Mekong River biodiversity, ecosystem initiative launches in Cambodia – Nevada Today

TheGlobal Water Center'sresearch team officially launched their Wonders of the Mekong initiative in Phnom Penh, Cambodia on Tuesday, Feb. 7.

The 5-year project, "The Wonders of the Mekong: A Foundation for Sustainable Development and Resilience," aims to preserve a functional, biodiverse and healthy Mekong River. It is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development.

"This project is a greatopportunity for usto share our knowledge and expertise on water and biodiversity issues with other institutions and learn from the experiences of experts in the Mekong River Basin," Zeb Hogan, assistant research professorin theDepartment of Biologyand lead researcher on the project, said. Hogan has conducted research on the river for 20 years.

Attending the launch were several project partners, including one of the main partners on this project, the Cambodian Inland Fisheries Research and Development Institute. The team will be working with them on fisheries studies, migration studies and endangered species research.

The launch event featured remarks from USAID-Cambodia Mission Director Polly Dunford and Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Secretary of State Nao Thuk.

"The Mekong River, with its total length of about (2,700 miles), is the most productive river on earth," Nao Thuk, Cambodian Secretary of State for Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, said. "The project will contribute to conserving the beauty and sustainability of this mighty river for the benefits of the people living on and along it."

The Wonders of the Mekong project is designed to bring increased awareness of the importance of the Mekong River and its ecosystem, which are vital to the economic and social health of Southeast Asia. The project will build institutional partnerships and develop educational materials to advance research on the importance of the Mekong River biodiversity and ecosystems.

"USAID is pleased to partner with the University on this important initiative that will help maintain the ecological, cultural, and economic integrity of one of the most important river and delta systems in the world," Dunford said.

This first trip for the team to the Mekong River is mainly exploration and a study tour - finding the research locations, some sampling, and the kick-off event. The team is also doing preliminary studies on seasonal migration of fish.

Hogan and his team are visiting potential research sites in the area around Angkor and the Tonle Sap Lake, the Tonle Sap River, the Mekong River, and the Mekong River from the Laos/Cambodian border to Phnom Penh.

The team includes: limnologist Sudeep Chandra, director of the Global Water Center in the University's College of Science, whose work focuses on the conservation and restoration of aquatic ecosystems with a goal of improving environmental policy; Forest Ecologist and Biogeographer Peter Weisberg in the University's College of Agriculture, Biotechnology and Natural Resources; David Crowther, science education professor in the College of Education and executive director of the University's Raggio Research Center for STEM Education; Thomas Dilts, research landscape ecologist in CABNR's Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Scienceswith skills in Geographic Information Systems, remote sensing, habitat modeling, habitat connectivity modeling, landscape genetics; and Bonnie Trejo, research faculty member in the Aquatic Ecosystems Laboratory in the Department of Biology.

Hogan is a conservation biologist, a member of the University's Global Water Center, a National Geographic Explorer and Fellow and is the host of the National Geographic Monster Fish television program where he chronicles his research on the world's imperiled giant freshwater fish, megafish, that are more than six feet in length or weigh more than 200 pounds.

USAID is leading the U.S. government's efforts to end extreme poverty and promote resilient, democratic societies.

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Mekong River biodiversity, ecosystem initiative launches in Cambodia - Nevada Today

Here’s One More App For The Square Ecosystem – Seeking Alpha

Investment Thesis

The mobile payment and financial services company rolled out a new service tailor-made for shop owners and retailers. Only time will tell about how this pans out for the new app in a market with several such service providers.

Square, Inc. (NYSE: SQ) has just announced and launched its newest creation - the Square retail app - touted as "a comprehensive backend package of tools that include complete coverage of inventory management, customer relationship management and employee tools."

Square is a popular tool for traders due to its wide array of software and hardware products, including the Square Reader, Square Stand, Square Cash, Square Capital and the Caviar service. Square Register, Square Payroll and Customer Engagement are all available through a monthly subscription. The launch of the Square Retail app is bound to bring a shake-up in the small business sector as merchants seek a simple but all-encompassing solution to their needs.

Modern business is increasingly reliant on cashless payments, and Square seems to be keen on grabbing a large market share through customer-centric innovations that ensure safety and convenience. Square's creations are built on the concept of leveraging technology to ease commercial transactions and keep track of financial performance. The new app is the first solely-owned product of Square this year, coming after the partnership with Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) in January that saw the scrapping of fees incurred by Square users on Apple pay.

What is on the table?

The user interface of the SR app is most compatible with businesses that deal in processed or packaged products - read those that have barcodes. It contains a smart inventory management system, which makes it easier to search product information or sort out the inventory using an intuitive search bar.

The new dashboard enables users to create a directory containing customer profiles and add staff notes. The inbuilt CRM feature allows merchants to keep track of shoppers' habits such as frequency of visit, average amount of money spent and type of products bought.

Fragmented businesses will find the employee management tool useful in keeping track of shifts and hours worked. Perhaps the key feature of the app is its usability and convenience, which are the backbone on which Square builds all its apps. Also, SR joins the famed Square 'ecosystem', which is really about Square being a one-stop shop for all services required by businesses.

One factor that will make SR a frontrunner in the business apps is the "Build with Square" feature that allows users to customize apps for flexibility in business solutions. Further, as with all Square products, SR can be integrated into iOS, Android or tablet computers. Apart from the traditional 2.75% transaction fee, merchants will pay $60 monthly charges per register for the SR.

Conclusion

Since it IPO'd in 2015, Square has amassed a membership of more than 3 million merchants. In the last earnings call, Square seems to be living up to its call of giving the best value proposition to shareholders. Quarterly revenues exceeded the previous guidance, with payment volume going up 39% to $13.2 billion. This growth was driven by several factors including improved transaction speeds on card readers, faster checkout process and an increase in large-volume merchants by 55% YoY. Being a payments processing company, the performance of Square is largely dependent on the speed and convenience it affords its users.

Square is keen on nurturing the instant deposit service which allows users to transfer money to their bank account instantly at a 1% fee. Within one year, this service has seen 4 million deposits from 200,000 sellers.

The SR app is expected to add onto the already hefty profits from the payments business, which grew 36% to $134 million. The robust system is expected to be received well by large businesses in need of a robust system for their multiple needs. Also, Square is on a bid to reduce the transaction speed from 4 seconds to 3. Square is currently trading at $14.73. As a whole, I consider Square to be a worthwhile investment given the innovative line of products it has on offer. In addition, the strong focus on increasing the number of merchants on its platform ensures a steady revenue stream for the company.

Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

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Here's One More App For The Square Ecosystem - Seeking Alpha

The Connected Car Ecosystem: 2016 – 2030 – Opportunities … – PR Newswire (press release)

By the end of 2016, SNS Research estimates that connected car services will account for $14 Billion in annual revenue, driven by a host of applications, including but not limited to infotainment, navigation, fleet management, remote diagnostics, automatic crash notification, enhanced safety, UBI (Usage Based Insurance), traffic management and semi-autonomous driving.

The "Connected Car Ecosystem: 2016 2030 Opportunities, Challenges, Strategies & Forecasts" report presents an in-depth assessment of the connected car ecosystem including OEM connected car programs, enabling technologies, key trends, market drivers, challenges, applications, collaborative initiatives, regulatory landscape, standardization, opportunities, future roadmap, value chain, ecosystem player profiles and strategies. The report also presents market size forecasts for connected car services from 2016 through to 2030. The forecasts are segmented for 3 connectivity models, 5 application categories, 5 regions and 17 leading countries.

The report comes with an associated Excel datasheet suite covering quantitative data from all numeric forecasts presented in the report.

Topics Covered

The report covers the following topics:

- Connected car ecosystem

- Market drivers and barriers

- Enabling technologies and key trends

- Connected car programs and platform offerings

- Embedded, tethered and integrated connectivity models

- Analysis of key applications and opportunities

- Regulatory landscape, collaborative initiatives and standardization

- Industry roadmap and value chain

- Profiles and strategies of over 240 leading ecosystem players, including automotive OEMs, mobile operators and connected car platform specialists

- Strategic recommendations for ecosystem players

- Market analysis and forecasts from 2016 till 2030

Forecast Segmentation

Connected car installed base and service revenue forecasts are provided for each of the following submarkets and their subcategories:

Connectivity Model

- Embedded

- Tethered

- Integrated

Application Category

- Communications, Infotainment & Payments

- Navigation & Location Services

- Vehicle Management

- Safety & Security

- Driver Assistance & Autonomous Driving

Embedded Car Connections

- GSM

- CDMA-2000

- W-CDMA

- TD-SCDMA

- LTE & 5G

- Satellite & Other Technologies

Tethered Car Connections

- Wireless

- Wireline

Integrated Car Connections

- Apple CarPlay

- Android Auto

- MirrorLink

- Others

Regional Markets

- Asia Pacific

- Europe

- Middle East & Africa

- North America

- Latin & Central America

Country Markets

- Brazil

- Canada

- China

- Egypt

- France

- Germany

- India

- Indonesia

- Italy

- Japan

- Mexico

- Russia

- Saudi Arabia

- South Africa

- South Korea

- UK

- USA

Key Questions Answered

The report provides answers to the following key questions:

- How big is the connected car opportunity?

- What trends, challenges and barriers are influencing its growth?

- How is the ecosystem evolving by segment and region?

- What will the market size be in 2020 and at what rate will it grow?

- Which countries and submarkets will see the highest percentage of growth?

- Who are the key market players and what are their strategies?

- How will connected cars drive investments in Big Data, cloud computing, analytics and other technologies?

- What are the growth prospects of embedded, tethered and integrated connectivity options?

- How do government mandates and initiatives impact the adoption of embedded connectivity?

- What are the future prospects of self-driving cars and cooperative V2X applications?

- Do LTE and 5G technologies pose a threat to the 802.11p standard for V2X communications?

- What strategies should automotive OEMs, mobile operators and connected car platform specialists adopt to remain competitive?

Key Findings

The report has the following key findings:

- By the end of 2016, SNS Research estimates that connected car services will account for $14 Billion in annual revenue, driven by a host of applications. The market is further expected to grow at a CAGR of 31% between 2016 and 2020.

- Although the market is presently dominated by infotainment and telematics, connected driver assistance systems and autonomous driving applications will witness the highest growth rate over the next four years.

- Multiple automotive OEMs are beginning to integrate in-vehicle payment capabilities with their connected car platforms to make it possible for drivers to pay for services such as fuel, parking, food and tolling, without having to leave their vehicles.

- The connected car ecosystem continues to consolidate, with larger players investing in acquisitions to increase their market share, technical capabilities, revenue and geographic reach. For example, semiconductor giant Intel has made a spate of acquisitions including Altera, Yogitech, Arynga and Itseez, to bolster its IoT and connected car capabilities.

- Many mobile operators have expanded beyond their traditional role as connectivity providers, to offer end-to-end connected car platforms directly to automotive OEMs and aftermarket suppliers.

Download the full report: https://www.reportbuyer.com/product/3095583/

About Reportbuyer Reportbuyer is a leading industry intelligence solution that provides all market research reports from top publishers http://www.reportbuyer.com

For more information: Sarah Smith Research Advisor at Reportbuyer.com Email: query@reportbuyer.com Tel: +44 208 816 85 48 Website: http://www.reportbuyer.com

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/the-connected-car-ecosystem-2016--2030--opportunities-challenges-strategies--forecasts-300405322.html

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The Connected Car Ecosystem: 2016 - 2030 - Opportunities ... - PR Newswire (press release)

Cris ‘Cyborg’ Justino ‘looking really good’ to get exemption for banned substance – ESPN (blog)

NEW YORK -- UFC president Dana White on Friday told ESPN he's encouraged that female mixed martial artist Cris "Cyborg" Justino, who faces a one-year suspension, will be granted a retroactive therapeutic-use exemption for using a banned substance.

The future has been uncertain for Justino (17-1) after she tested positive for spironolactone, a banned substance, in December. However, Justino has claimed innocence under the UFC's antidoping program, stating a doctor had prescribed the medication, and she has applied for the exemption.

"It's actually looking really good now," White said. "Apparently, the three [medical conditions] she has is what this medicine is used for. It's looking really good. It was looking bad for a minute, but now it's looking better. We're in a good place."

Justino's attorney Howard Jacobs, who has represented the UFC's Jon Jones and Brock Lesnar in failed drug tests, confirmed the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) has requested additional information regarding Justino's case, which, Jacobs said, suggests the exemption is being considered.

"Just yesterday we submitted further details in response to the questions that were posed to us, and Cris appreciates they are giving her case a thorough review," Jacobs said. "We're hoping to have a resolution soon.

"We're encouraged by the questions they've asked. If these requests are not granted, you typically get a generic denial. This response was very focused on specific things they were asking for. So, it's encouraging."

Any positive news for Justino would be a lift for the UFC, as it would clear her path for an obvious 145-pound title fight against the winner of Saturday's first-ever female featherweight championship bout between Holly Holm and Germaine de Randamie at UFC 208 in New York.

Both Holm (10-2) and de Randamie (6-3) have expressed interest in eventually returning to the 135-pound weight class, but White said he's confident the winner will defend the title against Justino, who has won 15 consecutive fights via knockout.

"We'll have to see, but why would you not want to face Cris Cyborg?" White said. "Especially if you're Holly, you've already held that title. You had 18 titles in boxing. If she could go in and beat Cris Cyborg, you know?"

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Cris 'Cyborg' Justino 'looking really good' to get exemption for banned substance - ESPN (blog)

UFC 208 main event is good but should have featured Cyborg – Toronto Sun


Toronto Sun
UFC 208 main event is good but should have featured Cyborg
Toronto Sun
If the UFC was finally going to add a 145-pound belt for women, Cris 'Cyborg' Justino sort of needed to be in the first title fight. She's only dominated all of her competition for the better part of a decade, after all. For some, Justino's absence has ...
UFC fighter Cris 'Cyborg' Justino is a big draw, but is facing a possible drug suspensionLos Angeles Times
Is 'Cyborg' Justino destined to be the Phantom of Brooklyn at UFC 208?MMAjunkie.com
UFC 208: Cris Cyborg Justino's shadow looms over inaugural women's featherweight division fightNewsday
Yahoo Sports -Bleacher Report
all 591 news articles »

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UFC 208 main event is good but should have featured Cyborg - Toronto Sun

Conor McGregor Vs Anderson Silva, Ronda Rousey Vs Cyborg & 5 MMA Super-Fights That Will Never Happen – Forbes


Forbes
Conor McGregor Vs Anderson Silva, Ronda Rousey Vs Cyborg & 5 MMA Super-Fights That Will Never Happen
Forbes
In the Wild West that is MMA matchmaking, never say never is typically the law of the land. Particularly in today's money-hungry climate, where the sport's most talked about matchup is one taking place in a boxing ring instead of a cage, ruling out ...
UFC 209: Fired Up Tony Ferguson puts McGregor, Khabib and Aldo on Blast!YouTube

all 114 news articles »

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Conor McGregor Vs Anderson Silva, Ronda Rousey Vs Cyborg & 5 MMA Super-Fights That Will Never Happen - Forbes

Ronda Rousey would never ever fight Cris Cyborg – UFC commentator Joe Rogan – Daily Star

RONDA ROUSEY will never do battle with Cristiane Justino, according to UFC commentator Joe Rogan.

GETTY

Rousey's mixed martial arts future is currently in major doubt following her devastating first-round TKO loss to Amanda Nunes at UFC 207, her second defeat on the bounce.

Many in the MMA world have speculated that the manner in which Rousey was so easily dispatched could send her into retirement.

RONDA ROUSEY was battered by Amanda Nunes in her long-awaited UFC comeback bout - here are some of the best pictures from the fight.

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Ronda Rousey's defeat to Amanda Nunes: The best pictures

If so, that would leave fans wondering how a fight with her and Justino, who is more commonly referred to as 'Cyborg', would've played out.

Last week, Rogan was asked about the possibility of Rousey taking on the reigning Invicta FC featherweight champion in Japan and claimed there's no way in hell that fight would ever come to fruition.

I dont think Ronda would ever do that

"I dont think Ronda would ever do that," he said during a recent episode of The Joe Rogan Experience podcast

"First of all, I dont think contractually fight outside of the UFC and I dont think she would fight outside of the UFC.

GETTY

"And I definitely dont think shed fight Cyborg. I dont think shed do that anyway.

"First of all, Cyborg is probably walking around north of of 190lbs. And Im not exaggerating."

JRE / YOUTUBE

Rousey has yet to make adecision on her fighting future, but UFC president Dana White believes the 30-year-old's fighting days are over.

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Ronda Rousey would never ever fight Cris Cyborg - UFC commentator Joe Rogan - Daily Star

‘Cyborg’ Twitter accounts see conservative voices dominate around … – The Age

Daniel John Sobieski, 68, climbed the stairs ofhis modest brick home in Chicago and settled into a worn leather chair for another busy day of tweeting. But he needn't have bothered. As one of the America's most prolific conservative voices on Twitter, he already had posted hundreds of times this morning as he ate breakfast, as he chatted with his wife, even as he slept and would post hundreds of times more before night fell.

The key to this frenetic pace was technology allowing Twitter users to post automatically from queues of pre-written tweets that can be delivered at a nearly constant, round-the-clock pace that no human alone could match. In this way, Sobieski a balding retiree with eyes so weak that he uses a magnifying glass to see his two computer screens has dramatically amplified his online reach despite lacking the celebrity or the institutional affiliations that long have helped elevate some voices over the crowd.

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Newsweek writer Kurt Eichenwald says a malicious message sent by a Trump supporter on Twitter was designed to trigger an epileptic seizure.

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US President Donald Trump said during a surprise visit with reporters aboard Air Force One en route to Florida that he was considering "a brand new order" that could be issued as soon as Monday or Tuesday.

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France's presidential election campaign lurched deeper into uncertainty on Tuesday after centrist Emmanuel Macron was forced to deny an extramarital affair while financial scandal continued to dog conservative rival Francois Fillon.

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Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe says he and President Donald Trump have confirmed their will to build a free and fair market based on rules, following Trump's decision to withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

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Rescuers race to save hundreds of pilot whales at New Zealand's picturesque Golden Bay in one of the country's largest recorded mass strandings.

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President Donald Trump was handed another legal defeat on Thursday when the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled to uphold a lower court's decision to block his controversial travel ban from seven Muslim-majority countries.

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A federalappealscourt refused Thursday to reinstate President Donald Trump's ban on travellers from seven predominantly Muslim nations, dealing another legal setback to the new administration's immigration policy.

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Trump's press secretary Sean Spicer referred to a mysterious Atlanta terrorist attack when justifying the travel ban, but the White House says he "clearly meant Orlando".

Newsweek writer Kurt Eichenwald says a malicious message sent by a Trump supporter on Twitter was designed to trigger an epileptic seizure.

"To me," Sobieski said, "it's kind of like a high-tech version of the old-fashioned soap box."

Today's digital soapboxes are little like the old-fashioned kind. Researchers have documented the power of automation technology to magnify some points of view while drowning out others.

Much of that research has focused on "bots," accounts programmed to follow instructions, such as automatically replying to tweets from other accounts. But Sobieski exemplifies the growing popularity of a variation, called "cyborgs," that mix human creativity and initiative with a computer's relentless speed, allowing their views to gain audience while sidestepping the traditional gatekeepers of news and commentary.

Sobieski's two accounts, for example, tweet more than 1000 times a day using "schedulers" that work through stacks of his own pre-written posts in repetitive loops. With retweets and other forms of sharing, these posts reach the feeds of millions of other accounts, including those of such conservative luminaries as Fox News's Sean Hannity, GOP strategist Karl Rove and republican SenatorTed Cruz, according to researcher Jonathan Albright.

"It's like a giant megaphone," said Albright, an assistant professor of media analytics at Elon University, in North Carolina, whose research singled out Sobieski's accounts as having unusual reach.

When Albright studied the most prolific Twitter accounts during the final two weeks of the US election, he found that all of the top 20 appeared to support Trump. Among accounts using major pro-Trump hashtags such as "#MAGA," for "Make America Great Again," two of the top three belonged to Sobieski.

While there is no way to know how often Sobieski's tweets are read as they flit through busy feeds nor is it clear how they are influencing political debates researchers have found that automation allows users to exert an oversize influence on conversations on Twitter and beyond.

One research team found that "highly automated accounts" supporting President Trump a category that includes both bots and cyborgs out-tweeted those supporting Democrat Hillary Clinton by a margin of 5-to-1 in the final days before the vote.

This Twitter advantage had spillover effects, helping pro-Trump and anti-Clinton stories to trend online, making them more likely to find their way into Facebook feeds or Google's list of popular news stories, said Samuel Woolley, research director for the Computational Propaganda project at Oxford University and co-author of the study on the effectiveness of pro-Trump bots.

"The goal here is not to hack computational systems but to hack free speech and to hack public opinion," Woolley said.

For the first new tweet on this day, Sobieski wants to opine on the spiking murder rate in Chicago and the alleged failings of the city's Democratic Mayor Rahm Emanuel (or "Rahmbo" to Sobieski). He navigates to a conservative online magazine for which he occasionally writes, American Thinker, and copies a link to one of his articles about crime.

To reach beyond his own 78,900 followers, Sobieski adds a few more adornments, typing #MAGA to surface the tweet to the president's supporters online, and @realDonaldTrumpin hopes of getting the attention of Trump or those who track messages to him. The last six characters are #PJNET, for the Patriot Journalist Network, a coalition of conservative tweeters who amplify their messages through coordination, automation and other online tactics.

Last, Sobieski adds what he calls "the coup de grace," plucking an image from his ever-growing digital library of illustrations. For this tweet he chooses a photograph of bloodied Iraqi men carrying what appear to be clubs, along with the caption, "BAGHDAD IS SAFER THAN CHICAGO."

In the time it takes to compose this tweet, his schedulers have sent out several others. Some planes, meanwhile, have taken off from Chicago Midway Airport a few blocks away, sending muted roars through the house he shares with his wife, a Lebanese immigrant and fellow Catholic to whom Sobieski has been married for 39 years. He will stay in front of the computer for another two, maybe three hours before quitting for the day, but his Twitter accounts never stop working.

"Life isn't fair," Sobieski said with a smile. "Twitter in a way is like a meritocracy. You rise to the level of your ability ... People who succeed are just the people who work hard."

Twitter, which declined multiple requests for comment, is more easily manipulated than some other social media platforms, researchers say, because it allows anonymous users and tolerates some degree of automation of its accounts. Bots can be bought or sold online, and some are so sophisticated with profile pictures, plausible names and a capacity for chatter fuelled by artificial intelligence that they are difficult to detect, even for experts.

The company has policies to limit automation and the use of multiple accounts, and it has published guidelines and "best practices." Twitter sometimes shuts down violators when they are discovered, but it acknowledged in a 2014 securities filing that "up to approximately 8.5 per centof all active users" may have used third-party apps for automation. Independent researchers say the percentage could be twice as high, putting the numbers of automated accounts in the tens of millions.

Some of the most prolific political tweeters complain that the company doesn't have clear enough rules of the road. Lewis Shupe, a conservative Las Vegas-based retiree who runs @USFreedomArmy, a 61,000-follower account, said that he had received warnings from Twitter for posting too often. He now limits his scheduler to 150 tweets per hour, a number he thinks allows him to fly under the company's radar.

"If Twitter would publish rules, we would follow them," Shupe said.

Political activists have used automated Twitter accounts, including bots, in at least 17 nations, including Iran, Mexico, Russia and the United Kingdom. In the run-up to the June Brexit vote, "highly-automated accounts" favouring departure from the European Union were more prolific, by a ratio of 3 to 1, than automated accounts on the other side of the debate, according to research by Oxford Internet Institute professor PhilipHoward and a colleague.

"It makes public conversation a synthetic conversation," said Howard. "It makes it very difficult to know what consensus looks like."

In the United States, automation tools generally have been deployed more aggressively by conservatives, researchers say. Pro-Clinton hashtags, in some cases, got "colonised" by pro-Trump tweets during the election season, according to the paper by Howard and Woolley. And for the third presidential debate, Trump's supporters and in some cases, likely bots began tweeting the "#TrumpWon" hashtag a half-hour before the event began.

"Liberals are pretty far behind," Woolley said.

The impact on political debate is heavy but not widely understood. In the USpresidential election, 19 per cent of all tweets related to the campaign during one five-week stretch probably came from bots, according to University of Southern California researchers Alessandro Bessi and Emilio Ferrara.

Those who use automation to magnify their voices express little sympathy for those who don't.

"Anybody can be a Twitter rock star if you learn how to do it," said Florida-based conservative activist Mark Prasek, whose Twitter account describes him as a "Christian Technologist." The Patriot Journalist Network he founded in 2012 allows members to send off dozens of pre-written tweets on a range of a conservative issues with just a few clicks of a mouse.

"It's a level playing field," he said. "We're using tools. Is it fair that I can get downtown faster using a car than if you are using a bike?"

Before Sobieski discovered Twitter, he was a prolific writer of letters to the editor, penning thousands to Chicago-area newspapers while also crafting occasional on-air replies to liberal editorial positions of local television stations.

That probably would have been the peak of Sobieski's influence as a right-wing gadfly in an increasingly left-wing city had he not become a regular freelancer in 2004 for the editorial page of Investor's Business Daily, a Los Angeles-based publication with a national reach. He started tweeting out web links to his editorials in 2009, christening his account @gerfingerpoken.

(During Sobieski's decades writing letters to the editor, one of his day jobs was working as a programmer for a company that, in its computer room, featured a satiric German sign that translated as, roughly, "Warning: Don't touch the machine with the blinking lights!" Sobieski named his account for one of the words in that sign, "gefingerpoken," accidentally misspelling it with an extra "r," as "gerfingerpoken.")

Sobieski acknowledges that he may have been too aggressive in his hunt to add followers during his early years. Twitter, he said, temporarily shut down @gerfingerpoken several times for violating terms of service designed to limit unwanted contact between users. He started @gerfingerpoken2 in 2012 as a hedge against the possibility that Twitter might block the original account permanently.

But Sobieski eventually developed a finely honed ability to dodge what he called "the Twitter police" while steadily building his reach online.

"My accounts will be tweeting long after I'm gone," Sobieski joked. "Maybe in my last will and testament, I should say, 'Load up my recurring queue.' "

The Washington Post

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'Cyborg' Twitter accounts see conservative voices dominate around ... - The Age

$62.4 million worth of cocaine wash up on two beaches in Norfolk – AOL News

Aris Folley, AOL.com

Feb 10th 2017 4:43PM

The National Crime Agency (NCA) says that around 794 pounds of cocaine with a potential street value of $62.4 million has washed up on two beaches in Norfolk, England.

NCA officials were called to Hopton Beach Thursday after a resident stumbled upon a number of holdalls packed to the brim with the Class A drug.

They also discovered a small number of packages separately at Caister Sea, almost 10 miles north of the beach, the following Friday.

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800 lbs of cocaine worth $62.4 million has washed up on two beaches in Norfolk

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Matthew Rivers, a spokesperson for the NCA border investigation team, said: "We are now working with Border Force, the Coastguard Agency and Norfolk Police to try and establish how the bags ended up where they did; however, it is extremely unlikely that this was their intended destination."

"This is obviously a substantial seizure of class A drugs, and its loss will represent a major blow to the organized criminals involved," Rivers continued.

Both beaches are near Great Yarmouth -- a town in Norfolk that has become notorious as a 'dumping ground' for people who are on "low income and welfare claimants," according to an England-based media outlet.

SEE ALSO: Drug-smuggling women took 200 pounds of cocaine on exotic world cruise: Cops

Superintendent of Dave Buckley of Norfolk Police added in a statement: "We are assisting the National Crime Agency with their searches and while we believe we have recovered all the packages, should any member of the public find one they are urged to contact Norfolk Police immediately on 101."

"We will have extra officers in the area to monitor the situation."

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$62.4 million worth of cocaine wash up on two beaches in Norfolk - AOL News

Hundreds Of Whales Die Stranded On A Remote New Zealand Beach – NPR

Volunteers try to save about 100 pilot whales after more than 400 of them were stranded at Farewell Spit near Nelson, New Zealand, on Friday. Tim Cuff/AP hide caption

Volunteers try to save about 100 pilot whales after more than 400 of them were stranded at Farewell Spit near Nelson, New Zealand, on Friday.

Updated7:40 a.m. ET

By the time Ceree Morrison found hundreds of pilot whales washed ashore on a remote beach in New Zealand 250 to 300 of them were already dead. The rest remained alive on Farewell Spit, a long strip of land that hooks from the country's South Island into the sea.

The scene was devastating.

"You could hear the sounds of splashing, of blowholes being cleared, of sighing," Morrison told The Associated Press. "The young ones were the worst. Crying is the only way to describe it."

All told, about 416 pilot whales had stranded at Farewell Spit before they were found Thursday night, the New Zealand Department of Conservation said in a statement. Even in a country with one of the highest stranding rates in the world about 300 dolphins and whales a year beach themselves, according to marine conservation group Project Jonah the DOC says this is the third largest single stranding ever recorded in New Zealand.

Farewell Spit, in particular, is "sometimes described as a whale trap," the AP notes. "The spit's long coastline and gently sloping beaches seem to make it difficult for whales to navigate away from once they get close."

As the tide rolled in Friday, hundreds of volunteers in the region attempted to send the surviving whales back to sea, pushing them out as the water rose high enough to do so and forming a human chain to try to block them from returning to the beach.

Of the survivors, about 50 successfully swam back into the bay, while about 80 to 90 were restranded, the DOC says.

No single cause for strandings is known, Project Jonah says, though the group explains that some factors are thought to include navigational errors, injuries from sonar blasts or fishing nets, and strong social bonds that can draw whole pods to follow wayward individuals into danger.

The AP reports that volunteers were able to refloat about 100 whales on Saturday. The wire service notes that some whales that were refloated on Friday beached themselves again, but the Saturday morning tide may keep the latest group at sea.

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Hundreds Of Whales Die Stranded On A Remote New Zealand Beach - NPR

Port San Luis looking at enforcement, partial ban to address dog complaints on beaches – The San Luis Obispo Tribune


The San Luis Obispo Tribune
Port San Luis looking at enforcement, partial ban to address dog complaints on beaches
The San Luis Obispo Tribune
Port San Luis Harbor District representatives are still pondering how to address complaints that some pet owners aren't cleaning up after their pooches or keeping aggressive dogs leashed on the beach. Among the options? More trash cans and signage, ...

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Port San Luis looking at enforcement, partial ban to address dog complaints on beaches - The San Luis Obispo Tribune

Californians Love the Beach, But Can We Afford It? – TheInertia.com

Ideally, kids from all over California can enjoy its beaches. Photo: Delphine Ducaruge

You love the beach, right? Of course you do! Well, so does the rest of California. According to a recent statewide survey, nine out of ten Californians say the coast is important to them personally. Even more, three out of four respondents say they visit the beach at least once a year, with many coming much more frequently. But even though a large share of Californians live in coastal metropolitan areas, few of them have easy access to the 1,011 public beaches and parks within Californias coastal zone. In Access for All, researchers Jon Christensen and Philip King offer some much-needed advice on how to increase equitable access to our beaches.

First thing first, a little history. In 1976, the state legislature adopted the California Coastal Act agreeing that the coast is a distinct and valuable natural resource belonging to all the people. Pushing things further, it stated that protecting our beaches is a paramount concern to present and future residents of the state and nation. Sure the beaches are crowded. But the California Constitution asserts that its our duty to provide maximum access for all people. Pretty democratic of us right? Well, as per usual, this has been easier said than done. Despite decades of efforts by the California Coastal Commission, the State Coastal Conservancy, and many local partners the reports findings arent so sunny. Heresare the stats:

62% of voters think access to the coast is a problem.

78% are frustrated by the lack of affordable parking.

68% dont have access to beach-bound public transportation.

And 75% cited a lack of affordable overnight accommodations, the majority of which were latino and families with children.

No matter how you look at it, it seems California has some serious beach barriers. So what are we doing about it? For one, transportation needs to change, and some cities are acting. Santa Monica Beach saw a surge of riders when the Metro Expo line opened in summer 2016. Get those folks to the surf! Non-profits like Oaklands Brown Girl Surf and San Diegos Outdoor Outreach offer young people from diverse communities a rare chance to get outdoors.

Four of the primary issues that make coastal access challenging for California residents. Image: UCLA.edu

The studys strength is in that it truly means access for ALL. While nearly all of us value our beaches, we dont necessarily enjoy them in the same ways. Families with children travel as groups, while most young people go to the beach alone. Certain beaches are more diverse than others. Equitable beaches are ones that can accommodate a diversity of people and a diversity of activities. In light of this, Access for All, asks us to acknowledge disparities in beach access and challenges us to do something about it. Of course, we could continue to hide these gems for our own enjoyment. Price out inlanders by jacking up parking costs. Vote down transportation development. And while no one is asking you to divulge secret spots youve been sworn protect, Access for All asks us to act on our better inclinations of citizenship and share the natural wealth a little. Technically, it belongs to all of us.

Christensen and King remind us that the California coast and beaches are among our states most important democratic spaces. In divisive times, it seems more important than ever to develop our sense of statehood, our sense of equitable identity. And to remember that according to our state constitution and the California Coastal Act, our beaches belong to all of us. We need to make sure they are accessible to everyone.

Data provided by UCLA

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Californians Love the Beach, But Can We Afford It? - TheInertia.com

Lauderdale-by-the-Sea offers beaches, condos and cozy ambiance – Miami Herald


Miami Herald
Lauderdale-by-the-Sea offers beaches, condos and cozy ambiance
Miami Herald
Those looking for an antidote to South Florida's glitz find it in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, an oceanfront stretch in North Broward with sleepy beachfront appeal, says Realtor Billy Brown of One Sotheby's. It's a cute and quaint beach town with an ...

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Lauderdale-by-the-Sea offers beaches, condos and cozy ambiance - Miami Herald

Will you be able to see tonight’s deep penumbral lunar eclipse? – Blastr

[Above: Photo of a lunar eclipse from September 2015, taken just as the Moon started toslipinto the darker part of Earth's shadow. Tonight's eclipse should look similar. Credit: Phil Plait]

Tonight Friday, February 10, 2017 about half the planet will be treated to a lunar eclipse. But not an ordinary one: It will be a deep penumbral eclipse, and youll have to be diligent to see it.

OK, so what does that mean?

Well, for one thing, the Moon wont get as dark as it does in a total lunar eclipse. But it will get noticeably duskier, especially on one side, and that should be pretty neat to see. Also, itll be visible mostly to folks in Europe and Africa, but those of us in the U.S. get a view of it as well, right after sunset (see below for specific times).

An eclipse is when an astronomical object blocks the light from another astronomical object. As the Moon orbits the Earth, it sometimes slides into the Earths shadow in space. When it does, the Earth blocks the Sun, the Moon grows dark, and we get a lunar eclipse.

But things get a bit complicated. Because theres nothing between the Earth and Sun, the Earths shadow is always pointing away from the Sun in space. But it actually casts two shadows; a dark, narrow cone-shaped one called the umbra (Latin for shadow) and a wider, less dark one surrounding the umbra called the penumbra (almost shadow). This is due to the geometry of the Sun being a disk in the sky and not a dot. I explain how all this works in my episode of Crash Course Astronomy: Eclipses:

The first part is about solar eclipses (the lunar eclipse part starts around 6:45), but explains why we have an umbra and penumbra. NASA also has a nice video showing the geometry of eclipses; it wasnt made for this particular eclipse, but it does show the orbital tilts to scale very nicely:

Each lunar eclipse is different because of the tilt of the Moons orbit. Sometimes it passes into the umbral shadow, and we see a nice, dark eclipse. But sometimes the Moons orbital tilt only lets it dip its toe, so to speak, into the penumbra. If it stays near the outer edge the dimming is so minor you might not even notice!

But thats why tonights eclipse (remember, thats why I started this article in the first place) is so interesting: The Moon misses the umbra, but only by a tiny bit. Thats why this is called a deep penumbral eclipse; it passes deeply into the secondary shadow of the Earth, but not the really dark one. As the folks at Sky and Telescope note, the Moon misses the umbra by a mere 160 km! Mind you, the Moon is 3470 km across, so this is a pretty near miss. In fact, the penumbra is just narrower than the Moon itself, and the Moon is never completely inside the penumbra at any one time during this eclipse.

So, when should you go out to see it? The Moon first starts to slide into the penumbra at 22:34 UTC, or 5:34 p.m. Eastern US time. If you live on the east coast of the US thats just after the Moon rises. Those of us farther west wont see this part of the eclipse, because it wont have risen yet!

The deepest part of the eclipse occurs about two hours later at 00:45 UTC technically, in Greenwich (where UTC is officially marked) the next day, February 11, but in the US its still Friday night at 7:45 p.m. Eastern time. For my location, in Colorado, the Moon rises just minutes later, so for me it will already be in the deepest part. If youre on the west coast, you wont even see this until its already over. That happens at 02:53 UT (9:53 p.m. Eastern).

So, the farther east you are, the better. Anyone in Europe and Africa will see the whole thing, but itll be late at night. India and China will only be able to see the start of the eclipse; itll set before the Moon reaches the deepest area of the penumbra.

And what will you see? Thats hard to say. If were lucky, at the greatest point in the eclipse the northern part of the Moon will look darker than the southern side, but neither will be dark dark. More dusky, probably. It should certainly be noticeable, though. Still, it wont get blood red like it does during a total lunar eclipse, so dont expect that. This will be more subtle.

Im not even sure Ill be able to tell from where I am; the Moon will rise fully eclipsed and then get brighter over the next two hours. It kinda does that anyway as it rises and clears the murk near the horizon. Ill take a look anyway, because every eclipse is different, so you never know. Thats part of the fun!

The next total lunar eclipse is just a year from now, on January 31, 2018. That one does favor the west coast, so yall will get your chance. Still, it happens late at night so you might want to nap first.

And, of course, we have a major solar eclipse coming: on August 21, 2017 the path of that will sweep across the continental US in what may be the most viewed eclipse in history. And duh: Ill have a lot more about that coming soon. Stay tuned. Until then, enjoy tonights show!

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Will you be able to see tonight's deep penumbral lunar eclipse? - Blastr

ASU Astronomy Researcher Breaks Down Tonight’s Eclipse – KJZZ


KJZZ
ASU Astronomy Researcher Breaks Down Tonight's Eclipse
KJZZ
... a lunar eclipse and a comet will be visible, too. To help break down the night-sky fun, I'm joined by Patrick Young. He's an associate professor in ASU's School of Earth and Space Exploration and a researcher in astronomy, astrophysics and ...

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ASU Astronomy Researcher Breaks Down Tonight's Eclipse - KJZZ

Full Moon Hike to explore astronomy, nature – Red and Black

As part of an ongoing series inviting guests to experience the nightlife of the State Botanical Garden of Georgia, participants will have a chance to explore the garden during an upcoming Full Moon Hike on Feb. 11.

From 7-8:30 p.m., attendees armed with walking shoes and wanderlust, will take a guided tour through trails and gardens, exploring topics like constellations, astronomy, nocturnal creatures and more.

Tours begin at the Visitor Center & Conservatory Front Fountain before weaving two miles under a full moon with informative activities and facts along the way.

This monthly tour, which has been running for around four years, is the idea of Andie Bisceglia, 29, a University of Georgia second year graduate student.

Previously a middle school ecology teacher before going to UGA, she moved here with her husband and began working in the crop and soil sciences and education department at UGA.

Bisceglia has been working closely the the Gardens since being hired by their children's program in 2011 when she began the Full Moon Hike program.

In the summertime theres frog and insect calls you can identify because thats when theyre active, Bisceglia said. In the winter when theres less sounds going on I might focus more on astronomy or constellations. It depends on whats happening out in nature at the time.

Currently as a full-time graduate student she is not employed by the Gardens but still organizes and guides the monthly Full Moon Hikes, modeled after a nature at night program she used to teach children in Maine and Connecticut.

Bisceglia strongly encourages the surrounding community to enjoy the cost-efficient activities and programs offered by the Gardens, especially the Night Hike, which allows for a glimpse into nightlife.

Its really easy in this day and age even for someone like myself who love nature to go weeks at a time without really getting out of your neighborhood or comfort zone, Bisceglia said. Especially at nighttime when most people arent comfortable going out on their own, this is a safe environment thats lots of fun for the people who go on the hikes to learn.

For this months tour, Bisceglia hasnt yet decided on a topic, but strongly suggested that she would focus on the lunar eclipse set to happen early Saturday morning. She mentioned doing a demonstration on the science behind eclipses, keeping with a timely theme.

Although attendance fluctuates during the colder months and spikes in the summer with children out of school, Bisceglia noted that her tours run the gamut, including attendees aged 285. She also said the hikes are almost too popular, as nightly attendance, which should be capped at 25, often climbS into the 60s.

Pre-registration for the Full Moon Hike on Feb. 11 is strongly encouraged at $5 per person and $15 for families.

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Full Moon Hike to explore astronomy, nature - Red and Black

Elusive blue lightning filmed dancing above a thunderstorm – Astronomy Magazine

In Earths upper atmosphere, blue jets, red sprites, pixies, halos, trolls and elves streak toward space, rarely caught in the act by human eyes.

This mixed-bag of quasi-mythological terms are all names for transient luminous events, or, quite simply, forms of lightning that dance atop thunderstorm clouds. Airplane pilots have reported seeing them, but their elusive nature makes them hard to study. But ESA astronaut Andreas Morgensen, while aboard the International Space Station in September 2015, filmed hundreds of blue jets flashing over a thunderstorm that was pounding the Bay of Bengal, confirming a mysterious atmospheric phenomenon.

According to Morgensen and researchers at the Denmark National Space Institute, these observations are the first of their kind, and offer a rare glimpse of poorly understood atmospheric phenomena. His work, which was published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, also proves that the ISS is a perfect lab for studying elves and pixies, and a planned follow-up mission should reveal even more.

A Great View

Storm clouds are like electrical cakes with alternating layers of negatively and positively charged ions. Air currents tear through the sky cake, squashing the layers and reversing their stacking order. When the base layers charge differs from the earths chargezap. The seems to be true for layers higher in the atmosphere, but instead of striking earth, transient luminous events discharge into space. Of course, you need to be above the clouds to see them; thus, the reason they are difficult to study.

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Elusive blue lightning filmed dancing above a thunderstorm - Astronomy Magazine

One giant leap for womankind – from astrophysics to IT security – SC Magazine UK

After nearly a decade as an astronomer, Dr Leila Powell wanted a change: I enjoyed the type of work I was doing but I started to feel that I wanted to do something where it would impact people's daily lives a bit more. Powell enjoyed the technical aspects of astronomy but wanted to put her skills to work outside of academia.

Much like astrophysics there are few traditional routes into cybersecurity, perhaps because the industry hasn't been around long enough to develop traditions'.

Powell's route into cyber-security was data science - dealing with large data sets, analysing them and pulling out insights. In her previous line of work, questions of how you communicate those insights, make them accessible and ensure they can't be misinterpreted are critical. It was a lesson she kept in mind when she made the jump to IT security.

Powell decided that she wanted to work in a startup because there would be more opportunity to learn different things, it would be a bit more fast-paced, and maybe I could keep some of the aspects that I liked about academia working in small teams, working on future problems.

It was a twist of fate that Powell landed where she did: I just started looking at startups that I thought were interesting, and Panaseer was one of those that I found out about. At that point I thought, cyber-security, that sounds interesting, could be good.'

Powell was impressed by the refreshing maturity and expertise of her interviewers: The team had a lot of experience working inside cyber-security which can be unlike the typical start-up of young people starting a new App.

These were people who knew what they were doing already. I believed in them and the idea, and thought it would meet that need in me to help people because it's becoming such a pressing issue now, for everybody. And I ended up here 18 months ago.

Both astrophysics and cyber-security are very male dominated areas, so SC asked Powell how the two compared, and what particular issues had she faced as a woman?

Powell explain that astronomy in general had a slightly higher percentage of women than cyber-security - 25 percent on her University course - but it was a very low number when she worked in a niche area as a theorist analysing supercomputer simulations to study galaxy formation and evolution. There might be just me or one other woman in a room of 50 people and that's my experience in security as well.

As for issues faced, Powell says, I think I have been reasonably lucky in that I've got used to being in a male-dominated environment very young studying physics, and then astrophysics. Certainly you get lazy comments. If I go to a tech event, people just assume that you are in HR or marketing, and it's not meant in a bad way, it's just that assumption. Or in talks they will always refer to a generic CISO as He'. And things like that can create an impression that you are an anomaly."

I have also noticed that an all male group will communicate differently to a mixed group or female group. I know that, particularly early in my career, I made efforts to insist in getting my point in, rather than waiting for someone to allow me to speak. Now that may be a personality thing rather than a specific gender thing, but typically women are socialised to be a bit more polite, and a bit more reticent to come forward and stand by their views. It's something I've learnt to do being in the environment I've been in.

But Powell also recognises that her relatively mild encounters are not necessarily the experiences of others: If I see anything more significant I am quite shocked by it. I know this stuff happens, but I've been lucky.

Powell notes how at events it's not uncommon to hear comments about a woman speaker's appearance in the middle of a technical talk. You think to yourself, what on earth are you doing? Other people share your outrage but it still happens. They might say She was really great', and then add some other comments, and you'd think, just stop there.'

But Powell's not completely sold on the approaches taken to actually get more into security because, she says, even then women are pushed into non-technical roles, like communications: I am sure there are many men that have excellent communication skills, but aren't technical that might consider a career in security if they knew there were roles like HR, marketing, more organisational roles.

If it's a fact that cyber-security has a Techie' image, that puts off people that don't have those skills, then let's open that out to men as well. Let's make it a gender neutral call to the general public.

It's interesting that you see a deficit of men in' women's roles', caring and communicating professions and you see a dearth of women in technical roles. Cyber- security can't undo all that, but I think [you can promote] role models of women who are in technical roles.

Powell adds, You also need to make the environment welcoming to women, so it's not just getting them there, it's retaining them there.

Security data scientist?

Panaseer's aim is to provide insight for security stakeholders and companies into their security situation and to give them the information they need to make informed decisions about what should be done next.

Powell adds that it's important that different people get information which suits their role: From the CISO, to the Sec Ops Team, each position within an organisation will need to know about the same situation but different levels of detail. We need to provide the information they need to do their job efficiently and be well informed.

In short, deliver the right insight to the right person at the right time.

The biggest issue companies face, according to Powell, is lack of visibility: We have all these tools gathering data, but there's not really a coherent picture of what's going on and being able to even know what's on their estate.

A company may have up to 15 controls on their estate. There's a lot of information to take in, often in lots of different places. Powell's role, as a data scientist is essentially to look at that data and find ways to view, analyse it, and present it so there is a communication piece which is really important to present it such that people can really understand what's going on on their estate and know what to do next.

At the very beginning is Security Information and Event Management data, otherwise known as SIEM data, which has to be brought onto platforms; part of the role as a data scientist is to understand that data as well as model and clean it.

The quality of the data is crucial, so part of my role will be to be involved in that; to model, to make it the best it can be. The next stage is what analysis do we want to have?', what data sets can we put together to get more value than you would get if you had things separately.

The next question is how to analyse that data. That could be about enriching it with more information or you might want to know which region one of your assets is in, and bring that together with an asset database.

Data is then searched, analysed and new ideas are tried out. When you have something you can work with, production code is written to feed into the Panaseer platform. That platform then runs on the client's estate and generates information on a regular basis so that that the client can check it.

Powell told SC that the most challenging bit of that process can be simply getting the data depending on who owns the data and where it is actually stored, it can take time to attain.

Powell points out that, This first stage is where a lot of the challenges lie and it can be a real blocker to getting useful insight. And it can sometimes be better to get a data set that is more easily accessible and demonstrate some value quickly, and make one aspect of someone's job easier.

Providing technical information is all well and good for people to do their job, but ultimately they'll have to report up, justify budget and show how the security team is working.

But it's hard to report on something that hasn't happened, explains Powell, We have this idea of different levels of insight dependent on the stakeholder and it's not just the stakeholder, it's also the audience who they are reporting to, so for example, the CISO might be meeting with the vulnerability manager and discuss perhaps a lower level of detail, but if they then have to go and report to the CEO, they don't want to be showing them lists of vulnerabilities across the estate then things would relate more to policies, SLAs, and risk.

The information provides an indicator ahead of time, so the report may say, It's looking like you might not hit your KPIs next month, let's try to act now.' Whereas at the moment people don't have the visibility to even do that a lot of the time. It's about tailoring that information, personalising it, then they'll use that to decide its providing evidence for a decision.

Often, says Powell, it reinforces how people need to focus on getting the basics right so that they are protected from the threats we all know about that have been around for ages; do they know that what they have installed is actually working? If you start getting less data coming through do you know why are you getting fewer alerts? Because there are fewer threats or because something has gone wrong, been switched off, or half your estate isn't even scanning any more?

Regarding the role of AI, Powell comments, Machine learning is great, great set of algorithms, great at finding complex correlations in data that it would be challenging for a human to spot with pen and paper, but it really is just a set of techniques. It's not magic despite what a lot of marketing might have you believe.

There's always caveats, adds Powell. Machines tend to throw up a lot of results and within them will be a lot of false positives

As with anything like that there's always caveats. One of the issues is that machines will throw up a lot of results for you. You'll always have false positives in that. Things that will be flagged up as worthy of looking at but aren't actually anything. People in security are already bombarded with information from a plethora of different sources, but in order to make that noise intelligible, an analyst, needs to go and work out what is really valid.

So how has Powell found the career change? She told SC, The skills I am using are the same including visualisation and communication; people often say it's a strange transition and it is in some ways, but [less so] with the maths skills, analytic skills and communication skills, and you pick up a lot of domain knowledge as well.

Getting to be in a start-up is also interesting. When I came in I was number five and we're 19 now. It was really exciting being part of a new company, so I learnt a lot about how businesses work as well, how the progression of a start-up works. We're all kept in the loop about how things are doing, get involved in recruitment, attend start-up community events around Silicon Roundabout and are involved in all aspects.

It's not just big companies now that need security, its small businesses too. Powell concludes, The average person can now get Ransomware attacks and has almost no knowledge about what they might do in order to be secure and that does worry me. How would the average non-technically minded person protect themselves when they're not even aware they need to defend themselves?

I wanted to have this impact on people's daily lives, and while Panaseer is not directly helping the general public, it's helping companies be more secure it's all part of the same thing.

Now I feel like I am making that impact. It affects people personally which is what I was hoping for.

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One giant leap for womankind - from astrophysics to IT security - SC Magazine UK

Wells Fargo Pushes Into Artificial Intelligence – Fortune

John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images

Wells Fargo has created a team to develop artificial intelligence-based technology and appointed a lead for its newly combined payments businesses, as part of an ongoing push to strengthen its digital offerings.

Wells Fargo's AI team will work on creating technology that can help the bank provide more personalized customer service through its bankers and online, the bank said on Friday. It will be led by Steve Ellis, head of Wells Fargo's innovation group.

Well Fargo's AI focus comes as banks and other large financial institutions increase their investment in the emerging technology which seeks to train computers to perform tasks that would normally require human intelligence.

Projects range from systems that can spot payments fraud or misconduct by employees, to technology that can make more personal recommendations on financial products to clients.

The bank also announced that it had appointed Danny Peltz, head of treasury, merchant and payment solutions, to head business development and strategy for its combined payments businesses.

For more about Wells Fargo, watch:

Pelz's group, which comprises of the bank's consumer, small business, commercial and corporate banking payments businesses, will also be tasked with establishing relationship with other companies in the payments landscape. It will also be in charge of the bank's new API (application program interface) services, or technology that allows customers to integrate Wells Fargo products and services into their own applications.

Both teams will report into Avid Modjtabai, head of payments, virtual solutions and innovation. Modjtabai's division was set up in October as part of efforts to enhance the bank's digital products and services by combining its innovation teams with some of the businesses most affected by changes in technology such as payments.

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Wells Fargo Pushes Into Artificial Intelligence - Fortune

Ford to Invest $1 Billion in Artificial Intelligence Start-Up – New York Times


New York Times
Ford to Invest $1 Billion in Artificial Intelligence Start-Up
New York Times
Ford Motor announced on Friday its plans to invest $1 billion over the next five years in Argo AI, an artificial intelligence start-up formed in December that is focused on developing autonomous vehicle technology. The move is Ford's biggest effort to ...
Ford spending $1 billion on self-driving artificial intelligenceCNET
Ford puts $1 billion in stealth artificial intelligence startupSFGate
Ford to invest $1 billion in artificial intelligence for your carWashington Post
WIRED
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Ford to Invest $1 Billion in Artificial Intelligence Start-Up - New York Times