Why bird flu has people worried about more than the price of eggs...
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[Farmers harvest cress by ship at an ecological floating island on February 17, 2023 in Chun'an County, Hangzhou City, Zhejiang Province of China] VCG/VCG via Getty Images  BROWSING  [Classifieds banner image]( The wackiest headlines from the week as they would appear in a Classifieds section... Careers HEALTH TRACKER AVAILABLE: After three years of keeping us all updated on Covid case counts, Johns Hopkins University will [stop]( updating its Covid-19 tracking dashboard next month. The tracker was viewed 2.5+ billion times and cost $13 million to run. Itâll be remembered as the runner-up to Dominoâs pizza tracker tech. PART-TIME TENNIS PRO: Matija Pecotic, who works full-time in real estate in Croatia, [defeated]( the former eighth-ranked tennis player in the world, Jack Sock, in Florida this week. Pecotic told news outlets that he had to leave his job early to play the match. Personal ISO TRUST: In a survey of Americans from Gallup and the Knight Foundation, [50% of respondents]( indicated they believe that national news orgs intend to mislead, misinform, or persuade the public. KETCHUP FOR THE PEOPLE: Kraft Heinz said it wouldnât [raise]( condiment- or fast meal prices despite higher costs. Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, and Unilever, on the other hand, said theyâd raise prices in response to inflation. For sale OUTDATED BARNEY MERCH: Mattel has [resurrected]( the beloved purple-and-green dinosaur for appearances on TV, film, and YouTube. But his makeover hasnât gone over well with OG Barney fans on social media. REALLY BIG BOOTS: The latest drop from art collective MSCHF, Big Red Boots, has gone [viral online]( and took over New York Fashion Week. They go for $350, but good luck snagging a pair.âMM  SNAPSHOTS  Photo of the week
[An image made out of drones in the effigy of the Emir of Kuwait Nawaf al-Ahmad al-Jaber al-Sabah, hovers above the Green Island off the coast of Kuwait City]Yasser Al-Zayyat/AFP via Getty Images This week in identified flying objects, a fleet of drones formed the effigy of the Emir of Kuwait Nawaf al-Ahmad al-Jaber al-Sabah to mark Independence Day celebrations in Kuwait City. Just imagine if we did this with George Washington above DC⦠ TOGETHER WITH SECUREFRAME At your service [SecureFrame]( Youâve heard of SaaS, but how about CaaS? Thatâs right: Compliance as a service has entered the chat, and itâs gonna make waves in the security and privacy world. Streamlined compliance? Sounds like a dream. And [Secureframeâs here to make it come true](. They can automate your entire compliance process within tons of security frameworksâincluding SOC 2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, PCI, and GDPRâall while continuously detecting and remediating misconfigurations across your tech stack. The cherry on top? [Secureframe is currently offering a personalized demo that covers](: - automating the audit-readiness process
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[Dexter from Dexter's lab saying ]Dexterâs Laboratory/Warner Bros. Domestic Television via Giphy Here are some illuminating scientific discoveries from the week to help you live better and maybe even colonize Mars. Solar power may be coming to the moon. Blue Origin claims it cracked the mystery of how to turn [moon dust]( into solar panelsâsomething scientists have been trying to do since astronauts first brought the stuff back to Earth. The company dropped the news with surprisingly little fanfare for a potentially major breakthrough, but if Bezosâs space force really is able to replicate the Earth-bound experiments itâs done so far on the moon, it would be a game changer. The company is reportedly trying to pitch its tech to NASA for building lunar infrastructure that could ultimately help get us to Mars. See the Titanic like never before. To mark the 25th anniversary of James Cameronâs first big water movieâs release, scientists made public never-before-seen [footage]( of the Titanicâs wreckage from when it was first discovered. Researchers from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution captured the video back in 1986 with cameras onboard a submersible. The uncut video shows what was left of the ship inside and out, including one sad chandelier. We wonât tell if you play Celine Dion while watching it. Thereâs a new way to screen for some cancers. Scientists in South Korea have developed a cheap way to [detect]( pancreatic and prostate cancerâand all the patient has to do is pee on a strip. They say their sensor, which costs around eight cents, has a 99% success rate in identifying the urine of people with these cancers versus people without. And the team is experimenting further to try to extend it to more cancers, including colorectal and lung cancers.âAR Â TOGETHER WITH GAINFUL [Gainful]( Meet your fitness goals and perform your best. [Gainful]( creates personalized performance nutritionâthink protein, hydration formulas, pre-workout blends, and moreâto support your specific goals and dietary restrictions. That new PR is calling your name. [Shop now for 40% off]( for new customers + get a free blender bottle with code MILLIONBREW. Â NEWS ANALYSIS Â [Why bird flu has people worried about more than the price of eggs](
[Person in haz mat holding chicken](Peter Garrard Beck/Getty Images Weâve all noticed that chicken eggs cost as much as the Fabergé kind latelyâOK, not quite, but the price of eggs has increased over 70% in the past year. At least part of the blame for the spike lies with the avian flu, which has been spreading from wild birds to poultry worldwide. In the US, over 58 million farm birds have died in the past year as a result of the outbreak (a death toll that includes whole flocks that had to be culled if even one bird got infected). But itâs not just avian safety and omelette prices that have people concerned about the outbreak: There are also fears this bird flu could lead to the next human pandemic. Whatâs new with the bird flu? The [A(H5N1) virus]( has been infecting poultry in Asia and other regions of the world since 1996, but the current outbreak is different in scope and intensity. Not only is the virus sweeping through new places, affecting Europe and the US more extensively than ever before, itâs also become endemic among some wild birds for the first time, per Reuters. More parts of the world are starting to see that itâs no longer a seasonal phenomenon, making poultry vulnerable to infection year-round. With A(H5N1)âs current iteration, the term âbird fluâ increasingly sounds like a misnomer: Scientists in the US have detected it in bears, foxes, raccoons, and other mammals. And a recent outbreak at a mink farm in Spain has shown that itâs now sometimes able to spread among mammals without any birds present. Flu viruses are particularly inclined to mutate, and if an animal becomes infected with both a human flu and a bird flu, the two different strains can exchange bits of DNA (kind of like the virus version of a sitcom crossover), making it more adept at infecting new hosts. This developmentâand humanityâs recent struggle with another high-risk pathogenâhas many people wondering whether humans might be next. So, how risky is it for humans? Not very. Experts urge vigilance within the medical community, but you donât have to relocate to an off-the-grid bunker in rural Wyoming just yet. - Instances of human infection are exceedingly rare: There have been less than 10 cases globally since December 2021, according to the CDC (though the mortality rate tends to be high).
- At the moment, humans mostly contract the virus from infected animals, and farm workers are taking precautions when dealing with birds and livestock. And in other reassuring news, you donât need to worry about bird flu in your foodâunless you enjoy eating raw eggs or poultry. Heating them to an internal temperature of 165ËF kills bacteria and viruses, A(H5N1) included, per the CDC. While scientists arenât immediately concerned about the bird flu setting off the next human pandemic, the situation is already making farming more unpredictable and threatens to render our fauna less diverse. Looking ahead...A(H5N1) vaccines for birds do exist, but theyâre traditionally unpopular due to import bans on vaccinated birds and their limited effectiveness against the ever-mutating virus. The recent outbreak has caused a change of heart in many governments that are testing jabs on birds.âSK Â DESTINATIONS Â Place to be: The Museum of Broken Relationships
[A couple holds their hands as they visit the Musem of Broken Relationships in Zagreb]Denis Lovrovic/AFP via Getty Images Itâs a big world out there. In this section, weâll teleport you to an interesting locationâand hopefully give you travel ideas in the process. When relationships end they leave behind not only emotional scars, but also physical objects that remind us of former partners. Did you know that thereâs a museum dedicated to those objects? Itâs called the Museum of Broken Relationships, and itâs located in a former palace in Croatiaâs capital, Zagreb. This monument to what could have been began as a temporary project in 2006, but after opening a permanent location several years later, itâs grown to become one of Croatiaâs most [popular tourist attractions](, per the NYT. Itâs not difficult to see the appeal. The collection includes over 4,000 items sent anonymously by heartbroken people all over the world, about 70 of which are displayed at a time. The mementos are accompanied by descriptions from the sender providing contextâbut some, such as a book called I Can Make You Thin (a gift from an ex-fiancé), donât really require an explanation. If youâre eager to eavesdrop on strangersâ failed relationships but arenât planning on traveling to Croatia, the museum opened a [temporary exhibit]( this month in Indianapolis.  BREW'S BEST  The Brewâs resident tastemaker, Jamie, compiles her favorite recs to help you live your best life. Meal prep: Two variations on crispy rice: 1) gochujang cheesy [rice balls]( and 2) tamari cured and [confit yolks]( over crispy rice. Productivity tip: [#Monkmode]( is TikTokâs no-distractions productivity hack. Workout: An explainer on [cycle syncing](, the viral trend of aligning your diet and exercise with your menstrual cycle. Book club: The New Yorker released its [Best Books of 2022]( list this week. Streaming binge: [Goliath]( on Amazon Prime starring Billy Bob Thornton. (h/t [Money with Katie]() Playlist: The Vault of Ambience for fantasy work/study vibes on [Spotify](, [Apple Music](, and [YouTube](. Life hack: Post-Valentineâs Day [dating advice]( from a behavioral scientist. Tech tip: See how every Uber driver has [rated you](. Level up: Sharpen your math, data, and CS skills with [Brilliant](. Quick, visual, hands-on lessons make learning fun and easy. Over 10M+ people already agree, so [try it today](.* *This is sponsored advertising content.  COMMUNITY  Crowd work Last Sunday we asked which part of your life you wish AI would take over and do for you. Our favorite responses: - âWatching the first couple episodes of a show to see if you like it or not.ââKatherine
- âGive it the ability to respond to haters of your favorite sports team after a big loss. It will save both the naysayer and my conscience from vulgarity-filled vitriol.ââJake from Harrisburg, PA (probably an Eagles fan)
- âI recently lost my husband. It literally took us weeks to write the obituary. Reading this newsletter full of anecdotes about ChatGPT and my husband having been a technology guru, we finally fed the data points into ChatGPT for fun. It churned out at least four or five really good obituaries that we tweaked for the final task. This was a heavy burden that was made so much lighter by AI.ââBetsey from Texas This weekâs question On Monday, a couple got [married]( during halftime of a Dallas Mavericks game. For the happy duo, staring into each otherâs eyes with the Jumbotron in their periphery must have been a dream. But not everyoneâs love language is squeaky gym shoes. Whereâs the least romantic place you can think of to get married? Hereâs Mattyâs response to get the juices flowing: Onstage after curtain call for a high school production of Our Town. [Share your response here](. Â SHARE THE BREW Â [Share Morning Brew]( with your friends, acquire free Brew swag, and then acquire more friends as a result of your fresh Brew swag. Weâre saying weâll give you free stuff and more friends if you share a link. One link. Your referral count: 0 [Click to Share]( Or copy & paste your referral link to others:
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