Articles of Interest about the virus, writing, journalism & more – April 25

***THE VIRUS 

It was my job to call people whose Covid-19 tests were positive. That taught me a lot about medicine, the law, and society

This game simulates how your choices affect the spread of the coronavirus 

When Denver backed off social distancing in the 1918 pandemic, the results were deadly

'We Haven't Learned From History': 'Radio Influenza' Is A Warning From 1918 

Social Distancing Enforcement Drones Arrive in the U.S.

Coronavirus Entered My Father’s Nursing Home and Nobody Warned Me 

***WORKING FROM HOME

Zoom’s encryption update is like ‘skipping two generations on a smartphone upgrade’

Google Duo video calls are about to look a whole lot better

Google Meet launches improved Zoom-like tiled layout, low-light mode and more

***WRITING & READING 

Microsoft Word now flags double spaces as errors, ending the great space debate 

Better training is key to tackling plagiarism in developing countries 

These Are The Most Popular Books Set In Every State

 Ways to Make Your Writing Clearer

Can Comic Books survive Coronavirus? 

***JOURNALISM

Investigating the coronavirus: Incomplete data creates headaches for reporters  

Congress' local news bailout push  

California Times folds Burbank Leader, Glendale News-Press and La Cañada Valley Su

NYPD Seizes Drone Of Photojournalist Documenting Mass Burials On Hart Island  

Why Do So Many News Anchors Sound Alike?

***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM

U.S. newspapers have shed half of their newsroom employees since 2008

Workers at Hollywood Reporter and Billboard Vandalize Website After Getting Laid Off 

L.A. Times to Furlough Workers as Ad Revenue Eliminated

YouTube says 'authoritative' news viewership has jumped amid COVID-19 pandemic 

***STUDENT MEDIA

A student newspaper retracts a story about coronavirus

Metro Atlanta schools’ shutdown doesn’t stop news — or student reporters 

Oregon’s student newspapers are adapting amid pandemic 

***FAKES & FRAUDS  

Chinese agents spread Fake text messages claiming the US military would enforce a country-wide lockdown

Facebook already knows who believes in fake news—and selling ads to reach them

***PRIVACY & SECURITY  

Flaw in iPhone, iPads may have allowed hackers to steal data for years

Americans doubt tracking cellphones will help limit COVID-19, divided on whether it’s OK | Pew Research Center 

Better Business Bureau warns about posting your senior picture in #Classof2020 Facebook challenge

Half of Americans have decided not to use a product or service because of privacy concerns

***SOCIAL MEDIA 

 TikTok now lets parents set restrictions on their kids’ accounts  

***POETRY 

 "I only have my poetry as my weapon. I will not surrender” 

Poem constructed from emails received during quarantine goes viral  

***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA   

Local media outlets launch during the coronavirus pandemic