Real Time Updates: "Freedom Rally" met by "Solidarity Against Hate" counter-protest in Seattle – KIRO Seattle

by: KIRO 7 News Staff Updated: Aug 13, 2017 - 4:58 PM

SEATTLE - The latest on the "Freedom Rally" put on by 'The Patriot Prayer', a conservative group, and the "Solidarity Against Hate" counter-protest in Seattle. All times local.

Click here to see photos of today's rally and counter-protest.

[4:57]

[4:45]

Seattle Police have made an arrest at 5th and Pine.

[3:54]

An update from the Seattle Police Department:

[3:47]

Demonstrators are marching back to Denny Park, according to the Seattle Police Department.

[3:03]

The Seattle Police Department has issued a Dispersal Order at 2nd and Pine. Police also have confiscated weapons, and have made arrests. The number of arrests is unknown at this point.

[2:00]

The "Solidarity against hate grouphas marched from Denny Park to Westlake Park where the conservative "Freedom Rally" group is located.

[1:00]

One of two groups that planned to march in downtown Seattle Sunday has said the group will not march, but gather in light of the violence that erupted at a Charlottesville, Va., rally Saturday.

The Patriot Prayer, a conservative, pro-Trump group, will gather at 2 p.m. at Westlake Park.

Opponents, which include members of the Veterans for Peace, Socialist Party, Washington Federation of State Workers and other groups, had planned to march after the Patriot Prayer group originally announced it would march in Seattle on August 13. They will gather at Denny Park at 1 p.m.

The Patriot Prayer group had touted the event as a Freedom Rally; opponents of their messaging say the group is homophobic, racist and bigoted.

On its Facebook page, the Patriot Prayer groups posted:

Seattle is running our state with a pedophile as a mayor. The West Coast has slowly been infected with communist ideologies throughout our entire culture. It is a belief that the individual is weak and that we are all victims. This is the lie of the century. No matter who you are, we are all amazing people with the ability to do anything that we put our minds to. These liberal strongholds run off of hatred and negativity. Patriot Prayer will bring in a positive message to Seattle that the people are starving for. With light we will change the hearts and minds of those who are surrounded by darkness. Live music and motivational speakers to promote freedom, free speech, and the power of the human soul.

The group has been criticized for inciting violence at recent gatherings in Portland and Vancouver, B.C.The Columbian newspaper recently did a profile on the group's lead, Joey Gibson.

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Real Time Updates: "Freedom Rally" met by "Solidarity Against Hate" counter-protest in Seattle - KIRO Seattle

Freedom Of The Press Is A Fundamental Human Need – HuffPost

The United Nations adopted 17Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015, which were designed to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure prosperity for all. These goals are intended to promote basic human needs and include: zero hunger, quality education, and clean water. While the SDGs are seemingly comprehensive and straightforward, the goals neglect to include one of the most important, and most undervalued, prerequisites for a healthy society freedom of the press.

Considering a free press to be as vital as water might seem absurd or melodramatic, as well as counterintuitive to Maslows Hierarchy of Needs. However, corruption is often the driving force behind ongoing environmental and socioeconomic issues, such as water crises, that pose major risks to public welfare. Consequently, unless such corruption is confronted and resolved, people will continue to die at the hand of government abuse and neglect. Corruption needs public exposure before confrontation can occur, which is not possible without an uncensored media. Human lives are relying on the existence of a free press for survival in these instances.

Food, water, and shelter do not exist in a vacuum. Governments have the capacity to influence the production of and access to these essential resources, especially in more authoritarian states. For instance, the looting of resources this year by South Sudanese politicians has resulted in a famine with a death toll currently in the thousands and rising. The lack of transparency on behalf of the South Sudanese government was the primary reason these politicians were able to get away with committing such abuses. These situations highlight how accountability over the control of essential resources can be just as significant to the preservation of life as the existence of such resources in the first place. A free press is the key to achieving this accountability.

This dynamic is already observable in many developed countries. When Donald Trump Jr. released emails in early July indicating that he had planned a meeting with a Kremlin-connected attorney about incriminating information regarding Hillary Clinton, he was not doing so out of some unwavering commitment to transparency. He did it because the New York Times had reached out prior to inform him that it was going to be running a story on said emails. Secret meetings may not be as devastating as famines, but the general idea holds true that leaders have a harder time hiding their corruption when the press is able to function independent of government oversight.

This is not a groundbreaking concept, nor is the idea that accountability leads to better governance. Nevertheless, these considerations suggest that freedom of the press should not simply be regarded as a human right, but as a human necessity. Research conducted at the University of Missouri suggests that a freer press leads to higher quality of life and a healthier environment. Additionally, countries experience greater economic growth and productivity when they are less corrupt.

These facts might make freedom of the press simply seem like a great benefit to society rather than a necessity, but consider what happens in its absence. The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (UNODC) estimates that approximately $2.6 trillion is lost annually to corruption. That is foreign aid, foreign direct investment, and government revenue all being diverted away from public goods into the pockets of fraudulent politicians and bureaucrats, inevitably hurting the common people. Look again at South Sudan, where thousands of children are at risk of starvation due to misuse of resources. When this kind of corruption remains unreported, or when media coverage of it gets stifled by the government, the issues go unresolved and more lives continue to be lost. These peoples lives rely on having such information disclosed, which is where freedom of the press becomes as necessary as the water they drink and the food they eat. The lack of transparency is causing loss of human life.

Fortunately, the rise of internet access in countries like South Sudan has made it possible for the press to circumnavigate legal limitations. This is not a solution in itself, since various websites dedicated to exposing corruption are targeted by government efforts. For example, Tanzanias Jamii forums have not been immune from state suppression. The internet is instead an accessory for transparency activists to use while international organizations and NGOs attack the problem at the source by fighting for a freer press. An important part of this battle will be for organizations like the United Nations to view freedom of the press as being on par with other basic necessities. Humans need clean water to survive, but they also need to know what their leaders are doing with that clean water in order to truly preserve the wellbeing of society.

John J. Martin is the Global Transparency Fellow at Young Professionals in Foreign Policy (YPFP). John earned his BA in International Relations from New York University.

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Freedom Of The Press Is A Fundamental Human Need - HuffPost

Concern over changing definitions of freedom – The Hindu

KOZHIKODE: Youth leader P.K. Firos, writer Narayan, and actor Mamukkoya represent different walks of life, and their interests may not be common. As they spoke at various sessions on the second day of the Festival of Democracy here on Sunday, there seemed to be agreement on the changing definition of freedom in the country.

Mr. Firos, State general secretary of the Muslim Youth League, while speaking at a session on Celebrating Freedom, pointed out that only a few got the fruit of freedom, while the dispensation ruling the country was trying to marginalise other sections of society, like minorities. Towards this goal, efforts are on to portray Muslims as the other and turn public conscience against them, he observed.

He said while he was attending a press meet in New Delhi, some journalists from Kerala had asked him as to why the largest number of Muslim terrorists who joined terror outfits were from Kerala.

I failed to understand from which source they got the information. There are around 90 lakh Muslims in the State, of whom around 20 are suspected to have joined Islamic State. How can you paint the entire community as a breeding ground for terrorists? he asked.

Mr. Firos said such experiences would make anyone insecure. On this January 26, one Intelligence Bureau official called me to ask if I had observed Republic Day, as if suspecting my commitment to the nation. I have never had such experiences in my life, he said.

Meanwhile, Mr. Narayan, the author of the path-breaking novel, Kocharethi, which chronicles the life of the tribal population, alleged that some people were dictating to writers as to what they should write and what they should not.

He was speaking at a session on My Writing, My Freedom. The National Book Trust [NBT] had earlier decided to publish the translated versions of some of my short stories in English and other Indian languages. After the change of guard at the Centre, the NBT chairman was replaced with someone who had earlier worked with Panchajanya, who said there was no need to publish my stories, he said.

Injustice

Mr. Narayan added that Oxford University Press had described him as the first novelist from the tribal community in south India. By not publishing my works, they [NBT] have done injustice to an important section of the Indian population, he added. Mr. Mamukkoya, who earlier opened the session on Celebrating Freedom, pointed out: We could have freedom only if we permit others to raise their opinions. Going by the recent developments, I dont know how long this freedom will last. What we can do is preserve whatever independence we have. Religious organisations and political parties will not discuss this issue as their views on freedom are different.

He said holding long lectures would not do any good, but there should be discussions, creative criticism, and joint celebration of freedom, which should be a model for future generations.

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Concern over changing definitions of freedom - The Hindu

The Minifree Libreboot T400 is free as in freedom | TechCrunch – TechCrunch

The Libreboot T400 doesnt look like much. Its basically a refurbished Lenovo Thinkpad with the traditional Lenovo/IBM pointer nubbin and a small touchpad. Its a plain black laptop, as familiar as any luggable assigned to a cubicle warrior on the road. But, under the hood, you have a machine that fights for freedom.

The T400 runs Libreboot, a free and open BIOS and the Trisquel GNU/Linux OS. Both of these tools should render the Libreboot T400 as secure from tampering as can be. Your Libreboot T400 obeys you, and nobody else! write its creators, and that seems to be the case.

How does it work? And should you spend about $300 on a refurbished Thinkpad with Linux installed? That depends on what youre trying to do. The model I tested was on the low end with enough speed and performance to count but Trisquel tended to bog down a bit and the secure browser, an unbranded Mozilla based browser that never recommends non-free software, was a little too locked down for its own good. I was able to work around a number of the issues I had but this is definitely not for the faint of heart.

That said, you are getting a nearly fully open computer. The 14.1-inch machine runs a Intel Core 2 Duo P8400 processor and starts at 4GB of RAM with 160GB hard drive space. That costs about $257 plus shipping and includes a battery and US charger.

Once you have the T400 youre basically running a completely clean machine. It runs a free (as in freedom) operating system complete with open drivers and applications and Libreboot ensures that you have no locked-down software on the machine. You could easily recreate this package yourself on your own computer but I suspect that you, like me, would eventually run into a problem that couldnt be solved entirely with free software. Hence the impetus to let Minifree do the work for you.

If youre a crusader for privacy, security, and open standards, than this laptop is for you. Thankfully its surprisingly cheap and quite rugged so youre not only sticking it to the man but you could possibly buy a few of these and throw them at the man in a pinch.

The era of common Linux on the desktop and not in the form of a secure, libre device like this is probably still to come. While its trivial (and fun) to install a Linux instance these days I doubt anyone would do it outright on a laptop that theyre using on a daily basis. But for less than a price of a cellphone you can use something like the T400 and feel safe and secure that youre not supporting (many) corporate interests when it comes to your computing experience. Its not a perfect laptop by any stretch but its just the thing if youre looking for something that no one but you controls.

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The Minifree Libreboot T400 is free as in freedom | TechCrunch - TechCrunch

Freedom pitchers finally give up run, still beat Grizzlies handily for sixth in a row – User-generated content (press release) (registration)

Tony Vocca returned to form and the Florence Freedom, presented by Titan Mechanical Solutions, won their sixth game in a row on Saturday with a 7-1 victory over the Gateway Grizzles at UC Health Stadium.

In the top of the fifth, with the Freedom (50-28) leading 3-0 and the scoreless innings streak reaching 33.1 innings, a leadoff triple by Gateways (24-54) Brent Sakurai off Vocca (7-5) paved the way for a Matt Hearn RBI-single, snapping the streak and cutting Florences lead to two. Vocca, however, would not allow another run over his six innings of work, inducing four double plays and striking out four while scattering nine hits.

Florence started the scoring in the bottom of the second when Austin Wobrock laced a line drive into center off Gateway starter Vince Molesky (5-7), scoring Collins Cuthrell, who had singled. Andre Mercurio extended the Freedom lead to three when he parked a two-run shot to right off Moleskyin the home half of the third.

Mercurio would lead the Freedom with three hits and three RBI in the game and also scored two runs.

With Florence leading 3-1 in the bottom of the fifth, Andrew Godbold lined a double to the wall in right-center, scoring Taylor Oldham, who was hit by a pitch to lead off the inning. Mercurio then reached on an infield single before Cuthrell plated Godbold with his second single of the game. Keivan Berges followed suit with a line drive into left that scored Mercurio and pushed Florence in front, 6-1.

The Freedom would count one more insurance run off Grizzlies reliever Tanner Cable in the sixth. After hitting Garrett Vail with a pitch and issuing a walk to Daniel Fraga, Cable gave up a run-scoring single to Mercurio.

Enrique Zamora, Jack Fowler and Sam Brunner each threw one scoreless inning of relief, with the help of an additional double play in the eighth, as the Freedom won their sixth straight game and secured the series win over Gateway.

The Freedom will pursue a seventh straight win and the series sweep in Sundays finale. First pitch is scheduled for 6:05 p.m. at UC Health Stadium, as Steve Hagen (6-4) will start for Florence against Gateways Will Anderson (2-11).

The Florence Freedom are members of the independent Frontier League and play all home games at UC Health Stadium located at 7950 Freedom Way in Florence, KY.The Freedom can be found online at FlorenceFreedom.com, or by phone at 859-594-4487.

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Freedom pitchers finally give up run, still beat Grizzlies handily for sixth in a row - User-generated content (press release) (registration)

How ‘Mister Fantastic’ Came to Become the Cyborg Superman – CBR (blog)

This Ive Been Here Before, a feature that deals with a term that I coined called nepotistic continuity, which refers to the way that comic book writers sometimes bring back minor characters that they themselves created in the past as characters in their current work.

In every installment of this feature, Ill spotlight an example of a character that did not appear in a comic for at least two years before then showing up in a comic written or drawn by the creator of the character.

Today, we look at Hank Henshaw, most famously known as the Cyborg Superman, but when he first showed up, he was based on an entirely different character.

Adventures of Superman #466 was relatively early in Dan Jurgens stint as both the artist and the writer on one of the three main Superman titles of the period (Superman, Action Comics and Adventures of Superman). Initially working with finisher Art Thibert, Jurgens then worked with finisher Brett Breeding for a long run and the two would move over to take over the flagship Superman title, Superman, where they would later famously do the final chapter of the famous Death of Superman storyline, the issue that actually included the, you know, death of Superman.

But back in early 1990, Jurgens was still pretty new on the book. In Adventures of Superman #466, he started a clever two-part story that opened with four scientists basically going through the same thing that the Fantastic Four did in Fantastic Four #1 (Jurgens had always been a very notable and vocal fan of the Fantastic Four).

The various astronauts went through different reactions that were inspired by the original FF

Anyhow, things go horribly wrong for most of the crew and by the end of the issue, only Terri, the wife of Hank Henshaw (the Reed Richards of the group) is still alive.

However, in Adventures of Superman #468 (following a Batman/Superman crossover that split the two-parter over three issues), we learn that Hank survived, but he survived by transferring his consciousness into machinery!

When he realizes that his very existence causes pain for his wife, Hank then transfers his consciousness into the birthing matrix/rocket ship that took Superman to Earth when he was an embryo. He then uses it to travel the stars and thats it for Hank Henshaw for the next two years.

As we noted, Superman then passed away in the Death of Superman storyline and this was followed eventually by the Reign of Superman, which introduced four men each claiming to be the real Superman (well, three of them, at least John Henry Irons never really claimed to be Superman, so it was weird that he was always lumped in on that aspect of it all) in Adventures of Superman #500 (released precisely two years after Henshaw vanished). One of the heroes was a Cyborg version of Superman

Eventually, it turned out that this was Hank Henshaw, who had used the birthing matrix to copy Supermans DNA and mixed it with his power to control machinery, he became the Cyborg Superman. He had also been driven mad, as when he teamed up with Mongul to come back to Earth to destroy it, beginning with nuking Coast City! After he did that, he showed off even more how evil he was in Adventures of Superman #503 (by Karl Kesel, Tom Grummett and Doug Hazlewood)

It was rather clever of Jurgens to go back into his catalog of characters (which obviously was not yet that extensive at the time) to find his Cyborg Superman, ultimately creating one of the best new Superman villains of the past 25 years.

Thats it for this installment (at a casual glance, I think it might be almost three years since Ive last done this feature. That cant be right, can it?)! If anyone else has a suggestion for a future edition of Ive Been Here Before, drop me a line at brianc@cbr.com!

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How 'Mister Fantastic' Came to Become the Cyborg Superman - CBR (blog)

Water levels rising in Great Lakes, effects felt at Holland-area beaches – HollandSentinel.com

The monthly water level average for July 2017 in Lake Michigan was the highest recorded since October 1997.

Deb Thompsons eight mile runs on the Laketown Beach are getting tougher.

This is because the water level of Lake Michigan is rising and is leaving less beach to run on, Thompson said.

Thompson, a resident of Holland for the past three years, is right. Lake Michigan beaches are shrinking and water levels in the Great Lakes are on the rise.

The monthly water level average for July 2017 in Lake Michigan was the highest recorded since October 1997, according to data from the Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory.

The laboratory measures Lake Michigan and Lake Huron as one unit.

Lake Michigan water levels hit a record low of 576.02 feet in January 2013, but have been above average since July 2014.

"For me I always run right along the water line anyway and today it's fairly calm, Thompson said. But days where the water is really rough, it's hard because you are running against these crashing waves and you don't have much beach to run on.

Thompson isnt the only one feeling the effects of the rising waters of Lake Michigan in the Holland area.

Holland State Park Supervisor Sean Mulligan said the crews from the state had to re-locate a deck used to help people with disabilities access the water.

The sand underneath the deck was being washed away due to high water levels. Life ring stations also had to be moved further inland due to rising water.

"The water is coming up higher and it's actually eroded away the beach further up than usual, Mulligan said. We've got little drop offs now instead of smooth transition from the beach into the water."

Sidewalk flooding is an issue when the water gets rough because it is coming over the walls of the channel between Lake Michigan and Macatawa Bay at the state park due to high water.

Because of the state parks extensive beach, Mulligan said the impacts havent really been felt by visitors. Maintenance issues due to rising waters are the biggest problem, he said.

Bob Reichel, a parks operations manager for Ottawa County Parks, has been taking care of the countys lakeshore parks since the last time water levels were well above average in 1997.

Some Ottawa County beaches arent as large as the one at Holland State Park and Reichel said most of the beaches he manages have lost somewhere between 100 feet to 150 feet of dry sand due to rising water levels.

We've lost that much sand area and our beach area is very limited now, especially compared to what it has been in past years when we had lower lake levels, Reichel said.

Another impact of the rising water levels is the washing up of eroded dune grass on beaches in Ottawa County.

Reichel said high waters have also washed up other debris, such as pieces of deck and large tree trunks, onto Ottawa County beaches.

The beaches, which have lost the most dry sand are Kirk Park in West Olive and Rosy Mound Natural Area in Grand Haven, Reichel said.

Al Meshkin, Laketown Township manager, agreed with Thompson that Laketown Beach is another area hit hard by rising water.

"My understanding is there's not much beach left, Meshkin said. The water level is pretty high and the water levels fluctuate all the time. Right now we are going through a very high water level time."

Drew Gronewold, a hydrologist with the Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, said high water levels in the late summer months are part of a seasonal process.

Water levels in the Great Lakes normally rise in the spring as snow melts, peak in August or July and then decrease in November and October as water evaporates from the lakes at a high rate. Water levels usually hit a low for the year in the winter months.

If that process continued with average snowfall, average runoff in the spring and average evaporation in the fall then water levels would stay around the same level, Gronwold said.

Since early 2013 precipitation in the Great Lakes region has been above average and evaporation has been below average. Gronewold said this is the cause behind the increase in water levels since 2013.

Really the story is since then, over the past couple years it has been very wet and the precipitation has been above average and water levels have been high as well, Gronewold said.

This process has caused the increase of water levels not only in Lake Michigan and Lake Huron, but all the Great Lakes.Lake Ontarios June 2017 monthly water level average was higher than any monthly average recorded for the lake since 1918.Lake Eries monthly water level average for June 2017 was the highest recorded since April 1998.Lake Superiors July 2017 monthly water level average was the highest recorded since September 1996.

"There is part of a larger story here that all the lakes are all very high right now and not just because its summer time, Gronewold said. They are high for even this time of year relative to the long term average."

Gronewold said the rise of water levels in the Great Lakes can be associated with a natural, cyclical process as well as human impact.One example of human impact on water levels is the dredging of channels between lakes to make sure large ships can pass through.Although the impacts of dredging are minor, Gronewold said dredging allows more water to flow through channels thus changing the water levels of the lakes.

Diversion of water in and out of the Great Lakes also has an impact on water levels. Gronewold said water is diverted out of Lake Michigan near Chicago.The outflow of water in Lake Ontario and Lake Superior are also controlled and regulated.The impacts of dredging, diversion of water and controlling the outflow of some of the Great Lakes are relatively small compared to real drivers of water level changes, Gronwold said.

The natural hydrologic cycle, climate change and climate variability are what really impact water levels in the Great Lakes on a large scale, Gronewold said.

As water levels in the Great Lakes are at the highest levels in about a decade, questions still remain about how much impact humans are having.

"There's still the question of how much of the changes we are seeing are due to human induced climate change and that's something we still are doing research on, Gronewold said.

Follow this reporter on Twitter @SentinelJake.

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Water levels rising in Great Lakes, effects felt at Holland-area beaches - HollandSentinel.com

Blue-green algae-related toxin warnings remain at Russian River beaches – Santa Rosa Press Democrat

(1 of ) Ashley Brown of the Sonoma County department of Health Services staples a precaution notice alerting visitors to positive test results for a potentially dangerous naturally occurring neurotoxin, Anatoxin-a, linked to harmful type of blue-green algae, Wednesday July 27, 2017 at Healdsburg Memorial Beach, (Kent Porter / Press Democrat) 2017

MARY CALLAHAN

THE PRESS DEMOCRAT | August 10, 2017, 5:17PM

The Russian River tested clean this week for a toxin related to blue-green algae that prompted cautionary signs at 10 popular beaches last month and in each of the past two summers.

The river remains open to swimming and other recreation. But warning signs urging visitors to avoid ingesting river water will remain at 10 popular beaches between Cloverdale and the river mouth as a precaution against exposure to the neurotoxin involved, the Sonoma County Department of Health Services said.

The weekly sampling suggests the threat, already minimal, could be diminishing. But precautions can only be lifted after several weeks pass without detection of the neurotoxin called anatoxin-a, county health personnel said.

State guidelines developed for static bodies of water like lakes require at least two weeks of negative test results for blue-green algae, formally called cyanobacteria, before the signs can come down, Sonoma County Health Officer Karen Milman said Thursday.

In a long swath of water with a moving current, theres greater potential for harmful blue-green algae to relocate and be present in an area that hasnt been tested, indicating a more conservative approach may be prudent.

In addition, county environmental health personnel monitoring the Russian River have seen growth of blue-green algae that still could release toxins at some point, as well as filamentous green algae in which cyanobacteria can intermix, Milman said.

Besides testing, we want to take into account other things, she said.

County environmental health personnel posted the caution signs July 27 after routine testing of river samples revealed very low levels of anatoxin-a, a potentially dangerous substance naturally produced by certain kinds of blue-green algae, which have proliferated in fresh water lakes, ponds and streams around California and the rest of the planet in recent years.

Anatoxin-a attacks the nervous system, causing symptoms that may include staggering, fatigue, convulsions, paralysis or even death.

Dogs and small children are particularly susceptible, given their size and potential for ingesting contaminated water. Studies indicate the odor of blue-green algae actually attracts dogs, who may eat it.

Two dogs died after frolicking in the Russian River near Healdsburg in 2015 at the height of Californias historic drought prompting widespread awareness of the potential for harmful algae blooms in warm, slow-moving water.

But after plentiful rain this past winter, water quality officials say, abundant runoff could have increased concentrations of nitrogen, phosphorous and other substances from fertilizer and other sources that feed toxic algae blooms.

The levels of anatoxin-a detected first at Cloverdale River Park Beach, Del Rio Woods Beach in Healdsburg and Patterson Point beach, located just downstream of Monte Rio, were extremely low, averaging 0.15 micrograms of toxin per liter of water.

Warnings against swimming and other water recreation arent required until at least 20 micrograms per liter is present.

But the state requires public notifications even when the smallest concentrations of anatoxin-a are present and a beach remains open to recreation, which has been the case with the Russian River in recent weeks.

Health officials urge visitors to avoid algae in the water and refrain from drinking, cooking with or washing dishes with river water. In addition, they advise bathing after exposure to river water, monitoring children closely and preventing dogs and other animals from drinking river water or eating algae scums.

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Blue-green algae-related toxin warnings remain at Russian River beaches - Santa Rosa Press Democrat

Concern over cigarette butts littering Greek beaches – euronews

The large number of cigarette butts on Greek beaches and streets is causing grave concern among people who want to protect the environment and their health.

At a beach in a southern suburb of Athens, many holiday-makers were seen smoking while enjoying the sea and the sunshine.

Some of them left cigarette butts on the beach after smoking. As a result, they dotted the beach as far as the eye could see.

Smoking in public is banned in Greece, and the No Smoking law has been in place for seven years.

However, nearly 22 billion cigarettes butts, totaling 3,500 tonnes, have been dropped by smokers in Greece, half of them on the beaches along the countrys coastline, according to the Greek Cancer Society (GCS).

Every time I go to the beach, I collect rubbish. When I find it, I collect it. Why? Because I like clean beaches, clean sands, clean sea, said Dillian Cowes, a Greek doctor.

But the GCS say only a few people bother to collect them and put them into bins.

They are urging people to take their cigarette butts seriously and refrain from leaving them on the countrys beaches.

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Concern over cigarette butts littering Greek beaches - euronews

Kuwait battles oil spill in Persian Gulf close to popular summer beaches (VIDEO) – RT

The Kuwaiti authorities are working to contain an oil spill that has tarred the beaches and left long black slicks in the area of Ras al-Zour, but activists have accused it of covering up the full scale of the damage.

On Saturday, the government announced that boats and crews were dispatched to drop containment booms in the area, a kind of floating barrier to stop the oil spill moving further. According to the state-run Kuwait News Agency, the authorities priorities were first to secure waterways, power plants and water facilities.

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Emergency teams from the Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC), several other oil companies, the Ministry of Electricity and Water and Environment Public Authority, have harnessed all efforts and capabilities to deal with the oil spill in south Kuwait, said Kuwaiti oil sector spokesman Sheikh Talal Al-Khaled Al-Sabah, in a statement carried by the official KUNA news agency. They are now focusing their efforts on protecting water outlets near the country's northern and southern Al-Zour power and water stations.

Nearby beaches will be cleaned once power and water plants are secured and the oil spill is put under full control, he added.

Since then, oil minister Essam al-Marzouq told the al-Rai newspaper on Sunday that no more patches of oil have been found and the authorities were working on clearing up those that were closest to shore. According to al-Marzouq, the clean-up operation should be over by the end of the week.

Its not yet clear where the oil spill originated, but some experts quoted by Kuwaiti media place the blame at the feet of an old 50-km pipeline from the joint Saudi-Kuwaiti Al-Khafji offshore oil field, where they estimate as many as 35,000 barrels of crude oil may have leaked into the waters surrounding Ras al-Zour. However, al-Khafji Joint Operations has said its facilities are safe and unaffected by the spill, instead attributing the accident to a tanker. Sheikh Abdullah al-Sabah, a member of the ruling family who is head of the Environment Public Authority, told AP there will be severe consequences to those responsible for this incident.

But Khaled al-Hajeri, the president of Kuwait's Green Line Society, has accused the government of covering up the full scale of the spill, saying the authorities already knew about the leak on Thursday.

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"The government failed to issue a statement communicating the severity of this disaster. There was no warning people against fishing or entering the polluted area, even though it is close to some of the most popular summer destinations in Kuwait," al-Hajeri told AP. "This media blackout is intentional, and wrong. People have the right to know. This will have an impact on the fish, the food people consume, and it directly affects their health and safety."

Assisting in the clean-up operation is the American oil giant Chevron Corp., which operates oil fields on both the Saudi and Kuwaiti sides of the border, as well as Oil Spill Response Limited (OSRL).

Ras al-Zour is the site of a new refinery that is being constructed by the Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC), due to be the largest in the Middle East with a capacity of 615,000 barrels per day and $11.5 billion worth of contracts.

Kuwait is home to the six-largest estimated oil reserves in the world, which make up around 95 percent of its export revenue. During the 1991 Gulf War, Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein ordered the oil fields to be set alight as his army retreated from the forces of the US-led coalition in Operation Desert Storm.

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Kuwait battles oil spill in Persian Gulf close to popular summer beaches (VIDEO) - RT

Stay up to date with the next big astronomical events with a new digital calendar – The Verge

Last week, The New York Times soft-launched a new feature called The New York Times Astronomy and Space Calendar, which previews some of the notable upcoming astronomical events. Theres a neat twist to this: you can sync it to your personal calendar on your computer or phone.

The Times calendar features a light range of upcoming events: meteor showers, notable anniversaries, and major events such as the August 21st solar eclipse. Each entry comes with a short blurb about the significance behind the event, as well as links to the Times coverage of each event.

The calendar isnt comprehensive, and thats by design, says Times Senior Staff Editor for Science editor Michael Roston, who was one of the calendars creators. He explained that while there are plenty of other science and astronomy calendars out there, such as the Jet Propulsion Laboratorys Space Calendar, we wanted to produce something that was curated with a more casual space and astronomy fan in mind.

One example he highlighted is SpaceXs flurry of activity. Theres a launch tomorrow, but thats not on the calendar. Roston explained that their focus us more on adding events that are of interest to the casual astronomy fan, and not to overwhelm the calendars of subscribers. So, when SpaceX eventually launches its Falcon 9 Heavy rocket that will likely pop up on the calendar, while some of the more routine satellite and commercial launches will be left off.

The project, Roston says, is intended to be a new format for service journalism, used as a conduit for the Times reporting on the field. Ben Koski, the Deputy Editor for Interactive News, also worked on the project, and explained that they are starting out slow, opting to launch with Google and Apple calendars, but theyve since added on a WebCal link for other users. The project launched last week, and the pair say that theyll integrate the feature into articles in the near future.

I synced up the calendar to my devices on Friday, and Im pleased to see entries for the Persied meteor shower alongside more mundane reminders for dentist appointments and bills. I never studied astronomy in college, but its a topic that Im endlessly fascinated by, and its a field that I follow, professionally and personally, and what I appreciate about this project is that its a simple way to work a bit of astronomy into your regular day. Its a good demonstration that you dont have to have a science degree to enjoy the universe: sometimes, you just need a heads-up that something cool is about to happen.

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Stay up to date with the next big astronomical events with a new digital calendar - The Verge

Astronomers are preparing to watch a star swing by our supermassive black hole – Astronomy Magazine

Theres a supermassive black hole in the center of our galaxy called Sagittarius A*, or Sgr A* for short. This massive but invisible object lies about 26,000 light-years away and weighs in at 4 million times the mass of our Sun. Although its challenging to observe the area around Sgr A*, its not impossible and now, Sgr A* is helping astronomers once again prove that Einstein was right.

The mounting evidence supporting Einsteins theory of general relativity has been recently published August 9 in the Astrophysical Journal. That evidence consists of precise measurements of the motion of a star, dubbed S2, which orbits Sgr A* closely, and seems to be deviating from the orbit expected if it wasnt affected by general relativity. This deviation indicates that Einsteins theory is indeed in play.

S2 is one of many stars known to orbit Sgr A*, but specifically it is the star that comes closest to the supermassive black hole. That orbit brings it particularly close to the black hole every 16 years an event that will take place in the middle of next year. As it passes through that region, S2s orbit is expected to change as a result of the warping of space-time due to Sgr A*s huge mass.

As 2018 approaches, S2 is already nearing that closest point. Astronomer Andreas Eckart of the University of Cologne in Germany is leading a team that has painstakingly compiled observations of S2 taken over more than 20 years to trace out its orbital motions. Although this data includes another close pass by the black hole 16 years ago, those observations were taken with instruments that dont have the precision available today. Thats why the upcoming pass is so important now, astronomers will finally have the resolution necessary to measure more definitively whether S2 is following a Newtonian orbit, which doesnt take into account general relativity, or an orbit predicted by Einsteins famous theory.

This artists concept shows the motion of stars close to Sgr A*, including S2. Credit: ESO/M. Parsa/L. Calada Eckarts team is already finding deviations in S2s orbit that are extremely close to the expected values according to general relativity, he said in a press release. Thats good news for Einsteins theory, which has held up to all previous tests, and looks like it will again pass with flying colors.

However, these results are only preliminary, and theyre still subject to significant uncertainty. Only continued monitoring as the star swings past the black hole next year will provide the precision necessary for a more confident measurement that will show whether general relativistic effects are truly at play near the massive black hole.

Those measurements will be taken with GRAVITY, a new instrument on the Very Large Telescope (VLT) array. Using this instrument and two of the VLTs 8.2-meter (27 feet) telescopes, Eckarts team will be able to produce images equivalent to those achievable with a telescope mirror 120 meters (nearly 400 feet) across; today, the largest telescopes available have mirrors 10 meters (33 feet) in diameter. Such high resolution could finally yield the measurements that will convince scientists once and for all that Einstein was right.

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Astronomers are preparing to watch a star swing by our supermassive black hole - Astronomy Magazine

Big asteroid to sweep close September 1 – EarthSky

Asteroid 3122 Florence named for the founder of modern nursing on August 27 at 11:50 pm CDT as seen from central U.S. Illustration by Eddie Irizarry using Stellarium.

The next attraction coming up in our skies after the spectacular total solar eclipse of August 21 might be an asteroid big enough to be seen in small telescopes, and maybe even in binoculars, as a small, very slow-moving star. Asteroid 1981 ET3 also known as 3122 Florence is a huge space rock at least 2.7 miles (4.35 km) in diameter. According to Paul Chodas at the Center for Near Earth Object Studies:

Florence is the largest asteroid to pass this close to our planet since the first near-Earth asteroid was discovered over a century ago.

Asteroid 3122 Florence will safely pass by our planet on September 1, 2017 at over 18 times the Earth-moon distance. The asteroid will not be visible to the unaided eye. It will, however, become visible in small amateur telescopes by late August, in the course of what will become the closest encounter to Earth by this asteroid since 1890.

It wont come this close again until after the year 2500.

Observers using a computerized or Go To telescope can point the instrument on August 27 a few minutes before 11:50 pm CDT to star HIP 106824 or to RA 21h39m 11.9 s / DEC -314109 and watch for about 5 to 10 minutes to detect the asteroids slow motion across the stars. Illustration by Eddie Irizarry using Stellarium.

Among the near-Earth asteroids classified as Potentially Hazardous, Florence is one of the biggest. Bigger asteroids include 1999 JM8 (4.3 miles or 7 km), 4183 Cuno (3.5 miles or 5.6 km) and 3200 Phaeton (3.2 miles or 5.1 km), which is thought to be the parent body of the Geminid meteor shower.

Of these, however, Florence is brightest, making it an excellent target for possible glimpses via small telescopes and binoculars.

Its size of about half the elevation of Mount Everest should allow it to reach a visual magnitude of +8.75 to +9, making it a relatively easy target for experienced observers at sites with dark skies.

Astronomers will study the flyby of the huge asteroid. Radar observations are scheduled from NASAs Goldstone Radar between August 29 to September 8, 2017. The Arecibo Observatory will also analyze Florence from September 2 5, 2017. Paul Chodas of the Center of NEO Studies said:

The September 1 flyby of Florence will provide astronomers with an excellent opportunity to make detailed measurements of a large near-Earth asteroid. In particular, radar scientists expect to obtain high-resolution images of Florence that could reveal surface features as small as about 10 meters (30 feet).

The asteroid rotates in about 2.5 hours and radar observations may reveal if Florence is a close or contact binary, or even if the space rock has its own small orbiting moon.

Closest approach to Earth is expected to occur at about 8:06 am EDT on September 1, 2017, but backyard observers using a telescope can try to get a glimpse of the space rock a few nights before that date.

On the night of August 27, the asteroid is in the constellation of Piscis Austrinus reaching about 19 above the southern horizon as seen from central U.S. Late in the night of August 29, the space rock gets into Capricornus and reaches an elevation of 33 as seen from Kansas.

Its distance will make it difficult to detect its slow motion across the stars, unless you are using at least a 5 diameter or bigger telescope and observe in the right direction.

Although asteroid Florence is travelling at 30,266 miles per hour (48,708 km/h), the distance will make it appear so slow that observers should keep watching the fairly bright asteroid for about 5 to 10 minutes to detect its movement across the stars.

Florence was discovered on March 2, 1981 from the Siding Spring Observatory in Australia. It is named in honor of Florence Nightingale (1820-1910), the founder of modern nursing.

Have a Go To computerized telescope? Point it to star HIP 104557 or to RA 21h11m57.45s / DEC -92333.6 a few minutes before 11:40 pm CDT on August 30, to see the asteroid forming a slowly changing triangle with these stars. Illustration by Eddie Irizarry using Stellarium.

Bottom line: Asteroid 3122 Florence will safely pass by our planet on September 1, 2017 at over 18 times the Earth-moon distance. Its the largest asteroid to pass this close to our planet since the first near-Earth asteroid was discovered over a century ago and might be visible to observers at dark sites using small telescopes, and even binoculars.

Read more about large Asteroid Florence from the Center for NEO Studies

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Big asteroid to sweep close September 1 - EarthSky

Spin the ultimate space jam with beats from Trappist-1 – SYFY WIRE (blog)

No matter what kind of music you like to blast from your car with the windows down, youve never heard something this otherworldly.

The system of seven Earth-size exoplanets orbiting cool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1 has made waves in the media over and over with all the buzz about potential life forms hiding out in its habitable zone, but this is the first time its making sound waves. The aspiring DJs at SYSTEM Sounds (who are all scientists at the University of Toronto's Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics) have found a way to convert the planets resonant chainhow their gravitational pulls harmonize to maintain stability in their circular orbits around both their star and themselvesinto a digital symphony.

TRAPPIST-1s resonant chain is not only the longest in any known planetary system, but makes music mathematically. If the seventh and most distant planet completes two orbital periods, the sixth has already completed three, the fifth four, and so on.

Seven Earth-sized planets around a nearby star is enough to get anyone excited, especially when several of them have the potential to support liquid water, said SYSTEM Sounds co-creator Matt Russo, a postdoctoral researcher at the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics. But what makes TRAPPIST-1 really remarkable is that all seven of its planets are locked in a resonant chain, where the lengths of the planets years form simple whole number ratios with each other. This is whats responsible for both the systems harmony and its rhythm.

Software created by the SYSTEM Sounds team, who want to try to convert as many things in space into music as possible, used data from NASAs K2 mission to translate the orbital periods of the planets into musical notes. They fast-forwarded the motion of the exoplanets until their orbital frequencies seemed to produce musical notes that were translated on a piano. Each note is played once per orbit, with a drumbeat every time two nearby planets come close (which is when the gravitational magic happens). Listen to the original below, which sounds like something theyd play in one of those New-Agey stores that always smell like incense smoke and have more crystals than Fraggle Rock.

Im strangely attracted to those places.

If you really want to be an unearthly DJ, the program on GitHub lets you adjust tempo and volume and switch notes on and off to customize your own sick space jam. Rock out.

(via Gizmodo)

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Spin the ultimate space jam with beats from Trappist-1 - SYFY WIRE (blog)

Reach for the moon: Ashland prepares for solar eclipse – The Independent

Karen Boatmen eagerly positioned her eclipse glasses onto her face, getting a small snippet of what it will be like on the big day Aug. 21.

I think all the kids should experience something like that, said the 8-year-olds mother, Joy Lydell, about the upcoming solar eclipse.

The two were at the Boyd County Public Library, where a viewing party will be hosted for the rare event. Aug. 21 will be the first time since 1979 a total solar eclipse has been visible from the contiguous United States.

During the eclipse, the moon will pass between the sun and Earth, blocking either all or part of the suns light depending on location. According to Dr. Thomas Pannuti, an Associate Professor of Space Science and Astrophysics at Morehead State University, the moon will block the sun for about two minutes and 40 seconds.

Overall, the eclipse can last for up to about three hours, from beginning to end.

Western Kentucky will witness a total solar eclipse since it falls in the path of totality. The path spans about 70 miles in width and will cross the United States from west to east. Ashland will experience a partial eclipse.

About 91 percent of the sun will be covered in Ashland, said Pannuti.

Pannuti explained what the sky would possibly look like during the eclipse, saying it will not be night-like, but there will be some darkness. Even though the suns rays will be partially blocked, looking at it can still cause damage to the eyes.

We definitely encourage people not to look directly at the sun, said Pannuti.

According to NASA, the only safe way to look directly at the uneclipsed or partially eclipsed sun is through special-purpose solar filters, like eclipse glasses, which do not include everyday sunglasses. For a list of reputable manufacturers and authorized dealers of solar filters and viewers go to eclipse.aas.org/resources/solar-filters.

The BCPL will also be giving out free eclipse glasses at all library locations from Monday until the day of the eclipse. Glasses will be limited to one per person.

The librarys eclipse viewing party will be from 1 to 2 p.m. outside the main branch in Central Park. Ben Nunley, BCPL public service manager, said eclipse glasses will also be handed out at the event along with information on the eclipse. The library has ordered 2,200 pairs of glasses in preparation.

Nunley said there will drinks and moon pies available. He added the library was also thinking about playing space-related tunes to go with the eclipse theme.

Morehead State University will also host an eclipse viewing event in front of the Space Science Center from 1 to 4 p.m. Astrophysics and space science students will be on-hand to assist in viewing the eclipse with solar telescopes and eclipse glasses.

The East Kentucky Science Center and Varia Planetarium will host an event on the campus of Big Sandy Community and Technical College to celebrate the eclipse as well.The center and Varia Planetarium will be open from noon to 5 p.m. free of charge.

The eclipse will be webcast on the planetarium dome and, weather permitting, there will be outdoor observations using special sunspotter instruments. Guests will receive free eclipse glasses.

While many will be flocking to prime viewing areas to observe the occurrence, some will be protesting it. Kentuckians for Coal will host a protest in Hopkinsville an area that will be in the path of totality in Western Kentucky in front of the Kentucky New Era newspaper on 1618 E. 9th St. from noon to 2 p.m.

The group is an ad-hoc coalition of miners, union officials, family members and coal users created to defend the Kentucky coal industry against encroachment from renewable energy industries and from economic development initiatives aimed at lessening Americas dependence on coal.

According to a release, Kentuckians for Coal stands against the eclipse and those who worship it. The coalition claims that the eclipses attraction of many visitors to Hopkinsville will further test the patience of both local residents and the extra law enforcement brought in to maintain order.

Communications director for the Kentucky tourism, Arts and Heritage cabinet Laura Brooks touched on the tourism impact of the eclipse, saying it will be big.

We certainly think its going to be an economic boom for the Commonwealth, especially in the western part, she said.

Brooks said of the six state parks that lie in the path of totality, all are fully booked on the Sunday night before the eclipse. She also anticipates there will be an international draw to Kentucky.

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Reach for the moon: Ashland prepares for solar eclipse - The Independent

Finding Harmony Between Human and Artificial Intelligence – Customer Think

[Image Source: Interactions.com]

Currently, artificial intelligence (AI) technologies are having an increasing impact on many aspects of daily life. I recently spoke with Interactions Dr. Michael Johnston, a veteran of speech and language technology with over 25 years of experience in the industry, to discuss the benefits of combining artificial intelligence with human understanding.

Artificial intelligence refers to the capability of a machine to mimic or approximate the capabilities of humans. Examples include:

Increasingly, systems combining constellations of AI technologies that previously were only found in research prototypes are coming into daily use by consumers in applications such as mobile and in-home virtual assistants (e.g. Siri, Cortana, and Alexa).

Despite these successes, significant challenges remain in the application of AI especially in language applications as we scale from simpler information seeking and control tasks (play David Bowie, turn on the lights) to more complex tasks involving richer language and dialog (e.g. troubleshooting for technical support, booking multi-part travel reservations, giving financial advice). Among enterprise applications of AI, one approach that is gaining popularity is to forego the attempt to create a fully autonomous AI-driven solution in favor of leveraging an effective blend of human and machine intelligence.

HUMAN INTELLIGENCE HAS ALWAYS PLAYED A CRITICAL ROLE IN MACHINE LEARNING Specifically, in supervised learning, human intelligence is generally applied to assign labels, or richer annotations, to examples used for training AI models which are then deployed in fully automated systems. Effective solutions are now emerging that involve the symbiosis of human and artificial intelligence in real time. These approaches vary in whether a human agent or artificial agent is the driver of the interaction.

In the case of an artificial agent fielding calls, text messages or other inputs from a user, human intelligence can be engaged in real time to provide live supervision of the behavior of the automated solution at various different levels (Human-assisted AI). For example, human agents can listen to audio and assist with hard to recognize speech inputs, assigning a transcription and/or semantic interpretation to the input. They can also assist with higher level decisions, such as which path to take in an interactive dialog flow, or how best to generate an effective response to the user. In these cases, the goal is to contain the interaction in what appears to the customer to be an automated solution, but one that leverages human intelligence just enough to maintain robustness and a high quality of interaction.

In contrast, in AI-assisted Human Interaction, the driver of the interaction is a human agent, and the users perception is that they are interacting with a person. The role of the AI is to provide assistance to the human agent in order to optimize and enhance their performance. For example, an AI solution assisting a contact center agent might suggest a possible response to return in text or read out to a customer.

Several companies have recently explored the application of sequence-to-sequence models using Deep Neural Networks to formulate a response or multiple responses that an agent can adopt or edit. One of the great advantages of this setting for applying new machine learning algorithms is reduced risk of failure as the human agent maintains the final say on whether to adopt the suggested response or use another. In addition, human decisions to adopt, reject, or edit suggested responses provide critical feedback for improvement of the AI models making the suggestions.

Another example of an AI-assisted Human Interaction is the application of predictive models based on user profiles and interaction history, to support a financial advisor with suggestions they can make to a client, or assist a sales person in recommending the optimal strategy to take for up-selling a product. Yet further applications of AI empowering human agents include within-call analytics to track customer or agent emotion and provide live feedback to the human agent on their own emotional state or that of the customer.

Perhaps the best solutions for customer care will combine both humans assisting AI and AI assisting humans: Customers will first engage with automated virtual assistants that respond to their calls, texts, messages and other inputs, and human assistance will play a role in optimizing performance. Then, if the call requires transfer to a human agent, that agent will be supported by an AI-enabled solution which quickly brings them up to speed on the history of the interaction and can assist them in real time as they respond to and engage with the customer.

TaraWildt

Interactions

Tara is a content marketing professional with experience in digital and social marketing. As Content Marketing Manager at Interactions, she is responsible for the overall content development and social media strategy. Tara holds a BA in International Relations from the University of San Diego and an MBA from Northeastern University.

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Finding Harmony Between Human and Artificial Intelligence - Customer Think

Are robots moving sculptures? On Art, illusion and artificial intelligence – Salon

Traditional art has an element of illusionism to it. This has long been commented on, and is responsible for the prevalent thought (at least among the general public) that the more realistic the artwork, the more a man-made creation looks like a nature-made one, the better it must be. The ancient praised the lifelike naturalism of painters, with Pliny relating the famous story of a duel between two artists, one of whom was able to fool a bird into swooping in to peck at his painted grapes, whereas the other was able to fool the first artist, tricking him into trying to pull aside a curtain that was, in fact, his painting of a curtain. Fooling a human trumps fooling an animal, and the ability to inspire awe, wonder, the how-did-they-do-that expression, has long been the goal of most traditional art. Think of a tale of Pygmalion, in which an ivory sculpture of a naked woman was so realistic, and its sculptors love for it so strong, that it actually came to life.

And so it is with robots, particularly the latest generation of Artificial Intelligence, which strives for a human-like appearance, yes, but also an ability to make human-like decisions and responses. From films like Ex Machina, AI and I, Robot to the AI that lives in our pockets and living rooms, like Siri and Amazon Echo, we want artificial intelligence to feel lifelike. But we also want to know how and why this works. If we cannot explain why, if the illusionism feels too real, it can frighten.

Perhaps the most famous of a sculpture come to life, a historical robotic AI conundrum, was a man-shaped machine called The Turk. This metal automaton was first unveiled in 1769, presented to the court of Empress Maria Theresa of Austria by one Wolfgang von Kempelen, a Hungarian inventor of, among other things, pontoon bridges, water pumps, steam turbines, a typewriter for a blind pianist, and a speaking machine that functioned like a mechanical model of the human vocal tract. This invention took 20years to produce, and used bellows of the sort that would stoke a fire, reeds from bagpipes, the bell of a clarinet and other components to produce sounds on demand that were reminiscent of human speech sounds.

While many of von Kempelens inventions areimpressive, he is best known for his Turk, which was a full-sized manikin in the form and attire of a mustachioed Ottoman man, smoking a long pipe with one hand and seated behind a table upon which a chessboard sat. The automaton appeared to move on its own and consider its human opponents chess game, reacting appropriately and winning most of its matches during its existence, in constant use (it was destroyed in a fire at a Philadelphia theater, which damaged the neighboring museum in which it was stored, in 1854). The Turk was victorious against several famous opponents, including Benjamin Franklin and Napoleon Bonaparte.

Von Kempelen got the idea to build The Turk after seeing illusionist Francois Pelletier perform at Schonbrunn Palace in Austria. Von Kempelen promised to return to the palace with an illusion that would outdo Pelletiers act. Return he did, with The Turk in tow. The automaton was designed with a stage magicians style in mind, for viewers would logically think that there might be some human hidden inside. So when it was presented, von Kempelen would open a series of cabinet drawers to show the audience that the base of the table was empty. Doors on the left of the cabinet showed brass gears and mechanics that looked like the inside of a clock. The back doors of the left side could be opened to show the audience all the way through to the other side. The right side also included brass structures, but these could be removed. There were hidden doors beneath the manikin, and thus behind the table, showing further clock-like workings. In short, the entire base of the automaton could be shown to the audience, to assure them that there was no person hidden inside.

But this is where the magicians sleight of hand came in. The middle of the table, beneath the chess set, did not open all the way to the far side. There was a compartment under the table that was not visible when the left and right cabinets were opened. Instead, there was a seat that could smoothly slide from side to side, where the chess master sat, rather contorted. When von Kempelen opened the left cabinet, the chess master would slide to the right. When he then closed the left cabinet to open the right, the chess master would slide left. Each time the seat slid, it automatically shifted fake gearworks into place to fill a cabinet that was otherwise empty when the cabinet doors were closed.

When the audience was satisfied that the base of the table contained nothing but gears, then the chess master would take his place on the right side, and use those same brass gears to manipulate the manikins arms and even his facial expressions. The chess master could see the board because each piece was magnetized, so the underside of the chess board had pieces on it that indicated where the real chess pieces sat on the board above.

As a further diversionary move, von Kempelen would place a small wooden box, in the shape of a coffin, on top of the table, adjacent to the chess board, when they game began, and would periodically look inside it, never showing the audience what it contained, but leading them to conclude that it contained some key to the functioning of the robot. Not only would the robot defeat opponents, react to them (even tsk-tsking them if they tried to cheat), it could also perform a complex chess puzzle called the knights tour, in which a player must move a knight so that it lands on every square on the board only once. To top it off, The Turk had a sort of Ouija board, through which it could speak to opponents and bystanders by spelling out its reply in German (though oddly not in Turkish).

In point of fact, The Turk was a hoax. Well, sort of. It was not a computer-programmed automaton, but rather a human-operated automaton. The trick was that a real (and preferably very small) human chess master was concealed inside the table component of the automaton, and would engage the chess opponents by manipulating the movements of The Turk through a system of levers. At least six known chess masters operated The Turk at some point (including a Bavarian rabbi and the very first chess Grandmaster).

Von Kempelen was not happy about his inventions popularity, as word of it spread, books were written about it, and it was in demand across Europe. He tried to dismiss his creation as a mere bagatelle, and even once dismantled it to discourage invitations, while he plowedahead on other projects. This is likely because of the logistical difficulties in procuring chess masters and the fear that showcasing it too often would lead to the unmasking of its workings. He only reassembled it on direct command of Emperor Joseph II, and he subsequently sent it on a tour of Europe.

While The Turk lost to several leading chess masters, it won almost all of its games, including the besting of Benjamin Franklin while he was American ambassador in Paris. Philip Thicknesse, Thomas Gainsboroughs dear friend, published a book on The Turk, trying to expose it as a hoax he was almost right, in thinking that a small child was concealed inside it. After von Kempelens death, The Turk passed through various hands and was eventually sent to the United States, where Edgar Allan Poes personal doctor bought it.

The Turk is but one story among many of a high-profile automaton that captured the worlds imagination. It is a sculpture, and therefore a work of art, but one that had the illusion of life breathed into it, thus it was a proto-robot. Most who saw it considered it an act of illusionism, not a real automaton but some trick of the inventors which was deemed pleasurable to its audience. The game was to figure out how it worked, knowing that it was not actually a man-built machine that could think and act on its own.

The Turk was, of course, the precursor to Deep Blue, the computer chess program that actually is programmed to think for itself, without the need for the showmanship of the mechanical manikin. Immersion in the liveliness of The Turk made it feel not like an artwork, not a metal statue, but something new, a magicians prop or clockwork mechanism. But of course it was both, art and artificial intelligence.

As is all AI, whether or not its creators feel the need to place it into a naturalistic shape, like a metal Ottoman. Todays AI inhabits the realm of minimalist or abstract art, with Amazon Echo as a sort of Brancusian monolith. Theres even a new robot you can have sex with, meant not just as an object of lust-satisfaction, but also a companion. Its the ancient story of Pygmalion, the sculptor who falls in love with his work, Galatea, only for it to come to life. AI is art: man-made approximations of nature, whatever the look of their skin.

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Are robots moving sculptures? On Art, illusion and artificial intelligence - Salon

Buy these seven shares to profit from driverless cars and artificial intelligence – Telegraph.co.uk

Autonomous vehicles

Fully autonomous cars are estimated to be just five years away, depending on both technology and the development of a regulatory system. This will dramatically increase the market for the components required.

For now, much of the growth comes from advanced driver assistance systems, such as automatic braking or adaptive cruise control.

Market value: 19.5bn

Last years pre-tax profit: 763m

This semiconductor firm was tipped by all of the technology fund managers we spoke to. It makes components used in systems such as emergency braking and battery management.

Hyunho Sohn, manager of the 2bn Fidelity Global Technology fund, said: Infineon exemplifies a company poised to gain from the move to electric and autonomous cars. It has a market-leading position and, as the technology going into each vehicle increases, it should experience increases in revenue and margin.

Market value: 18.7bn

Last year's pre-tax profit: 1.9bn

Delphi integrates different technologies into packages that meet the rigorous standards of the automotive industry, Mr Sohn explained

He said: "The firm has strong relationships with the major car manufacturers, and is well positioned to profit from both the rapid proliferation in low-level systems, and the eventual roll-out of fully autonomous driving."

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Buy these seven shares to profit from driverless cars and artificial intelligence - Telegraph.co.uk

Teaching AI Systems to Behave Themselves – New York Times

For years, Mr. Musk, along with other pundits, philosophers and technologists, have warned that machines could spin outside our control and somehow learn malicious behavior their designers didnt anticipate. At times, these warnings have seemed overblown, given that todays autonomous car systems can even get tripped up by the most basic tasks, like recognizing a bike lane or a red light.

But researchers like Mr. Amodei are trying to get ahead of the risks. In some ways, what these scientists are doing is a bit like a parent teaching a child right from wrong.

Many specialists in the A.I. field believe a technique called reinforcement learning a way for machines to learn specific tasks through extreme trial and error could be a primary path to artificial intelligence. Researchers specify a particular reward the machine should strive for, and as it navigates a task at random, the machine keeps close track of what brings the reward and what doesnt. When OpenAI trained its bot to play Coast Runners, the reward was more points.

This video game training has real-world implications.

If a machine can learn to navigate a racing game like Grand Theft Auto, researchers believe, it can learn to drive a real car. If it can learn to use a web browser and other common software apps, it can learn to understand natural language and maybe even carry on a conversation. At places like Google and the University of California, Berkeley, robots have already used the technique to learn simple tasks like picking things up or opening a door.

All this is why Mr. Amodei and Mr. Christiano are working to build reinforcement learning algorithms that accept human guidance along the way. This can ensure systems dont stray from the task at hand.

Together with others at the London-based DeepMind, a lab owned by Google, the two OpenAI researchers recently published some of their research in this area. Spanning two of the worlds top A.I. labs and two that hadnt really worked together in the past these algorithms are considered a notable step forward in A.I. safety research.

This validates a lot of the previous thinking, said Dylan Hadfield-Menell, a researcher at the University of California, Berkeley. These types of algorithms hold a lot of promise over the next five to 10 years.

The field is small, but it is growing. As OpenAI and DeepMind build teams dedicated to A.I. safety, so too is Googles stateside lab, Google Brain. Meanwhile, researchers at universities like the U.C. Berkeley and Stanford University are working on similar problems, often in collaboration with the big corporate labs.

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Teaching AI Systems to Behave Themselves - New York Times

Why Education Is the Hardest Sector of the Economy to Automate – Singularity Hub

Weve all heard the warning cries: automation will disrupt entire industries and put millions of people out of jobs. In fact, up to 45 percent of existing jobs can be automated using current technology.

However, this may not necessarily apply to the education sector. After a detailed analysis of more than 2,000-plus work activities for more than 800 occupations, a report by McKinsey & Co states that of all the sectors examined, the technical feasibility of automation is lowest in education.

There is no doubt that technological trends will have a powerful impact on global education, both by improving the overall learning experience and by increasing global access to education. Massive open online courses (MOOCs), chatbot tutors, and AI-powered lesson plans are just a few examples of the digital transformation in global education. But will robots and artificial intelligence ever fully replace teachers?

While various tasks revolving around educationlike administrative tasks or facilities maintenanceare open to automation, teaching itself is not.

Effective education involves more than just transfer of information from a teacher to a student. Good teaching requires complex social interactions and adaptation to the individual students learning needs. An effective teacher is not just responsive to each students strengths and weaknesses, but is also empathetic towards the students state of mind. Its about maximizing human potential.

Furthermore, students dont just rely on effective teachers to teach them the course material, but also as a source of life guidance and career mentorship. Deep and meaningful human interaction is crucial and is something that is very difficult, if not impossible, to automate.

Automating teaching is an example of a task that would require artificial general intelligence (as opposed to narrow or specific intelligence). In other words, this is the kind of task that would require an AI that understands natural human language, can be empathetic towards emotions, plan, strategize and make impactful decisions under unpredictable circumstances.

This would be the kind of machine that can do anything a human can do, and it doesnt existat least, not yet.

Lets not forget how quickly AI is evolving. Just because its difficult to fully automate teaching, it doesnt mean the worlds leading AI experts arent trying.

Meet Jill Watson, the teaching assistant from Georgia Institute of Technology. Watson isnt your average TA. Shes an IBM-powered artificial intelligence that is being implemented in universities around the world. Watson is able to answer students questions with 97 percent certainty.

Technologies like this also have applications in grading and providing feedback. Some AI algorithms are being trained and refined to perform automatic essay scoring. One project has achieved a 0.945 correlation with human graders.

All of this will have a remarkable impact on online education as we know it and dramatically increase online student retention rates.

Any student with a smartphone can access a wealth of information and free courses from universities around the world. MOOCs have allowed valuable courses to become available to millions of students. But at the moment, not all participants can receive customized feedback for their work. Currently, this is limited by manpower, but in the future that may not be the case.

What chatbots like Jill Watson allow is the opportunity for hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of students to have their work reviewed and all their questions answered at a minimal cost.

AI algorithms also have a significant role to play in personalization of education. Every student is unique and has a different set of strengths and weaknesses. Data analysis can be used to improve individual student results, assess each students strengths and weaknesses, and create mass-customized programs. Algorithms can analyze student data and consequently make flexible programs that adapt to the learner based on real-time feedback. According to the McKinsey Global Institute, all of this data in education could unlock between $900 billion and $1.2 trillion in global economic value.

Its important to recognize that technological automation alone wont fix the many issues in our global education system today. Dominated by outdated curricula, standardized tests, and an emphasis on short-term knowledge, many experts are calling for a transformation of how we teach.

It is not enough to simply automate the process. We can have a completely digital learning experience that continues to focus on outdated skills and fails to prepare students for the future. In other words, we must not only be innovative with our automation capabilities, but also with educational content, strategy, and policies.

Are we equipping students with the most important survival skills? Are we inspiring young minds to create a better future? Are we meeting the unique learning needs of each and every student? Theres no point automating and digitizing a system that is already flawed. We need to ensure the system that is being digitized is itself being transformed for the better.

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Why Education Is the Hardest Sector of the Economy to Automate - Singularity Hub