Politicians beg for satire. All you have to do is be militantly realistic – The Irish Times

Jessica Anthony: Both of us have written novels through the Trump administration, and both can be considered political. In 1962 James Baldwin gave a lecture called The Artists Struggle for Integrity, in which he said: The poets (by which I mean all artists) are finally the only people who know the truth about us. Soldiers dont. Statesmen dont. Priests dont. Union leaders dont. Only poets.

No novelist wants to be a didact and polemical fiction fails for all kinds of reasons. There is something subversive and radical, it seems, about the nature of the poetic truth, in that it has to live beneath the fiction, and can never be stated outright.

I know that youve written deeply in nonfiction about the myriad offences of egg production, which is extremely tough to read; your new novel, Barn 8, feels even more political in that we as readers recognise these truths in it, and are forced to examine the fact that the novel so deeply entertains us. Its political because its emotional.

Deb Olin Unferth: It does seem that artists and writers have a closer chance at grasping at some kind of truth, since artists are beholden to no one, unlike statesmen and union leaders, all of whom have constituents depending on them is told.

Barn 8 is told from many points of view, all circling around one event-the attempted theft of one million chickens. That structure made it feel democratic somehow, the web of all these connected people and animals headed toward this single moment. And the question was: Would they make it? I was rooting for them, I can tell you.

When I was reading your book, Enter the Aardvark, I was struck by how much our novels have in common because yours also features a disrespected creature an aardvark as totem and star and centre of the show. Were you surprised by that?

JA: I knew that I wanted to write about a politician, but when I began, I didnt expect the stuffed aardvark to take over in the way that it did! I knew this politician would find his entire career obliterated in roughly 24 hours, but thought the aardvark would sort of disappear and make room for other disasters. But I quickly realised that the aardvark, stuffed in a taxidermists shop in Leamington Spa, England in 1875, could sort of move through time, and was amused by the fact that this innocuous stuffed beast could, 150 years later, offer some illumination about the hypocrisy and intransigence of your modern day right winger.

DOU: Which goes back to the point James Baldwin made about poetic truth. I think that writers can be as subversive as they like with very little consequence, if they are good enough at what they do and can be funny. Irish writers have long shown us how to be radical and political, without skimping on the philosophical, emotional, and hilarious. Its hard to imagine contemporary literature existing without their influence.

JA: Flann OBrien is the perfect writer for right now. We need a mischievous rogue in our ranks. I wonder what Samuel Beckett would have made out of Donald Trump? I cant see Beckett being beholden to constituents. He would probably transport them all to a pig farm. There was always some lightness and humour in Obama, and obviously in Bill Clinton. Trump is too mean to be funny. Watching ancient Joe Biden rise up from the ashes makes me wonder what kind of truth you might tell if you wrote about a character like him nowadays.

DOU: The politicians of today are easy targets, begging for satire and fiction is absolutely the place to describe where we are now in terms of the absurd. All you have to do is be militantly realistic. The more carefully and precisely you describe what you see, the more the craziness of the situation lays itself bare. For me the place where comedy or satire becomes art is when it makes you laugh, but then crosses for a moment into grief or pain or revelation: Molloy dragging that bicycle across the countryside. The sermon in Portrait of the Artist.

JA: Militant realism is right. I keep hearing everyone saying its so surreal whether theyre talking about the virus or the political situation but there is nothing surreal about this moment. This is hard core rationalism. Of course you have to laugh at all the excess, or youre doomed. I feel like Im constantly watching America trip, and take a nasty tumble down the stairs.

DOU: There is nothing surreal about this moment, except perhaps this one thing: doesnt it seem eerie that in this time of extreme partisanship all over the world, that we are suddenly faced with this global crisis that is going to require multi-level unity for us all to get through it?

That is the sort of plot move we love in fiction bring the whole set of characters to the edge of a cliff, push them off, and then pull them back with a rope in such a way that they all get tangled and injured as they crawl their way back to solid ground.

And isnt it a relief and a shock to watch the internet turn from the villian-pest it has been for the past five years into this loving space where we are all cooking dinners together, having virtual cocktail hours, and talking to our parents more than we have in the past decade?

JA: It is extraordinary to watch how people are coping or not coping. It is good to see people being kind to one another but as a novelist, I cant help but wonder what awaits us when the novelty dries out.

Two main revelations from the virus so far: 1) Soulless politicians are really shit at handling a global pandemic, and 2) the everyday, mundane life of the novelist staying in, writing, cooking, reading, going online is not all that different from living through a pandemic. Still, there is as much to learn, I have to believe, in the lovely way a person walking their dog skirts six feet around you and glances at you apologetically. Maybe the coronavirus will bring back basic politeness? An era of new civility?

DOU: And there is something to be said for all of us for making space for quieting the mind and pondering deep thoughts. I dont meditate but reading and writing quiet my mind. I do think that that practice, of sustained concentration, essential to clear thinking, is the only thing that can save us at this point.

JA: What you say about slowing down resonates: speed and habits of consumption keep us from each other and from the natural world. Its about the fight for a reasonable speed, so theres room for a least the tiniest bit of empathy. I think this is what I was getting at earlier. Its vital that our leaders possess thriving imaginations, so they can put themselves in the position of the people they represent.

Ive been reading a lot of Grace Paley lately. She said way back in 1982: We are in the hands of men whose power and wealth have separated them from the reality of daily life and the imagination. We are right to be afraid. And for that, as you say, we need to quiet the mind. My novel began back in 2012 when the phrase enter the aardvark appeared in my mind, a little scrap of poetry that I sat with for three years.

DOU: I love that your book came from three words. Isnt it crazy that something so small as an image or a few words can blow up into a long project that tries to bring together everything weve ever thought about?

I feel like the novel, the novel form, is precisely that: a snapshot of the authors mind, but in such a way that all that is contained in the millisecond of the snapshot is spread out over pages and pages, explaining every connection, every side alley, every philosophical belief, every political rant, every fist-banging or head-smacking or drowning-love revelation that the author has.

Complexity: thats what we need. No more simply signalling approval or disapproval by a smiley face or a frown. Life is so much more.

JA: Thats one of the real privations of social distancing. I rely on observing the complicated ways people interact every day, and never feel nourished going online--human behavior online is typically born out of vanity or politeness. Like the way a child behaves when she knows she is being watched. Maybe forced isolation will thicken fiction.

DOU: I have been using social media for many years now, since the earliest days it existed, and still I feel as you do, that it is mostly just vanity and politeness. When I try to express complexity, empathy, intimacy, it feels essentially empty.

JA: Something Ive found simultaneously hilarious and terrifying is how powerfully Donald Trump uses Twitter. The more reductive we allow our politicians to become, the worse off well be. One of the reasons right-wing ideology and nationalism has become so globally rampant is that were now regularly communicating through such bytes. Somehow this was all made okay campaigning online without any examination for what it does to ideas, the complexity of policy.

Obama is famous for his defense of the scalpel, not the machete. The less space we make to speak to one another, the more we have to simply pick a side and dig in our heels. All of us could stand to be a little more wrong. What frightens me, and has always frightened me, is that so many people are drawn to binary thinking, and genuinely believe that the lack of complexity is a sign of strength or decisiveness.

DOU: People are drawn to binary thinking, yes. You capture that in your novel with your right-wing politician, who is constantly thinking about what plays. One of my favourite details in your book is when he is watching, with increasing anxiety, the number of emails and texts he is receiving. The number rises and rises and rises. It is hilarious and tension-inducing, all that cyberjunk scrolling and scrolling, so representative of our time. There is no way to stop it, it doesnt even really exist, its accumulation is in our brain, not in space. In a novel there is an end point: the author must stop the book at some point, one way or another. But in the world it doesnt have to end, the scrolling keeps going, infinitely, madly, wretchedly.

JA: Yes, its in your novel, too in the minds of the men behind the chicken barns. Think about the kinds of emotion you have to block out to be even remotely okay with piling cage upon cage of birds, making them live in a stinking din, watching what happens to their minds and bodies as they are deprived: in a particularly twisted revelation, we learn that these binary thinkers figured out that hens lay eggs only in light, and so constant light is shone upon them. Maybe calling the publics attention to the dangers of this way of thinking not only the actions, but the thoughts behind the actions is part of the answer.Enter the Aardvark by Jessica Anthony is published by Doubleday. Barn 8 by Deb Olin Unferth is published by And Other Stories and is reviewed in The Irish Times tomorrow

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Politicians beg for satire. All you have to do is be militantly realistic - The Irish Times

Tor Browser 9.0.9 Download – TechSpot

Tor is a network of virtual tunnels that allows people and groups to improve their privacy and security on the Internet. It also enables software developers to create new communication tools with built-in privacy features. Tor provides the foundation for a range of applications that allow organizations and individuals to share information over public networks without compromising their privacy.

Note: You can also download the latest beta version, Tor Browser 9.5.11 Alpha here.

Individuals use Tor to keep websites from tracking them and their family members, or to connect to news sites, instant messaging services, or the like when these are blocked by their local Internet providers. Tor's hidden services let users publish web sites and other services without needing to reveal the location of the site. Individuals also use Tor for socially sensitive communication: chat rooms and web forums for rape and abuse survivors, or people with illnesses.

Journalists use Tor to communicate more safely with whistleblowers and dissidents. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) use Tor to allow their workers to connect to their home website while they're in a foreign country, without notifying everybody nearby that they're working with that organization.

Groups such as Indymedia recommend Tor for safeguarding their members' online privacy and security. Activist groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) recommend Tor as a mechanism for maintaining civil liberties online. Corporations use Tor as a safe way to conduct competitive analysis, and to protect sensitive procurement patterns from eavesdroppers. They also use it to replace traditional VPNs, which reveal the exact amount and timing of communication. Which locations have employees working late? Which locations have employees consulting job-hunting websites? Which research divisions are communicating with the company's patent lawyers?

A branch of the U.S. Navy uses Tor for open source intelligence gathering, and one of its teams used Tor while deployed in the Middle East recently. Law enforcement uses Tor for visiting or surveilling web sites without leaving government IP addresses in their web logs, and for security during sting operations.

Welcome Screen

Our old screen had way too much information for the users, leading many of them to spend great time confused about what to do. Some users at the paper experiment spent up to 40min confused about what they needed to be doing here. Besides simplifying the screen and the message, to make it easier for the user to know if they need to configure anything or not, we also did a 'brand refresh' bringing our logo to the launcher.

Censorship circumvention configuration

This is one of the most important steps for a user who is trying to connect to Tor while their network is censoring Tor. We also worked really hard to make sure the UI text would make it easy for the user to understand what a bridge is for and how to configure to use one. Another update was a little tip we added at the drop-down menu (as you can see below) for which bridge to use in countries that have very sophisticated censorship methods.

Proxy help information

The proxy settings at our Tor Launcher configuration wizard is an important feature for users who are under a network that demands such configuration. But it can also lead to a lot of confusion if the user has no idea what a proxy is. Since it is a very important feature for users, we decided to keep it in the main configuration screen and introduced a help prompt with an explanation of when someone would need such configuration.

As part of our work with the UX team, we will also be coordinating user testing of this new UI to continue iterating and make sure we are always improving our users' experience. We are also planning a series of improvements not only for the Tor Launcher flow but for the whole browser experience (once you are connected to Tor) including a new user onboarding flow. And last but not least we are streamlining both our mobile and desktop experience: Tor Browser 7.5 adapted the security slider design we did for mobile bringing the improved user experience to the desktop as well.

Other

What's New:

This release features important security updates to Firefox.

This release updates Firefox to 68.6.0esr and NoScript to 11.0.15.

Note: We are aware of a bug that allows javascript execution on the Safest security level (in some situations). We are working on a fix for this. If you require that javascript is blocked, then you may completely disable it by:

The full changelog since Tor Browser 9.0.5 is:

All Platforms

Build System Windows

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Tor Browser 9.0.9 Download - TechSpot

Tor Project lets go of a third of staff due to COVID-19 – Privacy News Online

The Tor Project, the non profit organization behind the Tor (The Onion Router) Browser, has let go of roughly a third of its staff due to the COVID-19 crisis. Tor is known as a private browser developed for use by dissidents in oppressive countries and others that need their internet use anonymized. Tech companies and organizations around the world have been affected by this pandemic, and its sobering to see the Tor Project have to let go of staff during this time period where Tor use is arguably ever more crucial.

They wrote in a post on the Tor blog announcing the news:

Tor, like much of the world, has been caught up in the COVID-19 crisis. Like many other nonprofits and small businesses, the crisis has hit us hard, and we have had to make some difficult decisions.

As an example of how the privacy industry has been affected by COVID-19. The annual Internet Freedom Festival is supposed to be taking place between April 20th and April 24th with the Tor Project hosting a Tor Village as one of the main attractions; however, the event has been canceled for this year.

The post continued with an affirmation that Tor Browser development will go on:

We had to let go of 13 great people who helped make Tor available to millions of people around the world. We will move forward with a core team of 22 people, and remain dedicated to continuing our work on Tor Browser and the Tor software ecosystem.

As governments and companies around the world up their surveillance of their citizens as a way of corralling this pandemic and the average American becomes more dependent on their internet connection to work and live life, privacy awareness has been rising. It is unfortunate that the Tor Project needs to let go of staff during such a crucial time; however, the move was made to ensure Tors continuity into the future. Tors post continued:

The world wont be the same after this crisis, and the need for privacy and secure access to information will become more urgent. In these times, being online is critical and many people face ongoing obstacles to getting and sharing needed information. We are taking todays difficult steps to ensure the Tor Project continues to exist and our technology stays available.

Privacy is more important now than ever. The Tor Project is an established part of the privacy ecosystem and though it has suffered a hit, it will go on. On the VPN end of the privacy ecosystem, Private Internet Access has expanded its network, VPN connection features, and is also expanding its workforce with new hires. While the COVID-19 pandemic has affected PIAs work culture as well as social distancing has been implemented, and caused governments to seek more surveillance powers, the privacy world will continue on.

Caleb Chen is a digital currency and privacy advocate who believes we must #KeepOurNetFree, preferably through decentralization. Caleb holds a Master's in Digital Currency from the University of Nicosia as well as a Bachelor's from the University of Virginia. He feels that the world is moving towards a better tomorrow, bit by bit by Bitcoin.

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Tor Project lets go of a third of staff due to COVID-19 - Privacy News Online

Tor Project lays off staff as COVID-19 applies the pressure – proprivacy.com

Revelations that the Tor Project had to lay off a third of its staff this week sent shock waves through the privacy community. The news came after the nonprofit organization was forced to downsize due to the economic impact caused by the global coronavirus pandemic.

Support Tor

Tors Onion browser is considered by privacy advocates to be an essential service for maintaining privacy and anonymity online. The free browser is a vital utility for at-risk individuals including journalists, human rights campaigners, lawyers, protesters, and political dissidents, to name a few.

The recent announcement came from Tors blog. The dispiriting post explained that unfortunately staff were being laid off due to a sudden acute decrease in funding.

Tor, like much of the world, has been caught up in the COVID-19 crisis. Like many other nonprofits and small businesses, the crisis has hit us hard, and we have had to make some difficult decisions. We had to let go of 13 great people who helped make Tor available to millions of people around the world.

For privacy advocates living the world over, Tors sudden need to downsize can be considered a cause for concern. Since the pandemic started, governments worldwide have passed emergency regulations that allow for increased tracking and surveillance. And, while the need to tackle COVID-19 is indubitable, it is also critical to consider how new tracking measures may affect citizens' future privacy.

Fortunately, several governments are imposing temporary measures with sunset clauses. This is acceptable, because it ensures that any increased surveillance is measured, appropriate, and limited in its nature. However, not every country is imposing these important sunset clauses into their emergency measures - which is leading to concern from groups like Privacy International, Digital Rights Watch, Fight For the Future, and from individuals like Edward Snowden.

The world won't be the same after this crisis, and the need for privacy and secure access to information will become more urgent.

Isabela's warning is a sentiment echoed by leading privacy organizations worldwide, which agree that a potential for grave privacy-crumbling repercussions exists.

On the one hand, reasonable and measured responses to help combat the spread of COVID-19 are entirely necessary. On the other, it is essential for governments to be held accountable, for privacy to be maintained, for human rights to be respected, and for essential privacy services like Tor to remain available to people who require them - both during and following the pandemic.

Help Tor

After all, the loss of any vital privacy services because of the pandemic would signal a huge loss for citizens everywhere, eliminating their ability to communicate and protest against oppression, discrimination, prejudice, and totalitarianism around the globe.

For Tor, which relies on donations to perform upkeep on its platform, the economic impact of the pandemic is already being felt. The hardship caused by the pandemic has led to a drop in the number and size of donations. Thankfully, however, the firm is confident that it will be able to keep providing its services to users with its remaining team members.

We are terribly sad to lose such valuable teammates, and we want to let all our users and supporters know that Tor will continue to provide privacy, security, and censorship circumvention services to anyone who needs them.

The services provided by Tor continue to be important to huge numbers of people located around the world. And, for Tor to continue developing and maintaining its servers and software - including the Tor Browser Bundle and the Tor anonymity network - it will continue to require donations from citizens.

We understand that COVID-19 is causing huge amounts of hardship across the board, and that it's hard to think about donating during such a crisis. However, if privacy is something you are passionate about and you are in the fortunate position to be able to donate something, Tor is a worthy cause that will benefit from even a small donation.

Donate to Tor

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Tor Project lays off staff as COVID-19 applies the pressure - proprivacy.com

How to use the Tor browser – Technobezz

Tor stands for The Onion Routing. Onion routing means that when you connect to the internet, all your internet traffic is routed through multiple servers along with being encrypted at each step. So, the uniqueness of the Tor browser is that it offers privacy and its code is free and open-source.

In this age, when almost the whole world is connected online, there are also the problems of online tracking, censorship, and surveillance which can be real hurdles for those who do not want their identities to be revealed online or want to have censor-free internet access. For them, the Tor browser can act as a savior. Using the Tor browser, one can connect to the internet anonymously. Even if someone tries to monitor the internet traffic of a Tor browser user, they will only be able to see that you are using Tor.

See also: What Is The Best Internet Browser For Mac?

Go to https://www.torproject.org/download/ and click on the download option for the operating system on which you want to install Tor. You must use the official link to download Tor otherwise you might end up install some malware on your system in place of Tor. After downloading the setup, its installation is like any other normal software installation. E.g. for Windows OS, just double click on the setup file downloaded and confirm any prompt shown in a dialog box asking whether you want to install this software. Now, just wait for it to finish installing.

The Tor browser is portable software. So, once you have installed it, you can run it from a USB drive too. You just need to select a location (which can be USB drive too) to install during the setup.

There are some initial settings that you need to do when you run the Tor browser for the first time.

See the rest here:

How to use the Tor browser - Technobezz

A right to digital self-defense will prevent abuse of COVID-19 surveillance apps | TheHill – The Hill

Apple and Google recently announcedthey will jointlylaunch digital contact tracing tools to combat COVID-19. Their Bluetooth technology will allow Android and iOS phones to communicate and track when individuals pass within six feet of someone who tested positive for the novel coronavirus. Apple and Google are not alone. Around the world, countries including the UK, China, Taiwan, and South Korea have implemented comparable programs.

While these steps appear desirable, they raise serious risks for autonomy, privacy, and data security. The information collected could be used for commercial purposes, hacked by cybercriminals, or used to discriminate against individuals with COVID-19 or other health conditions. Moreover, it is difficult to establish whether the apps are beneficial and surveillance methods implemented now may persist long after the pandemic subsides.

To address these concerns, Apple and Google promised there will be strong protections around user privacy and emphasized that transparency and consent are of utmost importance. However, tech companies have repeatedly failed to protect user privacy and security; the time to rely on privacy legislation and industry self-regulation has passed. Instead of those top down approaches, which privilege legislators, lobbyists, and tech companies over individuals, we argue for a bottom-up approach.

State and federal lawmakers should create a right to digital self-defense ensuring that Americans can freely use anonymity, privacy, and cybersecurity tools to shield themselves against widespread and relentless data collection by private and public actors. Some examples of these tools are the TOR browser, virtual private networks (VPNs), personal servers such as the FreedomBox, and low-tech solutions such as clothing that disrupts facial recognition.

There are many more available tools of digital self-defense, and not all of them will be relevant to COVID-19 apps; nevertheless, recognition of a right to digital self-defense may serve as a catalyst to the development of new tools, covering different platforms, operating systems and scenarios.

While some of these tools are widely available, their use often comes at a cost. Specifically, people who adopt them may be subjected to increased government scrutiny. On the public side for example, the FBI usedspywareto track Tor users activity. Whether such surveillance constitutes an illegal search under the Fourth Amendment remains anunresolvedlegal question. In this context, people may wish to protect their privacy and cybersecurity even if they have committed no crimes.

On the private side, platforms such as Netflix and Hulu often refuse access to people who use these tools of digital self-defense. Some platforms, including Google, penalize users by requiring them to complete time-consuming CAPTCHAs thattrain the companys algorithmsto identify objects such as street signs and fire hydrants. These mechanisms frustrate users and encourage them to sacrifice privacy for easier access to services.

The right to digital self-defense may find support in the Bill of Rights, which was designed to protect states and their citizens from government tyranny. In the information age, we are witnessing the emergence of a new oppressive force digital tyranny, where tech companies threaten our privacy and security through widespread surveillance, profiling, and manipulation. They often work with federal agencies through public-private partnerships, such as the collaboration between Amazon Ring and up to400 law enforcement authorities.

Public-private partnerships including those directed at COVID-19 tracking can excuse federal agencies from respecting individual rights and freedoms because tech platforms conduct the surveillance, and most constitutional protections provided by the Bill of Rights do not extend to these private actors. Once the data is obtained, they pass it to their government partners. But the Bill of Rights is of limited effectiveness in the information age if it doesnt also extend to technology companies.

Some may argue that a right to digital self-defense is unnecessary because people can always choose not to opt-in to a contact tracing program. However, this criticism is rooted in outdated notions of consent. Tech companies have a history of using deceptive methods to influence peoples choices. They use deceptivechoice architectureto nudge people to consent. Besides, some surveillance programs are not optional; Chinas mandated contract tracing app Health Code controls where citizens may travel, and U.S. programs could shift in that direction.

Others might contend that a more desirable approach is to demand that tech companies take privacy and security more seriously. However, platforms have no obligation to implement safeguards beyond what the law requires, and U.S. privacy laws are inadequate and overly susceptible toinfluence by industry lobbyists.

A federal right to digital self-defense can serve as a foundation on which state lawmakers can build. For example, the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) sets a national floor for health privacy, and states can pass their own laws that provide protection above and beyond what HIPAA mandates.

Alternatively, states could establish the right to digital self-defense on their own by statute and incorporate it into their constitutions. In states where citizens can pass their own laws through ballot initiates, such as California and Alaska, the right could be implemented by the people, thus bypassing state legislatures, and stifling lobbyist efforts to water down legislation.

The COVID-19 pandemic is a public health emergency, but widespread surveillance carried out by private actors is not the solution. Given Big Techs track record, the social cost of widespread surveillance likely outweighs potential benefits, especially if tracking persists beyond the pandemic.

Lawmakers should codify a right to digital self-defense and encourage Americans to use anonymity, privacy, and cybersecurity tools to ensure that their privacy and security are not threatened by digital tyranny.

Ido Kilovaty is an assistant professor of law at The University of Tulsa College of Law, visiting faculty fellow at Yale Law Schools Center for Global Legal Challenges and an affiliated fellow at Yale Law Schools Information Society Project. He was a 2028-2019 Cybersecurity Policy Fellow at New America.

Mason Marks is assistant professor at Gonzaga University School of Law and an affiliated fellow at Yale Law Schools Information Society Project. In addition to a law degree from Vanderbilt University, he also holds an M.D. from Tufts University School of Medicine.

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A right to digital self-defense will prevent abuse of COVID-19 surveillance apps | TheHill - The Hill

DDoS in the Time of COVID-19: Attacks and Raids – Security Boulevard

There is no escaping it. COVID-19 is dominating headlines and has impacted virtually every corner of the world. Like most people at this point, Im 30 days into isolation and trying everything in my power to ignore the elephant in the room and the politics that go along with it.

Unfortunately, or fortunately, cyber security is an essential business. As a result, those working in the field are not getting to experience any downtime during a quarantine. Many of us have been working around the clock, fighting off waves of attacks and helping other essential businesses adjust to a remote work force as the global environments change.

Along the way we have learned a few things about how a modern society deals with a pandemic. Obviously, a global Shelter-in-Place resulted in an unanticipated surge in traffic. As lockdowns began in China and worked their way west, we began to see massive spikes in streaming and gaming services. These unanticipated surges in traffic required digital content providers to throttle or downgrade streaming services across Europe, to prevent networks from overloading.

The COVID-19 pandemic also highlights the importance of service availability during a global crisis. Due to the forced digitalization of the work force and a global Shelter-in-Place, the world became heavily dependent on a number of digital services during isolation. Degradation or an outage impacting these services during the pandemic could quickly spark speculation and/or panic.

[You may also like: COVID-19: The Rise of the Telecommuter & the Impacts on Businesses]

For example, as COVID-19 began to take a toll on Australias economy, there became a rush of suddenly unemployed citizens needing to register for welfare services on MyGov, Australias government service portal. This natural spike in traffic ended up causing an outage on the morning of March 23rd, requiring Government Services Minister Stuart Roberts to walk back his initial claims that the portal had suffered from a DDoS attack, naturally causing panic and speculation among those desperately seeking government assistance.

In France, Assistance Publique Hpitaux de Paris, the university hospital trust managing 39 public hospitals in the area, found itself a victim of a DDoS attack on March 22nd, just as France begin to deal with a surge in COVID-19 related cases. The attack was reported to have only lasted an hour and did not cause any significant damage.

The problem was, upon further review, in order to deal with the attack, there was a reduction in internet access. Typically, during any other day, this reduction would not have had an impact, but due to the pandemic and a remote, non-essential work force, employees outside of the hospitals network were blocked from external access during this attack, resulting in the inability to access email, Skype or remote application.

[You may also like: Preserving Business Continuity During the Coronavirus Pandemic]

In addition to this attack, the Brno University Hospital in the Czech Republic was hit a week earlier with a cyber-attack that force the hospital to shut down their entire network, resulting in the cancellation of surgeries.

And if that wasnt enough, a food delivery service in Germany experienced a DDoS attack from an extortionist. Lieferando.de, also known as takeaway.com, is a takeaway food service that delivers from more than 15,000 restaurants in Germany. During this global pandemic, citizens of the world have become very dependent on take away food services as part of the effort to help flatten the curve. Unfortunately, an extortionist attempted to capitalize on this by launching a Ransom Denial of Service (RDoS) attack on Takeaway, demanding 2 BTC ($11,000) to stop the attack. As a result, some orders were able to be accepted but were never delivered, forcing Germans to find another option for the night.

It should come as no surprise that law enforcement agencies around the world are particularly interested in taking down those looking to profit from COVID-19. They are also interested in kicking down doors of those who are conducting DDoS attacks during the pandemic.

[You may also like: How to Protect Your VPN: Lessons From a DDoS Attack Test]

On April 10th, a 19-year-old from Breda, Netherlands, was arrested for conducting a DDoS attack on March 19th against MijnOverheid.nl and Overhied.nl. Both of these websites are government-related and were providing Dutch citizens with important government information related to the pandemic.

Its truly unfortunate to see teenagers in the middle of a pandemic targeting critical infrastructure, preventing access to emergency regulations and advisories, but what did we expected? A cease-fire? In order to prevent additional DDoS attacks, a week prior to the Breda arrest, Dutch police shut down 15 stresser services. While these services were not listed, I can tell you, the raid was largely unnoticeable. Part of the problem can be found between the words of Jeroen Niessen, Dutch Police:

With preventive actions, we want to protect people as much as possible against DDoS attacks.By taking booters and their domain names offline, we make it difficult for cyber criminals.We have now put quite a few on black.If they pop up elsewhere, we will immediately work on it again.Our goal is to seize more and more booters

If they pop up elsewhere, we will immediately work on itagain.

In my opinion, it sounds like the police finally understand that raids are a losing battle without total commitment. If theres one thing we learned from the 2019 raid of KV solution, a bulletproof hosting provider, it was that when one criminal falls, dozens are willing to replace them.

For example, in 2018 the Department of Justice took down 15 stresser services as part of an effort to prevent DDoS attacks. The domain seized are listed below:

[You may also like: Are Darknet Take-Downs Effective?]

The problem is, taking down a stresser service is pointless when there are so many criminals using public services and corporations to mask their identities. Until there is cooperation and commitment to removing the DDoS threat completely, it will always linger, rearing its nasty head in the worst moments. Due to the lack of commitment between the global law enforcement community and the security community, we are unable to see a meaningful impact in the DDoS landscape.

Its really not that difficult to find a stresser service today. In fact, you can find these criminals openly advertising their services on major search enginesno Tor browser or Darknet Market required. While search engines could simply de-index these services, they choose not to. Instead, they elect to profit from your misfortune. Below are a handful of sites found on popular search engine using the terms booter or stresser:

powerstresser.pro, freeboot.to, instant-stresser.to, meteor-security.to, layer7-security.to, stressthem.to, stress.to, stress.gg, booter.vip, bootstresser.com, bootyou.net, defconpro.net, str3ssed.co, ts3booter.net, vdos-s.co, webstresser.biz, hardstresser.com, havoc-security.pw, synstresser.to, dosninja.com, stresser.wtf, thunderstresser.me, ripstresser.rip, astrostress.com, botstress.to, dotn3t.org, nightmarestresser.to, silentstress.wtf, torstress.com, xyzbooter.net, databooter.to.

[You may also like: COVID-19 Shows the Importance of Protecting Availability]

After reviewing the list, Officer Jeroen Niessens statement becomes clearer. Whether or not these current websites are associated with the original criminal groups or cloned, multiple stressers with notorious names have been reappearing. In general, I think its fair to say that while raids are disrupting criminals, they have hardly put a dent in the overall activity or economy of the DDoS-as-a-Service industry. Takedowns only represent a temporary solution, and this has become clear during the pandemic.

Unfortunately, the threat landscape continues to evolve during a pandemic. Criminals are clearly not taking time off.Worst of all, not only is the public cloud fully in scope for cybercriminals looking to compromise enterprise equipment, but due to the ongoing pandemic and the remote digitalization of the work force, remote software and digital services have come under fire from opportunist criminals.

I think during this time of chaos and uncertainty we really need to reflect on our impact and ability to secure the digital workforce and ask ourselves, are we protecting criminals due to privacy concerns or is there more we could do to remove and eliminate the DDoS threat?

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DDoS in the Time of COVID-19: Attacks and Raids - Security Boulevard

How Artificial Intelligence Is Totally Changing Everything …

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Back in Oct. 1950, British techno-visionary Alan Turing published an article called "Computing Machinery and Intelligence," in the journal MIND that raised what at the time must have seemed to many like a science-fiction fantasy.

"May not machines carry out something which ought to be described as thinking but which is very different from what a man does?" Turing asked.

Turing thought that they could. Moreover, he believed, it was possible to create software for a digital computer that enabled it to observe its environment and to learn new things, from playing chess to understanding and speaking a human language. And he thought machines eventually could develop the ability to do that on their own, without human guidance. "We may hope that machines will eventually compete with men in all purely intellectual fields," he predicted.

Nearly 70 years later, Turing's seemingly outlandish vision has become a reality. Artificial intelligence, commonly referred to as AI, gives machines the ability to learn from experience and perform cognitive tasks, the sort of stuff that once only the human brain seemed capable of doing.

AI is rapidly spreading throughout civilization, where it has the promise of doing everything from enabling autonomous vehicles to navigate the streets to making more accurate hurricane forecasts. On an everyday level, AI figures out what ads to show you on the web, and powers those friendly chatbots that pop up when you visit an e-commerce website to answer your questions and provide customer service. And AI-powered personal assistants in voice-activated smart home devices perform myriad tasks, from controlling our TVs and doorbells to answering trivia questions and helping us find our favorite songs.

But we're just getting started with it. As AI technology grows more sophisticated and capable, it's expected to massively boost the world's economy, creating about $13 trillion worth of additional activity by 2030, according to a McKinsey Global Institute forecast.

"AI is still early in adoption, but adoption is accelerating and it is being used across all industries," says Sarah Gates, an analytics platform strategist at SAS, a global software and services firm that focuses upon turning data into intelligence for clients.

It's even more amazing, perhaps, that our existence is quietly being transformed by a technology that many of us barely understand, if at all something so complex that even scientists have a tricky time explaining it.

"AI is a family of technologies that perform tasks that are thought to require intelligence if performed by humans," explains Vasant Honavar, a professor and director of the Artificial Intelligence Research Laboratory at Penn State University. "I say 'thought,' because nobody is really quite sure what intelligence is."

Honavar describes two main categories of intelligence. There's narrow intelligence, which is achieving competence in a narrowly defined domain, such as analyzing images from X-rays and MRI scans in radiology. General intelligence, in contrast, is a more human-like ability to learn about anything and to talk about it. "A machine might be good at some diagnoses in radiology, but if you ask it about baseball, it would be clueless," Honavar explains. Humans' intellectual versatility "is still beyond the reach of AI at this point."

According to Honavar, there are two key pieces to AI. One of them is the engineering part that is, building tools that utilize intelligence in some way. The other is the science of intelligence, or rather, how to enable a machine to come up with a result comparable to what a human brain would come up with, even if the machine achieves it through a very different process. To use an analogy, "birds fly and airplanes fly, but they fly in completely different ways," Honavar. "Even so, they both make use of aerodynamics and physics. In the same way, artificial intelligence is based upon the notion that there are general principles about how intelligent systems behave."

AI is "basically the results of our attempting to understand and emulate the way that the brain works and the application of this to giving brain-like functions to otherwise autonomous systems (e.g., drones, robots and agents)," Kurt Cagle, a writer, data scientist and futurist who's the founder of consulting firm Semantical, writes in an email. He's also editor of The Cagle Report, a daily information technology newsletter.

And while humans don't really think like computers, which utilize circuits, semi-conductors and magnetic media instead of biological cells to store information, there are some intriguing parallels. "One thing we're beginning to discover is that graph networks are really interesting when you start talking about billions of nodes, and the brain is essentially a graph network, albeit one where you can control the strengths of processes by varying the resistance of neurons before a capacitive spark fires," Cagle explains. "A single neuron by itself gives you a very limited amount of information, but fire enough neurons of varying strengths together, and you end up with a pattern that gets fired only in response to certain kinds of stimuli, typically modulated electrical signals through the DSPs [that is digital signal processing] that we call our retina and cochlea."

"Most applications of AI have been in domains with large amounts of data," Honavar says. To use the radiology example again, the existence of large databases of X-rays and MRI scans that have been evaluated by human radiologists, makes it possible to train a machine to emulate that activity.

AI works by combining large amounts of data with intelligent algorithms series of instructions that allow the software to learn from patterns and features of the data, as this SAS primer on artificial intelligence explains.

In simulating the way a brain works, AI utilizes a bunch of different subfields, as the SAS primer notes.

The concept of AI dates back to the 1940s, and the term "artificial intelligence" was introduced at a 1956 conference at Dartmouth College. Over the next two decades, researchers developed programs that played games and did simple pattern recognition and machine learning. Cornell University scientist Frank Rosenblatt developed the Perceptron, the first artificial neural network, which ran on a 5-ton (4.5-metric ton), room-sized IBM computer that was fed punch cards.

But it wasn't until the mid-1980s that a second wave of more complex, multilayer neural networks were developed to tackle higher-level tasks, according to Honavar. In the early 1990s, another breakthrough enabled AI to generalize beyond the training experience.

In the 1990s and 2000s, other technological innovations the web and increasingly powerful computers helped accelerate the development of AI. "With the advent of the web, large amounts of data became available in digital form," Honavar says. "Genome sequencing and other projects started generating massive amounts of data, and advances in computing made it possible to store and access this data. We could train the machines to do more complex tasks. You couldn't have had a deep learning model 30 years ago, because you didn't have the data and the computing power."

AI is different from, but related to, robotics, in which machines sense their environment, perform calculations and do physical tasks either by themselves or under the direction of people, from factory work and cooking to landing on other planets. Honavar says that the two fields intersect in many ways.

"You can imagine robotics without much intelligence, purely mechanical devices like automated looms," Honavar says. "There are examples of robots that are not intelligent in a significant way." Conversely, there's robotics where intelligence is an integral part, such as guiding an autonomous vehicle around streets full of human-driven cars and pedestrians.

"It's a reasonable argument that to realize general intelligence, you would need robotics to some degree, because interaction with the world, to some degree, is an important part of intelligence," according to Honavar. "To understand what it means to throw a ball, you have to be able to throw a ball."

AI quietly has become so ubiquitous that it's already found in many consumer products.

"A huge number of devices that fall within the Internet of Things (IoT) space readily use some kind of self-reinforcing AI, albeit very specialized AI," Cagle says. "Cruise control was an early AI and is far more sophisticated when it works than most people realize. Noise dampening headphones. Anything that has a speech recognition capability, such as most contemporary television remotes. Social media filters. Spam filters. If you expand AI to cover machine learning, this would also include spell checkers, text-recommendation systems, really any recommendation system, washers and dryers, microwaves, dishwashers, really most home electronics produced after 2017, speakers, televisions, anti-lock braking systems, any electric vehicle, modern CCTV cameras. Most games use AI networks at many different levels."

AI already can outperform humans in some narrow domains, just as "airplanes can fly longer distances, and carry more people than a bird could," Honavar says. AI, for example, is capable of processing millions of social media network interactions and gaining insights that can influence users' behavior an ability that the AI expert worries may have "not so good consequences."

It's particularly good at making sense of massive amounts of information that would overwhelm a human brain. That capability enables internet companies, for example, to analyze the mountains of data that they collect about users and employ the insights in various ways to influence our behavior.

But AI hasn't made as much progress so far in replicating human creativity, Honavar notes, though the technology already is being utilized to compose music and write news articles based on data from financial reports and election returns.

Given AI's potential to do tasks that used to require humans, it's easy to fear that its spread could put most of us out of work. But some experts envision that while the combination of AI and robotics could eliminate some positions, it will create even more new jobs for tech-savvy workers.

"Those most at risk are those doing routine and repetitive tasks in retail, finance and manufacturing," Darrell West, a vice president and founding director of the Center for Technology Innovation at the Brookings Institution, a Washington-based public policy organization, explains in an email. "But white-collar jobs in health care will also be affected and there will be an increase in job churn with people moving more frequently from job to job. New jobs will be created but many people will not have the skills needed for those positions. So the risk is a job mismatch that leaves people behind in the transition to a digital economy. Countries will have to invest more money in job retraining and workforce development as technology spreads. There will need to be lifelong learning so that people regularly can upgrade their job skills."

And instead of replacing human workers, AI may be used to enhance their intellectual capabilities. Inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil has predicted that by the 2030s, AI have achieved human levels of intelligence, and that it will be possible to have AI that goes inside the human brain to boost memory, turning users into human-machine hybrids. As Kurzweil has described it, "We're going to expand our minds and exemplify these artistic qualities that we value."

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How Artificial Intelligence Is Totally Changing Everything ...

Artificial Intelligence And Automation Top Focus For Venture Capitalists – Forbes

Artificial intelligence and automation have been two hot areas of investment, especially over the past decade. As the worldwide workforce increasingly shifts to a remote workforce, the need for automation, technology, and tools continues to grow. As such, its no surprise that automation and intelligent systems continue to be of significant interest to venture capitalists who are investing in growing firms focused in these areas. The AI Today podcast had the chance to talk to Oliver Mitchell, a Founding Partner of Autonomy Ventures. (disclosure: Im a co-host of the AI Today podcast).

Oliver Mitchell

For over 20 years Oliver has been working on technology startups and in the past decade he has been working on investing in automation. He spoke with us about seeing the big changes that are coming to the world with automation and the exciting possibilities that it still has to offer. He is a partner at venture firm Autonomy Ventures, an early stage venture capital firm that looks to invest in automation and robotics.

The best AI solutions are the ones that solve industry-specific problems

Despite the fact that Artificial Intelligence has been around for decades, there is still no commonly accepted definition. Because of this, artificial intelligence means something different to every industry, and this is reflected in the sort of investments that Oliver and other VCs are seeing. While some technology firms may be focused on how artificial intelligence can better help them manage funds, other companies might be more interested in how AI can supplement their human workforce. The various different tasks that artificial intelligence can help with is something that investors need to look at when making their investments.

Out of all of the investments that Oliver has made over the years, the best ones have been with companies that really focus on solving specific problems in an industry. In particular, applications of robotics to manufacturing, and specifically the concept of collaborative robots is appealing. Collaborative robots can be used to work alongside employees. To make the arm easier to use it has AI onboard and a suite of tools to enable anyone to operate the arm without technological training. With this arm, companies dont need to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to hire specialists to train their robotic arms. Rather, the arm can be taught through movement how to carry out tasks through an iPad or similar device. This arm falls under the category of collaborative robots, or cobots for short, that are able to work side by side with humans.

About half of the Autonomy Ventures portfolio companies are based out of Israel. One portfolio company is Aurora Labs, which focuses on providing a software platform for autonomous and connected cars to monitor their onboard software. Aurora Labs calls their software a self-healing software for connected cars. Your average car needs to go to a dealership in order to receive any kind of firmware or software update if an issue is detected. This is because the technician needs to plug a device into the OBDII port of the car. Due to limited power in the chips in most current cars, they arent able to access the cloud. Even those cars that have OnStar onboard have very limited connectivity. Self-healing software for connected cars from Aurora Labs allows cars to connect to the cloud so that they can receive updates over the air. While much of this solution isnt AI per se, the use of machine learning for more adaptive updates is part of the indication that AI is finding its application in a wide range of niches.

Keeping AI in check

Something important that Oliver addressed is the view and aims of AI. A lot of people have a science fiction perspective on artificial intelligence. He believes that we need to manage our expectations on AI because there are many tasks that AI still cant do that even a child can. One example Oliver uses is the ability to tie a shoe. While a 7-year-old has been able to tie shoes for years, robots still cannot tie a shoe. We need to be able to address everyday problems before we can start to move on to what we see in movies.

Oliver also is concerned about issues of bias in AI and machine learning, especially as systems become more autonomous. Software around the world is used to help humans but so many of us are quick to turn to technology without a chance to evaluate its proper use. Oliver sites many examples including the AI-based criminal justice system that was biased in its assessment of an offenders likelihood of reoffending. Once the software was deployed in multiple states it was found that it rated people of color more likely to reoffend.

Oliver also points out bias in a type of technology that is used in emergency departments around the world to analyze patients. The software looks at a patients chief complaint, symptoms, and medical history along with demographics and gives the medical staff a recommendation about what to do. However, this software has been found to not take into account the human aspect of medical care. It will make a decision based on a perceived likelihood of effective treatment, not on saving every life possible.

Regardless of the challenges and limitations of AI, investors and entrepreneurs see significant potential for both simple automation and more complicated intelligent and autonomous systems. Companies are continuing to push the boundary of whats possible, especially in our increasingly remote and virtual world. It should be no surprise then that VCs will continue to look to invest in these types of companies as AI becomes part of our every day lives.

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Artificial Intelligence And Automation Top Focus For Venture Capitalists - Forbes

Benefits & Risks of Artificial Intelligence – Future of …

Many AI researchers roll their eyes when seeing this headline:Stephen Hawking warns that rise of robots may be disastrous for mankind. And as many havelost count of how many similar articles theyveseen.Typically, these articles are accompanied by an evil-looking robot carrying a weapon, and they suggest we should worry about robots rising up and killing us because theyve become conscious and/or evil.On a lighter note, such articles are actually rather impressive, because they succinctly summarize the scenario that AI researchers dontworry about. That scenario combines as many as three separate misconceptions: concern about consciousness, evil, androbots.

If you drive down the road, you have a subjective experience of colors, sounds, etc. But does a self-driving car have a subjective experience? Does it feel like anything at all to be a self-driving car?Although this mystery of consciousness is interesting in its own right, its irrelevant to AI risk. If you get struck by a driverless car, it makes no difference to you whether it subjectively feels conscious. In the same way, what will affect us humans is what superintelligent AIdoes, not how it subjectively feels.

The fear of machines turning evil is another red herring. The real worry isnt malevolence, but competence. A superintelligent AI is by definition very good at attaining its goals, whatever they may be, so we need to ensure that its goals are aligned with ours. Humans dont generally hate ants, but were more intelligent than they are so if we want to build a hydroelectric dam and theres an anthill there, too bad for the ants. The beneficial-AI movement wants to avoid placing humanity in the position of those ants.

The consciousness misconception is related to the myth that machines cant have goals.Machines can obviously have goals in the narrow sense of exhibiting goal-oriented behavior: the behavior of a heat-seeking missile is most economically explained as a goal to hit a target.If you feel threatened by a machine whose goals are misaligned with yours, then it is precisely its goals in this narrow sense that troubles you, not whether the machine is conscious and experiences a sense of purpose.If that heat-seeking missile were chasing you, you probably wouldnt exclaim: Im not worried, because machines cant have goals!

I sympathize with Rodney Brooks and other robotics pioneers who feel unfairly demonized by scaremongering tabloids,because some journalists seem obsessively fixated on robots and adorn many of their articles with evil-looking metal monsters with red shiny eyes. In fact, the main concern of the beneficial-AI movement isnt with robots but with intelligence itself: specifically, intelligence whose goals are misaligned with ours. To cause us trouble, such misaligned superhuman intelligence needs no robotic body, merely an internet connection this may enable outsmarting financial markets, out-inventing human researchers, out-manipulating human leaders, and developing weapons we cannot even understand. Even if building robots were physically impossible, a super-intelligent and super-wealthy AI could easily pay or manipulate many humans to unwittingly do its bidding.

The robot misconception is related to the myth that machines cant control humans. Intelligence enables control: humans control tigers not because we are stronger, but because we are smarter. This means that if we cede our position as smartest on our planet, its possible that we might also cede control.

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Benefits & Risks of Artificial Intelligence - Future of ...

Artificial intelligence can take banks to the next level – TechRepublic

Banking has the potential to improve its customer service, loan applications, and billing with the help of AI and natural language processing.

Image: Kubkoo, Getty Images/iStockPhoto

When I was an executive in banking, we struggled with how to transform tellers at our branches into customer service specialists instead of the "order takers" that they were. This struggle with customer service is ongoing for financial institutions. But it's an area in which artificial intelligence (AI), and its ability to work with unstructured data like voice and images, can help.

"There are two things that artificial intelligence does really well," said Ameek Singh, vice president of IBM's Watson applications and solutions. "It's really good with analyzing images and it also performs uniquely well with natural language processing (NLP)."

SEE:Managing AI and ML in the enterprise 2020 (free PDF)(TechRepublic)

AI's ability to process natural language helps behind the scenes as banks interact with their customers. In call center banking transactions, the ability to analyze language can detect emotional nuances from the speaker, and understand linguistic differences such as the difference between American and British English. AI works with other languages as well, understanding the emotional nuances and slang terms that different groups use.

Collectively, real-time feedback from AI aids bank customer service reps in call centersbecause if they know the sentiments of their customers, it's easier for them to relate to customers and to understand customer concerns that might not have been expressed directly.

"We've developed AI models for natural language processing in a multitude of languages, and the AI continues to learn and refine these linguistics models with the help of machine learning (ML)," Singh said.

SEE:AI isn't perfect--but you can get it pretty darn close(TechRepublic)

The result is higher quality NLP that enables better relationships between customers and the call center front line employees who are trying to help them.

But the use of AI in banking doesn't stop there. Singh explained how AI engines like Watson were also helping on the loans and billing side.

"The (mortgage) loan underwriter looks at items like pay stubs and credit card statements. He or she might even make a billing inquiry," Singh said.

Without AI, these document reviews are time consuming and manual. AI changes that because the AI can "read" the document. It understands what the salient information is and also where irrelevant items, like a company logo, are likely to be located. The AI extracts the relevant information, places the information into a loan evaluation model, and can make a loan recommendation that the underwriter reviews, with the underwriter making a final decision.

Of course, banks have had software for years that has performed loan evaluations. However, they haven't had an easy way to process foundational documents such as bills and pay stubs, that go into the loan decisioning process and that AI can now provide.

SEE:These five tech trends will dominate 2020(ZDNet)

The best news of all for financial institutions is that AI modeling and execution don't exclude them.

"The AI is designed to be informed by bank subject matter experts so it can 'learn' the business rules that the bank wants to apply," Singh said. "The benefit is that real subject matter experts get involvednot just the data scientists."

Singh advises banks looking at expanding their use of AI to carefully select their business use cases, without trying to do too much at once.

"Start small instead of using a 'big bang' approach," he said. "In this way, you can continue to refine your AI model and gain success with it that immediately benefits the business."

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Artificial intelligence can take banks to the next level - TechRepublic

How Artificial Intelligence, IoT And Big Data Can Save The Bees – Forbes

Modern agriculture depends on bees. In fact, our entire ecosystem, including the food we eat and the air we breathe, counts on pollinators. But the pollinator population is declining according to Sabiha Rumani Malik, the founder and executive president of The World Bee Project. But, in an intriguing collaboration with Oracle and by putting artificial intelligence, internet of things and big data to work on the problem, they hope to reverse the trend.

How Artificial Intelligence, IoT and Big Data Can Save The Bees

Why is the global bee population in decline?

According to an Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) report, pollinators are in danger. There are many reasons pollinators are being driven to extinction, including habitat destruction, urbanization, use of pesticides, pollution, fragmentation of natural flowering habitats, predators and parasites, and changing climate. However, until recently, with The World Bee Project's work, there hasn't been a global initiative to study bee populations or to research and attack the issue from a global perspective.

Why is it important to save the bees?

Did you know that bees, along with other pollinators, such as butterflies, are the reason plants can produce seeds and reproduce? According to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), 35 percent of food crops and three-quarters of the worlds flowering plants depend on bees and pollinators. In fact, in order to ensure the almond crop gets pollinated in California each year, most of the beehives in the United States are shipped to California to ensure it. In fact, bees help to pollinate 90% of the leading global crop types, including fruit trees, coffee, vanilla, and cotton plants. And, of course, healthy plants are critical in replenishing our oxygen supply thanks to photosynthesis.

If the pollinators aren't alive or healthy enough to do their job, our global crop production, food security, biodiversity, and clean air is in peril. Honeybees are the world's most important pollinators. As much as 40 percent of the global nutrient supply for humans depends on pollinators. Presently there are approximately 2 billion people who suffer deficiencies of micronutrients.

Our lives are intrinsically connected to the bees, Malik said.

Partnership to monitor global honeybee population

The World Bee Project is the first private globally coordinated organization to launch and be devoted to monitoring the global honey bee population. Since 2014, the organization has brought together scientists to study the global problem of bee decline to provide insight about the issue to farmers, governments, beekeepers, and other vested organizations.

In 2018, Oracle Cloud technology was brought into the work to better understand the worldwide decline in bee populations, and The World Bee Project Hive Network began.

How technology can save the bees

How could technology be used to save the bees? Technology can be leveraged to help save the bees in a similar way that it is applied to other innovative projects. First, by using internet-of-things sensors, including microphones and cameras that can see invasive predators and collect data from the bees and hives. Human ingenuity and innovations such as wireless technologies, robotics, and computer vision help deliver new insights and solutions to the issue. One of the key metrics of a hive's health is the sounds it produces. Critical to the data-gathering efforts is to "listen" to the hives to determine colony health, strength, and behavior as well as collect temperature, humidity, apiary weather conditions, and hive weight.

The sound and vision sensors can also detect hornets, which can be a threat to bee populations.

The data is then fed to the Oracle Cloud, where artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms get to work to analyze the data. The algorithms will look for patterns and try to predict behaviors of the hive, such as if it's preparing to swarm. The insights are then shared with beekeepers and conservationists so they can step in to try to protect the hives. Since it's a globally connected network, the algorithms can also learn more about differences in bee colonies in different areas of the world. Students, researchers, and even interested citizens can also interact with the data, work with it through the hive network's open API, and discuss it via chatbot.

For example, the sound and vision sensors can detect hornets, which can be a threat to bee populations. The sound from the wing flab or a hornet is different from those of bees, and the AI can pick this up automatically and alert beekeepers to the hornet threat.

Technology is making it easier for The World Bee Project to share real-time information and gather resources to help save the world's bee population. In fact, Malik shared, "Our partnership with Oracle Cloud is an extraordinary marriage between nature and technology." Technology is helping to multiply the impact of The World Bee Project Hive Network across the world and makes action to save the bees quicker and more effective.

Here you can see a short video showing the connected beehive in augmented reality during my interview with Sabiha Rumani Malik - pretty cool:

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How Artificial Intelligence, IoT And Big Data Can Save The Bees - Forbes

Health care of tomorrow, today: How artificial intelligence is fighting the current, and future, COVID-19 pandemic | TheHill – The Hill

SARS-COV-2 has upended modern health care, leaving health systems struggling to cope. Addressing a fast-moving and uncontrolled disease requires an equally efficient method of discovery, development and administration. Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning driven health care solutions provide such an answer. AI-enabled health care is not the medicine of the future, nor does it mean robot doctors rolling room to room in hospitals treating patients. Instead of a hospital from some future Jetsons-like fantasy, AI is poised to make impactful and urgent contributions to the current health care ecosystem. Already AI-based systems are helping to alleviate the strain on health care providers overwhelmed by a crushing patient load, accelerate diagnostic and reporting systems, and enable rapid development of new drugs and existing drug combinations that better match a patients unique genetic profile and specific symptoms.

For the thousands of patients fighting for their lives against this deadly disease and the health care providers who incur a constant risk of infection, AI provides an accelerated route to understand the biology of COVID-19. Leveraging AI to assist in prediction, correlation and reporting allow health care providers to make informed decisions quickly. With the current standard of PCR based testing requiring up to 48 hours to return a result, New York-based Envisagenics has developed an AI platform that analyzes 1,000 patient samples in parallel in just two hours. Time saves lives, and the company hopes to release the platform for commercial use in the coming weeks.

AI-powered wearables, such as a smart shirt developed by Montreal-based Hexoskin to continuously measure biometrics including respiration effort, cardiac activity, and a host of other metrics, provide options for hospital staff to minimize exposure by limiting the required visits to infected patients. This real-time data provides an opportunity for remote monitoring and creates a unique dataset to inform our understanding of disease progression to fuel innovation and enable the creation of predictive metrics, alleviating strain on clinical staff. Hexoskin has already begun to assist hospitals in New York City with monitoring programs for their COVID-19 patients, and they are developing an AI/ML platform to better assess the risk profile of COVID-19 patients recovering at home. Such novel platforms would offer a chance for providers and researchers to get ahead of the disease and develop more effective treatment plans.

AI also accelerates discovery and enables efficient and effective interrogation of, the necessary chemistry to address COVID-19. An increasing number of companies are leveraging AI/ML to identify new treatment paths, whether from a list of existing molecules or de novo discovery. San Francisco-based Auransa is using AI to map the gene sequence of SARS-COV-2 to its effect on the host to generate a short-list of already approved drugs that have a high likelihood to alleviate symptoms of COVID-19. Similarly, UK-based Healx has set its AI platform to discover combination therapies, identifying multi-drug approaches to simultaneously treat different aspects of the disease pathology to improve patient outcomes. The company analyzed a library of 4,000 approved drugs to map eight million possible pairs and 10.5 billion triplets to generate combination therapy candidates. Preclinical testing will begin in May 2020.

Developers cannot always act alone - realizing the potential of AI often requires the resources of a collaboration to succeed. Generally, the best data sets and the most advanced algorithms do not exist within the same organization, and it is often the case that multiple data sources and algorithms need to be combined for maximum efficacy. Over the last month, we have seen the rise of several collaborations to encourage information sharing and hasten potential outcomes to patients.

Medopad, a UK-based AI developer, has partnered with Johns Hopkins University to mine existing datasets on COVID-19 and relevant respiratory diseases captured by the UK Biobank and similar databases to identify a biomarker associated with a higher risk for COVID-19. A biomarker database is essential in executing long-term population health measures, and can most effectively be generated by an AI system. In the U.S., over 500 leading companies and organizations, including Mayo Clinic, Amazon Web Services and Microsoft, have formed the COVID-19 Healthcare Coalition to assist in coordinating on all COVID-19 related matters. As part of this effort, LabCorp and HD1, among others, have come together to use AI to make testing and diagnostic data available to researchers to help build disease models including predictions of future hotspots and at-risk populations. On the international stage, the recently launched COAI, a consortium of AI-companies being assembled by French-US OWKIN, aims to increase collaborative research, to accelerate the development of effective treatments, and to share COVID-19 findings with the global medical and scientific community.

Leveraging the potential of AI and machine learning capabilities provides a potent tool to the global community in tackling the pandemic. AI presents novel ways to address old problems and opens doors to solving newly developing population health concerns. The work of our health care system, from the research scientists to the nurses and physicians, should be celebrated, and we should embrace the new tools which are already providing tremendous value. With the rapid deployment and integration of AI solutions into the COVID-19 response, the health care of tomorrow is already addressing the challenges we face today.

Brandon Allgood, PhD, is vice chair of the Alliance for Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare, a global advocacy organization dedicated to the discovery, development and delivery of better solutions to improve patient lives. Allgood is a SVP of DS&AI at Integral Health, a computationally driven biotechnology company in Boston.

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Health care of tomorrow, today: How artificial intelligence is fighting the current, and future, COVID-19 pandemic | TheHill - The Hill

First meeting of the new CEPEJ Working Group on cyberjustice and artificial intelligence – Council of Europe

The new CEPEJ Working group on Cyberjustice and artificial intelligence (CEPEJ-GT-CYBERJUST) will hold a first meeting by videoconference on 27 April 2020.

The objective of the Working group is to analyse and develop appropriate tools on new issues such as the use of cyberjustice or artificial intelligence in judicial systems in relation to the efficiency and quality of judicial systems.

At this meeting, an exchange of views will take place on the possible future work of the Working Group, which should be based on the themes contained in its mandate:

The CYBERJUST group will also hold a joint meeting at a later stage with the CEPEJ Working Group on Quality of Justice (CEPEJ-GT-QUAL) with a view to sharing tasks, in particular to follow up the implementation of the CEPEJ European Ethical Charter on the use of artificial intelligence in judicial systems and their environment and its toolbox and to ensure co-ordination.

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First meeting of the new CEPEJ Working Group on cyberjustice and artificial intelligence - Council of Europe

When the coronavirus hit, California turned to artificial intelligence to help map the spread – 60 Minutes – CBS News

California was the first state to shut down in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. It also enlisted help from the tech sector, harnessing the computing power of artificial intelligence to help map the spread of the disease, Bill Whitaker reports. Whitaker's story will be broadcast on the next edition of 60 Minutes, Sunday, April 26 at 7 p.m. ET/PT on CBS.One of the companies California turned to was a small Canadian start-up called BlueDot that uses anonymized cell phone data to determine if social distancing is working. Comparing location data from cell phone users over a recent 24-hour period to a week earlier in Los Angeles, BlueDot's algorithm maps where people are still gathering. It could be a hospital or it could be a problem. "We can see on a moment by moment basis if necessary, where or not our stay at home orders were working," says California Governor Gavin Newsom.The data allows public health officials to predict which hospitals might face the greatest number of patients. "We are literally looking into the future and predicting in real time based on constant update of information where patterns are starting to occur," Newsom tells Whitaker. "So the gap between the words and people's actions is often anecdotal. But not with this technology."California is just one client of BlueDot. The firm was among the first to warn of the outbreak in Wuhan on December 31. Public officials in ten Asian countries, airlines and hospitals were alerted to the potential danger of the virus by BlueDot.BlueDot also uses anonymized global air ticket data to predict how an outbreak of infectious disease might spread. BlueDot founder Dr. Kamran Khan tells Whitaker, "We can analyze and visualize all this information across the globe in just a few seconds." The computing power of artificial intelligence lets BlueDot sort through billions of pieces of raw data offering the critical speed needed to map a pandemic. "Our surveillance system that picked up the outbreak of Wuhan automatically talks to the system that is looking at how travelers might go to various airports around Wuhan," says Dr. Khan.

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When the coronavirus hit, California turned to artificial intelligence to help map the spread - 60 Minutes - CBS News

Artificial Intelligence in the Oil & Gas Industry, 2020-2025 – Upstream Operations to Witness Significant Growth – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Yahoo…

The "AI in Oil and Gas Market - Growth, Trends, and Forecast (2020-2025)" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The AI in Oil and Gas market was valued at USD2 billion in 2019 and is expected to reach USD3.81 billion by 2025, at a CAGR of 10.96% over the forecast period 2020-2025. As the cost of IoT sensors declines, more major oil and gas organizations are bound to start integrating these sensors into their upstream, midstream, and downstream operations along with AI-enabled predictive analytics.

Oil and gas remains as one of the most highly valued commodities in the energy sector. In recent years, there has been an increased focus on improving efficiency, and reducing downtime has been a priority for the oil and gas companies as their profits slashed since 2014, due to fluctuating oil prices. However, as concerns over the environmental impact of energy production and consumption persist, oil and gas companies are actively seeking innovative approaches to achieve their business goals, while reducing environmental impact.

In addition, the Oil and Gas Authority (OGA) is making use of AI in parallel ways, owing to the United Kingdom's first oil and gas National Data Repository (NDR), launched in March 2019, using AI to interpret data, which, according to the OGA anticipations, is likely to assist to discover new oil and gas forecast and permit more production from existing infrastructures.

The offshore oil and gas business use AI in data science to make the complex data used for oil and gas exploration and production more reachable, which lets companies to discover new exploration prospects or make more use out of existing infrastructures. For instance, in January 2019, BP invested in Houston-based technology start-up, Belmont Technology, to bolster the company's AI capabilities, developing a cloud-based geoscience platform nicknamed Sandy.

However, high capital investments for the integration of AI technologies, along with the lack of skilled AI professionals, could hinder the growth of the market. A recent poll validated that 56% of senior AI professionals considered that a lack of additional and qualified AI workers was the only biggest hurdle to be overcome, in terms of obtaining the necessary level of AI implementation across business operations.

Key Market Trends

Upstream Operations to Witness a Significant Growth

North America Expected to Hold a Significant Market Share

Competitive Landscape

The AI in the oil and gas market is highly competitive and consists of several major players. In terms of market share, few of the major players currently dominate the market. The companies are continuously capitalizing on acquisitions, in order to broaden, complement, and enhance its product and service offerings, to add new customers and certified personnel, and to help expand sales channels.

Recent Industry Developments

Key Topics Covered

1 INTRODUCTION

1.1 Study Assumptions and Market Definition

1.2 Scope of the Study

2 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

4 MARKET INSIGHTS

4.1 Market Overview

4.2 Industry Attractiveness - Porter's Five Forces Analysis

4.3 Technology Snapshot - By Application

4.3.1 Quality Control

4.3.2 Production Planning

4.3.3 Predictive Maintenance

4.3.4 Other Applications

5 MARKET DYNAMICS

5.1 Market Drivers

5.1.1 Increasing Focus to Easily Process Big Data

5.1.2 Rising Trend to Reduce Production Cost

5.2 Market Restraints

5.2.1 High Cost of Installation

5.2.2 Lack of Skilled Professionals across the Oil and Gas Industry

6 MARKET SEGMENTATION

6.1 By Operation

6.1.1 Upstream

6.1.2 Midstream

6.1.3 Downstream

6.2 By Service Type

6.2.1 Professional Services

6.2.2 Managed Services

6.3 Geography

6.3.1 North America

6.3.2 Europe

6.3.3 Asia-Pacific

6.3.4 Latin America

6.3.5 Middle East & Africa

7 COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE

7.1 Company Profiles

7.1.1 Google LLC

7.1.2 IBM Corporation

7.1.3 FuGenX Technologies Pvt. Ltd.

7.1.4 Microsoft Corporation

7.1.5 Intel Corporation

7.1.6 Royal Dutch Shell PLC

7.1.7 PJSC Gazprom Neft

7.1.8 Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd.

7.1.9 NVIDIA Corp.

7.1.10 Infosys Ltd.

7.1.11 Neudax

8 INVESTMENT ANALYSIS

9 FUTURE OF THE MARKET

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/14dtcc

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200424005472/en/

Contacts

ResearchAndMarkets.comLaura Wood, Senior Press Managerpress@researchandmarkets.com

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Artificial Intelligence in the Oil & Gas Industry, 2020-2025 - Upstream Operations to Witness Significant Growth - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Yahoo...

Pre & Post COVID-19 Market Estimates-Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market in Retail Sector 2019-2023| Increased Efficiency of Operations to Boost…

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The artificial intelligence (AI) market in retail sector is expected to grow by USD 14.05 billion during 2019-2023. The report also provides the market impact and new opportunities created due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The impact can be expected to be significant in the first quarter but gradually lessen in subsequent quarters with a limited impact on the full-year economic growth, according to the latest market research report by Technavio. Request a free sample report

Companies operating in the retail sector are increasingly adopting AI solutions to improve efficiency and productivity of operations through real-time problem-solving. For instance, the integration of AI with inventory management helps retailers to effectively plan their inventories with respect to demand. AI also helps retailers to identify gaps in their online product offerings and deliver a personalized experience to their customers. Many such benefits offered by the integration of AI are crucial in driving the growth of the market.

To learn more about the global trends impacting the future of market research, download a free sample: https://www.technavio.com/talk-to-us?report=IRTNTR31763

As per Technavio, the increased applications in e-commerce will have a positive impact on the market and contribute to its growth significantly over the forecast period. This research report also analyzes other significant trends and market drivers that will influence market growth over 2019-2023.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market in Retail Sector: Increased Applications in E-commerce

E-commerce companies are increasingly integrating AI in various applications to gain a competitive advantage in the market. The adoption of AI-powered tools helps them to analyze the catalog in real-time to serve customers with similar and relevant products. This improves both sales and customer satisfaction. E-commerce companies are also integrating AI with other areas such as planning and procurement, production, supply chain management, in-store operations, and marketing to improve overall efficiency. Therefore, the increasing application areas of AI in e-commerce is expected to boost the growth of the market during the forecast period.

Bridging offline and online experiences and the increased availability of cloud-based applications will further boost market growth during the forecast period, says a senior analyst at Technavio.

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Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market in Retail Sector: Segmentation Analysis

This market research report segments the artificial intelligence (AI) market in retail sector by application (sales and marketing, in-store, planning, procurement, and production, and logistics management) and geographic landscape (North America, APAC, Europe, MEA, and South America).

The North America region led the artificial intelligence (AI) market in retail sector in 2018, followed by APAC, Europe, MEA, and South America respectively. During the forecast period, the North America region is expected to register the highest incremental growth due to factors such as early adoption of AI, rising investments in R&D and start-ups, and increasing investments in technologies.

Technavios sample reports are free of charge and contain multiple sections of the report, such as the market size and forecast, drivers, challenges, trends, and more. Request a free sample report

Some of the key topics covered in the report include:

Market Drivers

Market Challenges

Market Trends

Vendor Landscape

About Technavio

Technavio is a leading global technology research and advisory company. Their research and analysis focus on emerging market trends and provides actionable insights to help businesses identify market opportunities and develop effective strategies to optimize their market positions.

With over 500 specialized analysts, Technavios report library consists of more than 17,000 reports and counting, covering 800 technologies, spanning across 50 countries. Their client base consists of enterprises of all sizes, including more than 100 Fortune 500 companies. This growing client base relies on Technavios comprehensive coverage, extensive research, and actionable market insights to identify opportunities in existing and potential markets and assess their competitive positions within changing market scenarios.

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Pre & Post COVID-19 Market Estimates-Artificial Intelligence (AI) Market in Retail Sector 2019-2023| Increased Efficiency of Operations to Boost...

EUREKA Clusters Artificial Intelligence (AI) Call | News item – The Netherlands and You

News item | 21-04-2020 | 04:58

Singapore has joined the EUREKA Clusters Artificial Intelligence (AI) Call. Through this new initiative, Singapore and Dutch companies can receive support in the facilitation of and funding for joint innovation projects in the AI domain with entities from 14 other EUREKA countries. The 14 partner countries are Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Luxembourg, Malta, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, South Korea and Turkey. The call will be open from 1 April to 15 June 2020, with funding decisions to be made by January 2021.

The EUREKA Clusters CELTIC-NEXT, EUROGIA, ITEA 3, and PENTA-EURIPIDES, have perceived a common cross domain interest in developing, adapting and utilising emerging Artificial Intelligence within and across their focus areas. These Clusters, together with a number of EUREKA Public Authorities, are now launching a Call for innovative projects in the AI domain. The aim of this Call is to boost the productivity & competitiveness of European industries through the adoption and use of AI systems and services.

The call for proposals is open to projects that apply AI to a large number of application areas, including but not limited to Agriculture, Circular Economy, Climate Response, Cybersecurity, eHealth, Electronic Component and Systems, ICT and applications, Industry 4.0, Low Carbon Energy, Safety, Transport and Smart Mobility, Smart Cities, Software Innovation, and Smart Engineering.

More information: https://eureka-clusters-ai.eu/

To find partners please check the online brokerage tool:https://eureka-clusters-ai.eu/brokerage-tool/

The Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO) will host a webinar on Tuesday 28th of April at 10am CEST for Dutch based potential applicants or intermediaries, register here.

Enterprise Singapore will host a webinar on Monday 27 April at 4pm (SG time) for Singapore based potential applicants or intermediaries, register here.

Link:

EUREKA Clusters Artificial Intelligence (AI) Call | News item - The Netherlands and You

Soyuz launches from Kazakhstan with space station supply ship – Spaceflight Now

A Soyuz-2.1a rocket lifts off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan with the 75h Progress supply ship for the International Space Station. Credit: Roscosmos

A Soyuz rocket decorated to mark the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe fired into space Friday from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, sending a Progress supply ship on a fast-track, three-hour pursuit of the International Space Station.

The Soyuz-2.1a booster ignited its kerosene-fueled engines at climbed away from Launch Pad No. 31 at Baikonur at 9:51:41 p.m. EDT Friday (0151 GMT Saturday) to kick off a nine-minute climb into orbit.

Liftoff occurred at 6:51 a.m. Baikonur time Saturday, and the Soyuz arced into clear skies toward the northeast over the barren Kazakh steppe.

The Soyuz-2.1a rocket was adorned with markings and the number 75 on its payload shroud, signifying the launch occurred on the 75th anniversary of the meeting of U.S. and Soviet troops on the Elbe River in Germany in the final days of World War II in Europe.

The number has a double significance because the cargo mission is the 75th Progress resupply flightto the International Space Station since 2000.

The Soyuz launch was timed less than a minute before the space station soared directly over the historic Central Asia spaceport, putting the Progress cargo freighter on course to dock with the orbiting research outpost less than three-and-a-half hours later.

The Progress MS-14 supply ship separated from the Soyuz rockets third stage around nine minutes into the flight. Seconds later, the automated cargo carrier unfurled navigation antennas and power-generating solar arrays.

A series of thruster firings put the Progress MS-14 in position to begin a final approach to the space station around three hours after launch. The radar-guided rendezvous culminated in a link-up with the rear port of the space stations Zvezda service module at 1:12 a.m. EDT (0512 GMT).

The Progress MS-14 spacecrafts pressurized compartment is packed with nearly 3,000 pounds (1,350 kilograms) of dry cargo, including food, medicine, sanitary and hygienic materials, and equipment for space station systems.

The supply ship also carries around 1,543 pounds (700 kilograms) of propellant for transfer into the stations Zvezda module propulsion system, 926 pounds (420 kilograms) of water, and around 110 pounds (50 kilograms) of compressed air to replenish the stations breathable atmosphere.

After docking, the three-man space station crew will open hatches to the Progress supply ship and begin unpacking the spacecrafts pressurized cabin. The Progress MS-14 spacecraft is scheduled to remain docked at the station through late 2020, when it will depart with trash and re-enter the Earths atmosphere for destruction over the South Pacific Ocean.

The arrival of the space stations next Progress supply shipment occurred a week after the departure of the research labs last crew. Russian cosmonaut Oleg Skripochka and NASA crewmates Jessica Meir and Andrew Morgan landed in Kazakhstan on April 17, leaving veteran NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy in command of the International Space Station.

Cassidy and his Russian crewmates Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner launched April 9 for their long-duration expedition on the station, expected to last more than six months.

A Northrop Grumman Cygnus spacecraft that arrived at the space station in February is scheduled to depart the orbiting complex May 11. Like the Progress, the Cygnus freighter will carry trash away from the station and burn up in the atmosphere.

A Japanese HTV cargo ship is scheduled for launch May 20 from the Tanegashima Space Center in Japan. Loaded with several tons of experiments and a fresh set of solar array batteries, the HTV cargo carrier is due to arrive at the space station May 25.

Then SpaceXs Crew Dragon spaceship is set for its first launch with astronauts as soon as May 27 from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken will fly aboard the Crew Dragon, with docking at the space station set for May 28 to begin a mission lasting several months.

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Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

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Soyuz launches from Kazakhstan with space station supply ship - Spaceflight Now

Long space flights can increase the volume of astronauts’ brains – New Scientist News

By Layal Liverpool

Credit: Delphotos/Alamy

Astronauts brains increase in volume after long space flights, causing pressure to build up inside their heads. This may explain why some astronauts experience worsened vision after prolonged periods in space.

This raises additional concerns for long-duration interplanetary travel, such as the future mission to Mars, says Larry Kramer at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, who led the study.

Kramer and his colleagues scanned the brains of 11 astronauts before they spent about six months on the International Space Station, and at six points over the year after they returned to Earth. They found that all the astronauts had increased brain volume including white matter, grey matter and cerebrospinal fluid around the brain after returning from space.

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Under normal gravity, it is thought that fluid in the brain naturally moves downwards when we stand upright. But there is evidence that microgravity prevents this, resulting in accumulation of fluid in the brain and skull.

The astronauts brain volume increased by 2 per cent on average and the increases were still present one year after they returned to Earth, which could result in higher intracranial pressure, Kramer says. He suspects this might press on the optic nerve, potentially explaining the vision problems frequently reported by astronauts.

Kramer and his team also observed that part of the brain called the pituitary gland was deformed in six out of the 11 astronauts. These results add to a body of evidence suggesting that brain structure can be altered after space flight.

This study is important because it provides data, for the first time in NASA astronauts, demonstrating the persistence of structural brain changes even up to one year following return to Earth, says Donna Roberts at the Medical University of South Carolina.

We are currently working on methods to counteract the changes we are observing in the brain using artificial gravity, says Kramer. These methods to pull blood back towards the feet could include a human-sized centrifuge that would spin a person around at high speed, or a vacuum chamber around the lower half of the body.

Hopefully one of these or other methods will be tested in microgravity and show efficacy, he says.

Journal reference: Radiology, DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2020191413

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Long space flights can increase the volume of astronauts' brains - New Scientist News