the loser countries of italy, spain and france making common cause. the beginning of european disintegration.
Tag: europe
Volcano & Air Travel
last time the eruption lasted for months. this would kill european airlines, business travel and tourism at the very least.
Internet of European Things
brussels is waking up to the internet of things “that potentially concerns 50-70B machines”.
Too many EU leaders
as soon as possible, all 27 EU members must ratify the Lisbon treaty, which creates the new job of a full-time EU president, so that small, incompetent countries like the Czech Republic no longer take turns to speak for Europe.
Paleogenetics
We recently put together a DNA sequence for the earliest mammal genome, 75 ma old. The cool thing is that you can get a lot of information about ancestral genomes just by crunching probabilities — even if you don’t have any fossils, or mosquitos-trapped-in-amber, or time machines, or whatever.
2008-11-20: Scientists are also reactivating a disabled virus in human DNA after millions of years. Welcome to Paleovirology. And crappy michael crichton novels, probably. And you can take it further to Paleo‐metagenomics:
Surviving fragments of genetic material preserved in sediments allow metagenomics researchers to see the full diversity of past life — even microbes.
2014-02-14: The largest unwritten story is ~200 ka of prehistory. We’ll write the major outlines of it in the next 100 years.
Genetic data identified over 100 events occurring over the past 4 ka: the Mongol empire, Arab slave trade, Bantu expansion, European colonialism, as well as unrecorded events, revealing admixture to be an almost universal force shaping human populations
2014-03-27: Amazing overview from the guy who sequenced neanderthals and denovisans, including recent research into FOXP2, the language gene.
2015-06-16: (long) overview of the state of genetics in prehistory
By the middle years of the 2000s researchers had gone back to a focus on recombining autosomal markers. But now they had a whole human genome to compare it to, as well as SNP-chips which quickly yielded large troves of data with little effort. In 2008 a paper was published which took the origin HGDP data set collected by Cavalli-Sforza and his colleagues, and utilized the new technologies to make deeper inferences. First, instead of 100s of markers you had 650k SNPs. Second, the emergence of powerful new analytic and computational resources allowed for the complemention of tree-based and PCA visualizations of genetic relationship with model-based understandings of genetic variation and population structure. By “model-based,” I mean that the algorithm posits particular parameters (e.g., “3 ancestral populations”) and operates upon the data (e.g., “650k SNPs in 1000 individuals”) , to generate results which are the best representation of the fit of the data to the model. This different from PCA, which has fewer assumptions, and represents genetic variation geometrically (each axis represents an independent dimension of variation within the data). Model-based clustering is very clear and aesthetically appealing. It gives precise results. But, the model itself is not necessarily right.
2015-09-15: A perspective
Ancient genomics is a powerful tool for the study of prehistory, but it is still in its infancy. The first true population studies using ancient nuclear DNA – with samples numbering in the 10s instead of single digits – are only 1 month old. For the moment, we have just 2 ancient genomes from the Americas. For other parts of the world, such as Africa, South and East Asia, we have 1 or 0. With so few data points available, the world of prehistory seen through the lens of ancient DNA is like a landscape sporadically illuminated by lighting. Plenty of surprises are left in store. The situation right now is a bit like that of archaeology just after the invention of Carbon-14 dating. A revolution is on its way, but we don’t yet know what it will bring.
2016-05-10: There have been multiple population replacements in Europe
~50 ka ago humans leave Africa, and mix with a number of Neanderthals. ~40 ka ago, they arrive in Europe. ~35-40 ka ago the first modern Europeans are replaced by another population. This second population is culturally similar to the first, and contributes some (though small proportionally) ancestry to modern Europeans. It is replaced by another population, which does not contribute much to modern Europeans (Gravettians), though populations related to it do. It is replaced by a population related to the first Europeans with descendants (Magdalenians, who are descended in part from Aurignacians, and do not share much drift with Gravettians). Then, the Magdalenians are replaced by Villabruna populations, the very late Paleolithic populations at the tail end of the Ice Age. The Villabruna have mixture from both the Near East, and to a lesser extent East Asia. Or, Villabruna populations were intrusive to the Near East, and possibly East Asia, or there were mediating populations between. It is all somewhat unclear. Then the Villabruna populations, which become Mesolithic hunter-gatherers, are overwhelmed by Near Eastern groups, which have very exotic ancestry unrelated to all other non-Africans (Basal Eurasian). Finally, the Neolithic groups are overwhelmed by populations from the steppe, who are themselves compounds of very distinct elements.
2019-09-30: We can also detect missing species, or genetic ghosts if you will
Genes from an extinct “ghost ape” live on in modern bonobos. Because apes have their natural habitat in the trees of the rainy tropical forest, with an acidic soil where the organic matter decomposes very quickly, the fossil record for our closest relatives is poor, but genetic data in living bonobos could help fill in gaps. Similar, but different: David Gokhman summoned a ghost, using information for 32 skeletal features encoded in DNA that was extracted from a pinky bone. DNA reveals first look at enigmatic human relative, providing more details of the physical structure of Denisovans.
2023-01-17: Using DNA to study parental age differences. Amazing.
The research used genetic mutations in modern human DNA to create a timeline of when people have tended to conceive children over the past 250 ka, since our species first emerged. 26.9 years was the overall average age of conception during the past 250 ka. But breaking this down by sex showed that men averaged 30.7 years when they conceived a child, compared with 23.2 years for women. The numbers fluctuated over time, but the model suggested that men consistently had children later in life than women.
Germany Overleveraging
the total liabilities of Deutsche Bank amount to around 2 trillion euro, or over 80% of the GDP of Germany. The total liabilities of Barclays of around 1.3 trillion pounds surpasses Britain’s GDP.
Immigration trends
As the Poles pack their bags, those who came to rely on them to paint their walls or fix their computers are feeling the loss. Reinforcements could be on the way: Romanians and Bulgarians will be able to work freely in Britain from 2013 and could come earlier if the economy picks up. But Ms Chappell points out that those countries have strong links with Italy and Spain, and other western European countries have more open labour markets than they did in 2004. Britain may not look as attractive a destination a second time around.
calling the free movement of people within the EU “immigration” is ridiculous. good to see it happening at this scale, that sclerotic place needs it bad.
EU Internet Nonsense
The EU takes money from the Microsoft ATM with one hand, and then invests it in a sure-to-fail “Google Killer” with the other. Of course, I’m stretching the facts here to make a point. The EU is simply allowing the French and German governments to make these investments with their own taxpayer’s money. There is no direct link between Microsoft fines and these subsidies. But the point is the same – the EU is not willing to let free markets determine winners and losers. The winners must be home grown, at any cost. And US companies that have too much success in Europe seem to face a bleak choice – massive fines or government-backed competitors. It’s absurd. And it’s no wonder that many of the best European entrepreneurs keep coming to the US to start companies.
i hate european industrial policy. so misguided.
2015-03-04: europe continues to be run by morons.
Just 1 week after the American government voted to enforce net neutrality, the European Union is considering plans allowing the opposite, permitting internet providers to create a tiered internet service with paid fast lanes.
2015-12-17: europe is working very hard to retain its top spot for the dumbest tech policies.
New European data protection rules would see companies require parental consent to handle data of those under 16, effectively blocking them from social media
2016-05-26:
But the much more concerning stuff involves the regulation of the internet. Now, yes, the EU Commission basically tries to bend over backwards to say that this isn’t about creating new regulations for the internet. And also to claim that they’re not changing the “intermediary liability” regime as laid out in the E-Commerce Directive that is a decent, if unfortunately weaker, version of US intermediary liability protections, saying that platforms aren’t responsible for actions of their users. But… there’s a big “but” after those claims, and it basically undermines those claims. You can read the following and see them swearing no new regulations and no changes, but the 4 bullet points and the details buried in them suggest something entirely different
one wishes that brexit happens so that the EU doesn’t have time for nonsense like this.
2018-09-18: how the latest internet nonsense coming out of the EU will only end up harming the EU.
If regulators, EU or otherwise, truly want to constrain Facebook and Google — or, for that matter, all of the other ad networks and companies that in reality are far more of a threat to user privacy — then the ultimate force is user demand, and the lever is demanding transparency on exactly what these companies are doing. To that end, were I a regulator concerned about user privacy, my starting point would not be an enforcement mechanism but a transparency mechanism. I would establish clear metrics to measure user privacy — types of data retained, types of data inferred, mechanisms to delete user-generated data, mechanisms to delete inferred data, what data is shared, and with whom — and then measure the companies under my purview — with subpoena power if necessary — and publish the results for the users to see.
EU fines Microsoft $1.4b
excellent. less money for adventures
A Talent Contest We’re Losing
The European Union took a step recently that the US Congress can’t seem to muster the courage to take. By proposing a simple change in immigration policy, E.U. politicians served notice that they are serious about competing with the United States and Asia to attract the world’s top talent to live, work and innovate in Europe. With Congress gridlocked on immigration, it’s clear that the next Silicon Valley will not be in the United States.
h1-b is completely broken. between this, the monopoly money housing bubble and the waste going into “homeland security”, the us is well-positioned to slip badly