‘True blue’ chrysanthemum flowers produced with genetic engineering – Nature.com

Naonobu Noda/NARO

Giving chrysanthemums the blues was easier than researchers thought it would be.

Roses are red, but science could someday turn them blue. Thats one of the possible future applications of a technique researchers have used to genetically engineer blue chrysanthemums for the first time.

Chyrsanthemums come in an array of colours, including pink, yellow and red. But all it took to engineer the truly blue hue and not a violet or bluish colour was tinkering with two genes, scientists report in a study published on 26 July in Science Advances1. The team says that the approach could be applied to other commercially important flowers, including carnations and lilies.

Consumers love novelty, says Nick Albert, a plant biologist at the New Zealand Institute for Plant & Food Research in Palmerston North, New Zealand. And people actively seek out plants with blue flowers to fill their gardens.

Plenty of flowers are bluish, but its rare to find true blue in nature, says Naonobu Noda, a plant researcher at the National Agriculture and Food Research Organization near Tsukuba, Japan, and lead study author. Scientists, including Noda, have tried to artificially produce blue blooms for years: efforts that have often produced violet or bluish hues in flowers such as roses and carnations. Part of the problem is that naturally blue blossoming plants arent closely related enough to commercially important flowers for traditional methods including selective breeding to work.

Most truly blue blossoms overexpress genes that trigger the production of pigments called delphinidin-based anthocyanins. The trick to getting blue flowers in species that arent naturally that colour is inserting the right combination of genes into their genomes. Noda came close in a 2013 study2 when he and his colleagues found that adding a gene from a naturally blue Canterbury bells flower (Campanula medium) into the DNA of chrysanthemums (Chrysanthemum morifolium) produced a violet-hued bloom.

Noda says he and his team expected that they would need to manipulate many more genes to get the blue chrysanthemum they produced in their latest study. But to their surprise, adding only one more borrowed gene from the naturally blue butterfly pea plant (Clitoria ternatea) was enough.

Anthocyanins can turn petals red, violet or blue, depending on the pigments structure. Noda and his colleagues found that genes from the Canterbury bells and butterfly pea altered the molecular structure of the anthocyanin in the chrysanthemum. When the modified pigments interacted with compounds called flavone glucosides, the resulting chrysanthemum flowers were blue. The team tested the wavelengths given off by their blossoms in several ways to ensure that the flowers were truly blue.

The quest for blue blooms wouldn't only be applicable to the commercial flower market. Studying how these pigments work could also lead to the sustainable manufacture of artificial pigments, says Silvia Vignolini, a physicist at the University of Cambridge, UK, who has studied the molecular structure of the intensely blue marble berry.

Regardless, producing truly blue flowers is a great achievement and demonstrates that the underlying chemistry required to achieve 'blue' is complex and remains to be fully understood, says Albert.

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Ghana mulling genetic engineering to combat armyworm crop damage – Genetic Literacy Project

[Ghanas] Ministry of Environment, Science, Innovation and Technology has encouraged local scientists to intensify research into ways to fight the fall army worm.

[At the] Council for Scientific and Industrial Researchs (CSIR) Open Day in Kumasi [capital city of Ghanas Ashanti region], Sector Minister, Professor Kwabena Frimpong Boateng, said the Crop Research Institute (CRI) has medium and long term plans using science and genetic engineering to produce something that could fight the fall armyworm in the years to come.

He added that it will help solve the threat of the deadly pest, which has destroyed swathes of farm fields across the country, and also a threat to governments Planting for food and Jobs program.

Professor Frimpong Boateng stated that he is elated that the Minister of Agriculture has affirmed his support to the research.

He also added that the research will include seed development so that by four years time the country will be able to produce more seeds and import less.

To the research community, the president has promised to devote 1% of the GDP towards research and development for all of us, if the right structures are put in place, he said.

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post: Environment Ministry to intensify research on how to deal with fall armyworm infestation

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Gene therapy to correct surfactant protein B deficiency in newborns – Medical Xpress

July 26, 2017

An article published in Experimental Biology and Medicine (Volume 242, Issue 13, July, 2017) reports that gene therapy may be used to as an intermediate therapy for newborns with surfactant protein deficiencies until lung transplantation becomes an option. The study, led by Dr. David Dean in the Division of Neonatology at the University of Rochester in Rochester NY reports that electroporation-mediated delivery of the surfactant B gene to deficient mice improves lung function and survival.

Surfactant is present in the lungs of all humans. This important protein makes it easier for people to breath. Without it, lungs would collapse with each breath. Surfactant protein B (SPB) deficiency is a rare but fatal disease that affects full term babies after an apparently uncomplicated pregnancy and delivery. Babies with SBP deficiency have severe breathing problems from birth, and die in infancy even with aggressive medical treatment. To date the only effective treatment is a lung transplant. Given how quickly these babies become ill, and the limited number of available organs, transplantation is often not even an option.

The most promising therapy for this devastating disease is replacement of the absent SPB gene, a process called gene therapy. Gene therapy approaches using viral-based delivery techniques have not achieved therapeutic levels of SPB protein and induce inflammation, which can exacerbate the disease. The current study used electroporation-based delivery techniques which result in higher levels of transgene expression and are well-tolerated even in animals with existing lung injury. Delivery of SPB DNA into the lung cells of SPB-deficient mice reduced lung inflammation, improved lung function, and extended survival. Since the DNA is eventually silenced, SPB expression does not last forever and this is approach cannot provide a cure.

Dr. Barnett, a neonatology fellow and coauthor said "although this treatment does not provide lifelong correction, our data suggest that this may be a useful approach for improving the survival and stability of infants until lung transplant can occur." Dr. Dean added "we are excited to help optimize an approach that may treat and someday even cure this and other devastating diseases."

Dr. Steven R. Goodman, Editor-in-Chief of Experimental Biology and Medicine, said, "Dean and colleagues provide evidence that gene therapy may restore surfactant activity in SPB deficiency for sufficient time to allow lung transplants in a greater number of affected neonates. This is represents an important advance in this field of research."

Explore further: Gene delivery to the lung can treat broad range of diseases within and beyond the lung

Data demonstrating sustained protein expression five years after a single intramuscular injection of a gene-based therapy for the treatment of alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency also shows improvements in multiple indicators ...

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GSK gives up on rare diseases as gene therapy gets two customers – Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - GlaxoSmithKline is swimming against the tide by getting out of treatments for rare diseases at a time when rivals like Sanofi and Shire see the field as a rich seam for profits.

Successful medicines for rare conditions are potentially very lucrative, since prices frequently run into hundreds of thousands of dollars, but patient numbers can be extremely low.

New GSK Chief Executive Emma Walmsley announced the strategic review and potential divestment of rare diseases on Wednesday as part of a wide-ranging drive to streamline pharmaceutical operations.

It follows a less than impressive experience for GSK in the field, including the fact that its pioneering gene therapy Strimvelis only secured its first commercial patient in March, 10 months after it was approved for sale in Europe in May 2016.

Since then a second patient has also been treated and two more are lined up to receive the therapy commercially, a spokesman said.

Strimvelis, which GSK developed with Italian scientists, is designed for a tiny number of children with ADA Severe Combined Immune Deficiency (ADA-SCID). SCID is sometimes known as "bubble baby" disease, since those born with it have immune systems so weak they must live in germ-free environments.

The new treatment became the first life-saving gene therapy for children when it was approved last year, marking a step forward for the emerging technology to fix faulty genes.

Walmsley said GSK was not giving up on gene and cell therapy entirely. Research will be focused in future in areas with larger potential patient numbers, including oncology.

Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Adrian Croft

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Gene Therapy Targeting Neuromuscular Junctions Could Alleviate ALS – Asian Scientist Magazine

AsianScientist (July 26, 2017) - In a study published in the journal EMBO Molecular Medicine, a group of researchers from the University of Tokyo describe a treatment method that prolonged the lives of mice with symptoms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

ALS, also known as Lou Gehrigs disease, is a neurodegenerative disorder of motor neurons characterized by the severe deterioration of muscle. The degeneration and loss of neuromuscular junctions (NMJs)the essential chemical synapses that transfer control signals from motor neurons to skeletal muscleslead to the loss of motor function, including the ability to breathe. However, therapies that protect or restore NMJs remain elusive.

The research group led by Professor Yuji Yamanashi and Dr. Sadanori Miyoshi at the Institute of Medical Science at the University of Tokyo, together with collaborators, had previously discovered that the muscle protein known as docking protein 7 (Dok-7) is essential for forming NMJs. Mutations in the related human DOK7 gene cause DOK7 myasthenia, a hereditary disease characterized by a defective NMJ structure.

In the current study, the research group found that by restoring the expression of DOK7 using gene therapy in a mouse model of ALS, the loss of motor nerve terminals was suppressed, resulting in larger NMJs which slowed the progression of muscle atrophy. Importantly, mice treated with this method before the onset of ALS-like symptoms had an average life span of 166.3 days compared with 154.4 days for non-treated mice. After the onset of ALS-like symptoms, the treatment prolonged the duration of survival to an average of 64.2 days compared with 50.3 days in nontreated mice.

The findings suggest that therapeutic approaches aimed at enlarging NMJs might be useful in developing treatments for ALS and other types of motor neuron diseases associated with abnormal development of NMJs. Age-related ailments like sarcopenia, which are likely to become a growing concern in aging societies, could also benefit from such treatments.

This study originates from a finding in basic, biological research, which had no particular disorder as a target; the current outcome was obtained through the participation of numerous collaboratorsboth basic researchers and clinical researchersand the huge support from multiple public grants, said Yamanashi.

By acknowledging the huge contributions of our collaborators and supporters, we would like to do our best to understand the causes of ALS and other intractable disorders, with the aim of developing effective therapies.

The article can be found at: Miyoshi et al. (2017) DOK7 Gene Therapy Enhances Motor Activity and Life Span in ALS Model Mice.

Source: University of Tokyo; Photo: Shutterstock. Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.

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Here’s what the Lime Street facade will look like – including Futurist memories – Liverpool Echo

Heres what the artwork on the Lime Street development could look like and it includes memories of the famous Futurist cinema.

Developer Ion is building a hotel, student flats and a row of shops and restaurants on the land between The Crown and The Vines. The plan was controversial because the historic Futurist was demolished to make way for it.

But that cinemas history will form part of a striking quantum timeline, designed by Anthony Brown, that will stretch across the Lime Street facade.

Mr Brown has designed 11 panels based on Lime Streets history.

They cover topics from the Futurist and other long-lost cinemas to the famous Maggie May and the Guinness Clock that once stood opposite Lime Street station.

Theres even a panel about the old Yankee Bar, famed for its miniature Statue of Liberty. The Yankee was also cleared to make way for the Lime Street scheme.

Mr Brown is best known for the 100 portraits of famous Merseyside people that he created for Liverpools 800th birthday in 2007.

Speaking about his Lime Street work, he said: With this work, our intention is to capture and reflect the history while commemorating the development of a truly unique street and one of the most important areas in the city of Liverpool.

We have created an accessible Quantum Timeline using illustrative graphic images and archived text to immortalise the development, buildings, business, people and heritage of Lime Street which was formally known as Limekiln Lane.

It will serve to forever mark and display what was as we celebrate what comes next.

Ion, formerly known as Neptune Developments, was behind the Mann Island development. Mr Browns painting have previously been exhibited there.

Ion managing director Steve Parry, managing director of Ion, commented: "Lime Street has seen many transformations in its history yet it has always reflected Liverpool life.

As one of the most important gateways to the city, we have an opportunity to reflect the vibrancy and history of the street on the elevations of the building.

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The Futurist: Future by design – Human Resources Online

Antonio Ramirez, senior vice-president of human resources at Sands China on how to proactively prepare your business for a new generation of employees.

Millennials are already here time to get ready for Generation Z.

A few years ago, I used to ask at the end of meetings with all the team members if they had any questions or suggestions 99% of the time the team had no questions or suggestions, so I assumed they had nothing to share.

I was wrong. They had lots of questions, lots of things that they wanted to tell me and share. I was just using the wrong platform. A few months ago we started to use an anonymous communication platform. I received lots of messages from the team; we maintained conversations; they raised concerns the end result being a much better team.

E-chat is a must-have platform and not a nice-to-have. At Sands China, we do not offer a job, but a lifestyle, so we need to have the culture, the technology and platforms that support it.

HR works to be a team that supports the company, which shapes the reality of today and the future, supports innovation, develops the culture, attracts, retains and develops talent so we have the best team structures.

We do it by using a leadership approach based on coaching principles, plus:

We are the architects of the HR strategies. We work with departments bringing the latest developments in the HR field. We zoom out with them and we work together on the planning, monitoring the implementation and measuring the outcomes of HR.

This is the generation that doesnt know what a TV channel is this is the Netflix, YouTube and Google generation.

We will have so much to learn with them and we want to be ready. We have created the Innovation and Productivity Centre, where the physical space and the working methodology are being shaped with the input of Millennials and for Gen Z.

We are investing big on a HR data centre and our Millennial team members are playing a vital role in mining the data and proposing solutions and new approaches. We are confident that we will be able to see trends that will allow us to be ready for Gen Z.

Millennials and Gen Z value information, stimulation and connection. They are well-informed, evolved and empathetic, and at Sands China, we want to be the reflection of all of this.

We are designing today to be the future of Gen Z.

The June 2017 issue of Human Resources magazine is a special edition, bringing you interviews with 12 HR leaders, with their predictions on the future of HR.

ReadThe Futuristor subscribe here.

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Neo-Futurists’ new show serves up plenty of ‘Food’ for thought – Chicago Sun-Times

When rehearsals began for The Food Show, one of the first things writer-director Dan Kerr-Hobert asked his five-member cast to do was demonstrate their favorite way to prepare eggs. These ranged from a perfect omelette and an elegant poached egg to the less ambitious half-scramble in a bowl in a microwave.

He says the way people cook eggs is a kind of handwriting, and felt the exercise would be a perfect starting point to introduce the actors to the ideas he was aiming to illustrate in this new Neo-Futurist show.

The Food Show When: To Sept. 2 Where: The Neo-Futurists at Metropolitan Brewing, 3057 N. Rockwell Tickets: $10-$25 Info: neofuturists.org

It was a good way to start the conversation about how our identities affect our relationship to food and visa versa, he says. After each egg was made we all talked about small ways in which the process revealed things about the person cooking. Some text came out of that which is now in the show, but it also gave us a baseline sense of each persons relationship to food.

With his new play, Kerr-Hobert wants to get people thinking and talking about food via a wide range of ideas from foods cultural connections and the significance of family recipes passed down to social issues and foods impact on the environment. And, yes, food will be cooked on stage as the actors ruminate about these ideas and more.

The Food Show was born out of an ongoing conversation Kerr-Hobert, a member of The Neo-Futurists, had with his cousin and Neo-Futurist alum Caitlin Stainken. Both were interested in ideas about the connections people have with food and identity and had talked about opening a restaurant but creating a show about food was the idea that won out. (However, Stainken has since moved to Montana, had a baby and wasnt available to continue with the shows creation.)

Kerr-Hobert says the show is not solely aimed at foodies: The goal is to look at the emotional relationship we all have with food.

Dan Kerr-Hobert | SUPPLIED PHOTO

He adds, one of the core themes in the show is the idea of food and inheritance: Where did we get our ideas about food? What ideas have we inherited? And why do we choose to keep them or give them up?

In 2009, the Neo-Futurists partnered with Metropolitan Brewery to stage Sean Benjamin and Steve Mosquedas Beer, which was directed by Kerr-Hobert at the brewerys Ravenswood location. The partnership continues with The Food Show, which debuts at Metropolitans new Avondale location. The cast features Oliver Camacho, Bilal Dardai, Tif Harrison, Spencer Meeks and Kyra Simms, with music composed by Mucca Pazza artistic director Ronnie Kuller.

As the 70-minute show unfolds, the cast is busy with tasks from making butter and pasta to searing salmon and baking cookies while also pondering the current issues related to food.

This is the first time Kerr-Hobert has created a Neo-Futurist show that he isnt performing in. It was a new and interesting challenge, he says. Instead of simply using the stories from his own life, he says he had to discover new ways to bring his ideas into the script.

He began by interviewing the cast, each of whom had a drastically different history with food. These personal narratives are woven into the piece.

Ensemble member Bilal Dardai (the creator of that aforementioned half scramble in a bowl) grew up eating a mix of ethnic Indian dishes and American cuisine (my mom was open to trying different things). His role in the show evolved around his ethnic background but also around the fact hes the only parent in the cast.

We discussed ideas about not only my background but also about what you feed a small child with a food allergy and how you handle that, Dardai says referring to his own experience with his son.

Kerr-Hobert hopes the show provides a space where people can have a fulfilling and entertaining meditation on food and the issues surrounding it. Do we keep our inherited ways or do we make changes, he asks. For me, the show is about mindfulness and a chance to think about questioning inheritance and whether or not we need to change.

I try and eat ethically but I definitely dont think enough about where all the food is coming from. I know those things have an impact on the world. There are a lot of questions about why we do what we do when it comes to food. We want to get people thinking about these issues.

Mary Houlihan is a local freelance writer

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A Bitcoin Civil War Has Been Avoided, at Least Temporarily – Futurism

In BriefMore than 80 percent of bitcoin miners have expressed supportfor BIP91, a protocol update that represents a compromise betweenwhat miners and developers want for the future of thecryptocurrency. If fully adopted, it could help Bitcoin avoid the"civil war" that many have been predicting. This Way or That Way?

Like a season premiere of the popular HBO seriesGame of Thrones, the financeworld is eyeing July 31 with both anticipation and slight trepidation.

Anongoing disagreement between miners and developersover the future of Bitcoins blockchainhas had many Bitcoin analysts, investors, and enthusiasts fearing a potential split in the cryptocurrency at the end of this month. However,as a moderate solution seems more likely to be accepted, fears of a network hard fork are beginning to die down.

As previously reported, the Bitcoin crisis is the result of a clash of ideas for the future of the popular cryptocurrency and its blockchains transactional capacity. Miners wanted to increase Bitcoins block limit, while developers proposed moving data off the main blockchain network.

The more moderate solution, which was activated on July 22, isBitcoin Improvement Proposal (BIP) 91. This protocol update prevents a hard fork from occurring by providing a compromise between what miners and developers want.Last week, more than 80 percent of bitcoinminers expressed support for BIP91, passing the threshold required for implementation.

This is definitely good news,but the potential for chaos hasnt been entirely avoided. Its only July 25, so five days remain before the required July 31 lock in. More than 51 percent of miners must begin usingthe BIP91 protocol by then for it to be fully adopted.

For now, though, it seems less and less likely that a hard fork is coming between July 31 and August 2. As if anticipating future smooth sailing, bitcoins value has risento $2,729 as of this writing. Thats a $570 increase over last weeks value.

Still, some are quick to point out that this current period of peace couldbe temporary.

Segwit2X locked-in on July 21st with +90% miner support so many people could now be tempted to assume that the scaling debate is over and Bitcoin is now good to scale to the masses, Juan Manini-Rios, CEO of SHA256 Trading, wrote in a Medium post. Unfortunately, that is not the case at all and a Bitcoin fork is still almost certain.

For AQR Capital Management former managing director Aaron Brown, a currency split may not be that bad for Bitcoin. It is the rule, not the exception, that currencies evaporate due to hyperinflation, government default or expropriation, or a losing a war, he told MIT Tech Review. People do not use them because they have faith in their long-term survival, but because they can facilitate transactions today.

Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in a number of cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

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A Bitcoin Civil War Has Been Avoided, at Least Temporarily - Futurism

China’s New Quantum Communication Network Will Be Unhackable – Futurism

In Brief China's new quantum communication network in the city of Jinan is expected to change cryptography for the better. As computers become more powerful, current encryption methods become less reliable. Quantum cryptography will be a key technology for addressing this. Securing the Internet

For a country notorious for its restrictive internet policies, China seems to be taking the lead on developing next-generation internet communications. The city of Jinan is set to become the hub of this quantum communications network that will boost Beijing-Shanghai internet when the project is launched by the end of August. It is set to become the worlds first unhackable internet communications network.

Unlike encryption methods that hide the key under difficult mathematical problems, quantum communication and cryptographyuse entanglementto do the trick. Concretely, the key is embedded in photons (light particles) and sent ahead of the encrypted message a method called quantum key distribution (QKD).

Communication becomes unhackable this way because any attempt to intercept the key would be obviousto the sender and the intendedrecipient. Whats even more impressive is that China has the technology to extend quantum communications up to 400 kilometers (about 250 miles), as previously demonstrated in a quantum cryptography research in Hefei.

As technology becomes increasingly more complex, computers are becomingincreasingly more powerful. This puts current encryption methods in danger, as number-crunching becomes easier with powerful computing power. Number-based keys need to be prolonged and constantly updated to keep up. QKD potentially solves all of this.

Yet, for the most part, it seems China is leaving the West behind in pursuit of this technology. For a long time people simply didnt think it was needed, Myungshik Kim from Imperial College, London,told the BBC. The mathematical difficulty of the current coding system was so high that it was not thought necessary to implement the new technology.

Recent security breeches and hacks, of course, reveal the error of this thinking. Thats one reason why China is pursuing quantum communication, but the tech has a number of other possible applications as well.

We plan to use the [Jinan] network for national [defense], finance, and other fields, and hope to spread it out as a pilot that if successful, can be used across China and the whole world, Zhou Fei, Jinan Institute of Quantum Technology assistant director, previously told the Financial Times.

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Scientists Assert That A Child has Officially Been Virtually Cured of HIV – Futurism

In Brief A nine-year-old child from South Africa has reportedly been "virtually cured" of HIV, as signs and symptoms of the dreaded infection hasn't been seen since the child received treatment shortly after being born in 2007. But how was this child cured? Nine Years and Counting

At the on-going Paris conference of the International AIDS Society (IAS), a team of scientists is presenting details of a remarkable development that could improve HIV treatment. The case is that of a nine-year-old South African child who was infected with HIV at birth. After receiving a burst of treatment soon after being born, the child has since been free of any symptoms or activesigns of the menacing virus without any further treatment.

HIV, which is known to affect more than36.7 million people worldwide, is one of the deadliest viruses around today since it was discovered, its taken the lives of more than 35 million victims, according to the World Health Organization. This South African case, however, is a glimmer of hope.

[T]his new case strengthens our hope that by treating HIV-infected children for a brief period beginning in infancy, we may be able to spare them the burden of lifelong therapy and the health consequences of long-term immune activation typically associated with HIV disease, Anthony Fauci, directorNational Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), told The Guardian.

While the doctors report detectingtiny fraction of immune cells that still have the virus integrated into them, the childs immune system remains healthy, and there is no sign of HIV infection.

The South African child was part of a NIAID-funded trial in 2007for treating infants with HIV. Scientists and doctors, however, haveyet to understand why and how the 40-week treatment (which was also given to 142 other children) worked for this child, whose identity remains anonymous.

We dont believe that antiretroviral therapy alone can lead to remission, Avy Violari, pediatric research head at the Perinal HIV Research Unit in Johannesburg, told the BBC. We dont really know whats the reason why this child has achieved remission we believe its either genetic or immune system-related.

Still, the mere fact that something like this is possible is a cause for hope. Unlike other cases where supposedly cured infants later on demonstrated latent HIV in the immune system, this South African case is the third reported virtually cured child. Speaking to The Guardian, Caroline Tiemessen from Johannesburgs National Institute of Communicable Diseases said, By further studying the child, we may expand our understanding of how the immune system controls HIV replication.

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New Action Movie Stars The Rock and SiriReally – Futurism

In Brief Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson and Apple's Siri have teamed up to make a "movie" that is actually an extended ad depicting the utility of the latest iteration of Siri, integrated with everything from Lyft to FaceTime to iTunes.

If youve read the title, then youre probably aware of an upcoming film circling an unlikely duo. The movie is called The Rock x Siri: Dominate The Day, and is actually an ad styled after the kind of crazy, possibly comedic action move Dwayne Johnson has become famous for. Like last years extended commercial collaboration between Taylor Swift and Apple Music, this project is Apple plus celebrity mojo plus, this time around, Siri.

According to Johnsons Facebook post, the movie is the dopest and funnest, and Siri is the greatest co-star of all time. She certainly received top billing on the poster no photo though. Check out the full movie here:

The Dominate the Day theme plays on Johnsons unlikely all-talented persona depicting him as a chef, fashion designer, fresco painter, jumbo-jet pilot, musician, and bonsai artist all with the help of Siris FaceTime-, iTunes-, and Lyft-integrated help. The idea is that you too can accomplish an unbelievable list of things with the help of Siri, even if youre not The Rock.

Dominating your actual day is optional.

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New Action Movie Stars The Rock and SiriReally - Futurism

The Fear and the Freedom by Keith Lowe the moral surprises of the second world war – The Guardian

Fact meets fiction in director Christopher Nolans Dunkirk, the latest film to dramatise the second world war. Photograph: Bros/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock

Four generations have been born since the end of the second world war. The infants of today Generation Z in demography-speak arethe great-great-grandchildren of the wartime generation. Since the defeat of Germany and the capitulation of Japan, countless terrible conflicts have been fought, andtens of millions have died in them. Indeed the numbers killed in wars since 1945 will, in the coming decades, inevitably exceed the death toll of the second world war. Yet even as we approach the third decade of the 21st century, and as 1945 slowly slips beyond living memory, it remains the case that when we talk about the war, everyone understands that we are referring to the calamitous conflict of 1939-45.

The borders between numerous nations, the widespread acceptance of the principle of national self-determination, the transnational institutions that for 70 years have attempted to order theworld economy, and the political power still ascribed to the victorious nations of 1945 are all legacies of the war. Yet, as Keith Lowe powerfully argues, the seemingly simple fact that the war made the modern world does reward further examination. The conflict remains a staple of TV, publishing and cinema two second world war movies, Churchill and Dunkirk, are currently on release in the UK. Meanwhile, our understanding of what the war meant to the people whose lives it shaped both combatants and civilians is distorted by layers of myth, the lingering echoes of wartime propaganda and the act of forgetting.

In The Fear and the Freedom, Lowe asks us to question the most critical delusion of all: that the allied powers acted as morally as the circumstances would allow and that this war, more perhaps than any in history, was a good war, fought against an ultimate evil for entirely laudable aims. One of the more discomforting voices raised against this view of the war comes from Yvette Lvy, a Jewish inmate of a Nazi labour camp in Czechoslovakia. She saw little to distinguish the conduct of her various liberators. The Tommies, she says, behave just as bad as the Russians The English soldiers said they would give us food only if we slept with them. We all had dysentery, we were sick, dirty and here was the welcome we got! The notion of allied moral purity is further undermined by Lowes account of the mass rape of German women and widespread looting by the Red Army in 1945.

As a historian of the modern era, Lowe enjoys an enormous advantage over scholars who write about more distant epochs: he is able for the moment at least to draw into his writing the experiences of those who lived through the conflict. Perhaps no historian since Gitta Sereny, in The German Trauma, hasgrasped that opportunity as firmly as Lowe, or done so much with it.

As every journalist knows, the art ofthe interview rests on two principles: asking the right questions and putting them to the right people. With journalistic nous, Lowe has assembled a remarkable chorus of voices and asks the most probing of questions. Their testimony, combined with the authors pointed analysis, elevates a laudable volume into a very readable and startling book.

These are not well-rehearsed stories, worn thin by overtelling. We hear from Leonard Creo, a decorated former GI, aveteran of a war in which all allied soldiers, whether frontline troops or back-office clerks, were designated heroes. From old age he recognises that his single, dramatic experience of combat made him neither hero nor victim. For him, the war and the American GI Bill opened doors to opportunities that would otherwise have remained closed. Another of the more memorable voices is that of Ken Yuasa, a former Japanese army surgeon, who expresses acceptance and guilt. He was one of the infamous doctors who practised surgical procedures on innocent Chinese peasants. These dehumanised human guinea pigs died on the operating table. Only when Yuasa read the words of the mother of one of his victims was he able to acknowledge his crimes.

Disturbing in a different way is the testimony of those who found the war exhilarating. Consider Ogura Toyofumi, a witness to the nuclear attack onHiroshima, who recalls marvelling at the destruction and the loss of life, finding himself able to locate beauty inthe atomic flash and its aftermath.

Lowe shows how the conflict was not just European but fought across the world by people of many different nationalities

Established beliefs are thrown into question. The famous postwar interview in which Robert Oppenheimer tearfully recalled how the scientists ofthe Manhattan Project reacted to thesuccessful test detonation of the atomic bomb is overturned by one of the books most remarkable passages. Oppenheimer did, as he later explained, recite a line from The Bhagavad Gita: Iam become Death, the destroyer of worlds. But he spoke these words of Lord Vishnu not while lamenting the manifest horror of the weapon he had helped bring into existence, but while strutting around like Gary Cooper in the Hollywood western High Noon.

The second world war is still too often written about and imagined as essentially a European conflict. Lowe shows how it was fought across the globe by people of many different races and nationalities. Adding to this global perspective are the insights of Sam King, a celebrated Jamaican-born RAF veteran. Kings story helps Lowe make one of his more nuanced points that the war was as capable of generating diversity as it was of drawing lines of ethnic division on the new map ofEurope.

It has been said that the most impressive and worrying features of human behaviour is our capacity to adapt to the most terrible of circumstances. As one of the messages of theBritish war recently turned into anostalgic cliche suggests, most people have the capacity to keep calmand carry on. Yet the testimony in these pages demonstrates that adaptation to the extremes and horrors ofwar was made possible only by the forging of myth. Both combatants and civilians came to define the war as a clear-cut struggle between good and evil, or as a conflict that would save future generations from the abyss. This myth was an essential tool of survival. Now it is an obstacle to a proper understanding of how this most terrible of allwars continues to shape our lives.

David Olusogas Black and British: A Forgotten History is published by Macmillan. The Fear and the Freedom is published by Viking. To order a copy for 21.25 (RRP 25) go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over 10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of 1.99.

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The Fear and the Freedom by Keith Lowe the moral surprises of the second world war - The Guardian

At ‘Freedom’ Summer School, Hartford Students Get Immersed In … – Hartford Courant

On a hot and languid morning in the city, as police made their usual patrols on littered streets with boarded-up buildings, a jubilant scene bloomed inside the gymnasium of Thirman L. Milner School.

Hip-hop thumped from a portable speaker at half court, the post-breakfast soundtrack for dozens of Hartford children who freestyled dance moves with shoulder leans and leaps into the air, fists raised to the ceiling minutes of unabashed joy that cut through the gym's stuffy humidity.

The elementary students were here for a summer literacy program called Freedom School, and for many there was nowhere else they'd rather be.

When the school's namesake arrived in his tan suit and offered a "good morning," the response for 83-year-old Thirman Milner, who was Hartford's first African American mayor, came to the beat of a drum.

"G-O-O-D M-O-R-N-I-N-G!" the kids chanted, before translating the greeting to Spanish. "Buenos dias!"

Midway through the six-week Freedom School program, a national initiative in its second summer at Milner, students had become well-versed in Afrocentric call-and-response, in affirmation and exultation, in letting their guard down enough to dream. They had taken field trips to farms, museums and bowling alleys, and picnicked near the pristine roses of Elizabeth Park, less than three miles from Milner's concrete courtyard.

Mark Mirko / Hartford Courant

Milner is a chronically low-performing neighborhood school in the North End. During Freedom School, children are told that they can be good readers and that they are worthy.

Messages of self-empowerment, and of helping one's community, are in the songs they sing and the culturally relevant books they read. As a guest reader that morning, Milner, the ex-mayor, brought a children's book version of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" speech.

"It builds their confidence up to make them believe in themselves that they can do anything," said Tamara Jones Roberts, one of the Milner mothers who took cellphone photos of their children dancing in the gym. The free spirit is part of a morning ritual called "Harambee!," which the program translates to "let's pull together" in Swahili. Students at the Milner site range from kindergartners to those who just finished third grade.

"Sometimes, outside of school," Roberts said, "they don't get that positive energy."

The network of Freedom Schools was founded by the Children's Defense Fund and the Black Community Crusade for Children in the 1990s, rooted in social justice tenets dating back to the civil rights movement. Now the Children's Defense Fund oversees sites in more than 25 states across the country, including three Freedom Schools in Connecticut all in north Hartford, where the programs preach a love for reading as an antidote to the blight of poverty.

Educators for Freedom Schools say the immediate goal is to stem summer reading loss, although the bigger vision revolves around literacy as power and disrupting the school-to-prison pipeline that disproportionately hurts black and Latino students.

"We don't want them to slip off in the summer," said Danny Baker, 23, of Hartford, one of the college students helping out children at Milner's Freedom School. "We want them to know that learning is a year-round thing ... . And I tell my students that they are the best, so don't let anybody tell them they're less than that."

Mark Mirko / Hartford Courant

A Hartford church group hosted an early version of the summer program in the mid-'90s, recruiting college students known as "crusaders" who helped students with their academics and self-esteem.

It would be another two decades before the current model took root in Connecticut's capital. Marian Wright Edelman, founder and president of the Children's Defense Fund, gave a speech at the University of Hartford three months after the Dec. 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown.

Addressing hundreds in the audience, Edelman "challenged us to start Freedom Schools to have a more peaceful environment, so that's how it started," said Marge Swaye, a former director of literacy and language arts for the Hartford school system who helped set the wheels in motion.

The Women's League Child Development Center on Main Street, near SAND School, became a Freedom School site last summer and hosts 50 elementary students with $62,000 in funding, Swaye said. Milner's program is sponsored by Christian Activities Council, a community organizing group down the street from the school that raised $100,000 from a mix of public, church and philanthropic sources for the full-day program that regularly draws about 75 students who attend for free.

"It's designed to infuse a social-action component into literacy," said Cori Mackey, executive director of Christian Activities Council. "It really fits our mission of developing leaders."

Phillips Metropolitan CME Church on Main Street also hosts a Freedom School in a modified program, said Swaye, who is looking to expand to more Hartford schools and community groups.

The Hartford school system provides breakfast and lunches, as well as certified teachers in the case of Milner, which is designated as one of the district's Early Start summer schools. While not all of the Freedom School students at Milner attend the school during the regular academic year, many of them do and school leaders say it is critical to improve their reading skills by third grade.

Third-grade reading is a fundamental benchmark in education: Research has shown that children who fall behind at this pivotal point are less likely to graduate from high school, perpetuating the cycle of poverty. Year to year, test scores show that few Milner third-graders are proficient in reading.

Experts say this achievement gap is why summer literacy initiatives are especially crucial for children in poor neighborhoods, who are more prone than wealthier students to losing reading skills during the extended break. Upper-income families have more resources to invest in camps, lessons or arrange for other structured activities that often weave in literacy, such as writing a script for a play at summer camp, said Catherine Augustine, a senior policy researcher at the RAND Corporation.

Milner teacher Susan Hunt-LaKose, who usually teaches fifth grade during the year, said her Freedom School students had just read "Destiny's Gift" by Natasha Anastasia Tarpley, the story of a local bookstore on the verge of shutting down because rent is too high. An African American girl named Destiny, who loved hanging out at the store, rallied the community to try to save it.

"All you heard was, 'This reminds me of ... ,'" Hunt-LaKose said of her students. "It empowers them, even from a young age, to know that they make a difference."

Program leaders at Women's League and Milner said they assessed a sample group of students last summer, and found that at the end of the program, the vast majority had maintained or improved their reading level. Hunt-LaKose, in her second Freedom School summer, said the book selections with themes such as immigration and overcoming racism are enticing for kids because they can connect the reading to their everyday lives.

In a Milner classroom, students were asked what special talents they could use to help their community. Cesar Feliz, 7, who will be entering third grade soon, spoke of living his truest self.

"I'm just me. I'm my own person, and I will always be that person, and I will always be myself," Cesar told his teacher. "I am not a weapon I am me."

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At 'Freedom' Summer School, Hartford Students Get Immersed In ... - Hartford Courant

Modern-Day Eugenics? Prisoners Sterilized for Shorter Sentences … – AlterNet


AlterNet
Modern-Day Eugenics? Prisoners Sterilized for Shorter Sentences ...
AlterNet
A Tennessee judge says he wants to give inmates a chance "not to be burdened with children." A Tennessee county has greenlit a modern-day eugenics ...
Tennessee Judge Pushes Sterilization on Those Incarcerated for ...Truth-Out

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Modern-Day Eugenics? Prisoners Sterilized for Shorter Sentences ... - AlterNet

Innovative eco-system stressed – The Hindu

Anil Kakodkar, former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, has said India should evolve and nurture an innovative eco-system and respond to technology demands.

Addressing the 70th anniversary of the Central Electrochemical Research Institute (CECRI) here on Tuesday, he said creating such an eco-system needed a change in mindset across all domains of society and breaking out from silo mentality.

On technology vision for India 2035, he said the new vision betted on emerging technologies to overcome challenges in ensuring inclusive growth and improved quality of life.

Such a technology leap must take advantage of Indias democratic dividend, he suggested.

The vision statement envisioned Indias technology future modes comparing it to four gaits of a horse: galloping, cantering, trotting and walking, he said. India gallops in some areas such as space, nuclear, information and missile technologies, canters to keep pace in few areas such as civil aviation and road transport, and trots in a few others such as food, manufacturing and electronics, he said.

India has not been able to walk the talk in time in many areas such as room temperature superconductivity, he said. India shone well during the agrarian era, but missed the bus during the industrial era, he said.

India invested only 0.88% of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in research and development programmes, but its investment was huge in absolute terms considering the countrys economy, he said.

It is sad that in most industries Indian expertise still lacks a global edge and we remain heavily dependent on many key foreign technologies, he regretted. The translation of research findings to commercialisation was strapped for want of funds, he said.

It is, however, a matter of pride that despite foreign rule, technology denial and embargos, India has managed to fly its flag high, he said.

Today, countries such as Israel were keen on making together with India, he said adding, the only way to sustain the momentum was to become a major player in the technology-production game.

Speaking on the occasion, Mr Vijayamohanan K. Pillai, Director, CECRI, said that with changing priorities it was necessary for scientists to prune their activities to those that impact the 125 million people of this country.

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Innovative eco-system stressed - The Hindu

Research at Lake Baikalfor the protection of a unique ecosystem – Phys.Org

July 26, 2017 Amphipods of the species Eulimnogammarus verrucosus react negatively to higher temperatures and pollutants like cadmium. Credit: V. Pavlichenko, ISU

Lake Baikal, with its exceptional species diversity and unique wildlife, is a UNESCO Natural World Heritage Site. As part of the Helmholtz Russia Research Group LaBeglo, UFZ researchers are studying the impact of climate change and environmental toxins on the lake's fauna. In a recent study, together with researchers from the Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) and the University of Irkutsk, they addressed the question of how Baikal amphipods that fulfil important ecological functions in the lake react to pollutants in the water.

Lake Baikal formed between 25 and 30 million years ago and contains around 20 per cent of all unfrozen fresh water on Earth. At approximately 23,000 cubic kilometres, its water volume is even larger than that of the Baltic Sea. Lake Baikal is not only the oldest and largest lake on Earth, but with a depth of over 1,500 metres also the deepest. It may also be one of the coldest: the average water temperature near the shore is only about 6 C. "The water is crystal-clear, the salt and nutrient content is low and it's extremely oxygen-richeven at the very bottom of the lake," says Dr Till Luckenbach, an ecotoxicologist at the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ). Over the course of evolutionary history, these particular conditions in Lake Baikal have resulted in a unique fauna. About 80 per cent of the 2,600 or so species living in Lake Baikal are endemicin other words they are not found anywhere else on Earth, indicating that they have adapted very well to the extreme conditions.

However, whether the fauna of Lake Baikal will remain so diverse and unique in years to come is uncertain. The lake is situated in a region in which global warming is particularly noticeable. Over the past 50 years, the average surface temperature of Lake Baikal has increased by nearly 1.5 C. "And it's still rising," says Luckenbach. "The period in winter when the lake is covered with ice has also become much shorter. In addition to this, there is detectable chemical pollution. Since the environmental conditions in Lake Baikal have remained stable for a very long time, these changes are dramatic." In the Helmholtz Russia Research Group LaBeglo, project leader Luckenbach and his team from UFZ have been working for the past six years with researchers from the University of Irkutsk, the AWI in Bremerhaven and the University of Leipzig to discover what consequences the changed environmental conditionssuch as rising water temperatures and chemical pollutionhave for the unique fauna of Lake Baikal. Two native amphipods of the genus Eulimnogammarus are being used as model organisms. Amphipods perform an important ecological function in water: they break down organic material, thus keeping the water clean, and serve as food for fish. This key role in the food network makes them important model organisms for ecotoxicologists.

Studies on the temperature sensitivity of Baikal amphipods carried out at the University of Irkutsk show that one species (E. cyaneus) can tolerate water temperatures up to around 20 C, which may occur in summer close to the shores of the lake. The research team found that E. cyaneus produces a constant level of so-called heat shock proteins, which protect important protein molecules in the organism that would otherwise be damaged at high temperatures. The other species, E. verrucosus, produces far fewer heat shock proteins and instead migrates to deeper, cooler regions of the lake to escape high water temperatures. "If water temperatures increase as a result of climate change, this could have far-reaching consequences not only for the individual species, but also for the balance of the ecosystem, which has developed over a long period of time," says Luckenbach. "In the case of E. cyaneus, the temperature maximum which the species can tolerate for long periods can sometimes already be reached in summera further temperature increase would be extremely critical. And if E. verrucosus has to migrate to deeper water more than is currently the case, the species will have to compete more with the amphipods living there for food sources."

In their study, published recently in Environmental Science and Technology, a team of researchers from UFZ, the AWI and the University of Irkutsk investigated how these two species of amphipods react to chemical pollution in the water. The animals were exposed to the heavy metal cadmium, which served as a model toxin. Although the water in Lake Baikal is still largely unpolluted, cadmium is a relatively frequent environmental pollutant whose toxicity makes it extremely problematic to ecosystems. It seems likely that Lake Baikal could see increasing heavy metal pollution. The lake's largest tributary, the Selenga River, is increasingly polluted with mining waste water from Mongolia, and via air, pollutants reach the lake from the industrial region around Irkutsk.

The reactions of the amphipods were observed in the laboratory. "The smaller species E. cyaneus absorbed the pollutant faster and thus died at lower pollutant concentrations in the water," explains Dr Lena Jakob, an ecophysiologist at the AWI, who carried out the experiments at Lake Baikal. "We also observed that E. verrucosus slowed down its metabolism even at low concentrations of cadmium. This is a warning sign, because the animals might avoid feeding when this happens, do not reproduce and are more likely to fall prey to predators due to reduced activity. Even a low but constant level of chemical pollution in Lake Baikal could have massive impacts on individual species and the ecosystem as a whole."

In another study, the UFZ researchers together with bioinformatics experts from the University of Leipzig obtained the first insights into the genome of E. verrucosus. It is surprisingly largeabout three times the size of the human genome. The genome data will be used as the basis for further investigation of physiological adaptation strategies in different environmental conditions. According to Luckenbach: "We want to shed a little more light on this area, understand the physiological level even better and find out whether there are other mechanisms that enable the organisms to withstand the effects of climate change and exposure to pollutants, because ultimately we want to be able to predict how the ecosystem might change."

Explore further: Image: Orbital view of Irkutsk and Lake Baikal

More information: Lena Jakob et al, Uptake Kinetics and Subcellular Compartmentalization Explain Lethal but Not Sublethal Effects of Cadmium in Two Closely Related Amphipod Species, Environmental Science & Technology (2017). DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b06613

The city of Irkutsk (centre left) and part of Lake Baikal (right) are pictured in this Sentinel-1A image over Russia's Siberia region.

Russia sounded the alarm Tuesday as water levels in Lake Baikal, the world's largest freshwater lake, dropped to record lows, with environmentalists blaming dry weather and overuse by local industry.

Despite widespread concerns about preserving the worlds largest body of fresh water, researchers report that pollution is continuing in Russias fabled Lake Baikal. The study is scheduled for the April 15 issue of ACS ...

A controversial Soviet-era paper mill on the shores of Lake Baikal will be closed down, a government spokeswoman said Thursday, after years of complaints about pollution at the UNESCO-protected Siberian site.

Ecologists are warning the world's deepest and oldest lake is at risk from climate change and faces a new threat from plans to build a dam.

Siberia's Lake Baikal, the world's largest and most biologically diverse lake, faces the prospect of severe ecological disruption as a result of climate change, according to an analysis by a joint US-Russian team in the May ...

Britain said Wednesday it will outlaw the sale of new diesel and petrol cars and vans from 2040 in a bid to cut air pollution but environmental groups said the proposals did not go far enough.

A new study projects that if climate change continues unabated, heat-related deaths will rise dramatically in 10 major U.S. metropolitan areas compared to if the predicted increase in global warming is substantially curbed ...

Hydrogen at elevated temperature creates high electrical conductivity in the Earth's mantle.

The idea of geoengineering, also known as climate engineering, is very controversial. But as greenhouse gases continue to accumulate in our atmosphere, scientists are beginning to look at possible emergency measures.

A new study found that Caribbean staghorn corals (Acropora cervicornis) are benefiting from "coral gardening," the process of restoring coral populations by planting laboratory-raised coral fragments on reefs.

Humanity will have used up its allowance of planetary resources such as water, soil, and clean air for all of 2017 by next week, said a report Tuesday.

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Research at Lake Baikalfor the protection of a unique ecosystem - Phys.Org

Oregon Ecosystem Files Lawsuit to Defend Its Rights – Truth-Out

The Siletz River in Lincoln, Oregon. (Photo: USFWS - Pacific Region)

On July 24, the Siletz River Ecosystem (SRE) in Northwestern Oregon took legal action to protect itself.

Becoming the third US ecosystem to do so, the SRE took this self-defense step by filing a motion to intervene in the lawsuitRex Capri and Wakefield Farms, LLC v. Dana W. Jenkins and Lincoln County, and Lincoln County Community Rights.

Carol Van Strum, a farmer, author, parent, naturalist, copy editor and co-custodian of 20 acres of temperate rainforest, bottomland and river in the Oregon Coast Range, is an advocate for the intervention of the SRE. She told Truthout why.

"This is a significant and groundbreaking effort, literally from the ground, offering a far more effective, comprehensive way to protect the planet we're part of than piecemeal campaigns to ban a single chemical or fight a single fracking or mining operation at a time," she said. "It is also significant because it starts with communities taking back control of their lives and environment that industry-controlled governments have taken from them."

"If Nature Has No Rights, Neither Do We"

The two plaintiffs, Rex Capri of Newport and Wakefield Farms of Eddyville, claim that it is their "right" to spray toxic pesticides aerially, and that this right is greater than the right of the people of Lincoln County to protect public health, clean water, and the rights of ecosystems and natural communities.

To see more stories like this, visit "Planet or Profit?"

The SRE has been in trouble for years. Its watershed has lost nearly half of its forest in just the last 16 years alone, and massive clear-cuts from strip logging plague the ecosystem.

Much of the area has been sprayed with pesticides from the air multiple times, and huge parts of the watershed are completely barren of vegetation. This has also resulted in critical habitat for salmon and steelhead being degraded and, in some cases, completely annihilated.

Today, because of this mistreatment, mudslides into the river are common, and pesticide run-off into the river and creek tributaries is rampant. This runoff now poses a major risk of contaminating one of Lincoln County's main drinking water sources.

Van Strum, who has lived in the area for nearly 50 years, explained to Truthout that she herself is part of the SRE ecosystem, and pointed out that the US Declaration of Independence asserts that the laws of nature "pre-empt human law." She also cited the Dr. Seuss bookThe Lorax,which chronicles the plight of the Lorax and his environment. The Lorax speaks for the trees against an entity that is seeking to destroy them. Van Strum told Truthout she is acting as the Lorax for the SRE.

"I speak for the rights of waters and forests and wildlife to challenge human violations of natural law," she said.

Dr. Seusshadsaidthat The Lorax was his personal favorite of his books, as it addressed economic and environmental issues. Hesaid the book"came out of me being angry," explaining, "I was out to attack what I think are evil things and let the chips fall where they might."

There are precedents for ecosystems filing lawsuits to defend their rights in other countries.

Ecuador has written the rights of nature into its constitution, and in New Zealand, rivers are granted personhood with human rights.Over the last year, high courts in India and Columbia have also recognized the rights of rivers as a means of creating higher protection standards for their ecosystems.

The federal constitution of Ecuador has recognized the rights of nature since 2008, and there, two different legal cases have affirmed that rivers have rights and damaging human activity violates those rights.

The United States hasn't taken any of these steps so far -- but, of course, that doesn't mean it never will.

"So far, I don't think any of those efforts have succeeded in this country, but no one [in power] gave the women's suffrage movement or civil rights movements here much chance but ultimately, they succeeded," Van Strum added. "I think this will, too, inevitably, because no matter how many suits and ties and shiny vehicles we hide behind, we are still and always a part of nature, so if nature has no rights, neither do we."

Rights Essential for Nature

Court documents for the case, obtained by Truthout, state, "The Freedom from Aerially Sprayed Pesticides Ordinance of Lincoln County (hereafter "the Ordinance") for the first time in Oregon law recognizes the rights of ecosystems and natural communities," and, "Pursuant to Section 3(a) of the Ordinance, the Siletz River Ecosystem and all natural communities and ecosystems within Lincoln County secured legal rights to be free from toxic trespass and aerially sprayed pesticides. These rights are essential for nature -- the physical world including human beings -- to survive and thrive."

The Ordinance thus sets a precedent by giving standing to ecosystems and natural communities to enforce and defend their rights through a human member of the system or community.

That means that the SRE is a real party with legal standing to participate in litigation to enforce or defend its rights. This then enables the SRE and all natural communities and ecosystems within Lincoln County to be a named party in an action brought by a Lincoln County resident or for Lincoln County to enforce or defend the ecosystem or natural community's rights.

Kai Huschke with theCommunity Environmental Legal Defense Fund(CELDF), the public interest law firm representing the SRE and Lincoln County Community Rights, in a press release about the recent filing, said that this case is a perfect example of what can happen when individuals as well as communities step forward "to secure nature's rights."

Van Strum encouraged people around the country to fight for both their communities' rights and nature's rights, and pointed to CELDF as a valuable resource in these struggles.

The lawsuit is now moving forward, but there is currently no indication of when the court will respond to the SRE's motion to intervene.

Did you know? Truthout is a nonprofit publication and the vast majority of our budget comes from reader donations. It's easy to support our work -- click here to get started.

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Oregon Ecosystem Files Lawsuit to Defend Its Rights - Truth-Out

Financial services platform efforts drive new partner ecosystem – TechTarget

Financial institutions are riding the digital transformation wave.

In this new era, the financial services industry is looking to invest in innovative technologies that improve business processes and address changing consumer expectations. Financial institutions are also looking to engage reliable tech partners to help them with IT engagements.

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To seize opportunities in this burgeoning market, large IT vendors are offering platforms on which fintech companies, independent software vendors (ISVs) and systems integrators can build new applications. The result is a still-developing channel ecosystem that aims to deliver IT solutions tailored to the financial services sector. These emerging financial services platforms are surfacing as financial institutions place their bets on such technologies as cloud computing, blockchain and artificial intelligence (AI).

"What we are seeing is a confluence of technologies," said Tom Eck, CTO at IBM's Industry Platforms unit. Eck said cloud computing has not only brought about economies of scale to financial institution's data centers, but it has also increased the pace of application development.

"Banking technology traditionally has been on quarterly release cycles, but now they've learned by seeing what's going on with fintech companiesthat have shortened the cycles of getting new products and updates out into the marketplace," Eck said. "Cloud has accelerated innovation because it's much quicker to get from a concept into production on cloud platforms."

By working with cloud technologies and agile software development methodologies, Fintechs are able to develop applications faster --on the order of months rather than years, Eck said. He added that banks can do the same by utilizing these tools and techniques, but the difference is that many fintechs were "born on the cloud" and hence these practices are instinctual. Nevertheless, banks are learning to adapt to these technologies as well.

Beyond cloud, financial institutions are also drawn to the attractiveness of using blockchain technology to keep a shared digital ledger of transactions that maintain a growing list of records. In addition, AI's cognitive capabilities, which can augment the intelligence or capabilities of a financial advisor, for example, are driving banks, insurance companies, wealth management firms and other financial companies to embrace this technology.

As the competition to build the next generation of financial apps takes shape, the IBM Cloud for Financial Services platform was launched in March to give fintech companies, ISVs and others access to APIs, data and content to build, monetize, and speed up the pace of developing financial services apps.

"IBM Cloud for Financial Services is a platform for developers to rapidly build next-generation financial services products and, as a platform, the value increases as more functionality is added," Eck said.

He added that IBM has capabilities that were previously only available as monolithic, on-premises applications. Now, the new platform is enabling some pieces of the functionality of those systems through APIs.

One example Eck cites is taking pieces of IBM Algorithmics, a risk management offering and financial modeling platform, and making it accessible to a much broader range of application developers. He said IBM is focused on accelerating the value of the platform by building out its ecosystem of third-party partners.

"We have a marketplace where we are plugging in offerings from fintechs that want to start selling some of their capabilities through the marketplace," Eck said. "By offering one platform with an integrated marketplace, a developer can tap in just as easily to the offerings from IBM as they can to offerings from the third parties. We think it is critical to build out this ecosystem so that we can more rapidly bring and expose value from our platform."

Executives at Actiance Inc., an ISV based in Redwood City, Calif., said it joined the IBM Cloud for Financial Services platform to extend its software offerings and introduce its tools to global financial customers. Actiance provides products for communications compliance, archiving and analytics.

"We are trying to sell our products to the biggest global banks worldwide," said Barry Ruditsky, Actiance's senior vice president of business development, channels and alliances. "Having a partner like IBM that has the infrastructure, the resources, and the relationships with these customers -- not just in New York, but in London and Hong Kong -- can help us deploy our capability to these global banks. IBM helps us gain that scale," he added.

Specifically, Actiance has three products: The company's Vantage and Socialite offerings enable organizations to add compliance policies to unified communications, collaboration and social media communications. These products capture this content and send it to a third product, Alcatraz, a cloud-based content archive for electronic communications. Actiance will use the IBM's financial services platform to take advantage of its AI technology and worldwide infrastructure.

Part of the strategy, Ruditsky said, is developing apps that, for example, track trader-to-trader discussions or communications between wealth managers and their clients on Twitter, LinkedIn and other social media products. That communication tracking feature is important in a regulated sector like the financial industry. Furthermore, employees at financial companies are using various social media platforms to interact with younger clients.

It's costing them a lot of money to stay on the status quo and they are looking for new platforms that reduce cost and open opportunities to adopt new, compelling types of applications. Barry Ruditskysenior vice president of business development, channels and alliances, Actiance

To deepen their understanding of this burgeoning market, companies want a better handle on customer behavior and financial product preferences. As a result, financial institutions can benefit from using AI along with archiving tools to mine communications data, spot trends and gain insights in a predictive and cognitive manner throughout their value chain, Ruditsky said.

"Many financial institutions can't do that right now," Ruditsky said, noting that those organizations are stuck in traditional on-premises environments that prevent them from digging into the content. They are unable to search through content and access the detailed metadata that would help them adopt predictive or cognitive applications moving forward, he said.

"It's costing them a lot of money to stay on the status quo and they are looking for new platforms that reduce cost and open opportunities to adopt new, compelling types of applications," he said.

As the financial industry marches toward adopting blockchain technology, Red Hat Inc. has been moving in that direction as well. Last year the company announced the OpenShift Blockchain Initiative, which encourages fintech companies and ISVs to develop blockchain solutions on Red Hat's OpenShift Dedicated, a container application platform.

"ISVs in general are struggling with the idea of how they do containerized app development and how they handle on-premises, hybrid and public cloud deployments," said Rob Cardwell, Red Hat'svice president of strategic partnerships and alliances. "We believe our technologies help them solve a lot of those struggles with how to architect their systems to meet these various demands from their customer base."

Cardwell described the initiative as being set up to facilitate building blockchain solutions on OpenShift which, in general, can work in a variety of environments. Options for deployment include the customer's site, Red Hat's managed cloud, public clouds or a sandbox brought in by a partner. As fintechs and ISVs develop newer applications more quickly, part of what Red Hat offers is a platform that lets them develop, test and deploy software on the same underlying application architecture, he added.

Similarly, Red Hat believes its technology lets application developers manage transitions from an on-premises environment to a hybrid private-public cloud mix without having to change their approach or architecture.

"Moving from one environment to the next is one of the foundational elements toward being able to develop applications more quickly and can change the turnaround time, or the cycle time, for developing these apps from months to weeks to days," Cardwell said.

The ability to work in different environments is one reason BlockApps Inc., an ISV, became a Red Hat partner. The company recently deployed its BlockApps Strato, an Ethereum blockchain infrastructure, on OpenShift.

Victor Wong, CEO at BlockApps, said many customers that originally launched the BlockApps offering primarily on a public cloud noted that they wanted more flexibility as they moved to serve larger blockchain production systems.

"OpenShift gave us the ability to provide our customers that flexibility of deployment on public clouds, private cloud or any sort of hybrid cloud environment," Wong said.

Wong added that financial companies have been toying with the idea of implementing blockchain in recent years, but they are suddenly moving into more serious production-grade applications and that has been a driving force behind the partnerships between vendors and application developers. It's the main reason why BlockApp is partnering with Red Hat.

"Prior to this partnership there was a big question about how our company was going to manage to serve new blockchain infrastructure," Wong said. "The primary reason we decided to work with Red Hat is to show that blockchain is a real technology that enterprises can start to take seriously."

Learn more about channel opportunities in the financial sector

Read about the potential for blockchain in financial services

Gain insight into multicloud computing and fintech companies

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Financial services platform efforts drive new partner ecosystem - TechTarget

Cyborg | Batman Wiki | FANDOM powered by Wikia

History

Cyborg

Vic Stone was the son of a pair of scientists who decided to use him as a test subject for various intelligence enhancement projects. However, Victor grew to resent this treatment and fell in with a young miscreant named Ron Evers who led him into trouble with the law. This was the beginning of a struggle where Victor strove for his own life engaging in pursuits his parents disapproved of such as athletics. In addition, Victor still kept bad company that led him into incidents such as when he was talked into participating in a street gang fight in which he was wounded. For the most part however, Victor still had a largely normal life under the circumstances where he also refused to follow his best friend's grandiose plans of racially motivated terrorism.

All that changed one day when he visited his parents at work at S.T.A.R. Labs. Coincidentally, an experiment in dimensional travel went horribly awry when a massive gelatinous monster crossed over an experimental portal and killed Victor's mother. The creature then turned on Victor and severely mutilated him before his father managed to force the creature back through the portal. To save his son, Victor's father outfitted him with experimental prosthetics of his own design. However, the equipment could not be worn inconspicuously, and thus Victor was horrified to see much of his body, including part of his face, replaced with sheer metallic limbs and implants. Although Victor wanted to die at this shock, he adjusted enough through his resulting physical therapy to control his implants with suitable skill.

Upon release from medical care, he found his life was seriously inconvenienced with the fearful reactions of the public at his implants; even his girlfriend rejected him. In addition, he was also disallowed his participation in athletics not only for his implants but for his poor grades which were further exacerbated by his long convalescence. However, when his old friend attempted to use Victor's troubles to manipulate him into attempting a terrorist attack on the United Nations, Victor found a new purpose as he equipped his weapons attachments and stopped his friend in a pitched battle on the UN building.

He joined the Teen Titans, initially for the benefit of a support group of kindred spirits and freaks and has remained with that group ever since. In addition, Victor found new friends who saw past his disfigurements to his own nobility such as a group of children who were adjusting to their own prosthetics and idolized Victor with his fancy parts and exciting adventures as well as their beautiful therapist who took a shine to him herself.

Throughout his association with the Titans, Victor has been destroyed, reconstructed, assimilated by an alien race, and had his humanity restored. He later went on to mentor a new Teen Titans group, consisting mainly of sidekicks, most of whom have taken over the secret identities of former members (i.e. Tim Drake, the third Robin, instead of Dick Grayson, the original Robin and Titans leader), as well as stalwarts such as Starfire, Raven, and Beast Boy, where they have fought enemies such as Deathstroke, Doctor Light, The Titans of Tomorrow and Superboy and Indigo during the Insiders storyline with a team up with the Outsiders.

During Infinite Crisis, Cyborg joined Donna's New Cronus Team that went to investigate a hole in the universe that was discovered during the Rann-Thanagar War. He left Beast Boy in charge of the Titans while he was gone. They arrived at the re-set center of the universe and with the help of assorted heroes, aided in the defeat of Alexander Luthor, Jr., who was attempting to re-create the Multiverse and build a perfect Earth from it.

Cyborg was fused together with Firestorm after returning to Earth. This was caused by the energy ripples caused by Alexander Luthor Jr. which altered the Zeta Ray Beams the heroes were going to use to return home.

After being severely damaged during the events of Infinite Crisis, Cyborg was rebuilt over time in thanks to Tower caretakers Wendy and Marvin. He awoke one year later to find a wholly different group of Titans led by Robin, the only member from the team he formed prior to going into space. Cyborg felt that members such as Kid Devil and Ravager were hardly worthy of being Titans, and thus was attempting to find a way to re-form "the real Titans".

After the team along with the Doom Patrol defeated the Brotherhood of Evil, Cyborg asked Beast Boy to rejoin the Titans, but Gar refused saying that his skills were needed with the Patrol. After returning to Titans Tower, Cyborg began reviewing the security tapes during the last year, in which it appears that he was looked to by all the Titans of the past year for a shoulder to lean on, despite being in a coma-like state.

Although Cyborg did retain the position of statesman amongst the Teen Titans and occasionally played second-in-command to Robin's lead, he no longer operated as a Titan in any official capacity.

Shortly thereafter, Batman, Wonder Woman, and Superman agreed that Cyborg should be offered membership in the new Justice League. However, following a battle against Amazo, Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) and Black Canary took over the formation of the JLA, and Cyborg was not included amongst the roster.

Cyborg began putting together a new branch of Titans East which consisted of Anima, Dove, Hawk, Lagoon Boy, Little Barda and Power Boy. During a training exercise, the team was attacked by an unknown foe and Cyborg was severely injured. This incident inspires the original members of the "New" Teen Titans to regroup and investigate the situation.

Omegadrome Cybernetics: Cyborg possesses cybernetic enhancements that provide superhuman strength, endurance and durability. Cyborg can also interface with computers. Built into his body-armor were an infrared eye, computer generator, sound amplifier, and special programming adapters that allowed him to interface with other body extensions. Integrated into Cyborg he still controls the Omegadrome, which can morph into different shapes and constructs permitting the following abilities:

Cyborg in the animated series, Teen Titans

Cyborg was one of the primary characters featured in the Teen Titans animated series where he was voiced by actor Khary Payton. The animated version of Cyborg was very similar to his comic book counterpart. The two main differences are his appearance and that he is noticeably less serious as the show normally had a much lighter tone than the comics. His head was considerably more rounded, and his mechanical parts were bulkier, but not overwhelming.

Like most of his teammates, he's never referred to by his real name throughout the course of the series. However he does take the alias "Stone" in the Season Three episode "Deception". He was known to have a love of video games and was often seen battling Robin or Beast Boy in either a fighting or racing game. Cyborg also had a big crush on the H.I.V.E.'s Jinx, and later had a brief relationship with Sarasim, a warrior from the distant past. A former athlete (just like in the comics), his victories were often accompanied by a resounding "BOO-YAH!". Brother Blood acted as his nemesis in Season Three. In episode 29, he becomes obsessed with catching the criminal Billy Numerous after the criminal's escape. He does manage to catch the criminal later, using special holographic technology to fool the villain.

His abilities/offensive attacks included two Sonic Cannons (one in each arm), a smaller sonic blaster located in his left foot, two sets of missile launchers (one in each shoulder), super-strength, high-end sensor and communication technology, and could also produce several different tools (a saw, a welding torch, a buffer, etc.) from his arms. At one point, he installed a super-processor chip called the Maximum-7 to further increase his abilities, but an overload forced Robin to remove it.

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