Poker Worlds Lost Summer: What Happens When Live-Action Sharks Are Forced to Stay Home? – Deadspin

Lexy Gavin was on quite a tear in live poker tournaments before coronavirus shut down the country.

Lexy Gavin played in the last live poker tournament in America before coronavirus shut everything down.

Gavin, well known in East Coast cash-game circles for years, has been making a mark on the live tournament scene of late. She had the most cashes of any woman at the 2019 World Series of Poker in Las Vegas, with 11 finishes in the money, grossing $69,549.

She followed that with a $37,665 16th-place finish in the $5,250 Seminole Hard Rock in Hollywood, Fla., in August, and a $40,058 score at the WPT LA Poker Classic in January.

Gavin was selected as a Shooting Star and a celebrity bounty, typically granted to up-and-coming players, in the Bay 101 Shooting Star event in San Jose that began on March 11, just as coronavirus began ravaging the country.

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I was getting freaked out, but I felt obligated to play because I was a Shooting Star, Gavin said. San Jose was a hot spot. I made Day 2 and Broadway shut down and professional sports (were canceled). I made Day 3 and there were 10 of us left.

I had been playing next to Mike (Tureniec) from Sweden, he was on my left. He showed up wearing a mask and looking really sick.

There were some players who wanted to keep going, but common sense prevailed, and the final 10 a star-studded field including Anthony Spinella, Anthony Zinno, Kristen Bicknell, Tyler Patterson and Craig Varnell agreed to an ICM chop (players are awarded prizes based on the chip value of their stacks) and Gavin added another $40,000 score to her resume. But it halted the mojo she had going, and cost her a shot at first, which would have given her a career-best $300,000 score.

Luckily, none of the other players got sick, according to Gavin. But a stop to live poker was disappointing for her and thousands of poker players around the world. Quarantine life in Redding, Calif., has been tough for Gavin, as shes been separated from her family on the East Coast, including her father, Austin, who had to endure 2 months of treatment for prostate cancer in the middle of the pandemic. While not being able to play any poker because online games are not legal in California, Gavin has been working as a poker coach as part of Jonathan Littles team and is preparing to launch her own training content on YouTube and LexyGavin.com.

The cancellation of the World Series of Poker (scheduled to start in late May) was a huge blow.

WSOP is like poker player summer camp, its a nice reunion, Gavin said.

High-stakes mixed cash games crusher Melissa Burr has been done her part to cheer up the poker world with daily tweets describing humorous anecdotes in what she calls the wouldbeWSOP:

Burr decided to make the light-hearted tweets after seeing people saying they were disappointed about not going out for their first year.

Burrs little snippets of authentic WSOP experience have been extremely popular. Anyone who has played tournaments at the Rio All-Suites Hotel and Casino can relate to not being appropriately dressed for the cold rooms of the Convention Center or being forced to buy a $7 banana before rushing off to play. Her tweets are loosely based on her performance in the 2014 Series, in which she made five deep runs and became the only woman to final table the prestigious $50,000 HORSE Players Championship.

There will be an online WSOP, with 85 bracelets awarded, which has sparked arguments among poker Twitter about whether or not the prestige of the Series is being watered down, especially as only players in Nevada and New Jersey will be able to participate. Last years WSOP featured 90 events, with 9 of them being online.

Brandon Shack-Harris, a two-time bracelet winner, said in a rant about WSOP that he had concerns about the quality of the product and that it felt like double-dipping if the Series goes ahead with plans to hold live events in the fall.

Burr was among those who agreed.

I dont think they should have 85 bracelet events, she said. Its definitely going to dilute the brand, said Burr, a South Jersey resident who said she will play one of the few non-Texas Holdem events, a $1,000 Omaha 8 tournament. Once they realize they can do it, theyll probably do it again.

Brooklyn pro Sundiata Devore doesnt think online bracelets are worth less than live bracelets.

Winning a bracelet or a trophy is nice, Devore said, but to me its always about making money. The best players tend to be online. I dont think you water down anything by having bracelets run online. Its not going to be easier to win a bracelet.

Ryan Laplante, who won a bracelet in 2016 for the $565 buy-in PLO tournament for $190,000, said he will definitely participate, but he understands some of the concerns.

My only true issues with them are: not enough mixed games, and way too small of buy-ins. Cheapening the buy-ins and having so many, to me kind of lessens the prestige of the events.

Laplante, a prolific grinder who lives in Las Vegas, says he will play every online event and fire max entries into everything. He estimates that will end up being $20,000-$25,000 in buy-ins, but with live poker, he would have been in much larger events.

I was planning on playing at least one $50K, maybe two, likely two 25Ks and a bunch of 10Ks and as many 5Ks and below as possible. So likely in the $300,000 to $500,000 in buy-ins.

Neil Blumenfield, who finished third in the 2015 Main Event for $3.3M, said he will not travel to play on WSOP.com, citing the fact that his age (66) puts him in a high-risk category.

Blumenfield lives just 15 minutes from the Hard Rock Casino in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., but hasnt played live poker since March even though action has returned to the Sunshine State, now a hotspot for the virus.

I expect that the casinos here will have to close again, he said. We made it worse by doing nothing in January to March and then doing nothing during lockdown to prepare to reopen.

Most of the players interviewed for this story talked about missing the social aspect of the game.

For me being mostly locked up, Blumenfield said, the three main things missing is live poker, which is my job, my hobby and my social life.

I miss not having WSOP a ton, Devore said. Not just because of poker. Part of the excitement of summer is getting out of New York and living in Vegas for two months and having an amazing tournament to wake up to every day.

Devore says he plans on visiting a friend in New Jersey so he can play the online series, which starts in July. But its not the same.

Theres social interaction you get live that cant be replaced by playing online, he said. Theres isolation and loneliness. You get to meet interesting people from all over the world in Vegas. Im really missing that this summer.

Devores experience since the nationwide shutdown illustrates that the uncertainty poker professionals deal with constantly has been exacerbated by the pandemic.

I was playing on BetOnline, ACR, WSOP, and on the apps, and did well in all of them. I was lucky because I had some success and thought, This should hold me over. But this is in mid- to late March, and we didnt know how long this would last. Then I started not winning as much, which was disappointing because I was cashing consistently, just wasnt getting the big scores. Then I started having a downswing.

Downswings are a part of poker, but its particularly problematic during a pandemic and economic recession, not to mention social unrest.

With so many players flooding the online sites, prize pools have grown but it increases variance, Devore said. There arent the softer $400, $600 live tournaments that are filled with recreational players. A $100 online tournament is like a $1,000 live tournament. A $215 online tournament is equal to a $3,500 WPT.

Fortunes will still be won and lost at the virtual felt this summer, but those yearning for the return of live tournaments may have to wait. Even as poker rooms in Las Vegas start to reopen, there arent plans for large-field tournaments yet, and new rules restricting the number of players at a table have been instituted in order to provide safe social distancing.

I love live poker, Blumenfield said, but not enough to die for it.

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Poker Worlds Lost Summer: What Happens When Live-Action Sharks Are Forced to Stay Home? - Deadspin

MASTERING THE GAME OF POKER WITH MACHINE LEARNING: How Machine Learning Impacts the World of Online Poker – The Fan Carpet

Mastering the Game of Poker with Machine Learning

Source: Pixabay No Attribution Required

Poker is one of the few card games which truly tests a players mettle. Poker blends the best tactical and strategic plays, with a focus on the psychological elements of the game. Over the years, poker experts and tech aficionados have been working feverishly on creating the ultimate poker learning machine. Poker machines are incredible upgrades of the complex algorithms and self-learning programs that dominated the scene in high-stakes games of chess. While poker machines comprehensively defeated the best online players in the world one-on-one, they failed in championship online poker tournaments, like 6-max and 9-max games.

Ostensibly, machines were encountering tremendous challenges with multi-player online poker games. That has already started to change. A powerful, machine learning poker construct named Pluribus has effectively defeated a handful of poker professionals in the same game. It's the equivalent of one poker professional playing against multiple independent versions of the AI poker construct. The ramifications of such technology are mind-bending. It harkens to the sci-fi blockbusters like Ex Machine (2014), and I Robot (2004) where artificial intelligence successfully outmaneuvered human intelligence and won, time and again.

When poker machines interact with players one-on-one, the dynamics are markedly different to multi-player interaction. While there is certainly complexity in heads up poker games, the fact that they are a zero-sum contest is important. If one player is winning, the other player is losing and vice versa. For this reason, the one-on-one poker format allows sophisticated computers to map out a strategic blueprint for success. The complexity rapidly increases with each additional player that is added to the game, making it extremely challenging for a computer to operate effectively against human opponents. In online poker games with multiple players competing for the pot, the computing capabilities of poker machines must be fine-tuned to the max. Once again, poker is making waves in our cultural zeitgeist!

Experts in the poker arena readily attest to the difficulties of accounting for all possibilities in next to no time at all. Decisions have to be made on the fly, and machines don't necessarily understand the nuances of human behavior, thought processes, strengths and weaknesses to be able to make all those important calls. Success in poker is measured over the long term. This requires the poker player, or poker playing machine, to know when to hold, when to fold, and when to walk away and live to play another day. It appears that the self-styled poker machine prodigy, Pluribus has done precisely that. With thousands of hands played, this artificial poker playing genius appears to be the proverbial real deal. Pluribus didn't learn how to play by pitting itself against human players; it played against copies of itself, outmaneuvering its own thought processes by way of complete randomness.

The complex processes which go into machine learning involve many sophisticated algorithms, programs, and learning curves. One such system is known as Monte Carlo Counterfactual Regret Minimization. This type of didactic learning system is so powerful that it allows the machine to learn from its mistakes, correct those mistakes, and employ winning strategies the next time around. It evaluates different decisions and the outcomes that are generated as a result of them. Known as abstraction of gameplay, and pooling of possibilities, the Monte Carlo Counterfactual Regret Minimization Strategy is highly effective in delivering winning solutions for poker playing machines. While many poker machines perform according to different habits and patterns, and noticeable trends, Pluribus has built-in modifiers with unique strategies to decrease the predictability of outcomes.

There are interesting examples of computers playing against one another where one computer always takes the same outcome and the other acts in a random fashion. When these computers play against humans, the one acting randomly would be more difficult to beat than the one which acts in the same way which would be beaten every time. This deductive ability of humans serves poker players well, but with no noticeable trends, patterns, or behaviors in place, it truly becomes challenging. Believe it or not, the collaboration between Facebook's AI lab and Carnegie Mellon University has truly created a poker playing machine that is capable of beating the best poker professionals in the world.

News of this successful poker machine spread like wildfire, and especially the news that these virtual playing bots can bluff better than human poker players. Pluribus managed to successfully play over 10,000 hands (in 12 days), against a dozen of the world finest poker pros. In one setting, there were 5 human players, and in another setting, they were 5 copies of the same AI program in addition to 1 human player. No collaboration between the copies of Pluribus was permitted. Even the legendary Chris Ferguson of WSOP fame attested to the difficulty in beating Pluribus. While machines beating humans in competitive games is nothing new, this is a whole new level of complexity and success. Multiplayer poker represents the pinnacle of imperfect information, strategy, and psychology in decision-making processes. For a computer to successfully operate and top human performance is a milestone with celebrating!

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MASTERING THE GAME OF POKER WITH MACHINE LEARNING: How Machine Learning Impacts the World of Online Poker - The Fan Carpet

How a psychologist cracked the secret of winning at professional poker in just a year – Telegraph.co.uk

Together, Konnikova and Seidel put together a plan. They will commit a year of their lives with the goal of getting Konnikova from the greenest of novices to a seat at the table at the mecca of pro poker: the Main Event at the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas.

The journey Seidel has planned out for her has no shortcuts. Shell have to work her way up from playing online poker in New Jersey coffee shops, through to charity tournaments, and off-Strip Las Vegas casinos, before she is allowed to play in the big leagues. Seidel teaches her the lingo (I was left baffled and amused by terms such as Naked Ace High, A Blocker to the Nut Flush, Capped Range, VPIP and degenning) and also offers an entre into the world of pro poker, a world populated by men with names such as LuckyChewy, Jungleman, and Chino, who have pink hair and fervent beliefs in the benefits of microdosing, and who bet on push-up competitions in between rounds at $100,000 tournaments in Monte Carlo.

The Biggest Bluff is a brilliant book mostly because Konnikova is a brilliant writer, but also because she is a brilliant observer of the weird world she has immersed herself into. Her pithy descriptions of casinos in Las Vegas, Macau, and elsewhere (she refers to Vegas perfectly as an adult playground on a lifelike scale) captures the seedy charm of these airless, dream-filled tombs.

She is also an excellent chronicler of the gender dynamics around a poker table. Pro poker is 97 per cent male. Men tend to view women as easy marks. (Konnikova cites a study showing that men bluff women 6 per cent more than they do other men) Then there is the mixture of condescension, bullying and lechery she encounters from her fellow players. Konnikova tries to flip these prejudices to her advantage, with limited success.

Not that chauvinism hinders her startling ascent through the poker ranks. From the outset, Konnikova is disarmingly modest about her successes. She mentions offhand that she made $2,000 on online poker while still a rookie. She wins her first tournament within six months of starting the project. Within 12 months she is flying to Europe to participate in tournaments. She clearly becomes very good at poker, very fast.

The most enthralling parts of the book are when she takes the reader inside the cockpit and talks through some of the high-stakes plays she finds herself involved in. Less interesting are her attempts to extract life lessons from the tables, (All too often, we stay in a hand long after we should have gotten out. Channel your outer warrior and your inner one may not be long in coming out. Do I go for the min cash in my life decisions?) but, in fairness, most good advice tends to be clich.

Perhaps the most penetrating insight is not that life is like poker, but rather that poker is better than life. For all its flaws, the world of pro poker is meritocratic and democratic to a tee. Everyone is allowed, she writes. No one will turn you away if you didnt come from the right school of have the right connections or diplomas. If you can afford the buy-in, you can play, simple as that.

I wont spoil the ending, but I looked up Konnikovas earnings on the Hendon Mob. By their count, she has earned $300,000 (240,000) at the tables. Id wager that missed deadline was worth it.

Clement Knox is the author of Strange Antics: A History of Seduction (William Collins)

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How a psychologist cracked the secret of winning at professional poker in just a year - Telegraph.co.uk

Live Poker Tournaments Are Slowly Returning Around The Globe – Poker News – CardPlayer.com

The coronavirus outbreak led to an abrupt halt of live tournament poker action in March of 2020. While the global poker circuit effectively ceased all operations over the course of just a few days, the return of tournament action is likely to be much more gradual.

The first major poker room in the world to reopen its doors was the Kings Casino Rozvadov, which is one of the largest rooms in Europe. It resumed operations on May 11, nearly two months after it first announced a temporary closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Cards were in the air in Rozvadov for two weeks before the venue hosted their first live tournament series, called The Big Week, which ran from May 25 31. The venue has continued to offer a selection of smaller daily tournaments and short series since resuming tournament action in late May.

Stateside, a number of poker rooms also resumed operations with only cash games available at first. Casinos in Florida began reopening in late May, including Derby Lane in St. Petersburg, the Seminole Hard Rock, and bestbet Jacksonville and bestbet Orange Park.

The Seminole Hard Rock Tampa recently announced that they would resume spreading select daily tournaments on June 23, after having first reopened on May 21. Derby Lane resumed spreading tournament events on June 6. Both venues currently include a maximum number of participants for their events.

We are going to start offering tournaments again in July, bestbet Director of Poker Jesse Hollander told Card Player. We will likely have three tournaments a week in Jacksonville and two a week at Orange Park, no-limit holdem tournaments with buy-ins of $60 and $150. We will offer those in July, and hopefully will offer more starting in August.

The Las Vegas strip reopened on June 4, and with it three poker rooms resumed operations: The Venetian Poker Room (pictured above before the outbreak), the Orleans Poker Room and the South Point Poker Room. The Golden Nugget followed suit a couple days later, and three more rooms opened on June 18 at Bellagio, Caesars Palace, and Sahara. The Venetian was the first to announce a return to multi-table tournament action. The room will host two $250 buy-in no-limit holdem shootout events, with one each on June 19 and June 20, with an eighty-player cap for the field and an 11:00 a.m. start time.

The events will have a maximum of five players per table, and will follow the shootout format that sees each table play down to a winner before moving on to the next round. The second round will shift to four-handed action, with the winners from those tables combining onto the final table of four to play down to a champion.

While these rooms and others around the country, and the world, have just begun to host live poker tournaments again, no major poker tours have yet announced the resumption of their publicly released schedules.

I believe to have large scale multi-table tournaments [running again], the most important thing is that some restrictions have to be lifted, said World Poker Tour Executive Tour Director Matt Savage. Travel restrictions so that players can attend, capacity restrictions so that tournaments dont have to be capped, and player per table restrictions so that tournaments can be played more than six-handed so that the properties that are open are fine with giving up cash games to run less profitable tournaments while maximizing attendance.

Savage spoke to Card Player about the Coronavirus impact on the live tournament scene back in late April. In that discussion, he highlighted the most important factor for himself and other tournament organizers: the wellbeing of those involved in putting on and playing in potential events.

The top priorities for us are to make sure that the players are safe and make sure our staff are safe, said Savage.

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Live Poker Tournaments Are Slowly Returning Around The Globe - Poker News - CardPlayer.com

Online poker ‘booming’ in lockdown at every level of the game – theScore

When Isaac Haxton flies to live poker tournaments, he returns home with a cold nearly half the time.

The 34-year-old American pro is an authority on the interlocking habits, demands, and stresses that foment sickness in his line of work. Players arrive for marquee events from all over the world, encountering any number of strangers in airports, taxis, and hotel lobbies en route. Jet lag and exacting schedules - the games can run mostly nonstop from noon to 2 a.m. - deprive them of sleep and compel them to eat at the table, where opponents in close confines cough and sneeze, touch their own faces, and handle common sets of cards and chips.

Contemplating this scene in the COVID-19 age is nightmarish, which helps explain why in-person play halted earlier this year. Granted, there's plenty about the tournament atmosphere that Haxton appreciates and misses, as he blogged in May for partypoker, the online card room he endorses: "Sitting around a table, shuffling chips, talking s---. Drinking too much coffee. The steady, mellow pace that can make 12 hours pass before youve noticed." Something is fun, he acknowledges, about managing and playing through the fatigue that builds over a long series.

That said, "it would be more pleasant to dial that intensity back a little," Haxton told theScore in a recent phone interview. "Your family could travel with you to a poker tournament. You could have some time to hang out with them. You could have time to take care of yourself and be relaxed and healthy.

"I do think that the hiatus is going to provide an occasion to reconsider this stuff," he said. "It is going to be more possible than it would be under business-as-usual conditions to consider doing things differently."

No business is operating as usual during the coronavirus pandemic, but when it comes to sports and adjacent forms of competition go, poker encountered distinct challenges when casinos closed across the United States and abroad. World Poker Tour stops from Las Vegas to Vietnam and more than a dozen points in between were canceled or postponed from mid-March onward. The World Series of Poker was due to proceed in Las Vegas from May into July; that extravaganza, too, had to be scrubbed.

Poker's predicament also had a distinct solution. Consider the revised plan for this year's WSOP: shift the 51st edition of the show online, starting July 1 and continuing through the summer.

Pros and amateurs alike have pivoted to online poker in droves, enabling the computerized version of the game to flourish in the absence of live-table action. Google searches on the subject surged in the U.S. and worldwide as people started to shelter inside. Gameplay spiked at major sites that offer home-game options for groups of friends. This emergent interest spurred record revenue for states where online poker is legalized, MarketWatch reports, including New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

More than 700 of the U.S.' 989 casinos have already reopened, per the American Gaming Association, with capacity restrictions, player temperature checks, and a gamut of other distancing and sanitation protocols in place. Yet as the Vegas-based poker magazine Card Player wrote in May, "Lockdown has taken a toll on people, and fear isnt going to go away for some time." Haxton, for one, is inclined to think that live poker - large international events, in particular - shouldn't resume before an effective COVID-19 vaccine is made available.

In the meantime, Haxton is aware of his professional good fortune. He's making money, feeling productive, and taking advantage of a fruitful recourse that isn't available to athletes in physical sports. As Card Player put it, online providers "offer the land-based experience on the web, just a couple of clicks away."

"The amount of high-stakes poker, especially tournament poker, that you can play online right now really doesn't compare to any previous point in history," Haxton said.

"It's been booming," Canadian pro Kristen Bicknell said.

The week that the NBA's shutdown prompted almost every league to follow, Bicknell was in San Jose for one of the last live showcases played amid the coronavirus. She flew home to Toronto when the conclusion of the event was expedited and has since spent her working hours playing up to 14 virtual tables at a time. Leading companies such as partypoker and GG Poker, her go-to sites, were quick to move high-profile upcoming tournaments online, bolstering the selection of quality games that she and Haxton say can now be found daily.

There are drawbacks to exclusively playing online, the pros note. Gone are some manifestations of poker's personal touch: feeling the chips, discerning if a player's manner betrays his or her cards, reveling in that opponent's irritation at those hands they lose. Trash talk routed through WhatsApp doesn't quite land the same, Haxton said.

Still, reasons to value the corresponding upsides abound. Bicknell believes she's improved significantly since March thanks to the particularities of online play: the many simultaneous games she can enter, the hand histories she can save and learn from upon later review. The speedier pace is another boon. Poker players might cycle through 300 hands in a full day on the felt, Haxton said, but can play 5-10 times that many in the same period online.

"You get to the long run faster," Haxton said. "If you have a losing stretch of 10,000 hands, that's a few days online. That's a month live. Professionally, it's a more stable and reliable way to make money in a lot of ways."

That appeal evidently applies to the recreational ranks, too. PokerStars, to cite one online cardroom whose users can play with friends for free, has seen this option's popularity balloon, with more than 300,000 home-game clubs created since March 1. Members in certain locations can set real-money stakes, but most active PokerStars home clubs use play money, a company spokesperson said in an email, seemingly bespeaking players' desire to maintain communal ties.

"With home games especially, there are no expectations. The social interaction and engagement comes first, with poker as the catalyst, and players seem to really appreciate that," PokerStars associate director of public relations Rebecca McAdam Willetts wrote. "People want to connect, and poker gives them the opportunity to do so in a fun and social way."

As online poker has grown in stature, so have novel means to disseminate the product to the masses. Home games are now available on PokerStars' Android app, marking the service's mobile debut. Viewership is up on Twitch, exhibited by the 58,416 people - a poker record - that Dutch pro Lex Veldhuis attracted to the platform during his run at a championship event in May. When Bicknell streamed a live session for partypoker's Twitch page recently, she realized it was a departure from her normal home setup: "I'm used to sitting in my pajamas, playing alone, nobody seeing what I'm doing or how I'm playing."

It's welcome entertainment, as well. "People want that element of it: to see the reactions, the highs and lows of poker," Bicknell said. "That's the fun of the game."

Those sensations won't be conveyed in person at this year's World Series of Poker, but Bicknell still expects a big turnout among players online. Even once casinos are ubiquitously open, she imagines it'll be a while before people feel comfortable traveling for events of that magnitude. For now, some hints of the live game still materialize on the screen, like a trend she's noticed lately: More players are ditching online monikers in favor of using their real name.

Haxton, for his part, has thought up a range of possible changes to the live experience that he'd like to see stick "even in a fully post-coronavirus world." Players shouldn't be discouraged, by rules or by stigma, from wearing a face mask at the table if they feel sick. Nor should poker culture perpetuate the expectation that they ought to compete through illness. If event schedules weren't quite so grueling, everyone involved could devote more time to self-care. That's another draw to playing virtually, Haxton said: His daily sessions hew closer to eight hours than 12 or 14, and at home, he can cook, exercise, and sleep in his own bed.

That Haxton has filled those hours for months now seems to support another thesis of his: There's demand among players of his standing for regular $10,000 and $25,000 buy-in tournaments online. Even when live poker becomes viable again, he figures that feeling won't wane.

"I think it's going to have a little bit of staying power," he said. "I've been really enjoying it, playing online poker, and I get the sense my peers feel the same way."

Nick Faris is a features writer at theScore.

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Online poker 'booming' in lockdown at every level of the game - theScore

Will the online poker boom last? – Casino Beats

Mark Robson, co-founder of Champions Sports, says operators need to be smart if thecurrent online poker boom is to continue once sport returns.

Online poker has enjoyed something of a resurgence following the global sports blackout resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic with some operators reporting a 60 per cent boom in play.

There are several reasons why players are returning to the game, but the big question operators are asking themselves is whether the higher levels of engagement can be maintained.

That will ultimately depend on the operator and its strategy for acquiring and retaining players, as well as the preferences of the players themselves.

Before discussing how operators may be able to prolong this unexpected rise in interest, lets first look at why a lack of sports and sports betting has led to a spike in poker play.

Sports and poker are different but the same

There are many similarities between sports betting and poker, especially the way it appeals to two different types of gambler the emotional player and the intellectual player.

Emotional sports bettors bet on a team or a player because they are fans and it adds even more excitement to watching the game.

Emotional bettors can enjoy the same feeling when playing online poker playing based on gut feeling or because they are holding their lucky hand.

Intellectual bettors, on the other hand, use their skill and knowledge to study form and bet based on the information available to them even if that means going against their favourite team.

Intellectual bettors are drawn to poker because it also requires skill and knowledge to master not only the game, but also their opponents. Instead of beating the odds, they are beating their rivals.

In addition to this, poker is an inherently social game and allows players to chat. At a time whenpeople are craving interaction, poker stands out from other gambling products.

Returning to the game they love

Another reason for the current poker boom is the lack of sports has pushed bettors back to a game they already know and love for some, poker will be the first game they played online.

This is certainly true of those that were introduced to online gambling during the poker boom of the early noughties. Of course, the passing of UIGEA dramatically changed the landscape (and not necessarily in a good way).

With diminishing player pools, many migrated away from online poker to other products such as sports betting and even casino and live dealer.

But with sports off the agenda due to the pandemic, many have gone back to poker and seem for the time being at least to have rekindled their passion for the game.

New players have the time to learn the game

As well as attracting existing players, the current situation is driving new players to the game as well. This is partly because they have the time to understand and learn how to play.

Some will have been curious about poker for some time, but with other entertainment and betting options available they simply wont have got around to giving it a go.

But with no sport to bet on and with fewer entertainment options on which to spend their budget many are turning to online poker for the very first time.

Boom or bust

The big question of course is whether operators will be able to maintain the high levels of interest they are currently enjoying once sports events and betting return.

Undoubtedly some players will stop playing poker and return to their preferred sports betting activity, but savvy operators can keep some of the players engaged in the long term.

This will require a smart approach to marketing and in particular the structure of the tournaments and satellites they are running now and throughout the year.

Operators should look to run satellites into bigger tournaments with decent prizes up for grabs. It doesnt have to be large cash prizes, either.

It could be a car, a home entertainment system anything that is going to excite players and encourage them to enter the satellites and earn their seat at the final.

By hosting the final at the back end of the year, and by running weekly satellites between now and then, there is a huge chance for operators to continue to engage players and drive retention.

Will the online poker boom last? Possibly not, but the current situation will undoubtedly drive growth in online poker and operators just need to figure out how best to take advantage of it.

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Will the online poker boom last? - Casino Beats

Book Review – Poker… What does gambling have to do with it? – Books – Ahram Online

When a novel is titled Poker after the famous card game, the reader would expect a story about the world of gambling which contains rich material that has not been discussed enough in Arabic literature.

In conservative Middle Eastern societies, gambling is an activity that no one speaks of; we see it sometimes in movies but not in literature. Saudi writer Helana Al-Sheikh in her novel unfortunately did not touch on that subject, which was a disappointment.

The title is irrelevant to the novel.

The main character is a writer, a political rebel and a difficult personality to deal with; imprisoned for printing and distributing political leaflets against the Jordanian government. He discovered his womanising skills after years of being deprived of seeing women. He is victim of the circumstances he was born into. As a Palestinian refugee he managed to study in spite of the dire conditions he lived in. He took up a writing career after his prison time.

The female character is an older woman, who realised her womanhood late in life. Her story is that of a young Jordanian girl who married an older Saudi man to get him a son instead of the many girls that he got from his previous wives in exchange for a financially secure life. Eventually, she failed in her mission and got another girl to complete the drama.

Returning back to Jordan after living the first four decades in conservative Saudi Arabia where no culture could reach women in her living conditions (as a young girl, a married woman then a divorced one) was an eye-opener. She participated in the cultural circles and lived a decadent life with her newly discovered love.

The writer was able to describe life in Saudi Arabia with precision that takes the novel to the last century: a real desert for women, no social life outside the house limits, her friends are the other divorcees of the same man who kept them in the house to take care of them financially (something that rarely happens), and the discrimination that she suffered from in the family because she was a light skinned blonde.

The writer was able to describe the intimate scenes and emotions in details. The rebelling writer and the insatiable older woman: from passionate love and desire, to despising themselves for having a relationship built on carnal impulses; from finding a mother and a caring person with the extra benefit of having a stable squeeze for the writer, to the feelings of jealousy and inadequacy that the older woman felt.

With characters who have such a complicated background the reader remains curious, albeit neutral, about the outcome of the relationship between a young man and an older woman. The writer kept both characters nameless, insinuating that this kind of relationship has happened and will continue happening no matter what traditions and societies think of them.

Women sold to older men through marriage and men spending a good portion of their youth in prison for whatever reason is a story that has been repeated in various shapes and forms all over the world.

The interesting female character came in the second half of the novel, Zeina the girl that the male character fell in love with. We find a traditional girl, a bit rough on the edges, a courageous character that speaks her mind, straighten our man out and would not allow him to touch her before getting married. With her humble background of a drunkard father who had intended to sell her through marriage to whoever will pay a higher price, she managed to marry the man she loved, and even tamed his rebellious personality to lead the life of a family man. This was an unfortunate turn of events since the rebellious character is always more interesting to the reader, while the family man is more of a normal everyday character.

The writer boldly condemns fake, shallow writers in cultural circles, especially when they are women. The older lady who suddenly discovered her life and body became a writer as well. The author made a point of mentioning the embarrassment that she caused her man when she spoke about any subject when they went out together. She basically spoke about what she does not know and the men in these circles accepted her mediocre level of culture for benefits related to gender rather than refinement or sophistication. In brief, she set herself to be an easy lay, the price was name recognition and sometimes even prize winning; this is a daring notion that many writers and critics bring up when prizes are announced, novels are published and articles are written by women.

When introducing her characters, the author started at a middle point in their relationship, when they were about to break up, then she went back in time to bring these characters to life. She gives their background with a hint of a not-deep-enough psychoanalysis. This kept the reader interested in the novel; she used accurate literary language which made the novel a challenging read, yet with an unfortunate lack of substance.

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Book Review - Poker... What does gambling have to do with it? - Books - Ahram Online

Ike Haxton Raises Concerns About the Health of Live Poker Players – HighstakesDB

High stakes crusher Ike Haxton has been blogging about the health concerns live poker players face in the future. The American partypoker ambassador talks about how much he misses the game but also can not stop thinking about the real challenges we face once the lights turn back on.

By: Mark Patrickson

I dont know about you folks, but Im really starting to miss playing live poker. Sitting around a table, shuffling chips, talking s**t. Drinking too much coffee. The steady, mellow pace that can make 12 hours pass before youve noticed. I love it, I miss it

The COVID-19 lockdown has left much of the worlds population nervous about returning to normal. With the number of coronavirus deaths being visibly published every day it is unlikely that much will be normal for a long time, with many choosing to stay under their own lockdown.

Haxton points out the obvious situation that live poker will struggle with when the games start, that it is the perfect environment to spread an infection.

The constant touching of the surfaces around you, including the cards and chips, makes it so easy to transmit any kind of bug to your playing partners.

The breathing in each others direction in such a small space guarantees an increased possibility of catching something.

In general, poker players are also not known for the healthiest lifestyle. With their compromised immune system we can again guarantee that per player there will be more bugs going around, even ignoring the coronavirus for a second.

Weve traveled from all over the world, on planes, through airports, and in taxis, coming into contact with countless people along the way. Were stressed out, jet-lagged, not eating well, and not sleeping enough, all of which surely compromise our immune systems.

A lot will depend on how quick a reliable vaccine program can be installed around the world. Will normal service resume before this happens? Haxton is of the opinion that it shouldnt in the case of poker.

There is bound to be quite a lot of arguing in the near future on exactly what is the best way forward. Haxton just says that his main interest is in getting the conversation going beforehand.

For the most part, I dont have very strong convictions on what should change, but Id like to get a conversation started about our options.

.

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Genting Ceases All Live Poker Activity in the United Kingdom – PokerNews.com

June 16, 2020Matthew Pitt

The COVID-19 pandemic has claimed a major victim in the British poker world as Genting is ceasing all live poker activity in the United Kingdom.

PokerNews was aware of rumours circulating regarding Genting not reopening its live poker operations before an employee reached out to us. The Genting employee, who wishes to remain anonymous, informed PokerNews they work in the Birmingham cardroom and have been told Genting will cease all live poker in their casinos.

Our source claims the Genting Resorts World Casino in Birmingham is losing 98 employees with between 20 and 50 jobs lost at every Genting casino around the United Kingdom.

A Cardroom Manager at one of Genting's casinos, posted an update on his Facebook page.

Please note: It was not this manager who told PokerNews of the upcoming redundancies

7,000 staff furloughed by Grosvenor Casinos

Well, its been emotional. Thank you to all our poker players, hope you have a great experience. Thoughts to all my colleagues (family) that didnt deserve this (although in current climate it was kind of expected) you are all superstars and proud to have had you in our team. Onwards and Upwards. PS anyone hiring?

PokerNews reached out to several Genting sources, including the President and Chief Operating Officer of their UK operations, but none had replied at the time of writing.

The cessation of live poker operations comes less than a week after Genting announced it is considering the closing of three of its UK casino.

GMB, the union for leisure and hospitality workers, revealed Genting casinos in Bristol, Margate, and Torquay are set to permanently close, resulting in significant job losses. GMB also warned of possible job losses across the companys remaining 29 sites.

Paul Willcock, the President and COO of Genting UK, sent a statement to his employees, which read in part, The COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic has caused unprecedented challenges. It has had a huge financial impact on our business and caused significant uncertainty for the foreseeable future. I am therefore forced to contemplate some very difficult options to ensure survival.

British casinos ready to reopen on July 4

It looks certain the long-running Genting Poker Series (GPS) has ran its last event. Launched in 2012, the GPS proved extremely popular in its infancy thanks to its solid blind structures, affordable 440 buy-in and substantial guarantees.

Genting inexplicably closed its online poker arm, which ran on the iPoker Network, a couple of years ago, which had a profound effect on the number of entrants because players could no longer qualify online or play Day 1 online.

Lower attendances and a restructuring of the GPS results in smaller buy-in stops being scheduled. The last GPS event was an 80 buy-in held at Genting Club Stoke on Trent that attracted 397 entrants and awarded 26,966.

Its only a year since Genting spent 750,000 refurbishing its casino in Luton. Part of that refurbishment was the creation of a more intimate poker room which will now likely be converted to more gaming floor space.

Eighteen months ago, Genting Casino Westcliff underwent a multi-million pound makeover.

Five years ago, Genting Resorts World Birmingham opened its doors to the public. It cost 150 million and is part of an entertainment and shopping complex at the site of the Genting Arena, formely the NEC. It features 50 shopping outlets, cinema, hotel, and a vast casino.

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The best actors to have appeared around a poker table – CineVue

Poker scenes have been cropping up in movies and on TV since the industries began. The game is incredibly versatile, depicting everything from a fun evening with friends, the glamour of casinos, and heightened tension over games where the price of losing isnt worth thinking about.

Its the secretive nature of the game, as well as the way it builds to a big reveal, that makes it work well on the screen. And it doesnt require an in-depth knowledge of the game in order to appreciate a winning hand especially as its nearly always a full house.

With poker scenes ranging from comedic to dramatic to ultra-realistic, there are plenty of actors who have held a hand of cards over the years. Here is a rundown of some of the best, along with the scenes where the cards might just have stolen the show.

Matt DamonA poker fan himself, Damon was called upon to bring his skills to the silver screen in the 1998 movie Rounders, playing Mike McDermott a talented poker player who retired after losing it all to a Russian gangster. Pulled back into the scene in order to help a friend raise the capital needed to repay some dodgy debts, he finds himself once again up against his poker nemesis Teddy KGB (played with relish by John Malkovich).

The film culminates in a head-to-head battle between Mike and Teddy, and both actors use the game to great effect to ramp up the tension between the characters. Mikes explanation of how he worked out Teddys tell is delivered perfectly by Damon. Rounders is a must-see for all poker enthusiasts.

Brad PittThe glamorous side of gambling is shown in technicolour in 2001s remake of Oceans Eleven, but where poker makes its memorable appearance is not on the floor of the casino but in the dimly-lit back room of a strip club. Pitts character Rusty Ryan, having retired from the heist game and now trying to turn legit, is shown trying to teach celebrities how to play poker. When Danny Ocean (George Clooney) crashes the game, Ryan takes the opportunity to deliver a lesson in drawing out the bluff.

The comedy in the scene comes from the actors playing nave versions of themselves, along with the knowing glances to the camera from Pitt and Clooney as they invite the audience into their little secret. It is well known that Hollywood contains many celeb poker players and its very easy to imagine similar scenes taking place in real life. Poker itself doesnt feature much in the scene. Instead, it is used as a vehicle to set the scene for the brilliant performances from the leading men.

Daniel CraigMr. Smooth himself, Craig took over the role of Bond for the 2006 film Casino Royale. Ian Flemings first Bond novel finally got an onscreen outing as part of the official canon of movies, and it brought us a younger Bond and a much more modern feel. And part of that feel came from the glitz and glamour of the casino sets. Set in the fictional Hotel Splendid, the movie sees Bond face off against arch-villain Le Chiffre during a Texas Holdem poker tournament.

Unfortunately, the filmmakers didnt pay as much attention to how the game was actually played, as they did to the atmosphere at the tables. So while the scenes where Bond and Le Chiffre clash charismatically over the cards, poker aficionados have been known to flinch at the inaccuracies in the rules and the etiquette. But when a game produces this much tension, I think we can forgive them using a little artistic licence.

Mel Gibson1994s Maverick may not have gone down in history as one of Gibsons finest, which is a shame, because his comedic turn as the poker playing Brett Maverick is a real delight to watch. Trying to raise funds to enter a poker tournament, Maverick battles his way through comedic mishaps until he finally gets a seat at the table.

The second half of the film is all poker, with a colourful cast of characters making up his opponents. Gibson switches between nave novice and slick con-artist with playful ease as he makes his way to the final table and a showdown between the best players. The slow reveal of everyones hands is incredibly unrealistic and screams Hollywood, but the tension that builds as Gibson places down one card after another, until finally revealing the tournament-winning ace of spades, can be cut with a knife and will have everyone watching from the edge of their seats.

These are just a few of many films and tv shows to use poker scenes over the years. If youre a fan of the game then its worth checking out the movies and seeing the great performances from many well-known actors as they try to convey the thrill and excitement of a winning hand.

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The best actors to have appeared around a poker table - CineVue

The effects of psychedelics on the brain’s "consciousness conductor" – New Atlas

In 2004, Francis Crick, one of the 20th centurys greatest scientific minds, died of colon cancer. Crick was best known for describing the structure of DNA in the 1950s with collaborator James Watson, but over the last couple of decades of his life his research focused on perhaps the biggest scientific question of them all: how does our brain generate what we consider to be consciousness?

The last paper Crick ever penned homed in on a small and still relatively mysterious brain region called the claustrum. Co-authored with Christof Koch, Crick was reportedly still editing the manuscript in hospital the day he died. Subsequently published in 2005, the paper presented a novel hypothesis - the claustrum may be key to our experience of consciousness, unifying and co-ordinating disparate brain areas to help generate our singular experience.

The claustrum is a thin, irregular, sheet-like neuronal structure hidden beneath the inner surface of the neocortex in the general region of the insula, wrote Crick and Koch in the landmark paper. Its function is enigmatic. Its anatomy is quite remarkable in that it receives input from almost all regions of cortex and projects back to almost all regions of cortex.

The extraordinarily unique way the claustrum connects different brain regions fascinated Crick. While some researchers had previously suggested the claustrum could potentially be the brains epicenter of consciousness, Crick and Koch presented a different analogy to describe the role of this mysterious brain region.

We think that a more appropriate analogy for the claustrum is that of a conductor coordinating a group of players in the orchestra, the various cortical regions, the pair wrote. Without the conductor, the players can still play but they fall increasingly out of synchrony with each other. The result is a cacophony of sounds.

A new study, published in the journal Current Biology, is describing in unprecedented detail how the claustrum communicates with other brain regions. The project, an international collaboration between researchers in Sweden and Singapore, somewhat backs up Cricks "consciousness conductor" hypothesis, revealing the claustrum is less like a singular hub for cortical inputs and more like a collection of specialized synaptic pathways connecting specific cortical regions.

We found that the synaptic connectivity between the cortex and claustrum is in fact organized into functional connectivity modules, much like the European route E4 highway or the underground system, says Gilad Silberberg, lead author on the study, from the Karolinska Institutet.

Another recent and even more focused study zoomed in on the claustrums role in coordinating slow-wave brain activity. A team from Japans RIKEN Center for Brain Science generated a transgenic mouse model in which they could artificially activate neurons in the claustrum through optogenetic light stimulation.

Yoshihiro Yoshihara

The research discovered slow-wave activity across a number of brain regions increased in tandem with neural firing in the claustrum. Slow-wave brain activity is most often linked to a key period of sleep associated with memory consolidation and synaptic homeostasis.

We think the claustrum plays a pivotal role in triggering the down states during slow-wave activity, through its widespread inputs to many cortical areas, says Yoshihiro Yoshihara, team leader on the new RIKEN research. The claustrum is a coordinator of global slow-wave activity, and it is so exciting that we are getting closer to linking specific brain connections and actions with the ultimate puzzle of consciousness.

So, if increased claustrum activity seems to orchestrate a kind of synchronized slowing down of brain activity across a number of different cortical regions, what happens when claustrum activity is suppressed?

One hypothesis has suggested dysfunctional claustrum activity could play a role in the subjective effects of psychedelic drugs. One of the fundamental neurophysiological characteristics of a psychedelic experience is widespread dysregulation of cortical activity. Brain networks that dont normally communicate will suddenly spark up connections under the influence of psilocybin or LSD. So a team from Johns Hopkins University set out to investigate exactly how psilocybin influences claustrum activity.

Due to the claustrums location in the brain its activity has traditionally been quite difficult to study in humans. However, a recently developed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) technique has afforded researchers a new and detailed way to measure claustrum activity. The Johns Hopkins study recruited 15 subjects to measure claustrum activity after either a placebo or a dose of psilocybin.

The study found psilocybin reduced claustrum neural activity between 15 and 30 percent. The overall reductions in claustrum activity also directly correlated with the subjective psychedelic effects of the drug.

More specifically, psilocybin seemed to significantly alter how the claustrum communicated with a number of brain regions fundamentally involved in attentional tasks and sensory processing. For example, under the influence of psilocybin, functional connectivity between the right claustrum and the auditory and default mode networks significantly decreased, while right claustrum connectivity with the fronto-parietal task control network increased.

Our findings move us one step closer to understanding mechanisms underlying how psilocybin works in the brain, says Frederick Barrett, one of the authors on the new study. This will hopefully enable us to better understand why its an effective therapy for certain psychiatric disorders, which might help us tailor therapies to help people more.

As Barrett suggests, this new insight into the effect psilocybin has on claustrum activity may shine a light on how this psychedelic drug generates its beneficial therapeutic effects. Psilocybin in particular has been found to be significantly useful in treating major depression and substance abuse disorders. The Johns Hopkins scientists hypothesize psilocybins action on the claustrum may play a key role in both the subjective effects of this psychedelic drug, and its beneficial therapeutic outcomes.

Further research is certainly necessary to verify this hypothesis, and the next step for the Johns Hopkins team will be to use this new claustrum imaging technique to investigate the brain region in subjects with a variety of psychiatric disorders. Fifteen years on from Francis Cricks passing his final work is still inspiring new research. The new wave of psychedelic science, in tandem with novel neuroimaging techniques, brings us closer and closer to understanding how our brains create consciousness.

The new study was published in the journal Neuroimage.

Source: Johns Hopkins Medicine

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The effects of psychedelics on the brain's "consciousness conductor" - New Atlas

Buy Psychedelics Online | Buy Research Chemicals …

When it to effectiveness and quality of psychedelics products , we have a variety of outstanding and top level list of them. To Begin with , the first experience is typical of vaporizedDMT, while the second is 5-MeO-DMT. Though they share a name and there are some parallels in their brief and very intense effects the two are worlds apart. Even in their chemical structures, 5-MeO-DMT is about as different from DMT aspsilocybinis. In addition, both have been in use in the traditional South American shamanic practices forthousands of years, but in different regions and to different ends. The differences between their subjective effects cant be overstated, so its important to understand what each one offersand which is right for an individual seeking psychedelic treatment.

One of the most common reactions to smoking DMT the first time is utter astonishment, for no amount of experience on the more popular 20th century psychedelics (LSD, Ecstacy, magic mushrooms, etc.) can really prepare one for the magical reality revealed by DMT or 5-MeO-DMT. So powerful is the truth of this altered reality that users can actually sometimes experience a psycho-spirtual death-and-rebirth, and when returned humbled and awe-struck to their bodily form, discover their lives have been irreversibly changed.

Buy LSD online cheap. Apsychedelicexperience (or trip) is a temporary altered state of consciousness induced by the consumption ofpsychedelicdrugs (such as mescaline, LSD, psilocybin, and DMT). For example, the term acid trip refers topsychedelic experiences brought on by the use ofLSD

Buy ebogaine online.The classical serotonergicpsychedelicsLSD, psilocybin, mescaline are not known tocause brain damageand are regarded as non-addictive. Clinical studiesdonot suggest thatpsychedelicscauselong-term mental health problems

Here you are safe toBuy ketamine online. Althoughpsychedelicscan induce temporary confusion and emotional turmoil, hospitalisations and serious injuries are extremely rare. Overallpsychedelicsare not particularlydangerouswhen compared with other common activities.

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Revive Therapeutics betting on psychedelics and potential COVID-19 treatment Bucillamine – Proactive Investors USA & Canada

The company is filing an Investigational New Drug application with the FDA for the Phase 3 confirmatory clinical trial of Bucillamine

Revive Therapeutics Ltd (CSE:RVV) (OTCMKTS:RVVTF) has come a long way in just six months under the stewardship ofCEOMichael Frank.That much is apparent from a casual glance at the share price for the year to date.

However, there is an argument to be made that suggests this may just be the start of the journey for this US and Canadian-listed life sciences innovator. For not only does Revive have a (coronavirus) COVID-19possible treatment headedtowards phase III clinical trials, but it also has some unique and interesting intellectual property (IP) that taps into the emerging area of psychedelics.

Also part of the story, but taking a back-seat for now, is its research around the potential uses of cannabidiol (CBD) to treat auto-immune hepatitis, ischemia and reperfusion injury from organ transplantation.

READ:Revive Therapeutics holds pre-CTA meeting with Health Canada for Bucillamine to treat COVID-19 patients

Revivehas a history of repurposing drugs and IP such asBucillamine,a cysteine derivativeanti-inflammatory that has been used for more than 30 years to treatrheumatoid arthritisin Japan and South Korea.

With an impeccable track record for safety, the companys researchers were assessingthe data fromits potential deployment in acute gout flareswhere ithad successfully completed a phase IIUS Food and Drug Administration (FDA)clinical trial.

Thats when more thoughts were given to the use of Bucillamine to treat lung inflammation.

The drug works by helping restore and enhance an antioxidant called glutathione. Revives team soon realized the same anti-inflammatory action that worked in gout and arthritis could possibly be deployed in people suffering lung inflammation as a result of seasonal flu, H1N1, SARS and, crucially, COVID-19.

In April, it applied to the US regulator to carry out a phase II trial in COVID-19and was surprised by the response.

BasedonBucillamines composition, efficacy, safety and history, as well as a previous, successful interaction with the FDA, the drugs watchdog asked Revive to prepare anInvestigational New Drug (IND) submissionfor a phase IIIconfirmatory trialin COVID-19.

Thats a very large milestone and a major study, says Frank.It gives the company a great deal of credibility.

The company is currently incorporating guidance provided by the US regulator intoits INDpackage, which should beready and submittedby the end of the month,Frank adds.

Another development that is exciting investors is the companys move into psychedelics, which appears incredibly well-timed.

Last year the FDA approvedesketamine to treat depression, making it the first-ever psychedelic drug to receive the regulatory green light in the US, with UK authorities giving their approval for the ketamine-like drug a few months later.

MDMA, meanwhile, has been given breakthrough therapy designation by the US regulator for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), as has psilocybin, the psychoactive found in mushrooms, which is being developed as an alternative to traditional antidepressants.

In March, Revive announcedit was acquiring Psilocin Pharma Corp in an all-paper deal worth $2.75 million. Its focus is psilocybin-based treatments forvariousmedical needs, which includes rare and orphan indications.

Reviveis working with the University of Wisconsin on some new delivery technology that could add another dimension to the research and discoveries to date.

We want to build a better product, with more favorable onset and delivery of psilocybin and then move it down the clinical path, says Frank.

And thats crucial, because like many others in this new and flourishing area of drug discovery, the plan is to formally follow the highly regulated route to market.

In doing so the potential reward could be significant. The psychedelics industry itself is big enough to pique the interest of Big Pharma, with investment bank Canaccord Genuity, in a recent market report,estimating the total market size for all indications under investigation to be as much as $100 billion.

However, the smaller, more innovative players such as Revive, are likely toset the pace and make an impact.

Psychedelics have shown promising efficacy across a broad range of both mental and substance abuse disorders, said Canaccord inits report. Together, the targeted indications affect over one-billion people globally.

Frankstated:I think we have only scratched the surfacein a number of areas, and our team looks forward to educating the market more.

Contact the author Uttara Choudhury at[emailprotected]

Follow her onTwitter:@UttaraProactive

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Revive Therapeutics betting on psychedelics and potential COVID-19 treatment Bucillamine - Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Are NDEs caused by carbon dioxide overload? And what about psychedelics? – Patheos

Notes from Pim van Lommel,Consciousness Beyond Life: The Science of the Near-Death Experience(New York: HarperCollins, 2010), 119-121:

Oxygen deficiency is accompanied by an increase of carbon dioxide, and this increase has been suggested as a possible cause for near-death experiences. Patients breathing in unusual quantities of carbon dioxide have been known to experience a sense of separation from the body, and there have been occasional reports of a bright light, a tunnel, a sense of peace, and/or memory flashes. It should immediately be pointed out, though, that these memory images or flashes are quite rare, are extremely fragmented, and never involved either a life review or an encounter with deceased persons. Moreover, the sometimes dramatic life changes that have been extensively documented in connection with NDEs have not been reported in cases of carbon dioxide overload.

After a relatively technical discussion of medical resuscitations and the difficulties in measuring levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide during a frantic operating room emergency, Dr. van Lommel offers a simple summation:

The conclusion that a high concentration ofCO2 could be the cause of an NDE seems to be highly questionable, and at least very premature. (118)

But there are plenty of other hypotheses on offer. How about psychedelics such as LSD, DMT, psilocybin, and mescaline? Perhaps surprisingly, Dr. van Lommel is somewhat more friendly to this suggestion than he was to oxygen deprivation or even to carbon dioxide overload. The latter three of these substances can be found fairly abundantly in nature. Psilocybin and mescaline, particularly, occur in plants native to Latin America and in (magic) mushrooms and have been used in potions, powders, and inhalants for centuries to induce mind-expanding experiences. All of them are closely related to the neurotransmitter serotonin, which is easily found in the human body, and their chemical structure is related to tryptamine.

During times of major physical or psychological stress, the body activates large amounts of DMT, notably via the pineal gland. This is probably also true during the dying process, when the cells of the pineal gland are dying and, it is thought, releasing DMT.

The experience induced by psychoactive substances is often surprisingly similar to a near-death experience, especially in the case of DMT although, depending on the dosage, confusing or frightening perceptions may also occur. These substance-induced experiences include the following elements: a sense of detachment from the body, out-of-body experiences, lucid and accelerated thought, an encounter with a being of light, a sense of unconditional love, being in an unearthly environment, access to a profound wisdom, and wordless communication with immaterial beings. Sometimes the characteristic post-NDE transformation, including the loss of the fear of death, is also reported after administration of DMT or LSD.

It is a new and surprising hypothesis that DMT, which occurs naturally in the body, could play an important role in the experience of an enhanced consciousness during near-death experiences. Perhaps DMT, its release triggered or stimulated by events in our consciousness, lifts our bodys natural inhibitions against experiencing an enhanced consciousness, as if it is able to block or disrupt the interface between consciousness and our body (and brain). Mention should be made here of the fact that zinc is essential for the synthesis of serotonin and related substances such as DMT. At a more advanced age, the body has lower levels of this metal, and, as mentioned earlier, NDE reports are less common at an older age. (120-121)

I would point out, though, that attempts to reduce NDEs merely to subjective brain events caused by oxygen deficiency or DMT an option that Dr. van Lommel himself clearly does not embrace fail to account for what seem to be verifiable out-of-body experiences in which the experiencers witness events and observe people from a vantage point distinct from the location of their bodies.

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Are NDEs caused by carbon dioxide overload? And what about psychedelics? - Patheos

‘People Should Have the Fundamental Right To Change Their Consciousness’ – Reason

When psychedelic drugs finally become legal in the United States and elsewhere around the world, the lion's share of the credit will go to Rick Doblin. Since founding the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) in 1986, Doblin has argued forcefully for the benefits of frequently demonized substances such as MDMA, LSD, psilocybin, and ibogaine in helping people cope with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, and other debilitating problems. For decades, Doblin and MAPS have been pushing not just for social and cultural acceptance but also for legal and medical legitimacy.

MAPS is currently sponsoring Phase 3 clinical trials of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy as a treatment for PTSD. Within the next few years, if all goes well, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is expected to approve MDMAa.k.a. Ecstasy, which the federal government banned in 1985 as a dangerous party drugfor use by prescription as a psychotherapeutic catalyst. Further down the line, psychedelic drugs such as LSD and psilocybin, which the FDA has recognized as a "breakthrough therapy" for depression, could undergo a similar legal transformation.

The rehabilitation of these once-vilified substances is a remarkable development that signals growing recognition of their life-enhancing uses and perhaps growing tolerance of people who choose to explore that potential. During a late-February ride from Manhattan to the John F. Kennedy International Airport,ReasonEditor at Large Nick Gillespie talked with Doblin about his role in this psychedelic renaissance and the experiences that drew him to the movement.

"I'm very much a child of the Cold War," Doblin says, recalling how he was taught to "duck and cover" at school during the Cuban missile crisis. His fear of nuclear Armageddon, ecological catastrophe, and genocide was the initial impetus for his vision of "mass mental health" facilitated by psychedelics, which he believes can have a unifying effect when used properly.

Although MAPS is doing everything by the book in seeking approval of MDMA as a prescription drug, Doblin's vision goes beyond such doctor-approved uses. He aspires to a world in which people can use psychedelics responsibly without permission from physicians or priests. "Psychedelics are tools," Doblin says. "They're not good or bad in and of themselves. It's how they are used. It's the relationship you have with them."

Reason: Many people are attracted to psychedelics because they're fun. The approach that MAPS has taken, by contrast, suggests that psychedelics should not be taken lightly. Talk about the contrast between using psychedelics recreationally and using them by prescription as an FDA-approved medicine.

Doblin: I think that people should have the fundamental human right to change their consciousness. When we talk about the Bill of Rights, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, and freedom of religion, underlying all of that is freedom of thought. Psychedelics are a good example of the freedom of thought that we should have.

At the same time, when people take these things for recreational purposes and they're only looking for positive experiences, that can be dangerous if difficult material comes up. If you suppress it, you could end up worse off.

So there's an aspect of it that's work. One of our big statements is thatdifficultis not the same asbad. A lot of times, when people approach this as a recreational experience and stuff that's difficult comes up, they think, "Oh, it's a bad trip." But it is also an opportunity. So medicalization is a strategy for achieving broader access and mass mental health.

When you talk about medicalization, are you saying we need to maintain the current power structure, dominated by big pharmaceutical companies and doctors who serve as the high priests, telling us what to do and how to think? Or do you have in mind a broader concept of mental health or well-being?

Our core approach is that we are not the guides. We don't know where people need to go. People are their own guides. One of the concerns I have about traditional medicine, psychiatry, and psychotherapy, is that even in certain shamanistic settings, the healers are the ones who do it to the person. The power is in their hands. They're like surgeons; you don't do your own surgery. But when we're talking about mental surgery, we're trying to empower people to heal themselves.

To give you a sense of how much progress we're making, one of our donors, Bo Shao of the Evolve Foundation, said that when we had the psychedelic revolution in America, his parents in China were suffering under the Cultural Revolution. His parents' whole generation is traumatized still from that. So he's helping us bring [MDMA-assisted] therapy to China. We've already brought Chinese psychiatrists and psychotherapists to the United States for training, and I've been to China.

We're trying to universalize it in that way. But unlike most pharmaceutical companies, since we're doing it in a nonprofit context, we're trying to help people learn how to heal themselves without having to come to doctors and therapists.

Give me an update about what's going on with FDA approval of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for PTSD.

On November 29, 201630 years after I started MAPSwe had what's called an end-of-Phase-2 meeting. That's where we discussed the data we had gathered during Phase 2 of clinical trials and whether the FDA would permit us to go to Phase 3 [the final step before approval of a prescription drug]. The FDA said yes. Then we negotiated for eight months every aspect of the Phase 3 research protocol, the statistical analysis plan, all the other supplemental material that's required when you move into Phase 3.

Phase 1 usually involves healthy volunteers, and you're just trying to understand what the drug does. In Phase 2, you do pilot studies, exploring who is your patient population, what are your doses, what is your treatment, who do you exclude and include. Phase 2 enables you to figure out how to design Phase 3, where you do the large-scale, randomized, placebo-controlled studies that are required to prove safety and efficacy. Those are the pivotal studies that you need to get approval for marketing.

There are also Phase 4 studies, which the FDA can require after you've gotten permission to market the drug when there's additional information that the FDA wants. We've already negotiated some of the Phase 4 studies. If we succeed in Phase 3, the FDA wants more information about how we can tell ahead of time who will respond well to the treatment and what we can say about relapse rates. How long do the benefits last?

Another aspect of it is that many drugs are tested in adults, and then they're prescribed to adolescents or children. If we succeed in adults, which means 18 or over for PTSD, then we have to do studies in 12- to 17-year-olds. If that works, then we have to study 7- to 11-year-olds who are traumatized.

When do you expect the Phase 3 trials to be completed?

The FDA can come back and say, "You did everything right [and] it looks good, but we're going to screw you over and stretch it out a little bit." We don't expect that the FDA will screw us over, because, once we got permission for Phase 3, we entered into this eight-month process where we negotiated everything. That's called the special protocol assessment process. If you end up agreeing, you get what's called an agreement letter, and the FDA is legally bound to approve the drug, assuming you get statistically significant evidence of efficacy and no new safety problems arise. And since MDMA has been around for 40, 50 years, tens of millions of people have taken it. We have a very good idea of the safety profile.

The other thing the FDA did, after we got this agreement letter, was declare MDMA a breakthrough therapy [a designation that is supposed to facilitate approval of promising drugs for hard-to-treat conditions]. So I don't think that they want to screw us over in any way.

In Phase 3, we have to do a minimum of two studies, each with 100 people, and then we do what's called an interim analysis for each study. We have enrolled almost 100 people in the first of the Phase 3 studies, and the interim analysis will be sometime in late March or early April this year. Then we'll know whether we need to add anybody for statistical significance. We expect to start the second Phase 3 study in the summer of 2021, so we should have all the data from the studies near the end of 2021.

Then we submit that to the FDA, and sometime in 2022, depending on how long the review process is, we anticipate approval. We're also negotiating with the European Medicines Agency, and that process is a year or two behind the FDA process.

We will need to raise around $30 million to finish Phase 3 in Europe and a similar amount to finish Phase 3 in the United States. But in the history of MAPS, we've received donations of about $80 million, and we're trying to do this all through donations. We don't want investors. I'm sympathetic with for-profit people getting involved. The scale of the problem is so big. We need all sorts of people, sponsors, resources. But I think the profit motive has warped American health care.

You've created a public benefit corporation to market MDMA. How will that work?

For the first 25 years of MAPS, I just assumed that once MDMA became a medicine, it would be a generic medicine, and it would be sold for very little money. MDMA was invented by Merck in 1912, so the patents have expired.

Even though I wrote my Ph.D. thesis at the Kennedy School of Government on the regulation of Schedule I drugspsychedelics and marijuanaI missed something. I learned only in 2013 or so that President Reagan had signed a bill to provide incentives for developing drugs that are off patent. Since they couldn't give patents, they offered what was called data exclusivity, which means you're the only one who has the right to use your data in the U.S. for five years. If you do pediatric studies, you get an additional six months of data exclusivity, which blocks generic manufacturers from even applying, and it takes the FDA at least six months to review those applications.

So we'll have about six years of data exclusivity. Once I realized that we might actually be able to sell MDMA for more than cost as a medicine, I realized that we had a different story to tell our donors: We're not going to be perpetually asking you for money, and we might even be able to make money from the sale of MDMA and use that for more research.

Doing that is a taxable situation, and you can't stay inside the nonprofit. A public benefit corporation is a kind of corporation that explicitly seeks to maximize benefits for the public rather than the return to shareholders. So that's the approach we're taking.

This is kind of like a legal version of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love, which sold LSD for practically nothing in the '60s and '70s.

They are a big part of the story of psychedelics that not that many people know about. They really had a mission beyond making money, and the mission was consciousness change. That is our mission.

All of our research staff and all of the research money has been transferred to the public benefit corporation. We are taking not just a new approach to mental health, which is psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy, but a new approach to marketing medical treatments and drugs. We will charge somewhat more than the MDMA costs us, but we're not going to charge the maximum of what the market will bear, because that means that you have fewer people paying more for treatments. And our goal is mass mental health.

Where is the biggest pushback against what you're doing coming from these days?

So far we haven't had a whole lot of pushback. Veterans [with PTSD] have such support, particularly among Republicansthere's a libertarian strand of the Republican Party that has been a strong ally in looking at the benefits of illegal drugs. There's pushback from drug warriors who think that we need to demonize these drugs to justify the drug war. That's why there's been suppression of research into cannabis.

The pushback that I've received has not been from regulatory agencies. The FDA is aware that there are enormous numbers of people with mental conditions that are not adequately helped by the currently available medicines. That's why MDMA was declared a breakthrough therapy. Psilocybin has been declared a breakthrough therapy for treatment-resistant depression. The most important new development in mental health treatment over the last 20 or 30 years has been ketamine for the treatment of depression.

Traditional psychiatry is coming around. Yesterday, theAmerican Journal of Psychiatrypublished an article about psychedelic psychotherapy and how it was promising.

I've received pushback from some of our donors who ask, "Why did you accept money from [Republican] Rebecca Mercer, [libertarian Charles] Koch, or others? Just stick to medicine." Right now some of our big donors are telling me that I should shut up about drug policy reform and the fundamental human rights issue, that we want people to have access to these drugs with proper education and harm reduction, but outside of medicine and religion.

There is potential for pushback from fundamentalist Christians, although it doesn't seem to have happened yet. Classic psychedelics like psilocybin have been used for thousands of years for religious and medical purposes. Through ego dissolution, people have mystical experiences, which suggests there may be a common mystical core in all the world religions. There are fundamentalists in each religion who say, "My religion is the only true one. Everybody else is an infidel." The psychedelic mystical experience is a challenge to that. But I think the fundamentalists could benefit from a deeper appreciation of their own spirituality.

The other possible area of pushback is parents worrying about their kids. If you make this into a medicine, they might think, kids will get the message that it's a good thing.

What we've been doing in that regard is going to festivals around the world where young people are using these psychedelics. A lot of them are using them unwisely and irresponsibly and just trying to have a good time. Difficult material comes up, and they then try to suppress it or push it down. We've started what we call the Zendo Project, which does psychedelic harm reduction at Burning Man, the Boom Festival in Portugal, all over the world. The aim is to help people who have difficult trips work through them and process the material, so that they don't get tranquilized, don't go to the hospital, and don't have long-term mental disruptions because of it.

You once told a reporter, "We're not the counterculture; we are the culture." And I think there's some real truth to that. But you're also a parent. How old are your kids, and have you tripped with them?

My kids are 25, 23, and 21. We've wanted to take [psychedelics] together as a family.

That sounds both wonderful and kind of terrifying.

When I had my bar mitzvah at 13, that really opened the door to psychedelics for me. Because my bar mitzvah did nothing. I mean, it was a nice party. I was the oldest of four kids. I really did expect that there would be some kind of spiritual experience. And the next morning, I'm lying in bed, and God did not come. Nothing happened, but I was ready for it. I felt really bad, and I felt that traditional rituals didn't really work.

When our children turned 13, my wife and I spoke to them and said, "If you want to try marijuana or MDMA, come to us and, and we'll give it to you." It was the best anti-drug strategy that we could have had, this idea of doing drugs with your parent. They all said, "We're not ready yet."

This is a hot-button issue. But if you look at the traditional cultures that have successfully integrated psychedelics in America, we have half a million members of the Native American Church who use peyote. We have many people who are using ayahuasca in ritual settings, and they've successfully integrated ayahuasca. They believe that children who are interested in ceremonies with their families can try small amounts of these drugs, and they don't have age limits. I went to a Native American Church ceremony with my wife. It was to celebrate the wedding of a friend of ours. A Navajo man brought his 9-year-old son, who took peyote and stayed up the whole night. Now, the 9-year-old didn't take the full dose.

I am profamily values. When it comes to the education of children, we should leave that to the families, not to the government. In 23 states, the laws prohibiting the use of alcohol by young people have a parental override that allows parents to give alcohol to their children, even at restaurants, as long as there is parental supervision. So this idea is not foreign to America. I think that's the way it should be with other drugs as well.

One of the worst parts of the drug war is that parents are scared to be honest with their own children. To have the intrusion of the government in the most intimate situations, where you are trying to educate your children, is terrible. I know people who still hide the fact that they smoke marijuana from their children, even in legalization states like Massachusetts, where I live.

Do you worry about a backlash? In the 1960s, there was Diane Linkletter's suicide, which her father, the writer Art Linkletter, blamed on LSD. In the 1980s, there was the cocaine-related death of Len Bias, who had just been drafted by the Boston Celtics. His death helped inspire draconian anti-drug legislation. Do you worry about that sort of thing?

I very much worry about backlash. That's why we've reached out to the police, to try to educate them. That's why we are actively reaching out to bipartisan groups and why we have bipartisan financial support.

In the '80s and '90s, when the rave milieu was just starting, people were taking MDMA and overheating sometimes and dying from hyperthermia. Those stories were used to block the research, and then drug warriors could say there's no evidence of benefit. But now, because we have strong evidence of benefits, the situation is different.

Now we're able to say that in a medicalized context, we're getting more benefits than risks. When people take drugs in nonmedical settings and have tragic outcomes, I don't think that's going to boomerang back on the research. We have veterans who have attempted suicide multiple times but are now PTSD-free after MDMA-assisted therapy. I felt that it was necessary for us to work with the hardest cases and to show that there can be value for people who have unsuccessfully tried other treatments.

So we accept people [into our trials] who have attempted suicide in the past. We just have to create a very strong support system for people throughout the entire process of therapy. And so far there's only been one person who has attempted suicideunsuccessfullyduring our trials. The therapist thinks that was a person who was in the placebo group and was so disappointed she wasn't randomized to the MDMA group that she lost hope.

We have to be very careful not to exaggerate the benefits or minimize the risks. I think what happened with Timothy Leary and others in the '60s is that the government was exaggerating the risks and denying the benefits. And Tim and others, I think, did the opposite: exaggerated the benefits and minimized the risks.

We try to be clear that this doesn't work for everybody. This is not a panacea. It's not a one-dose miracle cure. What we're really doing is psychotherapy. It's not that you just take this pill and something changes for the better. That provides a level of comfort, when people understand that it's done in a therapeutic context.

The best way to think about drugs is that they're tools. Psychedelics are tools. They're not good or bad in and of themselves. It's how they are used. It's the relationship you have with them.

The government's survey data indicate that nearly half of Americans 12 or older have tried marijuana at least once, while about 10 percent have used it in the last month. With hallucinogens, which includes LSD, psilocybin, and mescaline, about 16 percent of Americans say they have tried them, and less than 1 percent report using them in the last month. Assuming everything is medicalized or legalized in the way you want, do you think psychedelics will ever be a mass phenomenon?

No. I think it will be something that more people will want to use, because it helps you with core aspects of being human: What's the meaning of my life? What do I think about death? Why do I have social anxiety? How do I deal with trauma? I think larger numbers of people will use psychedelics, but it's not going to be like weed. Psychedelics are used intermittently, and the emphasis is on what you bring back from the experience. There won't be a lot of frequent users, but there will be more occasional users.

Are you optimistic about the future? Not just for psychedelics, but for a broader vision of self-guided mental health?

I'm very optimistic. This idea of unification, of a common mystical core, of shared humanity and global spiritualityit also permits greater individuality. Sometimes people think that when you talk about global spirituality or shared mystical experiences, all the differences are washed out. I think it works both ways. The more we can understand our commonality, the more we will appreciate our differences and our uniqueness.

This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity. For an audio version, subscribe toThe Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie.

Excerpt from:

'People Should Have the Fundamental Right To Change Their Consciousness' - Reason

Psilocybin Dulls Activity in Brain Region Linked With Consciousness – Psych Congress Network

Brain scans show psilocybin reduces activity in the claustrum, a thin sheet of neurons deep within the cortex considered by some to be the seat of consciousness, awareness, and sense of self, according to a study published online in the journal NeuroImage.

Researchers at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, reached the finding after developing a way to access the claustrum and detect activity in the deep-rooted location. For the study, they used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to observe the claustrum in 15 participants after taking psilocybin, the hallucinogenic chemical found in certain mushrooms, and compared them with fMRI scans obtained after the participants took a placebo.

After psilocybin use, neural activity in the claustrum slowed by 15% to 30%, according to the study. Simply put, the area of the brain believed to be responsible for setting attention and switching tasks was turned down. The reduced neural activity, researchers added, appeared to be linked with stronger subjective effects in participants, such as emotional and mystical experiences.

Psychedelics and Wellness: Whats the Connection?

In addition, psilocybin changed how the claustrum communicated with brain regions involved in hearing, attention, decision-making, and remembering, according to the study.

The findings, researchers observed, mesh with first-hand reports on the typical effects of psychedelic drugs, such as feeling connected with everything and experiencing a reduced sense of the self or ego.

Our findings move us one step closer to understanding mechanisms underlying how psilocybin works in the brain, said researcher Frederick Barrett, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, and a member of the school's Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research.

This will hopefully enable us to better understand why its an effective therapy for certain psychiatric disorders, which might help us tailor therapies to help people more.

Jolynn Tumolo

References

Barrett FS, Krimmel SR, Griffiths RR, Seminowicz DA, Mathur BN. Psilocybin acutely alters the functional connectivity of the claustrum with brain networks that support perception, memory, and attention. NeuroImage. 2020 May 23;[Epub ahead of print].

Research story tip: psychedelic drug psilocybin tamps down brains ego center [press release]. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins Medicine; June 4, 2020.

Excerpt from:

Psilocybin Dulls Activity in Brain Region Linked With Consciousness - Psych Congress Network

Breaking News: Mydecine Innovations Group Signs Definitive Agreement to Acquire Mindleap Health’s Advanced Digital Telehealth Platform -…

Mydecine Innovations Group Inc. (OTC: MYCOF) (CSE: MYCO) is pleased to announce that it has signed a definitive share exchange agreement with Mindleap Health Inc. (Mindleap) for the acquisition of a 100% interest in MindLeaps Digital Telehealth Platform focused on the emerging psychedelics industry.

Pursuant to the share exchange agreement, Mydecine will acquire 100% of the issued and outstanding shares of Mindleap in exchange for: (i) 6,363,636 common shares in the capital of the Company, and (ii) the binding commitment to advance CAD$500,000in working capital to Mindleap upon closing of the transaction and an additional CAD$500,000on or beforeSeptember 1, 2020. Certain principals of Mindleap will be subject to resale restrictions on the sale of the Mydecine shares for the periods ending 4, 12, 18, and 24 months from closing. Closing of the acquisition is subject to the receipt by Mindleap of the signatures of all of its shareholders on the share exchange agreement.

Mental health has been a big issue and is a major focus for the Mydecine Group of companies. Currently the World Health Organization estimates that there are more than450 million peoplesuffer from mental health disorders worldwide placing mental disorders among the leading causes of ill-health and disability worldwide. The US has the highest prevalence of mental health disorders in the world with27 percent of adults, yet only41 percentof the people who had a mental disorder in the past year received professional health care or other mental health services due to convenience and cost associated.

Mydecine Director and CEO,Josh Bartch, stated: This acquisition brings Mydecine an elite team drawn from tech, mental health, and science, paired with innovative technology with a strong USP and large addressable market. The scalability of the platform means high potential return on investment especially given Mindleaps 1stmover advantage in the rapidly emerging psychedelic medicine sector.

Mindleap is focused on making a considerable difference in peoples lives by improving access to mental health services and providing more personalized and effective treatments utilizing the latest technology. The Mindleap Platform upon launch will provide:

The team of mental health professionals that led the product design at Mindleap comprise of four PHDs including leading neuroscientists, psychotherapists, and clinical psychologists. Mindleaps CTOSimon Abou-Antounhas 10+ years of technical leadership, managing large projects and developing custom solutions for companies including Amazon, Scotia Bank and Fiat Chrysler. Simon commented: We have gathered a strong team with different sets of skills ranging from software developers, UX/UI designers and IOS and Android experts. Our full stack, frontend, backend, Cloud and QA specialists are currently focused on ensuring all requirements are met so we can launch Mindleap by the end of summer.

Mindleaps founder and CEONikolai Vassevbrings a unique skillset to the company as he has proven experience driving top line software licensing and SAAS revenue into some of the largest organizations in the world. During his career he has sold millions of dollars worth of cybersecurity and data analytics solutions and understands the intricacies of successfully implementing software solutions that are bringing value to customers, partners, and end users. Nikolai will be representing Mindleap and Mydecine at the Investing in Psychedelics event put together by the Canadian Securities Exchange, and CFN Media along with other industry executives and experts. You can register to attend for freehereand can tune in onJune 17starting at12:00pm PDT.

Nikolai Vassev, Mindleap Founder and CEO commented: The intense anxiety and fear that many people are feeling has led to social instabilities as the virus crisis and economic collapse continues to worsen and compound already existing problems. Mindleaps platform is set to launch in a few short months and will provide much needed support to those people suffering from depression, addiction and other mental health issues.

Mindleap is currently accepting applications from mental health provides. If you are interested in applying to be a specialist or getting on the wait list to use the platform, you can sign up here:https://mindleap.health/contact

About Mydecine Innovations Group

Mydecine Innovations Group is a life sciences company focused on the development and commercialization of products and services that contribute to improving overall health and wellbeing. The companys mission is to create a healthier world through advanced technologies, natural products, and psychedelic derived medicines. Mydecine Innovations Group owns a group of trailblazing companies that are focused on helping millions of people live better lives and our portfolio includes:

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Breaking News: Mydecine Innovations Group Signs Definitive Agreement to Acquire Mindleap Health's Advanced Digital Telehealth Platform -...

This Programme Helps Students Secure Job and Financial Independence Early In Life – Entrepreneur

HCL's Techbee prepares students technically and professionally for entry-level IT jobs in the company where candidates undergo an extensive 12-month training to become software engineers

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June20, 20203 min read

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

India has emerged as the IT hub of the world, attracting major IT companies to set their offices on Indian soil. One primary reason that pulled these firms was the availability of a vast chunk of the untapped workforce. There also has been a soaring interest among school going kids to set their foot in the IT sector. However, over the years, admission fees in engineering colleges have skyrocketed, proving to be a hurdle.

To address this issue, HCL launched Techbeea work-integrated higher education programme that not only guarantees a job in HCL but also provides financial assistance to students.

Launched in 2017, this early-career programme trains and hires students who have completed 10+2 education. The program offers IT engineering jobs by equipping students with future-ready skills, fundamentals of information technology learning, understanding relevant software tools, processes and life skills during these 12 months of training.

It prepares students technically and professionally for entry-level IT jobs in HCL where candidates undergo an extensive 12-month training to become software engineers.

TechBee was started in 2017. Our idea was to catch the students young and train them on global technologies that make them job-ready. We came up with this programme because we realized there is a huge skills gap in the Industry. In the last two years, I am happy to share that over 2,000 students have done this programme and have joined HCL as employees, said Sanjay Gupta, corporate vice-president and program director-New Vistas, HCL Technologies.

Interested students who wish to enrol for the programme undergo an entrance test followed by an interview round. During the training, enrolled students receive a stipend of INR 10,000 per month, which builds in them a sense of self-reliance.

Upon successful completion of the training, candidates get to work in prestigious projects at HCL Technologies in areas of application and infrastructure support, testing and CAD Support, added Gupta. The entry-level job in HCL offers a salary of INR 2-2.20 lakh per annum.

If a student secures 90 per cent or above in the training then there will be a100 per cent waiver on the fees, while a 50 per cent waiver is offered when a candidate scores between 85-90 per cent.

While working at HCL, students may also enrol in the graduation degree programme offered by reputed universities such as BITS Pilani and SASTRA University.Due to the COVID outbreak, the entire programme has been moved to a digital platform

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This Programme Helps Students Secure Job and Financial Independence Early In Life - Entrepreneur

FIRE in this Time – Resilience

Is F.I., S.I. Socially Intelligent?

Against the backdrop of the fire and rage in Minneapolis following the police murder ofGeorge Floyd, reminiscent ofpolice beating of Rodney Kingin LA in 1991, nearly 30 years ago, with many black deaths in between, what could possibly be the relationship of financial independence and the FIRE community to the unraveling in our society?

Are we quiescent on the edges, tending to our own business of careful managing of our money to reach financial independence? Are we concerned but powerless given our debts and gratitude for secure jobs we want to keep? Do we wonder what the connection might be between our brilliant strategy of buying our freedom through building capital and the unfair system that affords us the opportunity? Is the unrest close at hand for you or far away and does that make a difference in how we respond?

The title of this post, FIRE in this time, keys off another era in the life of Black people in America. James Baldwin wrote Fire this Time. He said,The brutality with which Negroes are treated in this country simply cannot be overstated, however unwilling white men may be to hear it, The title was taken from a prophecy recreated from the Bible in a song of a slave:

God gave Noah the rainbow sign,No more water, the fire next time!

Racism and injustice is the shadow of America, and its worthwhile to pause and take account of how our approach to money, called FIRE (financial independence retire early), may get us off the hook of a job, but not off the hook of being part of systems that rewards the already privileged and send disadvantaged to the margins.

This is not your typical financial independence post, encouraging you to continue, giving your mental and practical tools for your own road to FI. Here I intend to pose to you the tough question Ive asked myself for years: how does taking personal responsibility for our finances relate to the global economys preferential treatment of capital over people? In FI, we focus on personal responsibility; is social responsibility just not our thing?

Last Sunday I gave the keynote at theVirtual Camp MustachetitledAre we just clever or are we wise?

In it I praised the brilliance of the Your Money or Your Life program in liberating individuals myself included and went on to ask: what is the shadow of this bright light?

I used this visual to explore that question.

The classic FI program helps you set up a system for observation of your daily life transactions, the emotions that arise from being stuck in the work and spend cycle, and the beliefs that drive us to accept that its the only money game we can play. Our feelings about our money lives can yoyo from elation (I just bought the thing I wanted) to despair (Idiot! Youll never pay it off or play with it). Our beliefs, drummed into us from all communication channels, are rooted in the basic mantra of society: More Is Better.

Thats where FI comes in. We pop out of that nightmare into a new dream, a dream of freedom, and doing what we want with our time. The steps of the program help us systematically unhook. We dont struggle to adapt to the work and spend cycle, only a bit more peacefully. We jump ship, while using the advantages of the capitalist system we live in to buy sufficiency and security and freedom.

However, the book and the teaching only lightly touched on that capitalist system itself and on the impact of the design of money on life on earth.

Where does More is Better come from? The economys imperative: Growth is Good.

Its the demand of capital to turn a profit. Businesses need consumers. If the flow of consumption shuts down as we are now seeing they go under. Where does the imperative of growth come from? Some say, Humans are greedy, but I believe greed is just one way humans behave. We also share, love, prefer rest over work, value learning and relationships over the quest for more. I believe that the design of the money system encourages greed, even requires greed.

The right to issue money does not rest in the government. It rests in the Federal Reserve and its member banks. The Fed attempts to Goldilocks the economy not too hot, not too cold, just right through the prime rate, the interest banks pay on the money they borrow from the Fed and then turn around and lend at a higher rate to consumers. The US government authorizes the Fed, a private corporation, to run our money system. Banks do not have to have, in deposits, the money they lend to consumers. They only have to have 10% of that money in deposits, the rest is assumed to be created as people pay back their loans. This is called theFractional Reserve.Money created this way is really a lien against future life energy money of the borrower. Some people end up indebted for life.

The last element that drives the Growth is Good imperative is the interest the banks charge on loans. Depending on the interest rate and the term of the loan, the borrower will need to come up with 2 or 3 times the original loan. The economy has to grow if borrowers are going to prosper enough to pay their loans with interest. Enough amateur economics its just important to understand what money is at a systemic level. Class dismissed.

No system in nature grows forever. Its juvenile i.e. the characteristic of a body as it grows into maturity. Mature systems trees, forests, species in ecological niches grow in connections, not size. All mature systems are kept in balance by the give and take of animals, plants, sun, water, land, opportunities to flourish. A species that dominates a system without any predators to keep it in check will eventually eat through the easy and available energy (food) sources. The population will expand until all food is gone, and then collapse in numbers to restore the balance. Humans discovered the energy of the sun in the form of fossil fuels. While it looks like the sky is the limit, the market always goes up, are we reaching the end of our expansive economy? Much debate, but worthy of consideration.

Our economy treats the earth as resources. It assumes fungibility if we run out of one resource, we can substitute another. Youre smart. You can see where that is headed.

Back to the Your Money or Your Life definition of money, now with the design of the money system and the finite earth in mind.

Money is something you choose to trade your life energy for. When you see how the work-and-spend cycle uses up your life, you choose conservative spending and building savings. You choose to live within the limits of your own life energy.

Where does the life energy freed up from earning money go?

I suggest you consider investing it some, part or all in building up a life energy account for the earth. What does that mean? Just about any form of service:

And on and on and on. If you dont need to earn money from how you spend your time, you can spend your time on some piece of making this work more safe, fair and free for all.

We conserve material resources by valuing enough and moderating consumption to just what we need.

We use our creativity and skills to maintain and fix what we have rather than toss and replace. Check out theFix-it Clinic,created by FIer Peter Mui.

We have time enough to love. And to care about the future for all life, not just our own.

Duane Elgin, one of the grandfathers of our movement, quotes Richard Gregg in the opening of his book,Voluntary Simplicity, saying our purpose is to have a life that is outwardly simple and inwardly rich.

I know a lot of you are on this path or aspire to it. Perhaps the only next step needed is to aim higher and to wear your care for more than money like a badge of courage.

While what we do with our time post FI is ours to choose, the backdrop of our lives is not. We live in a time of punishing racial and financial injustice. We live in a time when humans have driven hundreds of thousands of species into oblivion, and may be driving ourselves off the extinction cliff. The pandemic has denied tens of millions of people their income and along with it their health care. Black and brown people are dying at twice or more the rate of whites because racism makes being black or brown in this world is a pre-condition or vulnerability to the virus. So however we choose to spend our time, these realities are calling to us. What we do with our lives is our leadership, especially because people whove achieved FI are natural beacons for others. Where are you leading people? What is your beacon telling them about the responsibilities that come along with the right to retire? The protests this week mean that racism is now in all of our faces, is all of our business. The good thing and there are many is we have time enough to educate ourselves and act.

(Originally published May 29, 2020, on http://YourMoneyorYourLife.com)

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FIRE in this Time - Resilience

A Pathway To Peace: Ideas For A New And More Resilient Reality – Honolulu Civil Beat

Just as the current global health crisis has exposed the cracks in federal and state leadership and infrastructure, so too has it accentuated warnings about environmental challenges ahead.

As author Naomi Klein recently pointed out during a Fridays for Future webinar, our normal was grim to begin with. Headlines about the reduction of air pollution and the return of wildlife to Venetian canals while giving false hope about the climate crisis demonstrate changes that, according to a recent study, are likely to be temporary as they do not reflect structural changes in the economic, transport or energy systems.

Whats needed, therefore, is not a return to our old ways, but a recalibration of policy and economic models that will serve the interests of our communities and prioritize the local quality of life and environment over offshore profits in the post-COVID rebuild.

The Institute for Climate and Peace, for which I serve as Senior Advisor and Co-Founder with Maya Soetoro and Research Assistant, Naima Moore, advances a peaceful, climate-resilient future by embracing the inherent wisdom, power, ingenuity, and voices of the communities that we serve. ICP is guided by the belief that environmental shocks must be met with innovative and transformative solutions that conjoin peacebuilding problem-solving methods with rigorous research of climate change to respond to climate crises, reduce friction, and build social cohesion through locally-based and culturally-appropriate responses. Our theory of change depends on the understanding that climate awareness is needed to build and maintain peace, and peace is needed to be resilient to the powerful storms on the horizon.

So, how do we build peace?

By turning to the positive peace framework, we can understand climate resilience and resilience to shocks in general in a new way. Research from the Institute of Economics and Peace identifies positive peace as a framework that shifts the focus away from the negative to the positive aspects that create the conditions for a society to flourish. Their eight indicators include, among other things:

Taken simultaneously, these pillars allow us to envision a new future one in which communities are better equipped to mitigate dangers of emergent threats and protect vulnerable populations.

COVID-19 has laid this fact bare, and it has reminded us that we need to be ever-vigilant if we want to prepare for the other crisis of the moment: climate change.

Climate change is on the mind of many people, including in Hawaii, where rising seas regularly flood coastal roads.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

The current moment serves as a foreboding preview of catastrophic climate events to come, and its far-reaching devastation is precisely the kind of crisis that climate experts have warned us about for years. In their model, the emergence of this sort of sudden yet predictable crisis combined with a rapid and silent acceleration is soon to become commonplace.

Research shows that climate change, often coined as a threat multiplier, can exacerbate inequalities in a region and disproportionately affect poorer countries or individuals, women, and marginalized communities of color. In Hawaii, it could mean greater food insecurity, environmental degradation, and health disparities among Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander groups.

Understandably, many are looking to shift this moment into a portal, as Arudhati Roy called it, through which we might find a better way of being. Positive peacebuilding within our communities is the method that stands the best chance of getting us all of us there.

In the midst of this crisis and despite the tragedies that surround us, the communities around the world with high levels of positive peace including social cohesion, investments in physical infrastructure, and transparent, accountable leadership have also shown us what a successful response can look like. In this way, the necessity of positive peacebuilding work is being proven.

Kuuleilani Samson cleans up an encampment on the rocky edges of Mauna Lahilahi Botanical Garden. Neighbors took it upon themselves to restore the garden which had been taken over by transients.

Kuu Kauanoe/Civil Beat

It is the countries that often rank highest for levels of positive peace, such as New Zealand, Iceland, Canada, and Japan, that are proving to be the most prepared for this crisis. And interestingly, when the framework for peace is already in place, not only can countries respond more effectively, but a communitys unity can even be accelerated. This was seen in Aceh, Indonesia, where a 30-year civil conflict was interrupted by the devastating earthquake and tsunami of 2004. That crisis triggered a return to negotiations and a peaceful settlement that has lasted.

We can also see this work in our local communities today. From first responders and food banks to local schools and grocery stores, community networks and neighbors are emerging as critical parts of the safety net protecting many from a free fall into conflict or chaos. Volunteer mutual aid groups are reporting record numbers of signups, and more than a quarter of a million people responded in a single day to the UK governments recent call for volunteers.Governments are leveraging resources to offset lost income, to provide free rent and cover tax payments, and to subsidize basic services to keep communities insulated from the worst outcomes of the crisis.

These are stepping stones on the pathway to peace, yet we must investigate and rework them to protect all rather than just some populations. And we must pay particular attention to those that have been at the bottom of an insidious racial hierarchy.

Hawaiis reopening provides the opportunity to weave positive peace and climate resilience into the fabric of a new political economy. It starts by translating climate resilience and peacebuilding into tangible, culturally-responsive processes, that allow us to not only recover from this crisis but lay the groundwork to mitigate and be resilient in the next.

Examples of this include the ina Aloha Economic Futures Declaration, which was sent to Gov. David Ige last month and is the first part of an effort to create a sustainable, pono economy based on centuries of island-based values, and the feminist economic recovery plan for Hawaii, from the Honolulu State Commission on the Status of Women, which recommends shifting away from our lopsided reliance on just two industries (tourism and the U.S. military), and focusing on sustainable economic opportunities, more access for women and Native Hawaiians to capital to promote their financial independence, midwifery, green jobs and other initiatives. These projects are critical in serving as a springboard for a more peaceful Hawaii, one that can indeed bounce forward after shocks.

Other vital initiatives could include:

As we work toward a new and more resilient reality, let us consider ways in which we can promote the interests and peace of our local communities and our environment, of which we are a part. Our economic policy cannot afford to revert back to normal, but must instead reimagine what equitable and green social prosperity looks like in our islands.

Should we prove unable to use this moment of pause to restructure our current systems, we risk a fragile peace amidst a fragile climate in the immediate years ahead.

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Excerpt from:

A Pathway To Peace: Ideas For A New And More Resilient Reality - Honolulu Civil Beat