Facebook Is Advising Trump Campaign On Trump TV

Before the third and final presidential debate, Donald Trump went live on Facebook in what may have been the first dry run of Trump TV. The broadcast was watched by nearly 9 million people as of this writing and came together, in part, thanks to help from Facebook.

According to a Facebook spokesperson, the social network has advised the Trump campaign on a number of content initiatives, including Facebook Live. The relationship with the Trump campaign is far from exclusive, though. The spokesperson said that Facebook&;s role in advising the Trump campaign is no different from its relationship with the Clinton campaign and that Facebook advises on how to effectively use Facebook for down ballot campaigns on both sides of the aisle.

Still, Facebook&039;s neutral stance with the Trump campaign raises a question — one that&039;s currently roiling decision makers from Silicon Valley boardrooms to Republican Party offices — about where institutions should draw the line when it comes to providing equal opportunities to parties and institutions that may have objectionable views.

Just this week, Silicon Valley executives and companies, including Facebook, have come under scrutiny for continuing to work with investor (and Facebook board member) Peter Thiel, a Trump supporter who spoke at the Republican convention and recently gave $1.25 million to Trump&039;s campaign. In a leaked internal memo, Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerberg defended Thiel, saying his company could not commit to diversity while also dissociating with Trump supporters.

Facebook&039;s non-partisan posture may be further complicated by the possibility of forthcoming Trump TV network. The scale of Facebook&039;s platform is without peer and the streaming infrastructure and built-in audience of Live could provide a meaningful, low cost way for Trump bypass a traditional TV operation in favor of digital. And for the next three weeks, Trump can use his campaign to leverage Facebook&039;s best practices team, effectively workshopping broadcast strategies with in-house advice. There&039;s even the possibility to make some money; a Facebook spokesperson noted that Trump&039;s page could create content featuring a particular brand using Live to generate revenue.

Facebook, for its part, refuses to draw lines. When asked if the company would allow fringe and nationalist political parties like the British National Party, the Front National in France, or a neo-Nazi political organization, the Facebook official, speaking on the condition they not be quoted directly or by name, said that the company would offer advice about Facebook&039;s best practices, so long as their activities did not violate Facebook’s published community standards.

Quelle: <a href="Facebook Is Advising Trump Campaign On Trump TV“>BuzzFeed

An Online Vision-Test Startup Is Suing For The Right To Operate

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In the latest example of a health-tech startup battling regulators, Opternative, the startup that lets you get a prescription without visiting an eye doctor, is suing South Carolina for the right to operate there.

Since the Chicago startup launched last year, allowing customers to self-perform a $40 vision test on its website and receive a corrective-lens prescription, it&039;s come under fire by optometrists who call the service unproven and potentially unsafe. The American Optometric Association and local optometrist groups have lobbied against it, including in South Carolina, where a recently passed law prohibits Opternative&;s business model. Similar bans are also on the books in Georgia and Indiana; otherwise, Opternative operates in 39 states.

When customers take a test on Opternative, an ophthalmologist licensed in their state reviews their results. But South Carolina&039;s Eye Care Consumer Protection Law, passed in May, mandates that vision tests “may not be based solely on objective refractive data or information generated by an automated testing device, including an auto refractor or other electronic refractive-only testing device, to provide a medical diagnosis or to establish a refractive error for a patient as part of an eye examination.”

So on Thursday, with the help of the libertarian law firm Institute for Justice, Opternative filed a lawsuit against the state of South Carolina in civil court. The company argues that the law violates the state&039;s constitution because it deprives Opternative “of its constitutional right to pursue an honest living,” and solely exists to reduce “access to online eye care in South Carolina in order to prop up professional optometrists&039; outdated business model.”

“They have not passed a law to protect people from any actual threat to public health or safety,” Robert McNamara, a senior attorney at the Institute for Justice, told BuzzFeed News.

The lawsuit notes that Gov. Nikki Haley vetoed the law, and said that “it uses health practice mandates to stifle competition for the benefit of a single industry,” but the legislature overrode her. Opternative also says that South Carolina lawmakers passed a separate law this year that allows telemedicine services in general to operate — but explicitly prohibits ophthalmologists from writing prescriptions for online services such as Opternative.

Optometrists who oppose Opternative say that because it does not offer a comprehensive eye health exam — which the site acknowledges on its website — customers potentially miss out on meeting in person with a professional who could catch eye diseases and other problems.

Optometrists also say there is little to no proof that the service can deliver accurate corrective-lens prescriptions as advertised. As evidence of its efficacy, Opternative cites an independently run study that involved 30 people. It has not been published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.

Asked if Opternative planned to also sue in Georgia and Indiana, CEO Aaron Dallek said in a statement, “I never make threats about lawsuits, and I have every hope that we can find ways to work productively and legally in all 50 states without litigation. But we absolutely believe in our constitutional right to earn a living free from arbitrary government interference, and we&039;re happy to defend that right like we are in South Carolina.”

BuzzFeed News has reached out to the American Optometric Association for comment.

Quelle: <a href="An Online Vision-Test Startup Is Suing For The Right To Operate“>BuzzFeed

Hyperpartisan Facebook Pages Are Publishing False And Misleading Information At An Alarming Rate

Mark Davis / BuzzFeed News

Hyperpartisan political Facebook pages and websites are consistently feeding their millions of followers false or misleading information, according to an analysis by BuzzFeed News. The review of more than 1,000 posts from six large hyperpartisan Facebook pages selected from the right and from the left also found that the least accurate pages generated some of the highest numbers of shares, reactions, and comments on Facebook — far more than the three large mainstream political news pages analyzed for comparison.

Our analysis of three hyperpartisan right-wing Facebook pages found that 38% of all posts were either a mixture of true and false or mostly false, compared to 19% of posts from three hyperpartisan left-wing pages that were either a mixture of true and false or mostly false. The right-wing pages are among the forces — perhaps as potent as the cable news shows that have gotten far more attention — that helped fuel the rise of Donald Trump.

These pages, with names such as Eagle Rising on the right and Occupy Democrats on the left, represent a new and powerful force in American politics and society. Many have quickly grown to be as large as — and often much larger than — mainstream political news pages. A recent feature in the New York Times Magazine reported on the growth and influence of these pages, saying they “have begun to create and refine a new approach to political news: cherry-picking and reconstituting the most effective tactics and tropes from activism, advocacy and journalism into a potent new mixture.”

The rapid growth of these pages combines with BuzzFeed News&; findings to suggest a troubling conclusion: The best way to attract and grow an audience for political content on the world&039;s biggest social network is to eschew factual reporting and instead play to partisan biases using false or misleading information that simply tells people what they want to hear. This approach has precursors in partisan print and television media, but has gained a new scale of distribution on Facebook. And while it isn&039;t a solely American phenomenon — the British Labour party found powerful support from a similar voice — these pages are central to understanding a profoundly polarized moment in American life.

For example, in late September, Freedom Daily, a Facebook page with more than 1 million fans, scored a viral hit with a post that filled its audience with racial outrage.

The post linked to an article on the Freedom Daily website with the headline “Two White Men Doused With Gasoline, Set On FIRE By Blacks – Media CENSORED (VIDEO).” The text that accompanied the link on Facebook connected the attack to recent Black Lives Matter protests and urged people to share the post “if you&039;re angry as hell & aren&039;t going to take it anymore&;”

Freedom Daily / Facebook / Via Facebook: FreedomDailyNews

Anyone clicking on the link saw a video of the altercation, with some additional commentary. “Back in the day, when people were a lot smarter and America was great, this would have been a lot different,” the article said.

But nowhere in the article or Facebook post did Freedom Daily make it clear that this incident happened almost a year ago, and that it had absolutely no connection to Black Lives Matter.

The falsehoods continued from there: The altercation was actually between two people, a black man and his co-worker — and perhaps most importantly, the co-worker is not white. Court documents allege that the fight began with the co-worker throwing the first punch. Prosecutors also said the second man caught fire as a result of him coming into contact with the first man who was engulfed in flames. And finally, in spite of the headline&039;s claim that the incident was “CENSORED” by the media, it was widely covered by Baltimore media as well as by CNN and the Daily Mail&039;s website. (The man who allegedly set the fire, Christopher Harrison Jr., was charged with attempted first-degree murder, reckless endangerment, and first- and second-degree assault.)

But these details only stood in the way of success on Facebook. In the end, Freedom Daily&039;s largely false post was shared more than 14,000 times, generating more than 9,000 reactions and over 2,000 angry comments on Facebook.

“Not even animals would do this,” reads the most liked comment on the post. “Time to hang these people.”

Pages like Freedom Daily play to the biases of their audiences — and to those of Facebook&039;s News Feed algorithm — by sharing videos, photos, and links that demonize opposing points of view. They write explosive headlines and passages that urge people to click and share in order to show their support, or to express outrage. And in this tense and polarizing presidential election season, they continue to grow and gain influence.

“They are, perhaps, the purest expression of Facebook’s design and of the incentives coded into its algorithm,” wrote John Herrman in the New York Times Magazine.

These pages are also a constant source of dubious, misleading, or completely false information.

During the period analyzed, right-wing pages, for example, pushed a conspiracy theory about a Hillary Clinton body double, recirculated an old and false story about a Canadian mayor lecturing Muslim immigrants about integration, wrongly claimed that Obama&039;s last address at the UN saw him tell Americans they needed to give up their freedom for a “New World Government,” and falsely claimed that a football player had been told not to pray by the NFL.

Left-wing pages wrongly claimed Putin&039;s online troll factory was responsible for rigging online polls to show Trump won the first debate, falsely said that Trump wants to expel all Muslims from the US and said US women in the military should expect to be raped, claimed that TV networks would “not be fact-checking Donald Trump in any way” at the first debate, and completely misrepresented a quote from the pope to claim that he “flat out called Fox News type journalism &039;terrorism.&039;”

The bottom line is that people who regularly consume information from these pages — especially those on the right — are being fed false or misleading information.

The nature of the falsehoods is important to note. They often take the form of claims and accusations against people, companies, police, movements such as Black Lives Matter, Muslims, or “liberals” or “conservatives” as a whole. They drive division and polarization. And in doing so, they generate massive Facebook engagement that brings more and more people to these pages and their websites and into the echo chamber of hyperpartisan media and beliefs.

What We Did

BuzzFeed News selected three large hyperpartisan Facebook pages each from the right and from the left, as well as three large mainstream political news pages. All nine pages have earned the coveted verified blue checkmark from Facebook, which gives them an additional layer of credibility on the platform.

The nine pages we analyzed. Fan numbers shown for each page are as of Oct. 17, 2016.

BuzzFeed News

Over the course of seven weekdays (Sept. 19 to 23 and Sept. 26 and 27), we logged and fact-checked every single post published by these pages. Posts could be rated “mostly true,” “mixture of true and false,” or “mostly false.” If we encountered a post that was satirical or opinion-driven, or that otherwise lacked a factual claim, we rated it “no factual content.” (We chose to rate things as “mostly” true or false in order to allow for smaller errors or accurate facts within otherwise true or false claims or stories.)

We also gathered additional data: Facebook engagement numbers (shares, comments, and reactions) for each post were added from the Facebook API, and we noted whether the post was a link, photo, video, or text. Raters were asked to provide notes and sources to explain their rulings of “mixture of true and false” or “mostly false.” They could also indicate whether they were unsure of a given rating, which would trigger a second review of the same post in order to ensure consistency. Any discrepancies between the two ratings were resolved by a third person. That same person conducted a final review of all posts that were rated mostly false to ensure they warranted that rating. (For more detail on the methodology and some notes on its limitations, see the bottom of this article, and you can view our data here.)

In the end, our team rated and gathered data on 2,282 posts. There were 1,145 posts from mainstream pages, 666 from hyperpartisan right-wing pages, and 471 from hyperpartisan left-wing pages. The difference in the number of posts for each group is a result of them publishing with different frequencies.

Accuracy: Right vs. Left

BuzzFeed News

All nine pages consisted largely of content that was either mostly true or earned a “no factual content” rating.

However, during the time period analyzed, we found that right-wing pages were more prone to sharing false or misleading information than left-wing pages. Mainstream pages did not share any completely false information, but did publish a small number of posts that included unverified claims. (More on that below.)

We rated 86 out of a total 666 right-wing Facebook posts as mostly false, for a percentage of 13%. Another 167 posts (25%) were rated as a mixture of true and false. Viewed separately or together (38%), this is an alarmingly high percentage.

Left-wing pages did not earn as many “mostly false” or “mixture of true and false” ratings, but they did share false and misleading content. We identified 22 mostly false posts out of a total of 471 from these pages, which means that just under 5% of left-wing posts were untrue. We rated close to 14% of these posts (68) a mixture of true and false. Taken together, nearly a fifth of all left-wing posts we analyzed were either partially or mostly false.

One of the most common reasons we rated a post as a mixture of true and false was because the headline and/or Facebook share line introduced misinformation or was misleading to the audience. This frequently took the form of a shared link that contained accurate body text paired with a misleading headline, likely to drive social engagement and clicks.

For example, the left-wing page Addicting Info shared an article with the headline “Trump Loses Support Of Police Union After Saying Tulsa Shooting Cop ‘Choked’ (VIDEO).” But contrary to the claim in the headline, the article makes it clear that Trump didn&039;t lose an endorsement. The executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police merely gave a quote that was slightly critical of something Trump said.

On the right, Freedom Daily posted a link to an article from the website Yes I&039;m Right. It carried the headline “Australia Voted To Ban Muslims And Liberals Are Pissed.” The story correctly reports on the results of a poll that asked Australians if they would support or oppose a ban on Muslim immigration to Australia. But there was no vote to ban Muslims, making the headline completely false. (Side note: As illustrated by that headline, pages on the right and the left both love to talk about how something that happened made the other side lose their minds, freak out, get totally shut down, etc.)

BuzzFeed News

Alarmingly, we found examples of pages on the left and on the right presenting fake news articles as real. Two left-wing pages, Occupy Democrats and The Other 98%, posted a link to an article on U.S. Uncut that claimed the surgeon general of the US warned that drinking every time Trump lied during the first presidential debate could result in “acute alcohol poisoning.” That story originated on the fake news website National Report. (“Please do your fact-checking as responsibly as possible,” joked the U.S. Uncut article that unwittingly presented false information as true.)

Right Wing News, a page with 3.3 million followers, shared a link to a story that claimed authorities in Charlotte had warned would-be rioters that their food stamps and other government benefits would be revoked if they were caught looting or rioting. That story came from the Baltimore Gazette, a fake news site.

Accuracy: Mainstream Pages

This Politico exclusive spread to other mainstream outlets and saw a high number of Facebook shares. The story remains unconfirmed.

Politico / Facebook / Via Facebook: politico

Mainstream pages did not publish any mostly false content on the days we checked. We did, however, encounter one story that spread to all three mainstream pages as well as some partisan pages and remains unconfirmed to this day.

There were eight mainstream posts out of a total of 1,145 that earned the “mixture of true and false” rating. The majority of these were related to one story — the report from Politico that former President George H.W. Bush would be voting for Hillary Clinton.

Our ratings guide dictated that any posts built solely on anonymous sources or on unverified claims should be given the “mixture” rating. Since President Bush and his spokesman refused to confirm or deny the report, we rated all stories that repeated this claim the same way. Politico&039;s story about the former president was shared more than 14,000 times from its Facebook page, making it that page&039;s biggest hit during the period we analyzed. Overall, we saw a high number of Facebook shares for stories about the Bush voting claim. But the sample number is too small to make any larger conclusion about how unverified stories perform compared to true stories on mainstream pages.

Worst Offenders = High Engagement

Which pages shared the least credible information?

Freedom Daily, with its 1.3 million fans, was the most inaccurate and misleading page during the period we analyzed. It had the highest percentage of false posts of any page, at 23%, and also saw the same percentage of “mixture of true and false” posts. That means 46% — nearly half — of its total output during the seven days we studied was rated as false or misleading.

Not coincidentally, Freedom Daily put up impressive Facebook engagement stats. It had by far the highest Facebook engagement (defined as the total number of reactions, likes, and shares) per post among the right-wing pages we studied. It ranked third among all nine pages for its median number of Facebook shares per post. (We considered shares to be the most important individual engagement metric, as Facebook itself has said it plays an important role in determining the spread of a post.)

BuzzFeed News

Quelle: <a href="Hyperpartisan Facebook Pages Are Publishing False And Misleading Information At An Alarming Rate“>BuzzFeed

Nintendo Is Launching A New Console And People Are Freaking Out

Nintendo Is Launching A New Console And People Are Freaking Out

Nintendo revealed its new console, the Switch, on Thursday.

youtube.com

Nintendo&;s trailer for the Switch showcases the console&039;s ability to transition from console to handheld so you can play games in a variety of situations. According to a press release, Nintendo already has a slew of publishing partners for the Switch, including Electronic Arts, Capcom, Activision, Sega, Square Enix, Warner Bros, and others. It&039;s been four years since Nintendo debuted the Wii U.

People were shook.

But not so shook that they didn&039;t have jokes.

The Switch will be available in March 2017.

Quelle: <a href="Nintendo Is Launching A New Console And People Are Freaking Out“>BuzzFeed

Amazon's New Fire TV Stick Is On Sale Now

Amazon’s second-generation Fire TV Stick starts shipping to customers today.

Amazon's second-generation Fire TV Stick starts shipping to customers today.

Nicole Nguyen / BuzzFeed News

The portable media streaming device, which is on sale for $40, includes a remote with a special button that activates Alexa, Amazon&;s voice-controlled personal assistant. Previously, the Alexa Voice Remote was sold separately for $30. You can ask Alexa to “find [genre]” like sci-fi or romantic comedy, “play [show]” or “skip ahead two minutes.”

The new Fire TV Stick, which is no larger than a stick of gum, plugs right into a TV&039;s HDMI port, and doesn&039;t look any different from the first-generation model introduced in 2014. Like its predecessor, this Fire TV Stick can stream shows from online services like Netflix, Hulu, HBO Now, and, of course, Amazon Prime to the big screen. It also still has 8GB of storage and 1GB of memory.

What is new is what&039;s inside. The gadget now runs on a quad-core processor (up from dual-core) and supports 802.11ac Wi-Fi routers (the previous only supported up to 802.11n, which has slower data transfer speeds).

The biggest upgrade is the Stick’s re-designed, more personalized software, which will be available for all Fire TV customers, starting with the new Fire TV Stick.

The biggest upgrade is the Stick's re-designed, more personalized software, which will be available for all Fire TV customers, starting with the new Fire TV Stick.

Amazon

The Fire TV Stick now features rows of personalized recommendations, which will surface show and movie suggestions based on the user&039;s viewing history for services they subscribe to.

In search results, Amazon also shows all of the services that a given movie or TV show is available on. The device will remember whatever the user selects as a preference, and default to that service the next time he or she plays a movie or TV show. It will also default to where you can watch that content for free. For example, if The West Wing is available to stream on Netflix and rent or purchase on Amazon Video, the Fire TV Stick will choose Netflix.

Other Fire TV customers will get an over-the-air update for the redesigned software later this year.

Amazon&039;s streamer goes head-to-head with the Roku Streaming Stick ($50), announced in April, which also has a quad-core processor and unbiased search, and Google&039;s Chromecast ($35), which uses the phone as a remote and can mirror Android and tablet screens.

The Fire TV Stick is the more affordable, more portable media streaming device in Amazon&039;s line up. The Fire TV ($100) is a box-like device that can be connected to the Internet via ethernet, has double the memory of the Fire TV Stick, and supports 4K Ultra HD content. That more premium streamer is more in line with Chromecast&039;s new 4K-ready Ultra ($69), Roku Ultra ($130), and Apple TV ($140).

Quelle: <a href="Amazon&039;s New Fire TV Stick Is On Sale Now“>BuzzFeed

While You Were Watching The Debate, Trump Just Launched Trump TV

In the minutes before the third and final Presidential debate, Donald Trump went live on Facebook in what may have been the inaugural broadcast of a forthcoming Trump News Network.

A little after 8:30 P.M., Trump&;s official Facebook page posted the link to the live video, offering up an alternative to the mainstream broadcast. The message: “If you’re tired of biased, mainstream media reporting (otherwise known as Crooked Hillary’s super PAC), tune into my Facebook Live broadcast. Starts at 8:30 EST/5:30 PST — you won&039;t want to miss it. Enjoy&;”

The broadcast quickly ballooned to around 200,000 concurrent viewers but quickly fell off to around 120,000. As of the middle of the debate, the feed was holding steady at around 170,000, trailing only the ABC News debate feed on the platform.

The livestream featured punditry from retired Lieutenant General Michael Flynn and former Arizona Governor Jan Brewer and in place of commercials, the feed was interspersed with pro-Trump ads and a special message from Ivanka Trump. Looking more like public access than a glitzy cable news offering, the broadcast moved slowly between guests with at least one or two hot mic off moments where the hosts discussed where the next segment was headed. There were also hints of some surprise programming after the debate ends.

While this isn&039;t Trump&039;s first livestream event — the campaign went live before the second debate during Trump&039;s press conference with Juanita Broaddrick and the Bill Clinton sexual assault accusers — but it appears to be the first attempt at some original programming and analysis.

The livestream comes on the heels of news this week that Trump&039;s son-in-law Jared Kushner was in the early phases of shopping a Trump TV network. This morning, in response to post-election Trump TV rumors, Trump campaign CEO, Steve Bannon hedged, telling CNN only that “Trump is an entrepreneur.”

As for a potential channel name? Plenty of options have been bandied about but judging by Trump&039;s own page, Trump TV might be a safe bet.

The trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Quelle: <a href="While You Were Watching The Debate, Trump Just Launched Trump TV“>BuzzFeed

These Parents Don’t Want To Know What’s In Their Baby’s DNA

Marc Debnam / Getty Images

Parents are far less interested in decoding their newborn’s DNA than scientists had thought, according to a new study.

Every year, 4 million newborns in the US already get their blood tested for a few dozen genetic glitches that cause rare diseases. Newer tests — known as whole-genome or whole-exome sequencing — can give much more information about hundreds or even thousands of genes.

These sequencing tests are dropping in price, but still expensive at about $1,000 per person. Few healthy babies have been sequenced to date. But as recently as 2013, it seemed that demand for these tests was sky-high: According to a survey of 514 parents in Boston, more than 80% said they were “extremely,” “very,” or “somewhat” interested.

But two years later, when those same parents were asked to actually enroll in a genetic-sequencing program, just 7% signed up. That&;s according to the new, unpublished study, dubbed “BabySeq,” presented on Wednesday at the American Society of Human Genetics meeting in Vancouver, Canada.

The huge drop-off rate is likely due to families’ lack of interest and concerns about finding out unpleasant information. These aren’t irrational fears. For example, one of the babies enrolled in the study tested positive for a mutation in the BRCA2 gene that’s linked to increased breast and ovarian cancer risk. The mutation had been passed down from the baby’s mother, who was then told the unexpected news about not only her new child’s risk, but her own.

Although the study is still in progress, its early results suggest that it may be a long time before newborn sequencing becomes routine — and it won’t happen without families having to confront tough choices.

Robert Green

Wikimedia / Via commons.wikimedia.org

Robert Green, a geneticist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and one of the BabySeq study’s leaders, believes that genomics will eventually be integrated into every aspect of health care. But not just yet. “At this moment in time, should we be using sequencing with newborns? I really don’t know,” Green told BuzzFeed News.

Green’s team invited the families of 345 babies in the intensive care unit and 2,062 healthy newborns to join the sequencing project. The vast majority didn’t take the next step of seeing a genetic counselor, with half citing logistical hurdles. These sleep-deprived, harried parents were probably (and understandably) reluctant to make follow-up visits to the hospital, Green said.

But dozens of parents also dropped out after meeting with the genetic counselor. About 26% of this group cited confidentiality and privacy concerns, 26% worried about unfavorable or uncertain results, and 17% feared insurance discrimination. Even among the babies in intensive care — whose parents, you might assume, would be more motivated to understand genetic risks — enrollment rate was just 7%, the same as it was in the group of healthy babies.

“I was surprised about that,” Green said. It could be that parents were too stressed about their sick newborns to join a research project that may not have direct relevance to them, he said. “If they’re emotionally distraught, if they’re somewhat overwhelmed at having to come to the hospital, all these things I think impact them.”

Because this type of project hadn’t been done before, Green said his group felt compelled to tell parents about every potential harm, even at the risk of exaggerating some of them. So he wasn’t completely surprised by the low enrollment rates.

Photodisc / Getty Images

About 50 families so far have received the results of their baby’s genetic sequencing. (The study covered the costs; it’s debatable whether people would be willing or able to pay for such a test in real life.) Dangerous or “likely” dangerous mutations linked to heart diseases showed up in three babies, and to a vitamin deficiency in another baby. Still, these genetic variants are not guarantees of disease, especially since they showed up in healthy, symptom-free infants.

Laura Hercher, a genetic counselor who teaches at Sarah Lawrence College and was not involved with the BabySeq study, told BuzzFeed News that she was shocked at the number of people who enrolled. “These are tiny numbers,” she said.

The results imply that parents are changing their minds after reading the details of “informed consent” documents, which are required in human research studies and spell out the possible consequences and benefits of participating.

“It suggests they’re really finding the informed consent information to be things they hadn’t thought about beforehand, and so that stresses the value of informed consent,” Hercher said.

“Had we not told the mother, we would have been sitting on a finding she was not even aware of — of her own risk of breast and ovarian cancer.”

Some of the test results have already inspired preventative measures. The baby with the vitamin deficiency-linked mutations, for example, is now taking a dietary supplement as a precaution, Green said. And the baby with the BRCA2 mutation led the researchers to rethink part of their study. Originally they had planned to only reveal variants linked with childhood diseases. This did not include BRCA2, since breast and ovarian cancer occur in adulthood.

But because this information meant the mother was also in danger — a “rare” yet not unprecedented finding — they decided to disclose it, Green said.

“Had we not told the mother, we would have been sitting on a finding she was not even aware of — of her own risk of breast and ovarian cancer,” Green said. The mother was “grateful” to be told, he said, and the researchers are now adjusting the rules of the study to allow for similar situations in the future.

The project raises another ethical dilemma about gene sequencing: Should a parent’s desire to find out their child’s DNA override their child’s freedom to do so on their own?

That’s a question families, bioethicists, and scientists will debate for years to come, said Misha Angrist, a Duke University associate professor who specializes in science policy and was not involved with the BabySeq study.

“People will say, ‘Well, you know when my daughter turns 18, she can decide for herself whether she wants to know that,’” he said. But others will say this is just like getting medical information from an ultrasound. “I think it really comes down to your view of parenting.”

LINK: Pregnant Women Are Finding Out They Have Cancer From A Genetic Test Of Their Babies

LINK: This Woman Says Her 2-Year-Old Died Because Of A False DNA Test

LINK: No One Should Edit The Genes Of Embryos To Make Babies, NIH Chief Says

Quelle: <a href="These Parents Don’t Want To Know What’s In Their Baby’s DNA“>BuzzFeed

Apple To Announce New Macs At October 27 Event

Apple

On Wednesday, Apple sent invites to media for an Oct. 27 event, which will be held at the company&;s Cupertino campus. The only official hint at what&039;s to come is this: “Hello again.” But Apple is expected to announce a long-awaited refresh to its Mac line of desktop computers and laptops.

Sources familiar with Apple tell BuzzFeed News that an all-new, thinner MacBook Pro and an iMac update will be unveiled at the event.

In August, Bloomberg reported that a MacBook Pro with a secondary touchpad at the top of the keyboard, a more powerful iMac, and a MacBook Air with USB-C could be announced. No word on whether a new Mac mini or Mac Pro is in the pipeline.

The MacBook Air, MacBook Pro with Retina, and iMac received minor internal updates in 2015, and the MacBook was updated earlier this year. The design of the MacBook Pro has not changed since 2013. The Air remains the only Mac in the line-up without a Retina display.

It&039;s safe to say that if you&039;re thinking about buying a new Mac, hold off until after next week&039;s news.

Twitter: @max_read / Via buyersguide.macrumors.com

BuzzFeed News&039; coverage of the fall hardware event begins at 10 a.m. on Oct. 27.

Quelle: <a href="Apple To Announce New Macs At October 27 Event“>BuzzFeed