Montana Jobs Not Well Positioned – Big Sky Business Journal – Big Sky Business Journal

Attracting a more educated and younger labor force to Montana is necessary to shore up the states economy, but to do so is more complicated than it may seem. And, is Montana sure that thats what it wants? quizzed Bryce Ward, an economist with the Bureau of Business and Economic Research (BBER) during the BBERs 42 Annual Montana Economic Outlook for 2017. Jobs of the future will tend to be more knowledge based, and while Montana has a proportional share of those kinds of jobs, its low population and open spaces is not the kind of place that sustains strong development of the kinds of businesses that develop high- wage and high- skill knowledge jobs. Areas that attract the college educated and the young tend to be faster growing in population, housing prices and wage growth. They have higher wages and a high level of quality of life. Entrepreneurs are more successful and the economies of those regions are more resilient to economic downturns. Montanas status is not well posed for the future. Most of the kinds of jobs available are jobs in categories that are projected to shrink over the next decade, except for low-wage service jobs. We need a vibrant culture of entrepreneurship, said Ward, who then asked, How do we encourage that? But then he cautioned, Be careful what you wish for, because if you succeed it could change other things that cause other problems. Better job opportunities would make Montana more attractive. As a result, population would increase and/or the cost of living would increase. A higher cost of living would make Montana less attractive, especially to people whose incomes do not rise proportionally. More people would increase congestion and may affect Montanas quality of life. There are three things that people look for when they chose where they want to live. People want to live in a place because it offers great jobs, has an affordable cost of living, and an amazing quality of life, explained Ward, adding, No place can offer all three. Historically, economic prosperity has been tied to natural resource development, but that link has weakened in the more recent era. A regions success is increasingly tied to human creativity, said Ward or a knowledge -based economy. Its not that natural resources are not important, but technology has allowed those industries to produce more with less employment. Montana is hampered in being able to address the problems of needing high-paying and more knowledge-based job opportunities, by the fact that Montanans live in relatively small places that are isolated from large metro areas, said Ward, which creates two problems that reinforce each other a small pool of skilled workers makes it difficult to build successful firms, which means fewer high paying jobs for skilled workers, which means more of those workers leave the state, maintaining that small pool of skilled workers. Looking at net migration numbers, it appears that people do want to live in Montana. Montana ranks 14th among states as a good place to live. As to quality of life, it ranked sixth, exceeded only by Hawaii, California, Vermont, Colorado and Oregon. The states population is growing by about 5 people per 1000 over the last 15 years and in Yellowstone County it has grown 38 percent. The average annual rate of growth for Yellowstone has been 1.38 percent over the past 20 years. While Yellowstone County has the highest population, Gallatin County has grown at a faster rate of 1.98 percent, and Flathead at 1.61, Missoula at 1.44 percent and Lewis and County at 1.40. Montana has the fewest people in the country who would like to move elsewhere. When asked if they could move would they, only 13 percent said they would the lowest response in the country. The cost of living is below the national average at about 97.7 percent of the national average - -2.3 percent below. Missoula is 95.8 percent the national average, and Great Falls 93.8 percent. Much of the costs of living is driven by the cost of housing. The median Montana household pays $750 less in housing costs than the national average. Yellowstone Countys cost of housing, at $9600 annually, is slightly above the statewide average and below the national average of $10,000. It is $2500 less than Bozeman and Gallatin County. But housing prices in Billings and Montana may not be as cheap as they used to be. Housing prices over the past 25 years appreciated at a rate that is the third fastest in the nation, and they have increased faster than the increase in income. That creates challenges for new people. Income levels in Montana are a problem, even though wages have been growing at a rate faster than the national average. Income is low in Montana. Personal income per capita and median household income is about 87 percent the U.S. level. Median earnings for workers over age 24 are essentially tied for last among the states. There is, however, wide variation in income levels across the state. Income levels in Yellowstone County are about equal to the national average. The disparity between the cost of housing and income levels in Montana, plummets the state to 41st in affordability. The ratio between the two measurements has changed from 2.46 in 1990 to 4.10 in 2015. Since most Montanans live in counties with very high price-income ratios, 58 percent say that living in Montana is unaffordable. Ward noted, however, that people continue to come to the state more so than leave which he attributed to the quality of life. But not everyone is equally impressed. It turns out that quality of life and community amenities are not enough to keep young people and the college educated here. They leave mostly because of a lack of opportunity and income. Most families have adult children who have left the state in search of something better. Montana experiences a net outmigration of people with college degrees. While in total Montana has more people moving in than out; among people with high education, Montana loses 35 people per 1000 population, annually that amounts to two-thirds of native Montanans with a degree. If people with college degrees did not leave the state there would be 17,000 more people here, said Ward. The income gap between Montana and the rest of the country is much larger for college educated workers. Median earnings in Yellowstone County as a percent of US level by education is 82 percent. For the state as a whole it is 77 percent. It is 90 percent in Silver Bow County, 84 percent in Lewis and Clark County, and 85 percent in Cascade County. Gallatin County is 79 percent and Missoula, 76 percent.

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Montana Jobs Not Well Positioned - Big Sky Business Journal - Big Sky Business Journal

Radical Transformation of Network Operations Transformation Through Automation – Cisco Blogs (blog)

Cisco Blog > SP360: Service Provider

It is a disruptive time for communications service providers, and more is coming along the way. So why not disrupt it ourselves?

Service providers must contend with rising costs due to applications explosive bandwidth consumption, commoditization and erosion of traditional business, new business models challenging existing operational processes, tough regulation, and increased competition from non-traditional players. While capital costs are a big item on the books, the operating expense can easily be 4-5X the capex spend.

In short: Network scale and bandwidth requirements are exploding.

And as we have seen over the past years, service providers have to focus on both lowering cost and finding new sources of revenue growth at the same time.

So, where is the good news? Pervasive video, gaming, virtual reality, digitization, enterprise IT services and IoT offer great new opportunities. The foundation for succeeding in these new markets is speed and agility in operating all aspects of the network, cloud, applications and security with service delivery velocity.

Implementing a strategy for network automation that saves OPEX and enhances velocity is essential. We have seen several technologies maturing over the past years that provide the required agility into networks that are part of this strategy.

Software Defined Networking (SDN) and its associated SDN controllers bring advanced programmability into the network. However, the technical focus initially was all about a protocol. Now, as technology continues to evolve, the discussion is shifting to operations and automation.

One of the enabling technologies to support this shift is Network Function Virtualization (NFV). NFV separates the control and user plane and allows service providers to expand into automation and manage increased network flexibility and deployment options. If you thought a physical network was tricky, think about a virtual or hybrid network, where functions can spin up at any time anywhere in the network.

SDN and NFV can help combat cost challenges while rapidly delivering capabilities for new business opportunities. However, for a full automation of the network operations, more capabilities are needed.

Cisco is complementing these technologies with Cloud Scale model-driven telemetry for real-time visibility into the network. WAN Automation Engine (WAE), Network Services Orchestrator (NSO) and EPN Manager (EPN-M) capabilities will take network automation to the next level. The foundation will be a modular software structure leveraging deep expertise in multi-domain networks to tailor technologies and drive tangible business outcomes that can be realized now. Innovation that leverages massive real-time visibility, and machine learning techniques will completely transform network operations from a descriptive to a proactive model.

However, the automation challenge will not be solved with modular integration alone. As service providers define their business cases, they will see a shift from developing and testing technology to driving integrated solutions with immediate, quantifiable business outcomes. Solutions like NFV Infrastructure (NFVI) and Management and Orchestration (MANO) automate the entire NFV stack. Virtual Managed Solutions enable service providers to deliver SD-WAN services to their enterprise customers faster. And solutions can include components from multiple vendors and best of breed open-source.

This is an exciting time, and we have many more solutions to come for network automation. Through implementing a comprehensive strategy, our customers network operations are experiencing a radical transformation a transformation that can boost service velocity, with the potential to completely change the operating expense and balance sheet for a service provider now.

Service providers are seeing a tremendous opportunity to leverage and adapt their networks to serve as a digital innovation platform, building a business partner ecosystem that can deliver innovative and profitable services to their end consumers.

Cisco is the best partner in this digitization journey. By helping service providers build cloud-scale networks and services through intelligent automation, we are enabling them to create a new kind of network platform that can position them for success now and into the future.

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Radical Transformation of Network Operations Transformation Through Automation - Cisco Blogs (blog)

WAN AutomationNot Just Another New Release, but a Game … – Cisco Blogs (blog)

Cisco Blog > SP360: Service Provider

Cisco WAN Automation Engine (WAE) is enabling real-time network planning. WAE 7.0 is a game-changer release, and we are thrilled to announce its general availability.

Youre likely familiar with WAE Design application, which has been the market leader innetwork modeling and capacity planning for years. Now the WAE Design can address new demands from Service Providers and Enterprise customers that have a tremendous need to drive not only CapEx reduction through planning, but also OpEx reduction with real-time automation.

For this new release, we took an innovative approach to the challenge of evolving an offline planning tool to an online platform that can help operators automate network management.

First, we moved to a YANG-based infrastructure that can automatically generate APIs and CLIs to simplify the customer experience. To feed the YANG-based infrastructure in real-time, our collection framework is leveraging streaming protocols such as BGP-LS, PCEP, and streaming telemetry. This not only improves scalability and visibility, but also provides the reactivity important for an online tool. It was also very important for us to offer a solution that could support legacy and multi-vendor networks. In that respect, we have built modular collectors that can be configured to augment models with data obtained by traditional sources such SNMP, CLI, and NETCONF.

Second, we put substantial effort into simplifying installation and configuration. What does it really mean for you? The installer now downloads and installs in minutes. Configuration of network collection is equally simple. You only need to provide device credentials, enable the desired data streams, describe how the data sources should be combined, and WAE will dynamically build a network model that reacts to change. This is a major improvement you have been looking forward to for quite some time.

WAE has always provided a rich set of optimization algorithms, and we keep adding features. In release 6.4, WAE added segment routing algorithms to support latency, disjointedness, avoidance, and bandwidth optimization. In release 7.0, WAE adds simplified Python APIs for running these algorithms and for applying the results of these algorithms back into the network.

And there is more! By combining a reactive network model with a powerful set of algorithms and easy-to-use Python APIs, WAE is now an application development platform.

As part of WAE 7.0, you automatically get access to a sample application for tactical traffic engineering.

What are the benefits to you?

This application enables you to significantly increase the utilization of your network infrastructure in an automated manner resulting in both CapEx and OpEx savings.

How does it work in simple terms?

WAE monitors the network for topology changes. If a network event such as a link failure causes congestion in the network, WAE will compute a set of Label Service Paths (LSPs) to mitigate the congestion and then deploy the LSPs into the network. When the link recovers, WAE will re-run the optimization, see that the LSPs are no longer required, and remove them from the network.

Why should you give this application a try?

This application clearly exemplifies the combined use of several software innovations Cisco brought to market over the past 12 months: model-driven telemetry, segment routing traffic matrix, segment routing capacity optimization algorithm, and LSP deployment in a closed-loop solution.

By innovating with a focus on the customer experience, we have evolved WAE 7.0 to an easy-to-install platform for network application development that is based on an easy-to-understand YANG networking model, a powerful set of algorithms, and well-designed Python APIs, helping you drive OpEx reduction through ruthless automation.

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WAN AutomationNot Just Another New Release, but a Game ... - Cisco Blogs (blog)

DISA must rely on automation to avoid paving the cyber, IT cow paths – FederalNewsRadio.com

When leaders at the Defense Information Systems Agency asked Dave Mihelcic to become the agencys chief technology officer more than a decade ago, he initially was hesitant.

But over the last dozen years, Mihelcic, who retired from DISA on Feb. 3, transformed the role of the CTO from one that was a part time role giving the DISA director limited advice to a position that is bringing DoD to the leading IT edge.

Mihelcic said he is not only leaving the DISA CTO position in a good place, but is enthusiastic about how the CTOs office is leading major IT advancements for DISA and DoD at large. Mihelcic said Riki Barbour will be the acting CTO until DISA names a permanent one.

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He said the biggest change in the CTOs office came from bringing in the right people to promote innovative approaches to IT.

We had a notion we wanted to drastically enhance the capabilities of the DISA CTO. We got approval very early on to bring in senior technologists and we brought in some of the best technologists from across the agency in everything from communications networking to computing to software development, Mihelcic said on Ask the CIO. Some of the innovation came in later. We recognized that as a gap. We were providing architectures, insight and oversight to DISA programs, but we had no inherent hands on capability, if you will. That was a gap we recognized several years into it and had to bring resources to bear to close that gap.

As DISA closed those innovation gaps, Mihelcic brought in leading edge technologies to help the military services and agencies.

One such initiative is around cloud. Not only did DISA lead the development of the DoDs cloud computing strategy and the MilCloud 2.0 acquisition, but it also is testing out software-defined networking capabilitieswhich many say is the next evolution in cloud.

The software defined environment looks to integrate and automate all of the technologies in a data center to have one-touch provisioning of entire systems supporting DoD needs, Mihelcic said.

This software-defined network effort also is the key for DISA to move more heavily toward an agile or dev/ops methodology. Mihelcic said DISA first started using an agile approach in 2010, but without the automation tools to test and verify software, moving to dev/ops wasnt easy.

What we tend to do is use techniques like agile but we accumulate updates to the network and then we send through a manual testing and certification cycle, and then manually push them out periodically, he said. What we really need to do is focus on the automation piece, both automate the test as well as the security certification, and then automate the deployment of software capabilities so we can match where industry is now.

DISA is testing these technologies to collect, compile, test and deploy the changes in real time.

We are about six months into the pilot and we have demonstrated these abilities, Mihelcic said. We are starting to spin out the results of that into DISA projects and programs to include our DCSDefense Collaboration Services. We also are looking at how the global command and control system can adopt some of these techniques, and likewise we are working with our computing ecosystem at DISA to use some of these automation techniques in the operational data centers today.

He added another goal of the software environment is to help DISA employees create, manage and oversee systems at a great rate. Through automation, he said, system administrators and cyber analysts can understand the health or vulnerabilities of a network more quickly and take action to fix problems.

Along similar lines, Mihelcic said several cyber-related projects are moving forward.

We in the CTO believe the cloud can be a security force multiplier, using technologies that will allow us to redeploy software instantaneously when a cybersecurity fault is detected. Essentially, the systems can patch themselves and make themselves immune to cybersecurity attacks in real time, he said. As part of our software defined environment lab demonstration that we are currently conducting, we have a scenario where a system is somehow attacked and infected with malware. We can detect that automatically and we can essentially reprovision a known good copy of the system without the malware, without the adversary owning the system, and then we can shut the adversary off to a virtualized version of that system and have our cyber defenders watch them in real time.

Mihelcic said he expects these advanced cyber capabilities to roll out more broadly across DISA over the next 12-to-18 months, especially as the agency modernizes its infrastructure to handle these upgrades.

All of these efforts around software defined environments and cybersecurity helps DoD become more comfortable with moving to the cloud.

Mihelcic said without the automation tools to rapidly provision, deploy and manage these cloud capabilities, then all the Pentagon is doing is paving the cow paths because they will continue to use their lengthy, legacy processes.

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DISA must rely on automation to avoid paving the cyber, IT cow paths - FederalNewsRadio.com

Abolishing provincial championships only way to cure fixture … – Irish Independent

It's quite probable that never in the history of sport anywhere in the world have such relatively minor proposals for competition structure change received so much attention.

Replacing the All-Ireland football quarter-finals with a round-robin series, bringing forward the final to August and playing extra-time in all Championship games that finish level except provincial and All-Ireland deciders isn't exactly revolutionary stuff, yet it has dominated GAA discussion for weeks.

Today, the pros and cons will be batted around Croke Park for quite some time, gathering heat and emotion as they go, before being voted on by Congress. Whatever the outcome, it's hard to believe it will have much overall impact.

If the round-robin plan is accepted against wishes of the Gaelic Players' Association (GPA) and the Club Players' Association (CPA), accusations will fly in all directions.

The popular line will be how the 'suits' ignored the wishes of the players, even if at this stage neither the inter-county nor club population have any plans of their own on the table. And if the motion is defeated, it will be another serious setback for Central Council, the body responsible for running the GAA on a day-to-day basis.

Rejected

Last year, Central Council was forced to withdraw a motion on Championship reform on the night before Congress after being told that players in Division 4 counties would boycott a suggested 'secondary' championship.

So if Central Council were to have another proposal rejected this year, it would raise the logical question: how and why is the second highest authority after Congress so out of touch with the membership?

Not that sensitivities should matter on any side of the argument. Besides, it's all largely irrelevant what happens today.

Replace the quarter-finals with a round-robin? Big deal. Anyway, it only applies to eight counties in any year.

Bring forward the All-Ireland finals? Okay, so the GAA takes a promotional hit in September but it can easily survive that.

Play extra-time in most Championship games in order to avoid the disruption caused to fixtures schedules by replays? It will cost provincial councils revenue over a period of time but since replays cannot be factored into their budgets anyway, it's not a big issue.

The reality is that while these three motions are being debated, every delegate knows that it's all peripheral to the real problem, one caused by the provincial championships.

Congress can add or subtract to fixtures as they wish, squeeze the Championship programme until it's squealing for mercy and tweak the system every year, but it still won't make any difference to the underlying problem.

For as long as the provincial championships remain as the foundation for the All-Ireland Championship, there were always be uncertainty over fixtures and unfairness in the format.

And in ten - and probably 20 - years' time Congress will still be trying to correct a flawed system,

You might think all of that would be a sufficiently good reason for the GAA to address the fundamental question: why aren't we dealing with the root cause of the problem rather than skirting around the edges?

Just as it's pointless polishing out the scratch marks on an old car if the engine is blown, it's futile trying to balance the All-Ireland Championship in everyone's interest without removing the provincials.

This weekend 16 games will be played in the Allianz League, featuring action between counties whose performances decide they level at which they operate. It will continue until April when placings for next year will be decided by the tables.

It's orderly and logical, with all counties playing on the same weekend at a level appropriate to their current talents.

It's the secondary competition, yet when the main event comes along in summer, order and logic is dispensed with in favour a system based on geography. Even then, it's lopsided, with different numbers in each province.

If that were changed, many of the difficulties that led to the launch of the CPA could be sorted out quite easily. Instead of being dictated to by uneven provincial structures, a whole range of Championship options would become available.

Most of all, the programme could be laid out clearly and concisely, with the only possible variations arising for counties who progressed to the latter stages of the All-Ireland race. It's so obvious that it defies logic why there hasn't been any meaningful debate on starting with a blank page and devising a number of possible formats.

Instead, every review of the Championship works off the premise that the provincial championships are sacrosanct, even if that's patently not the case any more in Leinster hurling, which hosts outsiders.

Removing the provincials as the starting point for the All-Ireland Championships should not mean the abolition of provincial councils. That fear underpins the thinking in many counties - hence the reluctance to concede anything.

There will always be a need for regional structures to administer the huge amount of work that goes on away from Croke Park, but why should that have anything to do with Championship formats?

Funding

Obviously, if provincial championships, complete with the various councils retaining their own income, were abolished as part of the All-Ireland Championship, the entire GAA funding model would have to change.

Would that be such a bad thing? Surely not. In fact, it would lead to a fairer distribution of finance, carefully calibrated to suit particular requirements.

What's urgently needed now is really radical thinking across all spheres of GAA activity, not the tinkering that will go on today.

Club players are on the verge of mutiny, a situation brought about not by too much inter-county activity but by shambolic competition structures. Inter-county players, through the GPA, oppose much but propose little about how the championships should be run.

Granted, their plan for a continuation of the provincial championships, followed by a full-blown Champions League-style All-Ireland series, was rejected by Central Council in late 2015 but surely that should not be the end of their deliberations.

All sides have a responsibility to continue offering possible solutions to a problem where contagion has spread to club activity.

The trouble is that while everyone wants to tidy the room, they ignore the large provincial elephant that's causing the mess in the first place. It's time he was whooshed out the door.

Irish Independent

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Abolishing provincial championships only way to cure fixture ... - Irish Independent

Town Crier: Sunday’s Highlights – Casper Star-Tribune Online

Sunday support meetings

The Casper Elks Lodge will host a benefit breakfast, open to the public as always, from 7:30 a.m. to noon on Sunday to benefit the Brian Scott David Street Stage. Lodge members will be serving pancakes, biscuits and gravy, bacon, sausage links, potatoes, scrambled eggs, French toast and omelets to order. New to the menu is build your own breakfast burrito. Also served is toast, juice, tea and coffee. All you can eat for $7, children 5 to 12 are $3, 4 and under are free. For more information, call 234-4839.

Twice-monthly Sunday Eagles Breakfasts are served from 8 to 10:30 a.m., on the first and last Sundays of the month, at 306 N. Durbin. Order off the menu for a served breakfast. 235-5130.

Special Blue Ridge guest Neal Hatfield will preach at both services at Mountain View Baptist Church, 4250 Poison Spider Rd., at 8:15 and 11 a.m., as well as Sunday School at 9:30 p.m. Bring the whole family and friends to these special weekend events full of fun, laughter, and God's inspiring word. For more information, call Pastor Mike Sain at 234-4381.

The Casper Childrens Chorale will sing during the 9 a.m. service at St. Marks Episcopal Church, 701 S. Wolcott, and the 10:30 a.m. service at Our Saviors Lutheran Church, 318 E. Sixth St. The Chorale, 80 singers in fourth through eighth grade, presents the tour annually, singing sacred choral literature in the setting for which it was written. Those songs are then added to the Chorales secular selections in preparation for their spring concert season. The public is encouraged to join in these services of worship and praise.

Living from the Heart: The Key to Peace, Freedom & Creative Empowerment, Feb. 26, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., offered in person at the Agricultural Learning Resources building on Fairgrounds Road and also via live webinar. In the new four-hour class, learn what the field of the heart really is, practice easy, practical ways to go into heart field and learn how to live every day from this place of peace, love, well-being and personal empowerment. The class is taught by Cathy Hazel Adams, practitioner, Intuitive Multidimensional Transformation & Healing, and certified Matrix Energetics practitioner. For a full class description and registration information, visit: http://www.cathyhazeladams.com/pp/classes-webinars-event/.

The Rover, Casper College's spring comedy, will performed at 2 p.m., on the McMurry Main Stage. It contains sexually suggestive scenes and language that some audiences might find offensive.

Tickets are $12 for adults and $10 for students 5-18 and are available online at caspercollege.edu/theatre, or one hour before each performance.

Mount Hope Lutheran School welcomes the public to its annual Strings Dinner at 5 p.m., in the MHLS gymnasium. Enjoy a chicken alfredo dinner while listening to a variety of music played by Mount Hope students. Mount Hopes PTO will also auction six theme baskets. All proceeds will go towards instrument repairs and new music for the students.

The Casper community is invited to this month's PFLAG dinner at the United Church of Christ, 15th & Melrose. The agenda is: 5 to 5:25 p.m., business meeting; 5:30 to 6 p.m., potluck dinner; 6 to 7 p.m., program.

The group will watch "The Out List" (58 minutes), a 2013 documentary movie on famous people who have come out as LGBTQ.

The dinner theme is baked potato and salad bar. White and sweet potatoes will be provided. Bring toppings, salads and desserts to share.

For more information, call Ruth Ann Leonard at 265-5449 or Rob Johnston at 259-5026.

Follow community news editor Sally Ann Shurmur on Twitter@WYOSAS

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Town Crier: Sunday's Highlights - Casper Star-Tribune Online

Pushing past barriers: Program aims to foster empowering female relationships – West Central Tribune

Transitioning from a credit analyst to a commercial banker with Wells Fargo allowed Hanstad to view the monthly events in a new light.

"I'd moved to Fargo and started this new position and suddenly Women Connect became an opportunity to network with a large group of businesswomen," Hanstad says.

But she wanted an even deeper connection with the women she would meet each month in the large group setting.

That connection came in the form of a program called PUSH, which stands for "Pursue Dreams, Unite Women, Shatter Barriers, Have Heart."

The program is the brainchild of Carrie Carney and Chelsea Monda, two young professionals in the community who met through a mutual friend to discuss women's empowerment programs.

More than a year ago, Carney, marketing director at Eventide, and Monda, a senior client consultant at Sundog, began meeting monthly at a local coffee shop to share expertise and ideas for creating a network of women gathering in a smaller setting.

In January 2016, PUSH officially launched at the Women Connect event and soon after, Carney and Monda began receiving requests from women who wanted to be placed in a group.

Hanstad was one of those requesters. She reached out to Carney for the email addresses of individuals who'd expressed interest in a group, and eventually her group grew to include nine women.

"It was like we were long-lost friends," she says. "We all just got along so well and have connected to one another ... some of my very best friends in Fargo are people I met through this PUSH group."

Hanstad's experience is common, Carney and Monda say. The placement of women in the groups is entirely random, and the ideal size for a group is eight people. The idea of being placed randomly eliminates any preconceived notions so new relationships can be established, Monda says.

Since the program launched last year, 35 groups have been created with more than 200 women participating in them. Additionally, the PUSH Facebook group has nearly 400 members.

Once a group is formed, members are provided with rules of engagement. Monda says the rules are a guideline for helping the group begin developing relationships among the members and not actually rules.

Beyond the initial phrase of providing contact information and guidelines, Monda says PUSH groups are mostly self-managed and become a great outlet for women who want to achieve personal or professional goals.

Carney and Monda have each set and achieved a number of goals since they formed their PUSH group. "I've reached some goals I wouldn't have without this group," Carney says. For example, Monda set a goal to train for and run a 5K, and her PUSH group held her accountable to that goal. Carney changed jobs and used her PUSH group as a sounding board for issues associated with her new role.

Even though PUSH is a sub-committee of Women Connect, you don't have to be a Chamber member to be in a group, Carney says.

Women interested in joining can request to start a new group or be placed in an existing one.

"So many women are going out of their comfort zones and being placed randomly, but they have nothing to lose and everything to gain," Carney says.

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Pushing past barriers: Program aims to foster empowering female relationships - West Central Tribune

Listen, technology holdouts: Enough is enough – The Washington Post – Washington Post

Even as fanatic customers can be counted on to line up outside the Apple store for the latest iPhone, there are still millions of Americans who dont use a smartphone at all. For that matter, there are still plenty of happy owners of tube televisions, rotary dial telephones, film cameras, fax machines, typewriters and cassette tape players.

The accelerating pace of disruption means more and more products are facing an early retirement. But even as computers, electronics and health products move quickly from must-haves to museum artifacts, a small but loyal following often carries a torch for the old stuff, sometimes out of nostalgia, sometimes from sheer stubbornness. For them, familiar and functioning technologies are good enough.

My Big Bang Disruption co-author Paul Nunes and I refer to these have-wonts as legacy customers, users who simply refuse to migrate to disruptive innovations even after theyve become both better and cheaper, and even after almost everyone else has made the shift.

Legacy customers are a niche market, although not necessarily a bad one. Much of Brooklyn, it seems, has been turned over to rediscovering handmade goods which, ironically, are sold over the Internet.

But in some cases the devotion of the laggards can cause major headaches. When the market for outmoded products shrinks, most manufacturers just stop making them. By law, however, some technologies cant be put to sleep until regulators give permission usually long after the dying market has become unprofitable.

Car manufacturers must keep up to a decades worth of spare parts, for example, even for discontinued models. And the U.S. Postal Service, teetering on bankruptcy for over a decade, still has to deliver mail to 155 million households, even as first-class volume continues to decline precipitously.

As the post office has learned, the cost of keeping old technologies on life support skyrockets when expensive networks of equipment and people must be spread over a dwindling number of users.

Although the vast majority of consumers have long since abandoned the analog telephone network for better and cheaper Internet voice, to take another example, 5 to 10 million households still rely solely on the old system. But as equipment manufacturers exit and older workers retire, maintenance costs now far exceed what the remaining customers pay. Yet carriers cant junk the old technology without approval from the FCC and state regulators.

No surprise, our research found legacy customers are largely older consumers who long ago gave up trying to keep up with the latest and greatest. Many are perfectly happy with worse and more expensive products; perhaps even take pride in still knowing how to use them. I was slow to embrace smartphone technology myself, and I still resist upgrading to the newest models even when its clear they offer better value and more features that Id likely use.

But like me, legacy customers are often wrong about both the costs and benefits of embracing disruptive new products and services. As recently as 2010, 80 percent of profits at AOL came from subscribers, many of them older, paying $25 a month for dial-up service they no longer used, but who thought the fee paid for (free) email service.

Worse, data recently issued by the Commerce Department finds that 13 percent of Americans still dont use the Internet at all, even though its now available nearly everywhere. (More homes have access to Internet service than indoor plumbing.)

You might think the holdouts just cant afford it, which certainly remains an important factor despite programs that subsidize both wired and wireless broadband. But the real holdup is that non-adopters mostly older, rural and less-educated just arent interested in Internet access, at any price. As other factors such as price and usability fall, a perceived lack of relevance now dominates.

Public and private efforts to overcome that perception are crucial for two important reasons. The first is that the resisters are wrong the Internet has become the starting point for government services, news, employment, entertainment and, increasingly, health care and education. Life without it is increasingly and unnecessarily isolated.

The second is that non-adopters ultimately cost more to serve. Printing information is increasingly a waste of scarce resources as digital alternatives continue to get better and cheaper. And all of us pay for the waste. A few consumers may prefer standing in line at the bank branchto using an ATM or banking app, but the higher cost is spread over all customers.

To overcome the inertia of legacy customers, it may be appropriate for governments to step in. The United States has long had programs aimed at making broadband more affordable for lower-income Americans and more accessible for those living in sparsely populated areas. On Thursday, the FCC unanimously approved the allocation of up to $2 billion in additional taxpayer funds for rural broadband build-out in areas where private investment cannot be cost-justified. Total support for rural broadband could reach $20 billion over the next decade. (The devil, however, will be in the details. A government audit found that an earlier Agriculture Department effort to expand rural broadband wasted $3 billion of stimulus money.)

At the other end of the life cycle, some technology dinosaurs need help being euthanized. Here, regulators can serve as a catalyst, providing the final nudge for legacy customers. Once it was clear that smart LEDs would become better and cheaper than inefficient incandescent lightbulbs, for example, governments around the world began passing laws banning production of the older technology.

And while things got a little messy at the end, in 2009 Congress succeeded in turning off analog TV, switching the few remaining holdouts over to digital. To ensure no one had to go without Lets Make a Deal, lower-income families were given converter boxes for older tube TVs.

As a bonus, the more efficient digital signals have made it possible for the FCC to reclaim and auction prized radio frequencies to feed exploding demand for mobile services. So far, the auctions have deposited nearly $20 billion in the treasury, with additional auctions going on right now that will soon bring in much more.

Retirement rarely pays so well.

Read more from The Washington Posts Innovations section.

A new digital divide has emerged and conventional solutions wont bridge the gap

Humans once opposed coffee and refrigeration. Heres why we often hate new stuff.

The big moral dilemma facing self-driving cars

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Listen, technology holdouts: Enough is enough - The Washington Post - Washington Post

Sprint Explores Blockchain Technology For Communication Carriers – CryptoCoinsNews

Sprint Corporation has teamed with TBCASoft, Inc. and SoftBank to develop blockchain technology for telecommunication carriers.

TBCASoft, based in Sunnyvale, Calif., develops consortium-based blockchain technology for telecommunication carriers.

SoftBank Corp. is a subsidiary of SoftBank Group Corp. that provides Internet connection services, mobile communication and fixed-line communication to customers in Japan.

The three companies will promote research and development to build a cross-carrier blockchain platform for a variety of services, including IoT applications, secured clearing and settlement, personal authentication and other services telecommunication carriers provide.

In June 2017, the companies will begin a technical trial to connect TBCASofts blockchain platform to telecommunication carriers systems. The parties will collaborate on issues related to technology, business and regulations of different jurisdictions.

Sprint developed the first wireless 4G service from a national carrier in the United States.

A recent Deloitte survey found blockchain technology is being adopted across industries, including telecommunications, consumer products, manufacturing, technology and media.

In technology, media and telecom, 27% of executives said their companies will invest $5 million or more next calendar year. Twenty-three percent of responding financial services report such investments planned for 2017.

Thus, telecom, technology and media industries are possibly the most aggressive investors in blockchain technology, according to the survey. Thirty percent of respondents in those industries say their companies are done with blockchain research and development and have moved on to production.

Also read: Tech, media & telecom more aggressive blockchain investors than financial services

Blockchains may be able deliver a broad variety of applications across the telecom industry, according to a report by Deloitte and the Blockchain Institute. The report noted the technology has the potential to significantly impact communication services provides (CSPs) operating models.

The impact depends on how actively the adoption of use cases is driven by CSPs. Companies such as Orange and Verizon, amongst others, have invested in startups in the blockchain area to explore synergies and potential use cases. More players are researching use cases in-house.

Image from Shutterstock.

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Sprint Explores Blockchain Technology For Communication Carriers - CryptoCoinsNews

When test-driving a new car, take the technology for a spin – WTHITV.com

DETROIT (AP) Car shopping isnt just about kicking the tires anymore. Its also about testing the technology.

The rapidly evolving in-car infotainment and navigation systems can be bewildering for all but the most tech-savvy car buyers. The average vehicle on U.S. roads is 11 years old; that means many people last went car shopping before iPhones were invented.

Car buyers should make sure they can pair their phone with a car, play music from their phone, make a hands-free call and use the navigation system before they leave the dealer lot, experts say. They should make sure volume knobs, climate controls and other technology is intuitive and displayed the way they like. Some drivers want volume controls on the steering wheel, for example, while others prefer a knob on the dashboard.

Safety technology is also changing rapidly, and buyers should familiarize themselves with what the car can and cant do. Some vehicles will brake automatically to avoid a collision, while others flash a warning and help the driver pump the brakes but wont bring the car to a full stop.

Spend some time in the parking lot sitting in the car and just messing with it, says Ron Montoya, senior consumer advice editor for the car shopping site Edmunds.com.

The issue is a serious one for the auto industry. Consumers complaints about phone connectivity, navigation and infotainment systems have lowered vehicle dependability scores in annual rankings from J.D. Power and Consumer Reports. Poor showings in such rankings can put a dent in sales. Car shopping site Autotrader.com has found that as many as one-third of buyers will choose a different brand if they think a vehicles tech features are too hard to use.

To combat that, some brands are setting up technology help desks at dealerships and boosting employee training. In 2013, General Motors Co. formed a staff of 50 tech specialists to help deal with an increase in questions from customers about new technology. Those specialists train U.S. dealers to pair customers phones, set up in-car Wi-Fi and set preferences like radio stations.

When he takes customers for test drives, Paul Makowski pairs his own phone with the car and has customers make a call, stream music and do other tasks. He uses his own phone so customers dont worry that their data will be shared with the dealership.

Some people fear the technology and decline it all, but we still go over it. They dont leave here not knowing what their car has to offer, says Makowski, the sales manager for Ed Rinke Chevrolet Buick GMC in Center Line, Michigan.

Here are some tips for taking a tech test drive:

TAKE YOUR TIME: Test driving the technology should take at least 45 minutes, says Brian Moody, the executive editor at AutoTrader.com. Find out whether your phone is compatible with the car and learn how to pair it. Call a friend and ask if the sound is clear. Make sure the car understands your voice commands. Enter an address into the navigation system or, if the car has the capability, download an address to the car from your phone. Moody says its better to learn all these tasks at the dealership than on the road.

UPDATE YOUR PHONE: Make sure your phone has the latest operating system when you go shopping. New cars will be most compatible with updated phones.

DECIDE WHAT YOU LIKE: Six percent of new cars sold last year had Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, which display many of your phones apps on the touchscreen. Thats expected to rise to 50 percent by 2020, according to IHS Markit. The familiar interface of those systems can make it easier to transition to in-car technology. But Montoya says there are some shortcomings. Apple CarPlay doesnt support the Waze traffic app or Google maps, for example, and if you want to change a radio station, you have to scroll out of Apple CarPlay and back to your cars radio. You should decide what system is best for you.

SHOP AROUND: Even if youve settled on a vehicle, it never hurts to test drive something else. You may find, for example, that you prefer climate controls on a touchscreen instead of on dashboard knobs, or that one vehicle has easier-to-use buttons on the steering wheel for making calls or adjusting volume. It might expose you to something better, Montoya says.

DONT FORGET SAFETY: Lane departure warning systems, backup cameras and blind-spot detection systems work differently depending on the car. Some lane departure systems buzz the seat if you drift out of your lane, for example, while others beep loudly. Thats something you might hear or feel a lot, so choose the technology you prefer.

BUY WHAT YOU NEED: Not everyone wants to stream Spotify and chat with Siri while theyre driving. If youre in that category, choose a stripped-down model so youre not paying for features you dont need, Montoya says. For example, a Toyota Camry starts at $23,050, but the EnTune infotainment package, which includes hands-free calling and other features, costs $775 extra.

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News Sentinel Auto Show showcases new car technology and more – Knoxville News Sentinel

Knoxville News Sentinel consumer brand manager Angie Howell talks about everything that is going on at the 29th annual Knoxville News Sentinel Auto Show in the Knoxville Convention Center Andrew Capps

Visitors browse Honda and Lincoln automobiles at the annual Knoxville News Sentinel Auto Show at the Knoxville Convention Center in Knoxville, Tennessee on Saturday, February 25, 2017. (Photo: Calvin Mattheis, Knoxville News Sentinel)Buy Photo

The 29th Annual Knoxville News Sentinel Auto Show has gathered more than 20 brands and hundreds of cars at the Knoxville Convention Center in an automotive technology exhibition.

The show will continue noon-6 p.m. Sunday, hosting a variety of makes and models at the Convention Center.

This years show features vehicles such as Lexus, Fiat, Toyota, Ford, Chrysler, Nissan and Mercedes-Benz. Dealerships from around the area brought their 2017 models to the show for the public to see.

Angie Howell, consumer brand manager for the Knoxville News Sentinel, helped organize theshow. According to Howell, the show is the perfect chance for those interested in cars, families and people shopping for a new vehicle to see what the industry has to offer.

This is a great opportunity families to get out for the day, but also a great opportunity for car enthusiasts or anyone in the market for a vehicle, she said.

Its a great event that brings together over 20 manufacturers under one roof. Its a prime opportunity to come check out hundreds of cars at one place.

John Fox, who works as a sales and leasing consultant for Lexus of Knoxville, was excited to have the opportunity to introduce so many people to the brands 2017 lineup and give them a chance to experience the vehicles through the shows Ride and Drive program.

Its a good way for us to us to connect with the community and show our cars, Fox said. We have three cars that were doing for the Ride and Drive, so if you see a car that you like here, we have three that you can ride and drive.

He added that Lexus brought in technology specialists to help showcase the brands luxury technology features during test drives.

We have technology specialists who will go in-depth to show you how everything works, he added. You can take a drive around the block and get a great feel for the car.

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The Knoxville Electric Vehicle Association joined the dealerships and manufacturers at the auto show with a couple of Tesla models put on display by their members. Gary Bulmer, a KEVA member, saidthe group came to the show to inspire people to consider buying electric cars.

Were here to promote electric vehicles. Thats what the club is all about, Bulmer said. People are very interested in Teslas, but were just as happy tointerest people in something like a Chevy Volt.

He added that the Teslas were getting quite a lot of attention compared to other cars at the show, a trend he credited to increased interest in electric vehicles.

Theres a lot of nice cars here and I think a lot of people use this to help get focused if theyre in the market for a car, he said. People are starting to develop an interest, and by talking to us they get a better idea since that these cars arent so hard to live with.

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News Sentinel Auto Show showcases new car technology and more - Knoxville News Sentinel

High schoolers teach seniors how to use technology – Thehour.com

Photo: Stephanie Kim / Hearst Connecticut Media

Larry Mauer learning how to transfer his music files to his MP3 player with help from Wilton High School junior Erin Sweeney at the Senior center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

Larry Mauer learning how to transfer his music files to his MP3 player with help from Wilton High School junior Erin Sweeney at the Senior center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

Linda Gortz uploads photos unto Shutterfly with help from Debbie McClelland at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

Linda Gortz uploads photos unto Shutterfly with help from Debbie McClelland at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

Alec Favarolo helps Barabara Sage with using her iPhone at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

Alec Favarolo helps Barabara Sage with using her iPhone at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

Ann Byrne receives email help from Shelby Connor, junior at Wilton High School, at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

Ann Byrne receives email help from Shelby Connor, junior at Wilton High School, at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

Luke Terradista, junior at Wilton High School, helps Gierdra Troncone at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

Luke Terradista, junior at Wilton High School, helps Gierdra Troncone at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

NoraNol Nolan, senior at Wilton High School and founder of Candy Stripers, helps Anne Richards navigate her new iPhone at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

NoraNol Nolan, senior at Wilton High School and founder of Candy Stripers, helps Anne Richards navigate her new iPhone at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

High schoolers teaching seniors in the community how to use their tech devices at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

High schoolers teaching seniors in the community how to use their tech devices at the Senior Center on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

High schoolers teach seniors how to use technology

WILTON Larry Mauer came to the Senior Center Wednesday afternoon for help with transferring his music to his SanDisk MP3 player. He also needed help creating an email account.

In a matter of minutes, his problem was solved after a one-on-one session with Wilton High School junior Erin Sweeney.

Shes really great, Mauer said.

I can lend her, but I wont easily lend her, he laughed.

Sweeney is part of the Candy Stripers, a group of Wilton High Schoolers who find ways to connect with and serve the senior community.

The club partnered with Stay at Home in Wilton to launch the tech class this year, meeting in the senior technology room twice a month for one-on-one sessions with seniors. The sessions last about an hour.

Those of us who live in Wilton are fortunate to have very capable students who enjoy working with seniors in the community in technology instruction, said Peter Dodds, president of Stay at Home in Wilton.

The program also allows for the building of inter-generational relationships. Conversations about growing up in Wilton and life stories were shared between seniors and the high-schoolers, in the midst of tips on how to use the latest technology devices and platforms.

NoraNol Nolan, a Wilton High School senior who founded the club last year, said she started the Candy Stripers for this very reason: to add enriched experiences and interactions in the lives of seniors who live in Wilton.

The clubs name was inspired by the original Candy Stripers, started by a group of female junior high and high-schoolers who volunteered at hospitals in the 1940s.

All of the members of our club, we all have an elderly member of our family who has been lonely or has needed help or been in a home, Nolan said. So we just go around the homes in the community and throw events for them.

Nolan said the best part of the tech class so far is helping seniors connect to friends and loved ones, and to the world, overall.

I know that my grandpa says that technologys left him behind, like everythings moving so quickly, she said. So its good for them just to sit down with us, and we go step by step.

Giedra Troncone, who needed help removing closed captioning on a foreign film, agreed.

Its the best thing you could have ever imagined, she said. These are answers to specific questions, and this way, we get the undivided attention.

For more information about the program, contact Stay at Home in Wilton at info@shwil.org or 203-423-3225.

SKim@hearstmediact.com; 203-354-1044; @stephaniehnkim

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High schoolers teach seniors how to use technology - Thehour.com

Seminary Square strip mall a work in progress – Galesburg Register-Mail

Rebecca Susmarski The Register-Mail

GALESBURG A hair salon, a Mexican restaurant and a jewelry store are only three of the businesses expected to move into the strip mall on North Seminary Street after its construction.

Hair Cuttery, Kay Jewelers, Mi Casa Mexican Cuisine, AT&T and Hibbett Sports all plan to move into the property, said Joe Rayfield, director of leasing and property management for the strip malls developer, Horne Properties. The strip mall will have room for a sixth business that has not yet been selected, and Rayfield said many restaurants have expressed an interest due to the drive-through capability at the site.

The city of Galesburg could only confirm that Kay Jewelers will be moving in, since it has not yet received building plans from any of the other stores, but Rayfield said the tenants should probably be opening in mid- to late-May.

At the end of March or first of April, all of [the stores] should be starting to submit for permitting, Rayfield said.

The city issued a building permit for the strip mall on Nov. 7 of last year, and construction work began shortly after that, said Matthew Carlson, building inspector for the City of Galesburg. The winter weather delayed the installment of the buildings footings, but Rayfield said things have been going well with construction since then.

The buildings foundations have been installed and its exterior walls are currently being erected. Carlson didnt have a timeline for the constructions completion nor when the strip malls stores will open, since interior work could be extensive or minimal depending on what the stores request, he said.

A mixture of veteran Galesburg businesses and new ones are expected to find homes in the strip mall. Jeff Gray, vice president of real estate for Hibbett Sporting Goods Inc., confirmed that Hibbett plans to move from its current location in Sandburg Mall to the strip mall by July.

The Galesburg Hibbett location, which opened in 2001, had been considering a location change within the city even before the mall announced its closing plans.

Were always looking at options to see if we can better position our stores, and the mall had struggled for the past couple of years in keeping tenants, Gray said. It just made sense to find an alternative location.

Mi Casa Mexican Cuisine will be a new addition to Galesburg and serve as a sister business to the original restaurant in Aledo. Owner RaeAnne Hernandez, who grew up in Aledo and started the business with her husband seven years ago, said the original restaurant was doing so well that she wanted to expand.

Hernandez has not yet signed a lease for the second location, but the strip malls position on North Seminary Street proved to be a considerable plus when she looked for a new place to settle.

That area of Galesburg is really growing and we wanted to be a part of that, Hernandez said.

The final strip mall will be slightly more than 17,000 square feet in length and formed in an L shape. The south end cap of the strip mall is the portion still available, Rayfield said.

He also plans to start another phase of development on that land in late 2017 or early 2018. Horne Properties has already developed the Wal-Mart and Menards on that land, and sold the land that Kohls, Pet Supplies Plus and Shoe Carnival have developed.

It depends on the interest were able to accumulate, but probably [it will be] another similar sized building of what were doing now, Rayfield said of the future development.

Rebecca Susmarski: (309) 343-7181, ext. 261; rsusmarski@register-mail.com; @RSusmarski

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Seminary Square strip mall a work in progress - Galesburg Register-Mail

Rebel Crossings by Sheila Rowbotham review feminist utopian dreams – The Guardian

Out of the shadows Helena Born and Helen Tufts on Squibnocket Beach in Marthas Vineyard, 1896. Photograph: Courtesy of Verso Books

Last year, believe it or not, was the year of Utopia. A perfect society: happy, prosperous, tolerant, peaceful this idyll was widely commemorated, although its location, appropriately, was nowhere (from the Greek ou-topos: U-topia). The occasion was the 500th anniversary of Thomas Mores Utopia, a splendid little book (in Mores words) that, over the centuries, has found echoes in innumerable dreams and schemes, especially on the left.

Socialism has always harboured utopian visionaries, although they have not always been welcome there. From the communities of universal harmony sponsored by Robert Owen, Charles Fourier, Henri de Saint-Simon and their early 19th-century followers (dismissed by Marx and Engels as purely utopian); to the libertarian-communist Edens of William Morris, Edward Carpenter and other fin de sicle New Lifers; to the free-loving, free-living arcadias of 1960s radicals, utopianism has been alternately embraced and repudiated by the left. The scope of socialist aspirations has widened and narrowed with changing times. Today, in a climate of ascendant neoliberalism and far-right populism, the aspirations have dwindled to the point where even the modest social-democratic ambitions of Jeremy Corbyn and his followers are slated as cranky utopian fantasies by their Labour party detractors.

All socialist utopias involve some refashioning of gender relationships. This has been true from the start. Between 1825 and 1845, Britains first socialists the Owenites, after the capitalist-turned-communist Owen produced a root-and-branch critique ofwomens oppression along with strategies to eradicate it, ranging from practical measures such as reform of the marriage laws and the introduction of birth control, to the creation of communities where private property would be abolished, childcare collectivised and nuclear households replaced by cooperative family arrangements. With these changes, the Owenites promised, women, married or single, would become mens social equals; no woman, with or without children, would need aman in order to survive. Or, as one woman told a socialist meeting in 1840: When all should labour for each, and each be expected to labour for the whole, then would woman be placed in a position in which she would not sell her liberties and her finest feelings.

In the 1830s, Owenite feminism travelled from Britain to the US via Owens son Robert Dale Owen, a strong believer in womens reproductive rights, and the celebrity freethinker Frances Wright. A handful of communities were established where marriage was by joint declaration, with no swearing of eternal fidelity or wifely obedience. These communities were short-lived, as were the half-dozen Owenite communities in Britain, and by the late 1840s the movement had died out. But the links between utopianism, socialism and feminism survived to reemerge inthe 1880s, strengthened by the rise of the womens suffrage movement in the intervening decades.

A host of thinkers and organisations appeared in Britain and America dedicated to building a new Jerusalem free from sex slavery. The US east coast was especially rich in visionaries. Most were obscure, with few adherents and few traces left behind them. But in the mid-1970s, Sheila Rowbotham found a little book in the British Library written by one of them, Helena Born, who originally came from Bristol, and edited by an American named Helen Tufts. Later she discovered that Tufts had kept a personal journal. These findings set her on a four-decade search that has resulted in Rebel Crossings, a collective biography of a half-dozen transatlantic radicals ofthe late 19th century.

Rowbotham is a leading feminist historian, and an unapologetic utopian. Rebel Crossings opens on a personal note: I first discovered the little group of rebels in this book when I, myself, was young and convinced the world wasabout to change for the better. Now in her 70s, Rowbotham came of age politically in the salad days of the New Left, when young lefties like her were seeking an alternative to communism under Stalin. She looked for her alternatives in the campaign for nuclear disarmament, in the History Workshop movement and, above all, in womens liberation, which became for her, as for many leftwing women at the time, her political home.

New Left men could be pretty old-school when it came to women. In 1969, Rowbotham published an influential pamphlet attacking the marginalisation of women by the male-dominated revolutionary left and arguing for feminism as a whole people question: Our liberation is inextricably bound up with the revolt of all those who are oppressed [and] their liberation is not realisable fully unless our subordination is ended. The following year she faced down an audience of (mostly male) students who laughed at her call for research into womens history. In the decades since, she has published dozens of books and articles chronicling the histories of women, especially female freethinkers such as those in Rebel Crossings.

I met Rowbotham in those early days in the womens movement. She had just published her first book Women, Resistance and Revolution (1972) which changed my life. I was a PhD student writing a boring dissertation on the USliberal philosopher John Dewey. Iread her chapter on Utopian Proposals, ditched Dewey, and embarked ona study of utopian socialism and feminism in Britain (published as Eve and the New Jerusalem in 1983 and reissued last year).

For Rowbotham, history writing was not an academic exercise but a political act: her declared purpose in writing Women, Resistance and Revolution was to produce a work that would aid the continuing effort to connect feminism to socialist revolution. Today her hopes for a socialist revolution have faded, but the ambition to link the pastand present in radical ways is still present. My aim, she writes in Rebel Crossings, is subversion sustained by humour and enjoyment.

Born and Miriam Daniell were friendsin 1880s Bristol who campaigned for womens suffrage, aided local strikers and played leading roles in the Bristol Socialist Society. Robert Nicol was a Scottish union militant and Miriams lover. In 1890, the three young people migrated to Boston, Massachusetts, where they experimented with a host ofisms, including Marxism, anarchism, transcendentalism and something called ownerism (self-ownership). They read Emerson, Thoreau, Carpenter, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Walt Whitman (a special hero), andwrote for journals with titles suchas Liberty, the New Age and the ComingLight.

Miriam gorgeous, charismatic and the boldest of the trio embraced Russian nihilism and a mystical feminism centring on woman as the universal redeemer. Helena, a more tough-minded individual (fearless and repellent was her self-description), became the directing liberator of the Boston Comradeship of Free Socialists and wrote articles denouncing capitalist alienation and feminine fripperies. Both women were bravely defiant of social convention: Miriam had left behind a husband in Bristol, while Helena became the lover of a married man, an Irish-born anarchist named William Bailie.

Both also died young: Helena in her early 40s, Miriam in her mid-30s, after giving birth to a daughter named Sunrise, a small, helpless bundle of utopia who became the stepdaughter of the socialist novelist Gertrude Dix, who succeeded Miriam as Robert Nicols lover. After Helenas death, William Bailie married Helenas friend Helen Tufts, a Boston-born feminist who in the 1920s was expelled from the Daughters of the American Revolution for exposing a DAR blacklist of social reformers and other anti-patriots. Ifthats patriotism, she bit back, Ill have none of it.

Rebel Crossings vividly evokes thesebusy, entangled lives, with their campaigning and propagandising and romancing, criss-crossed by doctrinal disagreements and ethical dilemmas made more acute by relentless soul-searching and grasping at moral absolutes. All six of Rowbothams protagonists were religious freethinkers, but their radicalism was shot through with the missionary zeal of a spiritual elect. Dear Comrade, Miriam wrote to a friend, let us if we think we see higher heights and purer lights than another not shun that climbing Soul but bend to point the way we take. Pragmatism had little part to play here, including in their free-love commitments, which were passionately ideological. Love waits not upon social or political changes, Helena wrote to William at the height of their romance. It creates them. Love is the great equaliser.

She vividly evokes these busy, entangled lives, with their campaigning and propagandising and romancing

But if love equalised hearts, it left many social inequities intact. Beyond all teaching and preaching is actual living, Tufts reminded her comrades. But actual life often disappointed, as new world modes of relating bumped up against old world habits and attitudes. Jealousy, rivalry, prejudice raised their heads; low bodily needs got in the way of the higher life, especially for the women. A woman who behaved as though her rights were equal to mans would be treated equally, Helen maintained; but daily life with her William was not always an egalitarian dream. Wm hardly ever wipes the dishes, but he says I cant understand where all these dishes come from! she confided to her journal. My dearest would like to forget dishes after he has used them.

Its easy to smile at some of this, and Rowbotham does smile now and then. But she never condescends. These were brave spirits whose courage she admires, and whose struggles to balance altruistic service and egoism, union and personal desire earn her sympathy. And her empathy: she has known such struggles. She has lived them, or rather experiences very like them as have I, and many other women who share our political past.

For any veteran of 1970s socialist feminism, reading Rebel Crossings is likely to be a mixed pleasure, summoning up a radical past that feels sadly distant yet uncomfortably close, as itreawakens memories of our own utopian moment, with its courage and confusions, its open-hearted visions and myopias. Like the books protagonists, we knew what we wanted aworld where all would live freely andunselfishly, with equal status, resources and opportunities and we sought to live our lives in the shape of our ideals, forming anti-patriarchal sexual relationships and communal households intended to prefigure the egalitarian society to come.

We were whole life revolutionaries, and the future belonged to us. But we underestimated the inequalities among us (of class, race, cultural advantage, financial resources) and the obstacles we faced, both internal and external: our conflicting desires (for unity, independence, work, children); our muddles over men; the personal hostilities, disguised as political disagreements, that cut across sisterly solidarities; but above all, the relentless momentum of our times, as the postwar settlement that had kindled our optimistic dreams gave way to tooth-and-claw neoliberalism and the dystopian nightmare we now see before us.

Rebel Crossings is crammed with hopeful visions from the past, but on the present it strikes a melancholy note. Watching globalised capitalism in action appropriating free expression, raiding collective spaces, shredding non-marketable aspirations, social solidarity and fellow feeling Rowbotham is forced to recognise that a good society, along with a new radical and emancipatory social consciousness, will take longer to realise that I imagined. Like many in my generation, I accept this reality rationally, but emotionally find itineffably baffling.

In the wake of 2016, Rowbothams bafflement is widely shared and not just by one-time utopians. And yet last month some five million women took to the streets in 673 marches worldwide. On seven continents we marched, against Trump and all that he represents: demagoguery, xenophobia, misogyny, racism, sexism, homophobia. Our banners echoed the call ofRowbothams long-ago rebels, for a future of liberty, love and solidarity. For most of us, this was thefirst glimmer of light in a dark time. Hardly utopia, but a moment of genuine hope, born not in some nowhere land of political fantasy but here and now, in this very world, which is the world of all of us (Wordsworth) the only placefrom which real hope, and determination, can spring.

Rebel Crossings: New Women, Free Lovers and Radicals in Britain and the United States is published by Verso. 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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Rebel Crossings by Sheila Rowbotham review feminist utopian dreams - The Guardian

Look around the wine store where Ranieri’s future was decided Mourinho loves this place! – Daily Star

TAKE a look around the exclusive Mayfair wine shop Hedonism, which counts some of football's richest men among its clients.

TAKE a look around the exclusive Mayfair wine shop Hedonism, which counts some of football's richest men among its clients.

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Take a look around the Hedonism wine shop in Mayfair

The Sun claim that this is the place where Leicester owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha recently boasted about sacking Claudio Ranieri after a 500,000 spending spree.

It's also one of Jose Mourinho's favourite places to buy his wine.

Bottles are sold for as much as 100,000 each in the west London joint.

The Manchester United boss was spotted with a bag from the shop the day before he was confirmed as manager of the Old Trafford side.

Click through the gallery above to take a look around Hedonism.

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Look around the wine store where Ranieri's future was decided Mourinho loves this place! - Daily Star

In Scorsese’s adaptation of Endo’s novel, a stark depiction of statism against religion – National Review

Decades in the making, Martin Scorseses Silence, based on Shsaku Ends 1966 novel, about 17th-century Jesuit missionaries to Japan, is ambitious and alternately gorgeous and horrifying. It is surprising that a film of this magnitude would be all but completely snubbed for Oscar nominations, particularly in the now-expanded category of Best Picture, where the competition is soft indeed. Silences sole Oscar nomination is for cinematography, and that is well deserved. With its focus on valleys and mountains shrouded in fog, the film often has the look of the movies of the great Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa.

Commentary on the film has focused on the dilemma facing the two Jesuit priest protagonists, Father Cristvo Ferreira (Liam Neeson) and Father Sebastio Rodrigues (Andrew Garfield): Can renouncing faithever be a path of faith? Yet the commentary has tended to ignore a more striking issue and perhaps one more relevant to our own time: namely, what happens to religious faith in a totalitarian political environment that actively and violently repudiates any religion that is not perfectly consonant with the dictates of the political regime.

Sixteenth-century Jesuit missionaries to Japan were for a time welcomed and had enormous success. Political changes in the country led to growing suspicion of foreign influences and to a fear that the allegiance of the Japanese people would be ssplit between nationalism and the new religion. The governmental response was ruthless and systematic. By the use of bribery and threats, it set ordinary citizens against one another and especially against any priests remaining in the country. The centerpiece of the elimination project was a very public form of repudiation of the faith: the so-called fumi-e (literally, to step on a picture), the stepping, and in some cases spitting, on an image of Christ or the Virgin Mary.

Around that ritual act, Japanese authorities construct a series of protracted, gruesome inducements to apostasy. Particularly terrifying is the threat that the torture of Japanese converts will cease only after the priests themselves publicly renounce their faith. Suppression was already underway when Father Rodrigues, a priest in Portugal, heard reports that his spiritual mentor, the missionary to Japan, Father Ferreira, had succumbed to Japanese terror and renounced his faith in Christ. Eager to be a missionary himself and to find out the truth about Ferreira, Rodrigues departs for Japan and immediately enters a world of systematic viciousness toward Christians, confronting a horror that he could never have imagined.

The only religious film that is remotely akin to Silence is Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ. Both are blood-soaked carnivals of torture that explore the way in which violence is the meeting point, the testing ground, in the contest between good and evil or, more precisely, between the witness of holiness and diabolical malevolence. Both films draw out to the point of excess the suffering of those who would maintain their faith in the face of betrayal and persecution. One slight weakness in the film is the performance of Andrew Garfield as the principal vehicle for the exploration of the trials undergone by the would-be faithful priest. With his performances in Silence and in Hacksaw Ridge, Garfield seems headed to stardom as a dramatic lead actor, but he is better suited to the role of the underestimated man of action in Ridge than he is to the brooding, anguished Jesuit in Silence.

The book and the film are much better at holding onto the tragic tensions in the character of Rodrigues than are many of the commentators. One of the films consultants, Father James Martin, S.J., editor of America, argues that the film underscores the inadequacy of black-and-white moral theology of the Jesuitpriests when confronted with a world of gray. But that observation only underscores the inadequacy of the banal categories of contemporary moral theology when applied to a great work of art. The world of Silence is not gray; it is surreal and nightmarish, and its dramatic depiction at the hands of Scorsese moves the film precariously close to the genre of horror.

While the priests are generous and sacrificial, they are also rightly accused of arrogance, of desiring primarily the esteem of the people they have come to serve. They are indeed focused on themselves and their tribulations. One of the key questions is whether Rodrigues hears a divine voice urging him, Trample! Jesus himself seems to speak from the icon placed before Rodrigues. If He does, then apostasy would seem to be a path of faith, not just an act of betrayal from which one can repent and return to grace. But it is far from clear how we are to interpret this scene.

This is a world where nothing is as it seems. The film leaves us with questions: Is this a divine voice? Or is it, given Rodriguess mentally strained condition, a hallucination? (How odd that God would break His apparently steadfast silence only to assuage the conscience of a Western Jesuit priest.) Or is it, as any Jesuit who had read Saint Ignatius carefully would know was possible, a communication not from the divine but from a malign spirit whose aim is to destroy souls? To seize, even in the spirit of advancing a moral theology of ambiguity, on any one of these interpretations would violate the tortured ambiguity of the film itself.

That is clearly the aim of the Japanese officials who, even as they expend enormous effort to extirpate the Catholic faith, taunt the priests for their failure to realize that Japan is a swamp in which Christianity cannot take root. That claim is belied both by the initial spread of the faith and by the lengths to which the Japanese go to rid their country of its presence.

While the lives of ordinary Japanese seem primitive indeed, the mechanisms that the officials deploy are far from crude. Instead, they exhibit a complex, diabolical rationality. The methods are totalitarian in both intent and form. The intent is to uproot completely any residue of Christian faith, to eliminate the presence of any force contrary to that of the government. Buddhism is praised but appears in the film only under the guise of a civil religion. The form is capacious, encompassing any expression of the faith, and sustained through time.

The instruments of torture and execution evince the power of totalitarian reason prior to, and in the absence of, modern technology. Torture is designed to work slowly over time and to be a kind of public display of the cost of belief. Public repudiation is as much about humiliation and mockery as it is about officially recanting. These methods deprive the potential martyr of any sense of glory. Both before and after their apostasy, priests are kept alive. Before their desecration of an icon, they are forced to witness the torture and murder of others, whose potential freedom rests, the priests are told, on the willingness of the priests to deny the faith. After their apostasy, the priests are kept around as examples of the falsity and cowardice of Christian leaders. They are given public roles, forced to break their vows, takes wives, and assist the government in its ongoing detection of forbidden Christian elements in the country.

What sort of religion can survive in this setting, where religious liberty is systematically denied? If anything endures, it is minimalist and completely privatized; indeed, what remains is so private that it cannot emerge from the interior of the soul. In everything external to ones thoughts and feelings, there must be complete conformity to the dictates of the state. Nothing less than public complicity with and docility toward the state is acceptable. If the film raises questions about the silence of God, it draws our attention equally to the silencing of religious speech and action.

In the service of a totalitarian ideal, government agents exhibit a kind of enlightenment rationalism. They are meticulous, patient, thorough, articulate, and confident in their control and ultimate victory. One of the more instructive characteristics of Japanese rule in the film is that it is not just a regime of terror, desecration, and destruction. The surrealist nightmare of isolation, torture, and death that it constructs for believers stands in contrast to the world enjoyed by apostates, to whom, the officials offer comfort, work, community, and the esteem of both the elites and the common people. The strategy is smartly designed to suppress memories of, and longing for, any higher calling, any end beyond the scope of the state.

Thomas S.Hibbs, the dean of the Honors College at Baylor University, is the author of Shows about Nothing.

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In Scorsese's adaptation of Endo's novel, a stark depiction of statism against religion - National Review

New app to bring awareness to internet censorship – Western Herald

Here in the United States, if the internet isnt working, or is working slowly, the solution is often as simple as calling tech support. In most cases, theyll have the user run a speedtest, and there are millions of sites and applications that provide this service. However, there arent so many sites that allow users to see who has access to their information, and for people in countries where the internet is censored or restricted, even the fastest internet connection wont grant them open access to information.

This is one issue the team working on the Open Observatory of Network Interference project hope to address with their new Ooniprobe app, which, as of Feb. 9, is available in a beta version for free on Google Play and in the App store. The app has three main features, a speed test, a web connectivity test and a test that detects the presence of components that could be responsible for censorship or surveillance.

Without a tool like Ooniprobe, governments have plausible deniability in terms of censorship events, and actually, people claiming that they can't access a website is not in itself proof of intentional, government-commissioned censorship, Arturo Filast the creator of the app said. Now, anyone around the world can run Ooniprobe and can inspect how their network is working and whether censorship is being implemented. The type of data collected by Ooniprobe cannot really be denied by governments since it provides a clear picture into what is happening in a user's network.

Filast believes access information is a fundamental human right, but in the current state of affairs, many countries either censor or severely restrict the internet; with countries such as China, Russia, Saudi Arabia and India showing thousands of blocked sites - including many messaging sites like WhatsApp and Telegram, according to OONI World Map Explorer.

While countries like the United States have considerably fewer reports of censorship and blocked sites, the country isnt entirely free of censorship. Even here at Western Michigan University types of censorship are in place, but according to Chief Technology Officer Tom Wolf, there is a fine line between censorship and internet security.

In my opinion preventing malicious cyber activities that are illegal in nature and/or intended to disrupt normal internet traffic would not be considered a form of censorship. I would view this as cyber security, Wolf said.

This begs the question of exactly where one should draw the line between security and censorship. Most firewalls, such as Merits Palo Alto - the firewall currently in place here at WMU - scan for evidence of malicious activities and dont otherwise censor content.

Filast addressed the very fine line between security and censorship, distinguishing that security measures should restrict themselves solely to universally bad content.

Internet censorship, in any form and of any type of content, is a slippery slope. We see this in countless occasions where it's implementation is passed as an excuse to restrict access to content that is universally bad, but then the same system gets used to implement censorship for content whose value is much debatable, Filast said.

However, Nathan Tabor, a visiting professor and historian focusing on South Asia, expressed concerns over this slippery slope mentality, pointing out that when someone knows their internet activity is being censored, theyre more likely to change their patterns of consumption in a form of implicit censorship.

A lot of my work is in Persian, so I often access sites from Iran, another place that has very restricted internet access. The things that I access have to do with history and literature, pretty innocuous subjects, but perhaps my internet history comes up on the radar of some overzealous homeland security official because Im accessing sites from Iran. With the data mining that happens with my search history, Id look like a terrorist, Tabor said. The sites that you read will fall into some kind of aggravated pattern decided by a security apparatus, regardless whether or not youre doing anything wrong.

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New app to bring awareness to internet censorship - Western Herald

Metallica’s James Hetfield on Chinese Censorship: Hopefully One Day They’ll Realize We’re Not a Political Threat – Loudwire

Raymond Ahner, Loudwire

When bands perform in China, it is no secret that they must submit their song lyrics to the government, who then return to the band with a list of songs they can and cant play as well as allowing certain songs as long as the lyrics are altered to something permissible. Metallicas recent trek to the country was no different, though James Hetfield seemed nonplussed by being forbidden from playing classics like Master of Puppets.

In an interview with South Morning China Post, the frontman was more than understanding about the censorship, stating,Why shouldnt you respect their culture when youre there as a guest and youve been invited to play? We want to be respectful and just because we do things differently, it doesnt mean it should be forced upon [others].

Hetfield is optimistic about returning to China and having the ability to play not just Master of Puppets, but other exclusions like One (in Shanghai) and Hardwired. But hopefully well keep coming back and theyll realize were not a threat politically and we have no agenda except to cross boundaries with music and let people enjoy the songs, he continued. Were not trying to bring a secret message to anybody.

During Iron Maidens performances in China last year, Bruce Dickinson toed the line with the censors, mouthing curse words and instructing the crowd to take a picture despite cameras not being allowed at the concert.

Metallica will embark on a North American stadium tour this summer, bringing along Avenged Sevenfold, Volbeat and Gojira on select dates. For more info and a list of all stops, check our 2017 Guide to Rock + Metal Tours.

Where Do Metallica Ranks Among the Top 50 Hard Rock + Metal Live Acts of All Time?

10 Bands That Were Banned From Countries

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10 Unforgettable James Hetfield Moments

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Metallica's James Hetfield on Chinese Censorship: Hopefully One Day They'll Realize We're Not a Political Threat - Loudwire

White House media ban is ‘unconstitutional censorship’, America’s National Press Club warns – The Independent

The National Press Club has condemned Donald Trumps exclusion of select media outlets from a White House press conference, calling the unprecedented action deeply disturbing and likening it to censorship.

Senior figures from the world's leading professional organisation for journalistsjoined a host of other industry leadersin protesting the decision announced by White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer to block news outlets including CNN, TheNew York Times, BBC, TheGuardian and BuzzFeed from the off-camera gaggle.

I find it deeply disturbing and completely unacceptable that the White House is actively running a campaign against a constitutionally enshrined free and independent press, the club's president, Jeffrey Ballou, saidin a statement.

The action harkens back to the darkest chapters of US history and reeks of undemocratic, un-American and unconstitutional censorship. The National Press Club supports our colleagues in the White House Correspondents Association in its protest and calls on the White House to reverse course.Mr Spicer did not give any justification as to why the news outlets had been excluded, however far-right organisations Breitbart News, One America News Network and The Washington Times were all granted access.

Othermajor outlets approved included ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox News, Reuters and Bloomberg, with Associated Press and Time both boycotting the gaggle after the exclusions emerged.

It came just two months after the press secretary promisedthe Trump administration would never ban press access regardless of the political leaning of the publication.

We have a respect for the press when it comes to the government, that that is something you cant ban an entity from, he said. You know conservative, liberal, otherwise I think that is what makes a democracy a democracy versus a dictatorship.

Donald Trump: We are fighting the phoney, fake news

National Press Club Journalism Institute President, Barbara Cochran, also accused Mr Trump of hypocrisy for claiming he loves the First Amendment, which defends the freedom of the press.

The president said, No one loves the First Amendment more than me. We call on the president and his staff to prove that and stop interfering with the ability of all news organisations to do their job of covering the White House, she wrote.

TheNew York Times and Buzzfeed both issued written statements protesting their exclusion from the briefing.

Fox News anchor Bret Baier discouraged conservative news outlets who celebrated the gaggle, citing organisations who defended his network when former President Obama tried to freeze out Fox News in 2009.

Some at CNN and New York Times stood with Fox News when the Obama admin attacked us and tried to exclude us, he wrote on Twitter, a White House gaggle should be open to all credentialed orgs.

It came as the US President renewed his attack on the mainstream media at the Conservative Political Action Conference.

I want you all to know that we are fighting the fake news. Its phony, fake, he said.I called the fake news the enemy of the people. They are the enemy of the people, because they have no sources. They just make them up when there are none.

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White House media ban is 'unconstitutional censorship', America's National Press Club warns - The Independent

Behold the censorship machine! – Personal Liberty Digest

Personal Liberty Poll

Exercise your right to vote.

In an effort to make websites more advertiser friendly some media outlets have taken to eliminating comment sections where, without considerable effort from moderators, they are unable to control the direction of reader conversations. But a Google-funded algorithm could change that via censorship.

The technology, called Perspective, uses machine-learning to ferret out toxic comments. Its designers reportedly based the technologys moderation standards on those used by the team of human moderators tasked with keeping discourse civil on The New York Times website. The Times is also reportedly now using Perspective to expand the number of articles it allows comments to appear on without overtaxing its moderation team.

Developers explain how the tool works thusly:

Perspective is an API that makes it easier to host better conversations. The API uses machine learning models to score the perceived impact a comment might have on a conversation. Developers and publishers can use this score to give realtime feedback to commenters or help moderators do their job, or allow readers to more easily find relevant information, as illustrated in two experiments below. Well be releasing more machine learning models later in the year, but our first model identifies whether a comment could be perceived as toxic to a discussion.

The level of potential toxicity appears largely based on the use of vulgarity or insulting language in comments.

Here are a few examples of comments the technology would deem highly toxic in comments:

And here are a few that are considered the least toxic:

Personal insults and name calling cheapen any pointand theres certainly no shortage of uncomfortable language on the internet. But is the top-down sanitation of comment sections really the answer?

How long before the machine decides whole topics are too uncomfortable for discussion and are likely to cause readers to leave?

And if the problem is online harassment, are we really going to pretend that simply silencing the true assholes among us will make them disappear? Theyll still be out there Ever been in a big city traffic jam?

Civility is important. But pretending that life isnt uncomfortable, and partially so because of the personalities of people we have to deal with, isnt the answer.

Besides, sometimes you just have to call a spade a spade or a f*cking moron.

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Behold the censorship machine! - Personal Liberty Digest