Why Bodhisattvas Need to Disrupt the Status Quo – Lion’s Roar

According to Zen priest and climate scientist Kritee, part of our work in addressing climate change is to understand systems how they work, how were complicit in them, and how we can change them to work for the good. From the Spring 2020 issue ofBuddhadharma: The Practitioners Quarterly.

Following Hurricane Katrina, a New Orleans resident in a temporary shelter drops to her knees and screams, imploring journalists to help (September 1, 2005). Photo by Ted Jackson, The Times-Picayune/Landov

For the past decade, I have been researching the climate impacts of different food production practices, which is important because our global food system contributes more than a third of all human-generated climate pollution. Recently I had the opportunity to present my research to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which brought mebrieflya sense of empowerment in the face of the climate crisis. But my deeper truth is that I find myself working with intense climate grief.

Im not alone. A growing number of climate scientists and activists report sleeplessness, anxiety, and even panic attacks. Many are overwhelmed by grief or anger. If I were not engaged in regular meditation and grief practices, as well as strategic actions with an ever-widening circle of ecodharma activists, I know I would be overwhelmed too.

In the past year, I have been in touch with a growing number of fellow dharma teachers who are waking up to the climate crisis and getting involved in climate action. This is due in large part to media attention brought on by youth-led school climate strikes, Sunrise Movement sit-ins, and Extinction Rebellion actions. While this is something to celebrate, I also think Buddhists can contribute much more radically to reducing suffering than they have so far. However, in order to do so effectively, we must bring not only our Buddhist understanding but also a systems-level view.

Averting a climate catastrophe will require enormous transitions, which raises important questions, such as: who will pay for the transitions? Will these transitions be consistent with democracy? And who will suffer the most if these transitions dont happenwill it be the poor and the racially marginalized?

A just transition must be democratic, fair, and equitable. We must therefore consider the ethical, moral, and spiritual underpinnings of such a transition and ask how each of usas well as our sanghascan assist in practical and concrete ways. We must also be willing to consider changing our own behavior, and that of our sanghas, in order to create a more just and sustainable society.

As bodhisattvas committed to relieving the suffering of all beings, we start by seeing relative reality, or suffering as it is. If we dont see the depth and extent of suffering, its very difficult to take compassionate action.

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At least a quarter of the worlds population is already facing an existential crisis. According to the International Labour Organization, approximately a billion people live on less than two dollars a day. More than two billion people work in informal sectors and have no work contract with their employers. These people and their families struggle every day to make ends meet. One sickness, birth, or death, one leaking roof due to an extreme rainfall event, or one failed crop due to a drought can throw them into crisis. They are already facing what those in the privileged Eurocentric world fear awaits them in the not-too-distant future: illness and death brought on by extreme weather events and forced migration due to a lack of basic resources, including water and food, as well as physical safety. They have done the least to usher in climate crisis, but they will suffer the most as the climate crisis deepens.

We cannot put off dealing with the current existential crisis faced by a quarter of humanity until after we have tackled the climate crisis. We need an integrated approach that makes enormous changes to reduce greenhouse gas emissions while also redistributing power and money and avoiding climate apartheid.

How do we do this? A just transition will require working through systems of separation, more commonly known as systems of oppression, which is another way of saying systems of domination, hierarchy, or superiority. Based on myths and lies, these systems purport that one group is more normal, superior, and/or powerful, and empower it to dominate another set of living beings. For example, patriarchy, class or caste hierarchies, and human domination over animals are all systems of oppression.

Most crucially, white people of European descent have power and supremacy over Black, brown, yellow, and Indigenous people all over the world. Globally speaking, this racial domination and associated neoliberal economic systems have helped primarily white folks to amass enormous wealth, steal land, and enslave people for hundreds of years. This concentration of power and wealth is systematically guarded through militarization, laws, trade deals, and media campaigns.

While we have made progress on some fronts, for the most part we take these systems of domination to be a given. Our hearts and minds have grown accustomed to a paradigm in which one human being has control over another. This is our default, and it has infected all parts of our psyche.

In Buddhism, through meditation and other transformative practices, we aspire to know states of heartmind that Buddha (the human being) embodied. These states of heartmind bring us close to reality as it is. When we see the absolute reality as it is, there is no individual human being, no separate entity. There is onlyinterdependent co-arising: I am you; you are me. I am a monarch butterfly that is going extinct, the Black woman whose five generations of family were lynched, and also Hitler and present-day fascists. All is me. Richest and poorest, we inter-are.

It is important to note that while Buddhism has devised many skillful practices to deal with the myth of separation in the consciousness of an individual practitioner, it has only just begun to grapple with systems of oppression. An individual cannot beat a system. To beat one system, it will require another system. Systems of oppression or separation must be replaced by systems of nonseparation or nonduality. The opposite of patriarchy is not matriarchy, where women are more powerful than men, but rather it is one of deep equality and solidarity. We are so used to systems of oppression that we have forgotten how to live in a way that is not separate. The top-down hierarchical systems that are rooted in exploitation and oppression must make way for systems and institutions that are rooted in compassion and sacred care of all beings. This requires more than words and good intentions; it must be backed by actions that redistribute power and wealth to those who are marginalized. Without this, societal healing and a just transition will not be possible.

While we need strategic and well-designed plans to redesign our economies, we also need spiritual and moral leaders who can penetrate hearts and minds. Their job is to embody genuine solidarity, interdependence, and friendship to help people wake up to the harm brought about by systems of domination and to see their complicity in it. Any legal policies involving redistribution of power and money will not be honored without changing the hearts of the oppressor and the oppressed.

Guided by the dharma, Buddhists can help our society disrupt the status quo, but in order to contribute to the transformation of the larger society, we also need to look at ourselves, as well as our sanghas. What do I mean? In an essay titled Revolutionary Suicide, African American pastor Lynice Pinkard challenges us as individuals and institutions to understand our own relationship with systemsof oppression:

To what extent does any one of us identify with the forces of domination and participate in relations that reinforce domination and the exploitation that goes with it? In what ways and to what extent are we wedded to our own upward mobility, financial security, good reputation, and ability to win friends and influence people in positions of power? Or conversely, do we identify (by putting our lives on the line) with efforts to reverse patterns of domination, empower people on the margins (even when we are not on the margins ourselves), and seek healthy, sustainable relations?

She argues that this desire for upward mobility is killing us spiritually. It is like we all know that the tree of this civilization is rotting but we still want to climb to the top!

As Buddhists, we have taken vows not to turn away from the suffering of others, whom we come to know as ourselves. When we manifest with the full integrity of what we know to be true, we naturally find ways to help heal our world. Some of my Buddhist friends are actually putting their lives on the line to defend all beings. Even if we are not ready to put our lives on the line, we can ask important questions:

Who is in our sangha? If our sangha is not diverse, do we have relationships with Black, Indigenous, and other people of color (BIPOC) outside of our sanghas? Having these relationships often means working through the racial trauma lodged in the bodies of everyone involved. (I highly recommend Resmaa Menakems systematic exploration of the trauma suffered by both BIPOC and white people in his seminal book My Grandmothers Hands.)

Are we more invested in building large Buddhist temples, or are we open to directing the money to building movements and to those on the front lines of systemic change?

Are we divesting from pathways that concentrate power and investing in those that redistribute power? How can we share power? How can we break the status quo systems of domination within our sangha or other communities we inhabit?

Are we making more than the average median income in our society? Why do we want to have a standard of living above that of others in our state or country?

Could we hire the most marginalized in our society? What do we have to learn to be able to hire and retain those individuals?

These are not easy questions. I wrestle with all of them myself and face the fear of letting go of my own privilege, wealth, and assets.

It wont be easy, but as bodhisattvas in training, we must find the courage and compassion to step up both individually and as a community of practitioners to grapple with these questions. As we do, we might gain greater understanding of the mindset of those destroying our planet. And we might be able to say a much needed NO to too-big-to-fail oil and gas corporations (without othering and shaming individuals who work for them).

Given what is already happening, we do not have the luxury of assuming that we can deal with social and ecological issues after enlightenment. As we individually spend time on our cushions to face absolute reality as it is, we must also create awakened systems and beloved communities that can deal with present-day relative reality as it is without perpetuating trauma and harm.

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Why Bodhisattvas Need to Disrupt the Status Quo - Lion's Roar

Book review: The story of yoga by Alistair Shearer – Stuff.co.nz

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The ancient practice shocked Victorians, was embraced by psychologists and finally co-opted by celebrities.

Yoga, Alistair Shearer notes, in this erudite, scholarly and engrossing study, is not itself a religion. But when practised in the right spirit, it may gradually align the practitioner with "those eternal principles on which all true religion rests".

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In much the same way as "mindfulness" has stripped Buddhist meditation of its spiritual or religious connotations to become a secular therapy for relieving stress and maximising efficiency, so yoga has long been stripped of its sacred associations. If the classic image of the yogi was once of the solitary contemplative in his Himalayan redoubt, it is now of lithe, sunkissed bodies enacting the "downward dog" at expensive retreats in the Greek islands or on the polished wood floors of the yoga studio with its aroma of incense, its New Age music and its air of cultivated narcissism.

As Shearer writes, yoga is now aUS$18 billionindustry, its rise no better illustrated than in an exhibition, Yoga: The Art of Transformation, held in 2013 at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, where tables for the opening gala were $50,000 a pop.

It is often said that yoga practices date from "5000 years" ago, but as Shearer points out, nobody knows for sure. There is no mention of what he calls "posture yoga" in the Vedic teachings, which date from roughly 2500BC to 500BC. But there are 900 mentions in the later Mahabharata, the great Sanskrit epic of ancient India, which includes the Bhagavad Gita, the most important text in what came to be known as Hinduism.

The seers of early yoga scriptures were interested in physical postures only insofar as they aided meditation and breathing.

Yoga was a physical practice only insofar as it served a spiritual objective. None of the great authorities, Shearer writes, saw the practice of yoga as a means to perfect the human frame, "but as a way to transcend its irksome limitations altogether". .

Shearer, who has written extensively on Hindu and Buddhist philosophy, provides a fascinating chronology of the changing attitudes towards yoga in the West. To the Victorians, Indian holy men were held to be objects of reproval.

A deeper understanding came with Swami Vivekananda, whose appearance at the first World Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893 galvanised popular interest in Hindu teachings. The Fabian turned theosophist Annie Besant, who saw Vivekananda speak in Chicago, would go on to publish a book on Maharishi Patanjali's yoga in 1907. In 1932, Carl Jung presented a seminar on kundalini yoga to the Psychological Society in Zurich, which, Shearer writes, was regarded as "a milestone in the Western understanding of Eastern thought".

Further enlightenment came with Aurobindo Ghose, the Indian nationalist turned mystic, whose teachings inspired the founders of the Esalen Institute in California the crucible of the so-called "Human Potential" movement in the 60s.

It is significant that some of the most popular forms of yoga today are the least contemplative. Shearer describes the "no pain, no gain" variation of Ashtanga yoga, popularised by K Pattabhi Jois and much espoused by celebrities such as Madonna, Sting and Gwyneth Paltrow, as "a sweat-based path for a nation of self-actualising achievers".

Then there is hot yoga invented by "the pony-tailed, waxed-chested" Bikram Choudhury a technique combining heat and vigorous activity. It's not unheard of for people attempting hot yoga "to vomit, break down and pass out, or lose bladder control in a room full of their fellow students". This too attracted the predictable celebrity following, and made Choudhury a multi-millionaire, before he fell to Earth after a Vanity Fair article accusing him of rape. (He has since denied any wrongdoing.)

In 2017, a survey in The Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies reported that yoga was the cause of more injuries than all other sports combined, with one in 10 practitioners developing musculoskeletal pain from their practice, and a third of those experiencing pain so severe they were out of action for three months.

Something for practitioners to meditate on, perhaps. Those adopting the determined sedentary position may find these statistics strangely vindicating.

The story of yoga by Alistair Shearer(C Hurst & Co, $50)

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Book review: The story of yoga by Alistair Shearer - Stuff.co.nz

Robosen Robotics Showcases T9 at Toy Fair New York – The World’s Most Advanced and Programmable Robot – Salamanca Press

NEW YORK, Feb. 22, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Toy Fair NY, Hall 1E, Booth # 4514-- Robosen Robotics (Shenzhen) Co. Ltd, a leading innovator in the field of AI and robotics, today showcased T9, the world's most advanced programmable robot that automatically converts from a robot to a vehicle in a stunningly smooth and seamless movement, at Toy Fair New York. T9 is the first robot available in the consumer market that features all of the following functions: automatic convertible movement from vehicle to robot, bipedal walking ability in robot form, race function in vehicle form, programmable/code development, robot control/commands by either voice or via app. T9 retails for $499USD and is available on Amazon and robosen.us

T9 is made with the latest robotic technology available with 23 proprietary chips and 22 proprietary servo motors (one for each artificial joint) that make it one of the most agile and flexible robots ever created; allowing it to perform high-speed, upright bipedal walking, while also automatically converting from robot to vehicle form.

Robosen Robotics' visionary craftsmanship and cutting-edge technology in artificial joint driving algorithms and digital electric drive technology, provide T9's artificial intelligence (AI) - Easy to remember voicecommands, complex animations completed with precision control, captivating dance performances and innovative stunts.

These animations are created and customized with three intuitive and easy-to-use programming platforms (Manual, Visual and 3D Graphics*) and T9's massive storage has enough memory to store tens of thousands of them. So, whether the user is a beginner, intermediate, or an advanced coder, T9's advanced robotics and AI will provide endless entertainment and opportunity to teach logical-based skills. Robosen Robotics also offers free online tutorials which makes learning to code fast and fun.

T9 is controlled by voice as well as via the T9 app (iOS and Android). With just a touch of a button, T9 can perform the latest customized dance animation, race around in vehicle mode, change back and forth from robot to vehicle form and more. Additionally, users can collaborate, create and connect with a global community of robo-centric fans through the Robosen Hub. They'll be able to upload and download popular user created animations, share programming tips and participate in fun events and competitions.

FEATURES/SPECS:DimensionsRobot Form: 265163340 mm;Vehicle Form: 287198149 mmControl MethodMobile app, voice controlWeight1.48kgExternal PortsDC charging port, Micro USB portMaterialAluminum alloy frame, ABS+PC shellBattery Capacity2000mAh lithium battery packServo motor22 (Chest 2 / Hands 42 / Legs 52 / Drive Wheels 2) Adapter Input 100V-240V ~ 50/60Hz 0.6A,OutputDC 12V 2AWirelessConnection Bluetooth 4.2 BLECertificationsFCC Certification

*A summary of each of three programming platforms:

Online Press Kit: HERE

About Robosen Robotics:Robosen Robotics (Shenzhen) Co. Ltd, is a leading innovator in the field of AI and robotics, leading the way in digital drive technology, artificial joint driving algorithms, force feedback technology, digital electric drive technology and artificial intelligence and programming. For more information, please visit https://robosen.us/

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Robosen Robotics Showcases T9 at Toy Fair New York - The World's Most Advanced and Programmable Robot - Salamanca Press

Top 10 Women in Robotics Industry – Analytics Insight

From driving rovers on Mars to improving farm automation, women have been everywhere. These women cover all parts of the robotics industry, both research, product and approach. They are authors and pioneers, they are investigators and activists. They are founders and emeritus. There is a role model here for everybody! Whats more, there is no reason ever not to have a lady talking on a board on robotics and AI.

Robotics is the method for the future, and women are driving the way for the absolute most accommodating innovations! For little girls, strong role models are vital! From Ada Lovelace, the worlds first computer programmer, to ladies engaged with robotics today, this rundown of female pioneers makes certain to motivate children to think about robotics as a future career.

While working at Otherlab, Danielle Applestone built up the Other Machine, a desktop CNC machine and machine control software appropriate for students, and financed by DARPA. The organization is currently known as Bantam Tools and was acquired by Bre Pettis. Right now, Applestone is CEO and CoFounder of Daughters of Rosie, determined to solve the labor shortage in the U.S. manufacturing industry by getting more women into stable manufacturing employments with purpose, growth potential, and benefits.

Crystal Chao is Chief Scientist at Huawei and the Global Lead of Robotics Projects, administering a group that works in Silicon Valley, Boston, Shenzhen, Beijing, and Tokyo. She has worked with all aspects of the robotics programming stack in her previous career, including a stint at X, Googles moonshot production line. In 2012, Chao won Outstanding Doctoral Consortium Paper Award, ICMI, for her PhD at Georgia Tech, where she built up an architecture for social human-robot interaction (HRI) called CADENCE: Control Architecture for the Dynamics of Natural Embodied Coordination and Engagement, empowering a robot to collaborate fluently with people utilizing dialogue and manipulation.

Squishy robots are quickly deployable mobile sensing robots for disaster rescue, remote monitoring and space exploration, created from the research at the BEST Lab or Berkeley Emergent Space Tensegrities Lab. Prof. Alice Agogino is the Roscoe and Elizabeth Hughes Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Product Design Concentration Founder and Head Advisor, MEng Program at the University of California, Berkeley, and has a long history of combining research, entrepreneurship and inclusion in engineering. Agogino won the AAAS Lifetime Mentor Award in 2012 and the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring in 2018.

Emily Cross is a cognitive neuroscientist and artist. As the Director of the Social Brain in Action Laboratory (www.soba-lab.com), she investigates how our cerebrums and behaviors are formed by various types of experience all through our life expectancies and across societies. She is right now the Principal Investigator on the European Research Council Starting Grant entitled Social Robots, which runs from 2016-2021.

Dr. Susanne Bieller is General Secretary, of The International Federation of Robotics (IFR), a non-profit organization representing more than 50 makers of industrial robots and national robot associations from more than twenty nations. Prior to that, Dr Bieller was project manager of the European Robotics Association EUnited Robotics. In the wake of finishing her PhD in Chemistry, she started her expert profession at the European Commission in Brussels, at that point dealt with the flat-panel display group at the German Engineering Federation (VDMA) in Frankfurt.

If robots can act in the most profound pieces of the sea, for what reason wouldnt they be able to contribute at home? That question has driven Cynthia Breazeal to pioneer social robotics that communicate with people. She made the worlds first social robot, Kismet, and established Jibo, the worlds first family robot. She additionally directs the Personal Robots Group at MITs Media Lab.

Heather Justice has the dream job title of Mars Exploration Rover Driver and is a Software Engineer at NASA JPL. As a 16-year-old viewing the first Rover arriving on Mars, she stated: I saw exactly how far robotics could take us and I was enlivened to seek after my inclinations in computer science and engineering. Justice graduated from Harvey Mudd College with a B.S. in computer science in 2009 and an M.S. from the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University in 2011, having additionally interned at three diverse NASA places and working in an assortment of research areas including computer vision, mobile robot path planning, and spacecraft flight rule validation.

Ayorkor Korsah experienced childhood in Ghana and studies in the United States picking up her Ph.D. in Robotics from Carnegie Mellon University. Presently back in Ghana, she is a professor of computer science and robotics at Ashesi University. In 2012, she co-founded the African Robotics Network, a community that shares robotics resources.

Madeline Gannon is a multidisciplinary designer imagining better approaches to speak with machines. Her ongoing works taming giant industrial robots center around growing new boondocks in human-robot relations. Her interactive establishment, Mimus, was granted a 2017 Ars Electronica STARTS Prize Honorable Mention. She was likewise named a 2017/2018 World Economic Forum Cultural Leader. She holds a PhD in Computational Design from Carnegie Mellon University, where she studied human-focused interfaces for autonomous fabrication machines. She additionally holds a Masters in Architecture from Florida International University.

Kanako Harada is Program Manager of the ImPACT program Bionic Humanoids Propelling New Industrial Revolution of the Cabinet Office, Japan. She is additionally Associate Professor of the divisions of Bioengineering and Mechanical Engineering, School of Engineering and the University of Tokyo, Japan. She acquired her M.Sc. in Engineering from the University of Tokyo in 2001, and her Ph.D. in Engineering from Waseda University in 2007. She worked for Hitachi Ltd., Japan Association for the Advancement of Medical Equipment, and Scuola Superiore SantAnna, Italy, before joining the University of Tokyo. Her research interests incorporate surgical robots and surgical skill assessment.

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New ‘cobot’ robots kill some jobs, create others – Automotive News Canada

Technology is often blamed for replacing humans in the job market, but when Shelley Fellows looks at a collaborative robot a cobot she sees the result of highly paid, highly skilled labour.

I see the mechanical designer who designed the tooling at the end of that robot arm, said Fellows, vice-president of communications at Windsor, Ont.-based AIS Technology Group, which specializes in automation technology.

I see the workers who fabricated that tooling. I see the electrical designer and the engineers who designed the electrical system and the circuitry. I see the programmers who programmed the controls. I see the vision system designer and the programmer for the vision system.

I see all of those highly skilled people; and without them, you wouldnt see that robot on the factory floor, said Fellows, who also chairs Automate Canada, an industry association devoted to growing Canadas automation sector.

While robotic technology kills certain jobs, automating the more monotonous tasks typically leads to more interesting, better paid positions, said Linamar Corp. CEO Linda Hasenfratz.

Between 2012 and 2019, the Guelph, Ont.-based parts supplier increased employment in Canada by almost 40 per cent, but the payroll was up 60 per cent. Most of the increase in employment occurred in jobs such as engineer and programmer, Hasenfratz said.

I think that is an interesting evolution, and it is a winwin all around, but that does have implications for our education and training system.

We have an increased need for people in engineering, technology, math, the trades.

We need to make sure we are graduating people with more skills.

The cobots also help ease a chronic labour shortage plaguing the parts industry, Hasenfratz said.

We have got huge shortages and need for people in all of these areas.

By automating tasks that are more repetitive, the industry can shift its workforce into the higher-value jobs, Hasenfratz said.

Fellows said an opportunity also exists to boost automation manufacturing in Canada. Currently, one-third of Canadian manufacturers source their automation outside the country.

We can be supplying our Canadian manufacturers with a lot more of our robotics, controls and other automation. To me, it would be a shame if our manufacturers automate but are sourcing most of their technology outside of our country.

William Melek, director of the University of Waterloos Ontario robotics research centre, RoboHub, said making this happen will require a collaborative ecosystem of industry, researchers, policymakers and advisers working together to address everything from workforce training to safety policies for working around cobots, as well as encouraging their development and evolution.

We cant be working in isolation, he said.

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New 'cobot' robots kill some jobs, create others - Automotive News Canada

Zymergen installs ‘dozens’ of miniature industrial robots from Mecademic – Robotics and Automation News

Zymergen, a science and materials innovation company based in California, has integrated dozens of Meca500 robots to automate experiments in their life sciences facility. (See video below.)

The Meca500 is a miniature industrial robot manufactured by startup company Mecademic. It has found a great number of applications in labs and industries such as watchmaking and medical technology.

Some predict that Mecademic has huge potential with its robot, especially in wtachmaking and medtech, especially as there is currently no other robot like it.

At the moment, Stubli is the leading supplier of robots for the watchmaking and medtech industry, according to a report by Robotics and Automation News.

Zymergen says flexibility, reliability, speed, and ease of integration were a few reasons why the Meca500 maximized throughput and lowered costs for Zymergens lab automation processes.

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What happens when robotics industry vets have kids? – ZDNet

What happens when a group of robotics industry veterans have kids? They have start a company specializing educational robots for kids, of course.

Matatalabis fast carving a path for itself in the world of children's STEAM education products and content. Matata's kid's programming robots uses image recognition technology to develop children's cognitive abilities and computational thinking through a variety of programming games. The robot focuses on physical programming, with no need for screen or literacy to learn to code.

Perhaps to the horror of some educators, who believe there's too much tech in education, but the delight of a growing customer base, the company's entry-level learning tech is targeted at kids as young as three. So far Matatalab has pursued an ambitious market strategy, bringing its products out in over 40 countries via a combination of traditional brick-and-mortar stores as well as Amazon.

There area numberof robotics companies vying for space in the lucrativeed techmarket. STEAM eduction is increasingly emphasized in budgets, and many schools now offer coding instruction as part of the standard curricula as early askindergarten. Analysts predict the educational robotics market will be worth$1.7 billionby 2023. In someChinese schools, students begin as early as preschool, which is where Matatalab is focusing.

The company was founded in 2017 by four Shenzhen-based robotics industry veterans who had all had kids who were entering pre-kindergarten. Studies show that brains begin to develop logic around 3 and 4 years old, so the team wanted to make a coding education product that catered specifically to this age group at an early stage of development. Their mission was to give kids around the world the greatest advantage for learning to code as they grow.

Like kid-aimed robots from companies likeCubetto,SAM Labs, andWonder Workshop, the result is an interesting blend of interactive technologies that purport to teach kids to code. The game-basedMatatalab Coding Set, meant for kids as young as four, contains coding blocks, a command board, maps, and challenge booklets. It's a screen-free experience, as well as a word-free experience, relying instead on graphical symbols that differentiate various coding blocks.

The company has won several awards, including the Reddot Design Awards and IDEA Awards. Whether it can eat market share from better known competitors like Wonder Workshop remains to be seen. Price is a perennial Achilles heel in this space, with parents hesitant to shell out on toys they aren't sure their kids will continue to use.

Matatalab's kits range from a $125 "lite" model to a nearly $300 "pro" model.

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What happens when robotics industry vets have kids? - ZDNet

China buys Danish robots to fight coronavirus – Robotics and Automation News

As a new and powerful weapon against the spread of the coronavirus, Chinese hospitals are now deploying Danish disinfection robots from UVD Robots.

Self-driving Danish disinfection robots are now shipping to a number of hospitals in China to help fight the coronavirus, also called COVID-19.

This happened after Sunay Healthcare Supply today signed an agreement with the Danish company UVD Robots.

The first robots shipped this week and in the following weeks, many more robots will be shipped via air to be deployed in the fight against the coronavirus.

With ultraviolet light, the Danish robot can disinfect and kill viruses and bacteria autonomously, effectively limiting the spread of coronaviruses without exposing hospital staff to the risk of infection.

Through Sunay Healthcare Supplys partners in China, the robots will be deployed in all Chinese provinces.

With this agreement, more than 2,000 hospitals will now have the opportunity to ensure effective disinfection, protecting both their patients and staff, says Su Yan, CEO of Sunay Healthcare Supply, a medical equipment supplier to the Chinese market.

Now sold in more than 40 countries, UVD Robots is already delivering its self-driving disinfection robots to hospitals in other parts of Asia in addition to healthcare markets in Europe and the United States.

The invention increases the safety of both staff, patients and their relatives by reducing the risk of contact with bacteria, viruses and other harmful microorganisms.

The concentrated UV-C light emitted by the robots as they drive has a germicidal effect that removes virtually all airborne viruses and bacteria on the surfaces of a room. Results, that led to the UVD robot winning the robotics industrys Oscar IERA Award in 2019.

Technology found superior in the market

Before entering into the agreement with UVD Robots, Sunay Healthcare Supply did its due diligence and screened the market for the best technologies to fight the corona-virus.

We found the UVD robot to be superior compared to other technologies and are pleased to in a very short amount of time enter into a reseller agreement with exclusive rights to supply the UVD robots in China, says Su Yan, emphasizing how both parties have worked intensively to get deliveries of robots to the Chinese hospitals.

CEO of UVD Robots, Per Juul Nielsen, is pleased to be helping combat the spread of the virus in China through the companys solution. In a severe crisis like this where the world health is threatened, our innovative technology really proves its worth, he says.

Developed by large group of collaborators from hospital and robotics industriesUVD Robots is a portfolio company in Blue Ocean Robotics, which develops a wide range of service robots.

The development of the UVD robot started in 2014, when a group of Danish hospitals demanded a far more effective way of reducing infection rates in hospitals.

The fruitful collaboration between bacteriologists, virologists and hospital staff from hospitals, and robot developers, designers, engineers, investors and business people from Blue Ocean Robotics led to an early market introduction in 2018.

Claus Risager, CEO of Blue Ocean Robotics and chairman of UVD Robots, calls it a tremendous satisfaction for employees, management and the circle of owners to witness the deployment of the UVD Robot.

We are now helping solve one of the biggest problems of our time, preventing the spread of bacteria and viruses with a robot that saves lives in hospitals every day.

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China buys Danish robots to fight coronavirus - Robotics and Automation News

Book Review: The Globotics Upheaval: Globalization, Robotics and the Future of Work by Richard Baldwin – USAPP American Politics and Policy (blog)

InThe Globotics Upheaval: Globalization, Robotics and the Future of Work,Richard Baldwin provides a new analysis of how automation and globalisation could together shape our societies in the years to come. Drawing on numerous examples to keep readers engaged from cover to cover,this book is a tour de force, writesWannaphong Durongkaveroj, discussing the past, present and future of globalisation and automation and their implications on the way we work.

The Globotics Upheaval: Globalization, Robotics and the Future of Work. Richard Baldwin. Oxford University Press. 2019.

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There is little wonder that the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) has sparked ongoing debates about the future of work. In The Globotics Upheaval: Globalization, Robotics and the Future of Work, Richard Baldwin, the author of The Great Convergence, provides a meticulous and succinct analysis of how a dynamic duo of economic change automation and globalisation can shape our societies in the years to come.

Baldwin starts by defining the term globotics a combination of globalisation and robotics. These are not old wine in a new bottle. Globalisation is no longer simply a trade of goods and services across boundaries. It is telemigration a widespread, new form of work that allows workers to sit in one nation and work in offices in another. Simply put, forget about the crowded office workers can now deliver services remotely. In addition, a new phase of automation is not just about vast machines and industrial robots that replace blue-collar workers in factories. It concerns white-collar robots software that performs functions that previously only humans could. An example is Amelia an AI-based digital assistant introduced at the Swedish bank SEB. The first key implication of Baldwins argument is that this transformation has happened so quickly. It took just years, rather than a century, for this dynamic duo to emerge, spread throughout the economy and change our lives. Second, it creates upheaval throughout society.

To depict the massive changes brought about by globalisation and automation, Baldwin proposes a four-step progression: transformation; upheaval; backlash; and resolution. First, an advance in digital technology has transformed the nature of jobs. Thanks to collaborative platforms such as Business Skype, Slack and Trello, remote work is possible. This mostly affects jobs that do not require a physical presence: for instance, those in management, business and finance. Moreover, the preponderance of AI-trained robots also disrupts jobs that are automatable. Most of these jobs are in the service sector the sector in which most people work. Baldwin points out that these changes will not eliminate all jobs, but they will certainly lower the headcount in many service-sector occupations (183). At the same time, this is not a doomsday predicament as the duo also helps create some jobs, especially for workers with specific skills in which the human average scores higher than that of AI.

Baldwin asserts that this unprecedented change can lead to a so-called globotics upheaval. This happens when people are forced to find new jobs. Society could wind up in economic, social and political turmoil. Baldwin uses the ubiquity of the iPhone to explain how globotics invades our society. They are everywhere, and we could not imagine how to live without them. For remote workers residing in different countries, they may accept lower wages and may not receive other benefits such as insurance and health care. This creates a fierce competition borne by domestic labour markets. People may view this practice of using remote workers or telemigrants as unfair competition (200), triggering discontent.

Baldwin describes how the globotics upheaval could turn into a violent globotics backlash: a fight between millions of service-sector and professional workers and globots (212). Baldwin argues that a failure on the part of mainstream politicians to stop the disruption of communities, the loss of good jobs and the undermining of hope has already resulted, in part, in the twin convulsions of 2016 Donald Trump winning the US presidential election and the UK referendum on leaving the EU. Protest can be another example of how workers react when their livelihoods and communities are threatened.

Baldwin ends the book with resolution. While it is true that robots are good at many tasks, it is equally true that they are useless in some cases. It is difficult to automate some jobs (e.g. education and technical) and some cannot be carried out from far away (i.e. hotels and restaurants, transportation and construction). Baldwin argues that future jobs will rely heavily on skills that globots dont have (261). These will require face-to-face interactions that stress humanitys abilities over AI robots; such jobs will be newly created in the future. Overall, Baldwin is optimistic about the transformation. As guided by history, he believes that this will make for a better society.

This book is another tour de force from Baldwin. He discusses the past, present and future of globalisation and automation and their implications on the future of work. With the book offering numerous examples, it is easy for readers to stay with Baldwin from cover to cover.

I do agree with Baldwins argument that the globotics transformation can have a profound impact on the future of work. However, while the evidence has been observed in advanced economies, the book does not address the implications for the Global South in a detailed manner. This poses a big limitation in a book aimed at extending our understanding of the future of work. Developing countries have been relying on manufacturing for decades to absorb the flood of labour released from agriculture. The result has been swift poverty reduction unmatched in human history. As industrialisation has fundamentally transformed the West in the nineteenth century, East Asia in the twentieth century and now Africa, it is important to know how the duo of automation and globalisation can have implications for development paths in the Global South, given levels of economic development and human capital. Whether the vulnerable services sector can provide more and better jobs than manufacturing remains an unsolved issue.

Moreover, while job creation is always good, the economy also needs better jobs. Take vulnerable jobs those without formal working arrangements, lacking decent working conditions, adequate social security and labour rights. Telemigrants tend to be particularly prone to this vulnerability. Additionally, the focus on the effects of globalisation and automation should not be limited to the creation of new jobs or the loss of the same old. What matters is the quality of the job. As observed by Winnie Byanyima:

It is the quality of jobs that matter. When you talk about low levels of unemployment, you are counting the wrong things. You are not counting dignity of people. You are counting exploited people.

It would be beneficial if the book had shone some light on this vital issue.

In addition, more analysis of the mechanisms of how resultant upheaval could flare into violent protest could complement the chapter on backlash, one of the key parts of Baldwins four-step globotics transformation. It is true that rising populism is a reaction to current economic and political situations. Yet, the book does not acknowledge other possible ways that people express their dissent, such as through social media platforms like Facebook or Twitter. Furthermore, the book does not systemically picture how governments can cooperate and deal with the protesters. Not all demonstrations in the street will turn violent. Countries with different levels of democracy and regime repressiveness seem to handle national uprising differently. Think of the recent protests in Hong Kong and Chile.

Lastly, Baldwin argues throughout the book that the future of jobs depends on how quickly new jobs can be created. But another illuminating framework is how firms use their profits. As pointed out by Mariana Mazzucato, the future of work looks grim when new profit is not used to reinvest and expand business but rather to maximise shareholder value through financial instruments. This has happened as finance has come to occupy the core of capitalism the same period in which we have seen the rise of globotics. No doubt the changing practices of firms can complement Baldwins story.

As one of the world thinkers on globalisation, Baldwin offers more than simply a prediction of the future in this book. It belongs on the reading list of all of us who live in this ever-changing world.

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Note: This article gives the views of theauthors, and not the position of USAPP American Politics and Policy, nor of the London School of Economics.

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Wannaphong Durongkaveroj Australian National UniversityWannaphong Durongkaveroj is a PhD candidate at the Arndt-Corden Department of Economics, Crawford School of Public Policy, College of Asia and Pacific at the Australian National University, Australia. His research focuses on poverty, inequality and trade.

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Book Review: The Globotics Upheaval: Globalization, Robotics and the Future of Work by Richard Baldwin - USAPP American Politics and Policy (blog)

Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas: Market Share, Application Analysis, Regional Outlook, Competitive Strategies & Forecast up to 2025 – News…

Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas Market (By Major Eminent Players, By Types, By Applications, and Leading Regions) Segments Outlook, Business Assessment, Competition Scenario, Trends and Forecast by Upcoming Years. The study of the Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas report is done based on the noteworthy research methodology that provides the analytical inspection of the global market based on various segments the Industry is alienated into also the summary and Advance size of the marketplace owing to the various outlook possibilities. The report also gives information about the key players of the Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas Industry by different features that include the Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas overview of the companies, the portfolio of the product and also the revenue facts from Period of Forecast.

Inspection robotics in oil & gas industry are robots and intelligent devices developed and employed for inspecting, monitoring and surveying oil & gas pipelines, platforms, rigs, storage tanks and other oil & gas structures. Oil & gas inspection robots include unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs), unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs), and smart PIGs among others. UUVs include remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROVs) and autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs). Global cumulative Capex (capital expenditure) of inspection robots in oil & gas industry will advance to $17.83 billion during 2019-2025, representing a robust growth at 15.9% per annum between 2018 and 2025.

Key Players:ABB Ltd.AeroVironment, Inc.Alstom Inspection RobotsCyberhawk Innovations Ltd.ECA GroupFlyability SAFMC Technologies Inc.Honeybee RoboticsHydrovision Ltd.IKM Subsea ASING Robotic AviationInternational Submarine Engineering (ISE) Ltd.Inuktun Services Ltd.MISTRAS Group Inc.OC RoboticsSeegridSky-FuturesVDOS

Based on robot type, the global market is segmented into the following sub-markets with annual revenue included for 2014-2025 (historical and forecast) for each section. ROVs AUVs UAVs UGVs Smart PIGs OthersBased on application, the global market is segmented into the following sub-markets with annual revenue included for 2014-2025 (historical and forecast) for each section. Oil and Gas Pipelines Oil Storage Tanks Platforms Rigs Other Oil and Gas StructuresBased on system component, the global market is segmented into the following sub-markets with annual revenue included for 2014-2025 (historical and forecast) for each section. Hardware System (further split into Imaging System, Sensors and Automation Systems, Steering and Positioning, Navigation System, Energy and Propulsion, others) Software System Operation and Service

Major Players: The report provides company profiling for a decent number of leading players of the global Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas market. It brings to light their current and future market growth taking into consideration their price, gross margin, revenue, production, areas served, production sites, and other factors.

Industry Overview: The first section of the research study touches on an overview of the global Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas market, market status and outlook, and product scope. Additionally, it provides highlights of key segments of the global Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas market, i.e. regional, type, and application segments.

Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas Market Dynamics: The report shares important information on influence factors, market drivers, challenges, opportunities, and market trends as part of market dynamics.

Regional Market Analysis: It could be divided into two different sections: one for regional production analysis and the other for regional consumption analysis. Here, the analysts share gross margin, price, revenue, production, CAGR, and other factors that indicate the growth of all regional markets studied in the report.

Global Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas Market Forecast: Readers are provided with production and revenue forecasts for the global Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas market, production and consumption forecasts for regional markets, production, revenue, and price forecasts for the global Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas market by type, and consumption forecast for the global Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas market by application.

Inspection Robotics In Oil & Gas Market Competition: In this section, the report provides information on competitive situation and trends including merger and acquisition and expansion, market shares of top three or five players, and market concentration rate. Readers could also be provided with production, revenue, and average price shares by manufacturers.

Contact Us:Web: http://www.qurateresearch.comE-mail: [emailprotected]Ph: US +13393375221, IN +919881074592

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Danish Robotics Companies Mobile Industrial Robots and Universal Robots Invest $36 Million in Robot Development and Production – Supply and Demand…

With financial backing from their joint U.S. parent companyTeradyne, Mobile Industrial Robots (MiR)and Universal Robots (UR)have acquired a 50,000 m2 building site in Odense, where $36 million will be invested in the construction of a major cobot hub in the cobot capital of the world. Collaborative robots or cobots are now the fastest growing segment of industrial automation. Cobots are a type of user-friendly robots that can work closely with humans without the need for safety guarding, enhancing both work environment and productivity.

The new cobot hub supports Teradynes mission to further strengthen the significant leads that both MiR and UR have established worldwide.

MiR and UR are leading the world in the collaborative robot revolution thats making automation solutions available to companies of all sizes.Teradyne continues to invest aggressively in the development of new products, solutions, and sales channels and this new facility is a key part of our growth strategy, says Mark Jagiela, President and CEO of Teradyne. We have found something very special in Denmark. The Danes combination of innovative industrial design, combined with a practical business sense, have created a perfect combination for this emerging industry. The ability to make robots work in collaboration with humans in a user-friendly manner is something we have not encountered to this degree anywhere else in the world and were very excited to expand our capabilities in Odense.

This is not the first time the MiR and UR owner has provided cash support for robot development in Denmark. To-date, Teradyne has invested more than half a billion USD in the two young Danish robotic companies, both of which are growing rapidly.

The building site is in Odenses industrial district close to URs current headquarters, which will also become part of the new cobot hub. The two companies will continue as separate entities with the aim to create an attractive environment that will help attract new employees to facilitate the continued growth expected by the two companies in the coming years. Denmark has a significant lead in the global market for cobots. Investing ambitiously in building the worlds largest cobot hub right here in Odense makes a lot of sense, says Thomas Visti, CEO of Mobile Industrial Robots. Offering a strong, professional environment with superb facilities enables us to attract talent from all over the world. MiR has hired 100 new employees the past year, with UR adding 280 new staff members during the past two years. Today, the two companies have 160 and 450 employees respectively based in Denmark. UR employs almost 700 employees worldwide while MiRs staff counts a total of around 220 globally.

Jrgen von Hollen, President of Universal Robots, sees enormous potential in the cobot market. This is a market expected to grow to a total value of almost $12 billion in 2030,accordingto ABI Research. Demand for Danish cobots already means that we are growing out of our current offices in Odense, both at UR and MiR, says the UR President. Odense has a strong ecosystem of talent and we are pleased to have the opportunity to invest long-term in the unique robotics environment that we have been building here over the last 10 years.

The Danish robotics industry is currently booming; the 2019 annualsurveyfrom trade association Odense Robotics shows that 8,500 people now work for Danish robotics companies, 3,900 of them in and around Odense, Denmarks third largest city. If the industry follows the growth forecasts, the Danish robot industry will employ 25,000 employees in 2025,accordingto the Danish analysis firm Damvad.

And its not just the number of employees thats growing. Danish robotics companies total revenue rose by 18 percent in 2018, reaching $995 million with exports increasing 26 percent. These figures are particularly significant in that just 15 years ago Denmark did not have any robotics industry to speak of.

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Danish Robotics Companies Mobile Industrial Robots and Universal Robots Invest $36 Million in Robot Development and Production - Supply and Demand...

High school robotics teams converge on BCIT for ‘last-chance’ competition – CTV News

VANCOUVER -- Hundreds of high school students from across B.C. got up early on Saturday and made their way to Burnaby for a robotics competition at the British Columbia Institute of Technology.

"We call this the last-chance qualifier," said Jason Brett, a BCIT instructor and one of the organizers of the competition. "The kids here today have been playing this game since September. Regional championships are coming up next weekend and you've got to qualify to get in. This is their last chance to do it."

The game involves stacking 14-centimetre cubes using semi-autonomous robots constructed and programmed without any specific instructions for how to do so.

"We get buckets and buckets of steel and aluminum and then we have to build it ourselves," said Declan Lawlor, whose team was one of 100 competing in Saturday's event.

Lawlor said this is his second year participating in a VEX Robotics competition. Last year, his team built and rebuilt its robot 17 times. He said the team's best finish in a competition was 10th place.

The winners of the regional competition will qualify for the worldwide competition, which happens in Louisville, Ky., in April.

Jacob Walter is a BCIT student and a previous winner of the regional competition. He spent his Saturday volunteering as a judge for this year's competitors.

Walter said the world competition could be described as the Super Bowl of high school robotics, complete with a packed stadium full of cheering fans. But, despite the more intense atmosphere, the game itself remains the same.

"It's like the competitions here, just a lot more teams," Walter said.

Brett said B.C. has sent a number of teams to the world competition over the years.

"British Columbia has one of the most competitive VEX Robotics competitions in the world," he said. "Our kids are just really, really good."

The competition isn't just about winning, however. Brett said the program fosters educational goals as well, largely by getting students excited about their work.

He said he remembers kids lining up outside his door when he was a high school teacher because they wanted to get into the classroom as soon as possible and continue working on their robots.

"They learn so much more when they can just go out there and drive themselves to do it," Brett said. "Passion is an amazing thing."

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High school robotics teams converge on BCIT for 'last-chance' competition - CTV News

PROGRESS MOHAWK VALLEY: How robots will help build the construction industrys future – The Times Telegram

A robot that can lift and place various materials that weigh up to 135 pounds.

Another robot capable of handling its own bricklaying.

This is not science fiction. It is work possibly taking place at the nearest construction site.

Technology and innovation is increasingly important to make up for workforce shortages, and to work smarter, including expanded use of panelized systems, as well as technology like lift-assist and robotics, said Andy Breuer, president of Hueber-Breuer Construction Company, Inc. We expect to see CR robotic masonry and lift-assist technology in use at both SUNY Poly Utica and Nexus.

Hueber-Breuer of Syracuse, founded in 1872, currently is run by the fifth and sixth generation of the Hueber and Breuer families.

The companys award-winning work includes construction management, building construction, design and development.

Hueber-Breuer has done extensive work in Oneida and Herkimer counties over the years. The company currently is working on the Nexus Center, a downtown Utica sports recreation facility primarily used for ice hockey, box lacrosse and soccer. Hueber-Breuer also is working on the new residence hall at SUNY Polytechnic Institute and has completed work on commercial spaces at the Doyle in Utica.

Breuer said technology will drive the field moving into the next decade.

Over time, information that was once gleaned from paper notes transcribed into the computer by a person at the home office can now be captured right on the spot in the field and goes directly online to our cloud-driven Project Management System, Breuer said. Digital photography, time-lapse photography and the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (drones) have also delivered huge efficiencies in quickly documenting and communicating many aspects of the project and in doing so, advance our ability to deliver a quality product to our clients.

Mary Thompson, executive director of Home Builders and Remodelers of Central New York, said the use of technology has gone crazy in the industry over the last 30 years.

Thompson spoke about cellphones in particular, noting how they now can scan documents and take measurements.

However, unlike other business fields where technology pushes out workers, Thompson does not see that happening in construction.

The tools help the people, she said, adding the field would still require people.

Development in Oneida County including the downtown hospital and Nexus Center in Utica, Cree in Marcy and ongoing development in Rome, including at Griffiss Business and Technology Park has increased work in the construction field, Breuer said.

The recent development boom in Oneida County has been the catalyst for growth and new investment, he said. It has led to new construction and renovation projects, which in turn builds confidence for further investment.

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What to do in Toronto this week: February 24-March 1 – NOW Magazine

These are our top event picks for the week of February 24-March 1. Formore events listings, visitnowtoronto.com/events.

National Theatre Live: Fleabag

Catch a recording of Pheobe Waller-Bridge's solo show that eventually became her hit TV show of the same name on the big screen.

February 24, 25 & 27. Paradise Theatre. $19-$27. paradiseonbloor.com.

The Runner

Christopher Morris's stunning show about a Z.A.K.A. volunteer facing a moment of crisisis back as part of Tarragon's season, with the same teamintact. As we wrote in ouroriginal review, run, don't walk, to get tickets to this riveting show.

February 25 to March 29 at theTarragon Mainspace

Hannah Gadsby

The Australian comedianis coming to Toronto for the first time with her latest solo show, Douglas.

February 27-29. Roy Thomson Hall. $45.75-$65.75.roythomsonhall.com

Brain Storm

Writer/director Taliesin McEnaney's show inspired by Canadian neurosurgeon Dr. Wilder Penfield world premieres at Dancemakers Studio.

February 27-March 8. Pwyc-$60. whynot.theatre.com

School Night Toronto

There's a solid lineup for this edition of the free-with-RSVP Monday night concert series, including the robot funk of Ice Cream and the still-somehow-under-the-radar local R&B/pop singer Sylo Nozra. Also playing: Alex Bent & The Emptiness and Sabby Sousa.

February24. Drake Hotel. 7:30 pm. Free with RSVPitsaschoolnight.com

Refused with Youth Code

Start warming up your voice to shout "CAN I SCREAM?" The long-running Swedish punks Refused are bringing their new noise to Toronto, touring behind the 2019 album War Music.

February 25. Phoenix Concert Theatre.Doors 7 pm. $35.ticketmaster.ca

Cam'Ron

The legendary Dipset rapper recently released Purple Haze 2, the sequel to his beloved decade-and-a-half old album and he's been hinting it could be his last. So you'll want to be at this surprisingly intimate show if you've been clamouring to see him.

February 28. Velvet Underground. Doors 7 pm. Sold out.

The Future Of Work And Death

Sean Blacknell and Wayne Walsh's documentary screens as part of a panel discussion exploring the possible impacts of artificial intelligence, automation and the development of mind uploading to prolong human life.

February 24. Toronto Reference Library. 6:30 pm. Free. eventbrite.ca

Cats

Ladies of Burlesque hosts the city's latest performance-based screening of the instant-camp classic.

February 26. Royal Cinema. 7 pm. $13. universe.com

Toronto Irish Film Festival

Dark Lies The Island, a darkly comic film adaptation ofKevin Barrys short stories, kicks off a weekend of Irish features and shorts.

February 28-March 1. TIFF Bell Lightbox.$15-$25.toirishfilmfest.com

Queerly Beloved

Inside Out celebrates 30 years by screening 18 queer classics at the Paradise Theatre.

March 1-31. $14-$21. paradiseonbloor.com

Western Lights:Isochronal

Artist Fezz Stenton uses 3D projectionmapping and animation techniques to transform the 116 foot-long wall at 809 Dundas Street West (at Palmerston) into textures of ice, molten heat, lush greenery and crystal structures.

February 27-29.7-11pm. The show runs every 15 minutes. Free. trinitybellwoodsdundas.com

Chowder Chowdown

Chef's challenge supports Ocean Wise sustainability seafood program.

February 26. Distillery District Fermenting Cellar. $60. ocean.org/chowderchowdown

Recipe For Change 2020

FoodShare's annual fundraiser puts the spotlight on the culinary artistry and vision of some of Torontos most dynamic Black chefs.

February 28. Toronto Reference Library.6 pm. $150. eventbrite.ca

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What to do in Toronto this week: February 24-March 1 - NOW Magazine

Behold, the Fine Art of the Lesbian Thirst Trap – NewNowNext

by Sam Manzella 2/19/2020

Whats in a thirst trap? For queer women, the answer isnt always as explicit as it may seem at first (or second, or third) glance.

As its name suggests, a thirst trap is categorized first and foremost by its purpose: capturing the attention of potential suitors on social media. Urban Dictionary defines a thirst trap as a sexy photograph or flirty message posted on social media [with] the intent of causing others to publicly profess their attraction, sometimes without any concrete plan to respond [to] or satisfy any of this attraction.

So, yes, theres usually a very surface-level, ISO external validation factor to uploading a racy pic of oneself to Instagram, though for some queer thirst trap evangelists, the power of the art form doesnt stop there.

Vanessa Pamela Friedman, Autostraddles community editor and resident thirst trap expert, tells me that thirst traps can double as a potent tool for boosting ones self-confidence. In her January 2019 Autostraddle magnum opus titled Your Homework for 2019 Is to Assume Everyone Thinks Youre Hot, Im Serious, Friedman points out that the thirst traps true power actually has nothing to do with the thirst trap itself. Its the unabashed show of confidencein oneself, in ones bodythat ultimately attracts others.

Vanessa Pamela Friedman.

Its not a stretch, then, to argue that this logic applies even more so to queer women, who experience the magnified effects of navigating a cis-heteronormative patriarchy as both women and members of the LGBTQ community. Many of us are familiar with the phenomenon of #Instagays, or perfectly sculpted, conventionally attractive gay men who boast (and often commodify) their likenesses on Instagram.

Few queer women who post thirst traps on Instagram have ascended to the online fame of top-tier Instagays, whose followers can number into the millions. Thats not to say popular queer women influencers dont exist, because girlthey do. Trust me. They also tend to embody traditional beauty ideals in a similar way (read: thin, androgynous-leaning white women galore). Theres no shame in getting your coin, but for queer women whose bodiesor messagesarent as easily marketable to mainstream brands, thirst traps can serve a very different purpose: celebrating yourself and your body with like-minded followers in a world which does not inherently champion you.

Theres a degree of safety that comes with a scaled-down following, too. For queer womenespecially those who arent interested in attracting romantic or sexual attention from cisgender, heterosexual menposting thirst traps sometimes means attracting attention from unwanted parties. Friedman says shes lucky enough that her small, majority-LGBTQ following means she rarely attracts unwanted attention (or unsolicited DMs) from cis-het men. That said, she does employe Instagrams block button very liberally. If someone follows me and I dont know them and dont like their vibe, she explains, I block without hesitation.

In fact, Friedman worries more about a different audience unintentionally finding her thirst traps: potential employers. As an academic at a liberal arts college, Friedman is currently on the hunt for teaching gigs. While she knows posting hot pics of her in a bikini doesnt make her a bad teacher, the people hiring her might not feel the same way. Its a consideration to keep in mind when posting racy photos on social mediaand the kind of foresight Friedman believes should factor into postinganything, really!

Jazzmyne Robbins.

I dont believe we are doing anything wrong when we post celebrations of ourselves, she adds. I think we are actually doing something very right. And while I will always stress safety and comfort first I will also always, always, always support everyones right to post thirst traps on the internet. Its 2020, and joy is scarceif we cant post hot photos of our butts online and celebrate each other, what the fuck are we here for?

Jazzmyne Robbins, a queer Instagram influencer and a producer for Buzzfeeds As/Is digital series, tells me she rarely considers the potential for unwanted attention when uploading thirst traps to Insta.

I post photos for me, and then for my followers that I know support me, Robbins says. I do understand that anyone can see anything that I post, and sometimes I will get comments that are not cool to look at, but I just delete the comments. She likens deleting disparaging comments on her posts to weeding out toxic people in her life: I wouldnt keep people in my life who make me feel bad, so Im not going to keep comments on my Instagram that me feel bad.

As for what makes a perfect, eye-catching thirst trap? Good lighting and a strong image composition help. It might sound obvious, but Friedman also stresses the importance of actually feeling good during the photo-taking process.

At the end of the day, the main point of a selfie or a thirst trap for me is just to feel good in my body, she adds. Like, This is my face, this is my body, I like myself even on days when I dont like capital-L Love myself, please enjoy this glimpse of myself.

Robbins agrees and describes her goal aesthetic as pure confidence pouring out. Thats what Im going for, she says. It does start with [intention] because if you are trying to impress others or do something not true to you, the picture will not be good!

Theres some vanity inherent to taking and uploading saucy selfies, sure, but thirst traps arewell, more than just skin-deep. Theyre an exercise in complete control over ones imagewhich, for women and members of the LGBTQ community, is a rarity. Theyre also tools for attracting romantic and sexual partners, and for self-care through body positivity and self-love. And if thats not a radical political act, then I dont know what is.

Brooklyn-based writer and editor. Probably drinking iced coffee or getting tattooed.

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How beauty is being used to fight back against facial recognition and CCTV – Dazed

The average Londoner is caught on camera more than 300 times a dayby cameras operated by public bodies, businesses, and individuals. This could be in the park, the shops, or at the station, with an estimated one CCTV camera for every 14 people currently in the UKs largest city. That number is predicted to rise to one in 11 by 2025, making modern surveillance culture a growing privacy battle as surveillance technology continues to advance.

To fight back, many people and projects are turning to make-up, something Albert Fox Cahn, executive director of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, says has the potential to throw off many of the algorithms. Surveillance technology can be very powerful but also very fragile, he explains. Even placing small amounts of make-up could trick an algorithm into finding no match or a match with a different face. This includes blocking out shapes in geometric patterns or obscuring key features such as the eyes or nose-bridge or experimenting with Juggalo clown make-up.

Artist Adam Harveys privacy concerns turned into activism and defiance through make-up. Harvey coined the term computer vision dazzle or cv dazzle when creating an open source anti-facial recognition toolkit that allows users to explore how fashion can be used as camouflage from face-detection technology. The idea behind CV Dazzle is simple: facial recognition algorithms look for certain patterns when they analyse images, so obstructing those patterns means obstructing the ability for the algorithm to recognise you. Techniques to do this include creating asymmetry, using hair to conceal the face (particularly the nose bridge), using make-up that contrasts with your skin tone in unusual tones and directions, and sticking gems on the face.

Started as part of his NYU Masters thesis in 2010, Harvey is currently working on the new software application to show how face detection and face recognition algorithms are analysing your face. The future will look back on the present day and realise that the surveillance technologies developed in this century have profoundly impacted what it means to be human and what it means to dehumanise each other through technology, says Harvey. For CV Dazzle, I proved that make-up can have a significant impact on face detection and face recognition systems. The looks created were tested and validated against Facebooks PhotoTagger, Googles Picasa, and Eblearn.

(Anti facial recognition techniques) include creating asymmetry, using hair to conceal the face (particularly the nose bridge), using make-up that contrasts with your skin tone in unusual tones and directions, and sticking gems on the face

As unregulated facial recognition technologies continue to make headlines, CV Dazzle is inspiring an increasing number of artists to experiment with the concept of make-up as a defence tactic. One of these is multidisciplinary artist Joselyn McDonald. Through her Mother Protect Me project, she experiments with how femme make-up and flowers can undermine facial recognition technologies, and created a YouTube tutorial last year. Because surveillance harms womxn, through cyberstalking, spouseware, and facial recognition technology being used to detect identities of womxn in porn, I wanted to create femme looks to engage women (and anyone else interested in the rituals of make-up) with facial recognition topics, she explains. McDonald sees her use of flora as a medium as having the added benefit of connecting viewers to the earth and forces us to think about how far weve come from natural ways of being.

To start the project, she applied flowers to conceal the key areas on the face (eyes, nose, mouth, shadows) over and over again to learn the patterns of what would undermine the algorithms. With the recent release of the extremely powerful facial recognition system Clearview AI, with a database of more than three billion images, shes focusing more on diverse bodies for her next iteration of the project to reflect that surveillance datasets can misidentify black faces Technology is very entwined with capitalism, McDonald says. Its an extension of us, for better or worse.

The Dazzle Club, a collaboration between artist-run organisation AiR and artist duo Yoke Collective would argue for worse. We are interested in disrupting the arms race of technology that is changing the perception of London, and with the huge profits for software and hardware companies, possibly misleading us all into the possibilities of a fair and social future, they explain. The intergenerational group of artists Anna Hart, Georgina Rowlands, Emily Roderick, and Evie Price are all based in London and began working on The Dazzle Club in August 2019, in response to the forced admission that facial recognition technology was being used by Argent on the Kings Cross Estate. The project hosts monthly artist-led silent walks through London with participants wearing CV Dazzle-inspired make-up looks, particularly black and blue geometric shapes that cross over or obscure the nose bridge.

Artists have been at the forefront of political action, revolution and defiance throughout history. Throughout the project the intersection of political action and art has generated a powerful conversation about freedom and expression in public places, the group says. CV Dazzle offers an opportunity of individual creative expression through face paint, exploring the future of fashion, identity and independence.

We are interested in disrupting the arms race of technology that is changing the perception of London, and with the huge profits for software and hardware companies, possibly misleading us all into the possibilities of a fair and social future Yoke Collective

Just as artists in general have been historically active in political defiance, make-up and face paint has always played a special role in the act of protest. FromJokermake-up being used to protest corruption in Lebanon to South Koreans smashing their make-up to escape the corset, recently make-up has continued to prove to be a powerful tool in the face of political oppression. For this reason, CV Dazzle often goes beyond whats necessary to attempt to conceal a face (with more simple tactics like face masks or sunglasses) to use creativity to oppose the technology and attract attention to the issue.

California-based artist Kel Robinson has been working on her own three versions of anti-surveillance make-up and learning about the software for over four years. The interest was sparked after a group of friends threw a CCTV underground party in 2015 with the theme of avoiding surveillance. After researching for the party, she began to experiment with her own make-up techniques and steadily gained a small client-base for this specific type of make-up. Now, shes booked to do this style every few months, mostly for parties or demonstrations.

Robinsons make-up techniques, which include applying lines, shapes, and colours over the five points of recognition that these softwares use: forehead, nose, each cheek, and chin, continue to develop as surveillance technology changes. She often tries what works by using the Facebook algorithm against itself, uploading photos with different shapes and colours until the software no longer requests to tag you. The point of this make-up isnt to get away with crime, its to protect ourselves from unjust surveillance and move more freely through the world without fear of monitoring, she says. The best way Ive found to do this is with the use of electric blue (from Urban Decay), or black or white liner to create the illusion of shapes protruding from the face.

As surveillance technology continues to develop, so too must the make-up techniques used as an attempt torebel from it. As a civil rights lawyer and technologist based in New York, Cahn is only too aware of the citys growing use of increasingly invasive surveillance tools at a state and local level. He says that there are no sure-fire ways to combat one of the most expansive facial recognition systems in the world, including make-up. In fact, some Chinese artificial-intelligence companies have announced that their technology can identify people even when theyre wearing face masks amid the coronavirus outbreak. Starting the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project a year ago as a way to push back, his greatest concerns for surveillance culture are that the technology is biased, broken, and fundamentally threatening to an open society. Cahn explains that error rates are much higher for women and women of colour specifically, making surveillance tools threatening to basically anyone that isnt a middle-aged white guy.

Cahn warns that one make-up look will not work for every facial recognition product and every biometric tool. You also have to keep in mind that there are other forms of biometric surveillance that are being rolled out at the same time, he explains, referencing GAIT recognition (which analyses the way we walk) and infrared cameras (that can identify us based off our body-heat pattern). While Im hopeful that we will find new and create ways to push back on the ever-growing surveillance state, we urgently need comprehensive laws, says Cahn. In the meantime, he says a pair of sunglasses or a baseball hat can also make many algorithms perform poorly (his project currently sells hats that say I opt out).

While theres no denying that surveillance culture is a growing issue with many potentially invasive or harmful repercussions, Harvey says the concept of CV Dazzle is currently still too exotic for most people. This, he says, has the potential to change. Camouflage was also once too exotic. Prior to WWI camouflage was used negatively as a term for hiding from the police, perhaps similar to how privacy is often discussed this century, he says. In the early 20th century it was considered socially unacceptable and deceitful. Now it is mainstream, socially acceptable, and fashionable. With this in mind, and the fact that a privacy armour in the form of a bracelet already exists, make-up could be set to be the next mainstream and fashionable way to arm ourselves in the battle for personal privacy.

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How beauty is being used to fight back against facial recognition and CCTV - Dazed

Greyhound to stop allowing regular immigration checks on buses – Peninsula Daily News

By Gene Johnson

The Associated Press

SEATTLE Greyhound, the nations largest bus company, said it will stop allowing Border Patrol agents without a warrant to board its buses to conduct routine immigration checks.

The companys announcement Friday came one week after The Associated Press reported on a leaked Border Patrol memo confirming that agents cant board private buses without the consent of the bus company. Greyhound had previously insisted that even though it didnt like the immigration checks, it had no choice under federal law but to allow them.

Greyhound Lines operates the Dungeness Line on the North Olympic Peninsula with stops in Port Angeles, Sequim, Discovery Bay and Port Townsend. The company took over the Dungeness Line in 2018 from Olympic Bus Lines, whose buses were boarded by Border Patrol agents seeking undocumented immigrants in 2008-09.

In an emailed statement, Greyhound said it would notify the Department of Homeland Security that it does not consent to unwarranted searches on its buses or in areas of terminals that are not open to the public such as company offices or any areas a person needs a ticket to access.

Greyhound said it would provide its drivers and bus station employees updated training regarding the new policy, and that it would place stickers on all its buses clearly stating that it does not consent to the searches.

Our primary concern is the safety of our customers and team members, and we are confident these changes will lead to an improved experience for all parties involved, the statement said.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which includes the Border Patrol, did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

Greyhound has faced pressure from the American Civil Liberties Union, immigrant rights activists and Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson to stop allowing sweeps on buses within 100 miles of an international border or coastline. In many cases, the buses being checked were not crossing or even approaching an international boundary.

Critics say the practice is intimidating and discriminatory and has become more common under President Donald Trump. Border Patrol arrests videotaped by other passengers have sparked criticism, and Greyhound faces a lawsuit in California alleging that it violated consumer protection laws by facilitating raids.

We are pleased to see Greyhound clearly communicate that it does not consent to racial profiling and harassment on its buses, Andrea Flores, deputy director of policy for the ACLUs Equality Division, said in an email.

By protecting its customers and employees, Greyhound is sending a message that it prioritizes the communities it serves.

Ferguson said in an email his office will follow up with Greyhound to ensure compliance.

Todays announcement from Greyhound confirms what should have been obvious to the company since I contacted them a year ago it has both the power and the responsibility to stand up for its customers, who suffered for far too long from Greyhounds indifference to CBPs suspicionless bus raids and harassment, he said.

The Border Patrol has insisted that it does not profile passengers based on their appearance, but instead asks all passengers whether they are citizens or in the country legally. The agency says the bus checks are an important way to ferret out human trafficking, narcotics and illegal immigration.

Some other bus companies, including Jefferson Lines, which operates in 14 states, and MTRWestern, which operates in the Pacific Northwest, have already taken similar steps to those announced by Greyhound. Flores said the ACLU would continue to push others to follow suit.

The memo obtained by the AP was dated Jan. 28, addressed to all chief patrol agents and signed by then-Border Patrol Chief Carla Provost just before she retired. It confirms the legal position that Greyhounds critics have taken: that the Constitutions Fourth Amendment prevents agents from boarding buses and questioning passengers without a warrant or the consent of the company.

When transportation checks occur on a bus at non-checkpoint locations, the agent must demonstrate that he or she gained access to the bus with the consent of the companys owner or one of the companys employees, the memo states. An agents actions while on the bus would not cause a reasonable person to believe that he or she is unable to terminate the encounter with the agent.

Greyhound previously argued that case law, including a 1973 Supreme Court ruling, did not extend the Fourth Amendments protections to commercial carriers.

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Greyhound to stop allowing regular immigration checks on buses - Peninsula Daily News

Interview With James Goodale: Stunning How Few In US Care About Threat Posed By Assange’s Case – Shadowproof

Editors Note Shadowproof editor Kevin Gosztola is in London for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assanges week-long extradition hearing.

Stay tuned to Shadowproof, as well as his Twitter, for coverage. And if you support our work and are able to help fund Kevins reporting, go here to donate.

James Goodale is one of the more prominent First Amendment lawyers in the United States. He represented the New York Times in the Pentagon Papers case. In 2013, Goodale wrote the book, Fighting For The Press, which outlined the threat to press freedom if President Barack Obamas administration prosecuted WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

No First Amendment attorney has been as outspoken on what will happen to journalism if the U.S. government successfully extradites Assange and brings him to trial in the U.S. for violating the Espionage Act.

Ahead of the first part of Assanges extradition hearing, I spoke with Goodale about the U.S. governments argument that Assange is not protected by the First Amendment. He also addressed the evidence of an espionage operation against Assange while he was in the Ecuador embassy. The operation was reportedly backed by the CIA.

Below is an edited transcript of our conversation. In a few areas, the audio cut out, but it is still possible to understand all of Goodales key points on what is at stake in this case.

GOODALE: I have dreaded the beginning of the extradition hearing because I do not want Assange back in this country to be tried under the Espionage Act. So thats my general point of view. I do not think that he should be tried under the Espionage Act because the act was designed for espionage and not for reporting the truth, which is what Assange did. And I dont want the law stretched any further than it has already been stretched.

With respect to the precise nature of the hearing, while the principal issue in the extradition hearing will be whether or not the offense complained of is a political offense and therefore does not hit the middle of the target with respect to the First Amendment, its close enough. So I am following that issue very carefully to see how the court will deal with it.

Seems to be, generally speaking, the actions that Assange took were against the interests of the United States, against its political interests, and therefore he is being sent back for a political trial. If, in fact, Im correct in that and the judge agrees with me, then he cant be extradited. So thats quite important.

A second issue that Im following is the CIAs tapping of his phone. It is quite clear that the CIA made a deal with a Spanish security company [inaudible]to have that Spanish security company videotape and audio tape everything that went onincluding importantly Assanges conversations with his lawyers.

If you have a conversation with your lawyer and its being taped, that is really fundamentally bad.

More to the point, in terms of the history of the Espionage Act as applied to these proceedings in the United States, Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times, was tried under the Espionage Act back in 1973. That prosecution was dismissed because it came to the attention of the court that the plumbers, employees who were in the White House under President Richard Nixons tutelage, broke into the office of Ellsbergs psychiatrist.

That is very much the same as breaking into the conversations, and as a consequence, Ellsbergs trial was dismissed. By analogy, therefore, Assange should not come back to this country because his rights have been completely fouled up.

Third thing Im following is that the government is taking this very strange position that Assange has no First Amendment rights whatsoever. That position is based on the idea that Assange is not an American citizen and therefore he doesnt get First Amendment protections. The government has said theyre going to put that into the court. I will be listening carefully as to what exactly that position is.

GOSZTOLA: Is there any argument to be made that a person who is a non-American would not have First Amendment rights? Or are they concocting this argument, making it up on the fly out of whole cloth?

GOODALE: I would agree with the fact that theyre concocting it [but not necessarily out of whole cloth].

What happened once a long time ago was that a drug dealer in Mexico was arrested in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and the Supreme Court said hey, the guys in Mexico. He doesnt get the protection of the Fourth Amendment. I dont think that applies to this case because, first of all, its a First Amendment case, and secondly, in the drug dealer case, he was being pilloried in Mexico.

In Assanges case, when he broadcast his informationthat is to say when he put it on the netit went worldwide, and it came into this country. So he was in the country, and if hes in the country, he should get the protection of the First Amendment. The drug dealer to whom I referred was not in this country.

Pretty disturbing that the government would take somebody who is in a country other than the United States, namely Assange, and say that hes subject to the Espionage Act of this country but he doesnt get the protection of the other laws that would otherwise protect him. Its the most outrageous goddamn thing Ive ever heard.

GOSZTOLA: What were talking about here are secrecy laws within the United States that have bearing on First Amendment rights for U.S. citizens. Then those laws are being imposed on someone who is a foreigner. If the First Amendment doesnt apply to Julian Assange, then how can this secrecy law? How can he be accused of violating the Espionage Act?

GOODALE: Exactly, how can the government have it one way and not the other way? You cant have it both ways. Hes not subject to it and hes out. Or he is subject to it and he gets the protection. It seems to me that when you think about this concept as applied to Assange, it makes no sense.

With a world that is tightly bound by the internet and thus we could have another example of this down the line. A precedent that the United States can go all over the world and pick up people who they think are stealing their secrets and try them under U.S. law when theyre in fact in some other country, not covered by protections of U.S. law, is a pretty outrageous concept.

GOSZTOLA: We see this reluctance to describe or allow Assange to be treated as a publisher. Of course, people dont want to say hes a journalist. But at minimum we can agree hes a publisher.

Does it matter whether people describe him as a whistleblower or a journalist? Ive always had a tough time trying to see him as a whistleblower because hes not the originator of the information.

GOODALE: We got the leaker, Chelsea Manning. The leakee, thats Julian Assange. Then weve got the publisher and thats anybody who puts the leaks on his website. So lets look at and see what Julian Assange does. Does he fit into the leaker category? No he doesnt. Is the leaker category the same as the whistleblower category? So hes not a leaker. So hes not a whistleblower. Then what is he? Hes a journalistic entity whos receiving information.

Hes very much the same as a reporter. Ok, and then he takes the information. He passes it on to the New York Times, among others. And the New York Times publishes it, and then Assange publishes, too. So, as Ive said, hes a publisher so hes wearing two hats: one is as a quasi-journalist and one as a publisher.

With respect to being a publisher, it doesnt matter whether you call him a journalist or not. He should be entitled to all protections that every publisher, including the New York Times, the Guardian, and the others get, under the First Amendment if in fact the First Amendment applies, which I think it does.

It makes no difference whatsoever under the law because if, in fact, you are gathering information you should be protected under the laws of this country regardless of whether we call that person a journalist, a leakee, or anything else. The function that he performs is something that the First Amendment protects. Its something that freedom of speech [inaudible] freedom of speech laws of any country should protect. It doesnt matter what you call him.

GOSZTOLA: You make the comparison between Assange and New York Times Neil Sheehan, who was involved in publishing the Pentagon Papers.

GOODALE: Many years ago, the government tried to do the same thing to Neil Sheehan. They had a grand jury all set up. They were going to indict him, and they were going to indict him under the Espionage Act. For reasons no one really knows, the grand jury got disbanded. They never went after Sheehan, but Sheehan and Assange are identical in terms of what happened to them and the function they performed.

GOSZTOLA: If you can apply the Espionage Act, then he has First Amendment rights. And then if he has First Amendment rights, how would all the details from the espionage operation be weighed to show the case could not go forward?

GOODALE: The basic argument you make is that the trial, if many, has to be fundamentally flawed if, in fact, everything that youve told your attorneys and told your colleagues is in the hands of the entity that is trying to prosecute you, namely the United States. So thats why I say its the same as breaking in on Ellsbergs psychiatrist, which is what the U.S. government did and the judge took a look at it and said Ive got to throw the whole case out.

Weve got to remember that Ellsberg was in the same position as Sheehan. Tried under Espionage Act for criminal [inaudible]. So that case got thrown out, so why shouldnt the Assange case get thrown out? So why shouldnt the extraditing court in [the United Kingdom] say its so fundamentally flawed? Hes not going to go back.

GOSZTOLA: The media organizations or editors are sensitive. They describe him as a source and not a partner, even though there was collaboration. They may be doing this because they dont want to treat him as a journalist. Is there a liability issue?

GOODALE: I do not think there is a legal liability issue that causes the American press and particularly those who partnered with him to parse the definition of what Julian Assange was doing in this case. I think myself that its absolute foolishness on behalf of the journalist profession to try to distance themselves from Assange in any way we can. And thats what were really talking about when establishment press, journalists generally speaking, say well hes not really a journalist. Hes a source.

Its all a bunch of nonsense as far as Im concerned. He is performing for all practical purposes, and particularly for all legal purposes, all the functions of a journalist. So come on. Wake up, American press. This guy is doing enough of what youre doing so that, when hes penalized for what hes doing, the penalties are going to come back and get you. Wake up.

Julian Assange, because hes not the ordinary person youd meet in any kind of circumstances, the journalists are standing askance and they dont want to be associated with him. But too bad for those journalists who dont want to be associated with him.

Cmon. Hes going to get pilloried, perhaps, without your support. You better stand up and support him because whatever happens to him is going to happen to you, and down the line, whats going to happen is really bad.

And whats really bad is the United States is going to end up with an Official Secrets Act, by which leaking not only is criminalized but receiving leaks in the capacity of a leakee is also going to be criminalized. And that is really bad because youre just inviting governments, particularly authoritarian governments, to control their information.

And if they lose control, you go to jail. They dont really believe that what you have received is that criminal. In fact, its the fact that youve got it and they dont have it. And if they dont have it, they cant control you. Wake up, American press.

GOSZTOLA: Do you feel like the press and all the people who should be concerned have responded adequately?

GOODALE: One person is concerned, the present speaker. One person speaking out against one of the greatest threats to the American press in the history of the United States. The answer to your question is no one seems to be paying any attention.

If, in fact, you were to follow world pressthe world press is covering this fully and completely. The American press isnt covering it at all, as far as I can see. Thus far. And it will be very interesting to see what the press does as to the coverage of the trial in England.

The rest of the world is concerned. Why shouldnt the U.S. press be concerned? I just dont get it.

GOSZTOLA: There are [members of parliament] from European countries, who will be there as observers, but there isnt a single person from [the U.S.] Congress who is going over to watch proceedings.

GOODALE: Thats a very good point. The German parliament [inaudible] briefing sessions related to Assange, and they will have observers. To the best of my knowledge, the U.S. will have no one.

Part of the problem in this country, which is different from other countries, is theres a sour taste in the mouths of journalists with respect to Assanges activities vis-a-vis the [Democratic National Committee (DNC)] leak. That is most freshly in their mind and because of that happenstance, and the fact that it was looked into by Mueller and is still around, has made Assange particularly unpopular. But so what?GOSZTOLA: The case that they tried to bring against Julian Assange and WikiLeaks around the issue of hacked material but we saw a court defend the right of publishing hacked material in the United States and it seems like the political establishment just cant accept that that is a part of our law.GOODALE: Well, thats another good point. That case was decided by my former First Amendment partner, Judge John Koetl.

He decided the First Amendment applies to Julian Assange in this country, and that Julian Assanges activities with respect to the release of information concerning the DNC was protected by the First Amendment. That suit was brought by the DNC, and Judge Koetl went out of his way to say that the activities of Assange in releasing that information were fully protected by the First Amendment.

If the Justice Department is going to succeed in persuading the world that the First Amendment doesnt apply here, theyre going to have to overrule Judge Koetls decision.

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Interview With James Goodale: Stunning How Few In US Care About Threat Posed By Assange's Case - Shadowproof

Column: What happened in Vegas should stay in Vegas – Seacoastonline.com

Well, that was chaos. Wednesday night the Democratic presidential candidates took the stage in Las Vegas to debate. It was not boring. The circular firing squad left no one unscathed. Most seemingly shocked by it was former New York City Mayor Bloomberg, clearly unprepared to defend from the well-predicted target on his back.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren is being credited for her attack-dog approach going after almost everyone, but most strongly, Bloomberg. She thought she had him against the ropes a few times; she wouldnt have if Bloomberg were better prepared to answer. She attacked him for refusing to, on stage, waive any non-disclosure agreements women had signed with his company. He stuttered and stumbled. It was uncomfortable. I think the answer would be pretty simple: I cant undo legal documents on a political stage, nor should I. That would be exploitative. Im not a lawyer, but I really hope a pressured pronouncement in a political venue for political gain cant be a legal way to cancel a contract.

She then went after him for calling people bad names. Look, its not nice, but if claim you havent called people bad names to their faces or behind their backs, I dont believe you. I think Im a generally nice person, but Ive gotten mad enough to name-call and the more annoyed I am the more creative my choice of words. Sure, you can mince, well, calling someone this is worse than calling someone that. But, is it? Im far more offended that Warren called herself a Native American and stole a heritage to advance her education and career than I am by the nonsense-names Bloomberg called anyone. We shouldnt call anyone derogatory anythings, but we all have. Its not a disqualifier unto itself. And, my Republican friends, you cant support Donald Trump and be offended by Bloombergs name-calling.

We had some back and forth between the two rising stars, Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Sen. Amy Klobuchar. I can summarize it best as: Youre a doo doo head! No, youre the doo doo head! It was that intellectual. Mayor Pete is upset that in a recent interview Sen. Klobuchar couldnt come up with the name of the Mexican president. As Klobuchar pointed out the election for president isnt a game of Jeopardy. Campaign days are long, with dozens of questions, interviews and conversations every day. People get tired and so do their brains. People forget things they know. It's not worth the way too many seconds Mayor Pete spent on it.

Joe Biden went after Bloomberg for his support of the New York City police policy of stop and frisk when he was mayor. I dont support stop and frisk. I think it goes against the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution. I simply dont understand this bizarre tactic of Democrats going after each other for who is more racist, sexist or bigoted. What an odd and pandering approach. When one of them is the nominee, have they thought about how they are going to support said racist, sexist or bigot against Trump?

The most interesting part of the grudge-match presidential debate was the race to the extreme left. We knew about Universal Health Care and the Green New Deal. These candidates went even further left. Bernie Sanders wants to force companies to give a chunk of their companies to their employees. Why would anyone start a big business if they have to give it away? Warren wants a wealth tax. The idea that you punish success is anti-American. Whats she going to do with that money? Pay for far more things than it could afford. My favorite is Universal Childcare. Cradle-to-grave control of our children paid for by taxpayers. Then shes going to mandate increasing wages for childcare workers. She wants the government to set industry specific salaries and wages.

Bloomberg didnt jump in on the new nonsense, but lets not forget hes the guy who told New Yorkers how much soda, per ounce, they can drink. He did have the most accurate comment of the night: I cant think of a way that would make it easier for Donald Trump to get re-elected than listening to this conversation.

The yelling over each other and hand waving seemed below the office of the president. The bar of our expectations of respect and civility has been lowered of late, but least it was entertaining.

Alicia Preston is a former political consultant and member of the media. Shes a native of Hampton Beach where she lives with her family and three poodles. The views expressed are those of the writer. Write to her at PrestonPerspective@gmail.com.

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Column: What happened in Vegas should stay in Vegas - Seacoastonline.com

112 Media Mistakes in the Trump Era: The Definitive List – Sharyl Attkisson

Click here to support independent journalism at SharylAttkisson.com

But as self-appointed arbiters of truth, weve largely excused our own unprecedented string of fact-challenged reporting. The truth is, formerly well-respected, top news organizations are making repeat, unforced errors in numbers that were unheard of just a couple of years ago.

Our repeat mistakes involve declaring that Trumps claims are lies when they are matters of opinion, or when the truth between conflicting sources is unknowable; taking Trumps statements and events out of context; reporting secondhand accounts against Trump without attribution as if theyre established fact; relying on untruthful, conflicted sources; and presenting reporter opinions in news storieswithout labeling them as opinions.

So since nobody else has compiled an updated, extensive list of this kind, here are:

USA Today misstated Melania Trumps arrival date from Slovenia amid a flurry of reporting that questioned her immigration status from the mid-1990s.

Multiple outlets including Politico, the New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, AP, Reuters and the Wall Street Journal reported the same leaked information: that Trump fired FBI Director James Comey shortly after Comey requested additional resources to investigate Russian interference in the election.

The Justice Department, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe said the media reports were untrue and McCabe added that the FBIs Russia investigation was adequately resourced.

The New York Times Jonathan Weisman reported that Comey testified Trump Attorney General Jeff Sessions told Comey not to call the Russia probe an investigation but a matter. Weisman was mistaken about the attorney general and the probe. Actually, it was Obama Attorney General Loretta Lynch (not Sessions) who told Comey to refer to the Hillary Clinton classified email probe (not the Russia probe) as a matter instead of an investigation.

CNN edited a video that made it appear as though Trump impatiently dumped a box of fish food into the water while feeding fish at Japans palace. The New York Daily News, the Guardian and others wrote stories implying Trump was gauche and impetuous. The full video showed that Trump had simply followed the lead of Japans Prime Minister.

MSNBC personality mistakenly stated that Trump had banned the Red Cross from visiting children separated from illegal immigrant parents.

NBC reporter Leigh Ann Caldwell reported that outgoing Supreme Court Justice Kennedy only retired after months of negotiations with Trump that concluded with Trump agreeing to replace Kennedy with Judge Kavanaugh.

Support Sharyl Attkissons fight against government overreach in Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions. For more info visit:https://www.gofundme.com/sharyl-attkisson-4th-am-litigation

Washington Post reporter implied Trump doesnt understand NATO countries. In fact, Trump met with the Finnish President at the NATO summit. Further, Finland is a NATO partner, just not a member.

The New York Times issues a major correction (below) to an original unfair article about U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley.

The New York Times falsely reported that a man, Mark Judge, testified he remembered an incident more than 30 year ago in which Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is accused of assault. Judge actually said the opposite: he does not remember such an incident, and that the allegations are absolutely nuts. The Times corrected its article in an editors note.

Multiple news outlets report that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosentein has resigned or been fired. Neither turns out to be true. Axios and others eventually update and clarify their erroneous reports.

NBC News falsely reports that President Trump praised Confederate General Robert E. Lee. Actually, Trump had praised the Union General Ulysses S. Grant.

CNNs Jeff Zeleny reports that President Trump has decided to fire a deputy national security adviser upon the First Ladys demand. The Wall Street Journal reports the adviser has been escorted out of the White House. Later, its reported that neither case was true. This did not happen. She is still here at the WH, a senior official told the press. The adviser was reassigned to another job.

Its discovered that nearly everything written by a Der Spiegel reporter, who had been honored by CNN, about a supposedly racist Trump stronghold town was fabricatedlike much of his other work.

NBC reports that Trump was the first President since 2002 not to visit the troops at Christmastime. But he (and First Lady Melania) did. NBC added a note to its story but left the false headline in place.

CBS News claimed, in June of 2018, that Trump spokesman Sarah Huckabee Sanders would retire by the end of the year. She didnt. As of May 2019, she was still on the job and there had been no correction or editors note. The same CBS story also quoted sources as saying the departure of White House assistant Raj Shah was also imminent. It wasnt. Shah continued to serve seven more months.

The New York Times issues a correctionto a report that falsely stated former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort asked for campaign polling to be given to a Russian oligarch, Oleg Deripaska, who has ties to Russia President Putin.Instead, the Times now claims, Manafort actually asked his associate Rick Gates to give polling data to Ukrainian oligarchs not Deripaska.

While working at Politico, one of the New York Times reporters, Ken Vogel, got caught sending drafts of stories to democratic officials. Another co-author, Maggie Haberman, was considered a friendly by Clinton campaign officials who turned to her when she worked at Politico.

We have had her tee up stories for us before and have never been disappointed. We can do the most shaping by going to Maggie, wrote Clinton officials in emails.

Fox TV affiliate in Seattle, Washington airs fake, doctored video of President Trump that altered his face and made it appear as though he had stuck his tongue in and out while giving an Oval Office address.

The Buzzfeed exclusive with anonymous sources implicating Trump in potentially criminal behavior (that Democrats and pundits said would be the nail in Trumps impeachment coffin) is refuted in a rare rebuke from Special Counsel Muellers office. Buzzfeed stands by its reporting.

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkissons work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

The New York Times and Washington Post are among the publications that issue corrections after falsely reporting that an anti-Trump activist had served in the Vietnam War.

Additionally, multiple news employees, including a CNN employee, apologize for mischaracterizing as the aggressors Trump-supporting teenagers at a pro-life rally.

The UK Telegraph apologizes for all the facts it got wrong in a Jan. 19 article criticizing the First Lady.

Fight government overreach and double-standard justice by supporting the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund for Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions. Click here.

While some media outlets responsibly reported and properly attributed allegations in the racist attack alleged by actor Jussie Smollett, others did not. Some unskeptically furthered the narrative that Smollett, who is black, was attacked by Trump-supporting racists who put a noose around Smolletts neck, shouted racial slurs, told him its MAGA (Make America Great Again) country, and poured bleach on him. While details are still emerging as of this date, Chicago police have stated that Smollett is no longer considered a victim of the crimes he alleged. The New York Times receives special mention here for adding a biased non sequitur in its early reporting that treated skepticism of Smolletts story as if it were unfounded, and fit in a dig at President Trumps son.

But the lack of progress in the investigation has fueled speculation about whether the report was exaggerated. The presidents son Donald Trump Jr., who is known to disseminate conspiracy theories on his Twitter feed, retweeted an article this week about Smollett declining to turn over his cellphone to the police.

Its as good a day as any to point out that The Washington Post and others reported last November that Trump was imminently about to fire DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen. The Post confirmed this with five anonymous sources. The firing was said to be likely to happen the following week.

Nielsen remained on the job for five more months before resigning.

Testimony by former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen seemed to put the final nail in the coffin of the dossier claim reported by many that Cohen had visited Prague to meet with Russians to help collude on Trumps behalf. Cohen told Congress hes never been to Prague or the Czech Republic, for that matter. McClatchy even reported that Cohens cell phone had pinged off Prague towers. Where did this apparently false information come from? Four people spoke with McClatchy on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of information shared by their foreign intelligence connections. Each obtained their information independently from foreign intelligence connections, reported McClatchy.

The Washington Post deleted a tweet containing false reporting about a January 19 incident regarding a standoff between Trump-supporting pro-life Catholic high school students and a pro-choice Native American activist. The Post wrongly stated, without attribution, that the activist had fought in the Vietnam War. The activist also falsely stated that a high school student had blocked him and wouldnt allow him to retreat. These events were later called into question, and the Washington Post is being sued in a multi-million dollar libel suit over its allegedly false reporting and misrepresentations. The Post also posted an editors note on this date stating that a more complete assessment of the incident contradicted or failed to confirm accounts as originally reported, including that a particular student was trying to instigate a conflict.

Multiple reporters and media outlets have provided false information and/or quoted incorrect anonymous sources as to the timing of the release of Special Counsel Muellers report on Trump-Russia collusion. The Washington Post said it would be out in summer of 2018. Bloomberg said it would be shortly after the 2018 Midterm elections. In February 2019, CNN, The Washington Post and NBC reported the report was coming the last week of February. However, it was not announced at that time.

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112 Media Mistakes in the Trump Era: The Definitive List - Sharyl Attkisson