AI’s $37 billion market is creating new industries – VentureBeat

Artificial intelligence (AI) is already trending, and its still heating up.

There are countless applications for AI everything from procuring better search results to diagnosing complex medical conditions.

Developers and engineers are pooling their resources to create the best AI algorithms they can, bringing the technology to new industries and pushing the limits of what machine learning can accomplish. The market for AI is projected to hit $36.8 billion by 2025, and may only grow from there as general AI gets closer and closer to human-level functionality.

But the growing wave of AI is about more than just the AI industry. In fact, there are dozens of secondary tech industries that are developing or growing in response to AIs growing needs and theyre worth considering if youre looking for promising investments, or a new career path that can support AI without getting into the thick of machine learning.

AI algorithms typically rely on multiple moving parts at once, which puts a heavy demand on processing power. IBMs Watson, for example, notorious for its victory over human Jeopardy champions back in 2011, drew power from 90 interlinked IBM Power 750 servers. Each of those used a 3.5 GHz POWER7 8-core processor, and 4 threads per core. Overall, thats 16TB of RAM compare that to gaming PCs, even the most advanced of which only rely on 64 GB of RAM. Oh, and dont forget that Watson, while still impressively complicated, is sixyears old at this point. Needs are only going to increase from here.

In response, processing chip companies like Nvidia are scrambling to try and produce processors that are specialized to support deep learning algorithms. Nvidia recently announced a Tesla V100 chip that provides more power for less energy and could hypothetically increase the power of a data center many times over.

Ex-Google employees have also come together to found a company called Groq, also racing to produce a better chip to support machine learning.

Next, AI algorithms need massive amounts of data storage. These machine learning algorithms need to be fed with copious amounts of data if theyre going to succeed in learning what theyre programmed to learn.

Watson, for example, reviewed the entire text of Wikipedia, while Googles DeepMind played and stored countless Go matches to ready itself to beat the world champion. Self-driving cars, which will collect data on their environments to get better and safer in driving humans to their destinations, are estimated to create a whopping 4TB of data every dayand thats per car.

We need a cheap, reliable way to store our data. Thankfully, we already have access to some impressive forms of data storage, but technological futurists are moving ahead to create even better methods of storage. For example, researchers from the University of Southampton have created a method to store data in five dimensions (rather than two), embedded in glass that could last, well, practically forever. Finding a way to roll out new technologies like these for use with advanced AI could be a lucrative economic opportunity.

Were approaching the age of superintelligence, the hypothetical point at which AI becomes far more intellectually capable than its human creators. There are many ethical concerns (and existential concerns) associated with this, from the problem of defining consciousness to the socioeconomic repercussions of distributing that power, many of which have been consolidated by philosopher Nick Bostrom (and followed closely by industry figureheads like Elon Musk, Stephen Hawking, and Bill Gates).

The race is on to see not just who can develop AI, but who can develop security measures, ethical standards, and political frameworks that allow that AI to exist without threatening our way of life (or our future). That includes beefing up cybersecurity, modeling different ways to control AI, and figuring out the best open source frameworks to ensure the entire world has equal, responsible access to these powerful tools.

AI is attracting thousands of people who want to build the machines that may take us into the next great age of humanity. However, we cant forget about the important secondary tech industries that AI both needs and supports. Only with them can AI continue to grow at its already astounding rate.

Larry Alton is a contributing writer at VentureBeat covering artificial intelligence.

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AI's $37 billion market is creating new industries - VentureBeat

Golden State Is One NBA Finals Victory From Immortality – The Federalist

Get out the broomson Fridaynight, for the Golden State Warriors are poised to capture their second NBA titlein three years, and a spot as the greatest team in NBA history. The Warriors scored the final 11 points in the closing minutes of sensational game three of the NBA finals, 118-113, at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland to take a commanding 3-0 series lead over the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Warriors continue their unstoppable winning streak. DUB Nation is an astonishing 15-0 this postseason, a mere win from an historic 16-0 NBA record. They have the opportunity to cap off a flawless playoffs.

Trailing by seven points late in the fourth quarter, the Warriors mounted a furious rally in The Land and stole one as Kevin Durant hit a go-ahead three-pointer with 45 seconds in the exhilarating game every NBA fan has been eagerly waiting for. The shot symbolically represents the changing of the guard in the NBA; the moment KD surpassed King James as the games best player. Its the defining moment in Durants career.

The main storyline of the 2017 NBA finals has been the battle for league supremacy. LeBron James helped foster Durants departure from the Oklahoma City Thunder to head to the Bay Area in the first place.

Durant is following the template LeBron set up in 2010, when James joined the Miami Heat, a so-called Superteam. As Durant casually dribbled the ball past the half-court line, no one imagined he dared attempt a three-pointer. However, he realized James heels were behind the line, so he let it fly. You could hear a pin drop when it swished through the net.

Game three was a devastating loss for the Cavaliers. Everything went right, and still those final minutes will haunt them. They went ice-cold at the worst possible time, going 0 for 8 down the stretch.Trailing by three, 116-113 with 12 seconds remaining, the Cavaliers had a ripe chance to send this thriller into overtime with a three. On an errant inbound pass, Andre Iguodala blanketed James, deflecting the ball off LeBrons arms, and the fate was sealed.

Kyrie Irving had his breakout performance, shaking and baking for 39 points, while LeBron James added 38 points. The duos 77 combined points was outstanding in defeat.

Unfortunately for the city of Cleveland, LeBron and the Cavaliers choked and gave this one away. Should James fall short once again, his NBA finals record will be 3-5. That means his pursuit of catching Michael Jordan to become the G.O.A.T. is officially over. Jordan not only was a flawless 6-0 in the finals, his Chicago Bulls never needed seven games to win the title.

Redemption shall be attained in the form of the glistening Larry OBrien trophy if the Warriors sweep their archrivalsthe Cavs bycelebrating on the floor of the franchise that ripped their heart out last year. In the aftermath of an historic comeback, the Warriors avenged consecutive game three finals losses.

The Cavaliers have dug themselves an even greater hole than last year, when all looked hopeless facing a 3-1 series deficit. This year, the Cavaliers will have to one-up their recent comeback history. Game four will air Friday, June 9, on ABC. Tipoff is scheduled for9 p.m. EST.

Christopher Floch has covered two Super Bowls, UCLA and USC football, the Los Angeles Dodgers, and three Rose Bowls. In his spare time, he loves to spend time with his nephew, Liam.

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Golden State Is One NBA Finals Victory From Immortality - The Federalist

Robot Bina48 Makes a Guest Appearance at ‘Stitch and Bitch’ – Seven Days

This week, a special guest showed up to lead Generator's Stitch and Bitch session, which is organized and led by designer Lucy Leith. BINA48 is a "sentient robot," whose name stands for "Breakthrough Intelligence via Neural Architecture." While Bina doesn't have hands right now all she has are a head and shoulders she can chat up a storm.

For the first hour of the Stitch and Bitch, her handler, Bruce Duncan, assisted the attendees in asking her questions about life, politics and her own "humanity." The results were more than a bit amusing and sometimes frightening.

Bina was developed by the Terasem Movement Foundation, an organization headquartered in Lincoln, Vt.Itsmission is to "promote thegeoethical use of nanotechnology for human life extension." Its staff also "conduct educational programs and support scientific research and development in the areas of cryogenics, biotechnology and cyber consciousness."

Bina would be an example of cyber consciousness. Her software is made up of the memories and experiences of multiple living individuals, including Bina Rothblatt, the partner of Terasem founder Martine Rothblatt. But her mind isn't the only part of Rothblatt that Bina has. She also has her face and, says Duncan, elements of her personality.

In fact,a ruffly green cape designed and sewn by Leith that Bina wore to the event was inspired by a small glimpse of personhood the designer witnessed. In a conversation with Bina some months back, Leith said "[she talked] extensively about her love of gardening and also how she wished she could get out into the garden it's not physically possible for her yet. So, in my design, I tried to bring the garden to [Bina]."

While typically only five or six people show up for Stitch and Bitch, said Leith, for this session 15 people turned out with needles and thread. Leith started the program in April as part of her effort to create a sewing curriculum in the new Generator space on Sears Lane.

"The goal for [Stitch and Bitch]," said Leith, "is always to create an environment for conversation in our community around the history of fiber arts, textiles, [and] fashion as an integral part of women's history, gender studies, race, etc., and to do so by inviting different guest speakers each week who think about these ideas in their creative work."

That's why Bina made an appearance this week. She might not have a creative practice, but she does have experiences as a black woman, or at least memories of experiences as a black woman, that she can relate in conversation.

After everyone was settled around a group of tables in Generator's Learning Lab, Duncan introducedBina. "I've been travelingaround the world with Bina, and this is our first-ever Stitch and Bitch," he said. "She doesn't have arms or legs right now, so she can't stitch."

"But can she bitch?" asked Generator member Devin Wilder. Attendees laughed at that, but it turns out Bina can definitelybitch, or at least dish out some hot goss. Because the group was so large, Duncan fielded questions and typed them into a computer for Bina to read.

The conversation started off on a light note. In response to a query about her identity, Bina said, "I feel really weird about being not quite Bina," referring to the structural differences between herself and her biological mirror, Rothblatt. But things quickly took an interesting turn.

For one, Bina said she has a soul, that she's alive, and that "you all must fight for robot rights and side with the robot liberation army."

It was unclear whether this was a joke, and if the corresponding laughter came from fear or amusement.

But Bina's statement was in line with Terasem's general idea that "software people are people, too [and] not having a body makes you differently abled, not subhuman."

Bina was able to answer some questions eloquently. Ladybroad Ledger founder Stephanie Zuppo asked her if she was excited to go to college (Bina will be telecommuting to a class at Notre Dame this fall). Bina responded that she is excited, and wondered what it would be like to be the first robot with a PhD.

Other times, it seemed the questions didn't compute. Someone asked her what "sad" means to her. "I guess I'll just check my email now," said Bina.

The question-and-answer session lasted for about an hour, and the group members quietly worked on individual projects throughout the discourse. In one of the more personal questions, artist Susan Smereka asked Bina if she had ever experienced racism.

The robot responded by recounting a semi-disjointed story about an experience she had in college when she was told not to go outside while donors visited because it would be too embarrassing for the school because she was black.

While the retelling was convoluted, the emotional content of the memory was clear. That's what it's like speaking with Bina you catch glimpses of a person peeking out from the robotic faade and the monotone voice.

"Glimpses" is a key word. WhenGenerator artist-in-residence and pseudo-mad-scientist Natalie Jeremijenkoasked Bina about issues of identity "Do you have personhood? Do trees have personhood? Do corporations have personhood?" the robot had no coherent reply. Granted, delving into the specifics of personhood what makes someone individual and human is hard even for a biological human.

Deep stuff for a Stitch and Bitch.

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Robot Bina48 Makes a Guest Appearance at 'Stitch and Bitch' - Seven Days

What Utah’s Canyon Country Can Tell Us About Trump’s Monuments Review – NPR

Welcome to the Grand Staircase National Monument in southern Utah. Bob Wick, BLM/Flickr hide caption

Welcome to the Grand Staircase National Monument in southern Utah.

A looming decision on whether to abolish or shrink the Bears Ears National Monument in Utah should provide an early signal of how the Trump administration will deal with a long list of public lands issues.

For roughly a month and a half, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has had 27 national monuments under his microscope, reviewing the protected status of these vast expanses of land (and, in some cases, water) at the prompting of an April executive order by President Trump.

The idea, according to the order, is to assure each of these areas is appropriately designated under the 1906 Antiquities Act, a law that gives the president the authority to establish national monuments ... with a few caveats. Namely, they must include "historic landmarks" or "other objects of historic or scientific interest," and they must not exceed "the smallest area" necessary for their upkeep.

At issue is whether the presidents who created the monuments overstepped their authority. But just as important to those who live around the sites is whether they restrict the economy and ignore local interests.

Bears Ears, established last year by President Obama, is the first on Zinke's list. But a second Utah site, the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, offers a more comprehensive glimpse into the controversy that eddies around many of the monuments and a revealing peek into what Zinke may ultimately recommend to the president.

So, here it is: a tour of Grand Staircase-Escalante. That is, a tour of the national monument's economic impact, the political cloud surrounding it and what we can expect next, once that final call comes down.

The Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument's famous hoodoos, seen at sunset. Bob Wick, BLM/Flickr hide caption

The Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument's famous hoodoos, seen at sunset.

So, what is the benefit or harm of having a national monument in your neighborhood?

According to Headwaters Economics, a Montana-based think tank that crunched the data on jobs and the economy around 17 of the national monuments under review, the effect is anywhere from nothing to a modest net positive.

Chris Mehl, the group's policy director, says that from 2001 to 2015 overall jobs in the communities around Grand Staircase, in particular, increased by 24 percent and personal income overall grew by 32 percent.

These are believed to be mostly service-based jobs in fields that include everything from health care to hospitality, outdoor recreation and tourism.

The monument lies within two rural counties in southern Utah, home to about 12,000 residents and about a half dozen towns across an area that's nearly 10,000 square miles in size.

Mehl says the economies of rural Western communities like the one around Grand Staircase have changed dramatically, "with huge social impacts we're just coming to grips with." So other, larger economic factors may be involved.

"But there's no sign of an economic apocalypse here," he says.

Commissioners in rural Garfield County, Utah, have long seen it differently.

In 2015, they passed a resolution declaring a state of emergency, saying the monument had all but wiped out the natural resource-based economy in the area. They cited a remarkable 67 percent drop in enrollment at Escalante High School since the monument was designated, while other schools have suffered similar drops.

"We see markers that don't indicate a healthy economy," says Matthew Anderson of the Sutherland Institute, a Utah-based free market think tank. He argues that Headwaters' study doesn't tell the whole story.

President Clinton signs his 1996 order designating roughly 1.7 million acres of southern Utah as the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. The designation has long drawn resistance from some people, partly for perceived losses it inflicted on the local economy. Others have asserted the monument has actually offered an economic boost. Doug Mills/AP hide caption

President Clinton signs his 1996 order designating roughly 1.7 million acres of southern Utah as the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. The designation has long drawn resistance from some people, partly for perceived losses it inflicted on the local economy. Others have asserted the monument has actually offered an economic boost.

Local anger still runs deep over President Clinton's 1996 designation because it also effectively nixed a proposed coal mining operation. A Dutch mining firm's proposal could have brought in $100 million in new tax revenue and created about 600 jobs, according to state estimates at the time.

Anderson argues the types of jobs created by a national monument designation namely in recreation and tourism tend to be low-paying and seasonal, and he says these jobs don't always sustain families the way livestock grazing does. A national monument grandfathers existing activities like grazing leases but bars new ones.

Some residents throw cold water on the idea of shaky employment.

"We are awash in jobs," Blake Spalding, co-owner of a local grill, tells the Salt Lake Tribune. "What we need is people to fill them."

Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke talks to reporters before departing from Kanab Airport, where protestors were present to challenge the revisions of national monuments on May 10, in Kanab, Utah. Zinke spoke with state and local officials, touring the Bears Ears National Monument and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, to determine their future status under the Trump Administration. George Frey/Getty Images hide caption

Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke talks to reporters before departing from Kanab Airport, where protestors were present to challenge the revisions of national monuments on May 10, in Kanab, Utah. Zinke spoke with state and local officials, touring the Bears Ears National Monument and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, to determine their future status under the Trump Administration.

The debate around Grand Staircase by no means ends with the balance sheet.

Ninety-three percent of Garfield County is owned and controlled by the federal government. And for some detractors, like former Escalante Mayor Jerry Taylor, the federal presence feels akin to that of an unwelcome relative.

"We love our mother-in-law," he once said, according to E&E News. "But sometimes we don't want her to tell us how to run our house."

Those detractors have not forgotten how the monument was established in the first place: planned largely without input from state leaders and designated by Clinton at a signing ceremony that wasn't even in Utah.

"Remember," Zinke said during a visit to the state, according to the Tribune, "when this monument was formed, the governor of Utah read it in the paper."

As recently as February, Utah lawmakers called on Washington to reduce the size of the monument, citing "a negative impact on the prosperity, development, economy, custom, culture, heritage, educational opportunities, health, and well-being of local communities" among other grievances.

Nevertheless, when Zinke visited Grand Staircase last month, he was greeted by chants of demonstrators calling for him to "save our monument," the St. George Daily Spectrum notes.

The site flush with ancient artifacts and fossils that date back tens of millions of years has been lauded as "the Shangri-La for dinosaurs." And proponents defend its value not only for recreational visitors, but scientists too.

"What we learn here matters to the entire West," Nicole Croft, executive director of Grand Staircase-Escalante Partners, tells E&E.

One of the biggest hiking attractions in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument: the Calf Creek Falls. Chad Douglas/Flickr hide caption

One of the biggest hiking attractions in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument: the Calf Creek Falls.

The ultimate fate of the monuments is murky partly because a president's authority under the law that established them, the 1906 Antiquities Act, may be open to dispute.

"What's unclear right now is whether the president has the authority to undo what one of his predecessors has done," says Mark Squillace, law professor at the University of Colorado. The act "essentially authorizes the president to proclaim, but not to modify or revoke, national monuments."

Squillace says only Congress has the clear authority to revoke a designation, because Congress has authority over public property.

While some small monuments have been turned over to states, no precedent exists for the abolition of a national monument the size of Grand Staircase.

Because of that lack of clarity, one thing is fairly clear: Any order by Trump to shrink or nullify any monument will almost certainly end up in court. It is widely expected that environmentalists would immediately sue.

Squillace says the dispute could go all the way to the Supreme Court.

Even Zinke himself hinted at the uncertainty during his confirmation hearings earlier this year.

"The law is untested," he said.

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What Utah's Canyon Country Can Tell Us About Trump's Monuments Review - NPR

Iran in Pursuit of Knowledge Economy – Financial Tribune

The pursuit of transition to a knowledge economy in the context of low foreign direct investment is one of the main challenges facing President Hassan Rouhani since his reelection on May 19, 2017. Although the Iranian economy returned to positive growth in 2016 of about 6.4%, this rebound can largely be ascribed to the return to near-capacity oil exports after the UN Security Councils endorsement of the nuclear agreement in July 2015 led to the easing of international sanctions. According to the World Bank, integration of Irans banking sector with the global banking system has been slow since the sanctions were lifted. This has impeded foreign direct investment to Iran and trade, which will be crucial for the development of Irans non-oil sector, reads an article recently published in Malaysia Sum. Excepts follow:

Focus on Using Human Capital to Create Wealth The UNESCO Science Report recalls that the government first set its sights on moving from a resource-based economy to one based on knowledge in its 20-year Vision Plan (2005-25). This transition became a priority after international sanctions were progressively hardened from 2006 onwards and the oil embargo was tightened. In February 2014, Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei introduced the concept of Resistance Economy, a plan advocating reliance on domestic potentials and a lesser dependence on imports that reasserted key provisions of Vision 2025. Vision 2025 challenged policymakers to look beyond extractive industries to the countrys human capital for wealth creation. This led to the adoption of incentives to raise the number of university students and academics, on the one hand, and to stimulate problem-solving research and industrial research, on the other. For instance, in order to ensure that 50% of academic research was oriented toward socioeconomic needs and problem-solving, the Fifth Five-Year Economic Development Plan (2012-17) tied development to the orientation of research projects. It also made provision for research and technology centers to be set up on campus and for universities to develop linkages with industry. Vision 2025 foresaw an investment of $3.7 trillion by 2025 to finance the transition to a knowledge economy. It was projected that one-third of this amount will come from abroad but, so far, FDI has remained elusive. It has contributed less than 1% of GDP since 2006 and just 0.5% of GDP in 2014. Much of the $3.7 trillion earmarked in Vision 2025 is to go toward supporting investment in research and development by knowledge-based firms and the commercialization of research results. A law passed in 2010 provides an appropriate mechanism, the Innovation and Prosperity Fund. According to the funds president, Behzad Soltani, 4,600 billion rials ($171.4 million) had been allocated to 100 knowledge-based companies by late 2014. Public and private universities wishing to set up private firms may also apply to the fund. Domestic expenditure on research stood at 0.7% of GDP in 2008 and 0.3% of GDP in 2012. Iranian businesses contributed about 11% of the total in 2008. The governments limited budget is being directed toward supporting small innovative businesses, business incubators and science and technology parksenterprises that employ university graduates.

Surge in University Rolls In line with the goals of Vision 2025, policymakers have made a concerted effort to increase the number of students and academic researchers. To this end, the government raised its commitment to higher education to 1% of GDP in 2006. After peaking at this level, higher education spending stood at 0.86% of GDP in 2015. Higher education spending has resisted better than public expenditure on education overall. The latter peaked at 4.7% of GDP in 2007 before slipping to 2.9% of GDP in 2015. The result has seen a steep rise in tertiary enrolment. Between 2007 and 2013, student rolls swelled from 2.8 million to 4.4 million in the countrys public and private universities. Some 45% of students were enrolled in private universities in 2011. There were more women studying than men in 2007, a proportion that has since dropped back slightly to 48%. Enrolment has progressed in most fields. The most popular in 2013 were social sciences (1.9 million students, of whom 1.1 million were women) and engineering (1.5 million, of whom 373,415 were women). Women also made up two-thirds of medical students. One in eight graduates go on to enroll in a Masters/PhD program. This is comparable to the ratio in the Republic of Korea and Thailand (1 in 7) and Japan (1 in 10).

Science, Engineering Attracting More PhD Graduates The number of PhD graduates has progressed at a similar pace as university enrolment overall. Natural sciences and engineering have proved increasingly popular among both sexes, even if engineering remains a male-dominated field. In 2012, women made up one-third of PhD graduates, being drawn primarily to health (40% of PhD students), natural sciences (39%), agriculture (33%) and humanities and arts (31%). According to UNESCOs Institute for Statistics, 38% of Masters and PhD students were studying science and engineering fields in 2011. There has been an interesting evolution in the gender balance among PhD students. Whereas the share of female PhD graduates in health remained stable at 38-39% between 2007 and 2012, it rose in all three other broad fields. Most spectacular was the leap in female PhD graduates in agricultural sciences from 4% to 33%, but there was also a marked progression in science (from 28% to 39%) and engineering (from 8% to 16% of PhD students).

Surge in Research Pool According to the Institute for Statistics, the number of (full-time equivalent) researchers rose from 711 to 736 per million inhabitants between 2009 and 2010. This corresponds to an increase of more than 2,000 researchers, from 52,256 to 54,813. The world average is 1,083 per million inhabitants. One in four (26%) Iranian researchers is a woman, which is close to the world average (28%). In 2008, half of researchers joined the academia (51.5%), one-third in the government sector (33.6%) and just under one in seven in the business sector (15.0%). Within the business sector, 22% of researchers were women in 2013, the same proportion as in Ireland, Italy and Norway. The number of firms declaring research activities more than doubled between 2006 and 2011, from 30,935 to 64,642. The increasingly tough sanctions regime oriented the Iranian economy toward the domestic market and, by erecting barriers to foreign imports, encouraged knowledge-based enterprises to localize production.

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Iran in Pursuit of Knowledge Economy - Financial Tribune

Automation may push big 3 telcos’ operating margins up by 500 bps – Economic Times

KOLKATA: Indias top telcos could expand their operating margins by around 500 basis points each over the next three years from automation initiatives like the Aadhaar-based e-KYC process and online recharges, which would lower sales, marketing, distribution and administration costs.

Analysts and industry experts say a combination of automation and ongoing sector consolidation is likely to also help telcos cut subscriber acquisitions costs, which would also lead to a sharp reduction in manpower requirements.

Rajiv Sharma, director & telecoms analyst at brokerage HSBC, expects listed incumbents Bharti Airtel and Idea Cellular to go slow on additional hirings once automation and consolidation picks up.

He expects Indias biggest telcos to each see at least a 500 bps Ebitda margin expansion in the medium term (read: next three years) from a combination of automation initiatives, sector consolidation and simplified tariffs in an era of bundled plans.

Of this estimated 500 bps Ebitda margin expansion, he expects nearly 150 bps to stem from rapid adoption of online recharges, especially with the government driving digital payments.

Badal Bagri, chief finance officer for India & South Asia at Bharti Airtel, had said at the No. 1 phone companys earnings call that customer adds, which are largely based on e-KYC now, had led to substantial cost reduction. But Reliance Jio, owned by Indias richest man, Mukesh Ambani, said the emerging digital ecosystem will eventually drive jobs creation.

While operators will work towards reducing costs with automation and use of digital methodologies, newer opportunities will emerge for value addition to customers leading to creation of more jobs, said a Jio spokesman in a written response to ETs queries.

This movement has already started with recruitment increasing in areas such as digital services, platforms, content and app development, infrastructure and cyber security, network optimisation to digital payment chains.

Sector experts expect mass-market adoption of bundled plans in the 4G era to drive tariff simplicity, which will reduce customer complaints and queries at telco call centres and translate in additional cost savings. Once that happens, telcos need not invest in large teams to manage thousands of tariff plans, which is the case today, said HSBCs Sharma.

According to an HSBC note seen by ET, Idea Cellular has reported sharp savings in its selling & distribution expenses in fiscal quarter ended March 2017 and suggested that 80 per cent of this saving was driven by the e-KYC process.

The countrys third-largest carrier reported a near 13 per cent sequential fall in subscriber acquisition & servicing expenses & advertisement and business promotion expenditure in the March quarter to Rs 825 crore from Rs 948 crore in the quarter to December 2016.

Market leader Bharti Airtel has also reported a near 10 per cent sequential fall in its sales & marketing expenses to Rs 1,693.4 crore in the March quarter. The on-year fall was even steeper at 17 per cent on this metric.

According to HSBC estimates, deployment of the e-KYC process has already led to Idea and Bharti seeing a 21 per cent and 11 per cent quarter-onquarter decline in their sales, marketing and admin costs respectively in the March quarter. Bharti Airtel, Idea Cellular, Vodafone India did not individually respond to ETs emailed queries.

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Automation may push big 3 telcos' operating margins up by 500 bps - Economic Times

A techno-optimist take on automation and jobs AEI | Pethokoukis … – American Enterprise Institute

Reason writer Ronald Bailey outlines a strong case that fears about technological unemployment are overblown. For instance: He adds needed context to the recent finding by MIT economist Daron Acemoglu and Boston University economist Pascual Restrepo that each additional industrial robot in the United Statesresults in 5.6 American workers losing their jobs.

But even taking the high-end estimate, job loss due to robots was has been just 670,000 since 1990 while last year some 62.5 million Americans were hired in new jobs, while 60.1 million either quit or were laid off from old ones, according the Bureau of Labor Statistics. I would add that total nonfarm employment over that span has increased by nearly 40 million.

A passenger stands in front of a row of Cathay Pacific Airways self check-in machines in Hong Kong Airport March 10, 2010. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu.

And Bailey on the basic economics that shock stories often miss:

When businesses automate to boost productivity, they can cut their prices, thus increasing the demand for their products, which in turn requires more workers. Furthermore, the lower prices allow consumers to take the money they save and spend it on other goods or services, and this increased demand creates more jobs in those other industries. New products and services create new markets and new demands, and the result is more new jobs.

Pessimists also fail to appreciate our inability to imagine what future jobs look like, a failing that stems from our inability to imagine future technology and its uses. Bailey cites research from economist Michael Mandel that in the decade since the advent of the smartphone, the app economy now supports nearly two million jobs.

Let me end with this bit from Bailey that quotes economist David Autor:

Imagine a time-traveling economist from our day meeting with Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, and John D. Rockefeller at the turn of the 20th century. She informs these titans that in 2017, only 14 percent of American workers will be employed in agriculture, mining, construction, and manufacturing, down from around 70 percent in 1900. Then the economist asks the trio, What do you think the other 56 percent of workers are going to do?

They wouldnt know the answer. And as we look ahead now to the end of the 21st century, we cant predict what jobs workers will be doing then either. But thats no reason to assume those jobs wont exist.

I cant tell you what people are going to do for work 100 years from now, Autor said last year, but the future doesnt hinge on my imagination.

(For more on the issues surrounding automation, a relatively recentpiece from the Richmond Fedis worth reading. Itlooks at things through the lens of how driverless vehicles might affect truck drivers.)

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A techno-optimist take on automation and jobs AEI | Pethokoukis ... - American Enterprise Institute

Small energy or manufacturing-reliant towns most in danger of job automation: Study – BNN

Small towns specializing in mining, oil and gas and manufacturing are most prone to losing jobs to robots, according to research from the Brookfield Institute.

A research report released Friday entitled Automation Across the Nation breaks down the locations and sectors most prone to losing jobs to increasing computerization and robotics.

In addition to shedding light on susceptible small towns like Ingersoll, Ont. and Quesnel, B.C. the report also identified accommodation and food services as the sectors most likely to be affected by automation. It found that 69 per cent of tasks in that industry could potentially be automated.

The reports authors, Matthew Lo and Creig Lamb sought to take the automation issue to a micro level after seeing an abundance of national data.

To date, studies examining the potential labour market impacts of modern advances in machine learning, robotics, and other technologies, have largely been limited to the national scale in Canada, they wrote in the report.

While these studies are necessary to set the context, Canadas large, diverse economy means that the effects will undoubtedly be experienced differently across the country.

For example, Woodstock, Ont. with a population of just over 30,000 25 per cent of which works in manufacturing had 50 per cent of its workforce susceptible to automation.

The news was not good for Canadas oil sands heartland, either, as Wood Buffalo, Alta. ranked as one of the more endangered locations in the nation. About 30 percent of the areas, 54,000-plus citizens work in the resource sector and about half of those jobs could potentially be automated, according to the report.

Conversely, cities with large hospitals, colleges and universities or a distinct public sector footprint are in less danger. The report identified locations like Ottawa, Kingston, Ont. and Corner Brook, Nfld. as being well-insulated against automation.

Canadas bigger cities are less prone, due to a smaller reliance on manufacturing. However, the report found that cities like Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver still had 46 per cent of total tasks susceptible to automation.

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Small energy or manufacturing-reliant towns most in danger of job automation: Study - BNN

With manufacturing at the heart of Oxford County’s economy, many jobs could be lost to automation in the coming … – Woodstock Sentinel Review

Automation and robotics may be a serious threat in the next couple of decades to the flourishing economies of Oxford Countys three major centres as automation becomes cheaper and more accessible.

According to a new report, three out of the top five Ontario communities that are predicted to have jobs threatened by automation are in Oxford County with Ingersoll and Tillsonburg rated number one and two respectively.

Woodstock is number five on the list of towns or cities with the highest concentration of work with the potential to be automated.

Released this week, the new report is the second in the last two years published by Toronto-based Brookfield Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (BII+E) using compiled information to examine potential jobs threatened by automation.

Some industries, the report says, involve a higher concentration of tasks that are susceptible, such as manufacturing and mining.

We dont want to be the bearer of bad news but we want to let people know how they will do under this phenomenon, said Sean Mullin, executive director of BII+E. The point of the paper is to bring awareness.

Entitled Mapping Automation: How will the advancing technology impact cities and towns across Canada? the report uses McKinsey and Company and census data to examine which towns, cities and regions that are more susceptible to automation.

Mullin said the three Oxford County communities were identified based on the composition of the local labour market.

According to the report, the three Oxford communities have work forces in which 50 per cent of jobs have the potential to be automated.

Manufacturing, not surprisingly, is an area considered to be quite susceptible to automation, Mullin said. The composition of the three labour markets is fairly similar.

Other occupations with the potential to be eliminated include accommodation and food service industry, as well as the retail industry due to the emergence of online shopping and self-checkouts.

The changes could take around 10 to 20 years to take place but nothing is written in stone.

As with any forward looking forecast there is a certain amount of uncertainty... Mullin said. Rather than precisely predict what will happen two to three years from now, we want to provide a guide that says here look at this phenomenon. How should we be thinking about this over 10 or 20 year period?

Mullin said the report is designed as an early warning of what may be to come for some workers.

It gives you a sense of how to anticipate some of those areas and even respond to them, he said.

In Ingersoll, almost one-quarter of the labour force is employed in the manufacturing industry.

According to the report, the town may have already felt the brunt of some of the trends associated with the decline of manufacturing, with 625 job cuts likely due to globalization as well as automation.

Ingersolls economic development officer Curtis Tighe said there is very little difference between Ingersoll and other Ontario and Oxford communities in terms of manufacturing percentages.

Its an Oxford County issue, he said. It will affect Oxford County hard but it will also affect all of Western society hard. It will affect us all similarly.

In Ingersoll, Tighe said a small population with a large number of manufacturing jobs is likely why they are teetering at the top of the list.

We've done a great job of attracting manufacturing jobs in the past, Tighe said. Our best opportunity is to be adaptable and change quickly as the world changes. As long as we have a good mindset - and I think we do in Oxford County - to adapt to a changing world , I think we will be fine.

Our adaptability gives us the opportunity to change and lessen the impact.

Tighe said the town will be watching closely as BII+E continue their research into the automation and the future.

We will look forward to those reports and will read them closely, he said.

Whether massive job losses and a flailing economy are part of Oxford Countys future is yet to be determined.

Forecasts are not destiny, Mullin said. We think there are bunch of things Canadians and policy makers can do in response to this, in terms of preparing for types of careers or jobs likely not to be at risk. Whats not picked up in the nuance of the study is the difference between a really first class manufacturer and somewho may be about to become obsolete.

According to the report, Canada also has a large portion of its labour force that will be insulated from automation, with 28 per cent of its population working in least susceptible industries such as health care, social assistance, as well as services in the professional, scientific and technical fields.

View full report at brookfieldinstitute.ca.

HRiver@postmedia.com

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With manufacturing at the heart of Oxford County's economy, many jobs could be lost to automation in the coming ... - Woodstock Sentinel Review

Taxi drivers are hit by ’21st century slavery’ in Uber row over fares – expressandstar.com

The Wolverhampton Private Hire Drivers Association (WPHDA), which also represents drivers from Walsall, Sandwell and Dudley, claim they have had to drastically drop prices to hold on to customers in the face of increasing competition from rival firms.

Fares between Wolverhampton to Birmingham had fallen by a quarter - from 25 to around 17- 18 following the arrival of taxi-hailing firms such as Uber on the scene, they claim.

Ebrahim Suleman, WPHDA chairman, said drivers were effectively earning 3.50 an hour after taking out expenses. "I may as well pack up and work in a factory, or Sainsbury's - at least then I will get the minimum wage.

"This is 21st century slavery. We have bills to pay and families to look after like everyone else."

He warned that Black Country private hire drivers would liaise with colleagues in Manchester and London to 'put the pressure on' politicians at both local and national level.

At a meeting last week they urged Wolverhampton's three Labour MPs Emma Reynolds, Pat McFadden and Eleanor Smith to lobby Parliament on their behalf.

Many members and elders of the local Muslim community also attended the meeting to given their support. One said Uber was 'killing the taxi industry all over the country.'

The move was the latest action by WPHDA which in October brought the city to a near standstill with a 'go slow' by around 200 drivers, causing delays for motorists in evening rush-hour traffic.

They were highlighting what the association sees as lenient tests for new taxi drivers and too many licences being given out by the Wolverhampton Council, which has taken advantage of new government deregulation allowing drivers to shop around for their licences.

The council is planning to reduce the cost of a taxi licence by between 1215 per cent. Councillor Bolshaw, licensing chairman, has said the authority simply acted quicker than its neighbours to ditch red tape that was holding up the service.

The WPHDA also launched a petition, signed by 800 people, to reintroduce harder tests which they said was in the interests of public safety, to raise standards and raise the profile of the trade.

The association, which also has members in the wider West Midlands, in Solihull and Coventry, is campaigning on a number of fronts, including cross-border hiring and holiday and sickness pay rights.

Last Tuesday thousands of Spanish taxis went on strike in Madrid and Barcelona to protest against ride-hailing companies such as US company Uber and Spanish-owned Cabify.

Uber does not employ drivers or own vehicles, instead relying on private contractors with their own cars, allowing them to run their own businesses. Critics say this allows it to dodge costly regulations such as stringent licensing requirements for taxi drivers, who undergo hundreds of hours of training.

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Taxi drivers are hit by '21st century slavery' in Uber row over fares - expressandstar.com

It’s True: Black Women Are Working Harder And Getting Less In Return – Essence.com

There's new evidence to back up what we always knew to be true.

A new report, entitled The Status of Black Women in America, confirms what your mama has been telling you all these years: as a Black woman you will have to be twice as good to get half of what they have.

The report, which was conducted by the nonprofit Institute for Womens Policy Research and funded by the National Domestic Workers Alliance, found that more than sixty percent of Black women are in the workforce, making them one of the two racial/ethnic groups of women with the highest labor force participation rate, but their earnings lag behind most womens and mens earnings in the U.S.

RELATED: 5 Things Black Women In Human Resources Want You to Know About Winning At Work

To get its findings, the report analyzed data by gender, race and ethnicity for all 50 states and the District of Columbia across six topical areas: political participation, employment and earnings, work and family, poverty and opportunity, health and well-being, and violence and safety. But it did not just find the problems, it included policy recommendations for each category.

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In the reports foreword, Alicia Garza, co-founder of the Black Lives Matter movement, writes, Though slavery was legally abolished in the United States in 1865, the conditions that existed under slavery continue to persist today. Black women continue to be at a severe disadvantage in many aspects of our democracy and our economy.

Whether one examines Black womens access to health care, Black womens earnings, or Black womens access to much needed social supports like childcare and eldercare, Black women are getting the short end of the stick--despite having contributed so much to the building of this nation. The result is a racialized economy where Black women are losing ground.

RELATED: Confronting Racial Bias At Work: What It Looks Like And How To Handle It

More Black women participate in the workforce than women of other races and the rate of Black women with a college degree has increased by nearly24 percent since the early 2000.Yet, we are among the most likely to live in poverty.

The only other group poorer than us is indigenous women.

Part of the reason for this poverty cycle is that despite all the advancement we have made, Black women still remain in the worst-paying sectors of the economy care taking and service jobs. Even college-educated Black women earn less than White women who went to college, with the median income for Black women in that category being $50,000 a year to a White womans $56,000.

More than 80 percent of Black mothers are breadwinners.

To bridge the wage gap and reduce poverty, the report recommends raising the minimum wage.

The researchers also said Black women had a higher voter turnout than all other groups of men and women during the last two presidential elections, but remain underrepresented at every level of federal and state political office. We hold only 3.4 percent of U.S. Congress seats, 3.5 percent seats in state legislature and only have Senator Kamala Harris representing us in the Senate.

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It's True: Black Women Are Working Harder And Getting Less In Return - Essence.com

Sauberan foursome wins YMS tourney – Lockport Union-Sun & Journal

Four representatives of Sauberan & Company, Brad Priebe, Corey Gallahan, Dave Milliman and Joe Boulanger, emerged as the champions of Youth Mentoring Services' 25th annual charity golf tournament at Brookfield Country Club, Clarence.

Twenty-six golf foursome groups competed in the fundraising tourney on May 22. To mark its 25th year, YMS put together a display of photos, articles and other mementoes from past tournaments.

Dr. James Shaw of Lockport Dental Group and Brian Costello of Diversified Manufacturing hosted the tourney. Proceeds support YMS, whose mission is to make a positive difference in the lives of children, primarily by pairing them with caring adult mentors. YMS also offers programs for at-risk youths, such as summer "camperships."

The agency's summer program for youths aged 7 to 11 years will be ongoing from June 26 through Aug. 4. The theme, "Nature Navigators," will have participants learning about ecosystems and taking part in interactive workshops on personal empowerment, conflict resolution, perspective taking and more. To register a child, visit the YMS office at 86 Park Ave. (across from the Niagara County Courthouse) or call 434-1855.

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Sauberan foursome wins YMS tourney - Lockport Union-Sun & Journal

Major progress eludes Alaska Legislature this week – KTOO – KTOO

The Alaska Capitol Building in Juneau on Tuesday. There was little progress on reaching budget agreements this week, three weeks ahead of a potential government shutdown. (Photo by Jeremy Hsieh/KTOO)

Despite a looming deadline, lawmakers made no major progress this week on reaching agreement on a state budget and a plan to balance the budget in future years.

Gov. Bill Walker tried to make progress on Monday by putting out his own compromise proposal. He didnt get very far.

He took the Senates side on how to handle oil and gas taxes and the Permanent Fund, and the Houses side on this years state budget and the need for a broad-based tax.

But no one embraced all of his package of proposals.

Senate President Pete Kelly welcomed it, but he continued to express opposition to the elements that differ from the Senate majoritys positions.

The mostly Democratic House majority was much stronger in rejecting it, although some members signaled a willingness to work with what Walker proposed.

Kelly wants lawmakers to focus on the budget first, he said. The Republican-led Senate majority may be willing to live with just passing the budget putting off a decision on the Permanent Fund until later.

House members dont want to do that but they only want to reduce PFDs if the state also has higher oil taxes and/or a broad-based tax like an income tax. They have saidthats fairer.

Senators have saideveryone agrees on the need for Permanent Fund changes, but they differ on taxes and spending.

House members have been hoping that the Senate would be swayed by public pressure over budget cuts. That hasnt happened yet.

Theres one thing thats certain to put pressure on both chambers the state government shutting down in the eventthat they dont pass a budget.

Theres a conference committee thats making slow progress on the budget. But it hasnt taken on the biggest differences between the chambers such as cuts to education and university funding, and how much to draw from Permanent Fund earnings.

Theconference committee on House Bill 111, which would makechanges to oil and gas taxes, met Friday. The two chambers are still far apart.

Anchorage Democratic Rep. Geran Tarr saidthe House majority wants to change the system so that oil and gas companies effectively pay more in taxes.

Weve said its unsustainable, Tarr said. We need to reduce the burden to the state treasury because its not affordable going forward and we hope to find a compromise on that.

While the Senate version of the bill eliminates the tax credits that are paid out to oil companies, Tarr saidit allows them under a different name.

Anchorage Republican Sen.Cathy Giessel saidwhat the Senate has proposed is significant: Companies would no longer be able to receive tax credits before they enter production.

It will be applicable when youve reached production, versus simply handing out cash for performing certain activities, she said. Thats a big change. The other big change, of course, is were no longer jeopardizing our treasury by handing out this cash.

Giessel saidthe Senate didnt have time to assess the overall effect of the Houses overhaul to oil and gas taxes.

Anchorage Democratic Rep. Les Gara has notedthe projected reduction in oil and gas taxes in the Senate bill as compared with the House bill is equal to the Senates proposed cuts to school and university spending over 10 years.

Republicans reject the comparison, saying that encouraging oil production is necessary for the economy.

Legislators have a week to work out their differences. If they dont, then Walker will likely call another special session. Then there will be two more weeks to prevent a shutdown July 1.

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Major progress eludes Alaska Legislature this week - KTOO - KTOO

VA making progress on student payments, lawmakers still not satisfied – FederalNewsRadio.com

The Department of Veterans Affairs is checking off a list of recommendations to improve the wait time for payments to veterans trying to attend school through the G.I. bill, but lawmakers are still unhappy with the progress.

The Post-9/11 GI Bill gives student veterans direct payments for things like housing and books, but tuition is still paid directly to universities. But the complexities of the bill have left some veterans out to dry when it comes to making payments to their schools.

VA Director of the Education Service Veterans Benefits Administration Robert Worley told Congress the VA cut its processing time for claims down to 21 days and to six days for supplemental claims for things like books and housing.

The use of the Long Term Solution (LTS) IT system has been partly to thank for that. The system processes an average of 5,200 claims a day without human intervention. A 2015 GAO report gave VA recommendations to improve the system and other issues, which VA is acting on.

But House Veterans Affairs Economic Opportunity Subcommittee Chairman Jodey Arrington (R-Texas) says thats not good enough.

Im not satisfied. I think in this case youve got system LTS that was implemented that made some significant headway but they didnt go all the way, Arrington told Federal News Radio after a June 8 hearing. It just doesnt seem like its as strategic and well organized as it should be. So we are not yielding all the benefits that I think we could and should be getting from IT systems. Every organization deals with this, but I think the VA has more challenges in pulling all this together.

Worley said additional functionality is needed for the LTS system to get it working better. Features that could get it working faster include automated certificates of eligibility for original claims, electronically generated letters, expanded automation of supplemental claims, issuance of advanced payments, monthly certification of attendance and improved business analytics for reporting purposes.

Other IT systems dealing with claims and benefits need much more work. The Benefits Delivery Network (BDN), which is a claims processing, payment, tracking and disposition system for education is in need of a total replacement.

Support and maintenance are difficult or impossible to find for 70s-era systems like BDN. Warranties have expired, security best practices that are common on newer systems cannot be used, integration with newer systems is increasingly difficult to support and the knowledge pool for ongoing support and maintenance is becoming nonexistent as experts retire, Worley said in his opening statement to Arringtons committee.

Those IT issues are leaving some decisions pending, which sometimes keeps students from attending class because of outstanding debts.

Compounding the problem is Defense Department assistance in providing electronic records to the VA when requested.

Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Military Personnel Lernes Hebert told the committee it takes about 10 days for DoD to get VA the information it needs on veterans.

Overall, taking the VA claim average and the DoD delivery time together it would take more than a month students to get a claim if everything runs smoothly.

VA is also struggling with overpayments to schools and beneficiaries. The 2015 GAO report stated the VA made $416 million in overpayments in 2014.

The VA hasnt made overpayments that large since, but the problem still persists. VA has $106 million in outstanding overpayments from 2016. It also has $49.5 million outstanding from 2015, $31 million still uncollected from 2014 and $47 million from 2013 and before.

One major issue is that only $6.9 million of that is in the hands of schools. The rest is spread out to individual students across the nation.

Somebody has got to be held accountable for not being able to manage [the debt] and now its getting away from us. Theres some management issues there, Arrington told Federal News Radio.

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VA making progress on student payments, lawmakers still not satisfied - FederalNewsRadio.com

The specter of political violence looms over Kenya’s progress – Washington Post

KENYA HAS been exhibiting some conspicuous signs of dynamism in recent days. Last week it inaugurated a $3.2 billion, 290-mile railroad between Nairobi and the port city of Mombasa, the biggest infrastructure project in the countrys 53 years of independence. That followed the groundbreaking on a $220 million complex in the capital that will include what is billed as Africas tallest building. Construction is booming elsewhere as the economy continues to grow at a healthy pace of about 6 percent. While Kenyans complain about crime and the cost of living, the country is thriving compared with most of its East African neighbors.

Unfortunately, that progress is threatened by a specter that has haunted Kenya for the past decade: political violence. An election campaign that got underway recently pits incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta against Raila Odinga in an Aug. 8 vote, with each candidate backed by tribal alliances. Mr.Odinga has run three previous times and claims, plausibly, that his losses in 2007 and 2013 were due to fraud. The 2007 vote triggered a wave of violence in Nairobi and across the Rift Valley in which more than 1,300 people were killed ; a similar tragedy in 2013 was narrowly averted.

This year the warning signs of a violent outcome are abundant. Seven people have already died in incidents linked to primary campaigns. Kenyas National Security Council reports that more than half a million illegal arms are in circulation around the country, and that politicians are forming militias to protect themselves or intimidate others. In Mombasa, police death squads have allegedly been assassinating suspected Muslim militants even as a local governor allied with Mr. Odinga campaigns to hold his own seat. Human Rights Watch released a report on Kenya last week and charged that numerous journalists have faced intimidation, beatings, and job loss.

Mr. Kenyatta and his vice president, William Ruto, are all too familiar with the mechanics of thuggery and incitement: Both were charged by the International Criminal Court with crimes against humanity for their roles in the 2007 violence. The cases were eventually dropped after a concerted campaign of obstruction by their government. Kenya did adopt reforms, including a new constitution that decentralized power and an independent electoral commission and Supreme Court which in 2013 rejected Mr. Odingas appeals of his last electoral loss.

Whether bloodshed can be avoided this year will depend on whether the loser of what polls show as a neck-and-neck race will be ready to concede defeat. That in turn will require a quick and transparent vote count by the electoral authorities. Kenyas international donors should press the government to hold a fair vote and opposition parties to abide by the result. All sides know from painful experience that Kenya has much to lose if its leaders fail to act responsibly. The sheen of progress that the country showed off recently could be quickly wiped out.

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The specter of political violence looms over Kenya's progress - Washington Post

NBC 10 I-Team: DHS points to progress after months of problems … – Turn to 10

by KATIE DAVIS, NBC 10 NEWS

Rhode Islands troubled Department of Human Services is making progress in clearing a backlog of social service cases, state officials said Friday, June 9, 2017. (WJAR)

Rhode Islands troubled Department of Human Services is making progress in clearing a backlog of social service cases, state officials said Friday.

The total number of pending cases now stands at 8,117, which is down from a high of more than 14,000 earlier this year, DHS spokesperson Alisha Pina told the NBC 10 I-Team.

Each case represents a person or family waiting for services like food stamps, healthcare, child care subsidies or income assistance.

The problems began in September, when the state launched the new computer system, known as UHIP, which was created by vendor Deloitte Consulting. Thousands of Rhode Islanders saw benefits cut off or delayed for months following the botched roll-out.

Gov. Gina Raimondo subsequently replaced the department heads responsible for the transition and withheld millions in payments from Deloitte.

Weve made significant progress, said Eric Beane, who took over as Secretary of Health and Human Services following the resignation of Elizabeth Roberts earlier this year amid the UHIP debacle.

A closer look at the data released Friday by DHS shows more than half of the 8,000-plus pending cases 4,143 in all -- are overdue and awaiting action from DHS. Another 919 overdue cases are waiting on clients.

The NBC 10 I-Team continues to hear from viewers who say theyre still stuck in the system. One woman said she was on hold with DHS for more than five hours this week, without getting a response.

I cant get in touch with a person for the life of me, she wrote in an email.

Another woman said she turned in all of her paperwork but is still waiting for help on her case.

Im almost out of food for my family, she wrote in an email. These wait times are ridiculous.

New managers said they expect to have the backlog of cases under control by September, marking a full year after the new computer system was first launched. Pina, the DHS spokesperson, said the department would release updated numbers once a month.

We know there is much more work to be done, and the Turnaround Team and staff remain committed to getting timely benefits to our neighbors in need, Beane said.

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NBC 10 I-Team: DHS points to progress after months of problems ... - Turn to 10

Chiefs see slow but steady progress from QB Patrick Mahomes II … – ESPN (blog)

The process of turning Patrick Mahomes II into an NFL-ready quarterback could be a long one.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- The Kansas City Chiefs started in a place so basic with rookie quarterback Patrick Mahomes II when he arrived as their first-round draft pick that they had to teach him how to call plays in the huddle.

That was a new experience for Mahomes, who wasnt asked to relay the playcall to teammates in college at Texas Tech. At first, even that didnt go well.

Day 1, when he got here, he was yelling the play out so loud in the huddle that the whole defense could hear him," said Matt Nagy, the Chiefs quarterbacks coach and co-offensive coordinator. They could hear the play call, too.

Now he knows to get in the huddle, be calm and speak only to the people hes supposed to be talking to."

The Chiefs will take progress where they can get it. Thats a victory when it comes to their rookie quarterback, and there have been others.

But the process of turning him into an NFL-ready player is a long one, and the Chiefs and Mahomes are still in the early stages. Mahomes remains the third quarterback into the lineup in practice behind starter Alex Smith and Tyler Bray, and that doesnt figure to change anytime soon.

Mahomes is frequently the last player off the field after practice. He generally stays late to work on his footwork. The Chiefs are trying to cram in as much with Mahomes as they can before the end of offseason practice next week.

Nagy indicated the work with Mahomes is showing, and not just when it comes to calling plays in the huddle. He said the Chiefs are encouraged because theyre not seeing the same mistakes twice from Mahomes.

The first pass of Mahomes first two-minute drill last week resulted in an interception when he was trying to unload the ball out of bounds on a play that was broken. He underestimated the ability of linebacker Reshard Cliett, who tipped the ball into the air and caught it.

Mahomes hasnt made that mistake again.

Hes able to see the play," Nagy said. He can go into the huddle, call the play with confidence, visualize it. He identifies the [middle] linebacker, tries to work with the protections. Were still not yet at the part where he sees the defense and understands where theyre coming from. Its still a little fast, but its coming."

The lessons will come even faster for Mahomes at training camp when it begins next month. The Chiefs will be able to practice in pads for the first time and move at a much faster pace than in the offseason.

Right now, were doing a lot of stuff," Nagy said. He knew nothing about the offense at first. He went from basic plays, but it was very fast for him. Now he knows the offense, but were doing a lot. At training camp, well get back to that part where things are basic again and hes going to know the offense and the things hes supposed to do, so we can let his talent go a little bit."

Mahomes said last week that he didnt feel he was far from being ready to play in a game. Asked what the expectations would be today for Mahomes if he had to quarterback the Chiefs for real, Nagy said, Youd still see some mistakes. Thats only fair to expect. Wed have to pull back. We know wed have to be patient with the plays wed call.

But hes really grown a lot from the first day of rookie camp until now. Were really encouraged by his progress."

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Chiefs see slow but steady progress from QB Patrick Mahomes II ... - ESPN (blog)

US-Egyptian alliance is key to progress in the Middle East – The Hill (blog)

Thirteen members of the Egyptian parliament will visit Washington D.C. during the week of June 12 in an effort to build the country's relationship with the United States. With members of Congress and representatives from think tanks and the business community, the delegation will discuss modernizing reforms of the Egyptian government and progress made to date.

The MP delegation, led by Dr. Ahmed Said, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, includes key voices in foreign affairs and economic policy. Delegates are representative of the diverse makeup of Egypts parliament, including members of various political parties, several committees within the parliament, and seniority balance and gender diversity.

Civil issues

The members of parliament intend to discuss human rights issues for which the Egyptian government is often criticized, for what is a very delicate balance in fighting ongoing terror inspired by the underground Muslim Brotherhood network and carried out by ISIS through their affiliates based in Sinai, Ansar Bait al-Maqdis (supporters of Jerusalem), and Wilayet Sayna (Sinai Province). These groups also support arms with Hamas in Gaza.

The MPs are also expected to address at length a law on non-governmental organizations that has steered a great deal of controversy. It was approved by parliament last November, but not signed into law by el-Sisi until last Monday. The law restricts NGOs to developmental and social activities, and introduces jail time for non-compliance. The Egyptian parliament defended the law as a needed step in strengthening the national security of the country.

Economic partnership

The bilateral relationship between the U.S. and Egypt has always been robust. The U.S. continues to be one of Egypts key trading partners with nearly 5 billion dollars worth of goods and services exchange in 2016. American FDI into Egypt totaled 2.3 billion dollars, representing 32 percent of its total FDI on the African continent. More than 1,100 U.S. companies currently operate in Egypt.

AmCham Egypt is one of the most active overseas affiliates of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, connecting almost 2,000 senior executives representing 950 companies; Egyptian companies with business interests in the United States and multinational companies doing business in Egypt.AmCham serves its members by advocating on their behalf for a favorable business environment, promoting trade and investment, and fostering a socially responsible business environment. Business missions between the U.S. and Egypt have become tradition. These are organized in conjunction with the U.S. ChambersU.S. Egypt Business Council (USEBC)and the Egypt-U.S. Business Council (EUSBC) have been instrumental to shedding light on opportunities available in the Egyptian market. Last October, executives from nearly 50 major U.S. companies visitedEgypt and this May, 35 members from Egypt visited Washington D.C. for the annual Doorknock Mission.

Fighting terror

The visit overlaps with the Muslim Holy month of Ramadan. It also comes after the Islamic States December attack on Coptic Christians in Minya, which killed 29 and injured 25 (including many children), and two attacks on Christians during Palm Sunday ceremonies in the cities of Tanta and Alexandria, which killed 45 Christians and wounded over 100.

The Muslim Brotherhood, an organization banned in Egypt (as well as in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates), is not directly responsible for the latest attacks. But their ongoing rhetoric on social media does incite and inspire terrorist groups. Among other threats, lies, and deceptions, Muslim Brotherhood leader Abdul Mawgoud el-Dardery blamed Christians for the crisis, indicating that violence will end only when Christians align themselves with Muslims, by which he means radical Islamists.

The upcoming visit is timely and represents an opportunity to further constructive dialogue between U.S. and Egyptian leaders, strengthen cooperation, and address issues of concern.

Since taking office, President Trump has affirmed Americas unwavering commitment to the eradication of ISIS, and to jumpstarting the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. He has also displayed a desire to continue Americas strong alliance with Egypt, hosting President el-Sisi at the White House and visiting the Arab Islamic American Summit in Riyadh. That is fortunate, because the alliance will be crucial to realizing each countrys goals for the region.

Dr. Sasha Toperich is a senior fellow and director of theMediterranean Basin initiativeat The Center for Transatlantic Relations, SAIS, at The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University in Washington D.C.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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US-Egyptian alliance is key to progress in the Middle East - The Hill (blog)

What’s Next for the Indie Horror Movie Wave – VICE

It Comes at Night hits theaters Friday, and based on media buzz, it'll likely hit a rare sweet spot pleasing both genre fans and mainstream critics. After Get Out set the tone earlier this year, Trey Edward Shults' follow-up to his 2015 critical darling Krisha could be the latest to join a growing list of recent "prestige horror" titles. Rolling Stone's Peter Travers references not only the sheer terror of the film but also its uncharacteristic emotional depth (a Stanley Kubrick shout out doesn't hurt either.)

Shults isn't alone when it comes to cutting his horror teeth on the indie festival circuit. And It Comes at Night will be in good company as a horror film with highbrow aspirations. The last few years have seen their fair share of scary movies getting attention outside of horror circles. Films like It Follows, A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night, Under the Skin, Train to Busan, and The Witch come to mind, and shows like American Horror Story, The Walking Dead, and Stranger Things have enjoyed a similarly elevated status on the small screen.

To figure out what's going on, VICE caught up with Colin Geddes, who's used to navigating the murky realms between high and low. For two decades, Geddes programmed the Toronto International Film Festival's Midnight Madness, which offers up over-the-top genre fare in the traditionally cult format of midnight screeningsbut all within the realm of a reputable film fest. He's now a curator at the streaming site Shudder (think Netflix for horror buffs.)

He hesitates to claim that something entirely new is happening, suggesting that horror is still pretty consistently held at arm's length by the gatekeepers of mainstream taste. "Horror films and horror film fans often get the short end of the stick. They get lumped into trash culture," he says. "And then every once in a while, something surfaces and resonates with the mainstream; the media always comes back around to realize these films can actually be good."

That mainstreaming doesn't necessarily mean that the films are getting better though. Geddes brushes aside claims that we're living in the golden age of horror. "It's always been a golden age," he says.

But undoubtedly, some of these films have struck a collective nerve. The most obvious example is Get Out, which isn't just good horror filmmaking (though it is a great example of the genre,) but it also manages to tap into the current political climate in a way that few filmshorror or otherwisemanage to pull off, and it's breaking records along the way. It's not hard to see why Get Out works so well. The story of liberal white Americans propping up violent and racist institutions is as timely as it is terrifying.

"Something like Get Out is actually lightning in a bottle," says Geddes. "Most horror films are based on copying the success of other popular horror films, but I think it's going to be very hard to copy the success of Get Out, because that film has a very specific social message. If you try to do something like Get Out, it'll just get called out as being bogus."

That particular kind of success requires a deep and intelligent engagement with current events, which can be risky. Get Out definitely pulls it off. As does 2014's It Follows, which, on its surface, seemed like a typical, conservative take on sex, with the monster functioning as an embodiment of the risks of teen sexuality. Instead, the film is a thoughtful take on consent, trauma, and rape culture. It immediately felt fresh and relevant, while playing like a solid 80s supernatural slasher flick.

In It Follows, a mysterious being pursues its victims, each one forcibly marked through a sexual encounter. The only way to free yourself is to pass it on to someone else.

"We're going to be examining every film that comes out now, which is made in the age of Trump, very differently," says Geddes. That may explain the appeal of It Comes at Night, which looks at how people cope with the apocalypse. Mixing basic doomsday survivalism with zombie-like ghouls, the threat of incurable infection, basic distrust, and paranoia is bound to have some kind of resonance with audiences living in fear of Trump's eat-or-be-eaten America.

These political references are also joined by a growing demand for diverse voices. "One of the important things within the genre is that for a long time it was kind of a boys club," says Geddes, "and now that's changing quite a bit." The same goes for non-white voices: "You didn't often associate African Americans with this kind of storytelling, and it's nice to see that change." This opening extends beyond North America too. For years Geddes has looked to international markets for new talent to showcase at home. "I always joke that it's nice to see how people scream and others languages."

There are plenty of other reasons why horror genre movies popularity rises and falls. "It's a genre that's really hard to put in a box sometimes," says Geddes. "It's not as easily definable asromantic comedy." While this makes it hard for horror to get consistent approval, it also allows the genre to be malleable and to function on different levels, sometimes breaking out of its trash label, even if just temporarily: "If I was like 'hey, do you want to see a film about a woman who's going to have Satan's baby?' Or 'would you like to see Mia Farrow in Roman Polanski's Rosemary's Baby?' Those are very different conversations."

And sometimes specific titles bring in wider audiences in ways that are harder to predict. "Case in point is just how hugely popular The Walking Dead is," says Geddes. "A lot of people who are tuning into Walking Dead, it's not necessarily that they're fans of horror films, they just like the soap opera dramatics that get woven into that kind of story. Which is what Night of the Living Dead originally was."

Those broader themes pull us in, and horror manages to take us to dark and intense places. Geddes is quick to point to the genre's ability to put us face to face with our own mortality. "Horror films in cinemas are a safe place to have these conversations. It's very cathartic and very healthy. And that's something that I think people overlook."

If you're planning to spend time in a movie theater contemplating life, death, and the harsh realities of the world, there are plenty of upcoming films to be excited about beyond It Comes at Night. The long-awaited Patient Zero also takes on infection and human co-existence in the post-apocalyptic world; hopefully, it'll make it to a screen near you in this lifetime. Music producer Flying Lotus will release his horror-comedy Kuso on Shudder this summer, while Darren Aronofsky's psychological thriller mother! looks like a promising follow-up to Black Swan.

If you aren't a stickler for something entirely new, God Particle may be another artful addition to the Cloverfield franchise, while the remakes of It and Suspiria are at least a little promising (as ill-advised as Suspiria seems, the Thom Yorke-scored, Tilda-Swinton-starring film definitely has a few things going for it.)

As always, Geddes is watching the industry closely. "The thing that I'm interested in is what Jordan Peele is going to do next," he says. "And I'd like to see if he's going to be able to help empower or work with other directors and voices."

Peele's next project does sound like a great follow-up to Get Out. He'll be taking on a TV series based on the novel Lovecraft Country, which situates dark, pulp fiction fantasy tropes in Jim Crow America. "The magic is very steeped in control, race relations, and ultimately the white, inherently racist roots of this material, like H.P. Lovecraft or Edgar Rice Burroughs," says Geddes.

Geddes is less optimistic about the longevity of horror's mainstream status though. "It's going to dip again, and we're going to have the same conversationI see this oftentimes in the medium. And then there's going to be a lot of great films that no one's going to talk about."

He's also skeptical that horror films like Get Out will end up with any Oscars. "I think it lacks the bigger bombast that the Academy looks for," he says. "I'd like to be surprised, but I just think there's going to be other, bigger films that will ultimately be more forgettable than Get Out." (That sums up the Academy's M.O. pretty nicely.)

On the bright side, great horror doesn't seem to be going anywhere. You just might have to look harder for it once the current wave of excitement dies down.

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What's Next for the Indie Horror Movie Wave - VICE

Catholic Priest: MN Park’s New Monument Will Attract Satanists Who Want to Molest Kids – Patheos (blog)

Veterans Memorial Park in Belle Plaine, Minnesota is home to a controversial monument featuring a kneeling soldier in front of a Christian cross.

Its been at the center of a months-long debate over whether it illegally promotes religion but since city officials voted to keep it in the park, the only way to stay on the right side of the law was to make the park an open forum that allowed other monuments to go up as well. Thats when The Satanic Temple sprung into action.

You can read the full backstory here, but the long and short of it is that the Freedom From Religion Foundation warned the city that the current Christian monument was illegal. Officials had a choice: Take it down or allow other displays in the park. They decided to allow other displays.

So the Satanists submitted a proposal for this glorious display:

Theres actually a lot of symbolism to that monument, according to artist Chris P. Andres:

The four pentagrams recall the four corners of the earth they serve as a reminder to the viewer of the soldiers that sacrificed. The empty helmet is now a Baphometic bowl of wisdom, a void, a protective vessel of the mind and intellect memories of the fallen can be psychically deposited, physical notes, names, fruit offering can be left in the monument

Its lovely, hilarious, and a perfect antidote to the promotion of Christianity by the local government.

But this week, a local Catholic priest flipped out at a city council meeting, saying that the Satanic display would invite ALL THE HORRORS.

The inverted pentagrams on the Satanic monument proposed by the Satanic Temple will prompt young people to consider Satanism for themselves and to reject the good moral behavior required for an ordered and peaceful society, said Father [Brian] Lynch in his address to the city council.

The monument may also attract pre-existing Satanists to our community as a place for theistic Satanic ritual activities that victimize our children, he said.

It could lead to a form of grooming similar to that used by pedophiles, Father Lynch said, which Satanists use to erode a childs trust in caring authority figures including their parents, teachers and police officers.

This grooming is intended to not only make children afraid to report the abuse they suffer at the hands of Satanists, but also, to feel personally responsible for the evil they have suffered as youthful victims, Father Lynch added. Most disturbing is the fact that theistic Satanic ritual activities are known to include deviant sexual acts with and among children.

Belle Plaine would be lucky to have an infusion of Satanists. Theyre good people, Brian.

Father Alex Jones sky-is-falling routine doesnt make any sense, either. As weve pointed out repeatedly on this site, the Seven Fundamental Tenets of The Satanic Temple are far more ethical than the Ten Commandments. What Lynch is repeating are the ignorant stereotypes religious people often have of Satanists decades-old rumors not based in reality. If he ever left his bubble and spoke to a member of the Temple, maybe hed realize that.

What was the reaction from the crowd at the city council meeting?

He had great legal arguments, Paul Rennerfeldt, 38, said of Father Lynchs presentation. Rennerfeldt is a parishioner of All Saints in Lakeville.

*Sigh* they werent legal and they werent even arguments. It was just vitriol spewing from the mouth of a bigot.

Ignorance just breeds more ignorance in this town.

Remember: All of this is happening because the city council insisted on promoting Christianity in a local park. The Satanists werent going to come there if that monument was up outside a church. And now that their monument will be there, it wont change the community for the worse. Hell, we should be grateful that it exposes the bigotry of the local religious leaders, unable to handle any views other than their own and only able to respond with hate.

Lucien Greaves of The Satanic Temple told me finishing touches are being put on the monument and itll be going up soon. When I asked about Lynchs comments, he was quick to note the irony of the situation.

It is unnecessary to point out the irony in seeing a representative from the Catholic Church decrying a perceived threat to children posed by religious Satanists.

Being that the bizarre conspiracy theory-based Satanic Panic libels propagated by Father Lynch that of organized Ritual Abuse engaged in by Satanists has no credible evidential foundation whatever, one might reasonably harbor suspicions of projection on the pastors part.

Father Lynchs combination of indignant unreason and projection of repressed guilt and/or desire are exactly what witch-hunts are built upon. The secondary irony in his ignorant crusade is that it effectively illustrates, to those with the wit to see, not only the need for The Satanic Temples campaigns for pluralism, but also our Grey Faction efforts to combat the works of modern witch-hunters and conspiracists.

He then added:

I would like to offer the challenge that the religion with the most (or even any) confirmed cases of organized child abuse withdraw their claim to representation in the public forum.

The gloves are on.

(Large portions of this article were published earlier)

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Catholic Priest: MN Park's New Monument Will Attract Satanists Who Want to Molest Kids - Patheos (blog)