How does a Sturgis-sized crowd affect COVID-19? It’s complicated

A paper on the South Dakota motorcycle rally had flaws, but it’s not useless.

STURGIS, SD—People walk along Main Street during the 80th Annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in Sturgis, South Dakota on August 8, 2020.

Enlarge / STURGIS, SD—People walk along Main Street during the 80th Annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in Sturgis, South Dakota on August 8, 2020. (credit: Michael Ciaglo | Getty Images)

The coronavirus loves a crowd. Put enough warm, susceptible bodies together and it's sure to spread. Scientists have known that since nearly the start of the pandemic, from studying Covid-19 outbreaks aboard the Diamond Princess cruise ship, inside a megachurchin South Korea, at a Champions League soccer match in Italy. Countless other clusters have since been recorded, often seeded by a single contagious individual.

It’s the danger of crowds that led the governments of other countries to enact national lockdowns. In the United States, it was more of a patchwork of state and local stay-at-home orders, school closures, and bans on mass gatherings. As scientists have learned more about the specific conditions that can lead to such superspreading events—unmasked people talking, singing, or exercising inside poorly ventilated indoor spaces—that’s made it possible, in theory, to fine-tune these disease containment strategies, and to ease up on the most dramatic restrictions and focus on the policies that do the most to stem the spread of the virus.

But people also love a crowd. And over the late spring and summer, a number of mass gatherings—often anxiously watched by the media, health care professionals, and worried neighbors—became real-life experiments in what happens when you put people together in the Covid-19 era. The events ranged from the apolitical (spring break, summer camp, back-to-school) to the politically supercharged (President Trump’s Tulsa rally, “reopen” protests, anti-police brutality protests, and ongoing demonstrations in Portland against the use of federal agents). Each one tested different variables—masks versus no masks, indoors versus outdoors—but all elicited an opportunity to study the same questions: How many people would get sick as a result, how many would die, and who would bear the cost of the health care bill?

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E-sports pros have “dream” jobs—but game publishers have all the power

What happens when a marketing initiative becomes a billion-dollar industry

James Eubanks competes during a <em>Call of Duty</em> final in 2017.

Enlarge / James Eubanks competes during a Call of Duty final in 2017. (credit: Chesnot | Getty Images)

In 2008, James “Clayster” Eubanks, then 16, decided he had what it took to be the number one Call of Duty player in the world. Growing up in Virginia, Eubanks owned all the latest consoles and specced-out gaming PCs; his house was the first on the block to have DSL. Now, he put all that practice to use, grinding up the Call of Duty ranks every single day, balancing his competitive ambitions against school, part-time jobs, girls. Playing the game professionally wasn’t an established career path yet, but there eventually came to be a loose circuit of tournaments. “It was really hectic,” Eubanks says. “But it became more and more sophisticated as the years have gone on.” Every year, tournament prizes got a little bigger. The competition got harder. He got more famous.

Then, the esports industry ballooned, as the massive popularity of League of Legends and Starcraft II esports kicked off a wave of big-money sponsorships and international stadium events. Publisher Activision began looking at competitive Call of Duty through a new lens. In 2020, Activision launched the Call of Duty League: 12 teams with five players each, representing 12 different cities around the world. As a top competitor playing on the Dallas Empire, Eubanks helped his team take the first Call of Duty League championship in July. He was thrilled. Then everything changed.

In August, Activision decided that professional Call of Duty games should be four-versus-four, not five-versus-five. Twenty percent of the league’s players had to go. Days after his big victory, the Dallas Empire dropped Eubanks, who had been designated fifth on the roster. “Got about 24 hours of happiness before I got thrown back into the blender, but that's the story of my career,” Eubanks wrote on Twitter.

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Libtorrent Adds Support for BitTorrent v2, a Potential Game-Changer

Libtorrent has just released version 2.0, which is a potential game-changer. The BitTorrent library, which is used by popular clients including uTorrent Web, Deluge, and qBittorrent, adds support for the new BitTorrent v2 protocol specification. This opens the door to various new features and introduces a new torrent format, which creates a separate swarm.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

libtorrent-logoMillions of people use BitTorrent every day but only a few know all the ins-and-outs of how it works.

Meanwhile, an even smaller group is actively involved in shaping the future of the file-sharing protocol.

BitTorrent was first made public by inventor Bram Cohen nearly two decades ago. While it was swiftly embraced by the masses, the protocol itself was far from perfect. Over the years many new features were added, including DHT, UDP trackers, peer-exchange, and support for streaming.

As developer of one of the leading BitTorrent libraries, Libtorrent, Arvid Norberg has been closely involved in the protocol’s development. It’s his code that makes a wide variety of torrent clients function properly. This includes uTorrent Web, Deluge, and qBittorrent.

LibTorrent 2.0 and BitTorrent v2

This week, Norberg announced the latest release of Libtorrent; version 2.0. This new version comes with many changes that eventually will make their way to torrent clients. The most crucial one is the implementation of the BitTorrent v2 protocol specification.

BitTorrent v2 is an improved version of the early BitTorrent standards and includes several technical changes. It was first proposed by Bram Cohen in 2008 and updated and improved along the way. Since most changes take place under the hood, the public at large won’t immediately recognize them, except for one.

Tech-savvy readers can get the complete lowdown from the Libtorrent site but for the sake of simplicity, we will focus on how the changes will affect users.

V2 Torrents and Separate Swarms

BitTorrent v2 changes the way torrents are ‘compiled’ and the newer version is not backward compatible. Older torrents have a SHA-1 hash and the new versions use SHA-256 hashing. This means that going forward, there will be different torrent versions.

These different (v1 and v2) torrents will also create separate torrent swarms. People who download a v1 torrent can’t share anything with people who download a v2 torrent and vice versa. While that sounds like a step back, the reality isn’t that bad.

There is an option to create so-called “hybrid” torrents that can connect to both swarms. These are basically two torrents in one. As a result, all torrents will have the same number of people sharing.

“A v2-enabled client would still be able talk to all peers, and peer-exchange would still work across v1 and v2-enabled peers. The main impact, I think, is that a v2-enabled peer would announce twice for a hybrid torrent, once for each info-hash. Both to trackers and the DHT,” Norberg tells us

For now, it makes sense that publishers, including torrent sites, are best off using hybrid torrents. After all, torrents that only use the v2 specification will have access to a limited number of peers. Norberg agrees.

“I think it would make sense for publishers to generate hybrid torrents. At least experiment with it to ensure it works well. v2-only torrents would only make sense for closed ecosystems right now, where the publisher also controls all clients.”

Important Changes Under The Hood

While new torrents are the most visible change, for outsiders it’s merely a byproduct of important changes under the hood. For example, the switch from SHA-1 to SHA-256 hashing will prevent a possible hash collision, which can be used for attacks and exploits.

Norberg tells is that the risk of these attacks is mostly theoretical, but this may change over time. So changing to SHA-256 is certainly wise. An even more exciting change, according to the developer, is the use of ‘per-file merkle hash trees’ for the piece hashes.

Merkle Hash Tree
merkle hash tree

In simple terms, this means that all files in a torrent will have their own unique identifier (hash). So, a collection of 100 photos will have a unique hash for each photo. This comes with several advantages.

For example, it will allow torrent clients to quickly check if they are receiving the right file. This prevents pollution attacks that can be used by outsiders to slow down torrent transfers.

“With the v2 hash trees, corrupt data will be detected immediately and the peer responsible for it can be disconnected. Currently, there’s more complex heuristic involved in attributing corrupt data to a peer, which means a malicious peer can do slightly more damage before being disconnected,” Norberg says.

Mutable Torrents and Merging Swarms

In addition, it opens up the door for peers to get the same file from multiple torrents. This is already technically possible today, as BiglyBT’s ‘swarm merging’ feature shows, but with unique file hashes, it’s easier and more reliable.

“Doing that is technically possible today, but to make it work generally for arbitrary torrents is very complicated. Having ‘per-file merkle trees’ greatly simplifies implementing this,” Norberg notes.

The same is true for so-called ‘mutable torrents’ where publishers can update torrents to add or remove files. That’s much easier with BitTorrent v2.

Finally, we should mention that it’s not just the .torrent files that will change. The v2 and hybrid magnet links are different too. And they will likely start downloading quicker, as the initial transfer of all piece hashes will be smaller. That is most noticeable when streaming or for downloading large archives.

Just how soon the v2 torrents will work depends on when clients update to the latest Libtorrent version. That can take days, but also more than a year. When large publishers and torrent sites will embrace the changes is uncertain as well, but eventually, it’s the way forward for all.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

"Genosse" Kühnert

Das ewige Elend der Sozialdemokratie – ironisch illustriert an einem aktuellen Beispiel

Das ewige Elend der Sozialdemokratie - ironisch illustriert an einem aktuellen Beispiel

Verfassungsschutz endlich auflösen

Nach jedem größeren Verfassungsschutzskandal reden Innenpolitiker von einer notwendigen Reform des “Sicherheitsapparats”. Bürgerrechtsorganisationen verlangen seit Jahren die ersatzlose Auflösung des Verfassungsschutzes

Nach jedem größeren Verfassungsschutzskandal reden Innenpolitiker von einer notwendigen Reform des "Sicherheitsapparats". Bürgerrechtsorganisationen verlangen seit Jahren die ersatzlose Auflösung des Verfassungsschutzes

Judge in Theranos fraud case orders 14-hour psychological test for Holmes

It’s the latest twist in the long, long saga of a disastrous startup.

Elizabeth Holmes, founder and former CEO of Theranos, arrives for motion hearing on Monday, November 4, 2019, at the U.S. District Court House in San Jose, California.

Enlarge / Elizabeth Holmes, founder and former CEO of Theranos, arrives for motion hearing on Monday, November 4, 2019, at the U.S. District Court House in San Jose, California. (credit: Getty | Yichuan Cao)

Elizabeth Holmes—the disgraced founder and ex-CEO of the now-defunct blood-testing startup, Theranos—may use a mental condition as a defense against a slew of federal fraud charges, according to a court document filed this week.

Holmes and Theranos’ former president Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani were charged in June 2018 with nine counts of wire fraud and two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Federal prosecutors allege the pair—who were romantically involved during the alleged crimes—engaged in conspiracy to defraud Theranos investors out of more than $100 million and defraud doctors and patients into falsely believing the company’s faulty blood-testing technology could reliably perform accurate health tests with just drops of blood from a finger-prick.

According to the court document filed this week, Holmes—who is now being tried separately from Balwani—notified the court last December that she plans to submit “expert evidence relating to a mental disease or defect or any other mental condition” that has bearing on the issue of guilt. The expert providing such evidence was named in the document as psychologist Mindy Mechanic, of California State University, Fullerton.

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Der Nebel um den Anschlag auf Nawalny verdichtet sich

Deutschland will dem Rechtshilfeersuchen Russlands nachkommen, aber keine Informationen weitergeben. Russische Ermittlungsbehörden suchen nach Marina Pevchikh, die mit dem Rettungsflugzeug mitgeflogen war. Hat sie die ominöse Flasche nach Deutschland g…

Deutschland will dem Rechtshilfeersuchen Russlands nachkommen, aber keine Informationen weitergeben. Russische Ermittlungsbehörden suchen nach Marina Pevchikh, die mit dem Rettungsflugzeug mitgeflogen war. Hat sie die ominöse Flasche nach Deutschland gebracht?

Wenn die zweite Welle kommt …

Über die derzeitige Studienlage zum Thema Covid-19, was wir besser wissen als im März und was wir erwarten können

Über die derzeitige Studienlage zum Thema Covid-19, was wir besser wissen als im März und was wir erwarten können