Test and trace
England launches its COVID-19 test and trace programme on Thursday
with a task force of 40,000 specialists to test those with symptoms
and identify their contacts, who will be instructed to isolate for
14 days, even if they have no symptoms.
"That captivity for a tiny minority for a short time will allow us
gradually to release 66 million people from the current situation,"
said Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
Britain has the second highest death toll from the virus globally,
with the confirmed tally rising by 412 to 37,460 on Wednesday.
Second wave spectre
South Korea reported its third consecutive day of rising coronavirus
cases and the most new cases on Thursday since April 5. At least 69
cases this week were linked to a cluster of infections at a
logistics facility operated by Coupang Corp, one of the country's
largest online shopping firms, in Bucheon, west of Seoul.
The spreading outbreak and warehouse closures come as Coupang and
other e-commerce firms scramble to keep up with a surge in orders as
more people opted to shop from home during the coronavirus outbreak.
Resurgence in state-backed hacking
Security experts at Alphabet Inc's Google have seen new activity
from "hack-for-hire" firms, many based in India, that have been
creating Gmail accounts spoofing the World Health Organization
(WHO), in an uptick in hacking and phishing attempts related to the
coronavirus outbreak.
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These accounts largely targeted business leaders in financial
services, consulting and healthcare corporations in numerous
countries, the company said in a blog post.
"Since March, we've removed more than a thousand YouTube channels
that we believe to be part of a large campaign and that were
behaving in a coordinated manner," Google said.
Books not beer
The world's largest book fair will take place in Frankfurt as
scheduled in mid-October, a sign of some return to normality.
Organisers said they were able to persuade city authorities the fair
could go ahead after outlining comprehensive sanitary measures. The
event, which dates back to the 15th century when Johannes Gutenberg
introduced the mass printing of books in nearby Mainz, usually draws
more than 300,000 visitors.
While the book fair is going ahead, Germany's Oktoberfest, the
world's largest folk festival due to take place in Munich from Sept.
19 to Oct. 4, has been cancelled.
(Compiled by Karishma Singh; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
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