Anonymous ID: a0f27a March 14, 2024, 3:39 a.m. No.20565437   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5482 >>5666 >>5814 >>5871

Cybercriminals gained access to thousands of accounts using a "credential stuffing" attack

Roku has confirmed 15,363 accounts were compromised by hackers

 

Saved payment details were used to make unauthorised purchases

 

Hackers sold access to the stolen accounts for as little as $0.50 online

 

Roku has reset password for accounts under attack from scammers

 

https://www.gbnews.com/tech/roku-warning-15000-accounts-hack

Anonymous ID: a0f27a March 14, 2024, 4:26 a.m. No.20565506   🗄️.is 🔗kun

An open letter to Baroness Hallett, Chair of the UK Covid Inquiry

The Inquiry must urgently address its apparent biases, assumptions, impartiality, & lack of evidence-based approach

 

We, the undersigned, are a group of UK public health scholars and academics in related disciplines, widely published in our fields, deeply concerned that the Covid Inquiry is not living up to its mission to evaluate the mistakes made during the pandemic, whether Covid measures were appropriate, and to prepare the country for the next pandemic.

 

First, the Inquiry gives the impression of being fundamentally biased. The Inquiry originated in legal petitions brought by bereaved family groups. Yet there has been little opportunity for petitions to be brought by those who have suffered from the negative effects of pandemic policy decisions. This is preventing a more holistic assessment of impacts on population health and wellbeing. This lack of neutrality appears to have led to biased reasoning and predetermined conclusions, for example, to lockdown faster next time.

 

Second, the Inquiry is taking key assumptions for granted instead of examining and critiquing them in light of the evidence. The consensus position in pre-2020 pandemic plans was that non-pharmaceutical interventions, including lockdown, had weak evidence of effectiveness, and were predicted to cause substantial harm to society, especially if used for prolonged periods. This informed the initial response to Covid in early 2020. Yet, the Inquiry assumes that these measures are effective and appropriate. As a result, it downplays the harms to society caused by two years of emergency

infection control mandates.

 

Third, the Inquiry lacks impartiality in the selection and questioning of expert witnesses. It has given preferential treatment to scientific advisers on SAGE, who have a vested interest in maintaining the justification for their policy recommendations. Very few scientists with an alternative position have been asked to testify, and the Inquiry has been confrontational rather than inquisitorial in its questioning of these views. The Inquiry has not seriously questioned the hypotheses and assumptions offered to government, especially from government appointed modelers, which were used to justify Covid policies. Neither has it seriously examined the social and economic costs of lockdown. It has also stuck to

an agenda of UK exceptionalism failing to recognize the experience elsewhere in the world.

 

Fourth, the format of the Inquiry is impeding investigation into the key scientific and policy questions. The Inquiry has adopted a legal format that prevents a systematic evaluation of the evidence by biomedical and social scientists on the harms of restrictions to the British public, the impact on Covid from policies such as mandatory NPIs, and the state of evidence for best practice. It is focused on who did or said what, rather than asking fundamental scientific questions. Yet investigating the interplay between harms, benefits, and best practice is critical to preparing for the next pandemic. The Inquiry, as currently functioning, appears unsuited to this task of national importance.

 

Fifth, the Inquiry risks reducing public trust in the impartiality and independence of government accountability and oversight. Its size and cost (by some estimates £300-500 million) will make it the largest public Inquiry ever undertaken to date, and yet its shortcomings, if not addressed, risk compromising the credibility of future public inquiries.

 

We believe the Inquiry has a significant and important mission and we would like to see it succeed. However, if it is to do so, these shortcomings need to be urgently addressed. The Inquiry must invite a much broader range of scientific experts with more critical viewpoints. It must also review the evidence on diverse topics so that it can be fully informed of relevant science and the economic and social cost of Covid policies to British society.

 

We, the undersigned, believe this is an urgent national priority and fundamental to ensuring that future pandemic response is evidence- based and maximizes the health and well-being of all.

 

Drafted by

 

Dr. Kevin Bardosh, Collateral Global; Division of Infection Medicine, University of Edinburgh.

Prof. Sunetra Gupta, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford.

 

Contact information: kevin@collateralglobal.org

 

https://collateralglobal.org/article/an-open-letter-to-baroness-hallett-chair-of-the-uk-covid-inquiry/