Data Scraping
BBC Inside Science
BBC
4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 22 March 2018
⏱️ 28 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
The story of how Cambridge Analytica had scraped Facebook data in its attempt to influence voting behaviour has been reported widely this week. Andrew Steele, a medical researcher at the Crick Institute in London, explains how data mining or scraping actually works and how it is used by many scientists to find ways of improving human health.
The Government Office for Science published a massive report this week, entitled the 'Future of the Sea' which sets out the UK's stall with regard to our future relationship with the seas, and to put science front and centre in that plan. Professor Ed Hill, Executive Director at the National Oceanographic Centre in Southampton, is one of the authors and tells Adam Rutherford about future exploitation of the sea.
Debris in space is a huge issue - it's estimated that there are more than 170 million fragments of satellites, rockets and other stuff that we've sent up, all orbiting the Earth at ballistic speeds. All of these have the potential to lethally strike a working satellite or worse, a crewed space station. Graihagh Jackson met Professor Guglielmo Aglietti at Surrey University who's researching the best technology to safely remove space junk.
Dinosaurs were incredibly successful and lived on earth for over 150 million years. Francois Therrien from the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Alberta, Canada, and colleagues explored how living crocodiles and birds, the descendants of dinosaurs, rear their eggs. Dr Therrien told Adam how their findings have suggested that dinosaurs used a variety of ways to hatch their eggs in the many environments on earth.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hey, it's Doleepa, and I'm at your service. |
| 0:04.7 | Join me as I serve up personal conversations with my sensational guests. |
| 0:08.8 | Do a leap interviews, Tim Cook. |
| 0:11.2 | Technology doesn't want to be good or bad. |
| 0:15.0 | It's in the hands of the creator. |
| 0:16.7 | It's not every day that I have the CEO of the world's biggest company in my living room. |
| 0:20.7 | If you're looking at your phone more than you're looking in someone's eyes, you're doing the wrong thing. |
| 0:26.0 | Julie, at your service. |
| 0:27.8 | Listen to all episodes on BBC Sales. |
| 0:31.2 | Hello You, this is the podcast of Inside Science from BBC Radio 4 first broadcasts on the |
| 0:35.6 | 22nd of March 2018 I'm Adam Rutherford more rubbish from me this week space junk in |
| 0:40.9 | fact there are millions of fragments of old satellites |
| 0:43.5 | whizzing around the earth at ballistic speeds and a Chinese space station will |
| 0:47.0 | crash through our atmosphere in the next few days the debris scattering over hundreds |
| 0:51.6 | of square miles and we can't predict where. Yikes we look at the |
| 0:55.3 | projects to clean up space. And there's plenty of rubbish in the seas too but even more |
| 1:00.0 | wonder. The government office for science has just released its vision for the future of the |
| 1:04.1 | UK's relationship with the sea, from economics to science to climate change. |
| 1:09.1 | We're diving in to find out the plan. |
| 1:11.5 | And with Easter approaching, we're thinking about eggs, not |
| 1:13.9 | chocolate but dinosaur eggs. Dinosaur eggs are actually very common. There's some |
| 1:18.9 | regions of the world like Alberta where I'm based but also China where dinosaur eggs are a dime a dozen there's so many that you find. |
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