Category Archives: News

Oil in Your Wine

Every great bottle of wine begins with a humble fungal infection. Historically, winemakers relied on naturally occurring yeasts to convert grape sugars into alcohol; modern vintners typically buy one of just a few laboratory-grown strains. Now, to set their products apart, some of the best winemakers are revisiting nature’s lesser-used microbial engineers. Not all these strains can withstand industrial production processes and retain their efficacy—but a natural additive offers a possible solution, new research suggests. Continue reading Oil in Your Wine

News briefs for Fortune

I wrote news briefs for Fortune.com in 2018 and 2019. Some of my favorites are:

“A Health Insurer’s Latest Plan to Cut Drug Costs? Pay Patients to Visit Mexico”

“People in China Will Soon Outlive Americans, But the Spanish Will Outlive Us All”

“For Years, the World Was Eliminating Extreme Poverty. Here’s Why the Progress Is Stalling”

“India’s Biometric ID System Registered 1 Billion People. A Court Just Restricted Who Can Use That Gold Mine of Data”

“Mexico City Is Sinking. Can Its New, Nobel Prize-Winning Mayor Fix the Crisis?”

“Migrants Are Healthier and Make Everyone Wealthier, Says Report”

Wild animals could hamper efforts to eradicate yaws disease

Global health officials are intensifying efforts to eradicate yaws, a disfiguring skin disease that infects more than 64,000 people a year in 14 African and southeast Asian countries. But some critics say that the plans could fail, because they don’t take account of discoveries in the past few years that wild primate populations harbour the bacterial infection. That could complicate or foil eradication efforts, they say.

Public-health officials met in Geneva, Switzerland, on 29–30 January to discuss how to expand the eradication programme in 6 of the 14 countries in which yaws is endemic. But they did not discuss the part played by wild animals. “Even if this is not the main cause of re-emerging yaws nowadays, it would jeopardize global eradication,” says Sascha Knauf, who studies neglected tropical diseases at the Leibniz Institute for Primate Research in Göttingen, Germany.
Continue reading Wild animals could hamper efforts to eradicate yaws disease

India’s Biometric IDs Trigger Privacy Lawsuits

In January, justices of the Supreme Court of India gathered to discuss the country’s national identification system, called Aadhaar. Since 2010, authorities have enrolled 1.19 billion residents, or about 93 percent of India’s population, in the system, which ties fingerprints, iris scans, and photos of Indian citizens to a unique 12-digit number.

Almost a decade later, India is still grappling with the technical, legal, and social challenges of launching the world’s most ambitious government identification program. Aadhaar’s reach and ubiquity has made it a tempting vehicle for centralizing activity, including welfare payments and mobile number registrations. But it has also raised major privacy and security issues. Continue reading India’s Biometric IDs Trigger Privacy Lawsuits