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Techâs Legal Shield Appears Likely to Survive as Congress Focuses on Details
Section 230 isnât expected to be revoked, but even the more modest proposals for weakening it could have effects that ripple across the internet.
Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, who co-wrote Section 230, said, “I think it would be a huge mistake to use the disgusting, nauseating attacks on the Capitol as a vehicle to suppress free speech.”Credit.Jason Andrew for The New York Times
March 9, 2021
WASHINGTON â Former President Donald J. Trump called multiple times for repealing the law that shields tech companies from legal responsibility over what people post. President Biden, as a candidate, said the law should be ârevoked.â
Hunting for a Leftover Vaccine? This Site Will Match You With a Clinic.
More than half a million people have signed up for Dr. B, a service that promises to match them with clinics struggling to equitably dole out extra doses before they expire.
Allison Ingram, a pharmacist, administered the Moderna Covid vaccine to Thomas Black at Cornerstone Pharmacy - Rodney Parham in Little Rock, Ark., on Monday.Credit.Rory Doyle for The New York Times
March 9, 2021
In the hustle to score an elusive vaccine appointment, the leftover dose has become the stuff of pandemic lore.
Extra shots which must be used within hours once taken out of cold storage have been doled out to drugstore customers buying midnight snacks, people who are friends with nurses and those who show up at closing time at certain grocery stores and pharmacies. At some larger vaccination sites, the race to use every dose sets off a flurry of end-of-the-day phone calls.
Girls Who Code expands their campus outreach
Girls Who Code is a new initiative group where they will teach problem-solving through robotics. Photo Submitted by GROW
Georgia State’s Girls Who Code (GWC) is determined to include young girls in coding. With the help of robotics professor Dr. Ashwin Ashok, GWC created the sub-club “GROW,” shortly after GWC arrived at Georgia State. GROW is a women’s robotics club that President D’Anne Anthony described as being not just about robotics but also about solving problems.
“You have a problem, but how can you solve it is the bottom line,” Anthony said. “With computer science, you can solve anything with coding.”