Friday, 6 August 2021

Tokyo Logs Record Number of COVID-19 Cases As Infections Surge Amid Olympics

TOKYO —Tokyo reported 5,042 new coronavirus cases on Thursday, its most since the pandemic began as infections surge in the Japanese capital hosting the Olympics.

Tokyo has been under a state of emergency since mid-July, and four other areas of the country have since been added. But the measures, basically shorter opening hours and a ban on alcohol for restaurants and bars, are increasingly ignored by the public, which has become tired of restrictions.

“We need to tackle the situation now that we have a stronger sense of urgency,” Prime Minister Yosihide Suga told reporters, referring to Tokyo exceeding 5,000 new daily cases for the first time. “The infections are expanding at a pace we have never experienced before.”
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Suga, who has been criticized for insisting on hosting the Olympics despite the coronavirus’s surge, says there is no evidence linking the increase in cases to the July 23-Aug. 8 Games. He urged people to firmly stick to the emergency requests and stay at home during summer vacation.

The new cases brought Tokyo’s reported total to 236,138. The entire country registered more than 14,000 new cases on Wednesday, for a 970,460 total.

Alarmed by the pace of the spread, some experts have called for the state of emergency to be expanded nationwide.

Instead, Suga on Thursday announced a milder version of the emergency measures in eight prefectures, including Fukushima in the east and Kumamoto in the south, beginning Monday. The less-stringent measures allow prefectural heads to target specific towns but do not allow them to order business closures.

Suga also pledged to “prevent the further spread of the virus by firmly carrying out vaccinations.”

Experts say people are not cooperating because many feel less of a sense of urgency about the pandemic while the Olympics are going ahead and the government’s repeats of the same requests for people to stay at home.

Experts on a Tokyo metropolitan government panel cautioned that infections propelled by the more contagious delta variant have become “explosive” and could exceed 10,000 cases a day in two weeks.

Measures targeting business owners begin with requests and increase to orders, and violators can be fined, though this rarely happens. Those who comply can receive compensation, but thousands of eateries still stay open after the requested 8 p.m. closing time. Measures for the general public are only voluntary requests, including staying at home, wearing a mask outside and avoiding nonessential trips.

Japan has managed to keep its cases and deaths lower than much of the world, but testing is still insufficient and Tokyo’s positivity rate stands at 20%, indicating widespread infections. Japan has 8.9 new confirmed cases per 100,000, compared to 8.5 in Vietnam and 28.4 in the United States.

In Tokyo, nearly 17,000 patients with mild symptoms are currently isolating at home — more than a tenfold increase from a month ago — and more than 10,000 others are waiting for beds in hospitals or special hotels.

As hospital beds fill, Suga’s government introduced a new policy this week in which coronavirus patients with moderate symptoms will isolate at home instead of in hospitals, an attempt to save hospital beds almost exclusively for seriously ill patients.

Opposition lawmakers criticized Suga for not increasing hospital capacity sufficiently despite warnings about the delta variant. Coronavirus treatment in Japan is limited to public and university hospitals that have adequate facilities and expertise.

Dr. Masataka Inokuchi, the vice chair of the Tokyo Medical Association, said he hopes to establish a system that allows patients to isolate safely at home. “This system, however, will collapse if the number of patients at home keeps rising,” he said.



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Pakistan will not accept 'forceful takeover' in Afghanistan, says NSA Moeed Yusuf - DAWN.com

  1. Pakistan will not accept 'forceful takeover' in Afghanistan, says NSA Moeed Yusuf  DAWN.com
  2. PM Imran Khan calls important meetings on national security, Afghanistan  Geo News
  3. No enemies, no allies  The Express Tribune
  4. Pakistan says Afghans must compromise for peace settlement  Gulf News
  5. US should give Pakistan the importance it deserves: FM Qureshi  Geo News
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Host amazing virtual events with a lifetime webinar subscription for less than $100 | TheHill - The Hill

Host amazing virtual events with a lifetime webinar subscription for less than $100 | TheHill  The Hill

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MIDEAST STOCKS Major Gulf bourses shrug off geopolitical tensions - Reuters

MIDEAST STOCKS Major Gulf bourses shrug off geopolitical tensions  Reuters

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Republican official who mocked COVID in final Facebook post dies of virus in Texas



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Satellites reveal how forests increase cloud and cool climate: European Space Agency - ZAWYA

Satellites reveal how forests increase cloud and cool climate: European Space Agency  ZAWYA

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Forest fire in Greece threatens Olympics birthplace - Al Jazeera English

  1. Forest fire in Greece threatens Olympics birthplace  Al Jazeera English
  2. Greece fires: 150 houses destroyed by wildfires as monks refuse to leave stricken island  The Guardian
  3. Countries around the world race to rein in wildfires  Hindustan Times
  4. Greek firefighters battle ‘raging’ forest fire near Athens  Al Jazeera English
  5. Greece: Wildfires reach outskirts of Athens forcing thousands of residents to flee  Guardian News
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Thursday, 5 August 2021

White woman in viral video says she had no choice but to call police on Black bird-watcher



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Populations are Booming in Flood-Prone Areas—Especially in Developing Countries

The number of people living in flood-prone areas is growing faster than in other places, and at a much faster rate than scientists had previously expected, a study published Aug. 4 in the journal Nature finds. It’s a worrying sign that human settlements are not prepared for increased flood risks in the climate crisis.

Researchers at Cloud to Street, a flood-tracking platform, used satellite images to estimate the scale of 913 large flood events across 119 countries, and the number of people exposed to them. They found that between 2000 and 2015, the total population living in areas exposed to flooding grew by between 58 and 86 million. That’s a growth rate ten times higher than estimated by previous studies, which relied on modeling rather than satellite imagery to assess the number of people exposed to floods.
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Overall, the population of flood-prone areas increased by 34.1% between 2000 and 2015, according to the report, while the total global population grew by only 18.6% over the same period.

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This summer has brought new attention to flood risks in developed countries. Within a matter of days in July, entire streets were swept away in Germany and Belgium, where the heaviest rains to hit northwestern Europe in generations killed more than 200 people, and a “once in a 1,000 year” flood killed more than 300 people in eastern China. Widely circulated images of the devastation, and of lesser disruption to subways in New York and London, have renewed calls in many countries for improved flood warning systems and better infrastructure to keep people safe during heavy rains.

But generally speaking, it’s developing regions where people are most vulnerable to floods —and where the population at risk is increasing fastest. Researchers found the largest and fastest growing number of people at risk from floods in south and southeast Asia. Top of the list was the Indus River basin in Pakistan, where up to 19.9 million people were living in flood-prone areas by 2015, a 36% jump from 2000. In the Ganges-Brahmaputra basin between India and Bangladesh, 134.9 million people were exposed to floods by 2015, a 26% increase. And in the Mekong basin, covering parts of Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and China, up to 32.8 million people are exposed, an 11% increase from 2000. Western Africa, southern Africa, and Central America saw sharp increases in the proportion of their populations exposed to floods, researchers found.

The population booms in these region’s flood-prone areas can be explained by failures in urban planning and housing provision, says Beth Tellman, Chief Scientist and Co-founder of Cloud to Street, who led the study. In many developing countries, the scarcity of public housing programs and other financial support forces people to settle informally on land that is hazardous and therefore not being used by the formal housing market. It’s a particular problem in countries that are rapidly urbanizing, Tellman says. “It’s not as though people necessarily have a choice about wanting to live in a risky area, but it might be the only type that they’re able to afford.”

Many of the world’s more developed regions managed to move people out of flood-prone areas between 2000 and 2015, by using tools like zoning laws and buyouts for people with homes in risky areas. Western and northern Europe, East Asia and North America all managed to slightly reduce the proportion of their populations exposed to floods, according to the study.

Climate change is expected to increase the number of floods worldwide. For one thing, warmer air can hold more moisture—7% more for every 1°C temperature increase. For another, the melting of ice caps is driving sea level rise and putting pressure on water management systems like dams. Cloud to Street projects that the proportion of the population exposed to floods will increase across many of the world’s regions by 2030, including Europe, North America, central Africa, South America and most of Asia.

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According to the World Resources Institute (WRI), by 2030, as many as 758 million people will be living in a 100-year flood zone, where there is a 1% chance of floods each year—an increase of 179.2 million people from 2010.

According to the WRI, only one third of that projected increase is expected to be driven by climate change. The other two thirds would come from demographic shifts: more people being born in or moving into exposed areas.

That means that, as with the past changes in flood exposure measured by Cloud to Street, our future capacity to protect people from floods will be decided by policymaking and the use of resources. Expanding funding for both climate adaptation—making our infrastructure and economies more resilient to floods and other shifts in the weather—and wider development programs will help reduce the number of people who lose their homes, livelihoods and lives in floods, Tellman says. “Flood exposure is not just a climate problem, it’s a human problem that we’ve produced. And the hopeful part is that it really is within our agency to change that reality.”



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Police Martyrs Day: PAF pays tribute to cops for their sacrifices - The Nation

  1. Police Martyrs Day: PAF pays tribute to cops for their sacrifices  The Nation
  2. Police Martyrs Day: COAS Bajwa pays tribute to cops for their sacrifices  Daily Pakistan Global
  3. Pakistan observes Police Martyrs' Day today  The Express Tribune
  4. Writing history with blood: K-P police martyrs  The Express Tribune
  5. View Full coverage on Google News


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NOAA's updated hurricane outlook calls for even more storms in 2021



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Delta and vaccinated parents: What people with kids under 12 need to know



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McDonald's workers in LA are striking after a violent attack by a customer reportedly left one employee bruised and beaten



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Mom of 3 facing eviction receives over $200K in donations after CNN segment



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Giant sea bass are thriving in Mexican waters – scientific research that found them to be critically endangered stopped at the US-Mexico border



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Cancel 'curry'? Why South Asian American chefs say it's time for the word to go



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A star fragment is flying out of our galaxy at nearly two million miles per hour - Engadget

  1. A star fragment is flying out of our galaxy at nearly two million miles per hour  Engadget
  2. A Supernova Flung This Star At 2 Million Miles Per Hour — Where It's Headed  Screen Rant
  3. Supernova Shrapnel Piece Spotted Hurtling Out Of The Galaxy At 2 Million Miles An Hour  IFLScience
  4. Astronomers Spot Spinning Runaway Star | Astronomy  Sci-News.com
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Net zero targets 'unrealistic' says Oxfam report

Oxfam’s chief executive said that net zero targets made by companies and governments are "unreliable and unproven".

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Pakistan government puts up Prime Minister Imran Khans official residence for rent - Firstpost

  1. Pakistan government puts up Prime Minister Imran Khans official residence for rent  Firstpost
  2. Cabinet asks Navy, PAF to vacate state land  DAWN.com
  3. Benazir Bhutto, Nawaz Sharif offered me party tickets multipe times: PM Imran Khan  Geo News
  4. PPP, PML-N had offered me to join them: Imran Khan  The News International
  5. Mahira Khan urges PM Khan to get the domestic violence bill passed  The Express Tribune
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New AJK Prime Ministers son is Labour partys councilor for London - Geo News

New AJK Prime Ministers son is Labour partys councilor for London  Geo NewsView Full coverage on Google News

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Nearly 10,000 South Carolina residents are dead due to COVID. Do you have any regrets?



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Arkansas GOP governor wishes he didn't OK ban on mask mandates



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Fully Vaccinated Half As Likely To Catch Delta Covid Variant And Less Likely To Infect Others, Study Finds - Forbes

  1. Fully Vaccinated Half As Likely To Catch Delta Covid Variant And Less Likely To Infect Others, Study Finds  Forbes
  2. Delta spreads ‘like wildfire’ as variant’s severity baffles disease experts  DAWN.com
  3. COVID-19: What you need to know about the pandemic on 4 August  World Economic Forum
  4. Mask Mandates: Time for More Libertarian Response to Delta  Bloomberg
  5. Delta plus COVID-19 variant reported in South Korea  Yahoo News
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Trump urges federal judge to block release of tax returns to Congress



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Oil price decline continues as China's outbreak weighs on demand - WorldOil

  1. Oil price decline continues as China's outbreak weighs on demand  WorldOil
  2. Oil prices fall as Delta variant spread weighs By Reuters  Investing.com
  3. Oil Drops for Third Day as China Delta Outbreak Threatens Demand  Yahoo Finance
  4. Small Crude Inventory Draw Disappoints Markets  OilPrice.com
  5. Oil prices fall as Delta variant spread weighs  Reuters
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Giant bird-eating centipedes exist—and they're surprisingly important for their ecosystem - Phys.org

Giant bird-eating centipedes exist—and they're surprisingly important for their ecosystem  Phys.org

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Jen Psaki said Biden would not try to influence the DOJ like Trump did, in a cutting response to a Fox News question



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Man claims $50 NC lottery prize — then ‘last-minute’ decision leads to a bigger payoff



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Updated | Deaths of well-known couple killed in Richmond shooting stun community



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'Barbaric beyond words': 9-year-old girl allegedly gang raped, forcibly cremated in India



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Wednesday, 4 August 2021

The Capitol police officer who testified he was called a 'n-----' during the Jan. 6 riot says he's since been targeted with racist abuse online



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‘American Pickers’ star Danielle Colby breaks silence on 'sad' Frank Fritz exit, stands by Mike Wolfe



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New York City Requires Proof of Vaccination for Indoor Activities



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New York City will require proof of vaccination for indoor activities including going to restaurants, gyms, and performances



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Wuhan Lab Air Circulation Systems Were Defective ahead of First Known COVID Cases, Congressional Report Finds



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Govt ready to work with 'elected members' of opposition, says Fawad - Business Recorder

Govt ready to work with 'elected members' of opposition, says Fawad  Business RecorderView Full coverage on Google News

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Gold futures head lower early Tuesday - MarketWatch

  1. Gold futures head lower early Tuesday  MarketWatch
  2. Gold Down, Investors Gauge Fed's Next Move Ahead of US Jobs Data By Investing.com  Investing.com
  3. Falling bond yields push spot gold prices back to 200-day moving average  Kitco NEWS
  4. Lessons for Today From the Gold Standard  The Wall Street Journal
  5. Gold eases in range-bound trade on caution ahead of U.S. jobs data  Reuters
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Khalid Mansoor appointed CPEC SAPM, Asim Bajwa wishes him luck - SAMAA

  1. Khalid Mansoor appointed CPEC SAPM, Asim Bajwa wishes him luck  SAMAA
  2. Khalid Mansoor appointed SAPM on CPEC affairs as Asim Bajwa bows out  DAWN.com
  3. Asim Bajwa resigns as CPEC Authority chief  Geo News
  4. Asim Bajwa resigns as CPEC Authority chairman  ARY NEWS
  5. Asim Saleem Bajwa resigns as CPEC Authority chairman  Daily Pakistan Global
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Vaccination lowest in Karachi, Hyderabad: Centre asks Sindh to improve COVID-19 response - Geo News

  1. Vaccination lowest in Karachi, Hyderabad: Centre asks Sindh to improve COVID-19 response  Geo News
  2. Fawad Chaudhry blames Sindh govt for Covid-19 situation in Karachi and Hyderabad  DAWN.com
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Afghanistan: Lashkar Gah residents urged to evacuate amid Taliban battle



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Jim Renacci's weak fundraising sparks doubts about ability to oust Mike DeWine in Ohio



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Over 1,000 earthquakes rattle Yellowstone in July in ‘doozy’ of month, geologists say



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Simone Biles says Tokyo bronze means more than all her golds - NBC News

  1. Simone Biles says Tokyo bronze means more than all her golds  NBC News
  2. Simone Biles balance beam finals at Tokyo Olympics  11Alive
  3. The Tokyo Summer Olympics: Live Updates  CNN International
  4. Chinese gymnasts beat American Simone Biles to claim gold and silver Olympic medals on beam  South China Morning Post
  5. Biles returns to competition with a bronze medal and a smile  ABC News
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Blac Chyna accused of being transphobic after attempting to expose ex Tyga



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VERIFY: When will your community need a mask mandate? Here's what the CDC recommends - WUSA9

VERIFY: When will your community need a mask mandate? Here's what the CDC recommends  WUSA9View Full coverage on Google News

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Sonification of Hubble Ultra Deep Field (2014) - NASA Goddard

  1. Sonification of Hubble Ultra Deep Field (2014)  NASA Goddard
  2. Hubble Captures Incredible Image Of 3 Galaxies Tearing Each Other Apart  Screen Rant
  3. NASA Releases Mesmerizing Image of Three Galaxies ‘Fighting’  Nerdist
  4. The Hubble Deep Field: Looking Back In Time  NASA Goddard
  5. Hubble Space Telescope Sees Spiral Galaxy IC 1954 | Astronomy  Sci-News.com
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Pakistan imposes fresh curbs on incoming air travellers - The News International

  1. Pakistan imposes fresh curbs on incoming air travellers  The News International
  2. CAA imposes new restrictions for inbound flights as fourth wave hits Pakistan  Geo News
  3. CAA mandates quarantine at 'designated facility' for intl travellers who test positive at airports  DAWN.com
  4. Pakistan revises SOPs for international inbound travellers amid spike in Covid cases  Daily Pakistan Global
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Follow These Five Easy Steps To Prevent Unknown Users From Adding You To WhatsApp Groups - Mashable India

  1. Follow These Five Easy Steps To Prevent Unknown Users From Adding You To WhatsApp Groups  Mashable India
  2. How to prevent unknown users from adding you to WhatsApp groups? Check here  India Today
  3. How to Check If You're Blocked by Someone on WhatsApp  News18
  4. WhatsApp tip: Here’s how you can join missed group calls on WhatsApp  India Today
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Driver grabs bumper before fleeing hit-and-run crash with motorcyclist in Kansas City



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House committee investigating Capitol insurrection has a lot of power, but it's unclear it can force Trump to testify



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Denver rolls out its first vaccine mandates



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Sara Ali Khan shares new video with an apology to Saif Ali Khan, Amrita Singh: ‘Naak kaat di maine’ - Hindustan Times

  1. Sara Ali Khan shares new video with an apology to Saif Ali Khan, Amrita Singh: ‘Naak kaat di maine’  Hindustan Times
  2. Sara Ali Khan leaves fans concerned with her bleeding nose video  Geo News
  3. Sara Ali Khan suffers nose injury: ‘Naak kaat di maine’  The News International
  4. What made Sara Ali Khan to apologise to her parents?  Daily Pakistan Global
  5. ‘Naak kaat di maine’ says Sara Ali Khan as her nose gets severely injured  BOL News
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Tuesday, 3 August 2021

Deadly shooting at water park followed an escalating ‘altercation,’ Tennessee cops say



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Young bankers told to stop complaining about hours - BBC News

  1. Young bankers told to stop complaining about hours  BBC News
  2. Goldman Sachs boosts junior pay after burnout complaints  Financial Times
  3. Goldman Sachs raises pay for junior bankers after 100-hour week complaints  The Guardian
  4. Goldman Sachs' junior banker salaries now match William Blair's  eFinancialCareers
  5. Goldman Sachs boosts starting pay to $110,000  Telegraph.co.uk
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‘The Infinite’ Virtual Reality Exhibit Offers a Taste of Life in Outer Space

Some astronauts say the experience of traveling to space causes a shift in their perception of their world, a deepened feeling of interconnection with humanity sparked when they look down upon the Earth from so far above it (it’s called the “overview effect”). Looking out through the cupola of the International Space Station (ISS) and down onto the planet’s surface 250 miles below for myself, I’m inclined to believe them. A profound mixture of discovery, awe and comfort bubbled up inside of me when faced with that view.

The thing is, I’m not an astronaut. Even if space tourism is making headlines this summer, only the luckiest or richest among us will actually get to experience such a magnificent view firsthand—but it’s been made accessible to all through The Infinite, a virtual reality (VR) exhibition that makes you feel like you’re an ISS crew member. The world’s largest VR experience to date using the largest production ever filmed in space as its core material, The Infinite takes visitors on an hour-long journey by using 360-degree, 3D footage from the VR film Space Explorers: The ISS Experience, a Primetime Emmy-nominated virtual reality series produced by Felix & Paul Studios in association with TIME.
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It took the team behind The ISS Experience—the third part of an ongoing four-part series—half a decade to plan, coordinate and create the film, with help from NASA and other space agencies. The team designed two types of cameras required for the production and sent them into space: One model is compact enough for the cramped quarters of the ISS (a pressurized zero-gravity environment), and the other is a tank-like model capable of operating in the vacuum of space, able to withstand extreme temperature highs and lows caused by direct sunlight—and the lack of it.

For all of its technical achievements, The ISS Experience is built on human moments. “When we started this project, we wanted to capture the human experience, to see it through a genuine and intimate connection with the astronauts,” says Felix & Paul Studios co-founder and Creative Director Félix Lajeunesse. The crew was instructed to relate to the camera, thereby becoming both the subject of the film and their own film crew. Scenes run the emotional gamut from shots of highly-trained scientists playing football in zero gravity and dressing up for Halloween to explaining the physical training they must undergo to reduce bone density loss or waxing philosophical about the nature of purpose and belonging.

If The ISS Experience is the film, consider The Infinite to be its grand augmentation: a 12,500 square-foot “theatre” that deepens viewers’ immersion into the simulated experience of low-orbit spaceflight. It’s a multisensory combination of architecture, a dizzying art installation commissioned from Japanese artist Ryoji Ikeda, and VR presentation that turns The ISS Experience into something concrete to experience beyond a screen. Designed by the scenographers and storytellers of PHI Studio and currently on display at Arsenal Contemporary Art in Montreal, Quebec, participants are directed to explore instead of staying still and passively observing—something that’s most apparent when entering a free-roam area filled with a giant model of the space station to wander through simultaneously with other visitors. It’s one of the many ways The Infinite turns its source material into a shared experience.

“It’s the intimacy we have an opportunity to witness that I find comforting,” says Phoebe Greenberg, The Infinite chief creative officer and the founder of PHI. “There’s such a vastness to the amount of people that’s required to get these elite people to space, and from what [The Infinite] demonstrates, [they] are still human and bring the quotidien to space. It makes them all the more relatable, and we don’t get that lens from other media. It’s the intimacy, and we feel the presence of those astronauts.”

“The main challenge was finding the right way to position the ISS in the space, to make sure that people are able to keep a certain distance from each other and track them throughout,” adds Julie Tremblay, PHI Studio’s executive producer for installations and touring exhibitions. “Through monitoring, the staff can see who’s on the floor, if their headsets are on, the battery life of the equipment, to detect and fix technical problems, all to create something seamless.”

And it is: While experiencing The Infinite, people in the same section as you show up as cosmic avatars walking about. It’s an elegant solution to keep visitors from accidentally bumping into one another, but it also acts as a reminder of where you are—the experience of looking up at the stars overhead or down onto the Earth for a taste of the overview effect is your own, but by being aware that others are around you, it transforms into a communal environment that blurs the lines between the physical and the digital.

We tend to think of those worlds as separate, but in The Infinite, they are combined to achieve a sense of connectivity. It’s about connecting to one another through technology, through emotions, through artwork and design, and—perhaps most of all—through an unforgettable view from aboard the ISS that connects visitors with all humankind.



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Have Red Bull blown their chance to end Lewis Hamilton's and Mercedes' reign of dominance? - The Telegraph

  1. Have Red Bull blown their chance to end Lewis Hamilton's and Mercedes' reign of dominance?  The Telegraph
  2. Lewis Hamilton suspects he has long Covid after Hungarian Grand Prix  BBC Sport
  3. Hamilton suspects he may have long COVID after Hungarian GP fatigue  Autosport
  4. Verstappen determined: "I'm absolutely sure I'm faster than Hamilton"  GPblog.com
  5. Drained Lewis Hamilton's long Covid fears after Hungarian Grand Prix  Daily Record
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Nauka module’s near miss raises concerns about future of space station - Ars Technica

  1. Nauka module’s near miss raises concerns about future of space station  Ars Technica
  2. Russian cosmonauts give video tour of module that jolted space station  Euronews
  3. NASA sees possibility of using International Space Station until at least 2028  TASS
  4. The International Space Station Had a Rough Day  The Atlantic
  5. Russia reports pressure drop in space station service module  Euronews
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Missing NFL player has not used his bank card nor been seen in North Texas, police say



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The 6 Best Oven Ranges Designers Often Choose for Kitchen Renovations



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How to Light Your Bathroom: 3 Expert Tips on Choosing Fixtures and More



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6 Dos and Don’ts for Using White Paint, According to Interior Designers



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Love Island couples rock villa in juiciest episode yet - dramatic splits and secret snogs - The Mirror

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  3. Love Island 2021 review: Sorry seems to be the hardest word in ITV2 show’s best episode yet  The Independent
  4. Love Island USA: Why Leslie Golden Left The Show Suddenly  Screen Rant
  5. Love Island fans blown away by Millie Court's bargain dress  Liverpool Echo
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How to properly season steak: Tips from a professional chef



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Kathy Griffin reveals she has lung cancer as she prepares for surgery - Metro.co.uk

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  2. Kathy Griffin diagnosed with lung cancer and will have part of her lung removed  Daily Star
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  4. Comedian Kathy Griffin shares lung cancer diagnosis as she outlines surgery plan  The Mirror
  5. Kathy Griffin: I have cancer : News 2021  Chortle
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NC minister, grandson of Billy Graham out of hospital after battle with delta variant



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Anti-Semitic social posts 'not taken down' in 80% of cases

A report tracking hundreds of anti-Semitic social posts finds firms fail to act in 80% of cases.

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This Is the PS5 SSD System Architect Mark Cerny Is Using - Push Square

  1. This Is the PS5 SSD System Architect Mark Cerny Is Using  Push Square
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  3. PS5 architect Mark Cerny has revealed his SSD of choice  Video Games Chronicle
  4. Poll: Are You Happy with Your PS Plus Games for August 2021?  Push Square
  5. PS5 designer Mark Cerny shares SSD recommendation  Metro.co.uk
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Drone footage appears to show 'up to 1,000' migrants detained amid border crisis



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How Will Delta and COVID-19 Change This Back-to-School Season? Here’s What to Know

Getting the kids ready to go back to school each fall is stressful enough in a normal year, never mind in the midst of a pandemic. Between the more transmissible Delta coronavirus variant, rising cases across the country and new masking guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there’s a lot for parents to navigate as they plan for schools to reopen this August and September.

On the whole, experts seem to agree it’s time to get kids back into their classrooms. Remote learning set many children—especially students of color—back academically, cut them off from essential social services like free or reduced-cost meals, and took a major toll on their mental health. As many districts have reduced remote schooling programs, even the most reluctant parents may have little choice but to send their kids back to school, short of homeschooling.
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The worry, of course, is that in-classroom learning could facilitate the ongoing spread of COVID-19. But on the positive side, a year of scientific progress means that schools may now be better equipped to prevent viral spread in their classrooms, hallways and locker rooms. Public health experts and school administrators now know that layered mitigation methods, including face masks, distancing and ventilation, can help reduce transmission. Additionally, kids over 12, as well as their teachers and parents, can get vaccinated—the best tool to prevent getting sick and to reduce the spread of the virus.

To help parents of school-age children navigate the upcoming back-to-school season, TIME spoke with pediatric infectious disease experts about how to keep kids—and those around them—safe this school year.

What risks does COVID-19 pose to my child?

It’s rare for COVID-19 to cause severe illness among school-age children, but it does happen. Those with underlying medical conditions, such as heart disease, immune disorders and diabetes are at higher risk, according to the CDC. Some 400 children have died after contracting COVID-19 in the U.S., according to CDC data. Of course, while any death is tragic, that figure represents only around 0.01% of children known to have tested positive for the disease. In other words, it’s unlikely that kids will suffer the worst impacts of the virus.

Indeed, while children can also develop “long COVID”—suffering from persistent COVID-19 symptoms long after getting infected—preliminary evidence suggests that the condition is far less common in children than adults. A study by Swiss researchers published in JAMA on July 15 found that only 4% percent of the kids surveyed who had tested positive for COVID-19 were still experiencing symptoms after 12 weeks.

That said, there’s still a lot we don’t know about COVID-19. Dr. Aaron Milstone, a professor of pediatrics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, notes that some viral illnesses, like measles, can cause harm years after exposure in children, and we can’t know for sure that COVID-19 won’t have future consequences. “I do think it’s important to acknowledge that there are unknown risks, although small,” he says.

How has the Delta variant changed the risk of getting COVID-19 at school?

The Delta variant is more transmissible than the version of SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) that circulated for much of the previous 16 months or so, which means that it could spread faster in schools, just like it does anywhere else. Though it doesn’t seem to cause more severe illness (in either children or adults), Dr. Sean O’Leary, a professor of pediatric infectious diseases at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, says he’s concerned that kids could carry the virus back home to vulnerable family members, or in the other direction, putting teachers and staffers at risk. “I think it has the potential to be bad,” he says.

Delta’s emergence is a reminder that schools will need to stay flexible as the virus continues to circulate. Milstone points out that the dynamics of the pandemic are changing over time—vaccine-generated immunity may wane over time, people of mixed vaccination status are increasingly socializing with one another, and fewer people are taking precautions like masking or distancing (though the CDC’s new guidance may help change that). “We have to keep up with the virus,” Milstone says.

The best preventative method, of course, is mass vaccination. And most evidence suggests that Pfizer-BioNTech’s vaccine, the only shot authorized in the U.S. for kids aged 12-15, is effective against the Delta variant. Vaccines aside, schools can help protect students, teachers and staff by implementing “layered” prevention methods, including masks, distancing and ventilation, says Dr. William Raszka, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the University of Vermont Medical Center. These efforts are especially important for protecting students younger than 12, who can’t yet be vaccinated.

Could my child carry COVID-19 to someone else, like family members or their teacher?

Children can pass COVID-19 to other people, although the risk of transmission tends to be higher with older children, says Dr. Liz Whittaker, a senior clinical lecturer in pediatric infectious diseases and immunology at Imperial College London. A study conducted in South Korea in winter 2020 involving 5,706 COVID-19 patients found that children below 9 years old were less likely to spread the virus to other groups compared to kids aged 10-19, who appeared to spread it as much as adults.

O’Leary says widespread community vaccination is the best way to limit these risks. “What we’ve seen throughout the pandemic, including now with this Delta variant, is that [the number of] cases in kids basically reflect what’s going on in the surrounding community,” he says. “The most important thing to help schools be successful this year is get everyone to get vaccinated, down to age 12.” And, if schools practice layered mitigation methods, it should keep teachers at low risk of infection, says O’Leary, especially if they’re vaccinated.

Parents can take steps to help prevent outbreaks at schools as well. Whittaker urges families to keep their kids home if they seem unwell, and consider having older children wear a mask even if they’re not going into school—and even if they’re vaccinated—in order to keep the people around them safe. And don’t forget the basics, she adds. “Like washing your hands before you eat, which we should do anyway,” she says.

Could schools trigger a COVID-19 outbreak in my community?

So far, schools haven’t been a major driver of COVID-19 outbreaks. Instead, they’re more likely to reflect the level of transmission that’s already happening in a given community.

For instance, in an April study published in Pediatrics, researchers who studied North Carolina schools with 90,000 in-person students and staff found only 32 school-based local infections over a nine week period, while 773 other people were infected elsewhere in the community. However, it’s important to note that the schools studied for that paper practiced mitigation strategies like universal masking, 6-foot distancing and symptom monitoring.

That said, Milstone notes schools “tend to be more conservative” and take more precautions to limit viral spread compared to other institutions. In fact, schools probably aren’t more dangerous than other activities many kids are already doing, he says. “I would say a kid who’s masked in school is less likely to bring [COVID-19] home from school than they are from bringing it home from their Sunday school group or … a birthday party with 10 other kids where they’re probably not masked.”

How can I get ready to send my child back to school during the pandemic?

If your child is too young for the shot, getting vaccinated yourself is one of the best ways to protect them from contracting COVID-19, as it reduces the risk you’ll spread the virus to other people. “If you’re sending a child to school, you absolutely want to make sure you’re vaccinated if the child’s too young to be vaccinated,” says O’Leary.

O’Leary also tells parents that they should take a close look at the mitigation measures their children’s school has in place, including whether face masks are required, and advocate for more precautions. And regardless of the school’s policy, it may be smart to talk to children about wearing face masks. Generally, O’Leary says, kids are “better than the adults at wearing masks!”

And most importantly, if your children are 12 or older and eligible, get them vaccinated—and don’t wait. People aren’t considered fully vaccinated until two weeks after their second Pfizer shot, which is usually scheduled three to four weeks after their first injection. That timetable means you’ll need to go ASAP to ensure your child is protected for their first day of school.

Milstone acknowledges his perspective is skewed as an infectious disease physician; with his career, he sees an unusual number of children very sick with COVID-19. All the same, he says that seeing children die from a disease that can be prevented by vaccination is very difficult.

“I’ve said this my whole career, right?” he says. “It’s really discouraging to watch people die of vaccine preventable diseases. And especially kids, who don’t get to make that choice for themselves.”



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Almost Every Doctor Recommends Sunscreen. So Why Don’t We Know More About Its Safety?

Each year, as Memorial Day approaches, Holly Thaggard braces herself for the headlines. About how sunscreen may be damaging coral reefs. About the possible flammability of spray-on sunscreen. Headlines—as there were this year—about how sunscreen contains chemicals that could harm your health.

“This has happened every single year for the last decade of my life,” says Thaggard, founder of Texas-based Supergoop, a sunscreen company that brands itself as reef-safe and free of hundreds of potentially problematic ingredients.

This year, the is-sunscreen-dangerous news cycle started in May, when Valisure, an independent laboratory dedicated to quality-testing pharmaceuticals and personal-care products, released a report warning that its scientists found benzene—a carcinogen also found in vehicle emissions and cigarette smoke—in 78 U.S. sun-care products. Benzene is not an ingredient in sunscreens, but rather a contaminant likely introduced during the manufacturing process, and experts say it’s not clear whether the amount detected in sunscreens could actually lead to health risks. But in July, Johnson & Johnson voluntarily recalled five of its Neutrogena and Aveeno sunscreen sprays due to the presence of benzene. The company stressed that the recall came from an abundance of caution, and that “the levels detected in our testing would not be expected to cause adverse health consequences,” but it still kicked off a fresh flurry of worrisome news stories.
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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) maintain that wearing sunscreen is safe, and crucial to reducing the risk of skin cancer. But it’s hard to blame consumers for asking questions, given persistent concerns about the environmental and health effects of sunscreen. In 2018, for example, Hawaii passed a ban on sunscreens containing the chemicals oxybenzone and octinoxate, for fear they could damage coral reefs. The FDA in 2019 requested extra safety data on sunscreen components as part of a more stringent regulatory strategy. And consumer watchdogs like the Environmental Working Group routinely publish warnings about the potential health risks of sunscreen chemicals like oxybenzone; recently, many have pointed to a 2020 study that found uncertain evidence it could cause thyroid tumors in rats.

As of now, there is no strong evidence that sunscreen harms human health and plenty of data to show that it helps prevent skin cancer. But paradoxically, tighter regulations may be a blessing for the sunscreen industry. As it stands, according to a survey from cosmetic procedures database RealSelf, almost half of Americans say they never wear sunscreen and only 11% wear it every day. And each time a scary new story about sunscreen breaks, Thaggard says, consumers get more and more confused—and perhaps less likely to use the stuff. “Having more restrictions and having more testing only makes it more expensive and only makes it a little bit more difficult” for sunscreen companies to operate, Thaggard says. But, at the same time, “people need to feel good about applying their products.”

Proving they’re safe, once and for all, is the only way to make that happen.


Skin cancer is the most common type of cancer in the U.S. About a fifth of Americans will develop some form of it during their lifetimes, and about 7,000 die from melanoma each year. Those stats are especially striking because most skin cancers are preventable. Many cancers are caused by an opaque confluence of genes, lifestyle and bad luck, making them extremely difficult to avoid. Skin cancer, by contrast, is almost always caused by one thing: excess sun exposure.

The sun gives off two kinds of potentially damaging rays. UVA light causes wrinkles and other markers of aging, while UVB light is the primary cause of sunburn. Both can contribute to skin cancer, so effective sunscreens must block both. They can do so using either physical or chemical filters, or some combination of the two. Physical formulas use minerals—typically zinc or titanium dioxide—to create a physical barrier against the sun’s rays, while the latter use chemicals such as oxybenzone, avobenzone, octinoxate and homosalate to absorb UV light. Mineral sunscreens can leave a telltale white residue on the skin, while chemical formulas tend to sink in more completely.

From a user-friendliness perspective, that easy absorption is an asset. But it’s also the source of some concerns about sunscreen and health.

When the FDA began regulating sunscreens as over-the-counter drugs in the 1970s, it set standards for things like product labeling and testing of a formula’s sun protection factor, or SPF—the measure of how much UVB exposure is required to burn the skin with sunscreen on versus without it. (These days, products labeled as “broad spectrum” protect against both UVB and UVA light.) But the FDA does not actually test individual sunscreens—or any cosmetics or personal-care products, for that matter—before they hit shelves. As long as sun-care companies formulate their products using a set list of active ingredients laid out by the FDA, and follow its guidelines for manufacturing and testing, they do not have to apply for agency approval prior to selling their goods. While the FDA sets the standards they must follow, companies are responsible for their own safety, efficacy and quality testing.

That hands-off approach is, in part, due to an outdated regulatory standard. The agency began beefing up its safety-testing requirements after most sunscreen ingredients had already been on the market for years, essentially grandfathering them into approval without much oversight. And for years, scientists thought sunscreens sat atop the skin rather than penetrating it, exempting manufacturers from the safety testing required for products that can be absorbed into the body.

That assumption was wrong, according to a body of research that includes a pair of FDA studies published in 2019 and 2020. They found that ingredients commonly found in chemical sunscreens, including oxybenzone and octinoxate, can penetrate the skin and seep into the bloodstream, lingering in the body for days at a time. That doesn’t necessarily mean those chemicals are harmful—in fact, the studies’ authors urged consumers not to stop wearing sunscreen because of their findings—but it raises the stakes for finding out if they are.

So far, the research looks fairly comforting. A 2020 research review published in the International Journal of Dermatology found no conclusive evidence that either oxybenzone or octinoxate causes health problems. It did note that oxybenzone exposure (which can also come from the use of other personal-care products) is associated with changes in hormone, kidney and thyroid function, but concluded that there’s not enough evidence to establish cause and effect. A 2021 report from the European Commission’s Scientific Committee on Consumer Safety also noted that, while there are concerns that oxybenzone may disrupt hormones, those data are “not conclusive.” It did say, however, that products should only be considered safe if oxybenzone makes up no more than 2.2% of their formula; U.S. sunscreens can contain up to 6% oxybenzone.

Dr. Henry Lim, a dermatologist at Michigan’s Henry Ford Health System and a past AAD president who has done research and consulting for multiple personal-care brands, notes that sunscreen ingredients have been around for decades, and there’s no evidence that they’ve caused population-level health issues. So why the persistent concerns about sunscreen’s safety?

In some animal research, chemicals like oxybenzone and octinoxate have been linked to reproductive and hormonal disorders. While there’s no concrete proof that the chemicals harm humans, oxybenzone has also been detected in the breast milk of women who report using cosmetics that contain UV filters, as well as in humans’ urine. Contamination issues, like this year’s benzene scare, are another trigger for concern, particularly given the FDA’s laissez-faire regulation of personal-care products.

Dr. Jennifer Beecker, a Canadian physician certified in emergency medicine, family medicine and dermatology, adds that people are, in general, more attuned to the chemicals they put on and in their bodies than they used to be. That’s understandable, after several recent high-profile incidents in which beauty products were linked to health issues—perhaps most notably Johnson & Johnson baby powder’s connection to the cancer mesothelioma.

“Everything in the world is a chemical,” Beecker says, and many are harmless. Even still, consumer concerns about chemicals and potentially unsafe ingredients may help propel the “natural beauty” industry to a nearly $50 billion valuation by 2025.

When it comes to sunscreens, it’s not only personal health that has some people nervous. Sun-care products’ effects on the environment have also been a major topic of discussion in recent years—one that researchers are still trying to understand.


When you go for a swim in the ocean after applying sunscreen, or shower at the end of the day, some can wash off your body and end up in waterways. That, according to the National Ocean Service (NOS), could be a big problem. When certain sunscreen chemicals—including oxybenzone and octinoxate—contaminate aquatic environments, they may bleach or kill coral and cause reproductive issues and birth defects for fish, mussels and sea urchins, the NOS says.

In 2018, Hawaii became the first state to ban the sale of sunscreens using oxybenzone and octinoxate, citing their potential damage to coral reefs. The policy went into effect in January of this year, and Key West, Aruba, Palau, the U.S. Virgin Islands and several other tourist destinations have followed suit. “We’re dealing with living beings, and beings that have just as much of a right to be here as we do,” says Hawaii state senator Mike Gabbard, who introduced the bill.

Gabbard this year pushed for an expansion of the policy, which would have also banned the sale of formulas containing avobenzone or octocrylene in Hawaii, but it didn’t pass. He says he plans to try again next year, with a bill that would ban all chemical sunscreens in several marine life conservation districts in Hawaii.

Lim says such legislation may be premature. A research review published in the journal Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry this year found that while sunscreen ingredients are commonly found in ocean water, they may not collect at levels great enough to actually harm coral. The most concerning research around sunscreen chemicals and coral, Lim says, occurred in laboratory settings, not under real-life conditions. (Gabbard says he stands by the policy and the research review that went into it.)

For both people and the planet, Lim says, there is no clear-cut proof that sunscreen is harmful. But there have been enough rumblings about potential issues associated with sunscreen, he says, to justify revamping the FDA’s regulatory process.

In 2019, the agency announced plans to do just that. At that time, the FDA said zinc and titanium dioxide, the basis for most mineral formulas, could generally be considered safe—but asked the sun-care industry for more safety data on a dozen commonly used chemical filters, including oxybenzone and octinoxate, about which less is known. In May of this year, the agency also announced its intent to assess sunscreens’ effects on the environment. An update to its regulatory policy is expected in September. That could bring new rulings on ingredient safety; the addition or elimination of some chemicals from the agency’s approved active ingredients list; and/or more guidance on the production of newer sunscreen formats, like sticks and powders.

In a statement to TIME, an FDA spokesperson said the agency is assessing the claims in Valisure’s benzene report, noting that “if the FDA’s testing raises any safety concerns, the FDA will work with manufacturers to address these concerns.” The spokesperson did not offer details on how the agency’s regulatory process may change in September, but said “drug manufacturers are responsible for following current good manufacturing practices and ensuring the safety and quality of their products.”

If the FDA does provide substantive new information about or requirements for ascertaining sunscreen safety later this year, it could mean a seismic shift for the sunscreen industry, which has thus far existed without much supervision. ​​Most companies, at least publicly, say that’s a good thing. “Our members are committed to continue working with the FDA and leverag[ing] our industry’s formulation expertise to further demonstrate the safety of UV filters in sunscreens,” reads a statement from the Personal Care Products Council, a trade group that represents many sunscreen and cosmetics manufacturers, including Edgewell Personal Care, the parent company of brands like Banana Boat and Hawaiian Tropic.

Johnson & Johnson, which owns brands like Neutrogena and Aveeno, did not respond to TIME’s questions about its post-benzene-recall testing plans, nor its stance on additional FDA regulation.

Supergoop, for its part, retains a Washington, D.C., public relations agency with one job: booking CEO Thaggard meetings on Capitol Hill, where she can stress the regulatory needle she feels the FDA must thread. Thaggard says her company supports the need for closer studies of sunscreen ingredients, and voluntarily avoids using oxybenzone and octinoxate. But making innovative sunscreens that people of all skin types and colors actually want to wear, she says, requires the freedom to innovate—and a variety of available ingredients.

Some dermatologists share her concern. Already, Lim notes, U.S. companies must work from a shorter list of approved ingredients than Europe’s. “If, say, one knocks out oxybenzone, it would be significantly more difficult for the industry to make a good product in the U.S.,” he says. The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, a nonprofit that often provides scientific analysis to the government, is currently weighing the potential health and environmental benefits of eliminating ingredients like oxybenzone against the potential public health downside of limiting the number of sunscreen products on the market.

Beecker adds that independent testing is an important way to ensure that brands are manufacturing their products properly. The questions that remain are, first, who would oversee that process, and second, whether brands would agree to it.

On the second point, at least, the answer may be yes. Running studies or submitting to extra testing is an expensive hassle for sunscreen companies, to be sure. But if the FDA can put safety concerns to bed, potentially coaxing more people into wearing sunscreen daily, manufacturers stand to gain—and so, in theory, would the public. An uptick in sunscreen usage would hopefully mean a downturn in cancer diagnoses, and healthy returns for the companies lining drugstore shelves with SPF lotions, sprays and gels.

As consumers await the FDA’s ruling, Beecker says they shouldn’t concern themselves too much with their sunscreen products.

“UV radiation is a well-established carcinogen…. Every day I have to tell patients very bad news because they have skin cancer,” she says. “We have tons of data that sunscreen prevents [skin cancers] that kill people. I still think the benefits way outweigh the risks.”



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