Explained: Who is John Lee, Hong Kongs new Chief Executive? – The Indian Express

John Lee was on Sunday (May 8) elected the leader of Hong Kong after winning an election held through a closed voting system. Lee, who was the only candidate running for the position, replaced Carrie Lam who had held the post since 2017.

Many criticised Lees appointment as the new Chief Executive, stating it was a move by China to increase its influence over Hong Kong.

The 2022 Hong Kong election was held a year after the citys electoral system was reformed. The new rules paved the way for Chinas ruling Communist Party to appoint more lawmakers to the election committee, reducing the share elected by the public and eliminating opposition voices. It also increased the number of members of the committee from 300 to 1,500.

So, in Sundays election, held through a secret ballot, the 1,500 members who voted were largely pro-Beijing supporters. The central government brought this voting system to ensure only patriots held the position of the chief executive.

The only difference in this election was that there was only one candidate John Lee. He garnered more than 99 per cent of the votes, the highest obtained by anyone so far.

On winning, Lee said, It is my duty to let people understand what I can do for them. But I do understand there will be a time that is needed for me to convince the people, but I can do that by action so that when they see results, they somehow will know he is trying his best. By accumulating successes then I can get them (to) be convinced that what I am trying to do is for the best of Hong Kong.

Lee will be sworn in on July 1, 2022, which is also the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong being returned to China by the British.

Lee, 64, has long been known as a pro-Beijing supporter. He has been a law enforcement agent since 1977, when he joined the police force at the age of 20. He rose to the position of Deputy Commissioner the second-most prominent position in the Hong Kong Police Force in 2010. He was then appointed Under Secretary of Security in 2012, after which he was promoted to Secretary of Security in 2017.

It was as Secretary of Security that Lee played a significant role in advocating the 2019 Extradition Bill that allowed for fugitives to be extradited to China, as well as Taiwan and Macau. The bill sparked months of protests in Hong Kong, during which the police under Lee were criticised for using water cannons, tear gas and ammunition.

Lee had defended the police action, claiming protestors resorted to terrorism and extremism.

In 2020, Lee backed the controversial National Security Law passed by China and instantly made it a part of Hong Kongs legal system. The law listed secession, subversion, terrorist activities, and collusion with a foreign country or with external elements to endanger national security, as offences. This law, too, led to months-long protests that turned violent.

As a member of the committee which looks over matters related to the national security law, Lee played an important role in its implementation. Due to this, he was subjected to sanctions by the United States and was even blocked by YouTube in 2022 for his election campaign. He believed the law would help Hong Kong restore stability from chaos.

In fact, on the day of the election result, Lee said, Having restored order from chaos, it is high time that Hong Kong starts a new chapter of development, a chapter that will be geared toward greater prosperity for all.

A survey conducted in Hong Kong in March showed Lees popularity has dipped to 34.8 per cent in 2022 from 38 per cent in 2021.

Lee has made it clear he will ensure much closer ties between Hong Kong and China. Even while launching his election manifesto in April, Lee said it was important that Hong Kong works closely with economically-significant Chinese cities.

Lee supports many controversial bills that have been long pending because of widespread protests. These bills are expected to be back in talks to be passed.

He has openly talked about bringing a law against fake news. Many journalists and news organisations are against this as they believe it will make it extremely difficult for independent and small media organisations to operate.

Further, Lees appointment comes at a time when the city has been subject to one of the worlds worst pandemic restrictions, impacting its economy and leading to a rise in unemployment.

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Lees appointment has been condemned by the European Union. In a statement, the bloc said, The EU calls on Chinese and Hong Kong authorities to abide by their national and international commitments, notably the ultimate aim of electing the Chief Executive and members of the Legislative Council by universal suffrage.

The European Union regrets this violation of democratic principles and political pluralism and sees this selection process as yet another step in the dismantling of the one country, two systems principle, it added.

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Explained: Who is John Lee, Hong Kongs new Chief Executive? - The Indian Express

Pakistan: Probe Initiated Against Journalist Sami Ibrahim for ‘Fake News On State Institutions’ – News18

Pakistans Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) on Sunday initiated an inquiry against journalist Sami Ibrahim for allegedly spreading fake news regarding state institutions.

The FIA, in a press statement, said that Ibrahim who works with BOL News has made imputations which are glaring attempts to incite armed forces personnel to mutiny. He has attempted to create chaos in Pakistan through media while staying abroad, it further stated. The agency also said that since the journalist is abroad a red notice would be issued against him through Interpol and his name would be listed on Exit Control List (ECL).

The FIA notice sent to Ibrahim alleged that he has tried to build a narrative with ill intent to cause intimidation, fear, panic, insecurity, and unrest between government officials/personnel of armed forces and general public.

Sources told News18 that the inquiry against Ibrahim may be the beginning of the case Pakistan is building against former PM Imran Khan. Ibrahim has interviewed several high-profile public figures, including Khan who was ousted in April following a no-confidence vote passed against his government in the National Assembly.

The FIA also stated that Ibrahim would be given an opportunity to defend himself in the case. An FIR would be filed if an offence is made out against the journalist, following which he would be arrested and prosecuted.

The inquiry was launched under Section 20 of the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (Peca) 2016, read with Section 505 of the PPC.

Meanwhile, reacting to the FIA notice, Ibrahim tweeted that necessary legal action will be taken after he returns on May 14.

The government has filed a case against me. I have also attached a copy of the government notice. I have discussed this matter with my lawyer Raja Amir Abbas who has told FIA that I am out of the country now. Necessary legal action will be taken after my return on 14th May, he wrote.

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Pakistan: Probe Initiated Against Journalist Sami Ibrahim for 'Fake News On State Institutions' - News18

NSA, Cyber Command tap new election security leaders – The Record by Recorded Future

NASHVILLE U.S. Cyber Command and the National Security Agency have named the newest leaders of a joint election security task force that will play a central role in keeping the 2022 midterm elections free of foreign interference.

The task force, originally dubbed the Russia Small Group, was established in 2018 by Army Gen. Paul Nakasone, who helms both Cyber Command and the NSA, to protect the 2018 midterms from meddling by Moscow.

It was rechristened the Election Security Group (ESG) ahead of the 2020 presidential election, and its mandate was tweaked to include threats from countries including China, North Korea, and Iran, as well as non-state actors.

The band is already back together, Nakasone said Wednesday at Vanderbilt Universitys Summit on Modern Conflict and Emerging Threats, noting the groups scope had been changed because we have broader issues than just one nation.

Were less than 200 days before our nation goes to vote for our midterm elections, Nakasone added. And I assure you that we are ready, we will be ready, going forward.

The latest incarnation of the team, which began work in late 2021, is headed by NSA Senior Executive Anna Horrigan and Brig. Gen. Victor Macias, the deputy chief of the Cyber National Mission Force (CNMF), an ESG spokesperson told The Record.

The groups ultimate goal is to detect, defend against, deter, and disrupt foreign interference and foreign malign influence to ensure safe and secure the upcoming election, the spokesperson added.

In the past, the group has served as a farm team for top national security officials in the federal government.

In 2018, for example, the team was led by Anne Neuberger and then-Maj. Gen. Timothy Haugh of the Air Force. Nakasone selected Neuberger to be the first chief of the NSAs Cyber Directorate; she is currently President Joe Bidens deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technology. Haugh went on to receive his third star and command the Sixteenth Air Force (Air Forces Cyber), and last week he was nominated to be Nakasones new deputy.

Maj. Gen. William Hartman, who took over the CNMF after Haugh and served as Cyber Commands co-lead in 2020, said Russia continues to engage in election-related influence operations.

The Russians have remained motivated to attempt to execute influence operations, he told reporters during a roundtable discussion at the Vanderbilt summit.

He predicted Moscows influence efforts would increase due to the Kremlins invasion of Ukraine, because there will be a fair amount of domestically generated information that the Russians will freely amplify.

Hartman said the upcoming midterms also would differ from 2020 because its not a presidential election year. A U.S. intelligence community examination found that Russia tried again that year to help former President Donald Trump win the White House.

Its not that foreign adversaries wont attempt to potentially influence or interfere with the congressional election. But it was easier in 2020 because there were clear signals of nation-states, Hartman explained, adding that China has the capacity to become more aggressive from an influence standpoint.(Last month Nakasone testified that he had created another joint team, dubbed the China Outcomes Group, under Cyber Command and NSA leadership to ensure proper focus, resourcing, planning, and operations to meet this challenge.)

Hartman said officials have already noticed that the Internet Research Agency an entity notorious for trying to sow discord among Americans that Cyber Command knocked offline in the days around the 2018 midterms is active in different places right now.

Moscow aims to create doubt in our democratic process. Ultimately, thats what I think the Russians will be focused on, Hartman told reporters.

He stressed there were no indications in 2020, or during the current election cycle, that Russia launched a digital strike directly at the countrys voting systems.

I do expect that the U.S. would consider that some type of red line, Hartman said.

Martin is a senior cybersecurity reporter for The Record. He spent the last five years at Politico, where he covered Congress, the Pentagon and the U.S. intelligence community and was a driving force behind the publication's cybersecurity newsletter.

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This TikTok User Who Finds the Games Playing in TV Shows Needs to Be Working for the NSA – Barstool Sports

I've seen this man come up on my TikTok feed a handful of times now and how he isn't already solving cyber crimes for the government is beyond me. He can find anything.

I've seen plenty of his videos that were very impressive, but nothing like the one above. This man really found a 1992 Louisville Redbirds-Buffalo Bisons game from one blurry shot of a mound meeting. There's no telling how many minor league teams he had to go through to even find the Louisville Redbirds, who have rebranded twice since they were known by that nickname.

If he doesn't get scooped up by the CIA or NSA, I'd bet this guy could make a pretty penny doing some investigative work for girlfriends around the county. If your man has made even the slightest inkling of a fuck-up, @noproblemgambler will find out in no time.

I'm going to watch these videos for the rest of the day. I am mesmerized.

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Graduation Week 2022: Cybersecurity grad prepares to protect the world – Jagwire Augusta

During her senior year at Grovetown High School, Lauren Wheeler made a decision that changed her life. She received an internship with the National Security Agency at Fort Gordon that opened her mind to a future career in cybersecurity.

My dad worked at Fort Gordon, so I was born and raised here, Wheeler said. And I always liked computers, but initially I thought I was more artsy. So, back in high school, I was interested in graphic design and worked on the yearbook staff. But then my dad said, Well, you know, theres an internship that the NSA offers.

Wheeler didnt know much about the internship, but there were two aspects of the program that appealed to her.

First, I thought, I can get out of school with this internship, Wheeler said, laughing. And then, I thought, It will also look good on my resume. So, I applied and received the NSA internship. That decision put me on my career path in cybersecurity, instead of graphic design.

Wheeler, now 22, is graduating from Augusta University with a bachelors degree in cybersecurity and was recently named the 2022 Top Cybersecurity Student for the School of Computer and Cyber Sciences at AU.

While attending Augusta University, Wheeler has also been working full-time for almost four years as an access control specialist, contracting for the Department of Defense. In that role, she monitors closed-circuit television systems and intrusion detection systems and maintains a top secret/sensitive compartmented information clearance. In addition, Wheeler was also awarded the Department of Defense Cyber Scholarship during her senior year at Augusta University.

With my dad working at Fort Gordon, I already grew up with security stuff in the house, so I was familiar with that part of cyber. And my internship in high school made me want to go to Augusta University because a few of the cyber professors come from the NSA, Wheeler said. So, even when I was in high school, I thought, Cyber would be a good choice. Then, when I got to AU, I knew it was the right choice.

With her cybersecurity degree, Wheeler says her career opportunities are endless and she is proud to say she already has a job waiting for her the minute she walks across the stage and receives her diploma.

A few weeks right after graduation, Ill start my job with Army Cyber at Fort Gordon, Wheeler said. Its exciting because, of course, youll hear some people talk about how, with their degree, its hard to find a job. Well, thats not the case with cyber.

She loves the fact that her cybersecurity degree will allow her to either stay in Augusta, which has become an international cybersecurity hub, or travel around the world.

I know I want to stay within the government, but I also want to travel, so once this year is done, maybe I will start looking toward other locations, Wheeler said. For example, I have family up in Washington state and I think that would be a fun place to live. My parents also just moved to Hawaii. Personally, I think it would be cool to live in another country, which the government offers tons of opportunities for jobs overseas, so Im excited about the possibilities.

One of the main aspects of cybersecurity Wheeler finds most appealing is the empowerment that she now has over computer hackers, she said.

I like the idea that I can protect myself, Wheeler said. Cybersecurity lets me be able to know what strategies I need and gives me the knowledge to protect myself. But I also have the ability to pass that knowledge on to others.

Both in high school and college, Wheeler gave speeches and presentations about the importance of cybersecurity and she was pleased with the response she received from audience members.

People were really receptive to what I was telling them because I was showing them how some social media posts and oversharing certain aspects of your life can be cyber risks, Wheeler said. For example, if youre sharing that you are on vacation, youre basically telling people youre not at home. Or, like those Instagram challenges where they ask, What do you prefer? Or, Do you like this? With those kinds of challenges, youre basically telling people the answers to your security questions. Those are the little things that people dont think about.

Another aspect of cybersecurity that Wheeler enjoys is programming, she said.

I always thought being a code hacker sounded cool, like Mr. Robot, Wheeler said, referring to the former USA Network show that featured a cybersecurity engineer who is recruited to join a group of hacktivists that aims to destroy all debt records by encrypting the financial data of one of the largest companies in the world. I thought that programming would be cool and it would be awesome to be a girl doing it, too. There arent a lot of girls in this field.

In fact, one of her favorite courses that she took at Augusta University was a class about programming taught by Steven Weldon, director of the Cyber Institute.

I just knew programming would be exciting and Steven Weldon broke it down where it was a lot of fun, Wheeler said. He made it engaging, which not all people can do, and the two hours in the lab would just fly by.

I also liked Dr. Jason Williams classes because he stimulates a lot of conversation in the classroom, she added. That was nice because sometimes with this major and if you are a student like me who doesnt live on campus we dont get to talk to a lot of the other students. But, in his class, he encourages discussions and that helps you get to know your peers. And now I really know the people who Im graduating with this spring.

After four years at Augusta University, Wheeler cant believe she will receive her diploma this week.

Everything just went by so fast. Its crazy to me that its already time to graduate. My brain is still on 2020 sometimes, Wheeler said, laughing. But my parents are super proud, especially my dad. When I decided to go into cybersecurity, I almost didnt want to tell him. I didnt want people to think, Oh, she went into cybersecurity because her dad is in computer science. I just like to figure things out myself.

But Im so glad that I went into cybersecurity and my parents are thrilled with my decision and cant wait for me to graduate.

Augusta Universitys Spring 2022 Commencement ceremonies will be held Thursday, May 12 and Friday, May 13. Thursdays ceremony will honor graduate students, and Fridays ceremonies will honor undergraduate students. Watch the events via livestream.

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Amazon Is Busting Unions. Biden Is Giving Them Huge Federal Contracts Anyway. – Jacobin magazine

The Biden administration has reawarded a massive $10 billion federal contract to Amazon, even as the president is facing mounting pressure to fulfill his promise to halt such contracts to companies that refuse to remain neutral in union elections. The contract decision came as Amazon responded to its workers first successful union drive by busting the organizing drive that followed.

At issue is Joe Bidens 2020 promise to ensure federal contracts only go to employers who sign neutrality agreements committing not to run anti-union campaigns.

Amid revelations of Amazonsaggressiveefforts to shut down a union drive among its workers, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) last month sent a letter to Biden asking him to fulfill that promise . . . to make sure that federal dollars do not flow into the hands of unscrupulous employers who engage in union-busting, participate in wage theft, or violate labor law.

A day later,Nextgovreported that Bidens National Security Agency (NSA) ratified a $10 billion cloud computing contract for Amazon, which hired the brother of Bidens top aide as a lobbyistdays after the 2020 presidential election. The contract for the companys web services division is code-named Wild and Stormy, and is distinct from another massive Pentagon cloudcontracton which Amazon is also currently bidding.

A few days after Amazonreceived the NSA contract, the Amazon Labor Union lost its second union election bid by a two to one margin at another Staten Island warehouse, after Amazon mounted a furious campaignto halt the organizing drive.

In effect, while Amazon was doubling down on its union busting, the Biden administration was delivering a massive federal contract to the company, signaling to Amazon executives that he is so far not interested in fulfilling his pledge to use the governments purchasing power to be the most pro-union president.

Meanwhile in Congress, lawmakers are advancinglegislationthat could give Amazon new tax breaks and give $10 billion to company founder Jeff Bezoss space company. Most Democratic senators also voted Wednesday toreject a measure from Sanders demanding that tech companies that receive government subsidies remain neutral in union elections.

Amazon first received the NSA contract from the Biden administrationlast summer, months after Biden pledged to make such deals contingent on union neutrality. But the contract was soon challenged by Microsoft, which allegedthat its own competing proposal had not been properly evaluated.

In the interim, Biden could have signed an executive order to rescind such contracts for employers that do not remain neutral in union elections but he has declined to do so.

Now, his administration has gone a step further, ratifying the lucrative contract even as Amazon has been making international headlines trying to stop union drives at the company, as well as fieldingallegationsthat it has been violating labor law in the process.

The details of Amazons contract and the dispute will remain classified, due to anexemptionin public records laws for national security.

Bidens contract pledge underscored how much power federal, state, and local governments have in creating fair conditions for union elections. Major corporations rely on those governments for contracts and subsidies, giving public officials the power to make that money contingent on companies treating workers fairly.

The Amazon Web Services deal is a case in point. That division, which oversees its government contracting, fuels the companys overall profits. Indeed, the companyreceived double the amount of operating income from the division $18.53 billion of the rest of its sprawling North American operations. If Biden and state governments predicate their contracts on Amazon remaining neutral in union elections, it would force the company to choose between union busting and massive profits.

That was the core of Bidens 2020 campaign pledge.

Today, I am renewing my request to President Biden to fulfill that promise, Sanders said Thursday at aSenate hearing. In my view, however, the time for talk is over. The time for action is now. Taxpayer dollars should not go to companies like Amazon who repeatedly break the law. No government not the federal government, not the state government, and not the city government should be handing out corporate welfare to union busters and labor law violators.

Also on Thursday, Amazon Labor Union president, Chris Smalls, reportedthat during a White House visit, Biden had told him that Smalls had gotten [Biden] in trouble.

Biden was likely referring to his statement in April to a union group where he said Amazon, here we come a statement that Press Secretary Jen Psakiwalkedback almost immediately.

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Modi@20: Balakot blew away the myth of Pakistans nuclear blackmail, writes NSA Ajit Doval – The Tribune India

Tribune News Service

Sandeep Dikshit

NEW DELHI, MAY 11

One of the Prime Minster Narendra Modis greatest successes was in handling cross-border terrorism and the finesse with which the Balakot aerial strike was conceived and implemented which blew away the myth of Pakistans nuclear blackmail, writes National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, who was in the operational cockpit during both the surgical land strikes of 2016 and the Balakot aerial strikes 2019.

Doval went on to warn that while the first two counter strikes were land-based and aerial, tomorrow, it may be different from both if the adversary again causes disproportionate casualties. Domain and level will not be inhibiting factors, writes Doval in the chapter, Tackling adversaries through strong and effective national security policies in the book Modi@20 unveiled on Wednesday.

The lack of response to the numerous incidents of bombings in Indian cities during the UPA era had agitated Modi ever since he was Gujarat chief minister. The decision not to retaliate for the Mumbai attacks had earned India the infamous nomenclature of being a soft state. The first-of-its-kind operations after Uri enhanced Indias global prestige. It caused panic in the adversarys mind and momentarily disrupted terror training and planning of more attacks, he said.

Revealing more details, Doval recalled that it was a simultaneous operation by multiple strike teams at four disparate locations. The novel planning for the strike generated chaos, panic and confusion by creating the enemy is everywhere syndrome. The then Pakistan Army leadership castigated its ground formations for failing to block even one strike team, despite having a large number of forward deployed troops. More importantly, it was a political call by the Prime Minister, which meant that he was taking responsibility, not only for success, but also failure. This exhibited risk-taking at the highest levela quality shown by very few.

The PMs striking characteristic has been his ability to approach national security matters from a long-term strategic perspective. He has an uncanny futuristic sense, and observes risks and opportunities that are often missed even by experts, affirms the NSA.

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Jesus, endless war and the irresistible rise of American fascism – Salon

The Democratic Party which had 50 years to writeRoe v. Wadeinto law with Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama in full control of the White House and Congress at the inception of their presidencies is banking its electoral strategy around the expected Supreme Court decision to lift the judicial prohibition on the ability of states to enact laws restricting or banning abortions.

I doubt it will work.

The Democratic Party's hypocrisy and duplicity is the fertilizer for Christian fascism. Its exclusive focus on the culture wars and identity politics at the expense of economic, political and social justice fueled a right-wing backlash and stoked the bigotry, racism and sexism it sought to curtail. Its opting for image over substance, including its repeated failure to secure the right to abortion, left the Democrats distrusted and reviled.

The Biden administration invited Amazon Labor Union president Christian Smalls and union workers from Starbucks and other organizations to the White House at the same time it re-awarded a $10 billion contract to the union-busting Amazon and the National Security Agency (NSA) for cloud computing. The NSA contract is one of 26 federal cloud computing contracts Amazon has with the U.S. Army and Air Force, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of the Interior, and the Census Bureau. Withholding the federal contracts until Amazon permitted free and open union organizing would be a powerful stand on behalf of workers, still waiting for the $15 minimum wage Joe Biden promised as a candidate. But behind the walls of the Democratic Party's Potemkin village stands the billionaire class. Democrats have failed to address the structural injustices that turned America into an oligarchic state, where the obscenely rich squabble like children in a sandbox over multibillion-dollar toys. The longer this game of political theater continues, the worse things will get.

RELATED:Democracy vs. fascism: What do those words mean and do they describe this moment?

The Christian fascists have coalesced in cult-like fashion around Donald Trump. They are bankrolled by the most retrograde forces of capitalism. The capitalists permit the stupidities of the Christian fascists and their self-destructive social and cultural wars. In exchange, the billionaire class gets corporate monopolies, union-busting, privatized state and municipal services, including public education, revoked government regulations, especially environmental regulation, and are free to engage in a virtual tax boycott.

The war industry loves the Christian fascists who turn every conflict from Iraq to Ukraine into a holy crusade to crush the latest iteration of Satan. The Christian fascists believe military power, and the "manly" virtues that come with it, are blessed by God, Jesus and the Virgin Mary. No military budget is too big. No war waged by America is evil.

The Democrats' hypocrisy and stupidity are the fertilizer for Christian fascism, which is bankrolled by the most retrograde forces of capitalism in exchange for the destruction of the welfare state.

These Christian fascists make up perhaps 30% of the electorate, roughly equivalent to the percentage of Americans who believe abortion is murder. They are organized, committed to a vision, however perverse, and awash in money. John Roberts, Samuel Alito, Amy Coney Barrett, Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, mediocre jurists and Federalist Society ideologues who carry the banner of Christian fascism, control the Supreme Court.

Establishment Republicans and Democrats, like George Armstrong Custer on Last Stand Hill, have circled the wagons around the Democratic Party in a desperate bid to prevent Trump, or a Trump mini-me, from returning to the White House. They and their allies in Silicon Valley are using algorithms and overt de-platforming to censor critics from the left and the right, foolishly turning figures like Trump, Alex Jones and Marjorie Taylor Greene into martyrs. This is not a battle over democracy, but the spoils of power waged by billionaires against billionaires. No one intends to dismantle the corporate state.

The ruling class in both parties told lies about NAFTA, trade deals, "reforming" welfare, abolishing financial regulations, austerity, the Iraq war and neoliberalism that did far more damage to the American public than any lie told by Trump. The reptilian slime oozes out of every pore of these politicians, from Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer to Biden, who backed the 1976 Hyde Amendment banning federal funding of abortions and in 1982 voted to support a constitutional amendment that would allow states to overturnRoe v. Wade. Their hypocrisy is not lost on the public, even with their armies of consultants, pollsters, courtiers in the press, public relations teams and advertising agencies.

Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

Marjorie Taylor Greene is clueless and unhinged. She claims Hillary Clinton was involved in a child mutilation and a pedophilia ring and several high-profile school shootings were staged. But weaponized, like Trump, she is a political cruise missile aimed straight at the heart of the discredited centers of traditional power.

Hate is the fuel of American politics. No one votes for who they want. They vote against those they hate. Black and brown marginal communities have suffered worse assaults than the white working class, but they have been defanged politically with militarized police that function as internal armies of occupation. The erosion of due process, the world's largest prison system and the stripping away of all rights, often including voting rights because of felony convictions, as well as a loss of access to most social services and jobs, have reduced many Black and brown people to subsistence level on the lowest rung of America's caste system. They are also the primary targets of Republican-sponsored voter suppression and redistricting.

The glue holding this Christianized fascism together is not prayer, although we will get a lot of that, but war. War is the raison d'tre of all systems of totalitarianism. War justifies a constant search for internal enemies. It is used to revoke basic civil liberties and impose censorship. War demonizes those in the Middle East, Russia or China who are blamed for the economic and social debacles that inevitably get worse. War diverts the rage engendered by a dysfunctional state towards immigrants, people of color, feminists, liberals, artists, anyone who does not identify as a heterosexual, the press, antifa, Jews, Muslims, Russians or Asians. Take your pick. It is a bigot's smorgasbord. Every item on the menu is fair game.

I spent two years with the Christian right reporting and researching my book "American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America." These Christian fascists have never hidden their agenda or their desire to create a "Christian" nation, any more than Adolf Hitler hid his demented vision for Germany in "Mein Kampf." They prey, like all fascists, on the despair of their followers. They paint gruesome portraits of the end times. when the longed-for obliteration of nonbelievers presages the glorious return of Jesus Christ. The battle at Armageddon, they believe, will be launched from the Antichrist's worldwide headquarters in Babylon once the Jews again have control of Israel. The closer we get to Armageddon, the giddier they become.

These people believe this stuff, as they believe in QAnon or the election fraud that supposedly put Biden in office. They are convinced that a demonic, secular-humanist ideology propagated by the media, the United Nations, elite universities, the ACLU, the NAACP, NOW, Planned Parenthood and the Trilateral Commission, along with the U.S. State Department and major foundations, is seeking to destroy them.

The Christian fascists do not fear nuclear war. They welcome it. The marriage of the forever-war industry with the Christian fascists who yearn for apocalypse is terrifying.

Violence is embraced as a cleansing agent, a key component of any fascist movement. The Christian fascists do not fear nuclear war. They welcome it. The insane provocations of Russia by the Biden administration, including the decision to provide $33 billion in assistance to Ukraine, target 10 Russian generals for assassination and pass on to Ukraine the intelligence to sink the Moskva, the guided missile cruiser that was the flagship of the Russian Black Sea fleet, supercharges the ideology of the Christian right. The marriage of the war industry, determined to make war forever, with the Christian fascists yearning for the apocalypse is terrifying. Biden is sleepwalking us into a war with Russia and perhaps with China. The Christian fascists will accelerate the bloodlust.

The political deformities we have spawned are not unique. They are the product of a society and government that no longer functions on behalf of the citizenry, one that has been seized by a tiny cabal, in our case corporate, to serve its exclusive interests. The airy promises politicians make, including the announcement by candidate Barack Obama that the first thing he would do in office was sign theFreedom of Choice Act, which during his eight years as president he never got around to doing, are worthless. The scheduled vote next week in the Senate on a bill asserting that abortions are legal in the United States, which is expected to be blocked by the Republicans' use of the filibuster, a Senate procedural rule that requires 60 votes to advance most legislation in the 100-member chamber, is another empty gesture.

We saw the consequences of this dysfunction in Weimar Germany and Yugoslavia, a conflict I covered for the New York Times. Political stagnation and economic misery breeds rage, despair and cynicism. It gives rise to demagogues, charlatans and con artists. Hatred drives political discourse. Violence is the primary form of communication. Vengeance is the highest good. War is the chief occupation of the state. It is the vulnerable and weak who pay.

Read more from Chris Hedges on war, peace and the global crisis of democracy:

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Meet Three Bay Area Artists Working to Amplify the Voices of People Who Stutter – KQED

Grossman said there are many myths surrounding stuttering. "One is that nervousness causes stuttering," she said. "Another is that if you would just breathe, or just slow down, or just relax, it would go away."

The stigma attached to stuttering can cause people to live lives of isolation and silence.

"Having this overall feeling that you have to be fluent to be a voice that's worth hearing, thats not a good feeling, and it's not a good thing," said NSA board chair Kristine Short. "So the more voices that we hear that stutter, the more that we make place for disfluent voices, the more inclusive our community will be."

Nina G is one of several local artists who stutter working toward that goal. A group of them, including podcaster Maya Chupkov, appeared on the steps of City Hall recently to help present San Franciscos Stuttering Awareness Week.

Chupkov, who said she began stuttering around the age of 4 or 5, has a background in local politics. She led the charge in getting the local version of Stuttering Awareness Week on the Board of Supervisors' radar.

"I want to thank you, Supervisor Dean Preston, for introducing this resolution that will help spread more awareness about stuttering so we feel more safe to be openly ourselves," said Chupkov, referring to the supervisor responsible for championing her proposal with the board.

For years, Chupkov said, she didn't see herself as capable of doing something as scary as speaking in public.

"When I was growing up, I didn't know anyone else who stuttered," she said. "It was just very lonely, and I just felt that no one understood me, and I was just constantly hiding a big part of myself."

Then, last fall, the 29-year-old San Francisco resident was inspired by a suggestion from her fianc to launch a podcast for and about the stuttering community.

"As soon as he said it, a light bulb just went off in my head," Chupkov said. "I realized that I needed to do this because there are so many people who stutter out there, especially young people that don't know anyone else that stutters. Having a show that they can listen to on a consistent basis I think will really do wonders in helping people who stutter feel less alone and feel more confident."

Chupkov launched her series, "Proud Stutter," on October 22, 2021 International Stuttering Awareness Day. She originally co-hosted the project with her friend Cynthia Chin, a nonstuttering ally, but now hosts solo. The first season, which included an interview with Nina G, has already racked up more than 11,000 downloads. Chupkov said shes gearing up to produce a second season.

Chupkov said making the podcast has made her more self-confident. In addition to doing things like public speaking in front of city officials, she's also hosting several events as part of San Francisco's Stuttering Awareness Week.

"Before I started the podcast, I didn't really consider myself as a creative person. And then I realized I just wasn't nurturing that part of myself," said Chupkov. "As soon as I started the podcast and I was tapping into my creative side more, that's when I was introduced to this completely new Maya that had this creative side that I just never nurtured before."

Chupkov said it makes sense for San Francisco to be at the forefront of activism around stuttering today, because of the city's long history of advocating for this issue. The NSA was founded as the National Stuttering Project in San Francisco in 1977. Its members were instrumental in establishing National Stuttering Awareness Week in 1988. "There is a big community of people who stutter here," she said.

The podcaster is hoping the passing of the Stuttering Awareness Week resolution in San Francisco will inspire other cities around the country to do the same, and has even produced a digital toolkit to help legislators and advocates in this effort.

Thirty-seven-year-old Gina Chin-Davis is a filmmaker and writer in Richmond. She said she started stuttering at the age of 4, and worked to hide her stutter for many years. These days, Chin-Davis identifies as a "mostly covert stutterer."

"This means that I can kind of pass, and a lot of people are surprised when they hear or I tell them that I stutter, but I do," Chin-Davis said.

She said trying to tamp down her stutter was exhausting.

"I felt like I had to put on this performance for people and convince them that I'm a person who doesn't stutter," she said.

Chin-Davis said she leaned away from situations that would force her to reveal her true self. Things changed when she started "avoidance reduction therapy," a form of therapy that asks the patient to confront and lean into their discomfort. She said her learning was put to the test when, in 2018, she decided to direct her first feature-length film, "I Can't Sleep."

"Being put into this kind of leadership role as a director, I had to use my voice more," she said. "It definitely brought up my stuff around it."

Chin-Davis said her micro-budget, self-financed movie proved to be a life-changing experience for her.

"Everything that I said, I would always ask myself, 'Is it worth saying? Should I say this?' And yet it was like, 'I am directing it and I wrote it, and so I need to say it.' I really put it on myself to say what I was thinking," said Chin-Davis of the directing process for "I Can't Sleep." "That wasn't always easy. And sometimes you get pushback."

Things were tough on the film set. Chin-Davis said she had to replace her crew after they acted disrespectfully. But she found a new crew and completed the production process. Her movie came out in 2020.

"I remember feeling very nervous and scared. People were yelling at me. And yet I just said what I had to say, stutter or not," Chin-Davis said. "I felt good about the decision afterwards. I was proud of myself that I did speak up and I did put my foot down verbally and I guess metaphorically."

Although Chin-Davis's first film didn't include any stuttering characters, she said it does have parallels to her own life, in that it tells the story of a young woman battling supernatural forces while trying to get a creative project finished.

"She is going through this process of feeling insecure about her ability to connect with people and have a message that resonates with them," Chin-Davis said. "But she does feel compelled to share it anyway."

Chin-Davis tackled the subject of stuttering head-on in a humorous video she made with longtime friend Nina G. It pokes fun at the way ignorant fluent people love to dispense advice to people who stutter. The two-minute piece, which has garnered almost 50,000 views on YouTube, toggles between the two artists as they say things like, "I used to stutter, too. But then I grew out of it. Thank God," and "Have you ever considered eating a live canary?"

Chin-Davis says she likes using her art to challenge people's assumptions. "It's kind of our job as artists who stutter to really put our voices out there and define things ourselves," she said.

Chin-Davis said people who stutter are still underrepresented in movies and TV, though she thinks Leonardo DiCaprio did a decent job playing a character with an occasional stutter in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.

She particularly likes the fact that Quentin Tarantinos 2019 film didnt make a big deal of the characters stutter.

"I want characters who stutter just to be there, just to be on the screen," she said. "It's not about the fact that they stutter. In fact, maybe nobody mentions it, even. It's just an accepted thing."

San Francisco's first-ever Stuttering Awareness Week runs through May 14, 2022.

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Meet Three Bay Area Artists Working to Amplify the Voices of People Who Stutter - KQED

Posted in NSA

Nation-state Cyber Attackers aiming at the US Defense Industrial Base – Security Boulevard

Pres. Biden calls for strengthening cyber defenses with Zero Trust architecture

President Bidens recent statement on our nations cybersecurity highlighted intelligence indicating that the Russian Government is exploring options for potential cyberattacks on US targets. While this most recent threat is seen as potential retaliation for the economic sanctions the United States and its allies have imposed on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, the threat of Russian-backed cyberattacks is nothing new. Indeed, as Bidens statement put it, cyberattacks are part of Russias playbook.In early 2020, for example, hackers connected to the Russian foreign intelligence service, the SVR, were identified as perpetrators of the massive SolarWinds cyberattack. The Russians were able to penetrate several US federal agencies, including the Treasury, Justice and Energy departments, the Pentagon, and even the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). Experts estimated that the hackers had been roaming undetected in these networksas well as those of several large private US companiesfor at least nine months. The SVR was gathering intelligence or laying the groundwork for future attacks, or both.We know that Russias ability to disrupt US networks and steal sensitive data is only getting more powerful. If your organization does work for the Department of Defense (DoD), theres no question that the Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) youre responsible for is a target too. Thats as true for prime contractors as it is for smaller suppliers far down the supply chain. In fact, DoD officials have noted that supply chain vulnerabilities are most prevalent six or seven levels down from prime contractors. Simply put, cybercriminals know that prime defense contractors are well protected, and save themselves time and effort by going after their subcontractors.Moreover, Russia isnt the only state actor conducting sophisticated cyberattacks against US targets. China, Iran, North Korea and others are in the arena too.

It comes as no surprise that the Biden administration is focused on strengthening US cyber defenses. In a May 2021 Executive Order, Improving our Nations Cybersecurity, President Biden called for the Federal Government to implement security best practices and to quickly lay out specific plans toward adopting Zero Trust architecture.The National Security Agency (NSA) describes Zero Trust as a security model that eliminates trust in any one element, node, or service and assumes that a breach is inevitable or likely has already occurred, so it constantly limits access to only what is needed and looks for anomalous or malicious activity.

Zero Trust is a security model that eliminates trust in any one element, node, or service and assumes that a breach is inevitable or likely has already occurred, so it constantly limits access to only what is needed and looks for anomalous or malicious activity.

This is in contrast to, as the NSA explains: Traditional perimeter-based network defenses with multiple layers of disjointed security technologies [that] have proven themselves to be unable to meet the cybersecurity needs due to the current threat environment.Zero Trusts greatest advantage lies in its integrated, system-wide, security-first approach. When securing your organizations data is paramount, compliance with federal regulations designed to protect CUIincluding DFARS, NIST and CMMCis less complex and far more readily achievable.

The DoD is intent on upgrading cybersecurity throughout the DIB via key regulatory frameworks that your organization needs to abide by. These include NIST SP 800-171, developed by the National Institute of Technology and Standards (NIST) specifically to protect CUI, and the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC) framework, among others.While neither NIST nor CMMC mandate a Zero Trust security model, the good news is that properly designed Zero Trust systems meet DoD mandates for securing CUI exceptionally well.In fact the State Department has led the way in incorporating Zero Trust principles into compliance frameworks. Its 2020 revisions to International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) allow contractors to simplify their ITAR compliance by taking advantage of technological advances that implement Zero Trust and enable the secure exchange of defense-related technical data in the cloud. Specifically:

The elegance of the new ITAR regulation lies in the fact that defense contractors have a simple and clear two-point compliance mandate to follow, and the mandates Zero Trust principles deliver some of the highest levels of data security possible. Furthermore, modern cloud based Zero Trust systems are often simpler and less expensive for companies to adopt, and so the ITAR regulation accomplishes key objectives of both security and rapid adoption particularly well.

The ITAR regulation offers a compelling model for significantly greater adoption of Zero Trust. Nearly 80,000 defense contractors that handle CUI vital to national security are currently embarking on significant security upgrades to comply with the DoDs CMMC 2.0 and NIST SP 800-171 requirements. CMMC 2.0 and NIST SP 800-171 are closely alignedboth require contractors to meet the same 110 security controls specified in NIST SP 800-171.Contractors that handle CUI have been required to comply with NIST SP 800-171 as part of their DFARS contract obligations since 2017, and to report those scores to the DoDs Supplier Performance Risk System (SPRS) since 2020. Under CMMC 2.0, they will have to demonstrate compliance via third party audits. Similar to ITAR, the NIST SP 800-171 and CMMC regulations can be particularly well addressed by the use of Zero Trust systems based on end-to-end encryption. That means we have a timely opportunity now to significantly expand adoption of Zero Trust security.PreVeil is an example of a communications platform grounded in Zero Trust architecture. Its end-to-end encryption is FIPS 140-2 validated. And it meets all applicable standards for cloud systems used to handle ITAR or CUI: PreVeil is FedRAMP Baseline Moderate Equivalent, and stores all ITAR and CUI encrypted data on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) Gov Cloud, which is assessed at FedRAMP High. Neither PreVeil nor Amazon have access to keys, network access codes, or passwords to decrypt your data, ever.PreVeils Zero Trust platform supports 84 of NIST SP 800-171s 110 security controls. Its easily deployed as an overlay to environments such as Microsoft O365 Commercial Email and One Drive or Google Workspace. Thats done without business disruption or the need to rip and replace existing servers, which makes it affordable. A defense contractor using PreVeil to protect CUI recently achieved a 110/110 NIST SP 800-171 score in a rigorous DoD audit, convincingly demonstrating that Zero Trust security seamlessly leads to achieving compliance. And that, in turn, will help your organization meet Pres. Bidens call to action to defend our nations CUI against the very real threats of nation-state backed cyberattacks.

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The post Nation-state Cyber Attackers aiming at the US Defense Industrial Base appeared first on PreVeil.

*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Blog Archive - PreVeil authored by Orlee Berlove. Read the original post at: https://www.preveil.com/blog/nation-state-cyber-attackers-aiming-at-the-us-defense-industrial-base/

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Posted in NSA

Eureka Robotics, the team behind the IkeaBot, picks up $4.25M – TechCrunch

Remember the IkeaBot? The robot went viral for its ability to build Ikea furniture as well (or better) than humans can. The team behind the project went on to found Eureka Robotics, which announced today that it has raised a pre-Series A round of $4.25 million, led by The University of Tokyo Edge Capital Partners (UTEC), one of Asias largest deep-tech investment firms, with participation from Vietnams Touchstone Partners and returning investor ATEQ.

Eureka Robotics products are based on research from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore and MIT. It focuses on robotic software and systems to automate tasks that require High Accuracy and High Agility (HAHA). Its robots are used for precision handling, assembly, inspection, drilling and other tasks.

The Eureka Controllers High-Accuracy calibration synchronizes the reference frames of the robot and camera with high accuracy, enabling submillimeter accuracy on vision-guided tasks, while Force Control gives the robot the ability to perform tight assembly and insertion, with clearance down to 50 micron. Meanwhile, its High Agility involves computer vision that allows robots to recognize and locate randomly placed objects. Once the robot finds the position of an object, real-time motion planning helps it move toward it.

An example of how the Eureka Controller can be used is the Archimedes, which deployed technologies originally developed for the Ikea Robot to a shop floor for the first time. It is capable of handling multiple-sized lenses and mirrors and loading those delicate objects onto a tray in order to be coated. Eureka co-founder Dr. Pham Quang Cuong told TechCrunch that the Archimedes is currently operating in a factory in Singapore, serving a U.S. laser lens manufacturer, and that the company has received multiple follow-up orders of the robot.

The funding will be used on accelerating development of Eureka Controller, the companys flagship product, which allows factories to deploy HAHA tasks in System Integrators and factories. Eureka co-founder Dr. Pham said that while the core technologies are mature and have already been deployed in production, we want to make those technologies really easy to use by System Integrators. Making advanced technologies easy to use by non-programmer engineers is actually difficult. Part of the funding will be used to grow Eureka Robotics software engineering team and product teams to work on the Eureka Controller.

Eureka Robotics also plans to expand its commercialization in Singapore and China, and new markets like Japan and Vietnam, with the help of UTEC and Touchstone, respectively. It currently has offices in Singapore and France and distribution partners in China, Japan and the U.S.

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Eureka Robotics, the team behind the IkeaBot, picks up $4.25M - TechCrunch

How RGo Robotics aims to improve the vision of mobile robots – VentureBeat

We are excited to bring Transform 2022 back in-person July 19 and virtually July 20 - 28. Join AI and data leaders for insightful talks and exciting networking opportunities. Register today!

RGo Robotics announced that it has exited stealth mode with $20 million in funding. The startup intends to enable mobile robots to operate autonomously by understanding their environment through artificial-perception technology. This removes the burden of robot manufacturers to develop this complex technology.

RGo Robotics says that is has developed an AI-powered perception engine to allow mobile robots to understand complex surroundings by achieving purportedly human-level perception. RGo says it has tested its technology in challenging indoor and outdoor field trials.

The startup reports that it has achieved design wins worth more than $10 million with leading global robot OEMs across multiple verticals. It envisions applications in logistics, manufacturing, last-mile delivery, service, agriculture and consumers.

Most mobile robots today are still blind and unable to navigate intelligently in dynamic and complex environments, and we see firsthand how hard it is for machine and robot manufacturers to develop basic visual perception on their own, said Amir Bousani, CEO and cofounder, RGo Robotics. Our technology changes this. Leveraging the most advanced AI and vision technologies,

The goal of the perception engine, Bousani says, it to allows mobile machines to understand the world around them so they can move autonomously, safely and intelligently in any environment. We call this intelligent autonomy.

RGo Robotics exited stealth mode with a series A funding in January, providing over $20 million. It aims to expand R&D and commercial teams. The startup was founded in 2018. RGo further said it was awarded Robotics Business Reviews RBR50 Robotics Innovation Award.

RGos perception engine consists of both software and hardware components. The hardware designed to offer an low-cost and low power reference design, while the software is available as an SDK. The data for the perception engine, through which the robot learns its environment, is provided over an API. The robot control system takes care of path planning and autonomous behaviors, according to the company.

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How RGo Robotics aims to improve the vision of mobile robots - VentureBeat

Rodney Brooks and Clara Vu will discuss human-robot interaction at TC Sessions: Robotics 2022 – TechCrunch

Robots have transformed automation across industries such as agtech, automotive, logistics, manufacturing and warehousing. Yet even the most advanced robots typically work in restricted workcells away from people due to safety concerns.

The field of human-robot interaction (HRI) offers the potential for robots with enough cognitive smarts to work effectively and safely alongside humans in places such as factory floors. The rise of the collaborative robot or cobot is well underway, with a projected market value of $8 billion by 2030.

Were thrilled to announce that two roboticists at the forefront of HRI Rodney Brooks, founder and CTO of Robust.AI (and co-inventor of Roomba, the popular household robot), along with Clara Vu, co-founder and CTO of Veo Robotics will join us on stage at at TC Sessions: Robotics 2022 on July 22 in Boston, Massachusetts.

Our conversation will cover the current state of HRI, the challenges of developing robots with common sense, and the technologies required for people and robots to work in close proximity. Of course, well ask what theyre up to right now and whats coming down the road.

Well also ask how long will it be before cobots become part of the everyday work environment. And what kind of training infrastructures do we need to create as more efficient cobots replace human workers in physically demanding or repetitive menial jobs?

Robotics legend Rodney Brooks founded Robust.AI in 2019 with a mission to build a first-of-its-kind industrial-grade cognitive platform for robots. The goal is to make robots that are smarter, safer, more robust, context aware and collaborative. Such robots could function reliably in construction, eldercare, households and other highly complex environments.

In 2020, Robust.AI raised a $15 million Series A.

In addition to his roles at Robust.AI, Brooks, an award-winning computer scientist, taught and held directorships at MIT. He was also founder and CTO at Rethink Robotics and iRobot.

Veo Robotics, an industrial automation company founded in 2016, created FreeMove, a comprehensive 3D safeguarding system for industrial robots that powers dynamic human-robot collaboration. In other words, it turns run-of-the mill industrial robots into machines that respond to humans.

When human skill and creativity join forces with the strength and speed of robots, the result is a flexible human-robot interaction, which would help manufacturers adjust to continuous, rapidly changing market demands.

In 2019, the company raised a $15 million Series A.

As Veo Robotics co-founder and CTO, Clara Vu leads the engineering team and developments of the computer vision-powered sensing and intelligence used by four of the biggest industrial robot companies in the world: FANUC, Yaskawa, ABB and Kuka.

With more than two decades of robotics experience, Vu has developed multiple products from inception to market. She began her career at iRobot programming robots for oil well exploration; she then moved on to interactive toys and the Roomba.

Prior to Veo, Vu was co-founder and director of software development for Harvest Automation, the makers of mobile robots for agricultural automation.

Dont miss a fascinating conversation with Rodney Brooks and Clara Vu, two roboticists on the cutting edge of human-robot interaction, about the reality and potential of humans and robots working side-by-side.

TC Sessions: Robotics 2022 takes place in person on July 22 in Boston, Massachusetts. Buy your pass by Friday, June 24 at 11:59 p.m. (PDT) and save $200.

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Rodney Brooks and Clara Vu will discuss human-robot interaction at TC Sessions: Robotics 2022 - TechCrunch

Robotics vacancies in the air force industry were the hardest tech roles to fill in Q1 2022 – Airforce Technology

Robotics jobs took the longest to fill across tech roles in the air force industry in Q1 2022 according to Airforce Technologys analysis of millions of online job advertisements.

Robotics job ads at these companies were online for an average of 71 days before being taken offline during the quarter, meaning they took 28.8 days longer to fill than an average job at the same companies.

The figure for Q1 2022 was an increase compared to the equivalent figure a year earlier, indicating that the required skillset for these roles has become harder to find in the past year.

Robotics is one of the topics that GlobalData, our parent company and from whom the data for this article is taken, have identified as being a key disruptive technology force facing companies in the coming years. Companies that excel and invest in these areas now are thought to be better prepared for the future business landscape and better equipped to survive unforeseen challenges.

Digitalization jobs took the second longest to fill on average at 54 days, while industrial automation came third among the tech themes tracked by GlobalData and which were linked to at least 100 job ads in the air force industry in each of the past five quarters.

The air force industry found it harder to recruit robotics jobs compared to the wider market, with ads online for 113.9% more time on average compared to similar jobs across the entire jobs market.

At the other end of the scale digital media related positions were the quickest to fill in the air force industry in Q1 2022 with positions closing during that period having been online for an average of 32 days.

GlobalData's job analytics database tracks the daily hiring patterns of thousands of companies across the world, drawing in jobs as they're posted and tagging them with additional layers of data on everything from the seniority of each position to whether a job is linked to wider industry trends.

You can keep track of the latest data from this database as it emerges by visiting our live dashboard here.

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Improved Material Composites for Better Defense

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Robotics vacancies in the air force industry were the hardest tech roles to fill in Q1 2022 - Airforce Technology

Video: Robots are changing the way we think about the hospitality industry – WCVB Boston

Technology becomes more and more a part of our daily lives every year. Whether it's ever-improving smartphones or self-driving cars. One company is working to make technology specifically robots a bigger part of the industry Las Vegas relies on most: hospitality.Meet Adam, an entertaining robotic bartender and barista being developed at Richtech Robotics in Las Vegas. At the present time, Adam can perform tasks like creating the perfect cappuccino.Another Adam is being taught or programmed how to pour craft beer. The hope going forward, Richtech says, is that artificial intelligent cameras will transform Adam from repeating sequences to adapting to its environment."It would be able to detect faces so that it can take orders vocally," Timothy Tanksley, an assistant tech manager at Richtech, said. "Right now, all of our orders are processed on a tablet, but eventually, the customers will be able to talk with adam and put in the order there."While Adam may have been one of the stars of the show at the recent Bar and Restaurant Expo in March, Richtech says it already has thousands of customers worldwide using the services of other types of robots, such as Maitre D' to deliver drinks and meals to tables, the U-V Guardian, which is used to disinfect rooms, Richie, the tuxedo-clad hotel delivery robot for room service, and Dust-E, which vacuums, mops and disinfects floors.Each robot uses technology like AI cameras and lidar to perform each task, and even to stop to avoid colliding with anything that might cross its path. "Service and entertainment is really the driving factor for why robotics will be adopted so quickly," Richtech executive KC McCreery said. Watch the video above for more on this story.

Technology becomes more and more a part of our daily lives every year. Whether it's ever-improving smartphones or self-driving cars.

One company is working to make technology specifically robots a bigger part of the industry Las Vegas relies on most: hospitality.

Meet Adam, an entertaining robotic bartender and barista being developed at Richtech Robotics in Las Vegas. At the present time, Adam can perform tasks like creating the perfect cappuccino.

Another Adam is being taught or programmed how to pour craft beer.

The hope going forward, Richtech says, is that artificial intelligent cameras will transform Adam from repeating sequences to adapting to its environment.

"It would be able to detect faces so that it can take orders vocally," Timothy Tanksley, an assistant tech manager at Richtech, said. "Right now, all of our orders are processed on a tablet, but eventually, the customers will be able to talk with adam and put in the order there."

While Adam may have been one of the stars of the show at the recent Bar and Restaurant Expo in March, Richtech says it already has thousands of customers worldwide using the services of other types of robots, such as Maitre D' to deliver drinks and meals to tables, the U-V Guardian, which is used to disinfect rooms, Richie, the tuxedo-clad hotel delivery robot for room service, and Dust-E, which vacuums, mops and disinfects floors.

Each robot uses technology like AI cameras and lidar to perform each task, and even to stop to avoid colliding with anything that might cross its path.

"Service and entertainment is really the driving factor for why robotics will be adopted so quickly," Richtech executive KC McCreery said.

Watch the video above for more on this story.

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Video: Robots are changing the way we think about the hospitality industry - WCVB Boston

Global Aerospace Robotics Market (2022 to 2027) – Industry Trends, Share, Size, Growth, Opportunity and Forecasts – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business…

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Aerospace Robotics Market: Global Industry Trends, Share, Size, Growth, Opportunity and Forecast 2022-2027" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The global aerospace robotics market reached a value of US$ 2.82 Billion in 2021. Looking forward, the publisher expects the market to reach US$ 5.45 Billion by 2027, exhibiting at a CAGR of 11.82% during 2022-2027.

Companies Mentioned

Keeping in mind the uncertainties of COVID-19, we are continuously tracking and evaluating the direct as well as the indirect influence of the pandemic. These insights are included in the report as a major market contributor.

Aerospace robotics refers to the robots used for the assembly and maintenance of aircraft, satellites and space shuttles. They are commonly used for executing sensitive tasks, such as material handling, cutting, riveting, bolting, welding and fabrication of exterior and interior components of the aircraft. They are also utilized for detecting minute variations in the thickness, patency and integrity of aircraft skins, airfoils and paint coatings.

Aerospace robotics usually operate through articulated, cartesian, cylindrical, spherical, parallel and selective compliance articulated robot arm (SCARA) technologies. In comparison to the traditionally used manual systems, aerospace robotics solutions can perform repeated tasks with enhanced accuracy and offer consistent and speedy results. Space robotics also find extensive application for autonomously operating on new planetary surfaces.

Significant growth in the aerospace and aviation industries across the globe is one of the key factors creating a positive outlook for the market. Moreover, the increasing requirement for automating various labor-intensive inspection, fiber placement, sealing and dispensing processes is providing a thrust to the market growth. In line with this, the widespread production of narrow-body aircraft with lightweight and small-sized components is providing a thrust to the growth of the market.

Various technological advancements, such as the integration of robotics with 3D visualization, Internet of Things (IoT), artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud computing solutions, are acting as other growth-inducing factors. These technologies aid in improving human-robot collaboration and minimizing the turnaround time for the manufacturing processes. Other factors, including extensive research and development (R&D) activities, along with significant improvements in the cyber-physical system (CPS) with automated decision-making functionalities, are anticipated to drive the market toward growth.

Key Questions Answered in This Report:

Key Topics Covered:

1 Preface

2 Scope and Methodology

3 Executive Summary

4 Introduction

4.1 Overview

4.2 Key Industry Trends

5 Global Aerospace Robotics Market

5.1 Market Overview

5.2 Market Performance

5.3 Impact of COVID-19

5.4 Market Forecast

6 Market Breakup by Type

7 Market Breakup by Component

8 Market Breakup by Technology

9 Market Breakup by Application

10 Market Breakup by Region

11 SWOT Analysis

12 Value Chain Analysis

13 Porters Five Forces Analysis

14 Price Analysis

15 Competitive Landscape

15.1 Market Structure

15.2 Key Players

15.3 Profiles of Key Players

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/aunath

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Global Aerospace Robotics Market (2022 to 2027) - Industry Trends, Share, Size, Growth, Opportunity and Forecasts - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business...

Cellula Robotics Ltd. partners with Trusted Autonomous Systems and the Royal Australian Navy on the SeaWolf XLUUV Project – PR Newswire

"Cellula is excited to take the DRDC funded Solus-LR project to the next level of capability with TAS and RAN" said Adrian Woodroffe, Business Development Manager at Cellula. "Our fuel cell power system is the key enabler that gives SeaWolf a game changing submerged range and payload capacity."

CEO of TAS, Professor Jason Scholz noted "TAS are excited to see the progress on the SeaWolf project across engineering, manufacturing, regulatory, control, propulsion and other supporting technologies and concepts. The novel technologies and demonstrated capabilities at Cellula Robotics made them a partner of choice; and plans underway to establish an Australian Cellula entity will bring them closer to the sovereign enterprises in Australia already working on delivering our concept of an underwater loyal-wingman to the Royal Australian Navy".

While headquarters for Cellula are based in Burnaby, British Columbia, the company is in its final stages of establishing an Australian office in Brisbane to further the next stages of this project, including Australian-based design and manufacturing. Demonstration missions with Solus-LR and the prototype SeaWolf XLUUV will take place in the first quarter of 2023 in Australia.

About Cellula Robotics Ltd.Engineering solutions, intelligent systems.

Cellula Robotics Ltd. is a proudly Canadian, privately owned, world leading marine technology company specializing in turnkey design and production of subsea robotic systems. Headquartered in Burnaby, British Columbia, Cellula employs 70 staff with a dedicated team of highly-skilled engineers, designers, and technicians. Cellula's extensive experience in projects that require integrated mechanical, electrical, hydraulic, and software elements in a subsea environment is evident in its wide client base spanning over the defence, mineral exploration and oil & gas sectors. Cellula prides itself in having developed and implemented a rigorous ISO 9001:2015 Quality Management System that continues to meet and exceed client expectations.

For more information, please go towww.cellula.com.

SOURCE Cellula Robotics

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Cellula Robotics Ltd. partners with Trusted Autonomous Systems and the Royal Australian Navy on the SeaWolf XLUUV Project - PR Newswire

Northern Nevada families come Out for Robots Rock! Event at the Discovery Museum – Northern Nevada Business Weekly

A kid learns programming by reading instructions to "Robot Grace" for how to make a PB&J sandwich

A young kid playing with cubelets in the Robotic Sampler room

"Tommy", the robot that they took to the worlds event.At another station in the same room, a woman is showing two first graders how she directs a Lego vehicle on a track using a computer as two other little boys play with KEVA planks. In the next room over, DRI Nevada Robotics has an interactive game involving sensory cubelets designed to help people Think, Act, and Sense.You guys can go to another station, the attendant jokes to two elementary school-age boys who have been playing with the cubelets for quite a while. She adds, I always tell parents, you have a Christmas list going.

This activity appeals mostly to elementary school kids, but the volunteer says that some middle schoolers and the occasional parent who wants to practice some engineering comes over here as well, she smiles. Across the cubelet station, 610-year-olds are playing with remote control cars, zipping them around on a track.Wandering into the next room, a couple of kids are coloring at the Robot Art station and others are playing with oversized magnets, launching wooden balls down a rollercoaster line, and placing little plastic parachuter people into a vertical flute and watching them shoot up. The Shop next to DaVincis Corner is full of people, kids and parents using reflective sticker tape, cardboard rolls, and other materials to build robots and rockets.And on the lower level, a volunteer named Grace is in the Blue Party Room at the Program A Human Robot to Make a PBJ Sandwich activity. This human robot relies on detailed written instructions to successfully make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, allowing kids (and their parents) to physically see where they went wrong in their coding when Grace does exactly what they tell her to do.Local kids and families had a field day playing with robots, with all activities carrying an educational undertone. Itll be interesting to see what this generation of Northern Nevadans does twenty years from now.

"Bob", the robot that won the state championship for the VC Silver Circuits

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Northern Nevada families come Out for Robots Rock! Event at the Discovery Museum - Northern Nevada Business Weekly

Gaussian Robotics’ Brand Name Changed to Gausium – AZoRobotics

Gaussian Robotics, a leading solutions provider of AI-based autonomous cleaning and service robots, announced that it has changed its brand name to "Gausium". This heralds a new stage of a multi-brand strategy for the company, along with the rollout of its ground-breaking new cleaning bot product "Phantas".

Over the past few years, the company has ramped up its efforts in robotic cleaning and servicing, offering a comprehensive line of autonomous cleaning robots and launching the autonomous delivery bot "X1", and introducing a brand-new commercial cleaning bot "Phantas". The company has indicated that building a platform-based service robots ecosystem will be key to its development strategy in the coming years.

The brand name "Gausium" derives from the German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss, whose theories and models provided a foundation for the development of the autonomous navigation algorithms SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping). Unlike many of the industry players that started from supplying traditional cleaning equipment, Gausium was established as a provider of SLAM solutions and robotics software.

This becomes the bedrock of the company's fast scale-up of its robotic products. The technological edge in fields like Visual-LiDAR SLAM, back-end cloud computing, AIoT systems and mobile apps will secure for the company a leadership position in the marketplace.

According to Peter Kwestro, Overseas BD Director of Gausium, the new brand name represents the company's positioning of 3 "I"s "Innovative", "Intelligent", "Industry leader", and that the Gausium autonomous solutions are developed under a "3S Principle" "Smarter", "Safer" and "Simpler".

Gausium believes that the future of the service sectors will hinge on smart robotics solutions, and aims to promote the smart digital transformation of the service industries. It aspires to lead the service robot industry to create a new generation of smart service platform and build the AIoT-enabled smart city infrastructure for the future. "Finally, a smart service ecosystem will be built on a global scale to fulfill the 'prophecies' and make dreams into reality, " said Edward Cheng, founder & CEO of Gausium.

Source:https://gausium.com/

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Robotics Pioneers to be Honored at Automate and automatica – Vision Systems Design

The Association for Advancing Automation (A3) has announced six winners of the 2022 Engelberger Robotics Awards.

At a special dinner in conjunction with the Automate 2022 Show and Conference in Detroit on June 8, three winners will be honored for their leadership in the field: Michael P. Jacobs, founder and CEO of Applied Manufacturing Technologies (AMT); Oussama Khatib, professor at Stanford University; and Marc Raibert, founder and chairman of Boston Dynamics.

The association will honor three more winners at automatica in Munich on June 20, and they are:

The award is named after the late Joseph F. Engelberger, known by many as the founding force behind industrial robotics, according to A3. Since 1977, the association has presented the awards to 134 robotics leaders from 17 different nations for excellence in technology development, application, education and leadership. Each winner receives a $5,000 honorarium and commemorative medallion.

In their unique ways, each of these six remarkable individuals have played prominent roles in shaping the robotics industry were a part of today, from educating future roboticists to advancing the role of mobile, industrial and collaborative robotics in manufacturing facilities and warehouses alike, said Jeff Burnstein, president of A3.

The past chairs of the A3 Technology Strategy Board selected the six honorees based on their achievements in the field. For example, Khatib, a roboticist and a professor of computer science, is credited with seminal work in areas ranging from robot motion planning and control, human-friendly robot design, to haptic interaction and human motion synthesis.

Wise, previously was the CEO of Fetch Robotics until its acquisition by Zebra Technologies in 2021. For nearly 20 years, Wise has been designing, building, and programming robotic hardware and software. She was the second employee at Willow Garage, a research and development laboratory specializing in robotics, where she led a team of engineers developing next-generation robot hardware and software. In 2014, she and other members of Willow Garage founded Fetch Robotics, which is best known for its autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) for warehouses.

Meanwhile, Jacobs is an expert in the robotic automation industry. At GMF Robotics (now FANUC), where he worked before AMT, Jacobs pioneered the product development and market introduction of robot simulation and offline programming systems.

The other Engelberger winners have led or been involved in advancing the automation industry in myriad ways. Marc Raibert founded Boston Dynamics, where he also served as CEO. The robotics company is known for creating BigDog, Atlas, Spot and Handle. Thorvaldsson joined ABB Robotics, a global leader in power and automation technologies, in 1976.

University of Naples Federico II's Siciliano, an engineer, is director of the ICAROS Center and coordinator of the PRISMA Lab at the Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology.

For more information about Automate 2022, visit https://www.automateshow.com/.

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Robotics Pioneers to be Honored at Automate and automatica - Vision Systems Design