Are cryptocurrencies about to go mainstream? – The Guardian

Bitcoin is the worlds biggest cryptocurrency but there are now close to 800 digital currencies work around $96bn total. Photograph: Alamy

Last Sunday a message posted on message board 4Chan started the rumor that Vitalik Buterin, the founder of cryptocurrency Ethereum, had been killed in a car crash. News of the 23-year-old, Russian-born programmers demise was soon proved false but not before 20%, or roughly $4bn, had been wiped from Ethereums soaring market value.

The hoax not only drew attention to Ethereum, the second largest digital currency after bitcoin, which had seen its value rise fiftyfold since the start of the year to $300 a coin, but also to the booming market in other so-called cryptocurrencies that could now be on the cusp of mainstream financial credibility.

Last week Barclays CEO for personal and corporate banking, Ashok Vaswani, revealed the lender had opened discussions with UK regulators about adopting digital currencies.

We have been talking to a couple of fintechs [financial technology companies] and have actually gone with the fintechs to the FCA [the Financial Conduct Authority, the UK regulator] to talk about how we could bring the equivalent of bitcoin, not necessarily bitcoin, but cryptocurrencies into play, Vaswani told CNBC at a conference in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Obviously [its] a new area, obviously an area weve got to be careful with. We are working our way through it.

Vaswanis comments came after several central banks from across Europe and Asia said they were looking into establishing digital-only currencies in addition to traditional denominations.

The Peoples Bank of China has reportedly run trials, while the Danish central bank is considering a digital-only e-krone.

On 19 June, the International Monetary Fund issued a staff discussion note stating that banks should consider investing in cryptocurrencies, saying: Rapid advances in digital technology are transforming the financial services landscape, creating opportunities and challenges for consumers, service providers and regulators alike.

At the same time, IBM announced it had made a deal with the Digital Trade Chain Consortium a group of seven European banks that includes Deutsche Bank, HSBC, KBC, Natixis, Rabobank, Societe Generale and Unicredit to build a digital trade platform that will run on IBMs cloud.

Andrew Levin, professor of economics at Dartmouth and co-author of a study on central bank digital currencies, told the Guardian that the concept of private institutions creating new forms of payment was not in itself new, but the greater need is for consumers and businesses to have access to money that has a stable value and is practically costless to use. We think theres a strong case for central banks to issue digital currencies that would be free to use.

Crypto- or cyber-currencies are digital-only currencies in which encryption and registry techniques, often called blockchains, are used to regulate the generation of units of currency independent of a central bank.

It is a booming, dizzying market. Since the start of the year, bitcoin, the worlds biggest cryptocurrency, has almost tripled in value to $2,565. By some estimates, the cryptocurrency business could be worth $5tn by 2022. There are now close to 800 cryptocurrencies worth, in total, around $96bn.

One of the newest offered to market is Tazos, backed by billionaire venture capitalist and early bitcoin investor Tim Draper of Draper Fisher Jurvetson. According to a prospectus, a total of US$893,200.77 worth of XTZ tokens will be issued on 1 July.

The best thing I can do is lead by example, Draper told Reuters last month. Over time, I actually feel that some of these tokens are going to improve the world, and I want to make sure those tokens get promoted as well. I think Tezos is one of those tokens.

Tezos founders, Kathleen and Arthur Breitman, anticipate their ICO will become a digital commonwealth or self-governing network. The couples background in finance speaks to the seriousness of the endeavor: Arthur worked at the high-frequency trading desk at Goldman Sachs; Kathleen at Bridgewater Associates, the worlds largest hedge fund.

We think our competitive advantage is in our ability to assign governance, Kathleen told the Observer. The thing about blockchain is its very interdisciplinary. You have to have an understanding of finance and economics, but also game theory, pure science and networking theory.

She concedes that blockchain complexity is also cause for investor skepticism. A lot of people struggle to understand its value proposition, because it offers something different to everyone. I like the idea of putting business logic in a decentralised network, and hopefully, it will help people to conduct business more easily.

Brock Pierce, managing partner of Blockchain Capital and a relative veteran of the ICO market, recently launched a tradeable, digital securities token called BCAP that he considers the next giant leap in the democratization of venture capital and liquidity where everybody has equal access.

Three days ago, Pierce launched the crowd sale of EOS, a blockchain coin (or token) offering thats already taken in $100m. This is a 340-day project thats already broken every record. Its 100% certain were going to surpass Bancor, the most successful ICO to date.

Pierce predicts that the underlying technology of blockchain essentially a public record of actions is going to impact our world more than the internet has.

He added: The implications are huge, and its going to have huge implications not only on venture, but private equity, real estate, digitizing currency. This is going to be the technology that democratizes the global financial system so everybody has equal access.

But such rapid increases in value is cause for concern. Five-year-old Ripple XRP, which is connected to 75 banks, including Bank of America and Royal Bank of Canada, has increased in value by 40 times this year alone. According to CNBC, 100 billion XRP are in existence, each priced 26 cents.

A lot of lessons will be learned and a lot of money will be lost, before a lot of money can be made, Peter Denious, head of global venture capital at Aberdeen Asset Management, told Bloomberg last week. Prices right now arent being driven by network usage, theyre being driven by speculation that tokens are going to appreciate. Its a gold-rush mentality.

But Les Borsai, an early investor in Ethereum, believes that what is under way is a re-ordering of the financial systems. At root, he argues, blockchain technology shows we dont need a centralized solution for anything. Its a liberated attitude and the implications are huge.

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Are cryptocurrencies about to go mainstream? - The Guardian

Cryptocurrency: Funds of the future? – THE BUSINESS TIMES

VIRTUAL currencies have been said to capture the imagination of some, strike fear among others, and confuse the heck out of the rest of us. What exactly are they? Should we invest in them? Where do we even start? Here are some of the most popular questions answered.

What is cryptocurrency?

Cryptocurrency is digital money created from code. Most cryptocurrencies are built on blockchain, an incorruptible digital ledger of all economic transactions made in virtual currency. The cryptocurrency economy is free of all government oversight and monitored by a peer-to-peer Internet protocol.

What are the major cryptocurrencies?

Bitcoin (founded in 2008), Ethereum (2015) and Ripple (2014).

How much are these worth today?

Let's just say anyone who's bought cryptocurrency before 2017 would have made astronomical gains (see graphs below).

Why invest in cryptocurrency now?

Cryptocurrency is said to be one of the best-performing assets in the last two years. Its market added nearly US$7 billion in value in just the first quarter of 2017, going by a CoinDesk report.

Bitcoin, whose price topped US$2,000 per coin for the first time in May, has arguably entered the mainstream. You can actually use it to buy stuff now, at retailers such as Microsoft, OkCupid and even Subway.

How to invest - where to even start?

First, there are two ways one can invest using cryptocurrency:

1. Buy and sell cryptocurrency. One can do this through platforms such as Coinbase, Coinhako and CoinMama using a credit card, debit card or bank transfer. Identity verification may be required for large transactions on some platforms.

Notably, a majority of cryptocurrency investors conduct only this form of investment, where they wait for prices of virtual currencies to appreciate before selling them.

2. Buy cryptocurrency, and participate in initial coin offerings (ICOs). One can do this on token markets or cryptocurrency crowdfunding sites such as TokenMarket or FundYourselfNow (Singapore-founded).

An ICO allows startups with innovative products to issue their own digital tokens that can be bought by investors or backers using virtual currencies. Digital tokens typically entitle backers to monetary rewards (such as profit sharing), or non-monetary rewards (exclusive products).

Notably, only a minority of cryptocurrency investors buy virtual currencies and participate in ICOs. The latter is considered a more speculative form of cryptocurrency investment, as it entails backing a young and thus high-risk company, and profiting only if the company succeeds.

How much to invest for the first time?

The rule of thumb is to not invest what you cannot afford to lose. The cryptocurrency market is uniquely unregulated and extremely volatile: prices can one day rise by 100 per cent and plunge 50 per cent the next day. Panic selling is very common.

One should therefore not invest in cryptocurrency if he or she is unaccustomed to wild price fluctuations.

Early adopters recommend S$4,000 as a good first amount to set aside for such investing, and to never let cryptocurrencies occupy more than 50 per cent of one's portfolio.

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Cryptocurrency: Funds of the future? - THE BUSINESS TIMES

A Wall Street bank is betting Nvidia will win the cryptocurrency battle … – Markets Insider

Genesis Mining

Nvidia and AMD are in a war.

The two companies both produce graphics cards and compete over PC gamers, self-driving car manufacturers and data center managers to prove that their technology is superior. Nvidiatends to be ahead in many of those markets and has seen its stock rise more this year because of it.

A new market is emerging though. The two graphics processing unit (GPU) companies are currently fighting over the cryptocurrency GPU market, and both are rumored to be releasing cryptocurrency optimized chips in the near future, according to RBC Capital Markets.

Cryptocurrencies are red-hot right now. Bitcoin is probably the most notable and has been around for years. But, recent explosive growth in rival currency Ethereum, has been making headlines. Recently, $100 million worth of GPUs were added to the Ethereum network in just 11 days.

The cryptocurrencies are made up of a decentralized network of users, and every time a transaction occurs in one of these currencies, it has to be verified by the whole network. People who help confirm these transactions are called "miners" and often use GPUs to speed up the calculations required to verify payments.

Previously, miners have used GPUs designed for gaming in their computers. This works, but isn't optimized for the task. Nvidia and AMD could release new cards that are optimized to draw as little power as possible and increase the speed of cryptocurrency specific tasks.

RBC reckons that when this happens, Nvidia's chip will outpace its rival AMD.

"Given Nvidia's performance lead across numerous categories (gaming and data center) we think the Company is best positioned to become the market leader in GPU based cryptocurrency mining if a new product is released," RBC wrote in a recent note to clients.

Details about the new cards are sparse, and their existence is only rumored for now. Considering only current GPUs, AMD has beaten out Nvidia because it has been faster at mining-specific tasks. RBC is betting this will change soon. When Nvidia has time to optimize their technology for mining, RBC thinks the company will be able to outpace AMD.

Previous domination in markets Nvidia has set its sights on is really the only information RBC is working with. Until the new cards come out or are officially announced, improvements are only hypothetical. RBC thinks Nvidia's work in data centers and high-end consumer gaming is enough to bet on the company winning the cryptocurrency market as well. Nvidia is certainly making waves in the self-driving car market, with a recent slate of high-profile partnerships.

Onlytime will tell. Nvidia is up 43.4% this year, compared to AMD's 10.24% increase and the general S&P 500's 7.17% increase.

Markets Insider

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A Wall Street bank is betting Nvidia will win the cryptocurrency battle ... - Markets Insider

Krosscoin The First Church and Charity Centric Cryptocurrency – The Merkle

The church/charity ecosystem is in the billions of dollars globally. The Waves based Krosscoin project is a multifaceted project and multinational team that aims to bring much needed and overdue solutions to the church and charity space. Krosscoin will assist big ministries in migrating to the blockchain where products and materials can be paid for by krosscoin or their native asset.

Krosscoin will also create a matching pair with them to promote liquidity. Krosscoin innovative products will also have a global market with applications for different purposes. Ribbon is its first product and will be released at the end of July.

Ribbon is the worlds first multilingual in-messaging app. It boasts of other features which the Krosscoin core team will disclose shortly before its release.

The Krosscoin team however being the first coin to provide solutions for Churches, NGOs and Charities, actually has a global outlook. They plan to participate in the disruption of several industries such as ecommerce ( a product is being developed for that already), banking, business solutions, media, gaming, government, transportation, oil and gas and international remittance. They also aim to merge virtual gaming with real time charity, an interesting thing to see.

Krosscoin has a very strong community on Facebook and on its slack channel, comprising of people from all over the world. The Waves platform and community is definitely benefiting from the strong Krosscoin ecosystem.

Mark Zuckerberg announced on Instagram that Facebook is changing its mission to not just merely connect the world (which they have done very remarkably) but to also promote unity and togetherness, to connect vitally. Krosscoin seems to be at the forefront in this regard to make this possible. Its logo Lets make good happen underscores the teams mission.

Discalimer: This is not trading advice. If you liked this article, follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and technology news.

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Cryptocurrency Gambling Company Monster Byte Inc. Launches ICO – The Merkle

Monster Byte Inc. owns a suite of long standing and profitable gambling websites that have been custom-built with proprietary technology owned by Monster Byte. Monster Byte is looking to raise additional funds to not only enhance their current consumers sites but also begin to resell their intellectual property and enter the B2B iGaming space. This ICO is unique because the company has been generating revenue, adding users and enhancing its products since 2013. Instead of wondering if you are buying vaporware with the ICO you have a chance to share in the growth and profits of an established company.

From Sports Betting to Provably Fair Games

Monster Byte owns and operates Peerbet.org, Bit777.com, and BitcoinRush.io. Bitcoin Rush offers sports betting and a provably fair casino all custom built and originally founded as casinobitco.in in 2013. The sportsbook currently offers highly competitive odds and a daily cashback system that is not available at any other bitcoin sportsbook. Peerbet was established in 2012 and offers 1% edge dice games and an on-site exchange for various cryptocurrencies. Finally, Bit777 was acquired by Monster Byte in 2014 from UltraPlay LTD and is a flash based casino with 49 different games.

What will the ICO funds be used for?

First and foremost, Monster Byte is hiring several functions, including additional developers, and community managers.

The BitcoinRush.io sportsbook will be updated with a new UI/UX model and implement a system that earns between 2-4% per bet regardless if the player wins or loses.

Peerbet.org will be relaunched with a new modern design that will be responsive for tablet and mobile device play.

BitcoinRush.io will start accepting more coins including Waves, Ethereum, Litecoin, Dash, and others in time for the next NFL season in September.

B2B syndication of its games and API access to both traditional fiat and cryptocurrency gaming portals. The new line of business will supplement existing revenue streams.

Telegram messenger betting support. People will be able to place bets from their telegram app.

What do token holders get?

Monster Byte Token will be issued exclusively on the Waves Platform due to the ability to easily trade tokens against other assets and cryptocurrencies all within the DEX, a very liquid decentralized exchange in the Waves LiteApp Wallet.

On a quarterly basis, all Monster Byte token holders are entitled to their share of the collective profit (revenue expenses) of Monster Byte. Dividends will be paid in bitcoin, and detailed quarterly reports will be published to provide full transparency on all operations. A dedicated Slack channel will also be created to follow the day-to-day operations and development progress with the team itself.

When is the ICO? I want in NOW!

The ICO pre-sale will begin on July 3rd, 2017 at 16:00 UTC, and extend until July 8th 16:00 UTC or whenever the pre-sale is sold out, whichever occurs first. During the pre-sale, 2,500,000 Monster Byte tokens will be sold at $0.08 USD, a 31.5% discount over the general sale. The general sale will open at July 8th at 16:00, and 7,500,000 Monster Byte tokens will then be sold at $0.11 USD.

Is there a cap?

Yes, in total, Monster Byte anticipates raising $1,025,000 USD which gives Monster Byte a $4.4M post-money valuation. They chose not to have an open cap as savvy investors should know exactly what they are buying into, with a well-defined capitalization model.

A unique opportunity

This is your chance to invest in one of the fastest growing industries. Sports betting and online gambling is one of the best use cases for cryptocurrencies. Currently, online gambling as a whole is a $46 Billion/year market. Depending on estimates, it is expected to be approximately $50 Billion/year by 2019. At the same time, due the benefits of both the player and operator, cryptocurrency gambling is going to eat into this market gradually year over year.

Based on Monster Bytes solid reputation and long-standing history in this young niche market, as well as their expansion into B2B operations this is an ICO that is sure to go quickly.

Visit our website and sign up for our newsletter to get the latest updates on the ICO and presale.

https://www.monsterbyte.io/ico

Slack https://monsterbyte.slack.com/

Bitcointalk https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1980482

This is a sponosored Press Release and does not necessarily reflect the opinions or views held by any employees of The Merkle. If you liked this article, follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and technology news.

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Cryptocurrency Gambling Company Monster Byte Inc. Launches ICO - The Merkle

UK dealer charged in US over multimillion-dollar fake Bitcoin site scam – The Guardian

Renwick Haddow is accused of duping investors into investing in a fake Bitcoin trading platform. Photograph: Benoit Tessier/Reuters

US authorities on Friday charged a British businessman with securities fraud, accusing him of deceiving investors over what turned out to be a fake trading platform for the cryptocurrency Bitcoin.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) alleged the clandestine Renwick Haddow, a UK citizen living in New York, diverted funds invested in a phoney Bitcoin site as well as from a flexible workspace firm Bar Works into accounts in Mauritius and Morocco, totalling $5m.

It said he touted experienced senior executives as behind the operations who turned out to be phantoms, and misrepresented the details and success of both companies.

Andrew Calamari, director of the SECs New York office, said: Haddow created two trendy companies and misled investors into believing that highly qualified executives were leading them to quick profitability.

In reality, Haddow controlled the companies from behind the scenes and they were far from profitable.

Bitcoin Store claimed to be an easy-to-use and secure way of holding and trading Bitcoin that had generated several million dollars in gross sales. The SEC alleged that in fact it never had any operations nor generated the gross sales it touted.

In 2015, Bitcoin Stores bank accounts allegedly received less than $250,000 in incoming transfers, none of which appear to reflect revenue from customers, the SEC said.

Haddows investors pumped more than $37m into Bar Works, which claimed to provide workspaces in old bars and restaurants, but in fact primarily sold leases coupled with sub-leases that together functioned like investment notes, the SEC said in a statement.

The commission alleged that throughout Haddow was hiding his connection to the companies given his checkered past with regulators in the UK, where he has faced similar charges for investment schemes.

According to a report in Crains, 27 investors from China filed suit in the state supreme court on 16 June seeking repayment of more than $3m invested in Bar Works, which they called a Ponzi scheme.

Another investment group filed a similar case against Bar Works in Florida in recent weeks.

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UK dealer charged in US over multimillion-dollar fake Bitcoin site scam - The Guardian

Mark Cuban Is Backing Cryptocurrency That’s Not Bitcoin or … – Fortune

Entrepreneur Mark Cuban, who previously helped Bitcoin's value drop after calling it a "bubble," is now interested in another digital currency. And no, it is not Ethereum, but the UnikoinGold .

According the Coindesk , Cuban is participating in another fundraising round of one of his portfolio companies , a sports-betting blockchain platform dubbed Unikrn, via an initial coin offering.

An ICO is a crowdfunding method that has grown in popularity as of late among blockchain startups, with more than 30 ICOs already this year. Companies sell their own digital currencies and use the proceeds to fund their businesses .

Unikrn has already raised some $10 million from investors, including Ashton Kutcher. The company allows anyone to place bets with its digital token, the Unikoin, according to Coindesk.

Investors will be allowed to register for the pre-sale starting mid-July. About 1 billion UnikoinGold tokens will be up for grabs.

The company has yet to establish a price for the UnikoinGold, though investors will be able to exchange digital currency for Ether, the token under Ethereum.

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Mark Cuban Is Backing Cryptocurrency That's Not Bitcoin or ... - Fortune

Asteroid Day 2017 – rogue comets and diverting them from Planet Earth – Fox News

The last day of June is an international recognition of Asteroid Day, a global, public discussion of the hazards posed to Earth and our civilization by asteroid and comet impacts.

June 30, 2017 marks the 109thanniversary of the 40-meter-wide asteroid impact over Tunguska, Siberia, that flattened 2000 square km (800 square miles) of conifer forest. That 3- to 5-megaton explosion, generated by an asteroid impact that occurs on average every millennium, is a reminder of the devastation that awaits our society if we fail to act to prevent a future impact.

Last year the United Nations recognized Asteroid Day as a global education event, aimed at raising awareness of cosmic impacts and the need for nations to work together to head off a future impact event. The professional society of astronauts and cosmonauts, theAssociation of Space Explorers, introduced the United Nations measure that recognized Asteroid Day.

We space fliers have seen the cosmic scars on Earth created by past impacts, and our international collaboration in space is an example of how we should apply our joint skills in space technology to find rogue asteroids and divert them from a collision with Earth.

Asteroid Day is a 24-hour global conversation kicking off on the eve of June 30, and features a day-long live broadcast from this years Asteroid Day headquarters in Luxembourg. The broadcast features asteroid science documentaries, interviews with scientists, astronauts, and policy makers, and interactive conversations with asteroid experts around the globe. In addition, close to a thousand events celebrating Asteroid Day will take place around the globe; you can see the program and the map online atAsteroidDay.org. You can also participate on Twitter at #AsteroidDayLive.

During my astronaut training, I explored the depths of Arizonas Meteor Crater, hiked the floor of Texas Odessa impact crater, and took in the view from the rim of the Henbury Crater complex in Australias great red Outback. From orbit, I observed a dozen or more impact scars scattered across the globe, some of the approximately 190 craters showing how our home planet has endured billions of years of cosmic bombardment.

We humans will endure another devastating asteroid or comet impact one that could wipe out a city, a region of a continent, or our global civilization unless we work together at finding dangerous asteroids and demonstrate our ability to change the orbit of one headed our way.

We need to support efforts to launch an infrared space telescope to hunt for the million or so objects that could threaten us, and ask your lawmakers to fund a deflection demonstration, like the joint NASA-ESA AIDA mission to nudge the orbit of a harmless asteroid with a high-speed spacecraft collision.

Were all piloting this spaceship Earth together, and Asteroid Day is a wonderful opportunity to learn how to protect it.

On behalf of the Association of Space Explorers, Ill be speaking about Asteroid Day and the asteroid hazard at theKennedy Space Center Visitor Complexon June 30. Lets talk asteroids!

For more information go towww.AstronautTomJones.com.

Tom Jones is a planetary scientist, author, and veteran NASA astronaut. He was a member of the 2012 Keck Institute for Space Studies asteroid retrieval study team. For more visit: AstronautTomJones.com.

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Asteroid Day 2017 - rogue comets and diverting them from Planet Earth - Fox News

Progress On Psoriasis, From ‘Last In Line’ To Often First, But At A Price – WBUR

wbur Narrating Medicine A new category of drugs, biologics, inhibits elements of the immune system that fuel inflammation. Humira is an example of a biologic. (David J. Phillip/AP)

My body is a walking encyclopedia covering 40 years of psoriasis treatments.

I've had hundreds of cortisone injections shot into my scalp, arms and legs. Thick black tar applied to my head so it could be absorbed into the scaly red plaques that surfaced when my condition flared. Salicylic acid shampoos that stunk like hot asphalt. Light box treatments. Methotrexate and cyclosporine, immune system suppressants prescribed variously for cancers, rheumatoid arthritis and organ transplant recipients.

And still, it was there. Always, or nearly always. The inflamed, flaking, cracking skin. Wavy ridges in my fingernails. Hundreds of hours spent in dermatology offices. Thousands of attempts to hide painful, embarrassing skin patches that would appear on elbows, knees, scalp and other surprising places when I was under stress, on a deadline, or for no obvious reason at all.

I am not alone. Last year, the World Health Organizations Global Report on Psoriasis called the disease a "serious global problem with at least 100 million individuals affected worldwide." That includes more than 7 million Americans. We are legion. With lesions.

Psoriasis is a mystery, a disease of the immune system with no clear cause or cure. For years, traditional medications that were developed initially for arthritis, Crohn's disease or other immune conditions eventually dropped down the pharmaceutical food chain to psoriasis patients.

Lately, though, that landscape has been shifting, with the advent of a new category of drugs: biologics, genetically engineered proteins derived from human genes. Usually injections that a patient administers at home, they inhibit elements of the immune system that fuel inflammation.

Humira, Enbrel and Cosentyx are examples of biologics. And a recent paper in The Lancet shows promise for a new biologic called tildrakizumab. Designed primarily for psoriasis, it may ultimately have additional applications.

Tildrakizumab differs from earlier, similar biologics by targeting a very specific immune system pathway.

"The breakthrough is that we have continued to refine our treatments to those that are likely to be most effective against psoriasis but less likely to affect other important pathways at the same time," says study senior author Dr. Alexa Kimball, a dermatologist and presidentof Harvard Medical Faculty Physicians at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

From Accidental Findings To'First In Line'

Psoriasis treatments have mostly been accidental discoveries, Kimball said.

Occasionally, a psoriasis patient who needed an organ transplant would end up being treated with cyclosporine, and it was amazing how a drug like that cleared the skin, sheexplained. And so there was this sort of accidental-incidental way that early psoriasis treatments were discovered.

Treatment evolved with those incidental discoveries, including traditional medications such as cortisone and cyclosporine, which are still prescribed frequently for mild to moderate psoriasis.

The first generation of biologics to treat psoriasis entered the market in the early 2000s. They have fewer side effects than traditional medications (the cyclosporine Im currently taking can impact liver and kidney function), are generally well tolerated, and the majority of patients don't mind injecting themselves.

But they still carry the risks of immune suppression, including reactivation of tuberculosis, and increased susceptibility to viral infections and certain cancers.

Immune proteins evolved to protect us from infection, explained immunologist Dr. Sarah Gaffen of the University of Pittsburgh. So when you start blocking them, youre going to raise the specter of some sort of infectious disease.

The good news is that highly focused drugs, like tildrakizumab, do mean greater improvement on psoriasis symptoms with far fewer side effects. Gaffen refers to the targeted nature of biologics as exquisitely specific.

And because psoriasis isnt a life or death matter, patients who are enrolled in research protocols can also be put on placebos with limited risk to their overall health. Thats not an option with arthritis or Crohns disease, where irreversible harm might be done without ongoing treatment. And, as Kimball added, The results are right in front of your face with psoriasis. You can see such a dramatic improvement.

More good news: In drug development these days, psoriasis has been gaining traction as a proof of principle disease, according to Kimball. If a medication did well on psoriasis, it was pretty likely to do well in other [immune] areas.

"The paradigm has completely switched," she added. "Psoriasis was last in line 10 or 15 years ago. Now its often first.

High Hopes, High Prices

Now for the not-so-good news, long familiar to anyone who takes biologics: the price tags.

While tildrakizumab isnt yet on the market, other biologics are, and I was recently introduced to the challenge of acquiring them.

I was having a severe psoriasis flare. Red, cracked, inflamed skin, so painful it was difficult to bend my arms or sit. My dermatologist prescribed Humira.

The prescription was filled before my insurance company had a chance to determine coverage. I asked the pharmacist how much the medication would cost if I paid out of pocket.

She looked at the computer screen, and then at me. Then again at the computer. I raised my eyebrows.

Do you want to guess? she asked me.

$600, I ventured.

She shook her head.

$6,000?

She shook her head again. I shrugged. She paused. $30,000.

$30,000? I repeated. I might as well buy a car.

You should, she said. Because thats not even for the whole year.

Kimball confirmed the cost. Usually we expect these drugs at list prices to run around $50,000 a year. They are very expensive drugs, she said.

Needless to say, I postponed the Humira. I may start on it this fall, when it's fully covered.

In 2016, Humira grossed over $16 billion, putting it in first place for the best-selling drug of the year, according to Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News, a trade publication.

According to the WHO report, treatments for psoriasis around the world --whether simple creams or complex biologics --are either unavailable or are not reimbursed for the majority of patients. And its hard to imagine anyone paying $50,000 to Walgreens out of a checking account.

Yet biologics offer the greatest advances yet in treating immune-regulated diseases. And tildrakizumab, while developed for moderate to severe psoriasis, may be one that also holds the potential to benefit other diseases in the future.

I hope those of us who need it will have access. Kimball recognizes this hurdle: "Figuring out how to get this right," she said, "so we ensure access to the patients who need these medications, is one of the things that absolutely keeps me up at night."

Beth Jones is a Boston-based writer and educator.

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Progress On Psoriasis, From 'Last In Line' To Often First, But At A Price - WBUR

More Businesses Would Promote Human-Trafficking Awareness Under Jacksonville Bill – WJCT NEWS

A Jacksonville City Councilman wants more types of businesses to be required to post human-trafficking awareness signs.

Although a 2015 state law requires the signs in strip clubs and massage parlors, labor trafficking often happens in different types of establishments.

Under a city ordinance, Jacksonville massage parlors and adult entertainment spots can be fined $500 if they dont post signs, printed out online, with trafficking awareness information, including the phone number for the National Human Trafficking Resource Center hotline: 1 (888) 373-7888.

After City Council adopted the policy last year, Councilman Tommy Hazouri has a new bill.

(It) would increase the awareness signage for human trafficking around the city, specifically at businesses that are hotbeds for human trafficking, he said.

The bill adds hotels and restaurants to the list of establishments required to post the signs under state and city laws.

Northeast Florida attorney Crystal Freed, who almost exclusively represents victims of trafficking, agrees with the expansion.

I think its a move in a positive direction because its adding establishments other than the typical venues that you find sex trafficking, Freed said.

She said the original city ordinance ignored restaurant and hotel workers, as well as support staff like maintenance workers, who are targets for labor trafficking.

And Freed said she hopes Hazouris bill isnt the end of the conversation because the community needs better education about how to spot trafficking. Much of it happens in home services, like housekeeping or lawn care, she said.

This March, Jacksonville Sheriff's Office Lt. Kevin Goff told the City Council that labor trafficking is 10 times harder to investigate than sex trafficking. And though Hazouri is targeting labor trafficking with his hotel signage, Undersheriff Pat Ivey told Council last year that sex trafficking is prevalent in the more than 150 hotels in Jacksonville.

Florida ranks third in the country for the number of human trafficking cases documented by the national resource center database. Last year, the top referrer of callers to the hotline was a Department of the State Know Your Rights pamphlet given to those who get work visas.

Hazouri says hes working out some logistics of his bill, like who would be responsible for monitoring restaurants and whether all of them would have to post the signs. He said hell soon schedule a workshop with other Council members, the state attorney's office and JSO.

State law already requires the signs be posted in other well-traveled places, including highway rest areas, emergency rooms and airports.

Lindsey Kilbride can be reached at lkilbride@wjct.org, 904-358-6359 or on Twitter at @lindskilbride.

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More Businesses Would Promote Human-Trafficking Awareness Under Jacksonville Bill - WJCT NEWS

World’s Sharpest Laser Created by Scientists Can Travel 2 Million Miles Before It Falters – Newsweek

The sharpest laser in the world has been created by scientists, with the light it emits able to travel 2 billion miles before it goes out of sync.

This breakthrough has widespread applications, and it could be used for high-precision experiments to make atomic clocks more accurate, to collect better radio astronomy data and to test Einsteins theory of relativity.

The first laser was built in 1960. Since then they have captured the public imagination and have been prominent in popular culturefrom James Bond to Star Wars. Lasers emit light through optical amplificationit is an acronym for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation.

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Being able to focus a laser on a tight spot has numerous applications in science, and lasers now feature in many aspects of industry, medicine and information technology. For example, the discovery of gravitational waves (ripples in space-time predicted by Einstein 100 years ago) was made possible by beaming two lasers into space to detect tiny fluctuations in space-time.

A laser beam from the ESOs Paranal Observatory pointed at the center of the Milky Way. ESO/Y. Beletsky

It was once thought the first lasers to be developed would not require refining, but as the need for increasing accuracy grew, scientists and engineers had to develop more precise lasers.

Now, researchers from Germany and the U.S. have created the sharpest laser in the world.

Light from a laser ideally has one fixed frequency (or wavelength) and a linewidththe width of the band of frequencies of radiation. But the linewidth of most lasers is too big to carry out high-precision experiments. As a result, scientists must find ways to develop lasers with greater frequency stability and a narrower linewidth.

In a study published in Physical Review Letters, the team announced the development of a laser with a linewidth of just 10 megahertz.

Thomas Legero, from the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt in Germany, was one of the physicists involved in the research. The smaller the linewidth of the laser, the more accurate the measurement of the atoms frequency in an optical clock, he said in a statement. This new laser will enable us to decisively improve the quality of our clocks.

One of the two lasers built. PTB

As well as its small linewidth, the team also showed that the frequency of the light emitted from the laser was more precise than anything achieved before. They found it only goes out of sync after 11 seconds of beaming it. This means the light has traveled 2 million miles10 times the distance from Earth to the sunbefore it went out of sync.

The Americanand German researchers are now using the lasers to improve optical atomic clocks, which could potentially be used to tell the time with unparalleled precision. At present, GPS devices, communication systems, power grids and financial networks rely on atomic clocks to synchronize. Optical atomic clocks are thought to be a far more accurate way of timekeeping, but creating them is extremely difficult.

In the future, Legero said, it is planned to disseminate this light also within a European network. This plan would allow even more precise comparisons between the optical clocks in Braunschweig and the clocks of our European colleagues in Paris and London.

They also plan to reduce the linewidth even furtherand are aiming to get it below 1 MHz in the future.

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World's Sharpest Laser Created by Scientists Can Travel 2 Million Miles Before It Falters - Newsweek

Trump travel ban: Who counts as a ‘bona fide’ relative? – BBC News


BBC News
Trump travel ban: Who counts as a 'bona fide' relative?
BBC News
President Donald Trump's temporary travel ban is now in effect, and has sparked a debate about who should count as a close relative. Under the rules, the US may refuse entry to refugees unless they can prove a "bona fide relationship" with a person, ...

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Trump travel ban: Who counts as a 'bona fide' relative? - BBC News

As Trump travel ban goes into effect, lawsuits begin – USA TODAY

Hours after President Donald Trump's travel ban was put in place, reactions were mixed at airports around the country. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

Activists protest outside the Tom Bradley International Terminal at Los Angeles International Airport on June 29, 2017, in Los Angeles.(Photo: Mark J. Terrill, AP)

President Trump's scaled-back travel ban against sixmajority-Muslim nations operated without disruptions at airports Fridayas opponents challenged its restrictive rules on who is permitted entry into the USA.

The American Civil Liberties Union and immigration advocacy groups reported no big problems with the ban, which went into effect Thursday, unlike Trump'sfirst, broader order that left hundreds of travelers from abroadin legal limbo in late January.

"I am not aware of any refugees being detained as a result of this executive order," Betsy Fisher, policy director for the International Refugee Assistance Project, said Friday.

After the Supreme Court allowed the revised ban to go into effect, legal challenges quickly surfaced. Hawaii's attorney general filed a lawsuit late Thursday to force the Trump administration to clarify how it created its list of people who will be banned and those who won't. The concern is that the administration is setting rules that may limit entry more than the Supreme Court intended.

In a ruling Monday, the court allowed the administration to enforce its 90-day travel ban against nationals of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen, so the government can tighten its screening to keep terrorists from sneaking into the country. The court ordered the administration to allow entry to people from those countries who could prove a "bona fide" relationship with a U.S. person or entity.

The State Department concluded that foreigners who have aparent, spouse, fiance, child, adult son or daughter, son-in-law, daughter-in-law or sibling in the USAqualified under that definition. The department said foreigners' grandparents, grandchildren, aunts, uncles, nieces andnephews did not qualify and would be banned.

Read more:

Who can (and cant) travel under the new travel ban

Trump's scaled-back travel ban goes into effect

Supreme Court travel ban ruling: What it means

The State Department said Thursday that it used a definition of family written into federal law under the Immigration and Nationality Act. Fisher said the administration clearly soughtthe most restrictive definition it could find, and she warned that it could violate the directives from the Supreme Court.

"It's quite clear that the relationships intended to be protected were broader than just one degree of separation," Fisher said.

Lee Gelernt, an ACLU attorney involved in legal challenges against Trump's travel ban, saidmore lawsuits could follow if the State Department does not expand its definition of a "bona fide" relationship.

"We are still hoping the government will make it unnecessary to proceed with litigationby rethinking how they are implementing the Supreme Court's decision," Gelernt said.

The limited ban will remain in effect while the Supreme Court considerswhether the ban is unconstitutional by targeting Muslims. The court could hear arguments after it reconvenes in October or dismiss the case if Trump lets the ban expire after 90 days because new screening procedures are in place.

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As Trump travel ban goes into effect, lawsuits begin - USA TODAY

How to stay pro-tech when social media can eat young lives – New Scientist

Having a new social machinery to hand is no guarantor of success

Amy Lombard/The New York Times/Redux/Eyevine

By Pat Kane

FACEBOOKS Mark Zuckerberg is king of all he surveys in social media. His next horizon is near-mythical: techno-telepathy. Direct mind-to-mind contact is the ultimate communications technology, the mogul says.

Youll think a text or update and send it, affirmed his experimental tech director, Regina Dugan. The old Arthur C. Clarke line that any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic seems evergreen in 2017.

Look around your streets or better, a mall, lobby or campus and youll see a generation of humans already deeply entangled in, and entranced by, their communication devices. As the next incessant blink, buzz or chirp pulls you towards the touchscreen yet again, havent you ever felt the urge accompanied by a twinge of your carpal tunnel to just respond, or receive, in a purely mental way?

Zuckerbergs aspiration to go from iPhone to psy-phone seems more like a shift in degree than kind. Yet what Ray Kurzweil once called the age of spiritual machines sometimes has to deal with the sweaty, fleshy, emotional reality of human beings as they are, particularly younger ones budding through those (so far) unavoidable heaves and surges we know as adolescence and early adulthood.

Going by these two fascinating ethnographies, even the digitally naturalised Generation Z (the kids of Gen X) are hardly ready for the direct and pure mingling of minds. Not while theres selfie-taking, sexting, cyberbullying or Yik Yakking to be done, day after day.

Yik Yak a controversial Twitter-style app which shut down in April this year provides Donna Freitass The Happiness Effect with its malevolent subtitle. Through hundreds of interviews with undergrads and graduates in 13 US colleges, Freitas lays out the regime of nervy identity construction through social media that occupies much of their emotional lives.

Nervy identity construction via social media occupies much of students emotional lives

Whether its due to their awareness that their timeline is a potential CV, or that their likes are an indicator of social status on campus, they are under pressure to display their best and most positive selves at all times. Now you dont have to wait for your 10-year high school reunion to show off how great your life is, says junior student Brandy. Its like that every day.

The anonymised Yik Yak app released a torrent of mutual abuse through some of Freitass campuses. Out from under the compulsion to display public happiness, the Repressed returned with a vengeance. Yik Yak was like a bad soap opera, said one. Another abandoned the service because I was overwhelmed by the racism and homophobia that exists on my campus.

So many of the tales here are about trying to establish some kind of autonomy over, or even just etiquette around, the endless connective demands of social media and smartphones. Ethics and mores are being established on the fly. Among Freitass students, the general attitude towards visually led dating apps where you display your wares to engage in hook-ups was an extended eewwww. For these febrile, nervy souls, steamy liaisons still need sociable encounters first.

Consistent with this reserve, the new ritual for courtly romance would seem to be the declaration that ones new boy/girlfriend is now Facebook official. When a couple agree to change their relationship status on the platform, they are (in one male students words) standing on top of a mountain and shouting it out to the world.

So far, so sweet, so familiar. The ecstasies of online communication are tempered by recognisable real-world (and real-body) anxieties and modesties.

Freitas is obviously a good pastor and counsellor to these fluttery kids, even as she mines them for research. But her matronising tone does remind you that Facebooks founding circumstance was as a campus social network, profiting from playing around with the status anxieties of Harvard University students.

The idea that the stifling managerialism behind Zuckerbergs network is seeking to enter your intimate mental life, at some stage in the neurotech future, feels like something that would invite neo-Luddism, if not outright rebellion.

One might have a romantic notion the agenda-setting SF novels of Cory Doctorow come to mind that the kids from the wrong side of the tracks would be the ones who demanded something different, less managed, more edgy, from their communication platforms. (Freitass students are clearly attending prestigious universities, where pressures to succeed keeps things normative.)

Jacqueline Ryan Vickerys book Worried About the Wrong Things has a cast of quirky, eccentric and talented young digital users, circulating in and around a working-class school near the Mexican border, with the pseudonym Freeway High. But the tale it tells is how, amid circumstances of socio-economic distress, education fails to be the haven that can generate possibilities and progress. And one predictor of school failure is whether it uses digital technology from a harm-driven rather than an opportunity-driven perspective.

The book has an intriguing tension. The authors teacherly interests are evident she promotes a connected learning model that imagines it can bring all the learning moments of a pupil, wherever and whenever they happen, into one educational framework.

Petty and futile constraints on classroom tech use sets a tone of defeatism and alienation

Yet the stories that unfold when she talks to the Freeway High students are pretty difficult to assimilate into any inclusive teaching system. In complete contrast to the compulsive communicators of Freitass book, two sensitive young Latino high-school film-makers (Sergio and Javier) often chose not to post their material on YouTube because they are insecure about its quality, and worried it might harm their career prospects, precarious and tentative as they are.

Freeway High has a classic teacher-liberator of the Dead Poets Society type a Mr Lopez who runs evening Cinematic Art Projects and Digital Media Clubs for the pupils. But, as Vickery charts in great and persuasive detail, the schools prevailing harm-driven view of social media muffles and excludes the digital creativity that already thrums through these kids lives. Petty and futile constraints on classroom tech use, and on the kind of digital material that children can bring in from their own enthusiasms, sets a tone of defeatism and alienation among some of the Freeway High kids.

The author has an obvious favourite pupil, a disruptive, deprived but poetic girl called Selena, with whom she spends considerable time. But she hears later that Selena has dropped out of school in the midst of her college preparations, and now has no connection with her. The book is strewn with tales of exclusion and struggle, in which parental backgrounds are chaotic and the demands of care, commuting and finding a place to live bear down too heavily on digitally ambitious youth.

Across both studies, and no matter the social positioning of each set of users, these young people evidently know they have a new kind of tangible social machinery in their hands (and minds): a machinery made of devices, networks and digital information, with which they can make a mark, pooling their knowledge and consciousness.

As responsible pedagogues, Vickery and Freitas are institutionalised (and institutionalising). And with Mark Zuckerberg as with any Silicon Valley visionary mogul you have to follow the profit-driven interest, not just gawp at the transhuman ambition.

Somewhere between the caring educators and the corporate disruptor, Generation Z is forging its own new society out of a digital revolution still in its early days. The streets will have their uses. And young, yearning bodies wont be ignored, either. The Happiness Effect: How social media is driving a generation to appear perfect at any cost Donna Freitas Oxford University Press

Worried About the Wrong Things: Youth, risk, and opportunity in the digital world Jacqueline Ryan Vickery MIT Press

This article appeared in print under the headline Best behaviour?

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Mark Zuckerberg’s top 5 personality traits, according to an IBM supercomputer – CNBC

Other notable traits he apparently possesses include modesty, assertiveness and altruism. Presumably, at least some of these characteristics have contributed to his achievements and success.

To arrive at these results, Paysa "gathered speeches, essays, books, the transcripts of interviews and other forms of communication produced by those highlighted above." It put over 2,500 words "through the Watson Personality Insights API."

"Personality Insights extracts personality characteristics based on how a person writes," according to IBM Watson's website. "You can use the service to match individuals to other individuals, opportunities, and products, or tailor their experience with personalized messaging and recommendations."

While it makes sense that former Harvard dropout Zuckerberg's top personality trait is his intellect, others, like his melancholy, may seem more surprising. Either way, the data provide a fascinating look into the mind of a self-made billionaire whose goal has been to "connect the world," one Facebook profile at a time.

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See also: Mark Zuckerberg, Satya Nadella and Bill Gates share this crucial personality trait for achieving success

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Anger as Scots patients miss out on ‘breakthrough’ stem cell therapy offered by NHS England – Herald Scotland

LUCY Clarke was facing a downhill spiral when she flew to Russia to undergo a cutting edge stem cell transplant.

Two years on she says the procedure not only halted her illness in its tracks, but reversed much of the damage inflicted by multiple sclerosis.

The 41-year-old from Inverness is now backing crowdfunding efforts so that her friend and neighbour, Rona Tynan, can receive the same life-changing operation in Mexico before she becomes too ill to qualify.

Mrs Tynan, 50, has until the end of August to raise the 60,000 needed.

However, both are angry at a cross-border divide which means that a small number of MS patients in England can undergo the treatment for free on the NHS, while in Scotland despite having some of the highest rates of MS in the world the health service has refused patients' funding and no clinical trials are planned.

Mrs Clarke, a chemistry graduate and acupuncturist, began investigating AHSCT (autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation) in 2014 after her condition progressed from relapsing-remitting to secondary progressive MS. At the time her son was three and she feared ending up in a wheelchair.

Although the treatment has been available overseas for decades, it has never been routinely available on the NHS and is considered unproven by many neurologists.

It is also a highly aggressive therapy, using intensive chemotherapy to strip out sufferers faulty immune systems before replenishing it with stem cells harvested from their own bone marrow or donor tissue. Despite the risks, many patients including Mrs Clarke credit it with transforming their lives.

She underwent the procedure in Moscow over a period of four weeks in April and May 2015. She said: From when my son was three to when I had the transplant, my walking had deteriorated, I needed to use a walking stick all the time, I had very poor balance, debilitating fatigue, I had brain fog, I used to slur my words.

"Im left-handed and my left hand was really weak so my writing was bad. Other things would come and go numbness in my legs, tingling, cramps in my calves, sore and painful legs. The majority of them have gone since the transplant.

I noticed quite quick improvements in things like balance. The biggest thing is not really having fatigue, and the brain fog completely went. I stopped slurring my words quite quickly after treatment. I was more alert. I had more concentration, more focus. Within six months the shaking in my left arm had gone. Ive still got drop foot in my right leg and I still use a walking stick, but once youve got to the stage of secondary progressive it all gets a bit scary. Things are going downhill and youre told theres nothing that can be done, so really my goal from treatment was just to halt the progression to know I wasnt getting any worse. Thankfully, and luckily, I have seen lots of benefits.

Eighteen months on, MRI brain scans show no signs of disease progression and while Mrs Clarke stresses that the treatment is neither a magic bullet nor a walk in the park, she is supporting Rona Tynans bid to undergo the same surgery in October.

Mrs Tynan, a retired Metropolitan police sergeant and mother-of-two from Inverness, also has secondary progressive MS. She is already in a wheelchair and fears that unless she undergoes the treatment soon she will become too ill. She said: Im a 7.5 out of 10 on the disease progression scale, where 10 is death. Most clinics stop taking you at seven, but Mexico just raised it to 8.5. Thats brilliant for people like myself, but I cant afford to get any more ill.

So far, Mrs Tynans fundraising page on JustGiving has raised nearly 4000, but she is frustrated that more is not being done to help Scottish patients. In England, clinical trials are ongoing in London and Sheffield but a small number of patients with relapsing-remitting MS can be referred for the treatment off-trial, for free, on the NHS. In Scotland, however, eligible patients have been turned down for NHS funding.

Mrs Tynan said: It seems crazy to me that Brits are going to Chicago and Mexico and Russia for a treatment that in the long-run could save the NHS loads of money. Scotland is one of the worst places in the world for MS yet in England you can get this treatment for free. Why arent we fighting in Scotland to get this?

Mrs Clarke added: Its very unfair. It just seems a no brainer to me why they wouldnt make it available not for all patients but for some. The Scottish Government said referral decisions were "for clinicians".

A spokesman said: "Whilst the vast majority of healthcare provided by NHS Scotland is delivered in Scotland, NHS boards can commission treatment in other countries on an ad hoc basis, particularly where highly specialised treatment is involved. Decisions to refer patients are for clinicians, based on agreed guidelines, which ensure best practice, equity of access and consistency of treatment for all patients.

"HSCT is not currently widely available anywhere on the NHS, but people from Scotland can participate in trials held in other centres across the UK, where clinically determined appropriate and beneficial."

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Anger as Scots patients miss out on 'breakthrough' stem cell therapy offered by NHS England - Herald Scotland

Is stem cell therapy approved in Singapore? – The Straits Times

Reader Charles Wang wrote to ask if stem cell therapy - the use of stem cells to treat various medical conditions - is approved in Singapore. Mr Wang also asked where one could seek this treatment if it is available. Health reporter Linette Lai answered.

Any new treatment must be backed up by sufficient scientific evidence to ensure that it is safe and effective. However, there is still not enough scientific evidence available for stem cell therapy to be approved as a mainstream treatment in Singapore.

A Ministry of Health spokesman said: "To date, stem cell therapy has not been substantiated by sufficient clinical evidence as a form of mainstream treatment for any diseases or ailments, and it is not available as a treatment in our public hospitals.

"If any registered medical practitioners or institutions want to administer stem cells as a form of medical treatment, it would have to be conducted within the context of clinical trials."

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Sinkholes, solar and spirituality: Here are some Florida laws that take effect July 1 – Bradenton Herald


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Sinkholes, solar and spirituality: Here are some Florida laws that take effect July 1
Bradenton Herald
After 11 bills hit the chopping block, 234 Florida measures made it through the 2017 legislative session. Some measures will help local issues, like funding Manatee County projects to combat opioid and flooding issues; others will have a statewide ...

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Sinkholes, solar and spirituality: Here are some Florida laws that take effect July 1 - Bradenton Herald

Religion and spirituality key to forging nation’s identity, says Najib – Malay Mail Online

The prime minister saidthe first principle of the Rukun Negara, namely Trust in God, was at the core of building the identity of each Malaysian. Reuters picKUALA LUMPUR, June 30 Datuk Seri Najib Razak today said religious and spiritual aspects were crucial to forming the characters of individualsplayingan important role in the development of the countrys identity.

The prime minister saidthe first principle of the Rukun Negara, namely Trust in God, was at the core of building the identity of each Malaysian.

When we hold fast to the teachings of religion, it can shape a prosperous life.

Its obvious, that we will act as responsible human beings and upholdpeace and harmony in the country, beginning from obedience and trust in our respective religions, Najib said.

Najib said this in the latest post on his official blog, paying tribute to social media users who have shared their aspirations on religious and spiritual affairs pertaining to the 2050 National Transformation (TN50) plan.

Najib said the suggestions provided by social media users were very encouragingand reflected the enthusiasm and support given by Malaysians, especially from theTN50 generation.

I would like to say thank you forthe proposals, and I hope that more Malaysians will take part in the TN50 dialogue to achieve our goal of making Malaysia among the top countries in the world in terms of the economy, peoples well-being, and also innovation, added Najib.

Meanwhile, Najib also shared several of the suggestions on his post, including one byAhmad Khalid Yong that Muslims should referto the Holy Quran as a source of knowledge, including in research and development.

Alhamdulillah, we have taken measures and made various efforts towards upholding theQuran in Malaysia, from the Wasatiyyah approach to the establishment of the NasyrulQuran Complex in Putrajaya, which makes us theworlds second largest producers and printers of the Quran afterSaudi Arabia.

Among other suggestions shared by Najib was fromCynthia, who said that religious places of worship such as mosques, temples, churches, and gurdwarashould organise moreprogrammes and activities involving themulti-racial community,to closethe gap. Bernama

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The Kabbalah Centre is LA’s Answer to Achieving Spiritual Enlightenment – NORCAL

Kabbalah Centre International is a renowned nonprofit organization that is located in Los Angeles, California. The Center provides courses on Kabbalistic teachings and the Zohar through online avenues, study groups worldwide, regional and city-based centers. Kabbalah center international presentation was developed by Philip Berg and his wife, Karen Berg. It comprises of multi-ethnic and international staff of teachers whose main aim is to offer Kabbalah studies and guidance to the students. The worldwide student community receives the studies via different platforms.

Previously, Rabbis had a belief that the mysteries of Kabbalah was complex and could only be taught to religious students and in this case the male students who are above forty years of age. This belief led to the notion that the Kabbalah center was a perversion of the ancient and reserved mystic tradition of Judaism.

History of the Kabbalah Centre

The first master of Kabbalist was Rav Yehuda Ashlag, and he planted the roots in the year 1922 and was the first one to bring modernity to the closely guarded wisdom. His aim was to make it more accessible. He managed to pass the mantle of leadership and publishing to his student known as Rav Yehuda Tzvi Brandwein. Later on, his student passed the mantle to Rav Berg. The revelation happened thousands of years ago, and the prime focus was on acquiring the once hidden knowledge of God. The knowledge comprised of Gods design for both the seen and the unseen universe. It is however intriguing because it is explained as the secret wisdom. Also, it is referred to as the Jewish mysticism. Initially, it was held in reserve for the elite group that comprised of the married men who were above forty. They represented scholars of the Jewish law, and the knowledge was passed through oral tradition from Adam to Abraham to Moses. Most of the Jews did not advocate for the widespread dissemination.

The primary reason for forbidding the dissemination was because Kabbalah dealt with matters about God. They had never been revealed in Torah. The wisdom had turned to the spiritual perception of God and made it more sensitive. During the 18th century, the study was more cloistered once the rabbis and the other respected Kabbalists banned the unsupervised access to the writings. Additionally, the invention of the printing press led to the distribution of books, but many Rabbis kept the Jewish mystical writing in the handwritten form. This move eliminated misinterpretation from the unlearned.

Kabbalah centres have attracted quite a number of both Jews and Non-Jew. They embraced the growing audience and welcomed people all over the globe. Currently, there are more than forty centers that are dedicated to the Kabbalah practice.

The practice of Kabbalah

Kabbalah experts explain the comeback of Judaisms mystical interpretation of the Bible. The relationship between God and man was a trend sometimes back. Most people were talking about it, and how wonderful Kabbalah was, and they would Google to see what was going on and the new interpretation. Madonna is otherwise known as Esther (her Kabbalah name) talked about how wonderful the practice was, and she went on and on. People would argue that those were the days because later on Kabbalah was replaced with cooler trends such as the ALS bucket challenge and the man-buns. However, the 90s can still manage to come back and spark the latest trends. Kabbalah center and the Wiccan community is making a profit from the sale of potions and several other witchy products.

Kabbalah amulets could be the trending magical protection gears. The practice also involves art that is vintage and ranges from dcor, framing and hanging. It is something that will make your house look beautiful with a touch of vintage. Kabbalah art stands the chance of being the famous home dcor in 2017. There are also board games that serve as a reminder that people can have fun using the traditional methods. The practical artifacts represent a rising trend. The mystical 19th-century manuscript enables the users to discover their fate. Also, individuals can build their own golem in team tag which is famous for the lovers of tabletop gaming. Though it is too early to tell, some people feel that Kabbalah could rise to stardom in 2017. The enthusiast can use Kabbalah to tap into other trends that are defining 2017.

According to this article in The Guardian, Kabbalah Centre volunteer program represents the foundation of the Kabbalah Center. It is a safe and organized platform for students to discover the joy of giving back. The center mentors the students, work on cleanup activities in the beaches, and feed the homeless and visit the sick. They are dedicated to finding ways that they can serve the community. Also, the volunteers distribute Zohar and plan activities in the communities. They have managed to bring to together people with different skills and passion for the unlimited volunteering activities. Although they represent diversity, they are joined with the commitment to improve peoples lives both locally and globally. They can achieve this by improving their lives first. Sharing makes the students passionate and enthusiastic about making a difference in the community.

Kabbalah practice emphasizes on meditation within Judaism. It is the central practice of Jewish mysticism. Furthermore, it represents the experiential side of Kabbalah making it the primary source of development of the Judaism belief and mystic thought. Various traditions relate to the meditative practice. Kabbalah practice is designed to help the reader in learning and to extract the meditation practices from the classic text of Kabbalah. The students will be in a position of understanding the profound mystical and theological insights that come from spiritual experience.

Meditation allows one to be more accustomed to their thoughts, feelings and other sensations. This practice of mediation has gained popularity over the years and is believed to have several positive effects. It is thought that, people who meditate are more relaxed and think rationally unlike the others. The increased audiences in the established centers take on Kabbalah as a method of attaining mystical experiences. The evolution has made it possible for the practice to spread and to reach to more people in the world.

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The Kabbalah Centre is LA's Answer to Achieving Spiritual Enlightenment - NORCAL