Michmutters – Page 170 – My WordPress Blog
Categories
US

Why Some Don’t Want Brittney Griner Free From Russian Prison: Expert

  • WNBA superstar Brittney Griner has been sentenced to nine years in Russian prison.
  • The US government has classified her as wrongfully detained and is working to negotiate her freedom.
  • Some Americans don’t want Griner to return, and a political scientist said two theories could explain why.

Some Americans are actively rooting against Brittney Griner’s return home to the United States.

The WNBA superstar was arrested in February after customs agents at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport claimed they found vape cartridges containing hashish oil in her luggage. She was found guilty of drug smuggling in early August and sentenced to nine years in Russian prison.

Brittney Griner.

Griner is escorted out of the courtroom after receiving her verdict and sentence.

REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina/Pool


Given the timing of her detention, the nature of her alleged offense, and the unjust reputation of the Russian courts, Griner is widely considered to be a political pawn Moscow is using as leverage against the United States. As such, the State Department classified Griner as wrongfully detained in May.

Even despite the “strong signal that the US government does not believe that there is a legitimate case against her,” as an expert previously told Insider, many of the two-time Olympic gold medalist’s compatriots are opposed to the Biden administration’s efforts to secure her freedom through negotiating a prisoner exchange with the Kremlin.

And there could be a scientific explanation why they’ve sided with a foreign adversary instead of supporting their fellow American.

Brittney Griner.

Griner competes for Team USA at the Tokyo Olympics.

Charlie Neibergall/AP


Dani Gilbert, an expert on hostage taking and recovery who is currently a Rosenwald Fellow in US Foreign Policy and International Security at Dartmouth College’s John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding, told Insider her research suggests that “how someone came to be in need of assistance affects whether or not the public thinks that person should receive it.”

This phenomenon, she said, is called the “deservingness heuristic.”

Gilbert used poverty as an example for her explanation. Individuals who believe that poor people are simply “unlucky” are the ones who are willing to support programs that provide assistance. But those who deem poor people lazy are less likely to support those same programs.

Her research, which she conducted along with a colleague at the University of California San Diego, suggests that that same theory applies to the public perception of hostages and wrongfully detained individuals. Griner is no exception.

Brittney Griner.

Griner is placed in her defendant’s cage during her Russian drug-smuggling trial.

AP Photo/Dmitry Serebryakov


“The fact that the American public might be really focused on the alleged drug possession and the outlandish accusation of drug smuggling might make the American public less willing to pay attention to this case.” [and] less supportive of government efforts to bring her home,” Gilbert said. “That’s the kind of dynamic that might really be in play.”

“It’s unfortunately quite predictable that Americans respond this way,” she added.

Gilbert further explained that personal characteristics could have an impact on the way the public regards Griner’s situation. Though “gender tends to be less influential in how the American public and how the media care about sympathizing with pay attention to Americans who are held hostage abroad,” than some other factors, “race is a huge deal here.”

Brittney Griner.

Griner.

Evgenia Novozhenina/Pool/Reuters


This concept is aptly called “the missing white woman syndrome,” Gilbert told Insider.

“A white girl or a white woman who is taken captive or arrested or something like that elicits tons of sympathy from the American public in a way that women and girls of color do not,” she explained. “And so I think the fact that [Griner is] Black could be a huge part of the lack of attention to her case.”

“And then there are other demographic characteristics, including the fact that she is openly gay, that she is gender nonconforming, not traditionally feminine — all of these work against public sympathy for someone in her position,” Gilbert added.

Griner’s beliefs may also play a role in her perceived deservingness of spending nine years at a Russian penal colony. Though she’s not particularly political — having only cast her first vote during the 2020 presidential election — she’s received serious criticism for her views of her on the national anthem.

Brittney Griner.

Griner sits on the bench as her Phoenix Mercury competes in the 2021 WNBA Finals.

AP Photo/Rick Scuteri


“I honestly feel we should not play the National Anthem during our season. I think we should take that much of a stand,” Griner told the Arizona Republic in July 2020, when many athletes knelt or stayed off the court when the anthem played in order to protest police brutality and honor Black Americans who were killed by police, including George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.

“I don’t mean that in any disrespect to our country,” she added. “My dad was in Vietnam and a law officer for 30 years. I wanted to be a cop before basketball. I do have pride for my country.”

Still, some see Griner as unpatriotic. Gilbert mentioned Facebook comments she saw that she basically said, “If you hate the United States so much, how does it feel now?”

Brittney Griner.

Griner behind bars.

Alexander Zemlianichenko/Pool via REUTERS


“I think that feeds in, in a way, to the whole deservingness thing,” Gilbert said. “People decide in their minds, if someone protests or has a particular political persuasion, that suddenly means that they’re not worthy of government assistance.”

“What we should really be focused on is the fact that she was wrongfully detained and is sitting in Russian prison in illegitimate arrest,” she added. “And that any American in that situation deserves help to come home.”

Categories
Technology

Researchers Stalk and Impersonate Tracking Devices (for Safety)

At Black Hat 2022, security researchers showed off a new attack that goes after tracking systems built on ultra-wideband (UWB) radio technology. They were able to stalk these tracking devices without their target’s knowledge, and even make targets appear to move at their attackers’ will.

A key use of UWB is real-time locating systems (RTLS), where a series of transceiver stations called anchors track the location of small, wearable devices called tags in a specific area, in real-time. This has a number of applications, from simple tasks like tracking personal items to high-stakes scenarios like infectious disease contact-tracing and factory safety mechanisms.

“Security flaws in this technology, especially in industrial environments, can be deadly,” says Nozomi Networks Security Research Evangelist Roya Gordon.

You may not be familiar with UWB, but it’s familiar with you. Apple has integrated it into mobile devices starting with the iPhone 11, as well as modern Apple Watches, HomePods, and AirTags. It’s also being used in large-scale infrastructure projects, like the effort to drag the New York City Subway signaling system into the 21st century.

Although Apple AirTags use UWB, the systems the team looked at were markedly different.


Standard Loopholes

What’s the problem with UWB RTLS? Although there is an IEEE standard for RTLS, it doesn’t cover the synchronization or exchange of data, the research team explains. Lacking a required standard, it’s up to individual vendors to figure out those issues, which creates opportunities for exploitation.

In its work, the team procured two off-the-shelf UWB RTLS systems: the Sewio Indoor Tracking RTLS UWB Wi-Fi Kit, and the Avalue Renity Artemis Enterprise Kit. Instead of focusing on tag-to-anchor communication, the Nozomi Networks team looked at communications between the anchors and the server where all the computation happens.

The team’s goal was to intercept and manipulate the location data, but to do that, they first needed to know the precise location of each anchor. That’s easy if you can see the anchors, but much harder if they’re hidden or you don’t have physical access to the space. But Andrea Palanca, Security Researcher at Nozomi Networks, found a way.

The anchors could be detected by measuring the power output of their signals, and the precise center of the space found by watching for when all the anchors detect identical signal data for a single tag. Since RTLS systems require the anchors to be arranged to form a square or rectangle, some simple geometry can pinpoint the anchors.

But an attacker wouldn’t even need pinpoint precision; anchor positions can be off by 10% and still function, Lever says.


Attacking RTLS

With all the pieces in place, the team showed off their location-spoofing attacks in a series of demos. First, they showed how to track targets using existing RTLS systems. We’ve already seen mounting concern over malicious uses of AirTags, where a bad guy tracks a person by hiding an AirTag on them. In this attack, the team didn’t need to hide a device, they simply tracked the tag that their target already used.

They also demonstrated how spoofing a tag’s movements in a COVID-19 contact-tracing scenario could create a false exposure alert, or prevent the system from detecting an exposure.

Another demo used a manufacturing facility mockup, where RTLS data was used to shut down machines so a worker could enter safely. By messing with the data, the team was able to stop production at the faux factory by tricking the system into thinking a worker was nearby. The opposite could be more dire. By making it seem as if the worker had left the area when they were actually still there, the machine could be reactivated and potentially injure the worker.


Practical Complications

The good news for owners of these systems is that these attacks aren’t easy. To pull it off, Luca Cremona, a Security Researcher at Nozomi Networks, first had to compromise a computer inside the target network, or add a rogue device to the network by hacking the Wi-Fi. If a bad guy can get that kind of access, you’ve got a lot of problems already.

Unfortunately, the team didn’t have any easy answers for securing RTLS in general. They kludged data encryption onto an RTLS system, but found that it created so much latency as to make the system unusable for real-time tracking.

The best solution the team presented was for the IEEE standard to be revised to cover the synchronization and exchange of data, requiring manufacturers to meet standards that could prevent RTLS attacks like this.

“We can’t afford to have those loopholes in standards,” Gordon says.

Keep reading PCMag for the latest from BlackHatBlackHat.

.

Categories
US

Beto O’Rourke drops f-bomb on heckler during Texas campaign stop

Texas gubernatorial hopeful Beto O’Rourke dropped an f-bomb Wednesday while confronting a heckler who apparently laughed at the Democrat’s plea to control gun violence.

The emotional moment unfolded at the Crazy Water Hotel in Mineral Wells, about 85 miles west of downtown Dallas, as O’Rourke was discussing his hopes to curb mass shootings.

O’Rourke was referring to the May 24 shooting in Uvalde when 19 children and two teachers were killed at Robb Elementary School by the gunman who purchased weapons just after turning 18.

“You could (legally) buy two, or more if you want to, AR-15s, hundreds of rounds of ammunition and take that weapon, that was originally designed for use on the battlefields in Vietnam to penetrate an enemy soldier’s helmet at 500 feet and knock him down dead, up against kids at 5 feet,” O’Rourke said.

A snicker could be heard coming from behind O’Rourke and the candidate turned toward a corner of the room where supporters of Republican Gov. Greg Abbott had gathered.

O’Rourke angrily gestured in that direction.

“It may be funny to you, motherf—–, but it’s not funny to me,” O’Rourke said to wild cheers from his supporters.

“We’re going to make sure that our kids who are starting their school year right now, that they don’t have to worry about someone walking in to their school with a weapon like this.”

Just two minutes earlier, O’Rourke had thanked Abbott’s supporters for attending his event.

“I want to hear a round of applause for these Abbott supporters who are here I’m glad that you all came,” said O’Rourke as his backers politely cheered. “Thank you for coming out. That’s not easy to do. But you’re welcome to join us and we’re glad that you’re here.”

An Abbott spokesman said the laughing person has no connection to the governor.

“This individual is not in any way affiliated with the campaign,” according to a statement by Mark Miner, Abbott’s campaign communication director.

A Republican has occupied the governor’s chair in Austin for more than a generation, as O’Rourke seeks to be the first Democrat to win Texas’ top race since Ann Richards in 1990.

Categories
Technology

League of Legends patch 12.15 is combating smurfs with the new ranked Duo queue changes

League of Legends patch 12.15 dropped yesterday, and a new set of changes have implemented a system that will work towards significantly reducing the number of smurfs in the game.

Like most competitive multiplayer games, the MOBA also sees its fair share of smurfs in ranked matchmaking, which ultimately hampers the game’s competitive integrity.

🛠 Patch 12.15 Notes 🛠⚡️ Energy based champions get a boost 🔧 Fine tuning Mastery Yi and Sivir 💪 Buffing up some engage supports⬇️ Nerfing Divine Sunderer and First Strike

High-rank players often do not shy away from making a smurf account to either help out a friend or just ruin the fun for another who has taken their ranked climb seriously.

This issue has been plaguing League of Legends for many seasons now, and with patch 12.15, Riot has implemented a solution that will look to combat a fair bit of the issue.

The developers have addressed the growing concerns with smurfs earlier on in Season 12, and with the new update, they will eliminate the ranked Duo queue for high-level players and primarily make it a Solo-queue only option.


League of Legends patch 12.15 will reduce the number of smurfs in the game

youtube-cover

League of Legends patch 12.15 wasn’t exactly a big one when it came to introduce champion balance updates. While one of the more significant changes was buffs to the energy champions, the patch, to an extent, dealt with fixing some of the issues with the title.

Riot introduced changes to the Duo queue system, which will now not let high-ranked players employ the system.

In the patch notes, the developers stated:

“Having a premade duo is a slight advantage, and while current Apex Tier (Masters, Grandmaster, and Challenger) players aren’t able to duo with anyone, the system only works off current rank. With this change, we’re tightening up the Apex Tier restriction to apply to MMR as well.”

“The goal of this is to prevent climbing smurfs from being able to duo queue into Apex Tier. That said, decayed Apex Tier players and the highest skilled Diamond I players may also be impacted by this change. Up until now these players could duo and reliably get into Apex Tier games, which isn’t fair when the people they’re playing against can’t duo. If this change works as expected, we’ll evaluate shipping it to the rest of the world with plans to re-evaluate before Season Start.”

youtube-cover

From now on, League of Legends players will no longer be able to queue up for a ranked game with a friend if they are both of the Master rank or higher. The system will not take MMR into consideration and will ultimately look to reduce the number of smurfs that one gets to experience in ranked matchmaking today.

Riot Games have also mentioned that they have successfully tested this method back in patch 12.10 for both the Korea and NA servers, hence, with 12.15, they have officially made it live for all regions.


.

Categories
Sports

NRLnews | Paul Green death, last ever interview at Cronulla Sharks v Dragons Old Boys day

Days before his shock death, rugby league great and premiership-winning coach Paul Green walked a lap of the field with old teammates in a moment of reflection.

It was the Cronulla Sharks’ Old Boys day and, in what would be the last interview he would give before his passing, a smiling Green expressed gratitude for what the club had done.

READMORE: Family, NRL community ‘devastated’ by Paul Green death

GALLERY: Paul Green’s football life in pictures

“It’s great to be back, terrific night, a great crowd and good for Shark Park, so let’s hope the footy’s great,” Green said in an on-camera interview that was published on Cronulla’s website (watch it in the player above).

“Plenty of good memories and great to catch up with all the Old Boys today. It’s been a tonne of laughs and really well done by the club.”

With that Green was left to enjoy the rest of the night with other greats of the club he left an indelible mark on, winning the Rothmans Medal (what is now the Dally M Medal) in just his second season of first grade in 1995.

The Sharks capped it off, beating fierce local rivals the Dragons 24-18 to cement their place in the top four and keep their top-two ambitions burning.

It was a fitting way for Green to make his final public appearance: a lap of honor to thank him for what he’s done for the game. Yet he certainly wasn’t the type to seek the limelight.

Green was a quiet family man with a deep love of the game and the gift of a large, analytical brain.

Stream the NRL premiership 2022 live and free on 9Now

As a player he was quick for a little man, standing at just 167cm, but it was his speed between the ears that made him a formidable halfback and then a champion coach.

On Thursday, as news of his death spread, the depth of emotion in the tributes told his story best.

His shattered family released a beautiful statement. And one by one the players he mixed with as a star halfback and then as a coach who reached the top said their piece.

“This is so sad,” Green’s former Sharks teammate Martin Lang wrote in a Twitter post.

“Paul was a close mate, we moved to Sydney together in 1993….the beginning of an outstanding NRL playing/coaching career. My sincere condolences to Paul’s wife, children and his dear mum and dad. Rest In Peace mate.”

NRL rocked by sudden death of Paul Green

Michael Morgan, the man who threw that flick pass to set up the last-minute try that leveled the 2015 grand final, before the Cowboys won it in golden point, added that he had “never been able to thank him enough.”

“He was more than influential, he helped me carve out the career that I did have,” Morgan said on Triple M’s The Rush Hour with Leisel, Liam and Dobbo.

“It’s no coincidence once he took over that he gave me an opportunity at fullback, it’s a position I’d never played in before and taught me, and I said it throughout my career when he unfortunately moved on from the Cowboys, how much he taught me about the game.

“You grow up playing it, you think you know everything but he just opened up a whole new world to the actual knowledge of the game for me.”

The world, and particularly the rugby league community, is a little emptier now as a result of the 49-year-old’s passing.

For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!

Categories
US

Armed attempting to breach FBI office leads to pursuit

A pursuit and ongoing police situation in Clinton County has shut down two highways and prompted an area lockdown Thursday. It all started after an armed suspect attempted to breach an FBI building in Cincinnati. According to FBI Cincinnati, it started around 9 am when a person showed up to the office in Kenwood and attempted to breach the visitor screening facility. An alarm went off and FBI special agents responded when the man fired a nail gun at law enforcement personnel. The man then held up an AR-15 style rifle before fleeing in a vehicle north onto I-71 leading Ohio State Highway Patrol on a pursuit into Clinton County. The FBI, Ohio State Highway Patrol and local law enforcement are now on scene near Wilmington where they say they are trying to resolve the critical incident. Clinton County Emergency Management Agency officials said law enforcement has exchanged shots with the male suspect who is described as wearing a gray shirt and body armor. EMA officials say the suspect “has not yet been taking into custody, but is contained.”I-71 is closed between State Routes 73 and 68 in both directions until further notice. State Route 73 is also shut down in both directions between Mitchell Road and State Route 380. State Route 380 is also closed between State Route 73 and Brimstone Road. A lockdown is in effect for all buildings within a one mile radius of Smith Road and Center Road, according to Clinton County EMA. Residents and businesses are asked to lock their doors. This is a breaking news story, WLWT is working to learn more and will continue to update with the latest information as it comes in.

A pursuit and ongoing police situation in Clinton County has shut down two highways and prompted an area lockdown Thursday. It all started after an armed suspect attempted to breach an FBI building in Cincinnati.

According to FBI Cincinnati, it started around 9 am when a person showed up to the office in Kenwood and attempted to breach the visitor screening facility.

An alarm went off and FBI special agents responded when the man fired a nail gun at law enforcement personnel. The man then held up an AR-15 style rifle before fleeing in a vehicle north onto I-71 leading Ohio State Highway Patrol on a pursuit into Clinton County.

.

The FBI, Ohio State Highway Patrol and local law enforcement are now on scene near Wilmington where they say they are trying to resolve the critical incident.

This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

Clinton County Emergency Management Agency officials said law enforcement has exchanged shots with the male suspect who is described as wearing a gray shirt and body armor. EMA officials say the suspect “has not yet been taking into custody, but is contained.”

I-71 is closed between State Routes 73 and 68 in both directions until further notice. State Route 73 is also shut down in both directions between Mitchell Road and State Route 380.

State Route 380 is also closed between State Route 73 and Brimstone Road.

A lockdown is in effect for all buildings within a one mile radius of Smith Road and Center Road, according to Clinton County EMA. Residents and businesses are asked to lock their doors.

.

This is a breaking news story, WLWT is working to learn more and will continue to update with the latest information as it comes in.

Categories
Technology

Adventures is a new skin-collecting game mode for Horizon Chase Turbo

Adventures is a new skin-collecting game mode for Horizon Chase Turbo

The retro arcade racer, Horizon Chase Turbo, has received a free new game mode that allows you to collect new car skins.

As part of developer Aquiris Game Studio’s seven years of Horizon Chase celebrations, the console and PC Turbo variant has received a new game mode – Adventures.

Available via a free update released today, 11th August, Adventures is unlocked once you have progressed to Chile in the main and existing World Tour campaign.

Each time you unlock a new car there, a new set of five adventure races will unlock. Win each of these and you unlock a new vehicle skin. Of course, if you’ve already finished the World Tour, the next time you play the game, the new Adventures mode and challenges will be there for you to play through.

Horizon Chase Turbo Adventures

There are 34 sets of five events, and therefore 34 car skins, to unlock, which the development team claims equate to eight hours of additional gameplay.

Think of it as a complementary dessert, courtesy of the chef, provided you’ve already played through the superlative Senna Forever DLC first.

Horizon Chase Turbo Adventures skin unlocked

Horizon Chase is a mobile game for iOS, Android and Huawei that was released back in 2015. This was followed by a console and PC version in 2018 called Horizon Chase Turbo. Today’s update is for that game, on PC (Steam and Epic), Xbox, PlayStation and Nintendo Switch.





Categories
Sports

Carlton star Patrick Cripps successfully overturns judicial verdict, is free to play against Melbourne

Carlton’s finals hopes have received a huge boost after Captain Patrick Cripps had his two-match suspension overturned at the AFL Tribunal Appeals Board.

Cripps was unsuccessful in overturning a rough conduct charge at the AFL Tribunal on Tuesday night, and his hearing at the Appeals Board on Thursday night loomed as his final hope of having his two-match suspension squashed.

The 27-year-old’s airborne collision, which left Brisbane’s Callum Ah Chee with concussion, was graded as careless, high impact and high contact.

Christopher Townshend QC, acting for Cripps, argued that there was a “denial of natural justice” because AFL Court chairman Jeff Gleeson failed to give directions to the jury on Tuesday night before they retired to consider their verdict.

Townshend said Gleeson himself had created confusion by effectively stating Cripps’ action was a bump.

.

Categories
US

The Arctic is warming much faster, as climate change’s impact grows

Placeholder while article actions load

For residents of the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard, the United States’ recent success in clinching a major piece of climate change legislation may feel like too little, too late.

Over the past 40 years, as the world’s largest historical emitter of greenhouse gases repeatedly failed to take significant action on the climate, the region surrounding Svalbard has warmed at least four times faster than the global average, according to significant new research published Thursday.

The study suggests that warming in the Arctic is happening at a much faster rate than many scientists had expected. And while US lawmakers this summer hashed out the details of a massive bill to speed their nation’s shift toward cleaner energy — the culmination of months of deliberations — the new findings were just the latest visceral reminder that the planet’s changing climate isn’t waiting around for human action.

Recent studies on subjects including tree mortality in North America and evidence of weakening ice-shelves in Antarctica, combined with a stream of extreme weather events that include last month’s European heat wave and torrential floods of late in Kentucky and South Korea, are providing steady evidence of global warming’s intensifying impact on the planet.

The Arctic is where some of the shifts are most severe.

Svalbard, to cluster of Arctic islands famed for populations of polar bears, experienced its hottest June on record. A record 40 billion tons of ice from the archipelago had melted into the ocean by the end of July. Melting permafrost and unstable mountain slopes are threatening homes.

And that’s just a sampling from a region that has warmed at an astounding rate — roughly 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) since 1979.

“It’s a really vulnerable environment in the Arctic, and seeing these numbers, it’s worrying,” said Antti Lipponen, a scientist with the Finnish Meteorological Institute who contributed to Thursday’s peer-reviewed study published in Communications Earth & Environment.

President Biden on Aug. 8 said that the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 would be “game-changing for ordinary folks.” (Video: The Washington Post)

The study provides sobering context for this week’s expected passage by the House of Representatives of the Inflation Reduction Act. Experts say it is a landmark piece of legislation that will drive down US emissions of greenhouse gases by incentivizing the purchase of electric vehicles and energy-efficient appliances, and a quickening pace of renewable-energy installations. Recent estimates suggest that the bill could lower US greenhouse gas emissions by as much as a billion tons per year by the end of 2030.

Sign up for the latest news about climate change, energy and the environment, delivered every Thursday

But that’s still tiny compared with the more than 2 trillion tons of planet-warming carbon dioxide gas that humanity has emitted since the year 1850 — a figure that does not include any other warming gases, such as methane, which also is playing a major role in the world’s temperature increases.

The Inflation Reduction Act will mark “an historic moment” for the United States — one that hasn’t seemed plausible since President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore pushed for significant action in the 1990s, said Bill Hare, a climate scientist and the chief Executive at Climate Analytics, a prominent science and policy institute. The bill could have a global ripple effect that spurs other countries to take more ambitious steps, Hare said.

Yet, Hare noted that the legislation does not bring the United States to President Biden’s goal of cutting emissions at least in half by 2030 from their 2005 levels. It also includes provisions for additional oil and gas drilling and easing permitting processes for fossil fuel infrastructure — contradicting findings from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that the world must nearly eliminate coal and significantly slash the use of oil and natural gas to have a hope of avoiding catastrophic warming.

At the same time, Hare noted, there is an ongoing “rush for gas” in Africa and Australia “that is quite inconsistent with the Paris agreement,” the 2015 accord in which nations vowed to progressively lower their emissions to avoid dangerous levels of warming. . And Russia’s war in Ukraine has prompted a near-term scramble for fossil fuels even in relatively climate-conscious Europe.

These forces continue to push the world off track from meeting the Paris accord’s most ambitious goal: limiting global temperature increases to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels. Beyond that threshold, experts warn, the world faces a future of chronic food crises, escalating natural disasters and collapsing ecosystems.

Already, with the world have warmed by roughly 1.1 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit), deadly climate impacts are unfolding across the globe. Europe is broiling amid record-setting heat waves that have scorched crops and sparked wildfires. At least eight people were killed in Seoul as the heaviest rainfall in more than 100 years deluged the South Korean capital. Droughts have ravaged Mexico and contributed to a spiraling hunger crisis in East Africa. In the United States, people are dying of extreme heat, and in overwhelming floods and raging wildfires.

“This summer is just a horrorscape,” said Kim Cobb, a climate scientist at Brown University and the lead author of the IPCC’s most recent report on the science of climate change. “And I know it won’t be stopping in the near term.”

These disasters underscore what an exploding body of scientific research continues to show: that adverse climate change continues to outpace the plodding progress of political action. Even a historic investment such as the Inflation Reduction Act, Cobb said, is dwarfed by the scale of the crisis.

“There needs to be an infinite acceleration in frequency of this kind of legislation,” she said. “I think the planet is sending that message pretty loud and clear.”

Starting trends in the Arctic

Take the new Arctic study, which shows that the amplified warming occurring at the top of the planet, while long expected, exceeds what climate models predict by a noticeable margin.

“We suspect that either this is an extremely unlikely event, or the climate models systematically underestimate this Arctic amplification,” Lipponen said of the rapid pace of Arctic warming.

The study takes as its starting point the year 1979 because of the availability of satellite data covering the Arctic. It defines the Arctic as the region above the Arctic Circle, and the authors acknowledge that if longer periods are considered or if the Arctic is defined more broadly, the rate of Arctic warming can appear somewhat less.

The warming is most concentrated to the east of Svalbard, in the Barents and Kara seas, regions that have also seen some of the fastest loss of Arctic sea ice. This ice has traditionally reflected a huge amount of the sun’s heat back into space, keeping the planet cool. But as it vanishes from the sea surface, more sunlight is absorbed by the ocean — and then the warmer sea surface supports even less ice.

It is one of the most well-known climate “feedbacks” — a phenomenon through which an effect of warming contributes to further warmth. Although scientists try to account for this feedback in the models they use to predict future climate change, they might be underestimating it. At the extreme, the new study finds some regions between Svalbard and the Russian island of Novaya Zemlya that are warming at a rate of over 1.25 degrees Celsius, or 2.25 degrees Fahrenheit, every decade.

That’s massively disruptive to Arctic life, human and otherwise.

But interconnections among the ice, atmosphere, land and ocean mean that no part of the planet will be unaffected. As extreme temperatures bake the carbon-rich permafrost of northern landscapes, the thawing earth releases carbon dioxide gas.

Even as people begin to cut their emissions, nature’s emissions have just begun.

There’s also concerning news from the other pole.

NASA scientists, led by Chad Greene, have derived a technique allowing them to study the enormous, sometimes country-size platforms of ice, called ice-shelves, that encircle Antarctica. These are Earth’s main defenses against massive sea level rise, acting as a bracing mechanism that holds back Antarctica’s inland ice.

But the shelves are sustaining severe damage. Several, like Larsen A and B, have collapsed entirely. Thwaites Glacier, Antarctica’s most worrying and perhaps most vulnerable spot, has lost about 2 trillion tons of ice from its ice shelf, which has dramatically retracted inland, new research found. The overall area lost from Antarctic ice shelves since 1997 — about 14,000 square miles — is a little bit larger than Maryland and represents about 2 percent of the total ice shelf area.

As a reminder of these ice shelves’ vulnerability, the Conger Ice Shelf in East Antarctica — traditionally thought to be the coldest and most stable part of the ice sheet — suddenly collapsed this year.

Conger was not very large for an Antarctic shelf — merely the size of a large city. But its unexpected collapse — which appears to have been triggered by a sudden period of unusual warmth — should prompt alarm, scientist say.

“It means that Antarctica’s ice shelves are vulnerable, and they can still surprise us,” NASA’s Greene, who works at the agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said of the event. Greene’s study, which appeared in Nature this week, was co-written with colleagues from NASA and the University of Tasmania.

“Conger counters a common expectation that ice shelf collapse should only occur after a long period of thinning and weakening,” he continued. “Conger tells us that ice shelves can collapse without any warning signs whatsoever.”

Imperial northern forests

In another sign of the swiftly shifting climate, new research this week also details how tree species that dominate North American boreal forests — including firs, spruces and pines — are experiencing growing stress and a decline in the survival of saplings in response to rising temperatures and reduced rainfall.

The five-year, open-air experiment details how critical trees that have populated the southern edge of boreal forests — a key ecosystem for wildlife, timber production and for soaking up massive amounts of carbon dioxide — are suffering profound impacts as the world warms. But the species that are most likely to replace them, such as maples, are not poised to expand their distribution fast enough to fully replace the trees that are on their way toward dying out.

“The species that are most abundant there are much more vulnerable to climate change than I and other scientists had thought,” said Peter Reich, a lead author of the study also published in Nature and a longtime forest ecology professor at the University of Minnesota.

If current trends continue, Reich said, swaths of boreal forests “will be impoverished, and they might even fall apart or collapse” over the next half-century unless warming slows.

“The take-home message for me is that a large part of boreal forests, one of the largest carbon sinks in the world, is probably going to take a pretty good hit in the next 40, 50 years, even in a best-case scenario,” he said.

That’s disturbing news, because the Earth needs to gain forests, not lose them, as people try to employ every trick in the book to get carbon that is in the atmosphere back into plants, soils, rocks, and even underground storage caverns.

Reich sees his most recent findings in a broader context: While the climate-focused legislation expected to pass in Congress this week is a positive, the impacts of climate change will continue. to accelerate, and they will require more far-reaching action.

Reich called the Inflation Reduction Act a “good first step” but added that “even in the most optimistic scenario, there’s going to be a lot of pain and suffering.”

“It’s going to take an economic toll on poor and rich alike in the future,” he said. “We shouldn’t pat ourselves on the back and say, ‘Mission accomplished.’ ”

Categories
Technology

The Ferrari 488 GT3 EVO is now also in the GT3 class within RaceRoom