A surgeon has admitted to branding the livers of two patients using a beam of ionized argon gas:
Bramhall previously worked at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth hospital, where he gained fame for a dramatic liver transplant in 2010. Bramhall transplanted a liver following the fiery crash-landing of the plane that was transporting the donor liver to Birmingham. Though the pilots were injured, the liver was intact and salvaged from the burning wreckage. The transplant spared the life of Dr. Bramhall's desperately ill patient.
But in 2013, colleagues discovered that he had been initialing his patients' organs. Doctors first spotted the letters "SB" on the liver of one of Bramhall's transplant patients during a follow-up surgery. They later learned of initials on another patient. Bramhall was suspended in 2013 and resigned in 2014 amid an internal investigation into the etchings. Earlier this year, the General Medical Council issued Bramhall a formal warning, saying at the time that Bramhall's case "risks bringing the profession into disrepute, and it must not be repeated."
Bramhall etched his initials using an argon beam—a jet of ionized argon gas—which surgeons use to control bleeding during procedures. Doctors who are part of the investigation don't think the marks are harmful and expect them to clear up on their own.
Also at BBC and The Guardian.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by maxwell demon on Thursday December 14 2017, @11:09PM
While it is clearly not the algorithm done by this site, it is just as easy to safely support HTML tags:
As an additional bonus, when doing it that way, things that happen to look like HTML tags but aren't will generally be preserved in the output. So if you type "a < 1 || a > 3" then it will appear exactly like that in the output, instead of removing the "tag" and ending up with "a 3" (this is how I can know that this algorithm is not used by SN).
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.