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The hugely popular Chinese app TikTok may be forced out of the U.S., where a measure to outlaw the video-sharing app has won congressional approval and is on its way to President Biden for his signature.In India, the app was banned nearly four years ago. Here s what happened:Why did India ban TikTok In June 2020, TikTok users in India bid goodbye to the app, which is operated by Chinese internet firm ByteDance. New Delhi had suddenly banned
stanley thermos the popular app, alongside dozens other Chinese apps, following a military clash along the India-China border. Twenty Indian and four Chinese soldiers were killed, and ties between the two Asian giants plunged to a new low.The government cited privacy concerns and said that Chinese apps pose a threat to Indias sovereignty and security.The move mostly drew widespread support in India, where protesters had been calling for a boycott of Chinese goods since the deadly confrontation in the remote Karakoram mountain border region. There was a clamor leading up to this, and the popular narrative was how can we allow Chinese companies to do business in India when were in the middle of a military standoff, said Nikhil Pahwa,
stanley cups a digital policy expert and founder of tech website MediaNama.Just months before the ban, India had also restricted investment from Chinese companies, Pahwa added. TikTok wasnt a one-off case. Today, India has banned over 500 Chinese apps to date. TikTok asks creators for help as bill to ban it moves through CongressHow di
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With misinformation lurking around nearly every corner of the internet, researchers across the country are working to rehab the image of bats in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.Barry Genzlinger runs the Vermont Bat Center and has been rehabbing bats for about a decade. Bats are nature s absolute best pest controller for nighttime pests, he explained.While he has a personal love for bats, Genzlinger understands why not everyone loves these mammals. Hollywood has convinced us that bats are scary, evil, they attack humans. When in reality, they are just the cutest darn thing, Genzlinger said.Genzlinger s goal these days is to keep bats from catching coronavirus. Every single bat he rehabilitated this winter got a nose swab, just like us humans.Rese
stanley cup archers across the country are doing similar testing. Those swabs are then sent to Tufts University to be analyzed. So far, none of Genzlingers bats have tested positive for the virus. But the concern is that if one bat has COVID-19, it could infect an entire colony. Its not so much that people i
stanley kaffeebecher n North America are concerned about getting COVID from our bats, its the other way around. We are concerned about giving COVID to bats that have never been exposed to it, he said.COVID-19 has not done the image of bats any favors. The origin of the virus is not confirmed, but some studies indicate it originated from similar viruses found in bats in the Eastern Hemisphere.In an effort to rehab the image of bats during this pandemic, sc
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