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How one carbon market is helping industry fight climate change

ClimateWire News - Mon, 07/07/2025 - 6:30am
Washington state's cap-and-invest program provides financial incentives to oil refineries and other big energy users to undertake decarbonization efforts.

UK’s Lib Dems have a plan to start banging on about climate

ClimateWire News - Mon, 07/07/2025 - 6:28am
The United Kingdom’s third party believes green policy is the way to hoover up Tory voters.

‘Pretty much alone’: EU’s greenest leader fights the tide

ClimateWire News - Mon, 07/07/2025 - 6:27am
The European Commission’s second most powerful politician is isolated, beleaguered and under attack — just like the green policy she has vowed to protect.

Heat is making Palestinians’ long walks to fetch water worse

ClimateWire News - Mon, 07/07/2025 - 6:26am
The scorching summer coincides with a lack of clean water for the majority of Gaza’s population, most of whom are displaced in tented communities.

A majority of companies are already feeling the climate heat

ClimateWire News - Mon, 07/07/2025 - 6:25am
Over half of the firms surveyed in a recent Morgan Stanley report experienced the climate's impact on operations within the past year.

Startup says its technology will save planet. Scientists have doubts.

ClimateWire News - Mon, 07/07/2025 - 6:24am
The company says it has designed particles that when released in the ocean will trap carbon at the bottom of the sea.

A systems perspective for climate adaptation in deltas

Nature Climate Change - Mon, 07/07/2025 - 12:00am

Nature Climate Change, Published online: 07 July 2025; doi:10.1038/s41558-025-02368-0

Deltas are complex and are among the most vulnerable landforms under climate change. Studying them collectively highlights common stressors that drive their most significant challenges. A holistic conceptual framing of a delta and its feeding river basin is fundamental to effective adaptation planning.

How to Build on Washington’s “My Health, My Data” Act

EFF: Updates - Sun, 07/06/2025 - 6:49pm

In 2023, the State of Washington enacted one of the strongest consumer data privacy laws in recent years: the “my health my data” act (HB 1155). EFF commends the civil rights, data privacy, and reproductive justice advocates who worked to pass this law.

This post suggests ways for legislators and advocates in other states to build on the Washington law and draft one with even stronger protections. This post will separately address the law’s scope (such as who is protected); its safeguards (such as consent and minimization); and its enforcement (such as a private right of action). While the law only applies to one category of personal data – our health information – its structure could be used to protect all manner of data.

Scope of Protection

Authors of every consumer data privacy law must make three decisions about scope: What kind of data is protected? Whose data is protected? And who is regulated?

The Washington law protects “consumer health data,” defined as information linkable to a consumer that identifies their “physical or mental health status.” This includes all manner of conditions and treatments, such as gender-affirming and reproductive care. While EFF’s ultimate goal is protection of all types of personal information, bills that protect at least some types can be a great start.

The Washington law protects “consumers,” defined as all natural persons who reside in the state or had their health data collected there. It is best, as here, to protect all people. If a data privacy law protects just some people, that can incentivize a regulated entity to collect even more data, in order to distinguish protected from unprotected people. Notably, Washington’s definition of “consumers” applies only in “an individual or household context,” but not “an employment context”; thus, Washingtonians will need a different health privacy law to protect them from their snooping bosses.

The Washington law defines a “regulated entity” as “any legal entity” that both: “conducts business” in the state or targets residents for products or services; and “determines the purpose and means” of processing consumer health data. This appears to include many non-profit groups, which is good, because such groups can harmfully process a lot of personal data.

The law excludes government from regulation, which is not unusual for data privacy bills focused on non-governmental actors. State and local government will likely need to be regulated by another data privacy law.

Unfortunately, the Washington law also excludes “contracted service providers when processing data on behalf of government.” A data broker or other surveillance-oriented business should not be free from regulation just because it is working for the police.

Consent or Minimization to Collect or Share Health Data

The most important part of Washington’s law requires either consent or minimization for a regulated entity to collect or share a consumer’s health data.

The law has a strong definition of “consent.” It must be “a clear affirmative act that signifies a consumer’s freely given, specific, informed, opt-in, voluntary, and unambiguous agreement.” Consent cannot be obtained with “broad terms of use” or “deceptive design.”

Absent consent, a regulated entity cannot collect or share a consumer’s health data except as necessary to provide a good or service that the consumer requested. Such rules are often called “data minimization.” Their virtue is that a consumer does not need to do anything to enjoy their statutory privacy rights; the burden is on the regulated entity to process less data.

As to data “sale,” the Washington law requires enhanced consent (which the law calls “valid authorization”). Sale is the most dangerous form of sharing, because it incentivizes businesses to collect the most possible data in hopes of later selling it. For this reason, some laws flatly ban sale of sensitive data, like the Illinois biometric information privacy act (BIPA).

For context, there are four ways for a bill or law to configure consent and/or minimization. Some require just consent, like BIPA’s provisions on data collection. Others require just minimization, like the federal “my body my data” bill. Still others require both, like the Massachusetts location data privacy bill. And some require either one or the other. In various times and places, EFF has supported all four configurations. “Either/or” is weakest, because it allows regulated entities to choose whether to minimize or to seek consent – a choice they will make based on their profit and not our privacy.

Two Protections of Location Data Privacy

Data brokers harvest our location information and sell it to anyone who will pay, including advertisers, police, and other adversaries. Legislators are stepping forward to address this threat.

The Washington law does so in two ways. First, the “consumer health data” protected by the consent-or-minimization rule is defined to include “precise location information that could reasonably indicate a consumer’s attempt to acquire or receive health services or supplies.” In turn, “precise location” is defined as within 1,750’ of a person.

Second, the Washington law bans a “geofence” around an “in-person health care service,” if “used” for one of three forbidden purposes (to track consumers, to collect their data, or to send them messages or ads). A “geofence” is defined as technology that uses GPS or the like “to establish a virtual boundary” of 2,000’ around the perimeter of a physical location.

This is a good start. It is also much better than weaker rules that only apply to the immediate vicinity of sensitive locations. Such rules allow adversaries to use location data to track us as we move towards sensitive locations, observe us enter the small no-data bubble around those locations, and infer what we may have done there. On the other hand, Washington’s rules apply to sizeable areas. Also, its consent-or-minimization rule applies to all locations that could indicate pursuit of health care (not just health facilities). And its geofence rule forbids use of location data to track people.

Still, the better approach, as in several recent bills, is to simply protect all location data. Protecting just one kind of sensitive location, like houses of worship, will leave out others, like courthouses. More fundamentally, all locations are sensitive, given the risk that others will use our location data to determine where – and with whom – we live, work, and socialize.

More Data Privacy Protections

Other safeguards in the Washington law deserve attention from legislators in other states:

  • Regulated entities must publish a privacy policy that discloses, for example, the categories of data collected and shared, and the purposes of collection. Regulated entities must not collect, use, or share additional categories of data, or process them for additional purposes, without consent.
  • Regulated entities must provide consumers the rights to access and delete their data.
  • Regulated entities must restrict data access to just those employees who need it, and maintain industry-standard data security
Enforcement

A law is only as strong as its teeth. The best way to ensure enforcement is to empower people to sue regulated entities that violate their privacy; this is often called a “private right of action.”

The Washington law provides that its violation is “an unfair or deceptive act” under the state’s separate consumer protection act. That law, in turn, bans unfair or deceptive acts in the conduct of trade or commerce. Upon a violation of the ban, that law provides a civil action to “any person who is injured in [their] business or property,” with the remedies of injunction, actual damages, treble damages up to $25,000, and legal fees and costs. It remains to be seen how Washington’s courts will apply this old civil action to the new “my health my data” act.

Washington legislators are demonstrating that privacy is important to public policy, but a more explicit claim would be cleaner: invasion of the fundamental human right to data privacy. Sadly, there is a nationwide debate about whether injury to data privacy, by itself, should be enough to go to court, without also proving a more tangible injury like identity theft. The best legislative models ensure full access to the courts in two ways. First, they provide: “A violation of this law regarding an individual’s data constitutes an injury to that individual, and any individual alleging a violation of this law may bring a civil action.” Second, they provide a baseline amount of damages (often called “liquidated” or “statutory” damages), because it is often difficult to prove actual damages arising from a data privacy injury.

Finally, data privacy laws must protect people from “pay for privacy” schemes, where a business charges a higher price or delivers an inferior product if a consumer exercises their statutory data privacy rights. Such schemes will lead to a society of privacy “haves” and “have nots.”

The Washington law has two helpful provisions. First, a regulated entity “may not unlawfully discriminate against a consumer for exercising any rights included in this chapter.” Second, there can be no data sale without a “statement” from the regulated entity to the consumer that “the provision of goods or services may not be conditioned on the consumer signing the valid authorization.”

Some privacy bills contain more-specific language, for example along these lines: “a regulated entity cannot take an adverse action against a consumer (such as refusal to provide a good or service, charging a higher price, or providing a lower quality) because the consumer exercised their data privacy rights, unless the data at issue is essential to the good or service they requested and then only to the extent the data is essential.”

What About Congress?

We still desperately need comprehensive federal consumer data privacy law built on “privacy first” principles. In the meantime, states are taking the lead. The very worst thing Congress could do now is preempt states from protecting their residents’ data privacy. Advocates and legislators from across the country, seeking to take up this mantle, would benefit from looking at – and building on – Washington’s “my health my data” law.

Friday Squid Blogging: How Squid Skin Distorts Light

Schneier on Security - Fri, 07/04/2025 - 5:01pm

New research.

As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven’t covered.

Blog moderation policy.

Robotic probe quickly measures key properties of new materials

MIT Latest News - Fri, 07/04/2025 - 2:00pm

Scientists are striving to discover new semiconductor materials that could boost the efficiency of solar cells and other electronics. But the pace of innovation is bottlenecked by the speed at which researchers can manually measure important material properties.

A fully autonomous robotic system developed by MIT researchers could speed things up.

Their system utilizes a robotic probe to measure an important electrical property known as photoconductance, which is how electrically responsive a material is to the presence of light.

The researchers inject materials-science-domain knowledge from human experts into the machine-learning model that guides the robot’s decision making. This enables the robot to identify the best places to contact a material with the probe to gain the most information about its photoconductance, while a specialized planning procedure finds the fastest way to move between contact points.

During a 24-hour test, the fully autonomous robotic probe took more than 125 unique measurements per hour, with more precision and reliability than other artificial intelligence-based methods.

By dramatically increasing the speed at which scientists can characterize important properties of new semiconductor materials, this method could spur the development of solar panels that produce more electricity.

“I find this paper to be incredibly exciting because it provides a pathway for autonomous, contact-based characterization methods. Not every important property of a material can be measured in a contactless way. If you need to make contact with your sample, you want it to be fast and you want to maximize the amount of information that you gain,” says Tonio Buonassisi, professor of mechanical engineering and senior author of a paper on the autonomous system.

His co-authors include lead author Alexander (Aleks) Siemenn, a graduate student; postdocs Basita Das and Kangyu Ji; and graduate student Fang Sheng. The work appears today in Science Advances.

Making contact

Since 2018, researchers in Buonassisi’s laboratory have been working toward a fully autonomous materials discovery laboratory. They’ve recently focused on discovering new perovskites, which are a class of semiconductor materials used in photovoltaics like solar panels.

In prior work, they developed techniques to rapidly synthesize and print unique combinations of perovskite material. They also designed imaging-based methods to determine some important material properties.

But photoconductance is most accurately characterized by placing a probe onto the material, shining a light, and measuring the electrical response.

“To allow our experimental laboratory to operate as quickly and accurately as possible, we had to come up with a solution that would produce the best measurements while minimizing the time it takes to run the whole procedure,” says Siemenn.

Doing so required the integration of machine learning, robotics, and material science into one autonomous system.

To begin, the robotic system uses its onboard camera to take an image of a slide with perovskite material printed on it.

Then it uses computer vision to cut that image into segments, which are fed into a neural network model that has been specially designed to incorporate domain expertise from chemists and materials scientists.

“These robots can improve the repeatability and precision of our operations, but it is important to still have a human in the loop. If we don’t have a good way to implement the rich knowledge from these chemical experts into our robots, we are not going to be able to discover new materials,” Siemenn adds.

The model uses this domain knowledge to determine the optimal points for the probe to contact based on the shape of the sample and its material composition. These contact points are fed into a path planner that finds the most efficient way for the probe to reach all points.

The adaptability of this machine-learning approach is especially important because the printed samples have unique shapes, from circular drops to jellybean-like structures.

“It is almost like measuring snowflakes — it is difficult to get two that are identical,” Buonassisi says.

Once the path planner finds the shortest path, it sends signals to the robot’s motors, which manipulate the probe and take measurements at each contact point in rapid succession.

Key to the speed of this approach is the self-supervised nature of the neural network model. The model determines optimal contact points directly on a sample image — without the need for labeled training data.

The researchers also accelerated the system by enhancing the path planning procedure. They found that adding a small amount of noise, or randomness, to the algorithm helped it find the shortest path.

“As we progress in this age of autonomous labs, you really do need all three of these expertise — hardware building, software, and an understanding of materials science — coming together into the same team to be able to innovate quickly. And that is part of the secret sauce here,” Buonassisi says.

Rich data, rapid results

Once they had built the system from the ground up, the researchers tested each component. Their results showed that the neural network model found better contact points with less computation time than seven other AI-based methods. In addition, the path planning algorithm consistently found shorter path plans than other methods.

When they put all the pieces together to conduct a 24-hour fully autonomous experiment, the robotic system conducted more than 3,000 unique photoconductance measurements at a rate exceeding 125 per hour.

In addition, the level of detail provided by this precise measurement approach enabled the researchers to identify hotspots with higher photoconductance as well as areas of material degradation.

“Being able to gather such rich data that can be captured at such fast rates, without the need for human guidance, starts to open up doors to be able to discover and develop new high-performance semiconductors, especially for sustainability applications like solar panels,” Siemenn says.

The researchers want to continue building on this robotic system as they strive to create a fully autonomous lab for materials discovery.

This work is supported, in part, by First Solar, Eni through the MIT Energy Initiative, MathWorks, the University of Toronto’s Acceleration Consortium, the U.S. Department of Energy, and the U.S. National Science Foundation.

East Antarctica slides into the spotlight as surface melt hotspot

Nature Climate Change - Fri, 07/04/2025 - 12:00am

Nature Climate Change, Published online: 04 July 2025; doi:10.1038/s41558-025-02371-5

Ice-sheet surface melting impacts sea level and ice dynamics. Now two studies provide a wake-up call for monitoring melt in Antarctica.

Continent-wide mapping shows increasing sensitivity of East Antarctica to meltwater ponding

Nature Climate Change - Fri, 07/04/2025 - 12:00am

Nature Climate Change, Published online: 04 July 2025; doi:10.1038/s41558-025-02363-5

This study provides a continent-wide assessment of surface meltwater area in Antarctica between 2006 and 2021, highlighting recent increases in magnitude and variability in East Antarctica, with indications that the ice-sheet surface is becoming increasingly prone to further meltwater ponding.

Rapid increases in satellite-observed ice sheet surface meltwater production

Nature Climate Change - Fri, 07/04/2025 - 12:00am

Nature Climate Change, Published online: 04 July 2025; doi:10.1038/s41558-025-02364-4

Surface melt is an important component of ice sheet dynamics, but for many remote regions the melt rates are mainly known from models. Here the authors present satellite observations of melt rates for Greenland and Antarctica, showing that East Antarctica has become a melting hotspot.

MIT and Mass General Hospital researchers find disparities in organ allocation

MIT Latest News - Thu, 07/03/2025 - 10:00am

In 1954, the world’s first successful organ transplant took place at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, in the form of a kidney donated from one twin to the other. At the time, a group of doctors and scientists had correctly theorized that the recipient’s antibodies were unlikely to reject an organ from an identical twin. One Nobel Prize and a few decades later, advancements in immune-suppressing drugs increased the viability of and demand for organ transplants. Today, over 1 million organ transplants have been performed in the United States, more than any other country in the world.

The impressive scale of this achievement was made possible due to advances in organ matching systems: The first computer-based organ matching system was released in 1977. Despite continued innovation in computing, medicine, and matching technology over the years, over 100,000 people in the U.S. are currently on the national transplant waiting list and 13 people die each day waiting for an organ transplant. 

Most computational research in organ allocation is focused on the initial stages, when waitlisted patients are being prioritized for organ transplants. In a new paper presented at ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (FAccT) in Athens, Greece, researchers from MIT and Massachusetts General Hospital focused on the final, less-studied stage: when an offer is made and the physician at the transplant center decides on behalf of the patient whether to accept or reject the offered organ. 

“I don’t think we were terribly surprised, but we were obviously disappointed,” co-first author and recent MIT PhD graduate Hammaad Adam says. Using computational models to analyze transplantation data from over 160,000 transplant candidates in the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) between 2010 and 2020, the researchers found that physicians were overall less likely to accept liver and lung offers on behalf of Black candidates, resulting in additional barriers for Black patients in the organ allocation process.  

For livers, Black patients had 7 percent lower odds of offer acceptance than white patients. When it came to lungs, the disparity became even larger, with 20 percent lower odds of having an offer acceptance than white patients with similar characteristics.

The data don’t necessarily point to clinician bias as the main influence. “The bigger takeaway is that even if there are factors that justify clinical decision-making, there could be clinical conditions that we didn’t control for, that are more common for Black patients,” Adam explains. If the wait-list fails to account for certain patterns in decision-making, they could create obstacles in the process even if the process itself is “unbiased.”

The researchers also point out that high variability in offer acceptance and risk tolerances among transplant centers is a potential factor complicating the decision-making process. Their FAccT paper references a 2020 paper published in JAMA Cardiology, which concluded that wait-list candidates listed at transplant centers with lower offer acceptance rates have a higher likelihood of mortality. 

Another key finding was that an offer was more likely to be accepted if the donor and candidate were of the same race. The paper describes this trend as “concerning,” given the historical inequities in organ procurement that have limited donation from racial and ethnic minority groups. 

Previous work from Adam and his collaborators has aimed to address this gap. Last year, they compiled and released Organ Retrieval and Collection of Health Information for Donation (ORCHID), the first multi-center dataset describing the performance of organ procurement organizations (OPOs). ORCHID contains 10 years’ worth of OPO data, and is intended to facilitate research that addresses bias in organ procurement.

“Being able to do good work in this field takes time,” says Adam, who notes that the entirety of the organ allocation project took years to complete. To his knowledge, only one paper to date studies the association between offer acceptance and race. 

While the bureaucratic and highly interdisciplinary nature of clinical AI projects can dissuade computer science graduate students from pursuing them, Adam committed to the project for the duration of his PhD in the lab of associate professor of electrical engineering Marzyeh Ghassemi, an affiliate of the MIT Jameel Clinic and the Institute of Medical Engineering and Sciences.

To graduate students interested in pursuing clinical AI research projects, Adam recommends that they “free [themselves] from the cycle of publishing every four months.”

“I found it freeing, to be honest — it’s OK if these collaborations take a while,” he says. “It’s hard to avoid that. I made the conscious choice a few years ago and I was happy doing that work.”

This work was supported with funding from the MIT Jameel Clinic. This research was supported, in part, by Takeda Development Center Americas Inc. (successor in interest to Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc.), an NIH Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award, a CIFAR AI Chair at the Vector Institute, and by the National Institutes of Health.

Surveillance Used by a Drug Cartel

Schneier on Security - Thu, 07/03/2025 - 7:06am

Once you build a surveillance system, you can’t control who will use it:

A hacker working for the Sinaloa drug cartel was able to obtain an FBI official’s phone records and use Mexico City’s surveillance cameras to help track and kill the agency’s informants in 2018, according to a new US justice department report.

The incident was disclosed in a justice department inspector general’s audit of the FBI’s efforts to mitigate the effects of “ubiquitous technical surveillance,” a term used to describe the global proliferation of cameras and the thriving trade in vast stores of communications, travel, and location data...

California asks judge to reject push to halt climate disclosure laws

ClimateWire News - Thu, 07/03/2025 - 6:38am
Deputy Attorney General Caitlan McLoon argued the laws have not been implemented and are a legal attempt to regulate business misinformation.

Trump’s science guidelines could amplify climate skeptics

ClimateWire News - Thu, 07/03/2025 - 6:37am
The new White House rules put more power in the hands of political appointees.

Workers died in high heat as OSHA debates protections

ClimateWire News - Thu, 07/03/2025 - 6:36am
The June heat dome contributed to the deaths of at least three people. They died as federal regulators weigh whether to finalize the nation’s first heat rule.

Human rights court will decide sweeping climate case today

ClimateWire News - Thu, 07/03/2025 - 6:35am
The decision by the international tribunal in Costa Rica could reshape domestic climate cases across Latin America.

Megabill passage all but assured

ClimateWire News - Thu, 07/03/2025 - 6:34am
President Donald Trump will get his "big, beautiful bill" by Independence Day.

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