Freedom of the press a matter of life and death in COVID-19 era – Columbia Daily Herald

Students in Jennifer Ducks journalism classes at Belmont University learn how to assess the credibility of information and sources.

Duck also teaches her classes how to debunk myths, which are bountiful on places like social media platforms, where people tend to share links, often without clicking on, reading or vetting them.

The COVID-19 pandemic makes the stakes higher than ever.

This is a matter of life or death, said Duck, an instructor at Belmont in Nashville and a Clemson University Ph.D. student. We need truth and we need facts. Journalists help us separate fact from fiction.

Her research focuses on the importance of a free press, which is more important than ever as mixed messages have emerged from government leaders, generally at the national level, about how to handle the novel coronavirus crisis.

Media organizations including The Tennessean and others have striven to separate fact from fiction in daily fact check articles and deep reporting, which seeks to use data, credible sources and science to help inform the public and keep people safe.

So, it is encouraging that Duck urged students to compete in the National Student Essay Competition on the topic of freedom of the press, sponsored by The McCarthy Family Foundation in partnership with The Tennessean, the Committee to Protect Journalists and other U.S. newsrooms.

Several students, from middle school to college, submitted essays by the April 24 deadline.

They all show a great deal of maturity in wanting to be informed and discerning citizens who defend constitutional freedoms.

Remember: Freedom of the press is one of five freedoms delineated in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which prohibits government from enacting laws to abridge it.

Our founding fathers valued a free press, wrote Frank Runyon, a seventh grader at Richview Middle School in Clarksville. Thomas Jefferson once said, Freedom will be a short-lived possession unless the people are informed. Our founding fathers who believed in democracy thought that freedom of the press was an essential key to our freedom.

Jefferson and other presidents also became angry at the press when journalists were critical, but holding government accountable is why the Founding Fathers wanted to protect a free press.

Often, people will lump all journalists as the media, but citizens need to push back against this slight and ask: Which media organization? What did they get wrong (or right)? Is this just a propaganda attempt to discredit the free-flow of information to citizens who deserve to know the truth?

Katie Kuhnash, a senior studying music business at Belmont, reflected in her essay on the importance of being well-informed at a time when Americans are so limited in their ability to spend time with friends, see their families and do commerce because of stay-at-home orders.

In a time where so much is limited, I think it is more important than ever to keep our press free, she wrote. This is also one of the most mysterious, uninformed times we have ever lived through, where being informed is more important than ever. Where being a democracy is more important than ever.

Citizens should search for the truth and be discerning.

But know this: Journalists work hard to be accurate and trustworthy, and to seek truth and report it truthfully.

We take the First Amendment seriously and are keenly aware that credible information, especially today, is a matter of life and death.

David Plazas is the director of opinion and engagement for the USA TODAY Network newsrooms in Tennessee and an editorial board member of The Tennessean.

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Freedom of the press a matter of life and death in COVID-19 era - Columbia Daily Herald

What We Learned This Week – Voice of San Diego

This week, several statements were issued, press conferences were held and interviews were given all trying to suss out inconsistencies in law enforcements approach to protesters during this pandemic, and yet for all that talking and writing, were no closer to understanding what the guiding principles are and when people might expect to face police intervention for violating stay-at-home orders.

Demonstrators who remained in their cars to protest the treatment of detainees inside the Otay Mesa Detention Center were ticketed by the Sheriffs Department, yet protesters downtown and in Encinitas last weekend to protest stay-at-home orders were not.

When confronted about the discrepancy, the Sheriffs Department and SDPD issued a joint statement that did nothing whatsoever to clarify their policies, and instead said only that theyre hoping to strike a delicate balance between respecting peoples rights and enforcing the law.

A group of civil rights activists then issued a bizarre and counterintuitive call for police to go after the leaders of the weekend protests. The same group that has consistently spoken out against inappropriate police intervention was now calling for inappropriate police intervention for the sake of retribution.

And, just as bizarrely, police seemed receptive to that call. They announced theyre pursuing a case against one of the leaders of the weekend protests. But if the protest itself was protected First Amendment activity and police determined those participating shouldnt be cited, why would organizing that protected activity be a crime?

(Just to be clear, I think the protesters message that society should be reopened because freedom is idiotic; I just believe that the same First Amendment principles that have deemed journalists essential workers during the pandemic also extend to people with really stupid protest demands.)

Regardless of what you think of the protesters message, there is very clearly no overarching policy or principle guiding police behavior right now.

On the VOSD podcast this week, Mayor Kevin Faulconer, in what has become his trademark when pressed on law enforcements inconsistent enforcement policies, praised the department and escaped saying anything specific about what they might be able to do better.

I think its important that youre able to do your First Amendment activity and I think its incredibly important that our police department strike that balance. And I think they do a very good job of that.

If the mayor believes its important to safeguard citizens First Amendment rights, then surely it must rub him the wrong way that police are pursuing charges against the organizer of last weekends downtown protest of the governors stay-at-home order?

I think theyre going to have to make the decisions on a case by case basis based upon the facts on the ground as they see them, he said.

Is that an answer? Well, what an answer is must be determined by each person in their own heart. (Just kidding. No. Its not an answer. Its many words strung together that add up to less than the sum of their parts.)

So, there you have it. According to activists and the mayor, police should limit intervention, except when for no identifiable reasons whatsoever they should pursue it against only certain people.

The county has only just this week begun to ramp up its coronavirus testing, but is still not testing to its full capacity. The other piece of the puzzle experts say well need to emerge from lockdown is the ability to digitally trace peoples steps to alert them they may have been exposed to the virus and San Diego County is only taking baby steps toward that effort.

***

There are some dark explanations behind a drop in domestic violence calls to police during the pandemic. And one Carlsbad city councilwoman revealed some explosive details about her own experience while arguing for more resources for victims of domestic violence.

***

School officials are scrambling to track down homeless students who havent yet logged on to San Diego Unifieds online learning portal. Meanwhile, as the city moves more than 1,000 homeless residents into its Convention Center, the demand is still outpacing capacity and officials are rushing to figure out what will happen to them once theyre forced to move out of the facility. Part of that plan involves buying distressed hotels at a steep discount, but the citys progressives have some questions about how that would work.

***

San Diego County is getting more than $330 million from the federal government to help battle the coronavirus. But that money cant backfill county coffers, which have taken a major hit amid the economic shutdown. Meanwhile, we put together a handy explanation of which county officials are making big decisions during the crisis.

***

Lawyers, inmates and staffers at Donovan state prison told VOSDs Maya Srikrishnan that the conditions inside the facility could make it a powder keg if coronavirus took hold. The next day, the state confirmed a staffer there had tested positive.

***

A temporary stop-gap effort to slow suicides on the Coronado Bridge doesnt appear to be working.

Has this bread corpse casually slithered off of your countertop, pre-heated the oven to 375 degrees, opened the oven door with its doughy hand, and baked itself until its crust has achieved the perfect, golden-brown hue? How to tell if your quarantine sourdough starter is ready.

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What We Learned This Week - Voice of San Diego

‘SNL’s’ Cecily Strong roasts Trump as Gretchen Whitmer: ‘That woman’ is ‘what Trump calls his wife’ | TheHill – The Hill

Cecily Strong of "Saturday Night Live" roasted President TrumpDonald John Trump US capping how much banks can lend as part of coronavirus emergency program Trump on 'Noble' Prize tweets: 'Does sarcasm ever work?' Pompeo plans to force extension of arms embargo against Iran: NYT MORE while performing as Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) on Saturday.

Strong as Whitmer said governors are having a moment right now but that, unlike her, other governors are getting cool nicknames.

Trump refers to me as that woman from Michigan, she said. But Im not offended because I am proud to be from Michigan. And that woman is also what Trump calls his wife.

Shecontinued by giving advice for protesters to safelyexercise their First Amendment rights, including to stay home, maintain social distancing and wear a mask outside.

I promise you can call me a bitch from the safety of your couch. Its called Twitter, she said.

The skit also commented on how Whitmer is under consideration to become presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe BidenJoe BidenSNL's Cecily Strong roasts Trump as Gretchen Whitmer: 'That woman' is 'what Trump calls his wife' President Trump faces a major hurdle with swing state voters Governors discuss, defend plans to reopen state economies amid coronavirus pandemic MOREs vice presidential candidate.

If its going to be a woman, it might as well be that woman, she said.

The president has referred to Whitmer as that woman from Michigan, prompting the governor to wear a T-shirt with the phrase on it when she was interviewed for The Daily Show" earlier this month.

Trump has accused Whitmer of taking her stay-at-home order too far as protesters have demonstrated against the order and called for the states economy to reopen.

Michigan has documented at least 37,778 confirmed coronavirus cases and at least 3,315 fatalities. The state ranks seventhin total cases and thirdin deaths, The New York Times reported.

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'SNL's' Cecily Strong roasts Trump as Gretchen Whitmer: 'That woman' is 'what Trump calls his wife' | TheHill - The Hill

Broadcasters and Trump’s False Information on Coronavirus: What Role for the FCC? – Just Security

With the unprecedented and rapidly evolving coronavirus crisis, it is crucial that the public receive accurate information. President Donald Trump has been documented to have provided inaccurate or misleading information about the disease and its effects. A group aimed at promoting internet and press freedom, Free Press, asserts that broadcast news outlets and on-air personalities have a responsibility to inform the public of the potential inaccuracy of Trumps statements when covering or discussing them. Otherwise, broadcasters could be responsible for the harm that results to those who believe and act on those statements. As an example, Free Press cites the death of an Arizona man who saw and believed TV news coverage in which Trump characterized hydroxychloroquine as a potentially effective treatment. The man apparently ingested a similar-sounding ingredient as a result, chloroquine phosphate, and died.

In an emergency petition filed with the Federal Communications Commission on March 26, Free Press urged the FCC to investigate the spread of false information about the coronavirus. Free Press documented a number of other false statements by Trump, which it alleges were widely broadcast by the press. The result of Free Press request was perhaps dismaying, but considering the First Amendment values involved here, not surprising. Even had the commission taken up the issue, its authority to act would be limited to broadcast media.

Free Press alleged that broadcasters who cover or repeat statements such as those Trump made about the efficacy of hydroxychloroquine, without also including disclaimers that the statements may not be accurate, could be in violation of the FCCs broadcast hoax rule. Free Press further urged the FCC to make a formal recommendation that broadcasters prominently disclose when information they air is false or scientifically suspect, even if the broadcaster is simply reporting on the presidents statements.

The FCC quickly dismissed the Free Press petition, stating that it does not act as the arbiter of truth in journalism. The FCC observed that broadcasters are covering a rapidly evolving health crisis, one in which new medical information is difficult to corroborate or refute in real time. Indeed, the FCC expressed the view that by providing live coverage of presidential briefings on the crisis, broadcasters could be serving the public interest.

While the FCC declined to involve itself here, the Free Press petition does raise the issue of whether the FCC can take action against broadcasters that provide inaccurate or misleading information related to the coronavirus pandemic. The FCC does have two potential bases on which to take action against inaccurate news reports: its broadcast hoax rule and its news distortion policy. Should the FCC seek to enforce these rules to help stop the spread of misinformation about the coronavirus? Or might it do more harm than good?

Broadcast Hoax Rule

The broadcast hoax rule was enacted by the FCC in 1992 after a number of incidents in which TV and radio stations pulled pranks on their audiences that caused panic among some members of the public or resulted in law enforcement responding to the false reports. Examples included a radio station airing a warning that the United States was under nuclear attack, a radio station falsely reporting that one of its on-air hosts had been shot in the head in the station parking lot, and a morning radio show on which the hosts orchestrated a false murder confession from a caller to the show. Without the rule, the FCC had no good options for addressing these situations. The broadcast hoax rule gave the FCC the ability to fine stations that pulled hoaxes like these.

The broadcast hoax rule has four prongs. First, a station must air false information concerning a crime or catastrophe. Second, the station must know that the information is false. Third, it must be foreseeable that broadcasting the false information will cause substantial public harm. Fourth, the broadcast of the false information must in fact cause immediate and substantial public harm. All four prongs must be met for the rule to be violated.

News Distortion Policy

In contrast to the broadcast hoax rule, the FCCs news distortion policy does not allow the commission to fine stations that violate the policy. Rather, the policy is applied only at a TV or radio stations license renewal, which occurs for stations every eight years. At that time, the FCC can consider whether a station has violated the policy in determining whether the station should have its license renewed. (In that respect, it may be a future FCC that looks back at what stations did during the Trump administration and coronavirus period.)

The news distortion policy likewise has four components. First, the station must deliberately intend to distort the news or mislead the audience. It is not enough that station simply aired inaccurate information. Second, there must be evidence, in addition to the news story itself, that the station intended to mislead the audience. Third, station ownership or management must initiate the distortion or know about it. It is not enough if a reporter acting on his or her own was responsible for the distortion. Fourth, the public must be deceived about a matter of some significance, rather than just an incidental part of the news.

The First Amendment

Both the broadcast hoax rule and the news distortion policy have several requirements which significantly narrow their applicability, in that much more is required for their violation than the airing of a false or inaccurate news story. First Amendment doctrine requires that government regulation of speech, such as the broadcast hoax rule or news distortion policy, be narrowly focused on just those types of speech that cause the harm the government is seeking to prevent. The additional elements contained in each of the rules are designed to do just that. It is significant that the FCC has very rarely had the occasion to consider the application of either rule, as their violation has seldom been alleged, and even more rarely has the commission found a broadcaster to have violated them.

Were the rules applicable to broader sets of circumstances, they would likely violate the First Amendment, which provides the highest level of protection to political speech, and even provides significant protection to false speech. Perhaps no other country in the world provides such expansive protection to free speech as the United States. Political speech is provided this protection to allow the public to engage in uninhibited, robust, and wide-open debate on public issues. Significantly, this protection is not dependent on whether a speakers claims are true or accurate.

Recognizing that falsehoods provide little or no benefit to society in and of themselves, the U.S. Supreme Court has concluded that some false statements are inevitable if we are to have open and vigorous debates on issues of public importance. These inevitable false statements might come from those who purposefully lie to persuade others to their point, or from those who attempt to spin the facts to support their cause. They might also come from those who mistakenly, and innocently, believe their statements to be accurate.

Punishing the press for covering false statements in these situations could limit and harm public debate on important issues due to a likely chilling effect. That is, the press might avoid covering statements on issues of public concern, even though some or all might be true, out of fear that some may turn out not be true and the outlet would risk prosecution or punishment. The news media, in effect, might censor itself.

Allowing the press to escape punishment by establishing the truth of these statements does not eliminate this chilling effect. News organizations may still be concerned about the difficulty of proving all aspects of their stories true in court, or even just about the difficulties and expense of having to do so.

That is not the end of the matter, though. Rather than let false statements simply circulate unchecked, we depend on the marketplace of ideas to help us sort the true from the false. We allow both true ideas and false ideas to compete in this marketplace. In fact, the First Amendment is grounded on the theory that the best test of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the competition of the market. Under this view, the best weapon against false speech is speech that is true. Counterspeech, accurate information which counters the false, is preferred as a remedy to government action.

In its denial of the Free Press petition, the FCC echoed this view. The commission concluded:

[T]he antidote to the alleged harms raised by Free Press is ironically enough a free press. The rapid and comprehensive coverage of the present pandemic, free from burdensome disclaimers, agency investigation, or other government oversight, advances the public interest in maximizing information flow, while facilitating the vetting of statements by public officials via the ordinary journalistic process.

In other words, let the marketplace of ideas operate without government intervention. The goals are the samegetting to the truth but the means to obtain it are markedly different (governmental regulation versus expansive press freedoms and counterspeech).

Fox News and CNN Out of Reach Anyway

Even if the FCC were to enforce the broadcast hoax rule or news distortion policy, this would only have limited effectiveness in countering the spread of false information. Thats because both rules apply only to broadcasters, which means TV and radio stations. Significantly, the two rules do not apply to cable networks like Fox News or CNN. Nor do they apply to newspapers or websites. This stems from the fact that broadcasters are licensed by the FCC to use a scarce public resource: the electromagnetic spectrum, which is used for all forms of wireless communication. Additionally, broadcasters so licensed are tasked with a government mandate to serve the public interest. Because of this, courts have allowed greater government regulation of broadcast speech than of speech in other forms of media. The FCCs authority over cable television content is much more limited, and the commission does not regulate or oversee newspaper or website content.

So targeting broadcasters would address just a portion of the flow of misinformation, meaning FCC enforcement of the rules would not be all that effective in reducing the harms stemming from the misinformation. Even then, any such action is complicated by the fact that the FCC does not have authority over broadcast networks themselves, such as ABC, CBS, FOX, or NBC, but rather only over the individual stations around the country that air each broadcast networks programming. Any action then, would need to be taken against each individual station airing false information. While not a perfect solution, reliance on the marketplace of ideas is better than having the FCC investigate and punish stations reporting on misinformation about the coronavirus crisis.

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Broadcasters and Trump's False Information on Coronavirus: What Role for the FCC? - Just Security

Internet Speech Will Never Go Back to Normal – The Atlantic

All these developments have taken place under pressure from Washington and Brussels. In hearings over the past few years, Congress has criticized the companiesnot always in consistent waysfor allowing harmful speech. In 2018, Congress amended the previously untouchable Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to subject the platforms to the same liability that nondigital outlets face for enabling illegal sex trafficking. Additional amendments to Section 230 are now in the offing, as are various other threats to regulate digital speech. In March 2019, Zuckerberg invited the government to regulate harmful content on his platform. In a speech seven months later defending Americas First Amendment values, he boasted about his team of thousands of people and [artificial-intelligence] systems that monitors for fake accounts. Even Zuckerbergs defiant ideal of free expression is an extensively policed space.

Against this background, the tech firms downgrading and outright censorship of speech related to COVID-19 are not large steps. Facebook is using computer algorithms more aggressively, mainly because concerns about the privacy of users prevent human censors from working on these issues from home during forced isolation. As it has done with Russian misinformation, Facebook will notify users when articles that they have liked are later deemed to have included health-related misinformation.

But the basic approach to identifying and redressing speech judged to be misinformation or to present an imminent risk of physical harm hasnt changed, according to Monika Bickert, Facebooks head of global policy management. As in other contexts, Facebook relies on fact-checking organizations and authorities (from the World Health Organization to the governments of U.S. states) to ascertain which content to downgrade or remove.

Read: How to misinform yourself about the coronavirus

What is different about speech regulation related to COVID-19 is the context: The problem is huge and the stakes are very high. But when the crisis is gone, there is no unregulated normal to return to. We liveand for several years, we have been livingin a world of serious and growing harms resulting from digital speech. Governments will not stop worrying about these harms. And private platforms will continue to expand their definition of offensive content, and will use algorithms to regulate it ever more closely. The general trend toward more speech control will not abate.

Over the past decade, network surveillance has grown in roughly the same proportion as speech control. Indeed, on many platforms, ubiquitous surveillance is a prerequisite to speech control.

The public has been told over and over that the hundreds of computers we interact with dailysmartphones, laptops, desktops, automobiles, cameras, audio recorders, payment mechanisms, and morecollect, emit, and analyze data about us that are, in turn, packaged and exploited in various ways to influence and control our lives. We have also learned a lotbut surely not the whole pictureabout the extent to which governments exploit this gargantuan pool of data.

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Internet Speech Will Never Go Back to Normal - The Atlantic

Judge Rejects Twitter Surveillance Request Lawsuit – The Ring of Fire Network – The Ring of Fire Network

Via Americas Lawyer: Mike Papantonio is joinedby RT Correspondent, Brigida Santos, to talk about a lawsuit brought forth by Twitter against the FBI and DOJ that has concluded that the federal government is free to demand consumer data from the social media giant and others via National Security Letters.

Transcript:

*This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos.

Mike Papantonio: A judge has rejected a Twitter lawsuit against the US government that sought to inform the public about federal surveillance requests. RTs Brigida Santos joins me now to talk about this story. Brigida, Ive been pulling, you know, Ive really been pulling for these folks. Im not a huge, I never, I dont even tweet. Im not a Twitter person. I think might be because, you know, Donald ran me off from even being interested. But what can you tell me about the lawsuit? What happened here?

Brigida Santos: Look, this was first filed by Twitter in 2014 against the Obama era government, but it has since been amended to challenge the government under president Donald Trump. The social media giant sued because it had wanted to include information about the number of surveillance requests it receives from the federal government every year as part of its public transparency reports. The requests which are known as national security letters, however, are designed to be withheld from the public. So a federal judge in California after six years has now dismissed the case handing a victory to the federal government.

Mike Papantonio: No surprises here. You know, Id like to know more about the appointment of the judge and what their pedigree is, but I probably could guess. What does this mean for the public? Are they going to ever learn about the government spying? I mean, they at least have a right to know. Yeah, youve been spying on me and at least let us know that that happened. Thats, thats probably not going to happen though, is it?

Brigida Santos: No, its probably not. And the federal government can now continue to completely ban companies, not only from saying anything about government surveillance requests, but even that they have been doing them in the first place. National security letters are law enforcement tools that are similar to subpoenas and theyre most commonly issued by the FBI. However, other agencies can also issue them. NSLs force companies to turn over information about certain customers for national security related investigations.

But theres no way for companies to even know whether the government is legally doing this or whether theyre violating the law with these requests. So these companies are now forbidden from disclosing how many requests theyve received or that theyve received any in the first place. All we know is that the federal government has issued over 300,000 NSLs in the past 10 years. We dont know where they were issued or what they were issued for.

Mike Papantonio: Yeah. We try to call balls and strikes on this show as much as possible and, you know, people get mad at us because were not tribal and we dont have one position. So the balls and strikes in this, in this situation is the other side of the story is when we compare how we have been able to suppress terrorist activity United States because of this type of spying. Its nothing less than spying. Thats what it is. That that when we compare ourselves to Europe and Asia and other parts of the world, we have done far, far superior. And when you build in this, this is the, the argument is this is part of the reason.

But the empirical data is we have done far, far better than the rest of the world and so we hear that argument. Whether its accurate or not, I dont know. But the argument is certainly out there. If you compare apples to apples, yes, were doing far better. As far as the first amendment goes, is this a violation of the first amendment? I dont know how it could not be, but tell me what your opinion is.

Brigida Santos: Yeah, I think that it is. But unfortunately, by citing national security concerns, the government can always find a loophole for warrantless extra judicial surveillance and in this case, Twitter says the government was infringing on its rights to free speech by preventing it from publicly posting information and forcing it to engage in speech thats been preapproved by the government. But this goes deeper because the government often passes that from these social media companies then down to consumers and users by basically forcing us to squash our own speech. And when we talk about social media, theyre also collecting massive amounts of data on people.

So theyre also doing their own form of corporate spying. And while the government cant legally squash free speech, of course, unless its given it this loophole of national security, private companies can squash that free speech. They are free to do that and the government, as I said, often does pressure social media companies to do that. You know, silencing certain stories or voices and that often happens. And of course this is a bipartisan policy, one of Americas policies where both parties seem to agree. It spans multiple administrations. Mass surveillance, this is just the next chapter.

Mike Papantonio: Yeah, well the companies, you know, whether its Facebook or Twitter or whoever, you know, theyd benefit from it. They get, they get a lot of benefit from the federal government and breaks that the federal government gives them and the federal government has always has that hammer over their head. If you dont do this, then were going to do this and so thats always there. Its a reality. Theyre terrified that theyre going to lose a dollar. So, I really loved seeing Twitter take this position, but its no surprise to see a federal judge shoot it down because truthfully, he probably, they probably were on good grounds. When it comes down to the first amendment argument versus police power of federal government, health, safety and welfare. Health, safety and welfare is going to Trump something like the first amendment most of the time. Look, thank you for joining me. Okay. Stay safe out there in LA.

Brigida Santos: You too, Mike. Thanks.

Originally posted here:

Judge Rejects Twitter Surveillance Request Lawsuit - The Ring of Fire Network - The Ring of Fire Network

Op-Ed: Should anyone own the rights to HOLLYWOOD? – Los Angeles Times

The Hollywood sign is a beloved Southern California landmark. Built in 1923 and donated to the City of Los Angeles in 1944, it sits on public land atop Mt. Lee in Griffith Park.

The sign truly belongs to the public. And yet, in a sleight of hand, the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce insists that it owns trademark rights to the signs likeness and therefore can charge for the use of that image.

For years, lawyers for the chamber have been threatening to sue over the use of the Hollywood sign in a variety of projects, from a student film and UCLA law school recruitment brochure to an advertising campaign and tourist photo. British YouTuber Tom Scott mocked the chambers trademark bullying by bleeping out the word Hollywood Sign and pixelating the sign as if it were some X-rated porn star in his video about the sign.

The chamber, which has had control of licensing trademarks for the sign since at least 1992, claims it has certain trademark rights for usage of the Sign or its likeness for commercial purposes. But what most people dont realize is that the chamber tried and failed to register trademarks on the Hollywood sign with two applications to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in 2004.

The trademark office rejected the applications because you cant get trademark protection for the the name of a place. The Hollywood sign may be a landmark, but it is also the name of a place. Trademarks are only granted for geographic names in association with specific products and services. The only way that the chamber could have won a trademark for the Hollywood sign is if it had showed that the public widely associated the sign with a specific product. Thats what the owners of Arrowhead Water or California Pizza Kitchen did.

Before the chamber could appeal the trademark offices rejection, the big Hollywood studios Paramount Pictures, CBS Broadcasting, 20th Century Fox, Columbia Pictures and Universal City Studios went ballistic because the chambers applications sought a trademark for the sign as a stage prop. The studios feared that the chamber would demand licensing fees to show the sign in movies and TV shows, according to studio sources. After the studios filed papers with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office seeking more time to file comments, the chamber abandoned its applications.

The chamber, however, was not dissuaded from pushing its right to trademark the word Hollywood. It sought and obtained federal trademarks for the word, using the signs blocky all-caps, staggered lettering.

This time, the chamber followed the requirements for applying for a trademark for a geographical location. It argued that the word HOLLYWOOD had become known to the public as the brand name for candy, food, jewelry, clothing, athletic apparel, paper, licensing of intellectual property, and advertising services after five years of continuous use in the marketplace. The trademark office granted these dubious trademarks.

Those registrations do not apply to an image of the sign itself. But that hasnt stopped the chamber from demanding that filmmakers, television producers and other artists pay licensing fees to show the sign in their works. There is no need to pay. As one scholar explained, these creative works dont violate trademark laws when they simply show the Hollywood sign to signify that the scene took place in Hollywood. Thats called descriptive fair use.

Theres also the First Amendment. The constitutional right to free expression gives the creators of films, television shows, video games, and YouTube videos the right to show the Hollywood sign for artistic reasons or realism without paying a dime. But even when people are within their legal rights to use the image, they pony up when they get a cease-and-desist letter from the chamber demanding money because its cheaper than a lawsuit.

Many courts have reaffirmed a First Amendment protection for expressive works. The most recent decision came down on March 31 from a federal judge in New York. The judge dismissed a trademark lawsuit brought by the maker of Humvees against Activision, the publisher of the Call of Duty video games. He ruled that Activision has a First Amendment right to show the trademarked Humvees, which provide a dose of realism in depicting contemporary warfare.

The Hollywood sign is a historical, geographical and cultural touchstone for Los Angeles. Its not just a billboard for Hollywood. Its an icon that has come to represent dreams made here in California. You shouldnt have to pay a licensing fee for that.

Susan E. Seager is a staff attorney at the UC Irvine Law School Intellectual Property, Arts, and Technology Clinic and Sachli Balazadeh-Nayeri is a law student working in the clinic.

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Op-Ed: Should anyone own the rights to HOLLYWOOD? - Los Angeles Times

CDC draft outlines phased reopening of child care, religious institutions, food industry amid coronavirus – Fox News

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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has drafted proposed guidelines for a phased reopening of the economy as some states begin to lift stay-at-home orders and resume operations amid the coronavirus pandemic, Fox News has learned.

Fox News obtained a copy of the 17-page draft proposal on Monday, which contains guidelines for child care centers, schools, day camps, faith-based institutions, bars and restaurants and public transportation, and an outline of specific directions for each sector.

TRUMP ANNOUNCES 'OPENING UP AMERICA AGAIN' GUIDELINES

According to the Washington Post, which first obtained the draft guidelines, coronavirus task force members Dr. Deborah Birx, Dr. Anthony Fauci, and assistant to the president and director of the Domestic Policy Council Joe Grogan have reviewed the proposed guidelines.

The CDC draft proposal begins with child care programs, stating that the reopening of those programs is crucial to helping parents and guardians return to work.

The guidelines note that in communities that are deemed significant mitigation areas by State and local authorities, child care programs should be closed, but that in other areas, programs can choose to remain open to serve children of essential workers, such as healthcare workers.

The reopening of child care centers includes three phasesphase one would restrict care to just children of essential workers; phase two would expand to all children with enhanced social distancing measures; and phase three would open the programs for all children with social distancing measures, while promoting healthy hygiene habits, and intensify cleaning, disinfection and ventilation.

The CDC recommends that during phase oneand two, classes should include the same group of children each day and the same child care providers, and recommend screening of children as they arrive.

As for schools, the CDC recommendsthat schools that are currently closed remain closed, while ensuring a continuation of student services, such as school meal programs. As for summer camps, theCDC draft recommends that camps be restricted to children of essential workers in phase one, with phase two welcoming children who live in the local area only. By phase three, the CDC recommends that camps restrict attendance to those from limited transmission areas.

Meanwhile, the proposal lays out guidelines for religious institutions, but according to The Post, those guidelines have been the subject of many changes in drafts.

This guidance is not intended to infringe on First Amendment rights as provided in the US Constitution, the CDC draft proposal says in the Communities of Faith section.

The federal government may not prescribe standards for interactions of faith communities in houses of worship and no faith community should be asked to adopt any mitigation strategies that are more stringent than the mitigation strategies asked of similarly situated entities or activities in accordance with the Religious Freedom and Restoration Act, the proposal states, adding that the CDC offers these suggestions that faith communities may consider and accept or reject, consistent with their own faith traditions, in the court of preparing their own plans to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

The guidelines suggest that faith communities consider limiting gatherings to those that can be held virtually or streamed online, for phase one.

For all three phases, the CDC recommends that faith communities consider temporarily limiting the sharing of prayer books and worship materials, and consider using a stationary collection box or mail or electronic payment instead of the traditional shared collection trays or baskets; and avoid or consider suspending choir or musical ensembles during religious services.

WHITE HOUSE SAYS PAYROLL TAX CUT FOR EMPLOYEES SHOULD BE INCLUDED IN 'PHASE 4' CORONVIRUS STIMULUS PACKAGE

The CDC also recommends that when holding in-person services, institutions consider holding them in a large, well-ventilated area or outdoors, as circumstances and faith traditions allow, and space out seating for attendees who do not live in the same household to at least six feet apart when possible.

Meanwhile, the CDC draft proposes guidelines for vulnerable workers across all sectors and industries, encouraging workplaces to keep in mind that some workers are at higher risk for severe illness from COVID-19.

These vulnerable workers include individuals over age 65 and those with underlying medical conditions, the guidelines state. Such underlying conditions include, but are not limited to, chronic lung disease, moderate to severe asthma, hypertension, severe heart conditions, weakened immunity, severe obesity, diabetes, liver disease, and chronic kidney disease that requires dialysis. Vulnerable workers should be encouraged to self-identify, and employers should avoid making unnecessary medical inquiries.

The new guidelines extend to restaurants and bars, promoting ways to maintain healthy business operations and a safe and healthy work environment for employees.

The first phase recommends that bars remain closed and restaurant services remain limited to drive-through, curbside take out or delivery only with strict social distancing. Phase twowould allow bars and restaurants to re-open, with limited capacity, and seating capacity that allows for social distancing. Phase threewould allow bars to open with increased standing room occupancy that would allow for social distancing, and restaurants to operate while maintaining social distancing.

For restaurants, the CDC recommends that customers wait in their cars while waiting to be seated, and avoid the use of buzzers, switching to phone app technology when possible to alert patrons when their table is ready. The CDC also recommends that restaurants avoid self-serve food and drink options like buffets, salad bars and drink stations.

As for mass transit, the CDC recommends that phase onerestrictridership to essential critical infrastructure workers only; phase twomaintain social distancing between transit riders and employees; and phase threeencourage social distancing as much as possible.

The CDC specifically states that all decisions and policies based on the guidelines should be made with state and local authorities.

The draft proposal is reportedly under review by White House officials, and the CDC could release a final proposal in the coming days.

The proposed guidelines come as several states begin relaxing social distancing measures and begin phase one of the White House's guidelines to reopen the economy. The guidelinespass the decision on when to move to each phaseto governors and local officials.

The Trump administration's guidelines outline what individuals, businesses, health care workers and more should do over three phases in reopening the economy, with states making it to the first phaseonly if they see a decrease in the number of cases within their borders over 14 days.

As of Monday, the U.S. reported nearly 1 million positive cases of COVID-19, and more than 54,800 deaths.

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CDC draft outlines phased reopening of child care, religious institutions, food industry amid coronavirus - Fox News

La Liga lending their super computer to coronavirus fight – From piracy tracking to disease tracking – ESPN

Apr 21, 2020

Sid LoweSpain writer

MADRID -- On the fifth floor of La Liga headquarters on Torrelaguna Street, in the northeast part of the city, is a computer 4,232 times as powerful as the one this piece is being written on and quicker than Inaki Williams. The building, which towers over the road heading out of Madrid toward the airport, is virtually empty, but while it stands alone, the computer hasn't stopped working. Built to make sure you're not watching illegal streams of games you shouldn't be -- watching any game would be a fine thing right now -- the computer is now being used to help in the fight against the coronavirus.

There has not been a game in Spain since Eibar played Real Sociedad behind closed doors over a month ago, and no one knows when football is coming back. The sport has come up with plenty of initiatives during these days of confinement: There have been FIFA 20 tournaments and fundraising, online concerts and lots of silly stuff to pass the time. Some players are phoning their club's oldest members to check up on them; others are providing food. We've seen Leganes' daily workouts and Saul Niguez's plan to help small businesses get back to their feet.

- Stream new episodes of ESPN FC Monday-Friday on ESPN+- Stream every episode of 30 for 30: Soccer Stories on ESPN+

Then there's La Liga's computer, heading into the monster's mouth. And, yes, that really is how it's referring to it: it is called Demogorgon.

"It's about the size of a normal computer, but it's capacity is more than 4,000 times the size. The processing speed is huge," says Emilio Fernandez del Castillo, the head of technological content protection at La Liga and person responsible for overseeing the computer. "It is built to detect and prevent piracy: We're searching for our content Monday to Sunday all over the world, and this is the tool that enables us to find it. Imagine how big it has to be to do that. Other systems, other computers, simply wouldn't be able to."

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The computer in La Liga HQ can do that and more, so some of the league's processing capacity was plugged into the folding@home platform, a project in which people volunteer to run computer simulations typically focused on medical research, specifically around viruses and proteins. La Liga is essentially lending its capacity so, in a way, everything is run through them but at the same time nothing is. The machine is like the thousands of home computers involved in this effort, only it is so much more powerful -- and because it's La Liga, there is a relationship of sorts there. There are hundreds of thousands of normal computers; it is like 4,000 of them in one go. The processing speed is off the scale.

"We have engineers, IT experts, people who know the systems so well and they thought: 'Look, we can hand this over, we haven't got games every day -- Barcelona aren't on every day,'" Emilio says. "So, we 'loan' some of our 'space' for that research. We were helping investigations into cancer. But then when all this happened, attention shifted and we handed it over to fight against coronavirus."

Now that there are no games at all and no goals to pursue except recovery, even more processing speed can be harnessed to help the investigation -- along with more than 700,000 people across the globe who have joined the grid in the past month.

"La Liga contacted us and wanted to learn more about our work: The technical department of La Liga found folding@home and joined our grid, installing our client on their super computer in Madrid," says Gregory Bowman, associate professor in the Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biophysics at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. That dramatically increases the chance of successfully modelling and understanding the coronavirus.

"In brief, we're trying to understand how all the moving parts of the SARS-CoV-2 virus' proteins contribute to their function, identify new therapeutic opportunities based on this insight, design new therapeutics and engage with experimental collaborators to test them," Bowman says.

Dan Thomas is joined by Craig Burley, Shaka Hislop and a host of other guests every day as football plots a path through the coronavirus crisis. Stream on ESPN+ (U.S. only).

The programme's models simulate the dynamics of COVID-19 proteins, searching for ways to attack the virus and identify points at which treatment can be most effectively inserted. It seeks to understand how the virus functions, watching the way that atoms might move. The simulations seek to understand the spike on the surface of the virus that identifies and attaches itself to human cells, watching and mapping how it might open up for its "attack": It is like the mouth of the Demogorgon monster from TV series "Stranger Things," or so analysts think. Hence the name.

The variables, though, are incalculable ... or they would be on a normal computer. Now, my laptop might produce the finest football articles known to man, but if it tried to simulate the virus' movement alone, I could be here a hundred years and not get anywhere near it. But with the combined power of processors worldwide, including super computers such as La Liga's, investigators are more optimistic.

"We're doing everything we can to accelerate the development of therapies," Bowman says. "We hope to start submitting papers soon, and we're keeping everyone up to date. Great progress is being made. We can't guarantee the outcome or timeline of our work, but we've already been successful on related problems like Ebola virus, and we're making progress on understanding how SARS-CoV-2 infects human cells and will soon share insight into novel therapeutic opportunities our simulations have uncovered, called cryptic pockets."

For now, work continues. And so, with a little help from La Liga, once more into the mouth of the monster.

Read the rest here:

La Liga lending their super computer to coronavirus fight - From piracy tracking to disease tracking - ESPN

One Supercomputers HPC And AI Battle Against The Coronavirus – The Next Platform

Normally, supercomputers installed at academic and national laboratories get configured once, acquired as quickly as possible before the money runs out, installed and tested, qualified for use, and put to work for a four or five or possibly longer tour of duty. It is a rare machine that is upgraded even once, much less a few times.

But that is not he case with the Corona system at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, which was commissioned in 2017 when North America had a total solar eclipse and hence its nickname. While this machine, procured under the Commodity Technology Systems (CTS-1) to not only do useful work, but to assess the CPU and GPU architectures provided by AMD, was not named after the coronavirus pandemic that is now spreading around the Earth, the machine is being upgraded one more time to be put into service as a weapon against the SARS-CoV-2 virus which caused the COVID-19 illness that has infected at least 2.75 million people (confirmed by test, with the number very likely being higher) and killed at least 193,000 people worldwide.

The Corona system was built by Penguin Computing, which has a long-standing relationship with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Sandia National Laboratories the so-called Tri-Labs that are part of the US Department of Energy and that coordinate on their supercomputer procurements. The initial Corona machine installed in 2018 had 164 compute nodes, each equipped with a pair of Naples Epyc 7401 processors, which have 24 cores each running at 2 GHz with an all core turbo boost of 2.8 GHz. The Penguin Tundra Extreme servers that comprise this cluster have 256 GB of main memory and 1.6 TB of PCI-Express flash. When the machine was installed in November 2018, half of the nodes were equipped with four of AMDs Radeon Instinct MI25 GPU accelerators, which had 16 GB of HBM2 memory each and which had 768 gigaflops of FP64 performance, 12.29 teraflops of FP32 performance, and 24.6 teraflops of FP16 performance. The 7,872 CPU cores in the system delivered 126 teraflops at FP64 double precision all by themselves, and the Radeon Instinct MI25 GPU accelerators added another 251.9 teraflops at FP64 double precision. The single precision performance for the machine was obviously much higher, at 4.28 petaflops across both the CPUs and GPUs. Interestingly, this machine was equipped with 200 Gb/sec HDR InfiniBand switching from Mellanox Technologies, which was obviously one of the earliest installations of this switching speed.

In November last year, just before the coronavirus outbreak or, at least we think that was before the outbreak, that may turn out to not be the case AMD and Penguin worked out a deal to installed four of the much more powerful Radeon Instinct MI60 GPU accelerators, based on the 7 nanometer Vega GPUs, in the 82 nodes in the system that didnt already have GPU accelerators in them. The Radeon Instinct MI60 has 32 GB of HBM2 memory, and has 6.6 teraflops of FP64 performance, 13.3 teraflops of FP32 performance, and 26.5 teraflops of FP16 performance. Now the machine has 8.9 petaflops of FP32 performance and 2.54 petaflops of FP64 performance, and this is a much more balanced 64-bit to 32-bit performance, and it makes these nodes more useful for certain kinds of HPC and AI workloads. Which turns out to be very important to Lawrence Livermore in its fight against the COVID-19 disease.

To find out more about how the Corona system and others are being deployed in the fight against COVID-19, and how HPC and AI workloads are being intertwined in that fight, we talked to Jim Brase, deputy associate director for data science at Lawrence Livermore.

Timothy Prickett Morgan: It is kind of weird that this machine was called Corona. Foreshadowing is how you tell the good literature from the cheap stuff. The doubling of performance that just happened late last year for this machine could not have come at a better time.

Jim Brase: It pretty much doubles the overall floating point performance of the machine, which is great because what we are mainly running on Corona is both the molecular dynamics calculations of various viral and human protein components and then machine learning algorithms for both predictive models and design optimization.

TPM: Thats a lot more oomph. So what specifically are you doing with it in the fight against COVID-19?

Jim Brase: There are two basic things were doing as part of the COVID-19 response, and this machine is almost entirely dedicated to this although several of our other clusters at Lawrence Livermore are involved as well.

We have teams that are doing both antibody and vaccine design. They are mainly focused on therapeutic antibodies right now. They are basically designing proteins that will interact with the virus or with the way the virus interacts with human cells. That involves hypothesizing different protein structures and computing what those structures actually look like in detail, then computing using molecular dynamics the interaction between those protein structures and the viral proteins or the viral and human cell interactions.

With this machine, we do this iteratively to basically design a set of proteins. We have a bunch of metrics that we try to optimize on binding strength, the stability of the binding, stuff like that and then we do a detailed molecular dynamics calculations to figure out the effective energy of those binding events. These metrics determine the quality of the potential antibody or vaccine that we design.

TPM: To wildly oversimplify, this SARS-CoV-2 virus is a ball of fat with some spikes on it that wreaks havoc as it replicates using our cells as raw material. This is a fairly complicated molecule at some level. What are we trying to do? Stick goo to it to try to keep it from replicating or tear it apart or dissolve it?

Jim Brase: In the case of in the case of antibodies, which is what were mostly focusing on right now, we are actually designing a protein that will bind to some part of the virus, and because of that the virus then changes its shape, and the change in shape means it will not be able to function. These are little molecular machines that they depend on their shape to do things.

TPM: Theres not something that will physically go in and tear it apart like a white blood cell eats stuff.

Jim Brase: No. Thats generally done by biology, which comes in after this and cleans up. What we are trying to do is what we call neutralizing antibodies. They go in and bind and then the virus cant do its job anymore.

TPM: And just for a reference, what is the difference between a vaccine and an antibody?

Jim Brase: In some sense, they are the opposite of each other. With a vaccine, we are putting in a protein that actually looks like the virus but it doesnt make you sick. It stimulates the human immune system to create its own antibodies to combat that virus. And those antibodies produced by the body do exactly the same thing we were just talking about Producing antibodies directly is faster, but the effect doesnt last. So it is more of a medical treatment for somebody who is already sick.

TPM: I was alarmed to learn that for certain coronaviruses, immunity doesnt really last very long. With the common cold, the reason we get them is not just because they change every year, but because if you didnt have a bad version of it, you dont generate a lot of antibodies and therefore you are susceptible. If you have a very severe cold, you generate antibodies and they last for a year or two. But then youre done and your body stops looking for that fight.

Jim Brase: The immune system is very complicated and for some things it creates antibodies that remembers them for a long time. For others, its much shorter. Its sort of a combination of the of the what we call the antigen the thing about that, the virus or whatever that triggers it and then the immune system sort of memory function together, cause the immunity not to last as long. Its not well understood at this point.

TPM: What are the programs youre using to do the antibody and protein synthesis?

Jim Brase: We are using a variety of programs. We use GROMACS, we use NAMD, we use OpenMM stuff. And then we have some specialized homegrown codes that we use as well that operate on the data coming from these programs. But its mostly the general, open source molecular mechanics and molecular dynamics codes.

TPM: Lets contrast this COVID-19 effort with like something like SARS outbreak in 2003. Say you had the same problem. Could you have even done the things you are doing today with SARS-CoV-2 back then with SARS? Was it even possible to design proteins and do enough of them to actually have an impact to get the antibody therapy or develop the vaccine?

Jim Brase: A decade ago, we could do single calculations. We could do them one, two, three. But what we couldnt do was iterate it as a design optimization. Now we can run enough of these fast enough that we can make this part of an actual design process where we are computing these metrics, then adjusting the molecules. And we have machine learning approaches now that we didnt have ten years ago that allow us to hypothesize new molecules and then we run the detailed physics calculations against this, and we do that over and over and over.

TPM: So not only do you have a specialized homegrown code that takes the output of these molecular dynamics programs, but you are using machine learning as a front end as well.

Jim Brase: We use machine learning in two places. Even with these machines and we are using our whole spectrum of systems on this effort we still cant do enough molecular dynamics calculations, particularly the detailed molecular dynamics that we are talking about here. What does the new hardware allow us to do? It basically allows us to do a higher percentage of detailed molecular dynamics calculations, which give us better answers as opposed to more approximate calculations. So you can decrease the granularity size and we can compute whole molecular dynamics trajectories as opposed to approximate free energy calculations. It allows us to go deeper on the calculations, and do more of those. So ultimately, we get better answers.

But even with these new machines, we still cant do enough. If you think about the design space on, say, a protein that is a few hundred amino acids in length, and at each of those positions you can put in 20 different amino acids, you on the order of 20200 in the brute force with the possible number of proteins you could evaluate. You cant do that.

So we try to be smart about how we select where those simulations are done in that space, based on what we are seeing. And then we use the molecular dynamics to generate datasets that we then train machine learning models on so that we are basically doing very smart interpolation in those datasets. We are combining the best of both worlds and using the physics-based molecular dynamics to generate data that we use to train these machine learning algorithms, which allows us to then fill in a lot of the rest of the space because those can run very, very fast.

TPM: You couldnt do all of that stuff ten years ago? And SARS did not create the same level of outbreak that SARS-CoV-2 has done.

Jim Brase: No, these are all fairly new early new ideas.

TPM: So, in a sense, we are lucky. We have the resources at a time when we need them most. Did you have the code all ready to go for this? Were you already working on this kind of stuff and then COVID-19 happened or did you guys just whip up these programs?

Jim Brase: No, no, no, no. Weve been working on this kind of stuff for her for a few years.

TPM: Well, thank you. Id like to personally thank you.

Jim Brase: It has been an interesting development. Its both been both in the biology space and the physics space, and those two groups have set up a feedback loop back and forth. I have been running a consortium called Advanced Therapeutic Opportunities in Medicine, or ATOM for short, to do just this kind of stuff for the last four years. It started up as part of the Cancer Moonshot in 2016 and focused on accelerating cancer therapeutics using the same kinds of ideas, where we are using machine learning models to predict the properties, using both mechanistic simulations like molecular dynamics, but all that combined with data, but then also using it other the other way around. We also use machine learning to actually hypothesize new molecules given a set of molecules that we have right now and that we have computed properties on them that arent quite what we want, how do we just tweak those molecules a little bit to adjust their properties in the directions that we want?

The problem with this approach is scale. Molecules are atoms that are bonded with each other. You could just take out an atom, add another atom, change a bond type, or something. The problem with that is that every time you do that randomly, you almost always get an illegal molecule. So we train these machine learning algorithms these are generative models to actually be able to generate legal molecules that are close to a set of molecules that we have but a little bit different and with properties that are probably a little bit closer to what we what we want. And so that allows us to smoothly adjust the molecular designs to move towards the optimization targets that we want. If you think about optimization, what you want are things with smooth derivatives. And if you do this in sort of the discrete atom bond space, you dont have smooth derivatives. But if you do it in these, these are what we call learned latent spaces that we get from generative models, then you can actually have a smooth response in terms of the molecular properties. And thats what we want for optimization.

The other part of the machine learning story here is these new types of generative models. So variational autoencoders, generative adversarial models the things you hear about that generate fake data and so on. Were actually using those very productively to imagine new types of molecules with the kinds of properties that we want for this. And so thats something we were absolutely doing before COVID-19 hit. We have taken these projects like ATOM cancer project and other work weve been doing with DARPA and other places focused on different diseases and refocused those on COVID-19.

One other thing I wanted to mention is that we havent just been applying biology. A lot of these ideas are coming out of physics applications. One of our big things at Lawrence Livermore is laser fusion. We have 192 huge lasers at the National Ignition Facility to try to create fusion in a small hydrogen deuterium target. There are a lot of design parameters that go into that. The targets are really complex. We are using the same approach. Were running mechanistic simulations of the performance of those targets, we are then improving those with real data using machine learning. So now we now have a hybrid model that has physics in it and machine learning data models, and using that to optimize the designs of the laser fusion target. So thats led us to a whole new set of approaches to fusion energy.

Those same methods actually are the things were also applying to molecular design for medicines. And the two actually go back and forth and sort of feed on each other and support each other. In the last few weeks, some of the teams that have been working on the physics applications have actually jumped over onto the biology side and are using some of the same sort of complex workflows that were using on these big parallel machines that theyve developed for physics and applying those to some of the biology applications and helping to speed up the applications on these on this new hardware thats coming in. So it is a really nice synergy going back and forth.

TPM: I realize that machine learning software uses the GPUs for training and inference, but is the molecular dynamics software using the GPUs, too?

Jim Brase: All of the molecular dynamics software has been set up to use GPUs. The code actually maps pretty naturally onto the GPU.

TPM: Are you using the CUDA variants of the molecular dynamics software, and I presume that it is using the Radeon Open Compute, or ROCm, stack from AMD to translate that code so it can run on the Radeon Instinct accelerators?

Jim Brase: There has been some work to do, but it works. Its getting its getting to be pretty solid now, thats one of the reasons we wanted to jump into the AMD technology pretty early, because you know, any time you do first-in-kind machines its not always completely smooth sailing all the way.

TPM: Its not like Lawrence Livermore has a history of using novel designs for supercomputers. [Laughter]

Jim Brase: We seldom work with machines that are not Serial 00001 or Serial 00002.

TPM: Whats the machine learning stack you use? I presume it is TensorFlow.

Jim Brase: We use TensorFlow extensively. We use PyTorch extensively. We work with the DeepChem group at Stanford University that does an open chemistry package built on TensorFlow as well.

TPM: If you could fire up an exascale machine today, how much would it help in the fight against COVID-19?

Jim Brase: It would help a lot. Theres so much to do.

I think we need we need to show the benefits of computing for drug design and we are concretely doing that now. Four years ago, when we started up ATOM, everybody thought this was nuts, the general idea that we could lead with computing rather than experiment and do the experiments to focus on validating the computational models rather than the other way around. Everybody thought we were nuts. As you know, with the growth of data, the growth of machine learning capabilities, more accessibility to sophisticated molecular dynamics, and so on its much more accepted that computing is a big part of this. But we still have a long way to go on this.

The fact is, machine learning is not magic. Its a fancy interpolator. You dont get anything new out of it. With the physics codes, you actually get something new out of it. So the physics codes are really the foundation of this. You supplement them with experimental data because theyre not right necessarily, either. And then you use the machine learning on top of all that to fill in the gaps because you havent been able to sample that huge chemical and protein space adequately to really understand everything at either the data level or the mechanistic level.

So thats how I think of it. Data is truth sort of and what you also learn about data is that it is not always the same as you go through this. But data is the foundation. Mechanistic modeling allows us to fill in where we just cant measure enough data it is too expensive, it takes too long, and so on. We fill in with mechanistic modeling and then above that we fill in that then with machine learning. We have this stack of experimental truth, you know, mechanistic simulation that incorporates all the physics and chemistry we can, and then we use machine learning to interpolate in those spaces to support the design operation.

For COVID-19, there are there are a lot of groups doing vaccine designs. Some of them are using traditional experimental approaches and they are making progress. Some of them are doing computational designs, and that includes the national labs. Weve got 35 designs done and we are experimentally validating those now and seeing where we are with them. It will generally take two to three iterations of design, then experiment, and then adjust the designs back and forth. And were in the first round of that right now.

One thing were all doing, at least on the public side of this, is we are putting all this data out there openly. So the molecular designs that weve proposed are openly released. Then the validation data that we are getting on those will be openly released. This is so our group working with other lab groups, working with university groups, and some of the companies doing this COVID-19 research can contribute. We are hoping that by being able to look at all the data that all these groups are doing, we can learn faster on how to sort of narrow in on the on the vaccine designs and the antibody designs that will ultimately work.

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One Supercomputers HPC And AI Battle Against The Coronavirus - The Next Platform

Could Machine Learning Replace the Entire Weather Forecast System? – HPCwire

Just a few months ago, a series of major new weather and climate supercomputing investments were announced, including a 1.2 billion order for the worlds most powerful weather and climate supercomputer and a tripling of the U.S. operational supercomputing capacity for weather forecasting. Weather and climate modeling are among the most power-hungry use cases for supercomputers, and research and forecasting agencies often struggle to keep up with the computing needs of models that are, in many cases, simulating the atmosphere of the entire planet as granularly and as regularly as possible.

What if that all changed?

In a virtual keynote for the HPC-AI Advisory Councils 2020 Stanford Conference, Peter Dueben outlined how machine learning might (or might not) begin to augment and even, eventually, compete with heavy-duty, supercomputer-powered climate models. Dueben is the coordinator for machine learning and AI activities at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), a UK-based intergovernmental organization that houses two supercomputers and provides 24/7 operational weather services at several timescales. ECMWF is also the home of the Integrated Forecast System (IFS), which Dueben says is probably one of the best forecast models in the world.

Why machine learning at all?

The Earth, Dueben explained, is big. So big, in fact, that apart from being laborious, developing a representational model of the Earths weather and climate systems brick-by-brick isnt achieving the accuracy that you might imagine. Despite the computing firepower behind weather forecasting, most models remain at a 10 kilometer resolution that doesnt represent clouds, and the chaotic atmospheric dynamics and occasionally opaque interactions further complicate model outputs.

However, on the other side, we have a huge number of observations, Dueben said. Just to give you an impression, ECMWF is getting hundreds of millions of observations onto the site every day. Some observations come from satellites, planes, ships, ground measurements, balloons This data collected over the last several decades constituted hundreds of petabytes if simulations and climate modeling results were included.

If you combine those two points, we have a very complex nonlinear system and we also have a lot of data, he said. Theres obviously lots of potential applications for machine learning in weather modeling.

Potential applications of machine learning

Machine learning applications are really spread all over the entire workflow of weather prediction, Dueben said, breaking that workflow down into observations, data assimilation, numerical weather forecasting, and post-processing and dissemination. Across those areas, he explained, machine learning could be used for anything from weather data monitoring to learning the underlying equations of atmospheric motions.

By way of example, Dueben highlighted a handful of current, real-world applications. In one case, researchers had applied machine learning to detecting wildfires caused by lightning. Using observations for 15 variables (such as temperature, soil moisture and vegetation cover), the researchers constructed a machine learning-based decision tree to assess whether or not satellite observations included wildfires. The team achieved an accuracy of 77 percent which, Deuben said, doesnt sound too great in principle, but was actually quite good.

Elsewhere, another team explored the use of machine learning to correct persistent biases in forecast model results. Dueben explained that researchers were examining the use of a weak constraint machine learning algorithm (in this case, 4D-Var), which is a kind of algorithm that would be able to learn this kind of forecast error and correct it in the data assimilation process.

We learn, basically, the bias, he said, and then once we have learned the bias, we can correct the bias of the forecast model by just adding forcing terms to the system. Once 4D-Var was implemented on a sample of forecast model results, the biases were ameliorated. Though Dueben cautioned that the process is still fairly simplistic, a new collaboration with Nvidia is looking into more sophisticated ways of correcting those forecast errors with machine learning.

Dueben also outlined applications in post-processing. Much of modern weather forecasting focuses on ensemble methods, where a model is run many times to obtain a spread of possible scenarios and as a result, probabilities of various outcomes. We investigate whether we can correct the ensemble spread calculated from a small number of ensemble members via deep learning, Dueben said. Once again, machine learning when applied to a ten-member ensemble looking at temperatures in Europe improved the results, reducing error in temperature spreads.

Can machine learning replace core functionality or even the entire forecast system?

One of the things that were looking into is the emulation of different permutation schemes, Dueben said. Chief among those, at least initially, have been the radiation component of forecast models, which account for the fluxes of solar radiation between the ground, the clouds and the upper atmosphere. As a trial run, Dueben and his colleagues are using extensive radiation output data from a forecast model to train a neural network. First of all, its very, very light, Dueben said. Second of all, its also going to be much more portable. Once we represent radiation with a deep neural network, you can basically port it to whatever hardware you want.

Showing a pair of output images, one from the machine learning model and one from the forecast model, Dueben pointed out that it was hard to notice significant differences and even refused to tell the audience which was which. Furthermore, he said, the model had achieved around a tenfold speedup. (Im quite confident that it will actually be much better than a factor of ten, Dueben said.)

Dueben and his colleagues have also scaled their tests up to more ambitious realms. They pulled hourly data on geopotential height (Z500) which is related to air pressure and trained a deep learning model to predict future changes in Z500 across the globe using only that historical data. For this, no physical understanding is really required, Dueben said, and it turns out that its actually working quite well.

Still, Dueben forced himself to face the crucial question.

Is this the future? he asked. I have to say its probably not.

There were several reasons for this. First, Dueben said, the simulations were unstable, eventually blowing up if they were stretched too far. Second of all, he said, its also unknown how to increase complexity at this stage. We only have one field here. Finally, he explained, there were only forty years of sufficiently detailed data with which to work.

Still, it wasnt all pessimism. Its kind of unlikely that its going to fly and basically feed operational forecasting at one point, he said. However, having said this, there are now a number of papers coming out where people are looking into this in a much, much more complicated way than we have done with really sophisticated convolutional networks and they get, actually, quite good results. So who knows!

The path forward

The main challenge for machine learning in the community that were facing at the moment, Dueben said, is basically that we need to prove now that machine learning solutions can really be better than conventional tools and we need to do this in the next couple of years.

There are, of course, many roadblocks to that goal. Forecasting models are extraordinarily complicated; iterations on deep learning models require significant HPC resources to test and validate; and metrics of comparison among models are unclear. Dueben also outlined a series of major unknowns in machine learning for weather forecasting: could our explicit knowledge of atmospheric mechanisms be used to improve a machine learning forecast? Could researchers guarantee reproducibility? Could the tools be scaled effectively to HPC? The list went on.

Many scientists are working on these dilemmas as we speak, Dueben said, and Im sure we will have an enormous amount of progress in the next couple of years. Outlining a path forward, Dueben emphasized a mixture of a top-down and a bottom-up approach to link machine learning with weather and climate models. Per his diagram, this would combine neutral networks based on human knowledge of earth systems with reliable benchmarks, scalability and better uncertainty quantification.

As far as where he sees machine learning for weather prediction in ten years?

It could be that machine learning will have no long-term effect whatsoever that its just a wave going through, Dueben mused. But on the other hand, it could well be that machine learning tools will actually replace almost all conventional models that were working with.

The rest is here:

Could Machine Learning Replace the Entire Weather Forecast System? - HPCwire

Mighty CPU rival to Intel and AMD set to shake up the market – TechRadar India

The announcement of Amazons Graviton2 may well have made AMD and Intel a little nervous - Amazon is, after all, a customer of both. Now, the two companies have even greater reason to be worried.

AnandTech reports that Parisian company SiPearl recently announced it had signed a major agreement with semiconductor giant ARM. The French firm will use ARM IP (Zeus Neoverse CPU) to develop a new set of CPUs: Rhea, Chronos and another unnamed model.

The company is backed by the European Commission as part of the European Processor Initiative (EPI) project, which aims to design a high performance, low power microprocessor for Europes first exascale supercomputer.

Three generations of processors are expected to be delivered in four years, which is a rather ambitious timeline. SiPearl will also be heavily dependent on technology from two other French companies: Kalray and Menta.

Although SiPearl will not, for the foreseeable future, produce any consumer-focused products, its roadmap gestures towards an automotive POC (power over Coax?) and an automotive central processing unit that could be on the horizon.

So, while SiPearl won't compete just yet with the likes of Amperes Altra, AMDs Epyc family or Intels Xeon range, it's one to keep a close eye on as Europe wrestles to build an HPC unit capable of competing with global giants.

Continued here:

Mighty CPU rival to Intel and AMD set to shake up the market - TechRadar India

How SMU computer science professors are using their resources to help find a coronavirus vaccine – The Dallas Morning News

What if university computer scientists, biologists and historians collaborated to use modern artificial intelligence and machine learning to examine a massive trove of infectious disease research papers, text mining for abstract patterns, elusive insights and hard-to-spot trends related to COVID-19 and the coronavirus family of viruses?

Imagine the energy such a group could generate if their students, working remotely and cut off from the normal distractions of student life, jumped in to volunteer for the project? Welcome to the nascent Southern Methodist University Artificial Intelligence Lab.

COVID-19 has been called the greatest challenge since World War II. Artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies were still young during other recent outbreaks SARS in 2002, H1N1 in 2009, MERS in 2012 and even Ebola in 2014. Increasingly more powerful processors, better algorithms and massive amounts of data have changed what we can do in 2020.

Our charge at the time of this pandemic is to deploy everything we now know about AI to discover as much as possible about what we do not know about COVID-19. The larger challenge, however, is to shape a university response that effectively trains students to grapple with a rapidly-changing and destabilized world.

More than a dozen SMU faculty members and students are volunteering their time to text-mine a large collection of scientific papers made available via the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and a collection of research groups. These works are packaged as a challenge on the data science site Kaggle. We are using SMUs supercomputer to yield insights from these papers that we hope will aid active infectious disease researchers in their search for a solution. As we discover trends, patterns and insights, it is our hope that our AI and machine learning research can assist in the goal to shorten the time required to discover and develop a vaccine or therapy.

Teams are meeting virtually, outside of hours scheduled for classes, working from apartments or family homes. By matching the COVID-19 research papers with teams of students directed by faculty, we are making use of two major resources universities have to contribute at this very unusual moment in history: brainpower and the gift of time for creative reflection.

Many of our students have hours on their hands after finishing their virtual classwork, and they are eager to serve the public good. They are telling us that they want to be able to look back on this time and remember that they were part of the fight. There is no more valuable gift that we could give our students than preparing them to face an uncertain world.

While we have placed our near-term priority on assisting in the search for a vaccine or therapy, there are many facets to a global pandemic that can and should be addressed. Here are a few ideas that we are contemplating in our lab:

Tasks of this kind are inherently interdisciplinary. Executing them in an effective manner requires creative work at the juncture between the disciplines. Students can only build these domains if they have knowledge of the technical skills they learn in computer science, as well as textual analysis skills they learn from the social sciences and humanities. Responding to coronavirus thus requires our faculty to think creatively about teaching, for instance, in the form of interdisciplinary labs such as the one we have recently launched.

Even while health-related restrictions are forcing students and teachers to limit their interactions to online spaces, SMUs faculty is experimenting with new ways to connect, bringing the immediacy and liveliness of an engaged, intellectual community to meet the challenge of the pandemic. Even more importantly, we are modeling for our students what it looks like to respond in real time to real world challenges, regrouping and refocusing our research on the pandemic, and inviting them to make discoveries.

At the end of a disrupted semester, these SMU students will have had an educational experience that is enhanced, rather than diminished, at least in terms of opportunities for research.

Frederick R. Chang is a cyber security professor, chair of the Department of Computer Science at Southern Methodist University and the founding director of the SMU AI Lab.

Jo Guldi is an associate professor of history at SMU, where she teaches text mining and is a founding member of the SMU AI Lab.

They wrote this column for The Dallas Morning News.

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How SMU computer science professors are using their resources to help find a coronavirus vaccine - The Dallas Morning News

5 Companies That Came To Win This Week – CRN: Technology news for channel partners and solution providers

The Week Ending April 24

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to make headlines, some of this weeks 5 Companies That Came to Win roundup remains focused on what IT and channel companies are doing to help mitigate the impact of the pandemic and the economic slowdown.

Topping this weeks list is Dell Technologies for its new financing and payment options, including $9 billion in financing, to help partners and customers weather the economic crisis.

Also making the list are Hewlett Packard Enterprise and its Aruba business for suspending partner revenue targets in a move to help solution providers maintain their Partner Ready program levels. AMD and Penguin Computing win applause for boosting the performance of a U.S. government supercomputer that is conducting COVID-19 research. Big Data startup Confluent is on the list for raising $250 million in funding. And McAfee has filled its long-vacant global channel chief post as the security company steps up its channel efforts.

Dell Provides $9B In Financing Through New DFS Payment Program

Dell Technologies wins kudos this week for launching a new Payment Flexibility Program that includes zero-percent interest rates for infrastructure solutions and up to 180-day payment deferral to help channel partners and customers cope with the new normal of the economic slowdown.

Dells financial arm, Dell Financial Services, this week unveiled the new program that also makes $9 billion in financing available to help fund customers critical technology needs.

DFS is offering zero-percent interest rates for servers, storage and networking systems with no up-front payment required. First payments are deferred for up to 180 days for all data center infrastructure and services. And the company is offering short-term options for remote work and learning solutions with six- and 12-month terms and refresh options for laptop and desktop computers.

Channel partners hailed Dells financing options, saying they provide themselves and their customers with the flexibility they need to preserve cash in these uncertain times.

HPE, Aruba Suspend Partner Ready Revenue Targets

Hewlett Packard Enterprise has suspended revenue thresholds for both its HPE and Aruba Partner Ready channel programs as part of a broad relief package for partners during the economic slowdown.

The move ensures partners will maintain the same level in the two Partner Ready programs for 2021 even if they fail to meet revenue commitment levels in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting decline in the economy.

HPE has also provided financial relief to distributors aimed at helping partners who are focused on small and mid-size businesses. Those include suspending or significantly reducing strategic development initiative targets and providing extended payment and early payment discount terms.

AMD, Penguin Computing Fight COVID-19 In Supercomputer Deal

AMD and Penguin Computing have teamed up to upgrade the U.S. Department of Energys Corona supercomputer with AMD Radeon Instinct GPUs in a move thats expected to accelerate coronavirus research.

Under the deal announced this week, AMD is donating hundreds of its Radeon Instinct MI50 GPUs as part of the new COVID-19 HPC (high-performance computing) Fund. Penguin Computing, an HPC integration service provider, is offering free upgrade services for the AMD-based Corona supercomputer that Penguin delivered to the Energy department in 2018.

The move accelerates plans by the DOEs Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, which operates the supercomputer, to outfit the system with more of the Radeon Instinct GPUs. The upgrade will support COVID-19 research at the laboratory, which is part of the White House-led COVID-19 HPC consortium.

Streaming Big Data Startup Confluent Raises Stunning $250M In Additional Funding

Big data startup Confluent caught everybodys attention this week when it raised an impressive $250 million in Series E funding, pushing the companys total financing to $456 million and its market value to $4.5 billion.

Confluent, started by the developers of the open-source Kafka event stream software, develops a Kafka-based platform that helps businesses and organizations manage and act on huge volumes of real-time, continuously produced data such as streams of financial transactions or data from operational IT systems.

Also winning big in venture funding this week was identity security tech developer ForgeRock, which raised an impressive $93.5 million in its own Series E round of funding.

McAfee Hires Ex-Apple Sales Exec For Global Channel Chief

After a nearly two-year vacancy, platform security vendor McAfee has filled its global channel chief position with the hire of former Apple sales executive Kathleen Curry.

Curry worked at Apple for five-and-a-half years as a sales executive where she was primarily responsible for global client development and the companys Enterprise Design Lab. She spent her first year at Apple supporting global alliances. Before joining Apple she worked at NCR Corp. managing global retail channels, and before that leading enterprise channel sales at Motorola.

Currys appointment comes as McAfee is stepping up its channel game. The company plans to launch a new partner program this year and Curry is tasked with bringing together McAfees channel, operations, alliances and OEM teams as well as expanding partner program initiatives to accommodate the growing number of remote workers.

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5 Companies That Came To Win This Week - CRN: Technology news for channel partners and solution providers

How Penguin Computing Is Fighting COVID-19 With Hybrid HPC – CRN: Technology news for channel partners and solution providers

Supporting Research On-Premise And In The Cloud

Penguin Computing President Sid Mair said the company is using its high-performance computing prowess on-premise and in the cloud to help researchers tackle the novel coronavirus.

The Fremont, Calif.-based company this week announced it is working with AMD to upgrade the U.S. Department of Energy's Corona supercomputer a coincidence of a name with the chipmaker's Radeon Instinct MI50 GPUs to accelerate coronavirus research. But that's not the only way the system integrator is looking to help researchers study and understand the virus.

[Related: How PC Builder Maingear Pivoted To Building Ventilators In A Month]

In an interview with CRN, Mair said the company is in multiple discussions for additional opportunities to help researchers using Penguin Computing's HPC capabilities to study the virus and COVID-19, the disease it causes. But the company is also using its own internal capabilities, an HPC cloud service called Penguin Computing On Demand, to deploy compute resources when there isn't enough time or money for researchers to stand up new on-premise HPC clusters for research.

"We have several researchers that have joined in and are utilizing that environment, and at the moment, we're doing that at no cost for COVID-19 research, even though it is a production commercial system that we currently sell high-performance computing compute cycles on today," he said.

HPC is seen as a critical tool in accelerating the discovery of drugs and vaccines for COVID-19, as demonstrated by the recent formation of the White House-led COVID-19 High Performance Computing Consortium, which counts chipmakers AMD and Nvidia as well as OEMs and cloud service providers like Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Microsoft as members. The effort is also receiving support from Folding@Home, a distributed computing application that lets anyone with a PC or server contribute.

This strategy of utilizing both on-premise and cloud servers to deliver HPC capabilities is referred by some experts as "hybrid HPC," which Mair said allows researchers to offload compute jobs into the cloud when there isn't enough resources to deploy new on-premise servers.

"They can't upgrade quick enough in order to continue to do their research, so being able to walk in and move their workflow over into an HPC environment that works and acts and implements just like they would do it on-premise but they're doing it in the cloud is becoming very, very beneficial to our researchers," he said.

William Wu, vice president of marketing and product management at Penguin Computing, said Penguin Computing is also planning to expand its offerings for researchers doing anything related to COVID-19, which could include running simulations to understand the impact of easing stay-at-home restrictions.

"We do intend to roll out something much more broader to allow anybody that is doing anything related to COVID, either directly or indirectly, to take advantage of what we're offering," he said.

In Mair's interview with CRN, he discussed how Penguin Computing's new GPU upgrade deal with AMD for the Corona supercomputer came together, how the company protects its employees during server upgrades, why GPUs are important for accelerating COVID-19 research and whether the pandemic is shifting the demand between on-premise and cloud HPC solutions.

What follows is an edited transcript.

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How Penguin Computing Is Fighting COVID-19 With Hybrid HPC - CRN: Technology news for channel partners and solution providers

COVID-19 Impact on Industrial Robotics Market by Type, Industry And Region Global Forecast to 2025 – GlobeNewswire

New York, April 27, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "COVID-19 Impact on Industrial Robotics Market by Type, Industry And Region Global Forecast to 2025" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p05888617/?utm_source=GNW 6 billion in 2020 and is projected to reach USD 73.0 billion by 2025; it is expected to grow at a CAGR of 10.4% during the forecast period. The projection for 2025 is estimated to be down by ~3% as compared to pre-COVID-19 estimation.

A shortage of skilled labor, especially in developed countries, is driving the further use of automation, in the industrial robotics market.Manufacturers are turning to automation to decrease manufacturing costs and to keep their cost advantage in the market.

Automation in the electronics industry presents an excellent growth opportunity for traditional industrial robots in the coming years, especially in the APAC region where manufacturers are looking to automate their production processes further. Post-COVID-19, manufacturers are expected to increase in-house manufacturing through automation rather than outsource manufacture to other countries to mitigate global supply chain risks in the future.

SCARA robots market to grow at highest CAGR during the forecast periodThe market for SCARA robots is projected to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period. SCARA robots are expected to play a vital role specifically in industries such as food & beverages and electronics & electrical by preventing contamination of food products and preventing damage of delicate semiconductor wafers due to human contact, especially for companies looking to minimize their losses during COVID-19.

Market for metals & machinery industry to grow at significant CAGR from 2020 to 2025.Like other industries, the metals & machinery industry has also been hampered by the COVID-19 pandemic.The lack of demand for metals and machines from the construction, automotive, shipbuilding, and many more industries have severely affected the metals & machinery sector.

Additionally, metals and machinery companies are planning to operate by utilizing only 50% of their workforce.However, the metals and machinery industry make up the building blocks for other large industries.

Companies in the metals and machinery industry make for a large number of essential suppliers. To minimize disruption in production, the traditional industrial robotics market for this industry is expected to grow at the fastest rate post-COVID-19.

APAC to dominate the global traditional industrial robotics market throughout the forecast period.2018 saw a decrease in sales of industrial robots due to countries like China seeing a fall in demand in the automotive sector and the adverse effects of the US-China trade war. Subsequently, the COVID-19 pandemic starting in late 2019 and extending till mostly Q2 or Q3 of 2020 is now adversely affecting the market growth for traditional industrial robots. However, the market in APAC is still expected to grow at the highest CAGR during 20202025. Although major countries contributing to the APAC market, such as China, experienced a greater slowdown in growth, their market share remains significant.On the other hand, 2018 has witnessed the penetration and sales of industrial robots in developing APAC countries such as India and Taiwan.The electrical and electronics industry is an important driver for industrial robots in APAC, owing to the rising demand for electronic products around the world.

Components like computer chips, batteries, and displays that are small and sensitive need to be handled with high speed and high precision. APAC also houses a major number of strong global players in the industrial robotics market.Apart from APAC, the growth of industrial robots in Europe has remained steady over the years.In Europe, industrial robots are not only relevant for large enterprises, but smaller enterprises as well.

Germany remains the largest market in Europe for industrial robots. Government initiatives like Industrie 4.0 and the penetration of IoT and AI are expected to boost robot sales in the coming years post-COVID-19. However, the COVID-19 pandemic will negatively affect growth even in developing APAC countries as well as European manufacturers until Q2 or Q3 of 2020.In the process of determining and verifying the market size for several segments and subsegments gathered through secondary research, extensive primary interviews have been conducted with key industry experts in the industrial robotics market. The break-up of primary participants for the report has been shown below: By Company Type: Tier 1 40%, Tier 2 40%, and Tier 3 20% By Designation: C-level Executives 40%, Directors 30%, and Others 30% By Region: North America 40, APAC 30%, Europe 20%, and RoW 10%

The report profiles key players in the industrial robotics market with their respective market ranking analysis. Prominent players profiled in this report are ABB (Switzerland), YASKAWA (Japan), FANUC (Japan), KUKA (Germany), Mitsubishi Electric (Japan), Kawasaki Heavy Industries (Japan), DENSO (Japan), NACHI-FUJIKOSHI (Japan), EPSON (Japan), Drr (Germany), Universal Robots (Denmark), Omron Adept (US), b+m Surface Systems (Germany), Stubli (Switzerland), Comau (Italy), Yamaha (Japan), Franka Emika (Germany), CMA Robotics (Italy), Rethink Robotics (Germany), Techman Robots (Taiwan), Precise Automation (US), and Siasun (China).

Research Coverage:This research report categorizes the global industrial robotics market based on type, industry, and geography.The report describes the major drivers, restraints, challenges, and opportunities for the industrial robotics market pertaining to the COVID-19 pandemic.

It forecasts the market considering the COVID-19 impact on the industrial robotics ecosystem until 2025.Apart from these, the report also consists of an analysis of all the companies included in the industrial robotics ecosystem.

It also identifies the new revenue sources for the players in the industrial robotics ecosystem.

Key Benefits of Buying the Report

The report would help leaders/new entrants in this market in the following ways:1. The report helps stakeholders understand the pulse of the industrial robotics market and provides them with information on key drivers, restraints, challenges, and opportunities specific to the COVID-19 pandemic.2. This report would help stakeholders understand their competitors better and gain more insights to improve their position in the business even during the COVID-19 pandemic.3. The report identifies new revenue sources for players in the industrial robotics ecosystem, post-COVID-19 subsides.Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05888617/?utm_source=GNW

About ReportlinkerReportLinker is an award-winning market research solution. Reportlinker finds and organizes the latest industry data so you get all the market research you need - instantly, in one place.

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COVID-19 Impact on Industrial Robotics Market by Type, Industry And Region Global Forecast to 2025 - GlobeNewswire

Shoreline robotics teams ponder what could have been at cancelled World Competition – The Westerly Sun

For high school senior Evan Spalding, a co-captain of the robotics team Free WiFi, he can only wonder what may have been at the FIRST Tech Challenge World Competition.

A Stonington resident and student at the Marine Science Magnet High School in Groton, Spalding and members of Free WiFi were set to travel to Detroit this week alongside their sister team, Blue Screen of Death, after both qualified for the world competition earlier this year that is before travel restrictions and stay-at-home orders related to COVID-19 brought the robotics season to a screeching halt.

As a team, we are fortunate in the sense that I was the only senior who would have been traveling, so both teams should be in a great position for next year, said Spalding, a designer who has worked with Shoreline Robotics Inc. for eight years now.

It was the first time that two teams would have gone to the competition, so it would have been interesting to see what could have happened with everyone there at the same time, Spalding said. Thats the one thing I will always wonder about.

Shoreline Robotics Inc. is a Pawcatuck-based organization that partners with the Westerly Library to bring robotics to area students. The organization sponsors two FIRST Tech Challenge teams each year; Team 10376, known as the Blue Screen of Death, and Team 13181, or Free WiFi.

Both teams had qualified for the 2020 World Competition, which was initially scheduled to take place in Detroit from Tuesday through May 2. The robotics season came to an abrupt end in mid-March as a result of the COVID-19 crisis, but the season had already been a successful one for students and coaches with Shoreline Robotics Inc.

Jay Spalding, Evans father and coach of Team 10376, said both teams have strong reasons to be proud of their accomplishments during the current academic year.

In February, both teams earned the right to take part in the World Competition after each qualified during the Rhode Island State Championship in February. Both teams had qualified for the state competition a month earlier and eventually found themselves going head-to-head during team competition in the semifinals.

Blue Screen of Death team defeated WiFi and advanced to the finals before eventually losing to a team from North Kingstown. Although the team did not take home the championship it would have been their second straight win for Blue Screen of Death the success did land them a spot in Detroit.

Molly Starr, a designer with Blue Screen of Death, said she wasnt particularly confident in the teams robot this year. After a better-than-anticipated showing in both the qualifying tournament and state championship, however, she said she was excited to see what the team would have been able to accomplish while working with and against the best teams in the world.

Weve had a track record of success, so our expectations were pretty high, said Starr, a Mystic resident and junior at Three Rivers Middle College Magnet High School. We knew we had a decent robot and program, so we just tried to accomplish what we could. We got a little luck along the way, which helped.

After falling to Blue Screen of Death in the semifinals, Free WiFi punched their ticket to worlds as winners of the 2020 Inspire Award.

According to the FIRST Tech Challenge website, the Inspire Award is an annual award that is given to the team that best embodies the challenge of the FIRST Tech Challenge program. This involves a team sharing its experiences, enthusiasm and knowledge with other teams, sponsors, the community, and the judges.

The team that receives this award is a strong ambassador for FIRST programs and a role model FIRST team, the website states.

The recognition was certainly one of note for the team, which had sought to win the award from day one, said Veronica Kushner, a Bradford resident and builder with Free WiFi. Kushner, a homeschool student and high school freshman, said outreach and cooperation with other teams in the region proved to be an important factor in helping win the Inspire Award.

Kushner said by trying to do what was right and including others in the building process, Free WiFis members had become better teammates and competitors. This helped them grow as individuals and made the award feel like a true team accomplishment.

I was really glad we were able to take home that award. Everyone was focused on being gracious and professional, and I think that mentality helped us to stay focused, Kushner said.

Jay Spalding said the team also took inspiration from Rilla Eisenbeiser, who was named the Rhode Island representative to the Deans List award, which is named in honor of FIRST Rbotics founder and innovator Dean Lawrence Kamen.

A high school sophomore, Eisenbeiser will find out whether she won during a virtual ceremony on May 2.

Im just happy to have been nominated, she said.

As the team looks to build on its accomplishments from this year, Jay Spalding and several team members said they are looking forward to seeing the social distancing restrictions lifted and hopefully get back out there for a friendly scrimmage before the end of the school year.

Members said it will then be all eyes ahead as they look to the fall competition and start of the 2020-21 robotics season. That means recruitment, team retention and brainstorming in preparation for the next challenge.

What is going on right now is shocking, but it wont go on forever, Spalding said. We are ready to open things back up. The students are excited to get back to building and we are looking forward to the chance to compete again and hopefully earn a trip to the World Competition again in 2021.

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Shoreline robotics teams ponder what could have been at cancelled World Competition - The Westerly Sun

Coronavirus New Jersey: Group Of High School Robotics Teams Band Together To Provide Face Shields To Jefferson Health – CBS Philly

CHERRY HILL, N.J. (CBS) As the coronavirus spreads the need for personal protective equipment continues. New Jersey has the second most cases of COVID-19 in the United States, so in order to help, a group of high school robotics teams decided to band together.

Face shields, printed and prepped by the joint efforts of a group of high school robotics teams, are arriving at New Jersey Jefferson Hospital locations just in time.

So the residents were in need of face shields and here they were sitting in front of us and being donated so the timing was great, said Dr. Roy Sandau, Chief of Surgery at Jefferson Health New Jersey.

Coronavirus Latest: What You Need To Know And Staying Connected

Sandau says he was overly excited about the donation.

The teams from Moorestown, Seneca, Lenape, Cherokee, and Bishop Eustace High Schools are now refocusing their efforts to come together to put their own print on the coronavirus pandemic.

Were seeing the shortage, how the coronavirus is affecting all of our hospitals and as an FRC team, we are always looking for ways to help out the community, student Emily Tsai said.

The students are making a Swedish model shield called the Verkstan stackable shields that are more efficient in the printing process and quicker to get to health care workers.

My son was able to take the code and slice it, FRC Against COVID-19 Co-Founder Maria Blatcher said. Now, we can print a stack of 37 so essentially have our printers running 24/7.

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Theyve made just over 1,000 shields so far, but they need help to make more. They say they need more 3D printing capacity, more resources to make the $1 shields.

If anybody in the community has a printer and wants to join us, we have informational videos on our website to get them going, Blatcher said.

If we can save one persons life or prevent more cases from spreading, its all worth it, Tsai said.

For more information on how to help FRC Against COVID-19, click here.

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Coronavirus New Jersey: Group Of High School Robotics Teams Band Together To Provide Face Shields To Jefferson Health - CBS Philly

Boston Dynamics Open Sources Their Healthcare Robotics Toolkit – Analytics India Magazine

Boston Dynamics has released a payload and application architecture for their mobile robot in order to protect healthcare workers amid COVID-19.

In a recent blog post, the robotics firm stated Mobile robots play a vital role in removing people from dangerous environments. We have spent the last six weeks building and testing a payload and application architecture that would enable our robot Spot to help reduce exposure of frontline healthcare workers to the novel COVID-19 virus.

The company further stated that it has developed and tested the payload, hardware, and software for this application in order to generalise it as well as make it easy to be deployed on other mobile robotic platforms with APIs and capacity for custom payloads.

Boston Dynamics has developed an open-source healthcare robotics toolkit which will allow mobile robots to carry out essential functions aiding in reducing the exposure of frontline healthcare staff to the deadly virus. With the deployment of our first healthcare-focused robot, were open-sourcing all of our work to empower mobile robotics platforms to leverage the same hardware and software stack that weve developed to help frontline healthcare workers, stated on the blog post.

Using the advanced mobile robots, the healthcare staff could reduce the risk of coming in contact with COVID-19, by reducing the number of the necessary medical staff at the scene. The robot will help in carrying out the essential function of speaking to the potentially infected patients, measuring vital signs and transporting supplies. The company has shared the toolkit on GitHub, which includes hardware and software designs for COVID-19 applications, including documentation for CAD mounts and programming scripts; making it vendor-neutral so that other mobile robotics platforms can leverage the same tech stack.

With the growing pandemic, robots technology have come handy in keeping essential frontline workers safe as well as in contributing to the fight against COVID-19. The company claimed that it had spent six weeks building and testing capabilities of this mobile robot in order to help hospitals in saving lives using its advanced mobile robot Spot.

According to the company blog post, Boston Dynamics started receiving inquiries from hospitals, around March 2020, asking whether its robots could help to minimise healthcare staffs exposure to COVID-19. Due to the increasing nature of the virus, hospitals are looking to using robots in order to take more of their staff out of range of the novel virus.

Based on these conversations, as well as the global shortage of critical personal protective equipment, we have spent the past several weeks trying to understand hospital requirements better to develop a mobile robotics solution with our robot, Spot. The result is a legged robot application that can be deployed to support frontline staff responding to the pandemic in ad-hoc environments such as triage tents and parking lots, said Boston Dynamics on the blog post.

The company hopes that these tools can enable developers to rapidly deploy robots in order to reduce risks to medical staff. Several researchers, analysts and robotics specialists have started using Spot for their healthcare workers benefits. Some of them are using it as a mobile telemedicine platform, where the healthcare providers are using an iPad and two-way radio attached to the robots back to attend and treat infected patients.

Additionally, the company is working towards advancing its robots to read and collect vital signs remotely and accurately measure body temperature, respiratory rate, pulse rate and oxygen saturation. We have been in dialogue with researchers who use thermal camera technology to measure body temperature and calculate the respiratory rate. Weve also applied externally-developed logic to externally-mounted RGB cameras to capture changes in blood vessel contraction to measure pulse rate. We are evaluating methods for measuring oxygen saturation, Boston Dynamics said.

Besides, the company is also advancing Spot to do essential decontamination work. This will be done potentially with mounted UV-C lights capable of disinfecting surfaces and killing coronavirus particles at the same time. We are still in the early stages of developing this solution but also see several existing mobile robotics providers who have implemented this technology specifically for hospitals, Boston Dynamic stated on the blog post.

We hope our fellow mobile robot providers, existing customers, and medical professionals will be able to use this information to leverage mobile robots to take people out of harms way during this critical time. Together, we can improve conditions for healthcare workers and essential personnel around the world, save lives, and fight COVID-19, concluded Boston Dynamics.

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As Workers Spread Out to Halt the Virus, Robots Fill the Gaps – WIRED

As the coronavirus began to spread through Japan in March, workers at a warehouse in Sugito that processes millions of personal care products each day were overrun by a spike in demand for masks, gloves, soap, and hand sanitizer.

To prevent workers from spreading the deadly virus, the company that operates the center, PalTac, introduced temperature checks, masks, and regular decontaminations. In coming weeks, it plans a more radical solutionhiring more robots.

We have to consider more automation, more use of robotics, in order for people to be spaced apart, says Shohei Matsumoto, deputy general manager of the companys R&D division. There are going to be fewer opportunities for humans to touch the items.

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The coronavirus pandemic has cost millions of jobs. Now, it may transform work in other ways. As manufacturers and ecommerce companies struggle to adapt to social distancing, regular cleaning, and a potential shortage of workers because of quarantines, some may invest in robots.

PalTac already uses robots from the US company RightHand Robotics to pick objects from bins and assemble orders. Matsumoto says it should be possible to expand the use of these robots with software updates, allowing them to recognize and grasp a new object, or retrieve items from new types of bins. Many industrial robots, including those found in car factories, take hours to program, cannot easily be moved, and blindly follow precise commands. The flexibility offered by these newer robotic systems makes it possible to redeploy them quickly.

Not every factory or warehouse will be able to use robots. In some ways, the coronavirus crisis has only highlighted how limited most workplace robots still are. They typically lack the ability to sense, respond, and adapt to the real world, so humans are still crucial even in the most automated facilities.

But the return to work may accelerate adoption of more flexible, cloud-connected collaborative robots with basic sensing capabilities. That might lead to more automation of work involving picking, packing, and handling products and components.

Robots at Japan's PalTac pick items from bins to assemble orders.

If you have to space out the people throughout your facility differently than you used to for manufacturing, or even picking, then you can't keep the automation in the same places, says Melonee Wise, CEO of Fetch Robotics, which makes wheeled robots capable of ferrying items around factories and warehouses.

Fetch is working with a large US ecommerce company to reprogram its robots to adapt to staggered shifts with fewer workers to allow for social distancing. It is also working on versions of its robots that can autonomously disinfect workplaces.

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As Workers Spread Out to Halt the Virus, Robots Fill the Gaps - WIRED