What the elimination of a major medical licensing exam Step 2 CS means for students and schools – AAMC

Now that a major, 17-year-old medical licensing exam is gone, educators and students are feeling their way forward.

The daylong, in-person Step 2 Clinical Skills (CS) test designed to assess aspiring doctors communication and physical exam techniques was put on hold last March in response to the pandemic. Then, in a shift that shocked many observers, the exams sponsors the Federation of State Medical Boards and the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) announced on Jan. 26 that they were no longer exploring how to revive it.

The fact that this segment of the three-part United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) is no longer has elicited varied responses, from utter dismay to sheer delight.

Most students are completely overjoyed, says Alex Lindqwister, past board chair of the AAMCs Organization of Student Representatives. They saw it as a source of stress with little actual value.

But many educators mourn the loss. We need to be able to say that our students are qualified in these incredibly foundational skills, notes Toshi Uchida, MD, medical director of the Clinical Education Center at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. Were not going to have that nationwide measure now.

Most students are completely overjoyed.

Alex LindqwisterPast board chair of the AAMCs Organization of Student Representatives

In response, leaders in academic medicine are looking for new ways to assess the skills the test covered: taking a patients medical history, performing a physical exam, formulating possible diagnoses, and communicating effectively with patients and providers.

Meanwhile, what comes next remains unclear.

We have an obligation to the public to make sure that critical skills are appropriately and uniformly assessed for basic competence, says AAMC Chief Medical Education Officer Alison Whelan, MD. I dont yet know the best way to do that, but we have a duty to figure it out. Still, Im confident the medical education community schools, licensing and accreditation bodies, and learners will tackle this thoughtfully.

Taking the USMLE Step exams is a major rite of passage, and all three exams are required for medical licensure in the United States. U.S. medical students usually tackle the daylong Step 1 exam, which covers the basics of medical practice and principles, at the end of their second year or during their third year. Step 2 Clinical Knowledge, also a daylong test, assesses applying medical knowledge and skills to patient care. Most students take that exam as well as Step 2 CS during their third or fourth year. Step 3, a two-day undertaking that evaluates ones ability to practice medicine without supervision, usually gets handled during residency.

Almost as soon as it was created in 2004, Step 2 CS began drawing criticism.

High on the list of complaints was the tests price tag, most recently set at $1,300. The cost of the test alone could be your entire monthly budget as a medical student, notes Zach St. Clair, a fourth-year student at University of Cincinnati (UC) College of Medicine. Some students also invested in fairly pricey study materials, he adds.

Other complaints involved some of the exams structure which required working through several encounters with laypersons trained to portray patients including that aspects of it felt artificial.

The number of test sites also drew fire: just six across the whole country. That meant many students were adding airfare and hotel to their test-related tabs in addition to possibly missing three days of school.

And critics felt that all the effort ultimately offered little value given that the test was pass/fail and so many examinees passed on their first try. In 2019, for example, 95% of test-takers from U.S. and Canadian MD-granting schools succeeded on their first attempt.

When COVID-19 made the in-person exam impossible, the USMLE took the opportunity to explore revamping the test, which approximately 35,000 examinees took last year.

We specifically stated that our goal was to deliver an exam that was appreciably better. Now, we need to consider innovative alternatives.

Chris Feddock, MDExecutive director of the Clinical Skills Evaluation Collaboration

As they began to tackle concerns, USMLE teams hosted focus groups, launched surveys, and conferred with a range of stakeholders from educators to examinees.

One option that the USMLE pursued but ultimately rejected was an online test. For one, going online would erase the physical exam component. There were also potential Wi-Fi connectivity issues, remote proctoring logistics, and difficulties expanding exam access broadly and fairly. Plus, it wouldnt even lower exam costs much, partly due to the expense of building and maintaining a secure online platform.

We specifically stated that our goal was to deliver an exam that was appreciably better, says Chris Feddock, MD, executive director of the Clinical Skills Evaluation Collaboration, a collaboration between the NBME and the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG), which certifies international medical graduates for training in the United States. There were definitely barriers in moving to a virtual platform in being able to demonstrate that the next version would be appreciably better. Now, we need to consider innovative alternatives.

While many students are thrilled that the travel and expense of the exam are gone, not all will celebrate its removal, experts say.

In that group are those who didnt pass and now wont have the chance to retake the test. At this point, the USMLE is reporting failures on test transcripts but adding a note to explain these unusual circumstances, says Feddock.

Perhaps most affected are international medical graduates (IMGs), who relied on the test to prove they can make it in the U.S. health care system. This population is no small slice of trainees: Nearly 1 in 4 residents and fellows are IMGs, according to ECFMG President and CEO William Pinsky, MD.

Thats why the ECFMG quickly built alternative pathways to certification last spring. Requirements include passing the Occupational English Testa patient communication and English language exam created specifically for doctors. Although some IMG students have called it unfair, the ECFMG says the test works well.

Meanwhile, the ECFMG has certified 2,600 applicants using its new approach.We have an obligation to provide U.S. residency programs with a pool of IMG applicants that is ample, diverse, and highly qualified, says Pinsky. We feel these new pathways have been successful in ensuring that.

Step 2 CS was created as a tool for licensing doctors, and state licensing boards are filling the gap in their own ways, according to Feddock. But medical educators have also come to rely on the test as they train tens of thousands of learners each year.

For residency program directors, the exams elimination isnt terribly impactful given its high first-try pass rate. Still, for programs that receive 100 applications per slot, the test served as one bar, however low. And directors may bemoan the loss more starting in 2022, when another component of the USMLE series, Step 1, switches from a numeric score to pass/fail.

Each year, it seems we get more applications and less information, says Jessica Kovach, MD, director of the psychiatry residency program at Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University in Philadelphia. Some schools haveeven gonepass/fail for their course grades in recent years. I hope the education community will now come together to find a standardized way for medical schools to provide information that programs need to better evaluate candidates.

Well have to take back the responsibility for a high-stakes assessment. As we do that, we have to be careful because schools can suffer from the phenomenon of failure to fail their own students.

Rachel Yudkowsky, MD Director of graduate studies at the University of Illinois College of Medicine

Meanwhile, medical schools are grappling with their own CS-related issues.

Most concerning to some experts is the potential impact on curricula. Assessment drives learning, argues Northwesterns Uchida, who also serves as the president of Directors of Clinical Skills Courses, an international consortium of educators. Having a high-stakes, rigorous licensing exam thats required for everyone really pushed medical schools to increase their focus on clinical skills. Now, she worries that some schools will cut back on the costly endeavor.

Another issue is whether schools that relied on Step 2 CS may need to ramp up their own assessments to ensure that students have the requisite skills to graduate, says Rachel Yudkowsky, MD, director of graduate studies in the Department of Medical Education at the University of Illinois College of Medicine in Chicago.

Well have to take back the responsibility for a high-stakes assessment, and we have to make sure that its valid and reliable, she says. As we do that, we have to be careful because schools can suffer from the phenomenon of failure to fail their own students.

She highlights one positive of the discontinuation of Step 2 CS: the flexibility to assess a wide variety of students clinical skills, rather than mirroring the tests format.

We can now explore all kinds of other skills, Yudkowsky says. Can students get informed consent, counsel someone for smoking cessation, handle end-of-life issues with a patient? she says. This move has really freed us up to experiment.

Although Step 2 CS is no more, USMLE leaders are contemplating other approaches to assessing clinical skills. Students and educators are also mulling over what they think might work.

At the USMLE, the next step is to spend several months sorting through priorities and stakeholder feedback as well as insights garnered from its aborted attempt to shift the test online.

We have no plans at this time to replace the prior exam with another stand-alone, full-day exam, says Feddock. We dont have any preconceived notions of the most ideal direction, he adds.

Meanwhile, some argue that schools should assume the entire responsibility for assessing students clinical skills.

I think it should fall to schools to ensure that our abilities are sufficient for graduation, says Robbie Daulton, a fourth-year UC student. We have a strong accreditation process that confirms the quality of medical schools. If accreditation includes a rigorous assessment of schools ability to assess clinical skills, then there's no need for a national clinical exam. If schools do take over this role, experts suggest they could do so with a recognized rubric created with the input of faculty, USMLE leaders, and other experts.

Whatever lies ahead, students look forward to contributing to discussions.

Now is a great time for students to be involved in pushing the conversation forward, says Joseph Geraghty, a seventh-year MD-PhD student at the University of Illinois College of Medicine and the AAMCs student liaison to the NBME. Its a great time to share bold, innovative ideas about how to improve clinical skills assessment.

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What the elimination of a major medical licensing exam Step 2 CS means for students and schools - AAMC

Lawmakers wish to bring a law school back to the RGV – KGBT-TV

HARLINGEN, Texas (KVEO) There was once a law school in the Rio Grande Valley, and now there is a push by lawmakers to bring it back.

This legislation pretty much allows any institution to create a law school down here in theRioGrandeValley, saidState Representative Armando Martinez, Texas House District 39.

Representative Martinez said other places in the state have access to law schools, and he wants to bring the opportunity to the Rio Grande Valley.

Many different people have reached out and called and asked about a law school and they would love to go if they were granted that opportunity,said Representative Martinez.

When students do not have the opportunity, Martinez said the Rio Grande Valley loses.

When you provide an opportunity to students who no longer have to travel outside the Valley, you retain all your smart hardworking students, that do not end up in SanAntonio,said Representative Martinez.

Compared to other cities, Martinez said the Rio Grande Valley is underrepresented.

There are over 800 people per attorney here in theRio Grande Valley. When you go to other parts of the state maybe 300 or 400 halfof that, so the disparity is large,said Representative Martinez.

At least one other RGV lawmaker has a different priority.

In the Rio Grande Valley, the medical school is the priority, doctors, nurses, medical technicians, and not lawyers. Recently manylaw schools throughout the state and the nation have reduced class sizes because of the economy,said Senator Juan Chuy Hinojosa, Texas Senate District 20.

Hinojosa said the medical school could be an economic driver, as the Medical Center in San Antonio.

Now San Antoniois a$30 billioneconomic driver, taking care of healthcare for the San Antonio area. We anticipate and expect the same results from the medical school in the Valley, said Hinojosa.

Representative Terry Canales said he supports a full law school program, but a hybrid program could be a creative solution for now.

Idont know if we could support afull-blownlaw school, but I think a hybrid is something that would benefit people,said Representative Terry Canales, Texas House District 40.

While Martinez is certain a Valley Law School would flourish, deciding to create one is not no certain.

We are always open, into looking at educational opportunities, so a law school is one of those, but theres a lot of studying that has to be done. said Veronica Gonzalez, Vice President for Governmental and Community Relations, UTRGV. They are very expensive to operate. We have to look at the need and the student demand. Is there enough demand in the Rio Grande Valley for it? What would it cost? Where would we find the money to do it.?

Despite the challenges, Martinez says he will continue to fight for a law school.

Absolutely, were going to try again, and were not going to stop until it gets done,said Representative Martinez.

If House Bill 695 were to get approved, state funding to form a school would not be available until 2027.

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Lawmakers wish to bring a law school back to the RGV - KGBT-TV

Art Fahrner-Edward Jones Alton High School Remarkable Redbird of the Month: Anastasia Reinier – RiverBender.com

ALTON - Anastasia Reinier is the Art Fahrner-Edward Jones Remarkable Redbird of the Month.

Anastasia, an Alton High junior, is very active student and devoted Redbird. She is involved in a number of extracurricular activities at school as well as within the Riverbend and St Louis area communities.

Anastasia had planned to run track as a Redbird in the 2019-2020 school year and was practicing to participate in the 200-meter and 400-meter runs, but the season never started last year due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. She remains hopeful that there will be a track and field season yet this year.

Anastasia is involved in singing with a Christian based high school group called Encounter, a group that is known for performing concerts at churches across the area. Encounter represents over 30 churches in the Alton area and is dedicated to sharing through the ministries of music, service, fellowship and participation in the life of the church. Anastasia is also involved in FCCLA (Family, Career and Community Leaders of America) and participated in a number of community service projects including feeding the homeless, raising awareness around domestic violence, cancer awareness and also Operation Snowball, an organization that focuses on leadership development to encourage young people to avoid taking drugs.

Anastasia has also represented Alton High School at FCCLA state competition where she received a gold medal and a Most Outstanding Award for all her achievements.

She is devoted to her community and also worked on a project to bring hygiene bags to the Oasis Center, a shelter for abused women in downtown Alton and even compiled a recipe book to help families in the community. Additionally, Anastasia has also done volunteer work and bell ringing for the Salvation Army and has also assisted in fund raising for the Ronald McDonald house.

Upon completion of her career at Alton High, Anastasia's goal is to complete her undergraduate college degree and continue to medical school. She hopes to become a doctor with a focus on pediatric surgery.

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Art Fahrner-Edward Jones Alton High School Remarkable Redbird of the Month: Anastasia Reinier - RiverBender.com

What it’s like to specialize in endocrinology: Shadowing Dr. Correa – American Medical Association

As a medical student, do you ever wonder what its like to specialize in preventive medicine? Meet AMA member Ricardo Correa, MD, an endocrinologist and a featured physician in the AMAsShadow Me Specialty Series, which offers advice directly from physicians about life in their specialties. Check out his insights to help determine whether a career in endocrinology might be a good fit for you.

The AMA'sSpecialty Guidesimplifies medical students' specialty selection process, highlights major specialties, details training information, and provides access to related association information. It is produced byFREIDA, the AMA Residency & Fellowship Database, which allows you to search for a residency or fellowship from more than 12,000 programsall accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education.

Learn more with the AMA about themedical specialty of endocrinology.

Shadowing Dr. Correa (@drricardocorrea)

Specialty: Endocrinology.

Practice setting: Academic and VA hospital.

Employment type:Employed by a university and veteran hospital in Phoenix.

Years in practice:Five.

A typical day and week in my practice: My typical day starts with walking early in the morning as part of my daily exercise. Then I go to work where I divide my time into clinical, research activities and education (between staffing trainees, giving lectures to medical student and the administration of the fellowship program). Then I go back home to have some organizational meetings and spend the rest of my time with my family and relax.

In a typical week, I usually have some days where I have my own clinic and staff the fellows clinic other days. There is part of my week that I dedicate to my research and write grants and manuscripts. In addition, I dedicate between 1.52 days for the fellowship program, my activities to diversity and inclusion and an extra half day to teach medical students. During the weekend, I volunteer some hours in an underserved clinic where I worked as the medical director. One weekend a month, I also go to my military drill as per my U.S. Army Reserve responsibilities.

The most challenging and rewarding aspects of endocrinology: Endocrinology is the perfect combination between science and medicine. Many of our patients, if we find out that they have a hormonal abnormality, we are able to replace them and help the patient feel excellent. The most challenging aspect of my patient population is that we deal with chronic conditions like diabetes and sometimes patients dont like to follow our recommendation, so we need to increase medication. Another challenging thing is that diabetic medication is expensive, and some patients cannot afford them. You feel frustrated when this happens.

The most rewarding aspect of endocrinology is many things. Seeing how you can change the life of a patient because you are treating their condition has no price. Dealing with underrepresented minorities and making them feel good and providing them the best care for their chronic condition is very special for me. Discovering new ways to manage patients through research is also very rewarding in my life.

How life inendocrinology has been affected by the global pandemic: We moved to telemedicine during the COVID-19 pandemic. There has been a positive and negative aspect of this. The positive is that the patients who have a chronic condition like diabetes and obesity are more compliant with the appointment. This translates to us seeing them more frequently, plus they are compliant with the medication.

The negative side is that more complex conditions that need to be seen in person sometimes are not coming in and we dont do a full physical exam. In the area of teaching, the learning has changed because the fellows dont have the opportunity to see all the patients face-to-face.

The long-term impact the pandemic will have onendocrinology: The impact is that we are now doing telemedicine. I always see the good part of everything and for us, having telemedicine is very beneficial for the patients with diabetes and obesity because they are more compliant with the appointment and the treatment. Also, some of the social determinants of health can be addressed during the telemedicine visit and we are doing that. I see that the future will be a mix of telemedicine and face-to-face visits.

Three adjectives to describe the typical endocrinologist: Creative, passionate and caring.

How my lifestyle matches, or differs from, what I had envisioned: The life that I have as an endocrinologist, scientist and educator is what I envisioned when I was in medical school. I have time to make change not only for my patients but also to the population near my area, in the country and to the next generation of physicians. My work-life balance is fine because I have time that I dedicate to my family. I am very happy because I am doing what I really like and that makes my work very easy.

Skills every physician in training should have for endocrinology but wont be tested for on the board exam: The most important skill that trainees should have for this specialty is being creative. It is about always trying to find the answer to a problem as well as correlating symptoms with laboratory and imaging work, making a diagnosis and finally giving them the most appropriate treatment. Hormonal world is not an easy world. There are many things that are difficult to make a diagnosis and many symptoms that overlap. Being creative and always thinking outside the box will need to be a must for the ones that are thinking about endocrinology.

One question physicians in training should ask themselves before pursuing endocrinology: The questions that you should ask yourself if you are planning to come to endocrinology are:

If you answer yes to the questions above, you are ready to become an endocrinologist.

Books every medical student interested in endocrinology should be reading: The two most important books of endocrinology cover the basic concept of endocrinology:

The online resource students interested in endocrinology should follow: Endotextit is an online book that covers the entire endocrine world and is free. I always look for any of the common conditions in the best evidence-based medicine source which is Dynamed. Many of the answers for endocrinology can be found there. The amazing thing is that everything that comes from research has been appraised and they give you the level of evidence.

On social media, there are several accounts including @ypsendo, @endojournalclub and @medscapeendo that provide information about endocrinology. Finally, I follow the Endocrine Society, Endocrine News, American Association of Clinical Endocrinology, American Diabetes Association, American Thyroid Association, and American Society for Bone and Mineral Research on social media because they all really care about education and promote endocrine learning.

Quick insights I would give students who are considering endocrinology: Endocrinology is a fascinating world. You can achieve many goals in your life. You can be an expert clinician, an amazing scientist and an outstanding educator. You can discover things that will change the future of medicine. I really recommend everyone that has an interest in endocrinology to explore the possibility. We need a lot more people like all of you. If you have any questions, I am available to talk to all of you about this.

Mantra or song to describe life in endocrinology: Puedes llegar, (You can make it) by Gloria Stefan.

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What it's like to specialize in endocrinology: Shadowing Dr. Correa - American Medical Association

Bill on the protection of freedom of speech on social media – JD Supra

On 1 February 2021, the Polish Ministry of Justice published a bill on the Protection of the Freedom of Speech on Social Media. The bills aim is to provide a legal framework to protect social media users from platform owners arbitrary decisions to delete their accounts or their posted content. Failure to comply with the obligations as set out in the bill can result in fines amounting to up to PLN 50,000,000 (approx. EUR 11,075,000).

The bill concerns social media platforms (defined as services provided by electronic means which allow users to share any content with other users or the public) which are used in Poland by at least one million registered users. This definition is quite ambiguous since it is unclear whether it covers all websites that allow its users to publish content, e.g. blogs. Also, the bill does not indicate how to determine the number of users, especially whether one should take into account all accounts including fake accounts, or accounts set up by foreigners.

The bill imposes several new obligations on the owners of these social media platforms. In particular, these platforms will be obliged to:

Those users who are dissatisfied with the way the platform has handled their complaint will be able to lodge a complaint with the Council for the Freedom of Speech (the public authority appointed by the Sejm (the lower house of the Polish Parliament)) within seven days of receiving the platforms decision. The Council will then have seven days to decide whether to order the platform to restore access to the profile or content. The case will be resolved based on the evidence provided by both the user (together with the complaint) and the platform (within 24 hours from the receipt of the information that the complaint has been filed with the Council). The platform will then have 24 hours to comply with the Councils decision. The platform, or user, will be able to appeal against the Councils decision to the court within 30 days of receiving the decision.

The bill also imposes on all providers of services by electronic means an obligation to store personal data of their users for 12 months following the day of making the connection (this term is not further clarified in the bill). Should any criminal content be found, the public prosecutor will have the authority to ask the service provider, or its representative in Poland, to provide them with information, in particular concerning the users data and publications on the online social media platform. In addition, if it is found that the content disclosed on the online social medial platform contains publication/s with pornographic content involving minors, content that praises or incites the committing of acts of a terrorist nature, or that further access to this publication creates the risk of causing significant damage or causing effects which are difficult to reverse, the prosecutor can immediately issue a decision ordering the service provider to prevent access to this content.

The bill also stipulates a new type of lawsuit the so called "blind lawsuit", i.e. the possibility of filing a lawsuit for the protection of personal rights without specifying the defendant's data which is presently necessary in order to file a statement of claim. According to the bill, the indication of the URL where the offensive content was published, the date and time of publication, and the name of the user's profile or login will be sufficient to successfully bring about a claim.

The bill was sent to the Chancellery of the Prime Minister on 22 January 2021 with the request that it be entered into the list of legislative works of the Council of Ministers. Once the bill is published on the list of legislative works it will be referred for arrangements, public consultations, and opinions. The bill will certainly evolve in the further stages of the legislative work.

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Bill on the protection of freedom of speech on social media - JD Supra

India’s row with Twitter increases over freedom of speech rules – Arab News

NEW DELHI:India's technology minister Ravi Shankar Prasad warned U.S. social media firms to abide by the country's laws, a day after a face-off between Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration and Twitter over content regulation.

The IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad called out Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and WhatsApp by name and said they were welcome to operate in India, but only if they play by India's rules.

"You will have to follow the Constitution of India, you will have to abide by the laws of India," said Prasad.

Late last night, Indias Ministry of Electronics and Information Technologyhas chided Twitter for not complying with its orders to remove certain accounts and content, warning the social media platform that it must respect Indian laws irrespective of Twitters own rules and guidelines. the Ministrysaid in a statementon Wednesday evening.

We value freedom and we value criticism because it is part of our democracy. But freedom of expression is not absolute and it is subject to reasonable restrictions" the statement added

Twitter has found itself in a standoff with the government after it refused to fully comply with last week's government order to remove some accounts, including those of news organizations, journalists, activists and politicians, citing its principles of defending protected speech and freedom of expression.

The government said the accounts unspecified in number were using provocative hashtags to spread misinformation about the massive farmer protests that have rattled Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration.

Twitter responded by temporarily blocking some of those accounts. It, however, refused to outright suspend them as suggested by the government and imposed restrictions on them only within India. Twitter subsequently restored them after online outrage.

Critics have accused the government of using the protests to escalate a crackdown on free speech.

Twitter's actions appeared to irk Modi's government, which over the years has sought to tighten its grip over social media, particularly Twitter and Facebook. The government served Twitter a non-compliance notice and threatened its officials with a fine and imprisonment of up to seven years for violating the order.

The ministry in its statement said it was disappointed after Twitter unwillingly, grudgingly and with great delay complied with only parts of the governments orders.

It cited Twitters crackdown on accounts after last months Capitol Hill insurrection in the United States, calling it a differential treatment to India. It said what happened in Washington was comparable to the violence at India's Red Fort on Jan. 26 when a group of protesting farmers veered from an agreed protest route and stormed New Delhis 17th century monument.

The clampdown on Twitter accounts comes as thousands of farmers have camped outside the capital for months to protest new agricultural laws they say will devastate their earnings. The government says the laws will boost production through private investment.

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India's row with Twitter increases over freedom of speech rules - Arab News

The UConn community must commit to protecting free speech – UConn Daily Campus

In this picture, a protest takes place to let minority voices be heard. Even though the UConn campus might seem isolated from the rest of the world, it is not isolated from political developments and other current events that prompt discourse and strong emotions. Photo byMathias P.R. RedingfromPexels.

Faculty boards across the country, including the University of Connecticuts, have expressed concern about the obstruction of the freedom of speech and expression on college campuses, citing recent events wherefreedom of speech has been suppressed by both university and non-university actors. In response to some of these issues, former UConn President Susan Herbst formed the Task Force on Free Speech and Civility in 2017. The Task Force published astatementreaffirming free speech that was unanimously approved by the University Senate. However, as past confrontations over free speech at UConn such asLuncian Wintrichs infamous clash with students fade from memory, it is important for the UConn community to revisit its commitment to free speech in a proactive way. Moreover, the nation as a whole (theJan. 6 capitol riotandincreasing polarization) is not providing a model for civil discourse that students can emulate. It is up to the UConn community to commit to protecting free speech.

Even though the UConn campus might seem isolated from the rest of the world, it is not isolated from political developments and other current events that prompt discourse and strong emotions. UConn students react and talk about current events every day. However, there is a deficit in frameworks that students can emulate to have a civil discourse about different points of view in student organizations and other spaces on and off campus. This has only been exacerbated by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, which has forced students to meet virtually and remain isolated from each other. In fact, a large number of students have never met each other in-person. Their virtual interactions (un)naturally lack body language and other social cues that facilitate human dialogue. Thus, what may have once been a disagreement in an in-person encounter might now feel like an insult.

The deficit in frameworks for civil discourse can be partly corrected by adopting restorative models and practices such as Harlan Cohens win-or-learn framework and his idea of the universal rejection truth,outlined in his newbookWin or Learn.According to Cohen, there is no losing in civil discourse or in interactions with othersone can only learn from someone elses point of view or win the argument. This is possible because of the universal rejection truth,which Cohen describes as a mindset that allows people to accept rejection. This liberating notion that others will not always accept ones point of view or ideas can help foster a culture of free speech. Even though these frameworks can increase tolerance for free speech, a more robust commitment is needed toprotectfree speech.

The UConn community can protect free speech at the institutional level by adopting theChicago Statement, which has now been adopted by81 major institutions of higher educationacross the country. The UConn community can also protect free speech by disseminating the Chicago Statement among its hundreds of student organizations. Finally, the UConn community can protect free speech at the individual level by encouraging all members to create a free and open environment in all university spaces.

Committing to protect free speech raises concerns about its scope. Some might fear it will lead to the toleration of hate speech, violent speech or speech that infringes upon human rights. Some of these questions have been litigated and debated for centuries, but at the end of the day it is every UConn members moral responsibility to use their free speech respectfully and within the boundaries of decency and intellect.

In the era of cancel culture, increased polarization and political violence it will be crucial for universities to protect free speech. Historically, protecting and fostering free speech has been a key function of universities. When students graduate they take with them a commitment to a free and open society. Unfortunately, the country as a whole is not providing models for free speech in the current political moment, and political actors are relying on partisan rhetoric and ad hominem attacks to convey their ideas. The UConn community must ask itself: if universities do not commit to protecting free speech, then who will?

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The UConn community must commit to protecting free speech - UConn Daily Campus

Why Suppressing Free Speech Will Hurt The Economy – Forbes

Freedom of speech is under increasing attack from various quarters, including, shockingly, much of the media. The consequences of nonconformity are ugly, such as potential loss of ones job and public shaming.

This is poison for democracy.

Moreover, what isnt so well appreciated is that freedom of expression goes hand-in-hand with economic progress, as this episode of Whats Ahead makes clear.

Free speech is essential to our well-being and for a more prosperous future.

Steve Forbes is Chairman and Editor-in-Chief of Forbes Media.Steves newest project is the podcast Whats Ahead, where he engages the worlds top newsmakers,

Steve Forbes is Chairman and Editor-in-Chief of Forbes Media.Steves newest project is the podcast Whats Ahead, where he engages the worlds top newsmakers, politicians and pioneers in business and economics in honest conversations meant to challenge traditional conventions as well as featuring Steves signature views on the intersection of society, economic and policy. Steve helped create the recently released and highly acclaimed public television documentary, In Money We Trust?, which was produced under the auspices of Maryland Public television. The film was inspired by the book he co-authored, Money: How the Destruction of the Dollar Threatens the Global Economy and What We Can Do About It. Steves latest book is Reviving America: How Repealing Obamacare, Replacing the Tax Code and Reforming The Fed will Restore Hope and Prosperity co-authored by Elizabeth Ames (McGraw-Hill Professional).Steve writes editorials for each issue of Forbes under the heading of Fact and Comment. A widely respected economic prognosticator, he is the only writer to have won the highly prestigious Crystal Owl Award four times. The prize was formerly given by U.S. Steel Corporation to the financial journalist whose economic forecasts for the coming year proved most accurate.In both 1996 and 2000, Steve campaigned vigorously for the Republican nomination for the Presidency. Key to his platform were a flat tax, medical savings accounts, a new Social Security system for working Americans, parental choice of schools for their children, term limits and a strong national defense. Steve continues to energetically promote this agenda.

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Why Suppressing Free Speech Will Hurt The Economy - Forbes

Free Speech Arguments Against Trump’s Impeachment Dishonor The First Amendment – People For the American Way

As we approach the Senate trial on the impeachment of former President Donald Trump for incitement of insurrection against the Republic he swore to protect on Feb. 9, his lawyers and other defenders have made the astonishing claim that convicting him would somehow violate freedom of speech. Judicial Watchs Tom Fitton even asserted that convicting Trump would be devastating to the First Amendment because it would be a green light to remove others that engage in core political speech that would be criminalized if the Left doesnt like it.

As a constitutional lawyer who has defended the First Amendment for almost forty years, I agree with lawyer Chris Truax that these free speech claims are absurd. First, the First Amendment protects members of the public from having their speech suppressed or punished by the government, and does not shield government officials for accountability for their actions, even if they involve speech. A private citizen would have the First Amendment right to proclaim loyalty to Russia or China or to advocate the secession of Texas from the union. Does anyone seriously contend that free speech allows a U.S. president to violate his oath of office and do the same, and also escape accountability through impeachment for such treasonous acts? Apparently, Trump and his supporters do.

As the House impeachment managers have pointed out, moreover, even if Trumps actions were treated like those of a private citizen, and even if the First Amendment applied to Congressional efforts to hold a president accountable as it does to a criminal prosecution, the free speech defense would still fail. The Supreme Court ruled more than 50 years ago that the First Amendment does not protect speech when it is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to do so. Trumps incendiary remarks just before the Jan. 6 violent insurrection at the Capitol, when he exhorted his followers to go to the Capitol and fight like hell, particularly when combined with evidence of his intent like reports that he was delighted as the riots were happening, could well be enough to warrant even a criminal conviction of Trump by a court. They are clearly enough to justify a conviction on impeachment in the Senate.

I have always believed that the First Amendment is first in our Constitution because, in important ways, free speech and the other rights it safeguards are crucial to protect our democracy. The attempt of a disgraced ex-president and his seditionist collaborators to try to hide behind free speech, as well as similar recent far right efforts to use freedom of speech to justify the violent actions at the Capitol on Jan. 6, truly dishonors our First Amendment.

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Free Speech Arguments Against Trump's Impeachment Dishonor The First Amendment - People For the American Way

Fordham Should Not Abuse Its Status as a Private Institution to Censor Free Speech – Fordham Observer

On Dec. 22, 2016, the last day of the fall semester, then-Dean of Students Keith Eldredge sent an email that incited four long years of legal action and fees. In the email, the dean denied by Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) request to form a club after the United Student Government had already approved it.

The dean wrote that he cannot support an organization whose sole purpose is advocating political goals of a specific group, and against a specific country, when these goals conflict with (the) values of the University, all the while without specifying what values SJP contradicted.

In response, the members of SJP went to court, using a New York state law (article 78) that allows students to challenge a decision at a private school if the decision was contrary to the institutions own rules, which SJP felt was the case.

The courts decision demonstrates how profoundly Fordhams label as a private institution has enabled it to restrict the rights of the student body.

On Dec. 22, 2020 exactly four years after Eldredges letter the New York State Appellate Court overturned the 2019 ruling and held that Fordham was actually within its rights to deny the club. The court added that SJPs political activism could potentially be disruptive to student life and as a result, they are still fighting for recognition to this day.

The courts decision demonstrates how profoundly Fordhams label as a private institution has enabled it to restrict the rights of the student body. By silencing the political opinions of SJP, especially at a university where other partisan clubs exist, the Fordham administration has shown a concerning lack of support for the diversity of student opinions on campus.

Discussions and support for SJPs case and cause have extended past campus and onto social media. The Instagram page @fordhamsjp provides its audience of 954 followers with updates on the court case, general information on the conflict between Israel and Palestine, and resources for other human rights movements. Its new posts receive hundreds of likes from the Fordham community and beyond, as the ongoing legal battle has brought the club national recognition.

@lc_sinners, a popular Instagram meme page that caters to Fordham students, has also backed SJP by posting multiple memes about Fordhams censorship of the club, particularly attacking Fordhams flimsy private institution excuse for silencing students.

As student journalists, we at The Observer feel that free speech is crucial to the well-being of the university community. The student body cannot be expected to grow and learn in an environment where the only ideas that are permitted are those that the administration deems acceptable.

While Fordham is a private university, it still received $19.6 million in 2018 of a total of $933.5 million and $2.5 million in 2019 in government grants. When any private university receives federal funding, however miniscule, it should abide by federal law. Therefore, its students and their free speech should be protected from actions like those that Eldredge has started against SJP.

As long as this continues, it will suppress those student voices that are unsuitable for the image it wants to project.

When discussing freedom of speech at a private institution like Fordham, we would be remiss in not mentioning the case of Austin Tong. In a similar action to SJP, Tong attempted to challenge a disciplinary action in court, but his case was dismissed since it was decided that the university administration had reasonable grounds to believe that Tongs behavior was hate speech. His case shows that SJPs case is not the only target of Fordham censorship; however, his comments online sparked reactions of fear and condemnation within Fordham that SJP has not received.

Tongs behavior was criticized heavily by many in the university community, and many people expressed fears for their own safety. Contrary to Tong, SJP has garnered a wide array of support from the Fordham community.

It is clear that Fordham has hidden behind its status as a private university meaning that the vast majority (nearly 88%) of the revenue for the university comes from tuition and fees alone and it abuses that power to play fast and loose with its First Amendment allowances. As long as this continues, it will suppress those student voices that are unsuitable for the image it wants to project.

As the first of its kind, SJPs case has set the precedent for all of New York states private universities. College students in this state or anywhere should not be silenced for expressing their political views in a peaceful and nondiscriminatory manner, yet their freedom of speech is now in danger because of Fordhams actions.

Moreover, all students are paying for the duct tape that Fordham is putting over SJPs mouth. The legal fees for the SJP trial were included in our tuition bills, a shockingly improvident and uncompassionate use of money during a time when it could have been used to alleviate financial hardships wrought by COVID-19.

Is this use of funds, power and time truly in line with Fordhams values?

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Fordham Should Not Abuse Its Status as a Private Institution to Censor Free Speech - Fordham Observer

SEYCHELLES: Covid-19 puts a damper on waste management on the island of Perseverance – AFRIK 21

In the Seychelles, the populations continue to pay a high price for the health crisis caused by the Covid-19. After the Chinese company Sinohydro postponed the commissioning of the Gogue dam to a later date (initially planned for June 2020), it is now the turn of Land Waste Management Agency (LWMA) to delay its sanitation project on Perseverance. The artificial island is located 20 km from the Seychelles capital Victoria.

In principle, the second phase of LWMAs waste sorting and collection project was due to start in March 2021, but the association will not be able to meet its schedule. The second phase of the project consists of going back to the inhabitants of Persvrance with the results of surveys carried out to explain to them how collection will be carried out in the future. At present, we are unable to achieve our objectives due to the restrictive measures put in place to counter the spread of Covid-19, explains Rahul Mangroo, LWMAs Deputy Managing Director.

As part of LWMAs sanitation project, 900 households on the island of Perseverance will be provided with 110 litre bins. Rubbish bins will be used for the collection of household waste. Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) waste and cans will be sold to the population in buy-back centres set up by LWMA. Instead of daily waste collection, there will be a calendar where we will indicate the days of passage for each type of waste, says Rahul Mangroo, LWMAs Deputy Managing Director. This waste will then be recycled, reducing pollution on Perseverance, one of the 115 islands of the Seychelles archipelago. LWMAs project will promote the development of the circular economy throughout the Eastern African country.

A third phase of the sanitation project is planned. It will analyse the waste sorting and collection process that has been put in place and make improvements where necessary. We will then report back to the Seychelles government on the effectiveness of our approach, says Rahul Mangroo, LWMAs Deputy Managing Director.

Ins Magoum

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SEYCHELLES: Covid-19 puts a damper on waste management on the island of Perseverance - AFRIK 21

Meet the American who is the first Black woman to travel to every country in the world – RADIO.COM

Jessica Nabongo has achieved the title of the first Black woman in history to travel to every single country in the world.

Prior to the onset of the pandemic, the Michigan native visited all 195 countries over the course of two years, ending her world tour in Seychelles, a country in East Africa, Good Morning America reported.

"Welcome to the Seychelles!! Country 195 of 195!," she captioned her Instagram post. "So much to say but for now I will just say thank you to this entire community for all of your support. This was our journey and thanks to all of you who came along for the ride!!"

Her friends and family joined her in the Seychelles to celebrate the completion of her incredible achievement.

Nabongo told "GMA" that traveling has always been a big part of her life.

Born and raised in Detroit, she first traveled to Canada when she was four. By the age of 18, she had been to Jamaica, the Cayman Islands, the United Kingdom, and her parents native country of Uganda.

After visiting about 60 countries by February 2017, Nabongo, who has a masters degree from the London School of Economics, made it her mission to visit every other country in the world.

Once she learned that she could become the first Black woman in history to achieve the feat, her goals were set.

"I didn't want anyone to beat me to it," she said. Nabongo's journey to finish seeing the world began in March of 2018.

While she first used her Instagram as a way to keep her friends and families updated along her journey, Nabongo's social media account quickly grew into a popular travel blog, which now boasts almost 200,000 followers.

She ended her quest on October 6, 2019, the same day as her late father's birthday.Nabongo said the journey was in her fathers honor.

"Had he not gotten a scholarship to Western Michigan," she said, "none of this would be happening."

Nabongo now runs JetBlack, a boutique travel firm that specializes in travel to Africa, Central and South America and the Caribbean.

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Meet the American who is the first Black woman to travel to every country in the world - RADIO.COM

Without Trump, What Is the Future of Trumpism? – World Politics Review

Can there be Trumpism without Trump? In the wake of the Capitol riot, this is an urgent, but also surprisingly complicated question. After half a decade of debate, it is still far from obvious that we know what Trumpism actually is. Some have taken it as a local instance of a global phenomenon often described as the wave of populism, or as part of a worldwide revolt against neoliberalism. For example, as social scientists Jonathan Hopkin and Mark Blyth have put it, Trump is a data point. Global Trumpism is a structural shift.

But it is important to recognize that Trumpism is, in fact, a distinctively American product, combining three elements not so easily found in other parts of the world. The first, obviously, is Donald Trump the person, and his uncanny ability to exploit the weaknesses of the U.S. political and media systems. The second is a distinctively American far-right ideology that the Republican Party started mainstreaming long before Trump descended on a golden escalator to announce his candidacy. The third is the promotion of a form of governance that at least initially promised a primacy of political will over economic considerationswhich, of everything about Trump, is the most obviously comparable to the official agendas of at least some populists elsewhere. ...

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Without Trump, What Is the Future of Trumpism? - World Politics Review

Amid the babble of populist voices, we need to find the… – Daily Maverick

The South African political landscape is characterised by a radical, dangerous and essentially undemocratic populist and venal left epitomised by the EFF, which was spawned by a broadly nationalist, essentially socialist and kleptocratic ANC, a plethora of smaller parties that champion the rights of selective minorities, tribal and religious groupings, populist upstarts on the ostensible right of the spectrum and the official opposition (the DA, with more than 20% of the electorates votes) which is home to a collection of social democrats, liberals, conservatives, pragmatists and some who, lamentably, have more in common with the racial nationalism espoused by the ANC and EFF.

The burning question is how can the DA, as the opposition with the most heft, grow both its organic and adjacent vote, and fashion a coalition that will unseat the command-and-control kleptocrats and their fellow travellers, and deliver a polity that is more efficient, considerably less corrupt and that will deliver much-needed economic growth?

To answer this question, one has to examine both the offering and the composition of the voter environment. Values and principles apart, the average South African voter, at one level, is an amalgam that reflects a deep religious conservatism; an often aspirational desire for both flashy and fundamental wealth, and a clinging to the conflicting mythologies of both liberation and colonialism.

The classical divides of class are less evident with a labour aristocracy that has tied its fortunes to the ruling party and a communist party that has disproportionate historical leverage over the alliance consisting of organised labour, the ANC and itself.

The combination has found expression in a labour protectionist polity, underpinned by racial transformation of the economy and fed by the wholesale theft of national resources. All this, while unemployment has grown relentlessly and is now at record levels.

Certain elements of the white electorate have turned to the racially selective haven of the Freedom Front Plus. Indians are largely given to supporting the DA along with many coloured people who resent the short shrift they have received from the ANC. The mass of black voters continue to support the ANC, albeit in dwindling numbers with some votes collared by the DA, others by the EFF, the IFP and the likes of the AIC on a tribal ticket.

It is unfortunately plain that race and myth are the overarching determinants somewhat understandably given our fractured past and that any segmentation, predicated on an understanding of beliefs, context and desired voter action, would be dominated by these considerations.

Absent a perverse lever of the kind used by Narendra Modis BJP in India, and which the likes of Herman Mashaba hope to capitalise on (but thankfully has no or little base), which exploits ethnic divides and a form of populism in the hopes of securing a majority, the viable communication of an alternative to shift the allegiances of the bulk of voters remains elusive.

Voting is a habit and habits are hard to break, especially when governed by the self-interest of those complicit in a system of patronage and others who aspire to being part of it as the only way out of their unenviable situation. Add to this the trump card of race and an accompanying hand of myths and you have the makings of a flush for now.

The wild card is, of course, the significant chunk of young voters who remain alienated, disinterested and otherwise occupied. Their natural inclination is to cut across racial divides and they are more open to questioning the myths that are peddled.

A targeted focus in this regard given their levels of alienation, unemployment, general dissatisfaction and aspiration would pay significant voter dividends and the channel of mobile telephony and impactful social media interaction provides a handy tool.

The youth would be open to a message that ties their post-apartheid aspirations to an offering that prioritises jobs, prosperity and harmony in a qualitatively new mould free of the past and focused on the future, and this is where values and principles need to be directed.

It has historically been the youth of parties that has fired the imagination of a new cohort and changed the perceptions of the old. The challenge and opportunity is to ensure that they are onside with the essential values and principles. This requires both communication and engagement.

These need to be based unambiguously on liberty, freedom, prosperity, economic growth and opportunity. Voters need to be weaned off paltry handouts and be given sight of prospective hand-ups on to the ladder of opportunity. This is where policy around education and the fostering of an innovative environment for jobs becomes key.

This is where role models come into play across the board, across countries and across race who share, live and reap the offerings of an open opportunity society. This is where the DA comes into play, contrary to the pronouncements of the pundits.

This is where intellectual icons like Thomas Sowell, musicians and the fashionistas of ideas come into play. Its about the world, not just the limited locality thats how you capture the imagination of the youth.

Theres much thats sexy, liberal and sound out there its fluid and can be fashioned. Now is the time. The youth are open to ideas. They are not necessarily conventionally conservative; they are potentially radical, and radicalism is an often under-recognised element of liberalism and conservatism for that matter.

The failure of democratic liberalism to capture the imagination of the electorate in the 21st century has led to a populist conservatism that draws on the alt-right and that has brought Trump, Brexit, Le Pen in France and the AfD in Germany to the fore.

How wonderful would it be if the DA could buck this trend in the most challenging of environments that momentarily allows the left equivalent of the right on the extremes of the political horseshoe to hold sway?

That would be a tonic of note to counter the various challenges and assaults from both extremes a vaccine against the virus in the time of Covid when authoritarianism with a pernicious agenda is on the up. DM

Ghaleb Cachalia is an MP in the National Assembly and the DA spokesman on Public Enterprises and serves on the Ethics Committee in Parliament.

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Amid the babble of populist voices, we need to find the... - Daily Maverick

Kangaroo Court: Quantum Computing Thinking on the Future – JD Supra

The promise of quantum computers is that certain computational tasks might be executed exponentially faster on a quantum processor than on a classical processor.

Quantum computing is a beautiful fusion of quantum physics with computer science. It incorporates some of the most stunning ideas of physics from the twentieth century into an entirely new way of thinking about computation. Quantum computers have the potential to resolve problems of a high complexity and magnitude across many different industries and application, including finance, transportation, chemicals, and cybersecurity. Solving the impossible in a few hours of computing time.

Quantum computing is often in the news: China teleported a qubit from earth to a satellite; Shors algorithm has put our current encryption methods at risk; quantum key distribution will make encryption safe again; Grovers algorithm will speed up data searches. But what does all this really mean? How does it all work?

Todays computers operate in a very straightforward fashion: they manipulate a limited set of data with an algorithm and give you an answer. Quantum computers are more complicated. After multiple units of data are input into qubits, the qubits are manipulated to interact with other qubits, allowing for several calculations to be done simultaneously. Thats where quantum computers are a lot faster than todays machines.

Quantum computers have four fundamental capabilities that differentiate them from todays classical computers:

All computations involve inputting data, manipulating it according to certain rules, and then outputting the final answer. For classical computations, the bit is the basic unit of data. For quantum computation, this unit is the quantum bit usually shortened to qubit.

The basic unit of quantum computing is a qubit. A classical bit is either 0 or 1. If its 0 and we measure it, we get 0. If its 1 and we measure 1, we get 1. In both cases the bit remains unchanged. The standard example is an electrical switch that can be either on or off. The situation is totally different for qubits. Qubits are volatile. A qubit can be in one of an infinite number of states a superposition of both 0 and 1 but when we measure it, as in the classical case, we just get one of two values, either 0 or 1. Qubits can also become entangled. In fact, the act of measurement changes the qubit. When we make a measurement of one of them, it affects the state of the other. Whats more, they interact with other qubits. In fact, these interactions are what make it possible to conduct multiple calculations at once.

Nobody really knows quite how or why entanglement works. It even baffled Einstein, who famously described it as spooky action at a distance. But its key to the power of quantum computers. In a conventional computer, doubling the number of bits doubles its processing power. But thanks to entanglement, adding extra qubits to a quantum machine produces an exponential increase in its number-crunching ability.

These three things superposition, measurement, and entanglement are the key quantum mechanical ideas. Controlling these interactions, however, is very complicated. The volatility of qubits can cause inputs to be lost or altered, which can throw off the accuracy of results. And creating a computer of meaningful scale would require hundreds of thousands of millions of qubits to be connected coherently. The few quantum computers that exist today can handle nowhere near that number. But the good news is were getting very, very close.

Quantum computing and classical computer are not two distinct disciplines. Quantum computing is the more fundamental form of computing anything that can be computed classically can be computed on a quantum computer. The qubit is the basic unit of computation, not the bit. Computation, in its essence, really means quantum computing. A qubit can be represented by the spin of an electron or the polarization of a photon.

In 2019 Google achieved a level of quantum supremacy when they reported the use of a processor with programmable superconducting qubits to create quantum states on 54 qubits, corresponding to a computational state-space of dimension 253(about 1016). This incredible achievement was slightly short of their mission goal for creating quantum states of 72 qubits. What is so special about this number? Classical computers can simulate quantum computers if the quantum computer doesnt have too many qubits, but as the number of qubits increases we reach the point where that is no longer possible.

There are 8 possible three-bit combinations: 000,001, 010, 011, 100, 101, 110, 111. The number 8 comes from 23. There are two choices for the first bit, two for the second and two for the third, and we might multiple these three 2s together. If instead of bits we switch to qubits, each of these 8 three-bit strings is associated with a basis vector, so the vector space is 8-dimensional. If we have 72 qubits, the number of basis elements is 2. This is about 4,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. It is a large number and is considered to be the point at which classical computers cannot simulate quantum computers. Once quantum computers have more than 72 or so qubits we truly enter the age of quantum supremacy when quantum computers can do computations that are beyond the ability of any classical computer.

To provide a little more perspective, lets consider a machine with 300 qubits. This doesnt seem an unreasonable number of the not too distant future. But 2300 is an enormous number. Its more than the number of elementary particles in the known universe. A computation using 300 qubits would be working with 2300 basis elements.

Some calculations required for the effective simulation of real-life scenarios are simply beyond the capability of classical computers whats known as intractable problems. Quantum computers, with their huge computational power, are ideally suited to solving these problems. Indeed, some problems, like factoring, are hard on a classical computer, but are easy on a quantum computer. This creates a world of opportunities, across almost every aspect of modern life.

Healthcare: classical computers are limited in terms of size and complexity of molecules they can simulate and compare (an essential process of early drug development). Quantum computers will allow much larger molecules to be simulated. At the same time, researchers will be able to model and simulate interactions between drugs and all 20,000+ proteins encoded in the human genome, leading to greater advancements in pharmacology.

Finance: one potential application is algorithmic trading using complex algorithms to automatically trigger share dealings based on a wide variety of market variables. The advantages, especially for high-volume transactions, are significant. Another application is fraud detection. Like diagnostics in healthcare, fraud detection is reliant upon pattern recognition. Quantum computers could deliver a significant improvement in machine learning capabilities; dramatically reducing the time taken to train a neural network and improving the detection rate.

Logistics: Improved data analysis and modelling will enable a wide range of industries to optimize workflows associated with transport, logistics and supply-chain management. The calculation and recalculation of optimal routes could impact on applications as diverse as traffic management, fleet operations, air traffic control, freight and distribution.

It is, of course, impossible to predict the long-term impact of quantum computing with any accuracy. Quantum computing is now in its infancy, and the comparison to the first computers seems apt. The machines that have been constructed so far tend to be large and not very powerful, and they often involve superconductors that need cooled to extremely low temperatures. To minimize the interaction of quantum computers with the environment, they are always protected from light and heat. They are shieled against electromagnetic radiation, and they are cooled. One thing that can happen in cold places is that certain materials become superconductors they lose all electrical resistance and superconductors have quantum properties that can be exploited.

Many countries are experimenting with small quantum networks using optic fiber. There is the potential of connecting these via satellite and being able to form a worldwide quantum network. This work is of great interest to financial institutions. One early impressive result involves a Chinese satellite that is devoted to quantum experiments. Its named Micius after a Chinese philosopher who did work in optics. A team in China connected to a team in Austria the first time that intercontinental quantum key distribution (QKD) had been achieved. Once the connection was secured, the teams sent pictures to one another. The Chinese team sent the Austrians a picture of Micius, and the Austrians sent a picture of Schrodinger to the Chinese.

To actually make practical quantum computers you need to solve a number of problems, the most serious being decoherence the problem of your qubit interacting with something from the environment that is not part of the computation. You need to set a qubit to an initial state and keep it in that state until you need to use it. Their quantum state is extremely fragile. The slightest vibration or change in temperature disturbances known as noise in quantum-speak can cause them to tumble out of superposition before their job has been properly done. Thats why researchers are doing the best to protect qubits from the outside world in supercooled fridges and vacuum chambers.

Alan Turing is one of the fathers of the theory of computation. In his landmark paper of 1936 he carefully thought about computation. He considered what humans did as they performed computations and broke it down to its most elemental level. He showed that a simple theoretical machine, which we now call a Turing machine, could carry out any algorithm. But remember, Turing was analyzing computation based on what humans do. With quantum computation the focus changes from how humans compute to how the universe computes. Therefore, we should think of quantum computation as not a new type of computation but as the discovery of the true nature of computation.

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Kangaroo Court: Quantum Computing Thinking on the Future - JD Supra

The global quantum computing race has begun. What will it take to win it? – ZDNet

The UK is now facing a huge challenge: after having secured a top spot in the quantum race, retaining the country's status is going to require some serious stepping up.

National quantum programs and decade-long quantum strategies are increasingly being announced by governments around the world. And as countries unlock billions-worth of budgets, it is becoming clear that a furious competition is gradually unrolling. Nations want to make sure that they are the place-to-be when quantum technologies start showing some real-world value and the UK, for one, is keen to prove that it is a quantum hotspot in the making.

"We have a very successful program that is widely admired and emulated around the world," said Peter Knight, who sits on the strategic advisory for the UK's national quantum technology program (NQTP), as he provided a virtual update on the NQTP's performance so far.

Speaking at an online conference last month, Knight seemed confident. The UK, said the expert, in line with the objectives laid out in the program, is on track to become "the go-to place" for new quantum companies to start, and for established businesses to base all manners of innovative quantum activities.

SEE: Hiring Kit: Computer Hardware Engineer (TechRepublic Premium)

The UK is just over halfway through the NQTP, which saw its second five-year phase kick off at the end of 2019, and at the same timehit an impressive milestone of 1 billion ($1.37 billion) combined investment. This, the government claims, is letting the UK keep pace with competitors who are also taking interest in quantum namely, the US and China.

There is no doubt that the country has made strides in the field of quantum since the start of the NQTP. New ground-breaking research papers are popping up on a regular basis, and so are news reports of rounds of funding from promising quantum startups.

But with still just under half of the national quantum program to carry out, and despite the huge sums already invested, the UK is now facing a bigger challenge yet: after having chased a top spot in the quantum race, retaining the country's status in the face of ferocious competition is going to require some serious stepping up.

Clearly playing in favor of the UK is the country's early involvement in the field. The NQTP was announced as early as 2013, and started operating in 2014, with an initial 270 million ($370 million) budget. The vision laid out in the program includes creating a "quantum-enabled economy", in which the technology would significantly contribute to the UK's economy and attract both strong investment and global talent.

"The national program was one of the first to kick off," Andrew Fearnside, senior associate specializing in quantum technologies at intellectual property firm Mewburn Ellis, tells ZDNet. "There are increasingly more national programs emerging in other countries, but they are a good few years behind us. The fact that there has been this sustained and productive long-term government initiative is definitely attractive."

The EU's Quantum Technologies Flagship, in effect,only launched in 2018; some countries within the bloc,like France, started their own quantum roadmaps on top of the European initiative even later. Similarly, the National Quantum Initiative Act wassigned into law by the Trump administration but that was also in 2018, years into the UK's national quantum technology program.

Since it launched in 2014, there has been abundant evidence of the academic successes of the initial phase of the NQTP. In Birmingham, the Quantum Sensing Hub is developing new types of quantum-based magnetic sensors that could help diagnose brain and heart conditions, while the Quantum Metrology Institute leads the development of quantum atomic clocks. There are up to 160 research groups and universities registered across the UK withprograms that are linked to quantum technologies, working on projects ranging from the design of quantum algorithms to the creation of new standards and verification methods.

A much harder challenge, however, is to transform this strong scientific foundation into business value and as soon as the UK government announced the second phase of the NQTP at the end of 2019,a clear messageemerged: quantum technology needed to come out of the lab, thanks to increased private sector investment that would accelerate commercialization.

Some key initiatives followed. A national quantum computing center was established for academics to work alongside commercial partners such as financial services company Standard Chartered, "possibly with an eye on financial optimization problems," notes Fearnside, given the business'established interest in leveraging quantum technologies. A 10 million ($13 million) "Discovery" program alsolaunched a few months ago, bringing together five quantum computing companies, three universities and the UK's national physical laboratory all for the purpose of making quantum work for businesses.

The government's efforts have been, to an extent, rewarded. The quantum startup ecosystem is thriving in the UK, with companies like Riverlane or Cambridge Quantum Computing completing strong rounds of private financing. In total, up to 204 quantum-related businesses have been listed so far in the country.

But despite these encouraging results, the UK is still faced with a big problem. Bringing university-born innovation to the real worldhas always been a national challenge, and quantum is no exception. A 2018 report from the Science and Technology committee, in fact,gave an early warning of the stumbling blocksthat the NQTP might run into, and stressed the need for improved awareness across industry of the potential of quantum technologies.

The committee urged the government to start conveying the near-term benefits that quantum could provide to businesses something that according to the report, CEOs and company chairs in North America worryingly seem to realize a whole lot better.

It's been three years since the report was published, and things haven't changed much. Speaking at the same forum as the NQTP's Peter Knight, Ian West, a partner at consultancy firm KPMG, said that there remained a huge barrier to the widespread take-up of quantum technologies in the UK. "Some of our clients feel they don't understand the technology, or feel it's one for the academics only," he argued.

"We need that demand from businesses who will be the ultimate users of quantum technologies, to encourage more investment," West added. "We need to do much more to explain the near-term and medium-term use cases for business applications of quantum technologies."

SEE: BMW explores quantum computing to boost supply chain efficiencies

Without sufficient understanding of the technology, funding problems inevitably come. The difficulty of securing private money for quantum stands in stark contrast to the situation across the Atlantic, where investors have historically done a better job of spotting and growing successful technology companies. Add the deep pockets of tech giants such as Google, IBM or Microsoft, which are all pouring money into quantum research, and it is easy to see why North America might have better prospects when it comes to winning the quantum game.

In the worst of cases, this has led to US technology hubs hoovering up some of the best quantum brains in the UK. In 2019, for example, PsiQ, a promising startup that was founded at the University of Bristol with the objective of producing a commercial quantum computer, re-located to Silicon Valley. The movewas reported to be partly motivated by a lack of access to capital in Europe. It was a smart decision: according to the company's latest update, PsiQ hasnow raised $215 million (156 million) in VC funding.

Pointing to the example of PsiQ, Simon King, partner and deep tech investor at VC firm Octopus Ventures, explains that to compete against the US, the UK needs to up its game when it comes to assessing the startups that show promise, and making sure that they are injected with adequate cash.

"The US remains the biggest competitor, with a big concentration of universities and academics and the pedigree and culture of commercializing university research," King tells ZDNet. "Things are definitely moving in the right direction, but the UK and Europe still lag behind the US, where there is a deeper pool of capital and there are more investors willing to invest in game-changing, but long-term technology like quantum."

US-based private investors are only likely to increase funding for the quantum ecosystem in the coming years, and significant amounts of public money will be backing the technology too. The National Quantum Initiative Act that was signed in 2018 came with $1.2 billion (870 million) to be invested in quantum information science over the next five years; as more quantum companies flourish, the budget can be expected to expand even further.

Competition will be coming from other parts of the world as well. In addition to the European Commission's 1 billion ($1.20 billion) quantum flagship, EU countries are also spending liberally on the technology. Germany, in particular, has launched a 2 billion ($2.4 billion) funding program for the promotion of quantum technologies in the country, surpassing by far many of its competitors; but France, the Netherlands, and Switzerland are all increasingly trying to establish themselves as hubs for quantum startups and researchers.

SEE: Less is more: IBM achieves quantum computing simulation for new materials with fewer qubits

Little data is available to measure the scope of the commercialization of quantum technology in China, but the country has made no secret of its desire to secure a spot in the quantum race, too. The Chinese government has ramped up its spending on research and development, and the impact of that investment has already shown in the countryachieving some significant scientific breakthroughs in the field.

In the midst of this ever-more competitive landscape, whether the UK can effectively distinguish itself as the "go-to place" for quantum technologies remains to be seen. One thing is for certain: the country has laid some very strong groundwork to compete. "The UK has some genuinely world-class universities with some really brilliant academics, so while the objective is certainly ambitious, it's not out of the question," argues King.

But even top-notch researchers and some of the most exciting quantum startups might not cut it. The UK has positioned itself well from an early stage in the quantum race, but becoming a frontrunner was only one part of the job. Preserving the country's position for the coming years might prove to be the hardest challenge yet.

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The global quantum computing race has begun. What will it take to win it? - ZDNet

Quantum Computers May Steal Bitcoin by Deriving Private Keys once Advanced Enough in 5-30 Years, Experts Claim – Crowdfund Insider

John Smith, who has been regularly keeping up with computer science, quantum computing, and cryptocurrency-related developments, claims that the future of crypto is quantum-resistant, meaning we must build systems that can protect themselves against the potential attack from quantum computers (QCs) when they become powerful enough to present a challenge to digital asset networks.

While discussing what the future threat to Bitcoin (BTC) from Quantum Computing might be, and how big of a deal it really is, Smith claims that the threat is that quantum computers will eventually be able to break Bitcoins current digital signatures, which could render the network insecure and cause it to lose value.

He goes on to question why there isnt already a solution as trivial as simply upgrading the signatures? He explains that this might not be possible due to the decentralized nature of Bitcoin and other large crypto-asset networks such as Ethereum (ETH).

While discussing how long until someone actually develops a quantum computer that can steal BTC by quickly deriving private keys from their associated public keys, Smith reveals that serious estimates range somewhere from 5 to over 30 years, with the median expert opinion being around 15 years.

Smooth added:

Banks/govts/etc. will soon upgrade to quantum-resistant cryptography to secure themselves going forward. Bitcoin, however, with large financial incentives for attacking it and no central authority that can upgrade *for* users, faces a unique set of challenges.

Going on to mention the main challenges, Smith notes that we can separate vulnerable BTC into three classes, including lost coins (which are estimated to be several million), non-lost coins residing in reused/taproot/otherwise-vulnerable addresses, and coins in the mempool (i.e., being transacted).

Beginning with lost coins, why are they even an issue? Because its possible to steal a huge number all at once and then selling them in mass quantities which could tank the entire crypto market. He added that if that seems imminent, the market could preemptively tank. He also mentioned that an attacker may profit greatly by provoking either of the above and shorting BTC.

While proposing potential solutions, Smith suggests preemptively burning lost coins via soft fork (or backwards compatible upgrade). He clarifies that just how well this works will depend on:

He further noted:

Another potential way around the problem of millions of lost BTC is if a benevolent party were to steal & then altruistically burn them. Not clear how realistic this is, given the financial incentives involved & who the parties likely to have this capability would be.

He added:

Moving on why are non-lost coins with vulnerable public keys an issue? This is self-evident. The primary threat to the wealth of BTC holders is their BTC being stolen. And as with lost coins, a related threat is that the market starts to fear such an attack is possible.

He also mentioned that another solution could be that Bitcoin adds a quantum-resistant signature and holders proactively migrate. He points out that how well this all works will depend on:

While discussing the vulnerability of coins in the mempool, Smith mentioned that it could complicate migration to quantum-resistant addresses *after* large QCs are built or it could greatly magnify the threat posed by an unanticipated black swan advance in QC.

While proposing other solutions, Smith noted:

A commit-reveal tx scheme can be used to migrate coins without mempool security. This gets around the vulnerability of a users old public key by adding an extra encryption/decryption step based on their new quantum-resistant key but w/ crucial limitations.

He added:

Considerations w/ commit-reveal migration [are that] its not foolproof unless a user starts with their coins stored in a non-vulnerable address, because attackers can steal any vulnerable coins simply by beating the original owner to the punch.

Considerations with commit-reveal migration are also that commit transactions introduce technical hurdles (vs. regular txs) & increase the load on the network. Neither of these are insurmountable by any means, but they suggest that this method should not be relied upon too heavily, Smith claims.

He also noted that how well the commit-reveal transaction type works will depend on:

He added:

One potential way around the network overhead & just plain hassle of commit-reveal migration would be if a highly efficient quantum-resistant zero-knowledge proof were discovered. Current QR ZK algorithms are far too large to use in Bitcoin, but that could change. Worth noting.

While sharing other potential solutions, Smith noted that theres the tank the attack & rebuild.

He pointed out that Bitcoins network effects are massive, so it is challenging to accurately estimate or predict what the crypto ecosystem will look like in the future, but the potential economic disruption of BTC failing may incentivize extraordinary measures to save the network.

He added:

Bitcoins ability to tank a quantum-computing-related market crash will depend on [whether theres] another chain capable of replacing BTC as the main crypto store of value [and whether] BTC [can] avoid a mining death spiral? Also, how far will stakeholders go to ensure the network survives & rebounds?

Smith also mentioned that for people or institutions holding Bitcoin, some good measures may be purchasing insurance, and/or hedging BTC exposure with an asset that would be expected to increase in value in the case of an attack.

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Quantum Computers May Steal Bitcoin by Deriving Private Keys once Advanced Enough in 5-30 Years, Experts Claim - Crowdfund Insider

Quantum venture funding dipped 12% in 2020, but quantum investments rose 46% – VentureBeat

Sorting through the hype surrounding quantum computing these days isnt easy for enterprises trying to figure out the right time to jump in. Skeptics say any real impact is still years away, and yet quantum startups continue to seduce venture capitalists in search of the next big thing.

A new report from CB Insights may not resolve this debate, but it does add some interesting nuance. While the number of venture capital deals for quantum computing startups rose 46% to 37 in 2020 compared to 2019, the total amount raised in this sector fell 12% to $365 million.

Looking at just the number of deals, the annual tally has ticked up steadily from just 6 deals in 2015. As for the funding total, while it was down from $417 million in 2019, it remains well above the $73 million raised in 2015.

Theres a couple of conclusions to draw from this.

First, the number of startups being drawn into this space is clearly rising. As research has advanced, more entrepreneurs with the right technical chops feel the time is now to start building their startup.

Second, the average deal size for 2020 was just under $10 million. And if you include the $46 million IQM raised, that squeezes the average for most other deals down even further. That certainly demonstrates optimism, but its far from the kind of financial gusher or valuations that would indicate any kind of quantum bubble.

Finally, its important to remember that startups are likely a tiny slice of whats happening in quantum these days. A leading indicator? Perhaps.But a large part of the agenda is still being driven by tech giants who have massive resources to invest in a technology that may have a long horizon and could be years away from generating sufficient revenues. That includes Intel, IBM, Google, Microsoft, and Amazon.

Indeed, Amazon just rolled out a new blog dedicated to quantum computing.Last year, Amazon Web Services launched Amazon Braket, a product that lets enterprises start experimenting with quantum computing. Even so, AWS quantum computing director Simone Severini wrote in the inaugural blog post that business customers are still scratching their heads over the whole phenomenon.

We heard a recurring question, When will quantum computing reach its true potential? My answer was, I dont know.' she wrote. No one does. Its a difficult question because there are still fundamental scientific and engineering problems to be solved. The uncertainty makes this area so fascinating, but it also makes it difficult to plan. For some customers, thats a real issue. They want to know if and when they should focus on quantum computing, but struggle to get the facts, to discern the signal from all the noises.

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Quantum venture funding dipped 12% in 2020, but quantum investments rose 46% - VentureBeat

The Quantum Computing market is expected to grow from USD 472 million in 2021 to USD 1,765 million by 2026, at a CAGR of 30.2% – Yahoo Finance

The early adoption of quantum computing in the banking and finance sector is expected to fuel the growth of the market globally. Other key factors contributing to the growth of the quantum computing market include rising investments by governments of different countries to carry out research and development activities related to quantum computing technology.

New York, Feb. 10, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Quantum Computing Market with COVID-19 impact by Offering, Deployment, Application, Technology, End-use Industry and Region - Global Forecast to 2026" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p05064748/?utm_source=GNW Several companies are focusing on the adoption of QCaaS post-COVID-19. This, in turn, is expected to contribute to the growth of the quantum computing market. However, stability and error correction issues is expected to restrain the growth of the market.

Services segment is attributed to hold the largest share of the Quantum Computing marketThe growth of services segment can be attributed to the increasing number of startups across the world that are investing in research and development activities related to quantum computing technology. This technology is used in optimization, simulation, and machine learning applications, thereby leading to optimum utilization costs and highly efficient operations in various end-use industries.

Cloud based deployment to witness the highest growth in Quantum Computing market in coming yearsWith the development of highly powerful systems, the demand for cloud-based deployment of quantum computing systems and services is expected to increase.This, in turn, is expected to result in a significant revenue source for service providers, with users paying for access to noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) systems that can solve real-world problems.

The limited lifespan of rapidly advancing quantum computing systems also favors cloud service providers.The flexibility of access offered to users is another factor fueling the adoption of cloud-based deployment of quantum computing systems and services.

For the foreseeable future, quantum computers are expected not to be portable. Cloud can provide users with access to different devices and simulators from their laptops.

Optimization accounted for a major share of the overall Quantum Computing marketOptimization is the largest application for quantum computing and accounted for a major share of the overall Quantum Computing market.Companies such as D-Wave Systems, Cambridge Quantum Computing, QC Ware, and 1QB Information Technologies are developing quantum computing systems for optimization applications.

Networked Quantum Information Technologies Hub (NQIT) is expanding to incorporate optimization solutions for resolving problems faced by the practical applications of quantum computing technology.

Trapped ions segment to witness highest CAGR of Quantum Computing market during the forecast periodThe trapped ions segment of the market is projected to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period as quantum computing systems based on trapped ions offer more stability and better connectivity than quantum computing systems based on other technologies. IonQ, Alpine Quantum Technologies, and Honeywell are a few companies that use trapped ions technology in their quantum computing systems.

Banking and finance is attributed to hold major share of Quantum Computing market during the forecast periodIn the banking and finance end-use industry, quantum computing is used for risk modeling and trading applications.It is also used to detect the market instabilities by identifying stock market risks and optimize the trading trajectories, portfolios, and asset pricing and hedging.

As the financial sector is difficult to understand; the quantum computing approach is expected to help users understand the complexities of the banking and finance end-use industry. Moreover, it can help traders by suggesting them solutions to overcome financial challenges.

APAC to witness highest growth of Quantum Computing market during the forecast periodAPAC region is a leading hub for several industries, including healthcare and pharmaceuticals, banking and finance, and chemicals.Countries such as China, Japan, and South Korea are the leading manufacturers of consumer electronics, including smartphones, laptops, and gaming consoles, in APAC.

There is a requirement to resolve complications in optimization, simulation, and machine learning applications across these industries.The large-scale development witnessed by emerging economies of APAC and the increased use of advanced technologies in the manufacturing sector are contributing to the development of large and medium enterprises in the region.

This, in turn, is fueling the demand for quantum computing services and systems in APAC.In APAC, the investments look promising, as most countries such as China, Japan, and South Korea have successfully contained the virus compared with the US and European countries.China is easing the restrictions placed on factory lockdowns and worker movement.

Despite being the epicenter of COVID-19, China has maintained its dominant position as a global network leader.

The break-up of primary participants for the report has been shown below: By Company Type: Tier 1 - 18%, Tier 2 - 22%, and Tier 3 - 60% By Designation: C-level Executives - 21%, Manager Level - 35%, and Others - 44% By Region: North America - 45%, Europe - 38%, APAC - 12%, and RoW - 5%

The Quantum Computing market was dominated by International Business Machines (US), D-Wave Systems (Canada), Microsoft (US), Amazon (US), and Rigetti Computing (US).

Research Coverage:This research report categorizes the Quantum Computing based on offering, deployment, application, technology, end-use industry and region. The report describes the major drivers, restraints, challenges, and opportunities pertaining to the Quantum Computing market and forecasts the same till 2026.

Key Benefits of Buying the Report

The report would help leaders/new entrants in this market in the following ways:1. This report segments the Quantum Computing market comprehensively and provides the closest market size projection for all subsegments across different regions.2. The report helps stakeholders understand the pulse of the market and provides them with information on key drivers, restraints, challenges, and opportunities for market growth.3. This report would help stakeholders understand their competitors better and gain more insights to improve their position in the business. The competitive landscape section includes product launches and developments, partnerships, and collaborations.4. This report would help understand the pre and post-COVID-19 scenarios as to how would the penetration of quantum computing will look like for the forecast period. The region segment includes the country wise impact analysis of COVID-19 and initiatives taken to overcome these impacts.

Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05064748/?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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The Quantum Computing market is expected to grow from USD 472 million in 2021 to USD 1,765 million by 2026, at a CAGR of 30.2% - Yahoo Finance

Danna Freedman to Discuss Applications of Quantum Technology at AAAS Annual Meeting, Feb. 8-11 – HPCwire

Feb. 9, 2021 Northwestern Universitys Danna Freedman will share novel insights on quantum chemistrys ability to unlock access to molecules and open new fields of study at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) annual meeting.

Freedman is a founding member of Q-NEXT, a transformative 100-person cross-institutional Department of Energy National Quantum Information Science Research Center at the Argonne National Laboratory.

Freedmans research approaches quantum systems from the bottom up rather than building quantum bits from the same components as everyday electronics will enable the creation of next-generation quantum technology.

Molecular chemistry enables a new paradigm for creating quantum information systems from the ground up, Freedman said. Molecules enable the construction of complex architectures by conferring structural precision and reproducibility.

Freedman will discuss this work in her presentation Molecular Quantum Information Technology: A New Way to Access Quantum Computers during a group scientific session called Designer Molecules: Understanding and Utilizing Their Quantum Nature.

Participants can register for the virtual 2021 AAAS Annual Meeting, which will take place Feb. 8 to 11, here.

Freedman, a professor of chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences at Northwestern, applies synthetic inorganic chemistry to overcome fundamental obstacles in physics and energy research.

Molecules are critical to our understanding of some of sciences most fundamental questions such as the Big Bang, star formation and access to quantum computing techniques. However, researchers have long considered molecules as too complex to study effectively.

Freedmans research challenges this assumption and paves the way for new understandings of molecules in ways that previously seemed impossible. Her cross-disciplinary team chemically synthesizes molecules that encode quantum information into their magnetic, or spin, states.

Source: NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY

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Danna Freedman to Discuss Applications of Quantum Technology at AAAS Annual Meeting, Feb. 8-11 - HPCwire