Just As We Were Making Progress: Gov. Jared Polis Says He Fears Hundreds Of New COVID-19 Cases Due To Protests – CBS Denver

DENVER (CBS4) Gov. Jared Polis says he strongly supports the message of protesters who are calling for change following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, but with COVID-19 still a major concern hes worried about the health risks Coloradans are taking whove been gathering in large groups over the past few days in order to get their message heard. He said hes been up at night worrying.

One of my greatest fears in watching the events over the last weekend is that so many people gathering in one place together will increase the spread of coronavirus across our nation, here in Colorado, Polis said in a Tuesday afternoon news conference. Only in the coming weeks will we see the impact of these large gatherings, but health experts tell me that it could result in hundreds of new cases and untold pain, death and suffering just as we were making progress.

Polis said hes glad he saw most protesters wearing masks at what he calls the justified demonstrations and thanked several state lawmakers who took it upon themselves to distribute masks at the large protests that took place in Denver. He also re-emphasized the message sent out earlier by Denvers mayor that anyone who was involved in the physical protests go get tested for coronavirus approximately a week afterwards.

You should get tested anytime you develop symptoms, of course, but if you havent developed symptoms, about 7 days after youve marched in a protest you should go in for a free, quick easy test, Polis said. Thats the way that we can act to capture earlier some of the folks that might be contagious without knowing it, or mildly symptomatic, to prevent this from being a major setback for our state with regard to coronavirus.

On Monday Colorado State Epidemiologist Dr. Rachel Herlihy echoed that time frame for protesters getting tested, saying a week really allows enough time for that individual to potentially test positive.

But also, ideally trying to catch them early enough in their infection that they become aware of their infection and can stay home and prevent transmission to others, she said.

Free testing is available from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Pepsi Center as well any of the dozens of other testing locations around the state.

Like Polis, Herlihy also spoke about the increased risk of transmission of COVID-19 with large gatherings.

One of the numbers that the governor has quoted recently is that at any given time in Colorado we estimate, given the current numbers were seeing in the state, that about one in 300 Coloradans is actively infectious with this virus. Certainly when large numbers gather there is the potential for the virus to be transmitted, and typically we estimate that its about two weeks from the time of exposure, until those cases are reported to public health, she said. So it will take about two weeks for us to know whether there is increased transmission that potentially is associated with large gatherings right now.

Polis did take a moment on Tuesday to discourage anyone who is in the higher risk category for COVID-19 to avoid large gatherings like the protests completely.

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Just As We Were Making Progress: Gov. Jared Polis Says He Fears Hundreds Of New COVID-19 Cases Due To Protests - CBS Denver

Businesses hit by COVID-19 closures and damage from riots – FOX 5 DC

Businesses hit by COVID-19 closures and damage from riots

Businesses across the area are dealing with a double blow

MANASSAS, Va. (FOX 5 DC) - Businesses across the area are dealing with a double blow.

First, being impacted by the coronavirus pandemic prompting closures, and now, riots leaving behind damage and potentially more protests ahead.

Download the FOX 5 DC News App for Local Breaking News and Weather

FOX 5 obtainedahome video showing the aftermath of Saturday nights riots.Were told what began peaceful quickly became violent, impacting businesses including Cafe Rio on Sudley Manor Drive and Sudley Road in Manassas.

Several employees were at work when large objects came crashing in, shattering awindow.

The restaurants catering van was also destroyed.

Were told the restaurant has been here for nine years and never experienced anything like this some of the tension captured on this video posted on Facebook.

Business was already slow amid the coronavirus pandemic and now the manager says customers are flat out frightened.

More protests are planned across the area.

Based on social media, one is reportedly scheduled to take place in Gainesville in the coming days.

FOX 5s Tisha Lewis reports some businesses are closing preemptively.

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Businesses hit by COVID-19 closures and damage from riots - FOX 5 DC

The Utah legislature’s COVID-19 commission to re-open votes to go to ‘green’ this weekend – fox13now.com

SALT LAKE CITY The Utah State Legislature's commission created to re-open the economy is recommending the state move to a "green" risk level for COVID-19 as early as this weekend, FOX 13 is told.

The Public Health and Economic Emergency Commission voted on Tuesday to move to the lowest risk level, which eliminates a lot of the health guidelines in place by the state's COVID-19 task force and the Utah Department of Health. But Senate President J. Stuart Adams, R-Layton, who sits on the commission, said there would be modifications -- including continuing strongly encouraging social distancing, the wearing of face masks and sanitization practices in businesses.

"Still the six-foot distancing in checkout lines, all the things were doing now but to have it be broader and opened for more businesses to allow our economy to go forward," Sen. Adams told FOX 13 in an interview.

Right now, Utah is in a "yellow" or low risk for novel coronavirus. Only Salt Lake City, Bluff and Mexican Hat are at an "orange" -- or moderate risk level -- because of a high number of cases. Sen. Adams conceded some parts of the state may not move to green or "new normal" right away.

"Theres probably parts of the state that arent ready. Summit, Wasatch County, maybe Salt Lake City, maybe West Valley, Magna. Maybe other areas of the state," Sen. Adams told FOX 13 in an interview. "These are data driven decisions and were seeing data that indicate that were showing the spread is not as prevalent as we see along the Wasatch Front. And we see hospital rates, hospital capacity we could absorb any type of spike that were looking at right now."

Utah has seen a strong uptick in COVID-19 cases in recent days. But the commission is focusing on impact to Utah's hospital system. Sen. Adams said it has not been overwhelmed, justifying the recommendation to move to the lowest risk level.

"The commissions actually looking at going to green because the numbers are good," Sen. Adams said.

The commission includes Major General Jefferson Burton, the acting director of Utah's Department of Health; Dr. Michael Good, the CEO of University of Utah Health; Brian Dunn of Steward Healthcare; as well as Derek Miller of the Salt Lake Chamber (who also chairs the governor's COVID-19 Economic Recovery Task Force); Brandy Grace of the Utah Association of Counties and Steve Starks of the Larry H. Miller Corporation. Legislative representatives include Sen. Adams; Senate Majority Whip Dan Hemmert, R-Orem; and House Majority Whip Mike Schultz.

"We are aware of the commissions recommendation to move areas to 'green' where the data support such a move. We review data on a weekly basis, and to this point have not recommended any areas move to 'green,'" the Utah Department of Health said in a statement to FOX 13.

The commission's recommendation will go to Governor Gary Herbert on Wednesday.

"We will review the recommendations from the Public Safety and Economic Emergency Commission and take them under careful consideration as we work to identify the best path forward to keep Utahns safe and informed," the governor's office told FOX 13.

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Additional COVID-19 case reported in Dare; total now 23 – The Coastland Times – The Coastland Times

In a video update released by Dare County late Tuesday afternoon, June 2, Sheila Davies, the director of Dare County Department of Health and Human Services, announced an additional COVID-19 case, bringing Dares total to 23.

Davies stated the individual is a non-resident who contracted COVID-19 through direct contact with a family member. She also stated the individual is asymptomatic and is isolating in their home county.

In this particular case the individual returned to their home county prior to us receiving the test results, said Davies. Upon receiving the positive result, we notified the individuals home county health department and worked closely with that health department and the individual who tested positive to ensure all direct contacts in Dare County were identified and notified.

Davies also noted that the countys online COVID-19 dashboard has been revamped and breaks down residents and non-residents as well as overall demographics including gender and age.

Of the 23 cases reported, 18 are residents and five are non-residents. Of the 18 residents, 15 have recovered or have been asymptomatically cleared, one has died and two cases are active and have been for over three weeks. One is hospitalized and the other is at home. According to Davies, those two cases are not connected. She also said one individual is over 65 and considered high risk, while the other is middle aged with no underlying medical conditions. She said both have been retested and both are still COVID-19 positive.

Davies also reviewed the four key metrics being tracked, which are the weekly number of tests, laboratory confirmed cases, positive tests as a percent of total tests and COVID-like illness surveillance. She stated that through May 31, 1,021 test results have been reported to Dare, including 301 this past week.

There were 179 tests performed at last weeks drive through testing event. Of the results reported to the county, 177 were negative and two were deemed invalid due to insufficient specimens.

Davies urged people to help us spread facts, not fear. Sites listed for additional information are: darenc.com/covid19, cdc.gov/coronavirus and ncdhhs.gov/coronavirus.

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Tyrrell County Schools employee tests positive for COVID-19; campuses closed for cleaning

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Additional COVID-19 case reported in Dare; total now 23 - The Coastland Times - The Coastland Times

Coronavirus brief: What happened in COVID-19 news yesterday in Sioux City, beyond – Sioux City Journal

SIOUX CITY -- For North baseball coach Nick Tillo, it felt like a normal day in June.

He was on the field with his players, hitting fly balls, hitting grounders, observing his players taking cuts in the batting cages during a sunny day.

"They picked up where we left off and jumped right into it. They were focused mentally and I think they were ready," Tillo said. "Physically, I think the biggest thing is getting reps in the cage and fielding ground balls and fly balls. It was great to be back. We had a long practice because it's two weeks until we play so we need to get everything together before we go to (Council Bluffs Thomas Jefferson) in two weeks."

While it felt normal for Tillo and other coaches, it was an abnormal sight compared to the state of athletics around the nation. MLB is still working out details to get on the field again, meaning high school baseball and softball players were some of the few athletes on a field when programs could officially hold their first day of practices around the state.

The fact that Iowa had its first official days of practice in order to prep for the first games on June 15 even made national headlines when it was among ESPN.com's headlines. Spirit Lake's baseball team held a practice at 12:01 a.m. on Monday.

Coaches and players are relishing their time on the field after more than two months apart.

"It was awesome. It was really, really exciting to see the guys again. The excitement was good. Guys were flying around, there was a lot of energy and it was good to get back out there," said Gabe Hoogers, who begins his first season as West's baseball coach. "I couldn't be more excited to do it with the group of guys that we have. I think we have a great group and we are excited to go out there with the four seniors and give them a proper sendoff."

Hoogers is one of a few new coaches to the metro area. Another is East softball coach Bubba Malenosky, who isn't just new to the Black Raiders program. It is of his first trips on the softball field since he is a former baseball assistant coach.

He was glad to finally get the chance to step on East's softball field on Monday.

"It's kind of strange for me because I am a brand new coach. Got to do one pitcher-catcher session and then practice starts," Malenosky said. "It went well. I think the girls are ready to be out there doing something. They are enthusiastic. They haven't been able to do much lately, nobody has been able to. I am from the baseball world so making the transition. It's my first taste of softball and from what I can tell, it's a lot faster pace game. It seems to be a lot of fun. It's going to be a pretty good transition.

"You know what, I think the girls enjoyed it. It felt just like it used to. Hitting ground balls, pop flies, the kids got into it and it was fun. Everyone was excited to be outside and to be on the field."

The practices felt normal for the coaches but there were slight changes due to the guidelines the IHSAA and IGHSAU set. Players need to socially distance so that means no group huddles during practices. So players were spread out in the infield as Hoogers gave instructions when West's practice started on Monday morning.

"The weirdest part is bringing them in at the beginning of practice but make sure they are socially distanced. I had them have their arms out and make sure they weren't touching anyone because they would be too close then," Hoogers said. "Normally you have a huddle. Other than that, (the guidelines) haven't changed much. Ninety percent of the time you are six feet apart. As far as changes, we will work through it pretty easily."

Postgame handshakes as a show of sportsmanship were commonplace at the end of games but due to the guidelines, those will not happen this season. Malenosky hopes for a new sign of sportsmanship to emerge after games.

"I think with the guidelines, the girls will get used to them. I think the people will get used to them. After practice, you can't even put hands in a huddle," Malenosky said. "The team building and sportsmanship things like that, I am going to miss. They are important but it will be learn on the fly and see what teams want to do. I really feel we need to do something, like a tip of the cap or something. One of the reasons we are coaching is to teach them life lessons. I think it's a big part of athletics."

Sunflower seeds and spitting are both banned, too. Seeds were common at baseball and softball fields with players and coaches and were available at concession stands, which also aren't allowed this summer.

For Hoogers, it will be a major habit to break but he is more than willing to change in order to have a season.

"That's going to be a tough one for me in general," Hoogers said with a laugh. "They help with the nerves for me. I will bring a couple of bags with me, so that will be different. When I was working on the field before practices, I've been mindful of it. Every time I have caught myself. The guys seem understanding with all of the guidelines and restrictions. Some of them will take more time. Every time we catch them, we call them on it."

Teams also have to sanitize equipment regularly from balls to bats to helmets, which is something players and coaches didn't have to worry about in the pre-coronavirus world.

However, Tillo, who chews gum instead of sunflower seeds, doesn't feel that will hold anything up in practices or games.

"It's different that way. The sanitizing and everyone having their own helmets, that part is different but we will get used to that," Tillo said. "It's just a little bump in the road. Even though there are small changes, it's not that drastic to be honest. We are so glad to be back.

"It's a shortened season and that's fine as long as we are playing. All of the kids are ready and we have more kids out. More kids want to do something. The coaches are happy. The games will have good crowds because there is nothing else to do. Why not go out and watch high school baseball?"

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Coronavirus brief: What happened in COVID-19 news yesterday in Sioux City, beyond - Sioux City Journal

Experts warn COVID-19 battle isn’t over as life starts to return to normal in Lexington – WKYT

LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) - Things are starting to return to normal after many businesses had to close, to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

Here in Lexington, people are eating at restaurants again, gyms and stores are opening back up, but as the number of new virus cases continues to increase, experts say we're not out of the woods yet.

Tuesday, the Lexington-Fayette County Health Department reported 21 new COVID-19 cases. To put that number into context, spokesperson Kevin Hall says at the start of April the Lexington area was reporting only 3 to 5 cases each day.

So far, Fayette County has 781 confirmed cases, with 113 of those cases requiring hospitalization and 13 people have died.

Hall says many of our new cases are from social gatherings that are following CDC guidelines.

"When the outbreak first happened in March, where there were people having parties that were almost thumbing their nose up at restrictions, this is not like that," Hall said. "These are people who have the best of intentions, they're trying to follow the guidelines, but that just goes to show you how quickly and easily this can spread."

Going forward, Hall says continue following restrictions and taking precautions. It could be as simple as choosing to eat out once a week instead of every day.

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Experts warn COVID-19 battle isn't over as life starts to return to normal in Lexington - WKYT

Despite COVID-19, The Washington Center internships are up, virtually – WTOP

The Washington Center's program has 322 students beginning their virtual internships at 13 different federal agencies, a 22% increase.

The Washington Center, which arranges internships for college students every year, many of whom get to live and work in D.C., had to do things differently for this years summer internship program, but ended up placing more interns than last year.

Its 2020 Summer Virtual Internship Program has 322 students beginning their virtual internships at 13 different federal agencies, a 22% increase.

It also arranged internships for another 257 students that have been placed with 162 organizations across the country.

The internships began June 1.

Many students in the spring internship program also transitioned to virtual internships.

It was a big change from interning for three weeks in D.C., to then doing it in my parents house. However, theres still a lot to be gained, and I feel like Im learning every day what its like to be in the workplace, said Kelsey Ballard, a spring 2020 education and communication intern with Washington Performing Arts.

Between all of its internship programs, The Washington Center brings as many as 700 students to D.C. for work experience, professional development and one-on-one mentoring. The students get academic credit from their schools, and the federal internships all pay stipends.

The Washington Center usually provides interns with housing at its residential and academic facility in NoMa, though virtual internships mean students will miss out on the experience of living in D.C. this year.

The center said some private organizations did not transition to a virtual internship model, but all federal agencies that it works with have.

These students have been through a lot of anxiety and change because of COVID, and theyve had their summer and future plans upended, said The Washington Center President Chris Norton.

With the federal agencies and employers transitioning to host virtual interns, these students will still be able to get the enriching summer experience they have been planning on.

Students in the Virtual Internship Program work 20 to 25 hours per week, and have access to virtual career readiness sessions and workshops on writing resumes and job interviews.

The Washington Center is the largest student internship program in D.C.

Like WTOP on Facebook and follow @WTOP on Twitter to engage in conversation about this article and others.

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Despite COVID-19, The Washington Center internships are up, virtually - WTOP

What you need to know about the COVID-19 pandemic on 1 June – World Economic Forum

Responding to the COVID-19 pandemic requires global cooperation among governments, international organizations and the business community, which is at the centre of the World Economic Forums mission as the International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation.

Since its launch on 11 March, the Forums COVID Action Platform has brought together 1,667 stakeholders from 1,106 businesses and organizations to mitigate the risk and impact of the unprecedented global health emergency that is COVID-19.

The platform is created with the support of the World Health Organization and is open to all businesses and industry groups, as well as other stakeholders, aiming to integrate and inform joint action.

As an organization, the Forum has a track record of supporting efforts to contain epidemics. In 2017, at our Annual Meeting, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) was launched bringing together experts from government, business, health, academia and civil society to accelerate the development of vaccines. CEPI is currently supporting the race to develop a vaccine against this strand of the coronavirus.

1. How COVID-19 is affecting the globe

Number of confirmed COVID-19 cases reported in the last seven days by country, territory or area, 25 May to 31 May

Image: World Health Organization

2. Pope: People more important than the economyFor the first time in several months, Pope Francis addressed the public, stressing how countries should prioritize as they reopen.

Healing people, not saving (money) to help the economy (is important), healing people, who are more important than the economy, Francis said.

Pope Francis leads the Regina Coeli prayer from his window in the newly reopened St. Peter's Square after months of closure.

Image: Vatican Media via REUTERS

3. Britain eases lockdown, but is it too soon?

English schools reopened on Monday for the first time since they were shut 10 weeks ago, but many parents planned to keep children at home amid fears ministers were moving too fast.

Britain has one of the highest death rates from COVID-19, and many people are worried that it is happening too soon, including a number of scientists who advise the government who have warned it could lead to a second spike in infections.

4. Mythbusting can strengthen false beliefsCOVID-19 mythbusting may have had limited impact because familiarity can strengthen false beliefs, according to an article published by the Conversation. Studies have shown that people who have read 'myth vs fact' articles remember which items are true and which are false right after reading such pieces. But several days later, people can accept false ideas as true.

Facts: Earth is not flat; Moon is not cheese.

Image: The Conversation

A study by health economists finds that paid sick leave could help slow the spread of diseases such as coronavirus. The study examined mandates enacted by state and local governments in the US between 2005 and 2018. Their research found that workers were more likely to stay home when sick with such measures in place, helping to contain illness. Women and minorities, who often work in industries that don't traditionally offer paid sick leave particularly benefit.

COVID-19 brought many policies around the globe to prevent the virus' spread including policies such as the Families First Coronavirus Response Act in the US. That policy, which went into effect April 1 for small- and medium-sized small businesses, was the first congressionally-passed bill providing Paid Sick Leave for employees. Bills like that, wrote the researchers, will be key to containing the virus, especially as businesses reopen.

License and Republishing

World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with our Terms of Use.

Written by

Linda Lacina, Digital Editor, World Economic Forum

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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What you need to know about the COVID-19 pandemic on 1 June - World Economic Forum

First human trial of potential antibody treatment for Covid-19 begins – CNN

The first phase of the trial will test whether the therapy is safe and well-tolerated; those results are expected in late June. The first Covid-19 patients being treated with the therapy are hospitalized at New York University's Grossman School of Medicine in New York, Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles and Emory University in Atlanta, the company told CNN.

If the trial ultimately shows the treatment is effective against Covid-19, it could be available by autumn, according to the Indianapolis-based company.

Scientists at AbCellera and the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases selected those they thought would be most potent and Lilly scientists engineered the treatment, known as a monoclonal antibody therapy. This approach has worked to treat other illnesses; there are monoclonal antibody therapies that treat HIV, asthma, lupus, Ebola and some forms of cancer.

It's not clear if such a therapy will work against Covid-19, but when this treatment was used on on cells in the lab, it blocked the ability of the virus to infect the cells, Skovronsky said. The data is not yet published, but based on those results, scientists got the green light to take the next step and prepare it to be tried in patients.

They also gave it a temporary name.

"We call it LY-CoV555, lucky triple 5," Skovronsky said.

Manufacturing has already begun

This will be a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind Phase I trial. Some patients will be receive the medicine and some will receive a placebo, and patients or their doctors won't be informed who received it and who didn't.

If the treatment appears to be safe, the company would move to the next phase of testing in a matter of weeks. The second phase of the trial will involve a larger number of patients, including patients who are not hospitalized, and will test whether the therapy is effective.

The company also plans to study the drug as prevention. The treatment could be used for vulnerable patient populations for whom vaccines might not be a great option, such as the elderly or people who have chronic disease or compromised immune systems.

Eli Lilly has already begun manufacturing the antibody therapy in large quantities so it could be tested and potentially for use in patients beyond the trial. Under non-pandemic circumstances, the companies would usually wait to find out if it worked first before it started making it.

"If it does work, we don't want to waste a single day, we want to have as much medicine as possible available to help as many people quickly," Skovronsky said.

In trials over the next several months, Lilly says it will test different mixtures of a few of the other antibodies scientists think might provide protection. The optimal scenario, though, Skovronsky said, is if they only need one antibody at a relatively low dose.

"The more antibodies are mixed together, higher doses, the more difficult it is to manufacture," Skovronsky said. "But if it has to be two antibodies, higher doses, or even three antibodies mixed together at higher doses, we'll do whatever it takes to make effective medicine for patients."

Other antibody therapies in development

Eli Lilly isn't the only company working on antibody treatments. Several US teams have cloned antibodies to Covid-19 and many are close to testing in patients. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals has said it hopes to start human trials this month and to have a treatment by the end of the summer.

"That's always the problem with treating Covid-19 with monoclonal antibodies -- if you wait until things are pretty far along, like including patients that are already on the ventilator, it may not have any clinical impact," Hotez said.

If it works though, it could also be useful if, for example, a patient in a nursing home tested positive for Covid-19, and such a treatment could be given to others at the facility; for a first responder that had just been exposed to a patient with Covid-19; or for health care workers, Hotez said.

One challenge Hotez noted: Monoclonal antibody therapies tend to be "pretty expensive," he said.

Typically, such treatments would take many years to develop, but Covid-19 treatments are on an accelerated schedule. Pharmaceutical companies have said that government approvals that normally take weeks have sometimes come within a day.

"It's really been a privilege to be able to operate in this kind of environment," Lilly's Skovronksy said. He said he and others in the pharmaceutical industry have wondered if the same collaboration and urgency could be applied to treatments for other diseases like cancer or Alzheimer's.

"For many of us, this feels a little like a moonshot or a Manhattan Project, where so many scientists are working together at breakneck speeds," Skovronksy said. "Surely there will be other advances that come of this."

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First human trial of potential antibody treatment for Covid-19 begins - CNN

11 employees and 1 patient test positive for COVID-19 at Lincoln Regional Center – Omaha World-Herald

LINCOLN Eleven state employees and one patient at the Lincoln Regional Center have tested positive for the coronavirus, a state official confirmed Tuesday.

Khalilah LeGrand, a spokeswoman for the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, said more cases are expected to be found as testing continues with patients and staff at the state psychiatric hospital.

The hospital is the latest state institution to be hit by the potentially deadly virus. In April, six workers and three teenagers tested positive for the coronavirus at the Youth Treatment and Rehabilitation Center-Kearney, an HHS facility for juvenile offenders.

More recently, seven inmates from the Community Corrections Center in Omaha have tested positive, as have 14 corrections employees from multiple state prisons.

LeGrand said the regional center outbreak began May 21, when officials were notified that a staff member had tested positive. She said the employee in question had no symptoms upon arriving to work that day, based on a routine temperature check and symptom screening, and had no contact with patients.

However, based on the work of contact tracers and advice from medical officials, HHS officials decided to test staff and patients out of an abundance of caution, she said. So far, 320 employees and patients have been tested with help from the National Guard. Additional testing is planned for Wednesday.

LeGrand said the 11 employee cases were traced primarily to four specific exposure incidents. She said one patient is known to be positive so far. She said staff with potential exposure have been asked to self-quarantine. Accommodations have been provided for those employees who need to quarantine away from a high-risk household member.

On Friday, HHS CEO Dannette Smith denied that the patient with the coronavirus had been transported with another patient. She said the two were transported separately and had no interaction.

Smith said HHS officials are taking steps to reduce the potential for spread of the coronavirus in the regional center, including trying to minimize the number of employees who work in multiple buildings and providing masks and other protective equipment as appropriate. Staff are checking patients temperatures three times a day.

The regional center has struggled in recent years with a shortage of staff and high turnover levels.

Masks made by Ann Kane and her family.

Ann Kane and her family are producing masks. Everyone has a job.

Ann Kane and her family have made around 200 masks.

UNMC med student Nate Mattison works on his laptop at his apartment near downtown Omaha.

A bottle of Purell sits on a kitchen countertop as UNMC med student Nate Mattison works on his laptop. Mattison is one of a handful of UNMC students who have stepped up fill various nonprofit needs. Mattison has signed up to be a Big Brother and is currently waiting to be paired up.

Mattison is one of a handful of UNMC students who have stepped up to fill the needs of various nonprofits.

Matt Van Zante prints parts for face shields in his basement.

A 3D printer prints parts for face shields.

Matt Van Zante is among a group making face shields for personal protective equipment for medical personnel.

Matt Van Zante shows off one of the finished face shields he helped make.

Matt Van Zante shows off a finished face shield.

A 3D printer prints parts for face shields in Matt Van Zante's basement.

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11 employees and 1 patient test positive for COVID-19 at Lincoln Regional Center - Omaha World-Herald

Police violence will make it harder to fight COVID-19 – The Verge

Law enforcements brutal response to this weekends protests may fuel mistrust in the health care system as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to smolder through the country.

Experts say the danger is especially acute in black communities, which have already been hit hard by the virus, and have historically borne the brunt of discriminatory policing. In the aftermath of the police response to protests, vulnerable communities may be even less likely to trust and cooperate with health officials. That could make it harder to control another wave of illness.

This blatant display reminds folks how bad the devaluing of black lives is, at the height of a global pandemic, and its certainly going to lead to less willingness to engage in the system, says Rachel Hardeman, an assistant professor and health equity researcher at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.

People already feel less willing to engage with contact tracers in the Twin Cities, according to someone with knowledge of the Minnesota COVID-19 response, who asked not to be named because they didnt have permission to speak with the media. Its hard to say yet if data would back up that assessment, they told The Verge, but anecdotally, people making calls feel like theyre meeting more resistance. Contact tracers identify people with a disease like COVID-19 and figure out who they recently interacted with to stop the virus from spreading. The Minneapolis health department did not respond to a request for comment.

Large gatherings like protests already make contact tracing difficult. When people at those gatherings encounter police violence, that task gets harder. People who test positive for the coronavirus may be reluctant to tell health officials if they were at protests because they may worry about retaliation. They might not want to identify people they interacted with at the protests for the same reasons. Thats just one way mistrust makes it difficult for public health officials to track down clusters of COVID-19.

Some statements from officials are only making the problem worse. Minnesota Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington used public health terminology to describe police work and said that officers are contact tracing people who were arrested to find out the groups that they were a part of. The conflation between an important public health activity like contact tracing and investigation of people who have been arrested could make people less likely to trust public health workers trying to trace the disease.

Black communities, as well as communities of other people of color, already distrust the health system. Police violence is, in itself, a constant public health issue: one in every 1,000 black men may be killed by police, and seeing images of police violence is associated with poor mental health for black Americans. Discrimination by law enforcement can lead to symptoms of depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder; stress from encounters with police is also linked to risk factors for chronic diseases like diabetes and hypertension.

People who have negative encounters with law enforcement are also less likely to trust medical institutions, one study found. All public health efforts in the United States are forced to grapple with that challenge its harder to engage with communities that, after decades of mistreatment, are reluctant to trust officials of any kind, including health officials.

Its one of the many ways that this sort of violence impacts health and well being, Hardeman says.

Finding solutions to those issues is even more significant during a pandemic. Instead, law enforcement created environments that are bad for public health. Police officers in Detroit, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and other cities used disease-exacerbating tactics like tear gas and pepper spray and carted hundreds off to crowded jails, which are known transmission vectors for COVID-19. Tear gas and pepper spray make people cough, a risk factor for spreading a respiratory disease. Many officers didnt wear masks and herded protesters into close quarters. The strategies are health threats at any moment, but are even more dangerous against the backdrop of the novel coronavirus and at a time when health officials need community engagement.

Itll be difficult to tell how much of the suspicion of public health officials that people may see in the next few weeks was already there and how much is new, Hardeman says. Itll be hard to tease apart ... which pieces bubbled up further because of whats going on, she says. But the violence from police officers during ongoing protests highlight and strengthen the reasons for the existing suspicion.

Adding community health workers to the COVID-19 response could help bridge gaps between black communities and public health, Hardeman says. They can bring folks along and keeping them safe, while also not devaluing their lived experiences of feeling this mistrust, because this mistrust is warranted.

Its difficult to act as a representative of a local government when that government is under such an unfavorable lens, the person with knowledge of the COVID-19 response in Minnesota told The Verge. Its hard to expect that people would be open to working with you when theyve witnessed violence from other government workers. Were supposed to be on the same side protecting the public, they told The Verge. Its just a horrifying incident.

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Police violence will make it harder to fight COVID-19 - The Verge

SpaceX commissioned this artist for the space station. He also painted a mural in Tampa. – Tampa Bay Times

It was already a big deal for Tampa when Los Angeles-based artist Tristan Eaton was commissioned in 2016 to paint a mural on the Berns Steak House wine warehouse. The street artist has murals all over the world, as well as pieces at the Modern Museum of Art in New York.

Now, having a Tristan Eaton mural in Tampa is even more significant. His work was aboard the SpaceX shuttle Crew Dragon, which docked at the International Space Station on Sunday.

According to artnet.com, Elon Musks SpaceX commissioned the artist to create indestructible artworks to commemorate the shuttles first trip to the ISS.

Eaton has shown locally at Tampas CASS Contemporary, the gallery that commissioned the mural at Berns Fine Wine and Spirits (1209 S Howard Ave.) in a partnership with Berns to help commemorate the restaurants 60th anniversary.

Titled Evangelines Feast, the mural is on a 60- by 30-foot wall that faces Howard Avenue. Before painting it, Eaton learned about the rich history of Berns, had a meal there and took a tour. Using a color palette made up of the deep reds of the restaurants decor, the mural incorporates an image of founder Bern Laxer, details of wood from the Harry Waugh Dessert Room and names of longtime employees.

It features images of Bacchus (the Roman god of wine), Artemis (the Greek goddess of the hunt), wine bottles and Florida panthers.

For the space station, Eaton created a series of two-sided, gold, brass and aluminum plates titled Human Kind to be viewed by the five astronauts who will live at the ISS. Americans Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley brought the works with them on the Crew Dragon and docked at the ISS on Sunday.

Each plate says Human on one side and Kind on the other. Theyre instantly recognizable as Eatons work, with collages of pop imagery including chimpanzees and rocket ships.

According to space.com, they come in protective sleeves with a front pocket containing the artists statement and a greeting to the astronauts. The greeting reads: Welcome to space! Thank you for taking time to view these works I created for this expedition. Your courage and dedication is an inspiration to all of us down here on Earth. I imagine every astronaut takes a moment to digest the history and glory of where you are and what you are doing for humankind.

The plates will come back to Earth with the Crew Dragon in a few months.

In an Instagram post, Eaton said stay tuned about what will happen to the artwork when it returns to Earth.

As an artist I try to look at the world with a big picture view, he wrote in the post. No one gets a bigger view of our world than our brave astronauts on the ISS.

Eaton said the plates at the space station represent the duality of Human Kind, our past and our future.

With kindness, hope and science, Human Kind has changed the world many times over, he wrote. "For a better future, we can do it again.

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SpaceX commissioned this artist for the space station. He also painted a mural in Tampa. - Tampa Bay Times

NASA chief "all in" for Tom Cruise to film on space station – The Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) NASA is rolling out the International Space Stations red carpet for Tom Cruise to make a movie in orbit.

The space agencys administrator, Jim Bridenstine, said before Wednesdays planned launch of two NASA astronauts aboard a SpaceX rocket that Elon Musks company is already getting customers eager to blast off.

Cruise is one of them.

Bridenstine said hell leaving it to Cruise and SpaceX to provide the mission details.

I will tell you this: NASA has been in talks with Tom Cruise and, of course, his team, and we will do everything we can to make it a successful mission, including opening up the International Space Station, he told The Associated Press.

Asked about Cruise filming on the space station, Musk told CBS This Morning, Actually, I think that remains to be seen. We are supportive and I think NASA is supportive of anything that captures the imagination of the public.

Bridenstine said the whole reason NASA created this commercial marketplace is so SpaceX, Boeing and other private companies can attract customers besides the U.S. government. That will drive down costs to American taxpayers, he said, and increase access to space for all types of people celebrities included.

I dont admit this very often ... but I was inspired to become a Navy pilot because when I was in elementary school, I watched the movie Top Gun, the 44-year-old Bridenstine said.

Cruise starred as Navy pilot Pete Maverick Mitchell in the 1986 film. A sequel is due out later this year.

The question is, Can Tom Cruise make a new movie that inspires the next generation Elon Musk. And if he can do that, then were all for it. NASA is all in, Bridenstine said.

A message to Cruises representative was not immediately returned.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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NASA chief "all in" for Tom Cruise to film on space station - The Associated Press

Watch live: NASA astronauts on way to space station – UPI News

ORLANDO, Fla., May 30 (UPI) -- NASA and SpaceX ended a nine-year absence of human spaceflight from U.S. soil Saturday when two astronauts lifted off toward a rendezvous with the International Space Station.

The 3:22 p.m. EDT launch, under overcast skies, from Kennedy Space Center in Florida marked the first time since the final space shuttle mission in 2011 that NASA astronauts didn't have to rely on Russia to get into space.

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine, in comments earlier this week, called the launch a beacon of hope to a nation troubled by the COVID-19 pandemic and social strife, much in the same way the Apollo moon program boosted the nation's morale.

The successful launch began a 19-hour journey for astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, who are to dock with the International Space Station. It also is a final test for the Crew Dragon space capsule made by Elon Musk's SpaceX.

SpaceX confirmed the capsule successfully reached orbit, and separated from the second stage booster. The first-stage rocket booster landed successfully on a barge in the Atlantic Ocean.

"It was incredible. Appreciate all the hard work and thanks for the great ride into space," Behnken said over the communication link to ground crews.

Bridenstine said he'd been praying for the astronauts and their families at liftoff.

"I've felt that rumble before, but it's a whole different feeling when you've got your own team on that rocket," Bridenstine said. "And they are our team, they are America's team. ... This is everything that America has to offer in its purest form."

Both President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence returned for the launch after Wednesday's postponement.

In a speech at the space center's Vehicle Assembly Building after the launch, President Donald Trump called for an end to violence following the death of Minnesotan George Floyd during an arrest Monday.

He then praised NASA and SpaceX for recent advances, as well as plans to return to the moon and eventually Mars.

"Today as we mark a new commitment to an American future in space -- a tremendous commitment it is -- let us all commit to a brighter future for all our citizens right here on Earth," Trump said.

NASA and SpaceX defied iffy weather forecasts to begin the mission. Storms in the east-central Florida area created "no go" conditions about two hours before launch. But the weather cleared as the countdown neared liftoff time.

Storm clouds and precipitation had forced a postponement of the launch Wednesday afternoon.

Astronauts Behnken and Hurley announced from the capsule that they had chosen the name Endeavour for it, which was the name of Behnken's first space vehicle, the space shuttle Endeavour.

The launch is the first time a private company has sent astronauts into orbit, under NASA's Commercial Crew Program.

SpaceX secured a contract to provide ferry service to the space station for a fixed cost, and developed the rocket and capsule with NASA's cooperation.

The Falcon 9 rocket had already been proven as a reliable workhorse for carrying supplies to the space station 250 miles above Earth.

Musk, speaking to family members of both astronauts on Wednesday, said he felt a strong sense of responsibility for their safety.

"I said we've done everything we can to make sure your dads come back OK," he recalled telling each astronaut's only child Wednesday before the launch was called off.

Heading east

After launch, the capsule headed east over the Atlantic Ocean and toward the United Kingdom.

The capsule was to orbit the Earth until it reaches the altitude of the space station and catches up to it.

Crew Dragon will inch closer and dock slowly. The capsule is to dock autonomously, but Hurley will demonstrate flying it manually for a brief test.

The spacecraft is scheduled to arrive at the space station Sunday, with docking planned for 10:29 a.m. EDT. Hurley and Behnken are to remain in the capsule for almost two hours as it is locked in place and checks are made on its systems.

Once the hatch opens, astronaut Chris Cassidy -- already on board the space station -- will greet the new arrivals. He and Russians Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner arrived in April and are to stay there until October.

During the mission, called Demo 2, Behnken and Hurley will conduct final tests of the Crew Dragon capsule before it is certified for regular ferry service to the space station.

Flying manually

One of the biggest tests will be flying the capsule manually for brief periods, using Crew Dragon's touchscreen controls.

"We've longed to be a part of a test mission, a test spaceflight," Behnken said during a brief press conference in the days before the launch. "It's something we dreamed about, flying something other than the space shuttle" to carry people into space.

Behnken and Hurley don't know how long they will be on the space station. NASA has said it could be as little as six weeks and as much as 16 weeks, depending on how quickly the crew completes necessary maintenance on the space station and how favorable weather conditions are for spacecraft splashdown.

If the mission ultimately is successful, NASA plans to launch another SpaceX capsule to the space station Aug. 30, Bridenstine, the NASA administrator, said Tuesday.

Crew members for that mission are NASA astronauts Mike Hopkins, Victor Glover and Shannon Walker, along with Soichi Noguchi, an astronaut with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.

The return to Earth for the Demo 2 mission would mark the first splashdown of a U.S. space capsule carrying astronauts since the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project in 1975.

SpaceX is more than two years behind schedule for the launch. NASA awarded two finalist contracts in 2014 to certify new spacecraft to carry people by 2017 -- Boeing received $4.2 billion for its Starliner capsule and SpaceX received $2.6 billion for Crew Dragon.

Starliner failed to reach the space station during a test flight in December, and is scheduled for another attempt in the third quarter of this year.

Over the past decade, NASA astronauts only used Russian Soyuz rockets and capsules to reach the space station, at a cost of more than $70 million per seat.

Veteran astronauts

Behnken, 49, and Hurley, 53, have been astronauts since their selection in 2000. They worked closely with SpaceX to develop the new spacecraft systems.

The two men share similar life experiences. Both are married to female astronauts who have traveled into space, and both have one child. Both were military test pilots and hold the rank of colonel -- Behnken with the U.S.Air Force and Hurley with the U.S. Marine Corps.

Behnken, originally from the St. Louis area, was a former chief of NASA's Astronaut Office. He flew aboard two space shuttle flights as a mission specialist.

Hurley, originally from upstate New York, flew on the last shuttle mission in 2011 and was the first Marine pilot to fly the F/A18 E/F Super Hornet.

SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket is the first orbital launch vehicle to be fully reusable, although the rocket for this launch was brand new.

The Falcon 9 is just short of 230 feet tall, with a 12-foot diameter. Nine of SpaceX's Merlin engines provide thrust of 1.7 million pounds upon liftoff. By comparison, a typical F-16 fighter jet emits 32,000 pounds of thrust.

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Watch live: NASA astronauts on way to space station - UPI News

International Space Station UK tracker: Find out how to see the ISS TONIGHT – Express.co.uk

The International Space Station has been a constant presence in the skies since its launch in 1998. In fact, the ISS orbits our planet every 90 minutes at an approximate altitude of 250 miles (400km). Although impossible to see during the day, the space station transforms into the third brightest object in the night sky.

The ISS goes through periods it cannot be seen from the UK for months.

Look west, right of the moon for the bright light moving towards the overhead

Tim Peake

This is because the space station's diagonal orbit can criss-cross other parts of the planet.

However, every now and then, a window of a few weeks arrives when the ISS flies over the UK at night.

Exact times understandably vary slightly depending on your location in the UK, but Express.co.uk has used Lancaster - the closest point to the geographical centre of the country in attempt to provide a fair average estimation.

Spotting the ISS for the first can be a profound experience, when you appreciate the glowing speck drifting silently overhead is actually home to human beings conducting scientific research benefiting the world.

READ MORE:SpaceX launch UK LIVE stream: How to see SpaceX launch over the UK

Express.co.uk has provided the dates and times ISS will become visible for the rest of the month, with the expected duration added in brackets.

May 28 10.09pm (6 minutes)

May 29 10.58pm (3 minutes)

May 30 10.10pm (5 minutes)

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You should have no trouble spotting the International Space Station as it drifts overhead at an average speed of 17,000mph.

The ISS takes on the appearance of one of the brightest stars in the night sky.

Sometimes the station will rise over the horizon, while at other times the ISS may slowly fade into view in the middle of the night sky as it starts to catch the Sun's light.

The orbiting laboratory will always appear in the west and will travel eastwards.

And just as it appears, it may disappear in the same way, growing gradually fainter until it is completely enshrouded by the Earth's shadow.

You'll easily be able to spot it with the naked eye weather permitting.

However, those who own a telescope or binoculars may even be able to distinguish some of the space station's details.

These can inclide the space station's iconic solar panels.

240 individuals from 19 countries have visited the International Space Station.

The space station has been continuously occupied since November 2000.

An international crew of six people live and work while traveling at a speed of five miles per second, orbiting Earth about every 90 minutes.

In 24 hours, the space station makes 16 orbits of Earth, traveling through 16 sunrises and sunsets.

Peggy Whitson set the record for spending the most total time living and working in space at 665 days on Sept. 2, 2017.

The acre of solar panels that power the station means sometimes you can look up in the sky at dawn or dusk and see the spaceship flying over your home, even if you live in a big city.

The living and working space in the station is larger than a six-bedroom house (and has six sleeping quarters, two bathrooms, a gym, and a 360-degree view bay window).

To mitigate the loss of muscle and bone mass in the human body in microgravity, the astronauts work out at least two hours a day.

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International Space Station UK tracker: Find out how to see the ISS TONIGHT - Express.co.uk

China reveals plan for Heavenly Palace space station to rival ISS – New York Post

China has outlined plans to build an orbiting science lab by 2023.

The Heavenly Palace station will house six people and serve as a test bed for experiments on astronomy, technology and more.

China hopes to build the spacecraft over the course of 11 rocket launches, reports SpaceNews.The first of these will take place next year, Zhou Jianping, chief designer of Chinas human spaceflight program, said at a conference in Beijing Tuesday.

Once operational, Chinas lab will rival the International Space Station (ISS) built by space agencies from the US, Japan, Russia, Canada and Europe.

The ISS has orbited roughly 250 miles above Earths surface since 1998 and also serves as a space environment research laboratory.

Jianpings announcement comes shortly after the China National Space Administration (CNSA) launched its newest rocket earlier this month.

The Long March 5B is designed to carry large payloads into low-Earth orbit.

Launch of the new stations core module on a Long March 5B could take place in early 2021, Jianping said.

A model of the huge module was displayed at an airshow in Zhuhai, China in 2018.

As part of the 11 missions, China hopes to launch two experiment modules, four crewed spacecraft and four cargo vehicles.

A number of international scientific projects will take place on the station, from astronomy to research into deep space travel.

According to Jianping, a total of 18 astronauts will be plucked from the Peoples Liberation Army Air Force.

Training has already begun, SpaceNews reports.

President Xi Jinping has prioritized advancing Chinas space program to strengthen national security.

The country has already sent two space stations into space Tiangong-1 and Tiangong-2 though only Chinese astronauts boarded them.

The US Defense Department has highlighted Chinas increasing space capabilities, saying it was pursuing activities aimed at preventing other nations from using space-based assets in a crisis.

China insists it has only peaceful ambitions in space but has tested anti-satellite missiles.

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China reveals plan for Heavenly Palace space station to rival ISS - New York Post

When you can see the International Space Station flying over Greater Manchester over the next week – Manchester Evening News

All eyes have been on the sky for the past few months as lockdown has turned us into a nation of stargazers.

Meteor showers, supermoons and the Starlink satellites have all given us plenty of free celestial entertainment while we've been confined to our homes.

Tonight there's an extra-special reason to look up as Nasa and Elon Musk's company SpaceX launch a manned rocket into space from the US for the first time in nine years.

If you're out watching the historic event, stay up a little later and keep your eyes peeled for the International Space Station too, where the Falcon 9 rocket's astronauts are headed.

The ISS will be visible over Greater Manchester for several nights from tonight, with most passes taking place between 10pm and 11pm.

The space station is currently occupied by an international crew of three people who live and work there while travelling at five miles per second.

The crews living and working space is larger than a six-bedroom house and contains a gym and a 360-degree view bay window.

The International Space Station orbits the Earth every 90 minutes travelling through 16 sunrises and sunsets in the space of 24 hours.

To see it, head outside during the times listed below.

The ISS looks like a fast flying plane or a very bright star moving across the sky - but it doesnt have flashing lights or change direction.

Planes usually fly at approximately 600 miles per hour whereas the space station flies at 17,500 miles per hour.

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When you can see the International Space Station flying over Greater Manchester over the next week - Manchester Evening News

Video captures moment SpaceX and International Space Station flying over Bristol – Bristol Live

At a time when attention has been turned towards our skies in recent days a photographer has captured the moment the International Space Station flew over Bristol this weekend.

Bob Holder-White caught the moment the International Space Station flew over Clifton Suspension Bridge at 10.59pm on Friday (May 29).

A 20-second exposure shows the path and trail of the International Space Station passing between both Clifton Suspension Bridge and the moon.

Elon Musk was able to successfully launch a SpaceX rocket into the sky with two astronauts in on Saturday after the first attempt failed due to bad weather.

Billy Swaby managed to capture the footage as the SpaceX rocket flew over Bristol.

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The video shows the rocket gliding through the sky gracefully as it successfully launched into the sky the second time around.

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Video captures moment SpaceX and International Space Station flying over Bristol - Bristol Live

Self-Supervised Learning The Third-Wave in Cybersecurity AI – Security Boulevard

The relationship between modern cybersecurity solutions and AI has become inextricable. The reality is that even the most talented and responsive SecOps teams would be unable to manually catch every threat posed to the sprawling, hybrid networks on which todays organizations rely.

Forward-looking organizations know they need to bring AI security tools onboard. As they begin looking into their options, the challenge becomes deciding what security companies truly mean when they make claims about AI.

All too often, so-called AI solutions require a great deal of human input, negating much of these platforms promised convenience and efficiency. Todays complex network security threats cannot be adequately addressed with outdated cybersecurity solutions. AI Advancements, especially in the field of self-supervised learning, play a central role in effective, real-time network security.

The concept of AI might bring to mind science fiction novels or movies set in the far future. In fact, rudimentary forms of AI have played a role in the development of computer technology since at least the 1940s, and historical records reaching back into the 1300s reveal humankinds fascination with the concepts of thinking and learning.

Between the late 50s and mid 70s, early computer programmers took advantage of computer advances like onboard storage to apply machine-learning algorithms to various processes. Early applications included teaching computers how to play games like checkers and chess.

More recent examples of first-wave AI are tax preparation software and features like recommendation engines. First-wave AI adds automation to repetitive, narrowly defined tasks, but cant perform functions beyond these limitations.

First-wave AI is purpose-built to solve specific problems. While it was an incredible advance in its day, first-wave AI is no match for the vulnerabilities inherent to the sprawling, distributed networks of today.

When Amazon recommends an almost eerie product suggestion, thats second-wave AI in action. The mega-retailer is constantly analyzing its customers buying patterns to arrive at spot-on recommendations. Second-wave AI relies on labeled data to come up with predictions about how well behave next and which products well find the most appealing.

Second-wave AI is more sophisticated in its application versus first-wave AI, but is capable of very little reasoning capability. IBMs Watson, for example, can provide information and even answer questions, but without context. Watson is unable to explain how it arrives at its conclusions.

Security Information and Event Management (SIEM) cybersecurity platforms typically rely on second-wave AI. These security solutions are a benefit to organizations in that they add some level of automation to network monitoring processes. However, they require a great deal of ongoing human interaction and constant guidance. Worse, SIEM platforms rely almost solely on past behavior to determine present and future risks.

The result is a security system prone to false-positive alarm triggers at a rate SecOps teams can rarely analyze fast enough. Recent studies reveal that security analysts are spending 25 percent of their workdays on threat hunting and batting down false positives. This time could be spent on more worthwhile pursuits, but the opportunity cost can be even higher when the time spent chasing false positives leads to missed true positives.

Not only are the majority of SIEM platforms not up to the challenge of catching sophisticated modern threats, they are also far too dependent on historical data. Todays networks are dynamic, constantly adjusting to both internal and external changes. SIEM platforms that lack the ability to understand the context of a given behavior are unable to respond quickly enough to be of much use in the real world.

Third-wave AI leverages generative, self-supervised machine learning to create an accurate baseline based on a normal network traffic analysis in real-time to better predict future network behavior.

Self-supervised learning is a major leap forward from first and second-wave AI because it is context-aware. Cybersecurity is greatly enhanced by systems that can look beyond anomalous activity and labeled data sets to predict future outcomes.

One recent example of the wide gap between second and third wave AI is the workforce response to the Coronavirus pandemic that swept across the globe in early 2020. Almost overnight, a huge percent of the worlds workforce switched from working onsite through company intranets to telecommuting from home. Third-wave AI adjusts to a new normal seamlessly, learning very quickly that while unexpected, this shift in how network data was accessed was not actually anomalous.

Todays network security threats require modern solutions that go beyond the limitations of second-wave AI-enhanced cybersecurity. Malicious actors are more sophisticated than ever and have long cracked the code when it comes to infiltrating and retraining label-dependent networks to exploit vulnerabilities.Third-wave, self-supervised learning platforms change the way organizations handle event management in powerful, fundamental ways. Learn more about the MixMode third-wave self-supervised solution.

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Self-Supervised Learning The Third-Wave in Cybersecurity AI - Security Boulevard

The Role of Quantum Computing in Online Education – MarketScale

On this episode of the MarketScale Online Learning Minute, host Brian Runo dives into how quantum computing, the next revolutionary leap forward in computing, could apply to online education.

In particular, it can be used to epitomize the connectivism theory and provide personalized learning for each individual, as its not restricted by the capacity of an individual instructor.

In this way, each learner can be empowered to learn at their own pace and be presented with materials more tailored to them in real-time.

In fact, quantum computing is so revolutionary that the education world likely cant even currently dream up the innovations it will enable.

For the latest news, videos, and podcasts in theEducation Technology Industry, be sure to subscribe to our industry publication.

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The Role of Quantum Computing in Online Education - MarketScale