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Twitter refugee (@lisalalibrarian) ; retired academic librarian; writing about technology, infosec, culture, etc
@0xabad1dea "Many worms will follow you" is an ancient curse in the Dune universe 🪱
@Nonya_Bidniss Is it because they were too delicious?
Flipboard is federating 250 publisher profiles and 4,000 of their curated Magazines, making it possible for people across the fediverse to find and follow their content.
https://about.flipboard.com/fediverse/flipboard-federates-250-publishers/
Flipboard Brings 250 Publishers to the Fediverse

Flipboard is federating publisher profiles and their curated Magazines, making it possible for people across the fediverse to find and follow their content.

About Flipboard
The Internet Archive losing its appeal means one thing: pirate stuff. Pirate brazenly. There’s no point trying to do it the nice way - you’ll get shut down anyway. Copy, share, and archive to your heart’s content. It’s the only way we’re keeping digital media and our cultural memory intact.
12/08/2024: Perseid Meteors over Stonehenge
stolen from reddit #crowdstrike
@Nonya_Bidniss Never travel without paper maps/atlas; even printed out in advance google maps in some cases. Texas and a lot of other states still pass out free road maps; pre-pandemic you could stop at state visitor centers and pick them up > at least in 2019 you could.
@Nonya_Bidniss lol 🤡

Yesterday, the best news which has ever come out during my lifetime, did. There's going to finally be an HIV cure. It's a ways down the road, but this all but guarantees it.

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-08-treatment-based-gene-safely-effectively.html

Here's the original paper explaining what was done in detail. Again, it's going to be a few more years before this is on the shelf, but there's finally hope for the end of HIV.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41434-023-00410-4

Here's one of the two papers where the technology germinated about a decade ago. Note that the last paper was SIV instead of HIV, but it's such a good model, it almost always translates to humans.

https://www.nature.com/articles/nbt.2647

Here's the other one. If you don't like reading original source materials like this, or want to read the first announcement with the details on the good news, I'll sum up...

https://www.nature.com/articles/nbt.2623

This is a gene therapy which inactivates HIV/SIV by entering the virus itself and editing the genome. This is cool in and of itself, but it is meaningful because it does a thing called "draining the viral reservoir". This is what makes it a cure and not just a treatment.

The reason why you can only suppress, and not eradicate viruses, is because they will go into a dormant state and hang out for years and then re-deploy, and you're back where you started.

This is why, as amazing as antivirals are, you're generally stuck taking them forever.

This is also why Sovaldi is such a big deal: it actually *cures* Hepatitis C, which previously was only treatable. You take it (along with other things) for twelve weeks, and at the end you are free of the virus. This is a first. No other cures for viruses exist.

And now there's a method to drain the viral reservoir and inactivate HIV. And this isn't just the best news of my lifetime, but it also paves the way for therapies to cure Hep B, and any number of others.

I am so excited, so happy, so hopeful.

✨💖✨

Novel treatment based on gene editing safely and effectively removes HIV-like virus from genomes of non-human primates

A single injection of a novel CRISPR gene-editing treatment safely and efficiently removes SIV—a virus related to the AIDS-causing agent HIV—from the genomes of non-human primates, scientists at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University now report. The groundbreaking work complements previous experiments as the basis for the first-ever clinical trial of an HIV gene-editing technology in human patients, which was authorized by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2022.

Medical Xpress
@InfoSecSherpa Congrats!😀​