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      Tapeworm in fox poop that will slowly destroy your organs is on the rise

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 23 April 2025

    No matter how bad things might seem, at least you haven't accidentally eaten fox poop and developed an insidious tapeworm infection that masquerades as a cancerous liver tumor while it slowly destroys your organs and eventually kills you—or, you probably haven't done that.

    What's more, according to a newly published study in Emerging Infectious Diseases , even if you have somehow feasted on fox feces and acquired this nightmare parasite, it's looking less likely that doctors will need to hack out chunks of your organs to try to stop it.

    That's the good news from the new study. The bad news is that, while this infection is fairly rare, it appears to be increasing. And, if you do get it, you might have a shorter lifespan than the uninfected and may be sicker in general.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taghealth taghealth taghealth taginfectious disease taginfectious disease taginfectious disease tagparasites tagparasites tagparasites tagtapeworm tagtapeworm tagtapeworm taghealth taghealth taghealth taginfectious disease taginfectious disease taginfectious disease tagparasites tagparasites tagparasites tagtapeworm tagtapeworm tagtapeworm taghealth taghealth taghealth taginfectious disease taginfectious disease taginfectious disease tagparasites tagparasites tagparasites tagtapeworm tagtapeworm tagtapeworm

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Tapeworm in fox poop that will slowly destroy your organs is on the rise

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 23 April 2025

    No matter how bad things might seem, at least you haven't accidentally eaten fox poop and developed an insidious tapeworm infection that masquerades as a cancerous liver tumor while it slowly destroys your organs and eventually kills you—or, you probably haven't done that.

    What's more, according to a newly published study in Emerging Infectious Diseases , even if you have somehow feasted on fox feces and acquired this nightmare parasite, it's looking less likely that doctors will need to hack out chunks of your organs to try to stop it.

    That's the good news from the new study. The bad news is that, while this infection is fairly rare, it appears to be increasing. And, if you do get it, you might have a shorter lifespan than the uninfected and may be sicker in general.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taghealth taghealth taghealth taginfectious disease taginfectious disease taginfectious disease tagparasites tagparasites tagparasites tagtapeworm tagtapeworm tagtapeworm taghealth taghealth taghealth taginfectious disease taginfectious disease taginfectious disease tagparasites tagparasites tagparasites tagtapeworm tagtapeworm tagtapeworm taghealth taghealth taghealth taginfectious disease taginfectious disease taginfectious disease tagparasites tagparasites tagparasites tagtapeworm tagtapeworm tagtapeworm

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Tapeworm in fox poop that will slowly destroy your organs is on the rise

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 23 April 2025

    No matter how bad things might seem, at least you haven't accidentally eaten fox poop and developed an insidious tapeworm infection that masquerades as a cancerous liver tumor while it slowly destroys your organs and eventually kills you—or, you probably haven't done that.

    What's more, according to a newly published study in Emerging Infectious Diseases , even if you have somehow feasted on fox feces and acquired this nightmare parasite, it's looking less likely that doctors will need to hack out chunks of your organs to try to stop it.

    That's the good news from the new study. The bad news is that, while this infection is fairly rare, it appears to be increasing. And, if you do get it, you might have a shorter lifespan than the uninfected and may be sicker in general.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taghealth taghealth taghealth taginfectious disease taginfectious disease taginfectious disease tagparasites tagparasites tagparasites tagtapeworm tagtapeworm tagtapeworm taghealth taghealth taghealth taginfectious disease taginfectious disease taginfectious disease tagparasites tagparasites tagparasites tagtapeworm tagtapeworm tagtapeworm taghealth taghealth taghealth taginfectious disease taginfectious disease taginfectious disease tagparasites tagparasites tagparasites tagtapeworm tagtapeworm tagtapeworm

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Elle Fanning teams up with a predator in first Predator: Badlands trailer

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 23 April 2025

    It's not every day you get a trailer for a new, live-action Predator movie, but today is one of those days. 20th Century Studios just released the first teaser for Predator: Badlands , a feature film that unconventionally makes the classic movie monster a protagonist.

    The film follows Dek (Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi), a young member of the predator species and society who has been banished. He'll work closely with a Weyland-Yutani Android named Thia (Elle Fanning) to take down "the ultimate adversary," which the trailer dubs a creature that "can't be killed." The adversary looks like a very large monster we haven't seen before, judging from a few shots in the trailer.

    Some or all of the film is rumored to take place on the Predator home world, and the movie intends to greatly expand on the mythology around the Predators' culture, language, and customs. It's intended as a standalone movie in the Predator/Alien universe.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagculture tagculture tagculture tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagmovie tagmovie tagmovie tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagprey tagprey tagprey tagtrailer tagtrailer tagtrailer tagculture tagculture tagculture tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagmovie tagmovie tagmovie tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagprey tagprey tagprey tagtrailer tagtrailer tagtrailer tagculture tagculture tagculture tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagmovie tagmovie tagmovie tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagprey tagprey tagprey tagtrailer tagtrailer tagtrailer

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Elle Fanning teams up with a predator in first Predator: Badlands trailer

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 23 April 2025

    It's not every day you get a trailer for a new, live-action Predator movie, but today is one of those days. 20th Century Studios just released the first teaser for Predator: Badlands , a feature film that unconventionally makes the classic movie monster a protagonist.

    The film follows Dek (Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi), a young member of the predator species and society who has been banished. He'll work closely with a Weyland-Yutani Android named Thia (Elle Fanning) to take down "the ultimate adversary," which the trailer dubs a creature that "can't be killed." The adversary looks like a very large monster we haven't seen before, judging from a few shots in the trailer.

    Some or all of the film is rumored to take place on the Predator home world, and the movie intends to greatly expand on the mythology around the Predators' culture, language, and customs. It's intended as a standalone movie in the Predator/Alien universe.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagculture tagculture tagculture tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagmovie tagmovie tagmovie tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagprey tagprey tagprey tagtrailer tagtrailer tagtrailer tagculture tagculture tagculture tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagmovie tagmovie tagmovie tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagprey tagprey tagprey tagtrailer tagtrailer tagtrailer tagculture tagculture tagculture tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagmovie tagmovie tagmovie tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagprey tagprey tagprey tagtrailer tagtrailer tagtrailer

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Elle Fanning teams up with a predator in first Predator: Badlands trailer

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 23 April 2025

    It's not every day you get a trailer for a new, live-action Predator movie, but today is one of those days. 20th Century Studios just released the first teaser for Predator: Badlands , a feature film that unconventionally makes the classic movie monster a protagonist.

    The film follows Dek (Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi), a young member of the predator species and society who has been banished. He'll work closely with a Weyland-Yutani Android named Thia (Elle Fanning) to take down "the ultimate adversary," which the trailer dubs a creature that "can't be killed." The adversary looks like a very large monster we haven't seen before, judging from a few shots in the trailer.

    Some or all of the film is rumored to take place on the Predator home world, and the movie intends to greatly expand on the mythology around the Predators' culture, language, and customs. It's intended as a standalone movie in the Predator/Alien universe.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagculture tagculture tagculture tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagmovie tagmovie tagmovie tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagprey tagprey tagprey tagtrailer tagtrailer tagtrailer tagculture tagculture tagculture tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagmovie tagmovie tagmovie tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagprey tagprey tagprey tagtrailer tagtrailer tagtrailer tagculture tagculture tagculture tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagdan trachtenberg tagmovie tagmovie tagmovie tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagpredator: badlands tagprey tagprey tagprey tagtrailer tagtrailer tagtrailer

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      Can the legal system catch up with climate science?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 23 April 2025

    A few decades ago, it wasn't realistic to attribute individual events—even heat waves—to the general warming trend driven by human-caused climate change. Now, there are peer-reviewed methods of rapidly detecting humanity's fingerprints in the wake of weather disasters like hurricanes or climate-driven wildfires .

    In today's issue of Nature, Dartmouth's Christopher Callahan and Justin Mankin argue that we've reached a similar level of sophistication regarding another key question: What are the economic damages caused by individual climate events? They argue that we can now assign monetary values to the damage caused by emissions that can be traced back to individual companies. They found that "The global economy would be $28 trillion richer ... were it not for the extreme heat caused by the emissions from the 111 carbon majors."

    They argue that this method might provide legal ammunition for those interested in seeking climate damages in court: "By revealing the human fingerprint on events previously thought to be ‘acts of God,’ attribution science has helped make climate change legally legible."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagattribution tagattribution tagattribution tagclimate change tagclimate change tagclimate change tagcosts tagcosts tagcosts tagliability tagliability tagliability tagscience tagscience tagscience tagattribution tagattribution tagattribution tagclimate change tagclimate change tagclimate change tagcosts tagcosts tagcosts tagliability tagliability tagliability tagscience tagscience tagscience tagattribution tagattribution tagattribution tagclimate change tagclimate change tagclimate change tagcosts tagcosts tagcosts tagliability tagliability tagliability

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Can the legal system catch up with climate science?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 23 April 2025

    A few decades ago, it wasn't realistic to attribute individual events—even heat waves—to the general warming trend driven by human-caused climate change. Now, there are peer-reviewed methods of rapidly detecting humanity's fingerprints in the wake of weather disasters like hurricanes or climate-driven wildfires .

    In today's issue of Nature, Dartmouth's Christopher Callahan and Justin Mankin argue that we've reached a similar level of sophistication regarding another key question: What are the economic damages caused by individual climate events? They argue that we can now assign monetary values to the damage caused by emissions that can be traced back to individual companies. They found that "The global economy would be $28 trillion richer ... were it not for the extreme heat caused by the emissions from the 111 carbon majors."

    They argue that this method might provide legal ammunition for those interested in seeking climate damages in court: "By revealing the human fingerprint on events previously thought to be ‘acts of God,’ attribution science has helped make climate change legally legible."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagattribution tagattribution tagattribution tagclimate change tagclimate change tagclimate change tagcosts tagcosts tagcosts tagliability tagliability tagliability tagscience tagscience tagscience tagattribution tagattribution tagattribution tagclimate change tagclimate change tagclimate change tagcosts tagcosts tagcosts tagliability tagliability tagliability tagscience tagscience tagscience tagattribution tagattribution tagattribution tagclimate change tagclimate change tagclimate change tagcosts tagcosts tagcosts tagliability tagliability tagliability

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Can the legal system catch up with climate science?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 23 April 2025

    A few decades ago, it wasn't realistic to attribute individual events—even heat waves—to the general warming trend driven by human-caused climate change. Now, there are peer-reviewed methods of rapidly detecting humanity's fingerprints in the wake of weather disasters like hurricanes or climate-driven wildfires .

    In today's issue of Nature, Dartmouth's Christopher Callahan and Justin Mankin argue that we've reached a similar level of sophistication regarding another key question: What are the economic damages caused by individual climate events? They argue that we can now assign monetary values to the damage caused by emissions that can be traced back to individual companies. They found that "The global economy would be $28 trillion richer ... were it not for the extreme heat caused by the emissions from the 111 carbon majors."

    They argue that this method might provide legal ammunition for those interested in seeking climate damages in court: "By revealing the human fingerprint on events previously thought to be ‘acts of God,’ attribution science has helped make climate change legally legible."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagattribution tagattribution tagattribution tagclimate change tagclimate change tagclimate change tagcosts tagcosts tagcosts tagliability tagliability tagliability tagscience tagscience tagscience tagattribution tagattribution tagattribution tagclimate change tagclimate change tagclimate change tagcosts tagcosts tagcosts tagliability tagliability tagliability tagscience tagscience tagscience tagattribution tagattribution tagattribution tagclimate change tagclimate change tagclimate change tagcosts tagcosts tagcosts tagliability tagliability tagliability

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