U.Va. School of Medicine looking ahead from eugenics roots – University of Virginia The Cavalier Daily

Newly named Pinn Hall previously a center for eugenics research, support by Nisha Dabhi | Feb 02 2017 | 02/02/17 2:34am

The field of eugenics commonly discredited as a pseudoscience has deep roots at the School of Medicine. Pinn Hall, was previously named after Harvey Jordan, former Dean of the Department of Medicine. Jordan was a prominent eugenics researcher and a renowned leader of the national eugenics movement.

Popular in the early 1900s, eugenics is a set of beliefs and practices that aims to improve the genetics quality of the human population by deeming certain humans as genetically superior to others. Eugenic theory amplified segregation regarding race, class and disability across the U.S.

The attention garnered in the field led to Virginias Eugenical Sterilization Law in 1927, which attempted to forcibly sterilize those believed to be more inferior than others. Populations most affected by this law included poor and uneducated African Americans and other minorities.

The pseudoscience was taught at leading universities like Harvard, Cornell, Columbia and the University. Research in these institutions centered around data collection for the heritability of traits such as familial mental disorders and criminality, classifying some traits as far superior than others. Researchers would then use their data to provide evidence that certain individuals should not have children so as to inhibit the transmission of undesirable genes.

The popularity of eugenics drew then-University President Edwin Alderman to hire Jordan and Robert Bean to conduct research on eugenics at the University.

However, the renaming of Jordan Hall to Pinn Hall finally erases the small remnants of the Universitys little-known association with the study of eugenics.

The renaming of Jordan Hall as Pinn Hall was really about looking ahead as we get ready to celebrate U.Va.s bicentennial to identify someone who embodies the attributes the students in the School of Medicine aspire towards, Eric Swenson, University Health System Public Information Officer, said.

Vivian Pinn matriculated at the School of Medicine in Fall 1963 a time when white men dominated its composition. When Pinn entered the auditorium on her first day, she soon realized that she was the only female and the only African American student.

There were no other women or people of color in the class, Pinn said. It was a very strange feeling I can still remember that.

At first, Pinn said she felt discouraged and considered abandoning her studies. But when two of her classmates invited her into their anatomy lab group, Pinn felt included and ended up staying, eventually graduating from the School of Medicine.

That was the gesture that two of my classmates made that kind of got me involved in the class and prevented me from feeling like an outsider, Pinn said. That was a kind introduction for me, and I often talk about that since it was a gesture that made a difference in my life.

However, Pinn faced challenges for being different. When obstacles arose, Pinn refused to give up but reminded herself that she was at the University for a reason to be a physician. Pinn advises others facing adversity to remind themselves of their own purpose for pursuing a task, just as she did.

It was just knowing that I was there for a purpose, and I had come so far that I wasnt going to let anyone keep me from doing what I could do, she said.

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MILO: Eugenics Is Alive And Well At Planned Parenthood – Breitbart News

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Progressives like to insinuate that there is something sinister about Big Oil and Big Tobacco. They might even be right! But Planned Parenthood, Big Abortion, is worse, proclaimed MILO. We were all shocked when undercover tapes came out showing they are in the business of selling baby parts to the medical industry. Can you imagine, and I dont think this is a stretch, the senior leaders of Planned Parenthood sitting in a conference room discussing the best timing for an abortion, to maximize their profits from the dead babys body? Its horrifying, and its what feminists want more of.

Planned Parenthood can attribute a good portion of their boffo baby-killing business to their president since 2006, Cecile Richards, he continued. Richards is well on her way to personally matching Hitlers body count. Weve done the grim maths so you dont have to.

Using a conservative estimate of 300,000 abortions a year or 300 kiloscrapes, using the technical metric measure Cecile Richards has presided over three million abortions, or three megascrapes in her ten years as president of the organisation, MILO stated. This has earned her half Holocaust status. Full Holocaust seems eminently reachable given Planned Parenthoods growing hegemony in the abortion industry.

MILO continued to add that these statistics were just since Richards took charge, and didnt include abortions performed prior to 2006.

Planned Parenthood has since 1970 performed 7 million abortions, comfortably surpassing Hitler according to its own annual reports, added MILO. You have to admire the chutzpah, if youll forgive my terminology: Planned Parenthood has amassed a Third Reich-style death count completely legally and while pocketing half a billion dollars a year to do so. But under Richards the numbers have skyrocketed such that in just the last ten years, at least 3 million young lives were ended.

If Cecile stays in her post another decade, she will reach full Hitler, by matching the six million deaths of the Holocaust. In fact itll probably be sooner than that, given the acceleration in procedures during her reign, he continued. The road ahead may be rocky. Besides the undercover videos still being released, some media sources are starting to cover the revolting practices of these sociopathic monsters. Nice normal people, whatever their views on abortion, have no stomach for these unashamed charnel-house activities. And perhaps President Trump will defund them.

If you need to hear more about Margaret Sanger, heres something she once said. She was inarguably racist, MILO explained. She spoke glowingly about a presentation to a group of KKK women in New Jersey, and they loved her messaging about the black race. Messaging like this, in a letter to Dr. Clarence Gamble:

We do not want word to get out that we want to exterminate the Negro population and the minister is the man who can straighten out the idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members.

Margaret Sangers goal was to diminish the black race, and one can argue she was at least partially successful. Stats about abortion by race are not always easy to find, but nonetheless paint a compelling picture about the race reality of abortion, proclaimedMILO. In 2012, there were more black children aborted in New York City than born alive. More than 31,000 compared to just under 25,000 live births. Blacks accounted for 42% of the abortions in the city, with Hispanic women accounting for another 31%. Thats 73% of all abortions in the city killing black and Hispanic youth.

Other national data from the Center for Bio-Ethical Reform asserts that black women are 3 times more likely to have an abortion than white women, he concluded. So isnt it fascinating that intersectional third-wave feminists fighting for abortion and so often arm-in-arm with Black Lives Matter? To any BLM members tucked away in the audience, I can conclusively say that feminists are one group that do not believe black lives matter at all.

Written from prepared remarks.

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MILO: Eugenics Is Alive And Well At Planned Parenthood - Breitbart News

The state of the Apple HomeKit market: Apple’s smart-home ecosystem has yet to coalesce – TechHive

Apple announced its smart-home control system, HomeKit, in 2014 at its annual developers conference. It started enabling it in iOS in mid 2015 and had a more complete rollout later that year. With iOS 10 in September 2016, HomeKit finally got its own app and better integration.

But HomeKit remains an immature technology with few choices even for diehard Apple equipment owners. This was emphasized at CES, a trade show at which Apple never exhibits, but where products from third parties aimed at the ecosystem often get their debut. For HomeKit, it was mostly crickets. Amazons Alexa ruled the roost, with a large number of integrations with third parties, extending its voice-controlled system.

This is certainly part of a larger sense of malaise across all smart home systems. While the promise remains immense, multiple competing, incompatible ecosystems that include a lot of products from startup companies seem to have stalled a lot of innovation and even reductions in cost.

Elgatos Eve is one of the earlier HomeKit systems. It includes door/window, motion, and environmental sensors.

Imagine if instead of Wi-Fi, we had three separate high-speed local area wireless networking standards, and had to either set up a separate router for each and use dongles, or buy into an approach that wouldnt work everywhere when we left the house.

In that context, however, HomeKit still remains behind. While HomeKit is built into iOS and the fourth-generation Apple TV, which can act as a hub of sorts, macOS doesnt include it. And third parties are making HomeKit-enabled hardware, but not enough and in enough variety that if youre looking to equip your home with a single system, you have enough choices.

This snapshot of the market will certainly change, but the lack of product announcements at CES means the likelihood is low through much of 2017 for established companies and well-funded newer firms to add significant HomeKit options.

In case youre not tuned in to the purpose of smart home devices, controls, and ecosystems, heres a brief primer and where Apples HomeKit fits into things.

Smart home devices are a subset of the internet of Things (IoT): network-connected equipment that can be used over a local network and accessed remotely via the internet. Some smart home gear is also connected to the cloud. Having very little computational intelligence of its own, these devices rely on internet-connected servers for cues or control.

A range of existing home devices can be made smart: thermostats, alarm systems, refrigerators, washing machines, coffeemakers, and much more. Some of these have been semi-intelligent in the past, with programming options or quirky remote access via smartphone or native apps, or only accessible through low-power, short-range networking when youre within close proximity. (If you used or use X10 controllers, which date to the 1970s, you may have experienced much more primitive versions of this, as X10 relied on home electrical wiring as its primary backbone, even after adding wireless bridges.)

Behmors connected coffeemaker is like many smart appliances: You can control it with your smartphone via your Wi-Fi network, but it cant be integrated into a broader smart-home ecosystem.

The smart home promise is to bring intelligence to dumb gear for reasons of convenience, energy efficiency, safety, and even fun. Lighting is the main example: few people wired-in intelligent lighting controls in homes prior to the development of network-connected light switches and bulbs. Nor would most people consider being able to unlock their front door remotely an important feature, or having remote-controlled blinds. These would have been largely expensive and custom installations. Smart home products arent cheap, but theyre often amenable to user installation and are nowhere as expensive as the previous generation of automated goods.

The goal of a smart home is to take hundreds of small decisions and behaviors and wrap them up so you can trigger them based on time, presence (judging via sensors or smartphone proximity), or patterns. So you might set what Apple calls a scene that you use for your whole family being home in the evening. Another scene might power up a home-entertainment system, dim the lights, lower the blinds, and even roll down a screen or retract a covering.

Unlike some other computer and personal electronics standards for device communication, no single industry group emerged to bring all the disparate manufacturers into one flexible standard, as with Wi-Fi, USB, Bluetooth, and others. As a result, you can find dozens upon dozens of protocols that work at various levels of networking function.

Smart home ecosystems are typically built on existing networking standards, providing compatibility at that level at least. This can include the well-known Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, but also ones you are unlikely to have heard of if you havent already installed gear, such as Thread, ZigBee, and Z-Wave.

Standards are great! There are so many to choose from.

Why not just use Bluetooth and Wi-Fi-enabled IoT smart home devices, some of which have been around out for years? Because those typically require buying all your equipment from a single company, and relying on it to advance hardware and software on its own. These newer ecosystems may have a single firm dominating them, like Apple or Google, but ultimately hundreds or thousands of companies will make products that work with them, although some companies may have to make multiple versions.

And a coalescing of approaches has started to happen, which will decrease incompatibility and reduce your need to buy in to one system. The recently formed Open Connectivity Foundation comes out of a merger of groups backed separately by chipmaker Qualcomm and CPU giant Intel. As IDG News Service correspondent Stephen Lawson wrote after the 2017 CES, however, it will likely be one to three years before the industry begins to coalesce around a few standards that provide better interoperability.

You may have read some of the coverage in late 2016 about IoT botnets, which are smart devices that have had their software and capabilities hijacked, usually undetectably by their owners, and which are then used to launch distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks against targets for financial or political reasons. The IoT devices identified as the biggest problem are typically one-off hardware that arent part of any ecosystem, and are typically sold inexpensively (and often under many different brand names) by low-end manufacturers.

A map of the massive DDOS attack that occurred in October 2016 and the internet outages involved.

Hardware that is certified for one of the major smart-home systems, like HomeKit, must demonstrate that it adheres to encryption and other standards. Apple is particularly rigorous on this front, including disabling remote access to HomeKit accessories by default. This may explain why HomeKit hardware has been slower to come to market, too, but its a good problem.

Its in this framework that Apple remains an island with HomeKit, its own standard that it licenses to other parties, but which doesnt interoperate on its own with any other top-level standard, like Thread, a standard deeply supported by Alphabets Nest.

HomeKit originally required using various smartphone apps and benefited from a third-party HomeKit hub to pull together connected actions. But Apple added a dedicated app, called Home, starting in iOS 10 and watchOS 2, which radically simplifies controlling HomeKit-equipped hardware. Home controls appear in iOSs Control Center.

The closest comparison to the Home app for central control in other ecosystems is Google Home, an Amazon Echo-like device that connects to Nest and other supported hardware, and Samsungs SmartThings, which works with several kinds of smart-home protocols, but not HomeKit. SmartThings has an Android and iOS app, and requires its own hub. Amazon, meanwhile, is making fast progress when it comes to expanding the universe of smart devices that its Alexa digital assistant can control.

Samsungs SmartThings hub, smart plug, door/window sensors, and a motion sensor. The hub has Z-Wave and ZigBee radios inside.

After installing and configuring a HomeKit device via its iOS app, its available in Home and can be individually controlled (by tap or with Siri), as well as part of timed, manual, and triggered events. (HomeKit support on iOS devices requires at least iOS 8.1; the Home app comes with iOS 10.)

Manual control works without a hub, but if you want to schedule events, set up user permissions to for specific hardware, and remotely control HomeKit devices, youll need one.

Remote control, including using Siri on an iPhone or iPad, requires either a third- or fourth-generation Apple TV. The Apple TV must logged into the same iCloud account. For timed actions and user permissions, you must have a fourth-generation Apple TV running tvOS 10 or an iPad with iOS 10 on your network. Many people seem to have iPads that routinely stay at home, making this latter option a reasonable choice for them.

Having an Apple TV on your network will enable you to control HomeKit devices from afar.

You can also use a third-party hub, which have various features and can bridge multiple standards. The Casta Wireless Smart Bridge Pro works with products from its maker, as well as certain Nest, HomeKit, and other devices. The Insteon Hub offers the same automation and remote control options as tvOS 10, but can also control the broad universe of Insteon hardware.

In the Home app, all available devices appear and can be assigned to locations, like rooms, and to scenes, which are collections of accessories paired with a state they should switch to, such as the lighting and temperature youd like to trigger when you wake up and say good morning or at a certain time of the day.

With a hub as noted above, you can share access to HomeKit devices youve authenticated to your account, allowing others to use them or modify settings. This can be useful among adults, but also to give a child, babysitter, or house sitter controlled access. (Note, of course, that all those people must have an iPhone or iPad to enjoy the sharing.)

The Insteon Smart Hub Pro is a good choice for early adopters who also have Insteon products. The company is one of the earliest players in the smart home market.

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The state of the Apple HomeKit market: Apple's smart-home ecosystem has yet to coalesce - TechHive

Guiding ecosystem conservation using airborne lasers – Ars Technica

Industrialization and urbanization have drastically changed the face of our planet, and the number of untouched natural habitats for wildlife is shrinking.Conservationists are tryingto understand remaining biodiversity in order to createsanctuaries that preserve it. One of the challenges they face is how to make connections amonginformation derived from different methods of evaluating the Earth's life.

One approach to getting data onbiological diversity involvesfield inventories of species. Another evaluates ecosystem processes by dividing the Earth into categories based on vegetation (forests or grasslands, for example) and subsequently analyzing properties of that category's plant life. But critical information isoften missed when only one method is employed.

But these two types of inventories are actually linked. This link goes by the name"functional diversity," which represents the features oforganisms that influence both their individual fitness and their contribution to the function of ecosystems that contain them. In a recent investigation published in Science, a team of ecologists has used an advanced aerial imaging method to explore the functional diversity of plant communities.

A good grasp of functional diversity is critical to understanding this study. At its core,functional diversity is a type of biodiversity that describes the activities and processes thatorganisms engage in as they interact with their surrounding community and ecosystem. To give an example, one plant may produce fruit that feeds other species while extracting nitrogen from the soil.

Plants are an integral part of any ecosystem, and their diversity is inextricably linked to the biological, chemical, and physical processes that occur within thatecosystem. Though our understanding of plants' roles in ecosystemshas grown over the years, we don't know enough about how their traits vary over largerareas. This makes coming up with effective conservation plans challenging.

Astrong understanding of the functional diversity of an ecosystem can take years of study. The ecologists behind the new workwondered whether it was possible to get a decent understanding in a shorter amount of time.So they attempted to track functional diversity through remote measurement of theforestcanopy, using traits that are able to indicate the presence ofdifferent plant species and communities, as well as their health.

In order to identify these critical plant canopy traits, the team took a step back to consider the most critical processes in plant growth and health. After identifying these processes, the ecologists were able to identify measurable traits directly associated with these processes.The most obvious one isphotosynthesis, the process by which all plants use energy from sunlight to produce sugar. Photosynthesisis highly dependent on nitrogen andwater in the leaves, as wellas theleaf mass per unit area, all of which can be sensed.

Next, the team expanded its consideration to things thatdepend on the local conditions of aplant's habitat, such as topographic and soil features. The presence of key chemicals in leaves, like phosphorous and calcium, is indicativeof these processes. The presence of these chemicals isalso closely related to changes in the species that are presentin tropical forests, and so they can be used to track turnover of the canopy.

Finally, the scientists thought about long-term processes, like evolutionary changes and response to pathogens. These can be tracked through defense compounds found in leaves, such as polyphenols and lignin.

Focusing onseven canopy traits, the researchers used remote sensing to explorethe functional diversity of plant communities.

The team focused on Peruvian tropical forests as a model system, since they are exposed to a range of tropical conditions, pressures from land-use, and attention of conservationists. Combining advanced aerial imaging with a form of artificial intelligence, the ecologists generated maps of a large portion of the tropical biosphere, detailing several aspects of functional diversity.

Analysis revealed that the seven forest canopy traits selected by the ecologists were largely uncorrelated, so they providea breadth of information. Mapping these traits revealed functional variation in the forests, driven by things likegeology, elevation, hydrology, and climate.

To better understand what their data told them, theecologists used 301 well-studied forest inventory plots located in the Peruvian Andes and Amazon. They found that canopy functional composition, based on information from their individual trait maps, was related to the species present, which were identified through thefield inventory data.

The team integrated the seven mapped canopy traits to identify common functional properties among coexisting species. Using this information, they identified 36 functional classes of forest, which clusteredinto six forest functional groups. The researchers suggest thattheir spatially explicit data may be used to bridge the gap between the distribution of plant species and the biological processes that go on in forests.

The ecologists were particularly interested in understanding how their data could be usedto further conservation efforts. Each functional forest group was analyzed relative toareas that are threatened, protected, or remain conservation opportunities based on government land allocation data. The researchers found that in each forest, up to 53 percent of the mapped area could be an opportunity for new conservation action, based on government information of how the forest is currently allocated.

This information could be used to guide conservation initiatives to mitigated continued loss of forests from the Andes-to-Amazon. But the newly minted method is far more important, since it works with data that's relatively quick and easy to obtain. That makes evaluating other regions for understanding of conservational opportunities easier.

Science, 2017. DOI: 10.1126/science.aaj1987 (About DOIs).

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The not-so-secret strategy behind Walgreens’ ecosystem advantage – CIO

Disclosure: Walgreens is a customer of my employer,Apigee.

Sometimes, strategic advantage relies on concealment. The formula for Coca-Cola, for example, is a famously well-kept secret.

In other cases, a company's secret advantage is as plain as day, and their success is premised on focused execution (as well as, perhaps, competitors hesitating to pick up the gauntlet and raise their game to the same level).

Consider Amazons emphasis on its third-party retail marketplace a not-so-concealed strategy. In his 2014 shareholder letter, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos made no bones about the scope and scale of the companys third-party marketplace and the importance of the positive network effects it generates (the Amazon flywheel, as he calls them) to the companys overall strategy.

Fast forward to 2016. Traditional retail giant Walmart now has a third-party marketplace of its own. Touting more than 20 million items (and even making the CEOs latest earnings call highlight reel), the brick-and-mortar juggernauts third-party marketplace is certainly making progress but it still pales in comparison to Amazons 365 million.

For businesses with roots in brick and mortar, the Amazon versus Walmart story should serve as a cautionary tale. The lesson is simple: when it comes to digital, playing catch-up is often a lost cause. The key to digital isnt replicating what your competitors are doing its expanding into new lines of digital business by leveraging digital assets in unique and innovative ways.

Those looking for inspiration should consider looking to Walgreens as a company to study alongside Amazon for tips on turning digital into a strategic advantage.

Like me, you may already have a sense of the Walgreens physical-world strategy from simply walking around your neighborhood or visiting different cities: the companys stores are located within 5 minutes of a staggering 76 percent of the U.S. population. Walgreens digital strategy complements it well: my favorite pithy (but accurate) articulation highlighting a key component of their digital strategy is putting an API around the stores.

They have a clear vision for making digital and physical experiences better together. But the beauty of Walgreens as a case study is that the secret sauce to their success isnt Silicon Valley voodoo or the stuff of science fiction. It comes from focused execution that is within the reach of any enterprise.

I wanted to understand Walgreens approach in greater detail, so I spoke with Drew Schweinfurth, developer evangelist at Walgreens and one of the key people behind the companys successful and growing developer ecosystem now well into the hundreds.

Drew spends many of his days having conversations with different lines of Walgreens business to identify high-impact products to take to market. However, in this case the products are digital services and the market being served consists of potential consumers of the APIs with which theyre implemented.

What struck me about Drew is that hes not a geek hes a brilliant, good-old-fashioned product manager (although, to be sure, he does have some serious geek cred). Now, while being a geek may help a great deal when it comes to attracting developers, for Drew, its all about finding the sweet spot across value to the business, feasibility and marketability classic product management.

Finding these digital sweet spots isnt an exact science for Drew not all bets have paid off big but the trajectory is impressive. Its also all out in the open on the Walgreens developer blog.

Consider the Heart Partner app from Novartis, which helps heart failure patients coordinate care and monitor vital signs, medication compliance, and activity with the added incentive and reward of loyalty points from Walgreens' loyalty program, of course, thanks to the Balance Rewards API.

Novartis is one of 50 fitness and health partners tapping this API. Similarly, more than 100 partners are printing photos in Walgreens stores via the Photo Prints API.

So where did this supply of digital services come from? Did Walgreens have to hire hundreds or thousands of developer evangelists to roam the halls of its corporate offices, infusing thousands of employees with Silicon Valley mojo? Nope.

To the contrary, filling the pipeline took only a strong will and few words. Walgreens leadership told every technology team at the company to build for "web scale" that is, to build the internal services they felt were needed, and to build them to scale across an external ecosystem.

The internal teams were not required to know anything about developer evangelism or digital service product management. They simply needed direction to build digital products with the potential for externalization which, in our cloud- and microservices-centric world, is simply good practice anyway!

As Drew describes it, Our team is the toaster. We ask other teams to give us bread, and then we make toast. We just need the power supply to keep delivering.

Walgreens success highlights the path every leadership team can follow to achieve focused digital execution:

It follows from these three premises that most enterprises have the power to use APIs that deliver digital services that move the needle on revenue and brand equity which means that winning scores of third-party partners ought to be within their grasps too.

Unless, that is, theres a barrier concealed within the organization: something like a hidden strategic disadvantage. If thats the case, now might be a good time to identify it, root it out, and raise your digital ecosystem game.

This article is published as part of the IDG Contributor Network. Want to Join?

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(VIDEO) comScore’s Fetters: Digital Buy Side Wants Audience Quality, Ecosystem Cleanup – Huffington Post

HOLLYWOOD, Florida - Has the pendulum begun to swing from advertising and media's preoccupation with digital viewability to audience quality? It's a trend that comScore executive Aaron Fetters is seeing on the buy side--along with a keen desire to clean up "a mess" of an ecosystem.

"We finally seem to be going a little bit beyond just the discussion of viewability and fraud and getting back to how does that combine with audience," Fetters says in an interview with Beet.TV at the IAB Annual Leadership Meeting. "I'm hearing the buy side really begin start to ask again am I getting the audience I thought I was buying."

Now SVP, National Agencies & CPG Business at comScore, less than two years ago Fetters was on the buy side, as Director of Global Insights at the Kellogg Company. He thinks it's a positive sign that the industry seems to be moving beyond a sole concentration on viewability, fraud and eliminating waste.

"It think we've probably made a lot of progress in beginning to eliminate a lot of the waste in the ecosystem, but now I'm seeing the attention turn back to it's not enough to just know that I'm getting a quality impression," Fetters says. "I want to know who's seeing that impression."

Addressing the digital ad ecosystem, Fetters expects the consolidation among ad tech providers to continue. "Clearly we're seeing it week after week, month after month," he says.

It cannot happen fast enough, according to Fetters. "I think if you look at some of the campaigns that are running today, where you may have three, four, five, six tags on an ad to do various measures or activities against that ad or to collect data. Marketers are realizing this is too much and this is a mess," he says.

Alluding to remarks at the IAB event by Procter & Gamble Chief Brand Officer Mark Pritchard, Fetters acknowledges that marketers have mostly allowed the digital ad ecosystem to be managed for them. But that's changing.

"Now they're kind of stepping up and saying how much of my working dollar is going against non-working activity and can I be more efficient with that," says Fetters. I think we're going to see a big move toward simplifying the execution of ad serving, how do we get ads in front of consumers."

It's a question of necessity, according to Fetters, "because the buyers are starting to take notice, the buyers are starting to demand it."

He says it's fascinating to see the expanding desire by brands to build more targeted TV plans to reach specific audiences. And while addressable or programmatic TV "may be not quite scalable today, it certainly is not stopping the same idea of using data to build television-based audience in a new way."

This video is part of a series produced at the IAB Annual Leadership Meeting. Beet.TV's coverage of this event is sponsored by Index Exchange. For more videos from this series, please visit this page.

You can find this post on Beet.TV.

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Swatch Group and CSEM to promote "Swiss made" OS ecosystem … – Electronics EETimes (registration)

Swatch Group and CSEM to promote "Swiss made" OS ecosystem ...
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Long-term partners Swatch Group and CSEM announced they are working on the development of a unique Swiss made ecosystem to secure small connected ...

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French Government to promote gender equality in the tech ecosystem – TechCrunch


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French Government to promote gender equality in the tech ecosystem
TechCrunch
The French Government announced a new initiative today in order to promote gender equality in the tech ecosystem in France with the help of 15 organizations. Like in many other countries, there are less women working in French startups than men. This ...

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Cyborg Lights Up In FULL New JUSTICE LEAGUE Image – LRM Online (press release) (blog)

In the comics, the modern age Cyborg has been able to create fantastic weapons out of his hands, and many have wondered how it would translate to the big screen. It appears it will be some type of electrical, light, or laser array; and it looks pretty cool. My guess is that whatever he has going on in this image will be able to shoot some type of beam that could kill or render enemies unconscious. Another noticeable item is his mechanical left leg. In looking over the entire body of Cyborg, one should be quite pleased as it appears they did not try to "future" him up too much, and chose to go with gadgets maybe only 20 years in the future. Normally, he would have some gigantic cannon here, based on nanotechnology, and it could appear gaudy or out of place.

Wonder Woman is in her typical pose, and while we have seen a similar pose quite a bit now, it does seem to be her calling card. The Wonder Woman movie will give us our biggest indication of her powerset, and as I have said before, she is likely the strongest member of the Justice League. Batman, in the books, could never find her weakness. In fact, her only flaw may be her love for humanity.

Aquaman looks like Khal Drogo in a different costume, and I am sorry, but I will need to see major greatness out of Momoa to ever get past his similarity in the roles he has played. Here is the synopsis from the film:

Justice League will feature Ben Affleck as Batman (we think), Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Ray Fisher s Cyborg, Ezra Miller as The Flash, and Henry Cavill as Superman. The fim drops on November 17th of this year!

Source: GamesRadar(via Universo DC)

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Cyborg Lights Up In FULL New JUSTICE LEAGUE Image - LRM Online (press release) (blog)

‘Cyborg’ Twitter accounts see conservative voices dominate around the clock – The Sydney Morning Herald

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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Tennis star Eugenie Bouchard thought the Atlanta Falcons were clear Super Bowl winners but Twitter user punslayintwoods wasnt so sure so he proposed a bet.

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Footage captures the moment a skiff packed with explosives rams a Saudi warship in the Mandeb Strait last week, killing two sailors and injuring several others.

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Dashcam video from police cruisers in Illinois and Wisconsin capture a fireball streaking through the night in the early hours of Monday, with the American Meteor Society reporting hundreds of sightings across the region.

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Top technology companies, including Apple, Google, and Microsoft are banding together and have filed a legal brief opposing US President Donald Trump's immigration ban.

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Raw vision: Queen Elizabeth II marks her Sapphire Jubilee with a gun salute, becoming the first British monarch to reign for 65 years.

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The British parliament's Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow makes a passionate statement arguing why US President Donald Trump should not be allowed to address from Westminister Hall.

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Thomas Keating, the partner of Victorian woman Emily Collie, who was killed when two jet skis crashed in waters off Phuket, will be charged with reckless driving causing death. Vision courtesy: Channel Seven

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

Originally posted here:

'Cyborg' Twitter accounts see conservative voices dominate around the clock - The Sydney Morning Herald

UFC’s Paige VanZant trains with Ronda Rousey rival Cris Cyborg … – Washington Post

With her commercial appeal, athletic prowess and never-give-up attitude, UFC up-and-comer Paige VanZant is already well on her way to stardom, but this week she upped the ante whenshe trained with Ronda Rouseys former foe Cris Cyborg Justino.

VanZant, who suffered a loss in her most recent fight at UFC on Fox 22,expressed her intention to fight again immediately after the Dec. 17 defeat to Michelle Waterson.

[Paige VanZant and Michelle Waterson mistake UFC faceoff for dance-off]

That intent only grewin the new year when after a short holiday break, VanZant hit the gym again, keeping her fans updated on her training regime on social media.

The 22-year-old strawweights beendoing cardio, lifting weights, working on her martial arts skills, and now, it appears shes hoping to perfect her boxing abilities with the help of Cyborg.

Considered one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in the world, Cyborg (17-1) has mowed down just about every woman shes ever faced in the last 11 years.

Iron sharpens iron, VanZant wrote on Instagram alongside a photograph of her and the 31-year-old Brazilian.

Its unclear how long VanZant and Cyborg have been friendly, but fight fans know they have one thing in common they both have amutual distaste for Rousey.

VanZant, who competes at a lower weight limit than Rousey, once claimed she wasbullied bythe fighter for having tweeted congratulations to Holly Holm, who upset Rousey in November 2015.

[Miesha Tate and Paige VanZant swear theyve been bullied by Ronda Rousey]

Cyborgs drama with Rousey, meanwhile, goes much deeper. Their rivalry began in 2011, when Rousey, then just eight months into her pro-MMA career, reportedly turned down a fight against Cyborg in the 145-pound division of the Strikeforce promotion and accused the Brazilian of using steroids.

Cyborg, who, ironically maybe, is currently fighting another accusation of steroid use after she failed a recent drug test, denied the accusations at the time, and fired back by repeatedly calling out Rousey as a coward.

While the current Invicta featherweight champion seemed to mold her career in the last few years around the goal of eventually fighting Rousey in a catchweight clash, that disappeared last month when Rousey suffered her second defeat in what UFC President Dana White believes was her final fight.

Cyborg called a truce with Rousey, who has yet to respond.

[Dana White says Ronda Rouseys fighting career is probably done]

VanZant, meanwhile, has remained mum about Rousey since the 30-year-old lost to Amanda Nunes on Dec. 30. That seems like the smart move as the former Dancing With the Stars runner-up concentrates on advancing her burgeoning fight career.

VanZant, who exhibited a set of unique skills in August when she beat Bec Rawlings in what retired UFC fighter Urijah Faber described in a phone interview last year as a video game finish, is still awaiting word on her next fight.

See the original post here:

UFC's Paige VanZant trains with Ronda Rousey rival Cris Cyborg ... - Washington Post

Ex-UFC champ Holly Holm: ‘There has to be a lot that happens’ before fighting ‘Cyborg’ – MMAjunkie.com

A fight between Holly Holm and Cristiane Justino has been historically difficult for UFC officials to put together. And it doesnt seem that trend is going to change going forward.

Since Justino (17-1 MMA, 2-0 UFC) officially joined the UFC roster this past year, the organization has made multiple attempts to book a fight with Holm (10-2 MMA, 3-2 UFC). The most recent effort came for Saturdays UFC 208 event, which sees Holm face Germaine de Randamie (6-3 MMA, 3-1 UFC) for the inaugural UFC womens featherweight title.

Before Holm vs.de Randamie was booked for the pay-per-view headlinerat Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., UFC officials intended to pitHolm against Cyborg.The timing didnt work, though, and the Brazilian received notice of a potential U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) violation thathas put her career on ice.

Depending how Justinos USADA case unfolds, she could be sidelined for more than a year with asuspension. Holm said shes not ready to rule out the potential showdown entirely, but she saidthe ball is currently in Justinos court.

Im just going to wait and see what happens with that (USADA situation), Holm told MMAjunkie. There has to be a lot that happens for that fight to happen. Shes got to deal with whatever is going on with USADA. Who knows whats really happening with that? Obviously something.

The UFCs decision to add a womens featherweight division revolved largely around Justino. Cyborg, whos the current Invicta FC 145-pound champ, has dominated the weight class for more than a decade, but UFC officials havebeen reluctant to give her fights at her desired weight, and they required Justino to cut to 140 pounds for her first two UFC appearances.

After a long wait, UFC officials finally added theweight class, but the timing couldnt have been worse; it happened just as Justinos potential anti-doping violation came to light. If and when she does return, she would seemingly fight the Holm-de Randamie winner, but much can change during that time.

Holm, aformer UFC womens bantamweight champion, has said she might opt for a return to 135 pounds if she can win at UFC 208 in hopes of winning back that belt and achieving her goal of holding two titles simultaneously.

Holm said shes aware the fight most fans want to see her in is against Justino, but numerous hurdles remain. She said its a similar situation aswhen she entered the UFC and fight fanswere clamoring to see her fight then-UFC champ Ronda Rousey. She was patient, and the fight eventually materialized under terms she was satisfied with. She said shes going to use the same approach for Cyborg.

In order to even think about that potential fight, I have to get through this fight, Holm said. When I first signed with the UFC, I had two fights, one fight being Raquel Pennington and then Marion Reneau. In both of those fights, people kept asking me, How long do you think until you fight Ronda? I said, Well I have these fights in front of me first, so I have to get through them. I know Cris Cyborg is definitely the big name for the 145-pound division, but right now with this situation she has going on, I think Ill just let that pan out.

Who knows whats really going on? I dont want to put all my eggs in one basket. I dont want my career to be defined over one fighter. I still have so much to do. Ive got Germaine de Randamie right in front of me. If I dont get by her, there probably wont even be talk of a Cris Cyborg fight.

For more on UFC 208, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.

Originally posted here:

Ex-UFC champ Holly Holm: 'There has to be a lot that happens' before fighting 'Cyborg' - MMAjunkie.com

Justice League: New Photo Reveals Best Look at Cyborg and … – Den of Geek US

This article contains some Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice spoilers.

This is the one that the DC Extended Universe is building towards. Five years after The Avengers showed us that it was possible to pull off a non-mutant superhero team on the big screen, we'll finally see a Justice League movie.Man of SteelandBatman v Superman: Dawn of Justicedirector Zack Snyder has wrapped filming onJustice League, from a script by Batman v Superman's Chris Terrio.

The latest image (courtesy of Batman News) only gives us half the team, but it's probably the single best look we've had at Ray Fisher's Cyborg and Jason Momoa in full Aquaman armor so far.

This looks like it could be a shot from a trailer, and since the real trailer for this movie is long overdue, it might well be. Cyborg still looks a little off, but having one of his hands open up into some kind of bizarre weapon (probably sonic if the comics are anything to go by) is pretty cool.

Here's an earlier look at the team courtesy ofEntertainment Weekly!

Aquaman's armor is a pretty bold choice, too, but it fits perfectly with the overall aesthetic of the DC Extended Universe so far.

Now, about that trailer.

We're still waiting on a new Justice League trailer, butthe first footagearrived at SDCC 2016! This is our first glimpse of Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, The Flash, Cyborg, and Aquaman working together on the big screen.

Check out the trailer below:

We did a full analysis on the trailer right here.

You can see some other footage in this video from director Zack Snyder, who posted this awesome behind-the-scenes video which has lots of new looks at the characters in action.

It also looks like we're due to get another Justice League trailer very soon, too.

Justice Leagueis scheduled for a November 17th, 2017 release, with a sequelto follow on June 14th, 2019.The complete DC superhero movie release calendar can be found here.

In order for the Justice League to form, they need a threat with power levels that only a team of heroes could take down, right?

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justicemade it pretty explicit that Darkseid is on his way to this world, and there were several visual cues for those who are interested.We broke those down (along with lots more comic references in the movie) right here. But he isn't the villain of the Justice League movie.A deleted scene fromBatman v Supermanreleased onlineoffered a look at a monstrous creature on a Kryptonian ship, who turned out to beanother Fourth World related despot (and Jack Kirby creation), Steppenwolf.

Steppenwolf is basically Darkseid's cousin, a powerful warrior from Apokolips who wields a pretty crazy energy axe.

The Wrap broke the news that Ciaran Hinds (you may know him as Mance Rayder on Game of Throneswhich makes him a particularly cool choice for this part if it's true) has been cast as Steppenwolf. Steppenwolf will be done via motion capture, and his casting has apparently been kept under wraps throughout the production, which recently wrapped principal photography.

We have reached out to representatives for comment or confirmation, and will update this if we hear anything.

Here's what Steppenwolf looked like in that Batman v Superman deleted scene:

And here's Ciaran Hinds as Mance Rayder. You may start your Photoshop engines accordingly...

It's still inevitable that we'll see Darkseid in these movies, and he'll probably still be a presence in the first one. DC Comics used him as the catalyst for the formation of the Justice League in the current comic book series. He's a pretty big gun to burn this early, though, so holding him back forJustice League Part Twosound about as logical as anything else we've heard.

Lex Luthor is now confirmed to appear, as well.Luthor was last seen at the end ofBatman v Supermanraving about a villain on the way. Whether he was talking about Steppenwolf or Darkseid remains to be seen, but given that deleted scene, it's probably Steppenwolf.

It looks like maybe, just maybe,Joe Manganiello's Deathstrokewill turn up inJustice Leagueafter all.Zack Snyder just posted a cryptic image of himself(wearing a Batman gauntlet) and working on storyboards for a scene that do indeed appear to contain Slade Wilson. See for yourself...

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Justice League: New Photo Reveals Best Look at Cyborg and ... - Den of Geek US

Supergirl: David Harewood on Playing Martian Manhunter and Cyborg Superman – IGN

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Supergirl's second season has brought with it many big changes, and Martian Manhunter has been impacted as much as any character. So far this season we've seen see J'onn relocate the DEO, form a bond with fellow Martian refugee M'gann M'orrz and comes to terms with his inner demons after discovering that M'gann is actually a White Martian. Actor David Harewood has even been pulling double duty, as he's also been playing the vengeful Hank Henshaw, now reborn as Cyborg Superman.

It's been an eventful season for Harewood, and that won't change as the series gears up for more Martian-focused conflicts. We recently had the chance to chat with Harewood about J'onn's evolving role on the show, the challenge of playing two vastly different versions of the same character and what to expect from the upcoming Flash/Supergirl musical crossover. Martian Manhunter may not have been able to join in on the fun in Invasion, but fans will soon get to see him stand side-by-side with Barry Allen.

Melissa Benoist as Supergirl and David Harewood as J'onn J'onzz.

IGN: There have been a lot of changes so far this season, both in terms of the move to Vancouver and the changing role of J'onn and the DEO on the show. Are you happy with those changes so far?

Harewood: Yeah, I mean, the move to Vancouver was a pretty big one. It's gorgeous. I think I miss the climate of Los Angeles, very much so, but I think the actual move has benefited the show. We're stronger. The show seems to have found more of an identity. I'm very happy about that. Playing J'onn, it's definitely benefited me.

IGN: Looking back at the first half of the season, it seems like we're getting to see J'onn in his Martian form a lot more this year. Does that make your job more difficult, just with the added special effects work?

Harewood: No, no. I want to see the green guy more, myself. I think it's great to show those elements of him, especially since there became fewer and fewer of them last season. It's difficult because I'm playing somebody who I'm not through the use of CG. It's can be a little bit of a frustrating character to play because it's never quite who you are, if you know what I mean. But I love putting on the costume. That never really gets old. I would like to see him in his Martian form a lot more. It's brilliant - what they're doing is amazing - but it's still difficult to get emotion into that character because of the CG performance. What they tend to do is when you want there to be real emotions, it has to be the actor. With the image, it can be the CG guy. So it's pretty much up to them.

IGN: One of the other big developments recently was the return of the real Hank Henshaw. Has it been a challenge playing two versions of this same character?

Harewood: Not really a challenge, because one has much more darkness. I'm enjoying that element and being darker. It's strayed a little bit from the comic book. There really isn't much information on Cyborg Superman, Hank. Why is he called Cyborg Superman? There are still some holes there as a character that I'm not quite sure about. I try not to ask myself anything deep or meaningful, and I just try to get one with it and just play what's on the page and don't ask any questions.

IGN: In your mind, why do you think he takes the name Cyborg Superman? Doe he have a fixation on Superman as he makes his return?

Harewood: I know the story behind the comic books. Obviously, that's not necessarily the story being told on Supergirl. Like I said, I'm just playing the old Hank Henshaw that's been genetically enhanced. I'm not really asking myself too many questions about the mythology, because I think the mythology is a lot more complex than we can get into in our show. It's probably for the best that we read what's on the page and I make my acting choices based on what's on the page rather than what's in the mythology, because the mythology is different. That could cause me some difficulty if Ifollow the comics, so I'm just trying to to read what's on the page and keep all those questions and stuff like that buttoned up as much as I can. They lead to more questions which can unravel what you're doing.

IGN: The other day you tweeted out a new image of Martian Manhunter and Supergirl with the tagline "The Martian Chronicles." Is this the start of a big ongoing story for J'onn?

Harewood: It's more about Mars and the idea of what happened there. Now the White Martians know where M'gann is and want to make her pay for her crimes. She killed three guards to help a Green Martian escape. There are White Martians descending upon Earth to capture her and bring her back to face justice. J'onn puts himself on the line to protect M'Gann. That's where "The Martian Chronicles" comes in. It might cross over into the following week, too, but it's mainly next week's episode. It's centered very much on these invaders from Mars and how they're affecting J'onn and M'gann.

IGN: Looking at that episode, it seems like there's a strong horror movie vibe to it, with everyone being locked in the base and not knowing who's real and who's an impostor. Would you say there's a horror movie quality to this one?

Harewood: Yeah. This episode was great fun to shoot. As you say, you don't know who's who. These White Martians can impersonate anybody. There's some real comedic moments, and there's some pretty tense moments. It's one of those "edge of your seat" episodes where you just don't quite know what's going on or what's around the next corner. I think people will enjoy it.

IGN: Watching last night's episode "We Can Be Heroes," I was really impressed with your subplot and J'onn's struggle to move past his hatred of White Martians and show empathy for M'gann. Was that mind-melding scene a challenge for you , just in terms of the emotions at play?

Harewood: It's great working with Sharon Leal. She's a fantastic actress. This whole storyline has given me other colors to play and other things to do than just be the grumpy dad/boss. It's a chance to be vulnerable and to show empathy. I've really enjoyed that. It's been a challenge, but I welcome that. With the one scene back on Mars, I think that was perhaps the first time that J'onn could see how much pain M'gann had caused herself by disobeying her own race. She wanted to protect the Green Martians, and I think that's forced J'onn, as you said, to look at himself and question why he's holding such hatred for a race of beings when there was, in fact, some good in them and amongst them. That was a real revelation for J'onn to know that there are good White Martians and that they're not all awful and terrible. There are good ones among them, and it really forces him to evaluate the level of his own prejudice and his hatred.

Got feedback on our player?

IGN: All the CW shows had their big crossover last December, and obviously J'onn didn't get a chance to really participate in the crossover, but it sounds like you do have a role in the upcoming Flash/Supergirl musical crossover. Is there anything you can tease about that?

Harewood: I'm really excited about that. I won't be getting any good dance numbers, but I think fans will be excited to see J'onn J'onnz and the Flash in the same program. I'm certainly excited to work with Grant [Gustin]. He's a great guy, and I was disappointed not to make the crossover last time. So I'm very, very excited to be popping up on his show. I know how popular it is, and it should be fun. It's a good script.

Jesse is a mild-mannered writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on Twitter, or Kicksplode on MyIGN.

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Supergirl: David Harewood on Playing Martian Manhunter and Cyborg Superman - IGN

The Cyborg Bill of Rights v1.0 – Boing Boing

/ Richard MacKinnon / 4 am Wed, Feb 1 2017

Our civil liberties, protections, and rights need to be revised periodically if they are to accompany us as we cross new frontiers. A new frontier looms ahead. More accurately, the new frontier looms within. And it is within our bodies and upon this battlefield that the next electronic rights war will be fought.

In anticipation of the battle for the body, we can envision a conflict among competing interests in property located within a person's body and likely connected to externally controlled resources for storage, logging, and monitoring--for instance, a medical device--and we can imagine that someone's body may contain more than one such synthetic organ, life sustaining system, or other supportive technology--all of which having different owners with different interests and claims on a person's innards.

It is the time to revisit the state of our rights, test our metaphors and precedents, and decide how to protects ourselves now that the battle has become more intimate and personal than ever before. Our process begins with a draft of proposed rights that are discussed thoroughly, adopted by convention, and then published to serve as model language for adoption and incorporation by NGOs, governments, and rights organizations.

A person shall be free from exploitive or injurious 3rd party ownerships of vital and supporting bodily systems. A person is entitled to the reasonable accrual of ownership interest in 3rd party properties affixed, attached, embedded, implanted, injected, infused, or otherwise permanently integrated with a person's body for a long-term purpose.

Header image: Ryan O'Shea

Rich MacKinnon is past president of EFF-Austin, former board member of the ACLU of Texas, and founder of Borgfest Human Augmentation Expo and Cyborg Pride Festival.

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The Electronic Frontier Foundation is seeking first-hand reports of travellers being asked to divulge their social media habits by US border guards (beyond the optional field on the ESTA form) (email info@eff.org); meanwhile, ACLU urges travellers to stay on the customs/immigration side and let them know if people are being detained (Tweet @nobanjfk).

The Electronic Frontier Foundations Digital Security Tips for Protesters builds on its indispensable Surveillance Self Defense guide for protesters with legal and technical suggestions to protect your rights, your data, and your identity when protesting.

White cops from Aiken, SC improperly stopped a car driven by a black woman (they claimed the stop was motivated by temporary tags, but driving with current temporary tags is not grounds for a stop), then improperly questioned her passenger, who voluntarily gave them his ID, then induced a drug dog to alert on the []

Making great games has never been more accessible, thanks to a variety of development tools like Unity3D. But getting your idea off the ground still takes a fair amount of advanced programming skills. Fortunately, Ive discovered that learning to make games online with theMaster Game Development Bundleis incredibly easy (and not costly).In addition to gaining []

Aside from taking up considerable space and being horrifyingly out-of-date, VHStapes degrade with every play. But what about home movies or lesser-known titles that didnt survive the digital transition? With this Video Digitization Device and Editing Software Package, you can save your old tapes from analog oblivion.The conversion dongle connects to any composite video source, []

Between lingering cold weather, overpriced Valentines gifts, and the general state of the country, February is shaping up to be a rough one. Thats why were sharing four affordable and last-minute gift ideas that will show someone some love when they need it most.#4 Teleflora Fresh Flower DeliveryTeleflora is a really cool company that works []

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The Cyborg Bill of Rights v1.0 - Boing Boing

These 36 beaches should be avoided (again) because of all the human poo – Mashable


Mashable
These 36 beaches should be avoided (again) because of all the human poo
Mashable
So imagine the disgust felt by beachgoers in Melbourne, Australia, when they were warned (for the second time in just over a month) to avoid all 36 beaches in the Port Phillip bay region Tuesday, due to a post-heavy rainfall influx of human faecal ...

and more »

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These 36 beaches should be avoided (again) because of all the human poo - Mashable

36 Australian Beaches Unsafe for Swimming Due to Human Shit – Gizmodo

Australias Environmental Protection Authority issued a warning to steer clear of all 36 beaches in Melbourne, Australias second biggest city, due to a poor water quality rating, which turns out, is code for poop. This is not the first time this has happened.

Earlier this month, 21 beaches in Port Phillip Bay were deemed unsafe for swimming for the same reason. Dr. Anthony Boxshall, the manager of applied sciences at the EPA, told ABC, We have indicators we look for which is an indicator of fecal contamination, which is a nice way of saying poo.

To determine the water quality ratings, the EPA checks the levels of a bacteria called enterococci, which according to the NIH, is found in high concentrations in human feces. If the water has 400 or more enterococci for every 100 milliliters of water, it gets a poor quality rating because it makes you susceptible to illness.

Storms and flash floods struck Melbourne over the weekend, and those hostile weather conditions helped contaminate the water. Dr. Boxshall told The Age on Monday morning, The bay is like a shallow tub and all the catchments drain into it. Theres no exit.

Dr. Boxshall also warned that swimming in any of Melbournes 36 beaches could lead to gastronomical illness, as well as infections. Its gastro that were worried about and infections. If someone had an open wound on their hand, you can get pathogens, he said.

Specifically, children, the elderly and pregnant women are at risk for contracting an illness from Melbournes beaches.

The shitty conditions are expected to remain for the coming days. After that, the unknown awaits.

[The Age]

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36 Australian Beaches Unsafe for Swimming Due to Human Shit - Gizmodo

Who’s visiting South Bay beaches, who isn’t and why? – The Daily Breeze

Californias 1,100 miles of coastal beaches, many with soft sand and great waves and fun piers, are among the states greatest assets, destinations for locals and visitors alike.

But new research shows that, for many Californians, the beach is out of reach.

While the beach itself is intended to be free or inexpensive, ancillary expenses and social barriers often make it tough for low-income residents to enjoy a day on the sand.

Last week, legislation was introduced in Sacramento aimed at fixing that problem. If passed, Assembly Bill 250 would direct the state Coastal Conservancy to develop new low-cost accommodations and improve existing affordable accommodations, with the goal of making a trip to the beach more accessible for families that dont have a lot of money and might have to travel far.

Its heartbreaking to see lower-income families and middle-class families who never have seen the beach or enjoyed waking up to the sounds of tides and the salt in the air, said Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher, D-San Diego, who introduced the legislation.

Its heartbreaking for me because its such a part of the California experience.

The bill comes days after researchers at UCLA released a study that details how travel costs and lack of affordable accommodations prevent low-income families from going to the beach.

The average cost of a one-day visit to the beach was $22, not including parking or food, according to the study. Staying in beach towns costs an average $605 for a four-day stay, and three-quarters of the 1,100 people polled said the cost of an overnight stay was unaffordable.

In addition to showing why people dont go to the beach, the study conducted last summer at beaches from Ventura to south Orange County also found who goes to different beaches, with questions focused on family income and demographics.

The least racially diverse of the 11 beaches studied were the Doheny and Strands beaches in Dana Point, where nearly 80 percent of the visitors were white. Less than 1 percent of the visitors at Doheny were African-American.

Those beaches also drew the wealthiest visitors, with 82 percent reporting household income of $50,000 or more.

Conversely, the majority of visitors to Dockweiler State Beach in the South Bay were nonwhite, including 63 percent Latino and 16 percent black. Nearly half of the visitors reported household income of less than $50,000.

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At Redondo Beach, 47 percent of visitors were white and 40 percent Latino. More than one-third of those visiting Redondo Beach earn $50,000 or less.

Redondo Beach Councilman Bill Brand wasnt surprised by the findings.

Redondo Beach has always been a friendlier, more affordable waterfront destination than most other beach cities like Santa Monica or Manhattan Beach, he said in an email.

Brand, who entered politics as an activist fighting overdevelopment on the coast, believes a $400 million waterfront overhaul at the center of the citys upcoming election will change that.

Unfortunately, the recently approved CenterCal project is going to drive the new demographic to a whiter, wealthier class, Brand said. The challenge is to properly revitalize our waterfront without eliminating as a destination for all Californians.

Developer CenterCal Properties argues the opposite that building the 524,000-square-foot project will improve coastal access by bringing more people to land that is largely made up of underutilized development and surface parking lots.

CenterCal says the project will have something to offer for visitors of all income levels, but opponents are skeptical.

Melanie Cohen, president of the South Bay Parkland Conservancy, which advocates for the preservation and acquisition of open space, called the survey results right on.

Im really proud that the South Bay allows people to have that kind of access, Im just afraid now that as time goes on, its getting tougher and tougher, she said.

If the beachgoers look different at different beaches, researchers say a variety of issues are at play, including cost, self-segregation and amenities like fire rings or RV spaces, which the report said attract different groups of people.

We believe its a combination of factors, said Jon Christensen, a researcher at the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at UCLA, who co-authored the study.

There are historically patterns of visitation and discrimination ... where people feel theyre welcome (at some beaches) and where they might not feel as welcome (at others), Christensen said.

The research found that among key demographic groups, blacks generally were less likely to visit a beach, with about one-third of those polled saying they get to the sand less than once a year.

Christensen said a legacy of discrimination that prevented African-Americans from using public pools and beaches continues to play a role.

This is a very real issue and a real concern, he said.

The survey did not include beaches on the isolated Palos Verdes Peninsula, where residents and elected officials have been accused of NIMBYism for the ways theyve responded to a flood of new visitors drawn by social media.

Palos Verdes Estates is embroiled in a high-profile civil rights lawsuit alleging officials have enabled the bullying tactics of territorial surfers who have kept out nonlocals and effectively privatized Lunada Bay.

The city, which denies the allegations, is pushing back against pressure from the Coastal Commission to make the area more welcoming with public amenities.

Surfers recently gathered there on Martin Luther King Jr. Day in a protest against localism.

Susan Brooks, a councilwoman in neighboring Rancho Palos Verdes, doesnt believe the Peninsulas affluence has any effect on who is able to enjoy the beach.

Were a blufftop community, the terrain is more difficult, Brooks said. You cant just go down to these places and walk down like you can in Torrance.

Access to the 1,400 acres that make up the Palos Verdes Nature Preserve is free, she noted, as is parking at the Palos Verdes Interpretive Center and near the hiking trails and beach below Trump National Golf Club.

But aside from an Americas Best Value Inn on the edge of town bordering San Pedro, the only hotel in the city is the exclusive Terranea Resort. Rancho Palos Verdes banned short-term rentals last year.

The fact is were not a hotel community, Brooks said. This was considered at the end of the earth at one time and now its the playground of Greater Los Angeles. Now were supposed to change the dynamics of the principles on which this city is founded?

In 2015, city leaders changed parking rates at Abalone Cove Shoreline Park in response to an influx of visitors, citing public safety. In recent years, a combination of record attendance and rip currents has claimed the lives of two teenagers and led to dozens of rescues.

Officials originally wanted to give Rancho Palos Verdes residents preferential parking as they did near Del Cerro Park but abandoned that idea after receiving pushback from Coastal Commission staff.

Turnbull Sanders said transportation is a problem, so the Coastal Commission is partnering with Caltrans to help get more young people to the beach. The state agency also is working to lower beach parking fees and create more beach camping and low-cost accommodations, both of which are important for people who live hours from the coast.

Though many Californians are prevented from visiting the beach, in part because of the cost, most have a relationship with the ocean. Up to 94 percent of California voters said in surveys that the health of the ocean and beaches is personally important.

People across all of these demographic categories ... want the same thing when they visit the beach. Clean water, clean sand, a place to relax and enjoy the scenery and a place for their kids to play, Christensen said. People at the beaches, though they look different, they all want the same things by and large. Thats true even across income.

Read the original:

Who's visiting South Bay beaches, who isn't and why? - The Daily Breeze

Some Californians can’t afford to go to the beach, and lawmakers want to change that – The Mercury News

Californias 1,100 miles of coastal beaches, many with soft sand and great waves and fun piers, are among the states greatest assets, destinations for locals and visitors alike.

But new research shows that for many Californians the beach is out of reach.

While the beach itself is intended to be free or inexpensive, ancillary expenses and social barriers often make it tough for low-income residents to enjoy a day on the sand.

This week, legislation was introduced in Sacramento aimed at fixing that problem. If passed, Assembly Bill 250 would direct the Coastal Conservancy to develop new low-cost accommodations, and improve existing affordable accommodations, with the goal of making a trip the beach more accessible for families who dont have a lot of money and might have to travel far.

Its heartbreaking to see lower income families and middle class families who never have seen the beach or enjoyed waking up to the sounds of tides and the salt in the air, said Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) who introduced the legislation Monday.

Its heartbreaking for me because its such a part of the California experience.

The bill comes days after researchers at UCLA released a study that details how travel costs and lack of affordable accommodations prevent low-income families from going to the beach.

The average cost of a one day visit to the beach was $22, not including parking or food, according to the study. And an increase of only $15, researchers found, could force many families to skip the trip altogether an amount thats typically eaten up by parking and day-use fees. Staying in beach towns cost an average $605 for a four-day stay, and three quarters of the 1,100 people polled said the cost of an overnight stay was unaffordable.

In addition to showing why people dont go to the beach, the study conducted last summer at beaches from Ventura to south Orange County also found who goes to different beaches, with questions focused on family income and demographics.

The least racially diverse of the 11 beaches studied were the Doheny and Strands beaches in Dana Point, where nearly 80 percent of the visitors were white. Less than 1 percent of the visitors at Doheny were African American.

Those beaches also drew the wealthiest visitors, with 82 percent reporting household income of $50,000 or more.

Huntington Beach was slightly more diverse, with 54 percent of its visitors white and the bulk of the rest Latino and Asian. About two thirds of visitors had household income of $50,000 or more.

Conversely, the majority of visitors to Dockweiler State Beach in the South Bay were nonwhite, including 63 percent Latino and 16 percent African American. Nearly half of the visitors reported household income of less than $50,000.

And at Redondo Beach, 47 percent of visitors were white and 40 percent were Latino. More than a third of those visiting Redondo Beach earn $50,000 or less.

If the beach goers look different at different beaches, researchers say a variety of issues are at play, including cost, self segregation and amenities like fire rings or RV spaces, which the report said attract different groups of people.

We believe its a combination of factors, said Jon Christensen, a researcher at the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at UCLA who co-authored the study.

There are historically patterns of visitation and discrimination where people feel theyre welcome (at some beaches) and where they might not feel as welcome (at others), Christensen said.

The research found that among key demographic groups, African Americans generally were less likely to visit a beach, with about a third of those polled saying they get to the sand less than once a year.

Christensen said a legacy of discrimination that prevented African Americans from using public pools and beaches continues to play a role.

This is a very real issue and a real concern.

Effie Turnbull Sanders, 44, a lawyer and a member of the California Coastal Commission, grew up as a competitive swimmer. By the time she was swimming for UCLA, in the 1990s, she noticed that the swimmers and the fans mostly came from the same, white background.

I was keenly aware that kids of different socioeconomic backgrounds didnt make it to the beach, even if they lived only 10 miles away, she said.

There are efforts to change that.

Non-profits like the Oakland-based Brown Girls Surf push to promote surf culture among women and girls of color.

Turnbull Sanders said transportation is a problem, so the Coastal Commission is partnering with CalTrans to help get more young people to the beach. The state agency also is working to lower beach parking fees and create more beach camping and low cost accommodations, both of which are important for people who live hours from the coast.

Though many Californians are prevented from visiting the beach, in part because of the cost, most have a relationship with the ocean. Up to 94 percent of California voters said in surveys that the health of the ocean and beaches is personally important.

People across all of these demographic categories want the same thing when they visit the beach. Clean water, clean sand, a place to relax and enjoy the scenery and a place for their kids to play, Christensen said. People at the beaches, though they look different, they all want the same things by and large. Thats true even across income.

The beaches are still these great democratic spaces.

For Daniel Ordaz, 56, who recently strolled the Huntington Beach Pier while visiting from El Paso, Texas, seeing people from different walks of life was part of the draw when he lived locally and fished off the pier as a teen.

Thats why I came, Ordaz said. To see the diversity here.

Contact the writer: lawilliams@scng.com

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Some Californians can't afford to go to the beach, and lawmakers want to change that - The Mercury News