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10 More Virus Researchers Say 'Virtually No Chance' Coronavirus Escaped From a Lab (npr.org) 401

Long-time Slashdot reader Charlotte Web writes: "Virus researchers say there is virtually no chance that the new coronavirus was released as result of a laboratory accident in China or anywhere else," writes NPR, citing "10 leading scientists who collect samples of viruses from animals in the wild, study virus genomes and understand how lab accidents can happen."
NPR reports: "All of the evidence points to this not being a laboratory accident," says Jonna Mazet, a professor of epidemiology at the University of California, Davis and director of a global project to watch for emerging viruses called PREDICT. Rather, the experts interviewed by NPR all believe that the virus was transmitted between animals and humans in nature, as has happened in previous outbreaks — from Ebola to the Marburg virus — and with other known coronaviruses such as SARS and MERS...

Lowering the odds further still, when researchers begin to work in the lab to see what they've collected, the samples they handle aren't actually infectious. Mazet says they are "inactivated," a chemical process that breaks apart the virus itself while preserving its genetic material for study... These protocols are used by scientists all over the world, including in China. Mazet says that the staff at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, where much of the suspicion has been focused, has been trained by U.S. scientists as part of the PREDICT program. Scientists working there follow the rules, Mazet says.

Mazet says researchers at the Wuhan institute were so good, they actually helped to shape the protocols. "They were not only completing all of those trainings, but they were also weighing in and helping us to make those trainings very strong from a safety perspective," she says.

U.S. intelligence officials have now also joined additional scientists saying there's zero evidence that the virus escaped from a lab. And NPR also interviewed Peter Daszak, the president of the EcoHealth Alliance researching the origins of pandemics, who points out that nearly 3% of the population in China's rural farming regions near wild animals already had antibodies to coronaviruses similar to SARS. "We're finding 1 to 7 million people exposed to these viruses every year in Southeast Asia; that's the pathway. It's just so obvious to all of us working in the field..."

"We have a bat virus in my neighborhood in New York killing people. Let's get real about this."
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10 More Virus Researchers Say 'Virtually No Chance' Coronavirus Escaped From a Lab

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  • False Flag (Score:5, Funny)

    by fred911 ( 83970 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @02:38AM (#59995506) Journal

    "U.S. intelligence officials have now also joined additional scientists saying there's zero evidence that the virus escaped from a lab."

    They're just trying to hide the fact that 5G is spewing the virus.

    (this is satire, sad it even has to be said)

  • Unsurprising (Score:2, Flamebait)

    by DrXym ( 126579 )
    The only people floating this idea are conspiracy idiots and trolls/bots appealing to conspiracy idiots.
  • It would have been better if it was a lab escapee. If it was from a lab then better safety procedures could stop the next one. If it just kind of wandered out of the forest on its own then this won't be the last one which sucks for everyone.
    • by DamnOregonian ( 963763 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @03:20AM (#59995584)
      Ya, it would have been nice if it were a lab escapee.
      However-
      scientists have been screaming that we need to be prepared for zoonotic pandemics [ucsusa.org]

      A reemergence of SARS or a zoonotic pathogen like SCoV could cause the next great pandemic—an event on the scale of the 1918 flu outbreak that killed 40 million people worldwide.

      • by slack_justyb ( 862874 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @12:09PM (#59997134)

        And the 2002 SARS is not the end all be all. Random respiratory diseases arise all the time and every time they do, proper response has beating it back. The 1993 Four corners outbreak was quashed before it became a problem in the US. That was due to Sin Nombre orthohantavirus (SNV). The West Virginia outbreak of 1985 was stopped in it's tracks. That was due to Monongahela virus (MGLV). In 1995 a new zoonotic virus was stopped at patient one in Florida. It came from the new Black Creek Canal orthohantavirus (BCCV).

        People fail to realize. Fighting disease is a fight eternal and we've been winning and preventing any of these diseases from hitting the headlines, by trusting the experts and allowing policy to be based on their recommendations. Between now and 1918, there have been countless new viruses of zoonotic origin. All of them have been beaten back by quarantine, sanitation, contact tracing, and just basic standard medical protocols. This current outbreak, in every single way was completely preventable and wasn't. That's a clear indication that there is a global breakdown in this trusting experts and basing policy on their recommendations. Now it could be that some leaders are incompetent. It could be that the policy recommendations are too inconvenient. It could be a mixture of multiple things. But the fact remains, there is a breakdown in listening to sound science planet wide. The priority of things is being redirected to things that distract from making sound science based decisions. And people will pay with their lives for leaving science for comfort as they currently are paying for it.

        This virus we're dealing with will hardly be the last we deal with. And if the policy makers of this world continue to ignore science, it will lead to the exact same outcome as we are seeing or perhaps even worse. There is no question about if this will happen again, only when and how we will respond to it.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      It decidedly will not be the last one and it is not even the big one the experts have been expecting for a decade or two. This is a less serious outbreak we get as a bonus in between large ones.

    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      "If it was from a lab then better safety procedures could stop the next one."

      Didn't you read the summary? Lab safety procedures simply aren't needed. One wonders why they spend all that money on negative pressure rooms, filtration, PPE, etc.

      ...when researchers begin to work in the lab to see what they've collected, the samples they handle aren't actually infectious.

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @03:03AM (#59995556)

    Ok guys, I'm not saying he was involved. But man, it's damn suspicious when you think about the fact that may have originated in a bat cave. Where was Bruce Wayne at the time? Shouldn't we at least look into it? I say we check it out just to rule it out, you know what I'm saying?

  • It's no use (Score:5, Insightful)

    by peppepz ( 1311345 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @03:11AM (#59995568)
    We live in a post-truth world, providing articulate and educated explanations about why a conspiracy theory is false won't help. In fact, if you do that, people will believe you even less, and also hate you because of their cognitive dissonance.
    We grew up fearing that nuclear weapons would destroy society as we know it, it turned out that it will be memes to do it.
  • I'm not convined (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bob8766 ( 1075053 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @03:38AM (#59995618)
    I'm pretty well sold on the idea that it wasn't manufactured in a lab.
    They fail to make a convincing argument that it couldn't have come from a lab where they were researching corona viruses.

    That raises the first coincidence that would be needed for SARS-CoV-2 to come out of a laboratory: Scientists would have to find it in nature first.

    If it wasn't manufactured in a lab, wouldn't it have to come from nature anyway? This could happen at a market certainly, but someone has to collect and deliver samples to labs and study them, and the ones a lab would want are ones more likely to be infectious.

    Even if researchers stumbled across the virus, they would be very unlikely to get infected. When researchers collect samples, they take extraordinary precautions to avoid infecting themselves in the field, says Mazet

    Yeah, we take extraordinary precautions to train employees to detect phishing scams and choose decent passwords, yet malware seems to make it on computer networks all of the time. If there's one thing the scientific research world can learn from from the world of computers, it's that any security system built on requiring everyone to voluntarily do even one thing correctly every time is a system that will fail eventually, and the last thing anyone wants to hear out of a person's mouth at that point is, "But we have procedures!".

    Now it is possible for viruses to escape from a laboratory by infecting a worker. In the early 2000s, there were three documented cases of the original SARS virus escaping from a laboratory environment, according to Lim Poh Lian, a senior consultant at the National Centre for Infectious Diseases in Singapore. But the circumstances surrounding those escapes were vastly different.

    Great. Well first of all since they don't know anything about the circumstances, they don't know how those circumstances could have been different and we know it's possible for it to escape from lab environments. It should be very difficult to spread if proper procedures are followed, but there's no way to prove that the proper procedures were being followed at the lab.

    In any event, lab escape still gets a rating of "plausible" even if there's no smoking gun.

    • Lab escape is a reasonable hypothesis. But is it lab escape of something found in nature already? Or lab escape of an edited virus? The latter case can be traced back by experts analyzing the code because editing is 'clearcut'. You only do the purposeful substitutions in the code while you don't bother touching the rest of the code.

      Unless you're trying to obfuscate the source and add a lot of random changes as well, which is what you could call the creationist variant: it was inserted deliberately but ever

    • Fair enough. But what is the conclusion that we come to? Is it that we have a moratorium on scientific research? given that research could in your scenario be involved in it's release? Because that plainly would not work because the virus was already out there in nature ready to spread and one day it would. The only sane conclusion is that we need to find these viruses faster and to create vaccines against them. That involves research. The same dilema faces study of computer malware.

    • Yeah, we take extraordinary precautions to train employees to detect phishing scams and choose decent passwords, yet malware seems to make it on computer networks all of the time. If there's one thing the scientific research world can learn from from the world of computers, it's that any security system built on requiring everyone to voluntarily do even one thing correctly every time is a system that will fail eventually, and the last thing anyone wants to hear out of a person's mouth at that point is, "But
    • You are absolutely correct. This virus could easily have come from bat samples collected in Yunan province. It's spread may be due to mishandling of hazardous samples.

    • I'm pretty well sold on the idea that it wasn't manufactured in a lab.

      They fail to make a convincing argument that it couldn't have come from a lab where they were researching corona viruses.

      You cannot prove a negative. It is impossible to prove that it didn't come from a lab. Even if researchers find it in wild animals, conspiracy theorists can claim those wild animals were infected by escaped lab animals.

      So the burden of proof has to be upon those claiming it came from a lab to prove that it came

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      If it wasn't manufactured in a lab, wouldn't it have to come from nature anyway?

      So how would this work? It occurs in nature, people start getting infected. Scientists get a sample and take it to the lab, and also manage to stop it spreading beyond a very few people so nobody notices. Then some time later it escapes the lab and a couple of million people get it, spreads over the entire world... Even though they already knew about it and managed to shut it down the first time.

      That's the opposite of plausible.

    • why not at least read the summary... "when researchers begin to work in the lab to see what they've collected, the samples they handle aren't actually infectious. Mazet says they are "inactivated," a chemical process that breaks apart the virus itself while preserving its genetic material for study""
    • by catmistake ( 814204 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @07:56AM (#59996212) Journal

      They fail to make a convincing argument that it couldn't have come from a lab where they were researching corona viruses.

      Then allow me to make one:

      Since the advent of microbiology laboratories, (and when this was is up for debate, 6th century BC by Mahavira, 16th by with Girolamo Fracastoro, 17th century by Athanasius Kircher (1646), Robert Hooke (1665), and/or Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (1676), 19th century by Ferdinand Cohn, Louis Pasteur, Robert Koch, and Adrien Certes, or the late 19th century with the work of Charles Chamberland, Martinus Beijerinck, Sergei Winogradsky, Adolf Mayer, Dmitry Ivanovsky, Martinus Beijerinck, Adolf Mayer, John Buist, and/or Carlos Finlay, or early 20th century by Wendell Meredith Stanley, Hubert S. Loring, Frederick Twort, Félix d'Herelle, Fred Griffith, Ross Granville Harrison, Friedrich Loeffler, E Steinhardt, C Israeli, RA Lambert, Walter Reed, Paul Frosch, William Crawford Gorgas, John Kunkel Small, Thomas Milton Rivers, Christopher Andrewes, Francis Holmes, Richard Pfeiffer, Ernest William Goodpasture, Ernst Ruska and Max Knoll (last two here invented the electron microscope), or in the mid 20th century with formation of the Phage Group including Max Delbrück, Salvador Luria, Alfred Hershey, Martha Chase and founding of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, or Frank Macfarlane Burnet, George Hirst, Rosalind Franklin, Heinz Fraenkel-Conrat, Robley Williams, John F. Enders, Thomas Weller and Frederick Robbins, Rosalind Franklin, Jim Watson and Francis Crick, or the late 20th century by Denis Parsons Burkitt Joseph Atabekov, Anthony Epstein, Yvonne Barr and Bert Achong, Baruch Blumberg, Howard Temin and David Baltimore, Luc Montagnier, and/or Michael Houghton, though I think everyone can agree that by the late 20th century modern microbiology and virology laboratories became far more common, but even ignoring the modern labs, there have been a lot of labs previously throughout late history), though there have been a few dozens of breaches around the world, not one of these escaped pathogens led to a pandemic, nor an epidemic, nor even an outbreak, not a single one.

      Since the dawn of recorded history, however, every single outbreak, epidemic and pandemic originated from people working and living close proximity to animals, especially livestock (but of course not exclusively), every single one we know about originated this way.

      But who knows? Maybe this time, with SARS-CoV-2, your paranoia-fueled skepticism is well-founded, and the Wuhan wet market is just a coincidence. After all, there is always a first time for every single thing, right?

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @07:59AM (#59996218)

      Yeah, we take extraordinary precautions to train employees to detect phishing scams and choose decent passwords

      No you don't. The fact that you compare this to training a researcher working at a BSL-4 rated lab just shows you have no idea what you're talking about.

    • by rl117 ( 110595 )

      It doesn't matter if everyone in the lab is perfect, it only requires one person to screw up once. One anecdote from a few years back:

      I once trained up a new guy to work in a cat 2 lab in a disease research centre. Seemed intelligent, was a med student on a research placement, and they picked up the procedures quickly enough and seemed competent. Sterile technique is not rocket science, its just ingrained discipline. I went through the procedures several times over a few days with them, saw they could d

  • by GeLeTo ( 527660 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @03:50AM (#59995640)
    Q: How do you calculate the chances that the first global pandemic in modern times happens within 20km of a research center that tests animal virus transmission to monkeys [nature.com]

    A: Divide the population around a 20 mile radius of such centers (you can probably count them on one hand) by the total world population.

    It's a damn small number. Read the linked article, it was written in 2017: The prospect of ramping up opportunities to inject monkeys with pathogens also worries, rather than excites, him: “They can run, they can scratch, they can bite.”
  • by LutzUwe ( 6806196 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @04:03AM (#59995668)
    Why cite the Marburg virus here? It was an lab accident after all. Grivets from Africa being kept in an animal facility and infecting people is not a lab accident? Please do not give more arguments to the conspiracy theorists by citing inaccurately. Greetings from Marburg
  • by johannesg ( 664142 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @04:12AM (#59995686)

    "Our procedures are really good, so couldn't possibly have been us, or our colleagues in China. We've never actually been to that lab, or even China, but we just know. Because there is nothing dangerous about what we do. All those level-4 precautions are taken for no reason at all, the viruses we work with have been deactivated." Suuuuuure...

    The one thing I don't understand is this: if you want a level-4 biolab, why do you put it in a city with 11 million people, and not, for example, in the middle of the Gobi desert? An outbreak there would be a lot less hassle, seeing how there is just dust and sand for hundreds of kilometers in all directions...

    N39.856553, E85.962737 seems like a good spot for dangerous bio-research.

    • Re:To summarize (Score:4, Insightful)

      by CaffeinatedBacon ( 5363221 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @06:04AM (#59995908)

      The one thing I don't understand is this: if you want a level-4 biolab, why do you put it in a city with 11 million people, and not, for example, in the middle of the Gobi desert?

      Same reason these aren't all in the desert [wikipedia.org]
      Who wants to work or live in a desert?
      The people working there will eventually travel to a city anyway and can still infect people when they get there.

    • Do your world class experts want to work in the middle of the desert? That and, researchers don't want to die, so they will let you know when they've been exposed. A properly run lab will have protocols to follow for an exposure, which will include medical isolation. It is easier to keep it safe in a research lab where you know what you're working with than a hospital lab.
  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @04:21AM (#59995700)

    You are trying to use observation and logic to counter claims, that weren't supported by valid arguments in the first place!

    You are falling for the classical strategy of the moron:
    10 Make a wild claim. Do not back it up!
    20 Lure opponent into validating the weight of your previously invalid claim, by countering it with arguments. (Trigger him, make him angry.)
    30 GOTO 10 (repeat), until opponent trips up and makes a tiny error.
    40 Attack opponent's error, and claim victorious!

    Because it is not a logical agument for them. It is an emotional one! They feel unsafe! Fear. That's all it is.

    But the argumentative trick here is, that the moron becomes the game master! The rule maker. The judge!
    So he can change the rules however he wants, to make him win and you lose.

    When really, YOU should stay the judge of his arguments, and NOT accept invalid arguments in the first place!
    It needs no counter-arguments, because it doesn't contain any valid arguments in the first place!

    I don't know why smart people always freakin feel the need to put themseves into that weak position... I fell for that too in the past. A lot.
    Maybe because they assume the opponent is like them, thinking logically... Maybe it's because in their heads, they are trying to find the basis for the opponent's arguments thenselves, because they assume there must be some, for the opponent to make his statement. (The Dunning-Kruger effect makes smart people doubt themselves too much.)
    Maybe because due to past traumata, they automatically assume the morons to be the dominant position, and create a self-fulfilling prophecy...

    In any case: Never argue with an idiot! He'll drag you down to his level, and beat you with experience!
    Just stay in the game master / judge role, amd reject him until he *actually* makes a valid argument!
    (Hint: Buy yourself a grown-up dosis of self-confidence! :)

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Well said. "Stupid and uneducated" is not a state that most people want fixed, it is the state most people prefer to exist in.

  • ...doesn't that mean someone left the door open?

  • Chinese bio labs have a notorious reputation for selling their animal subjects on the black market after they've expended their experimental usefulness.

    So, although the virus may well not have been “created” (purposefully engineered) in a Chinese bio lab, the prevalence in Wuhan of wild bats is extremely low in that city, so either the bats there that infected humans were brought in from nearby specifically for the animal “wet markets” or they were brought into Wuhan for the bio l

    • . . . or they just handled the samples incorrectly at the lab and infected some of the workers there.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Chinese bio labs have a notorious reputation for selling their animal subjects on the black market after they've expended their experimental usefulness.

      Only among bullshit merchants. I'm afraid Infowars is not a reliable source of information.

    • you'll need to post some verifiable links to those claims
  • by vix86 ( 592763 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @04:36AM (#59995746)

    We have papers saying this lab in Wuhan dealt with coronaviruses in bats. So...

    Lowering the odds further still, when researchers begin to work in the lab to see what they've collected, the samples they handle aren't actually infectious. Mazet says they are "inactivated," a chemical process that breaks apart the virus itself while preserving its genetic material for study...

    Okay researchers, where the fuck do you get these samples from before you "chemically inactivate" them? Do you pick these bat coronaviruses off a tree? Or do you get them out of bats which shit and sneeze all over the place spreading fluids everywhere? Neither group, "it came from a lab!" vs "No it didn't," will ever be able to prove one way or the other.

    Here is the thing though, Occam's Razor in this matter weighs way more heavily in favor of this virus getting out of a lab than it coincidentally just happening to spawn 10 miles from a lab that studies bat coronaviruses.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Occam's Razor does not work that way, and becomes invalid if you rephrase it as you like. Option A: The first virus made in the lab generates a worldwide pandemic. Option B: The virus is naturally emerging. Just like every other pandemic generating virus in the history of mankind. If a known fabricated virus would emerge a city near the laboratory it produced, what would you expect an authoritarian regime would do in terms of mitigation? Wait for weeks or months or act immediately?
      • OK.
        A) New coronavirus outbreak occurs in an area with no bats, within walking distance from biolabs which study bat coronavirus (note: study, no mention of create or alter)
        B) Virus said to have emanated from a wet market, which didn't apparently sell bats (or pangolins).
        C) If the virus emanated from a wet market, and you were an authoritarian regime, would you be re-opening said wet markets 3-4 months into a global pandemic originating in said markets?

        Occam's Razor
      • You missed option C. A naturally occurring virus is studied in a lab, and is accidentally spread to humans who are in close contact with the animals.
    • We don't have any reason to believe they performed the inactivation step. That's part of the problem - China cuts corners and lies.
  • by AK Marc ( 707885 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @04:53AM (#59995770)
    The virus has been found in the wild. A 90% match in bats (where it likely originated and incubated before going to other species), and a 97% match in Pangolin (the presumptive intermediate species patient zero caught it from).

    Unless the WHO, US, and China are all conspiring to frame China, it couldn't have come from a lab. The ability to make non-human viruses to fake a chain of infection from a host species, to an intermediate species, to humans, then get a natural-looking spread of the disease in local wildlife is beyond out abilities. It's theoretically possible to do, but is not practical.

    All the right markers were found in all the same places as MERS and SARS1, so SARS2, being a human-made version of SARS1 sounds reasonable, but the frame up is too good to be possible, at least with current tech, and the "enemies" all having to be in on it.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      When it comes to genetic comparison, 90% and 97% are not all that good.

      Human beings are a 90% genetic match to the common house cat, and a 97% genetic match to a chimpanzee. You would never look at a common house cat and say "oh man just one more intermediate step and we'll have a human."

      You would never look at a common house cat and say "well that thing is going to give birth to a chimp, and then that chimp is going to give birth to a human being.

      To say that A virus that is a 90% match made the leap in two

    • What about that means it couldn't have escaped from a lab? That there are a large number of other Corona viruses? That doesn't mean it couldn't have come from a lab, this version could still have evolved naturally, been found in the wild, and escaped from a lab. Or it could have been subjected to functional changes for research purposes and then escaped. Nothing about the existence of other members of the Corona family means this one could not have escaped from a lab.
    • You're talking about two different things.

      1) Was the virus MANUFACTURED in a lab, and then accidentally released?
      2) Was the virus being studied in a lab, and then accidentally released?

      I believe most of the public conversation today, barring a few tinfoil hatters, is #2. So shrill protestations that #1 is obviously not true are either misunderstanding or disingenuous.

  • by portwojc ( 201398 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @05:51AM (#59995892) Homepage

    Peter Daszak, their source has worked with Zhengli Shi of the Laboratory of Virology, Wuhan Institute of Virology...

    https://scholar.google.com/scholar?start=0&q=author:%22Peter+Daszak%22+author:%22Shi+Zhengli%22&hl=en&as_sdt=0,5

    Not that it matters but for full disclosure it does.

  • TLDR->'Virtually no chance this is an escape cuz'. 1. 6-10 virus scientists said so. (I mean virus scientist is a prestigious title but theres a lot more than 6/10 in the world) 2. Wuhan lab is really careful honest! 3. There are animals with antibodies to similar viruses (no shit? How does that virtually rule anything out?) Meanwhile SARS has been confirmed to have escaped multiple times from the lab yet this time its impossible we swear!
  • Nor do I genuinely believe it's from a lab, I don't believe it is.
    But if you told me it was and provided proof, I wouldn't be surprised.
    It seems to do the following things all of which seem convienient.

    Doesn't seem to exhibit symptoms for a very long time
    It apparently sheds the most viral load before symptoms are apparent
    It seems to do a variety of random things to the target. Not just the lungs, but organs, skin, etc. This thing really does a number on you

    My memory is slipping but I've read a few other t

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @07:25AM (#59996082)
    That seems to be the extent of the arguments against this having escaped from a lab. Well, that and, "China paid us for advice on how to run a lab (and may still be), so we know they must be extra careful."

    "What about all those Chinese farmers with Corona antibodies?" So what? Having been exposed to some kind of Corona virus means what exactly? That there are Corona viruses in the wild, some of which will cause serious harm and some which don't? Is that supposed to be a serious argument made by serious scientists? Sure doesn't sound like one to me.

    China is a Communist nation. They lie. They conceal. Corruption is rampant and there is no accountability. This is the same system that led the USSR to tell everyone their reactor design could not possibly ever melt down, even after it did.

    There is no reason whatsoever to believe they followed the same protocols our researchers do. That their first reaction was a coverup suggests that there was something they were more worried about than a disease. Perhaps something that would threated the Party's power, like an appallingly embarrassing failure to perform virology research in a safe manner.

  • Think the Weyland-Yutani Corporation from 'Alien'. The priority is to preserve the Alien not the crew.

    A virology research center in an area where viruses crossing to humans is highly possible. A new virus is identified. The center suppresses the information in the hopes of being able to capture and harness the virus' potential as a weapon. It also allows and follows the virus' spread in the wild and observes the effectiveness of existing infrastructure and counter-measures ... a low-cost experiment. No

  • FTA: "Garry says the reason is simple â" the virus infects people in a way that scientists had never seen before: "The virus is just really too good at what it's doing," he says. "No human using a computer could do this. This is very clearly a natural process that occurred."

    What? So it's not plausible that someone very clever could think of the mod? That is the opinion of someone not familiar with say, evolutionary computing or other machine learning techniques.

  • All of the evidence points to this not being a laboratory accident

    What evidence? What evidence can this be — even in theory?

    the experts interviewed by NPR all believe that the virus was transmitted between animals and humans in nature

    Beliefs aren't proof...

    additional scientists saying there's zero evidence that the virus escaped from a lab

    That does not disprove the idea either...

  • by TheNarrator ( 200498 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @09:27AM (#59996560)

    If you look on Google Scholar Peter Daszak worked with the Bat lady who worked on combining SARS and HIV for gain of function at the Wuhan Lab and they released 11 papers on SARS and Coronavirus together. Obvious conflict of interest is obvious. https://scholar.google.com/sch... [google.com]

  • by mveloso ( 325617 ) on Monday April 27, 2020 @01:31PM (#59997430)

    The anthrax leak didn't happen because a scientist did it, it was an error by the maintenance personnel. It was only confirmed decades later once the USSR fell. The same guy who confirmed it wasn't from the lab re-investigated after the fall of the USSR and confirmed it was from the lab.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    You can't tell if a leak happened a priori. You can't trust the authorities to be truthful. Even smart people make mistakes. Shit happens.

    We'll have to wait until the fall of the Chinese Communist Party to know for sure, and even then we might never know.

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