Daily Archives: April 25, 2017

Dogsitting Freedom Advances In Colorado – Forbes

Posted: April 25, 2017 at 4:54 am


Forbes
Dogsitting Freedom Advances In Colorado
Forbes
This week the Colorado Senate will consider a bill to ensure residents can look after someone's dog without a license from the government. Like many sharing economy bills, the legislation (HB 1228) arose after an excessive regulatory crackdown. Across ...

See the rest here:

Dogsitting Freedom Advances In Colorado - Forbes

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on Dogsitting Freedom Advances In Colorado – Forbes

Tax Freedom Day: You’ve been working for Big Gov to THIS point – Conservative Review

Posted: at 4:54 am


Conservative Review
Tax Freedom Day: You've been working for Big Gov to THIS point
Conservative Review
Falling on April 24 this year, Tax Freedom Day rather perversely celebrates the part of each year where the government generously allows us to keep our own money. It is the dividing line between that portion of the year where we work for the government ...
Illinois' Tax Freedom Day a week later than average AmericanIllinois News Network
Crossing the Line Tax Freedom Daynwitimes.com
Tax Freedom Day still to come in UtahKSL.com

all 20 news articles »

See more here:

Tax Freedom Day: You've been working for Big Gov to THIS point - Conservative Review

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on Tax Freedom Day: You’ve been working for Big Gov to THIS point – Conservative Review

Speaking of Palestine and academic freedom Mondoweiss – Mondoweiss

Posted: at 4:54 am

In the past few years, Ive become something of a counselor. I have no formal credentials and a bad track record at the very thing Im supposed to help others avoid. How can I be critical of Israel, friends and strangers ask, without losing my job or getting into trouble? Im flattered to be approached in this way, I am. But I cant help but think: me? Youre asking me how to manage a career in academe while being critical of Israel? Ive lost two jobs in the past three years because of my sharp criticism of Israel and Im a month away from being unemployed again. I mean, Ill try, but if you want to ask me about how to get into trouble in academe, Im on better footing.

I recall one such inquiry from a colleague last month. It was a routine, even banal, question, nothing that would normally require a halting answer. And yet, as is often the case with ordinary things, the question was filled with a world of complexity.

My colleague wanted to know if she should join a delegation of scholars to Palestine. A well-respected organization offers a development seminar on Palestine for US professors, including a short visit to the country. Its a nice opportunity: participants get a trip to the Mediterranean, where they will be treated to visual beauty, warm hospitality, and wonderful cuisine. They will have an opportunity to interact with sharp intellectuals and activists and to visit the holy sites so grandiose in humanitys imagination.

This kind of trip is common for scholars, who visit places around the world with sponsorship from research groups or universities. There is only one instance where the question should I go? needs to be raised: in relation to Palestine. My friend wasnt concerned about safety or other fantastical perils, but about the possibility of being condemned by Zionist groups and damaging her chances at tenure. She was right to be worried.

We had a long conversation weighing the benefits of the trip against its potential pratfalls. Its a fun adventure. Youll come back with plenty to write about. This is important to your research. The networking possibilities are attractive. But. A number of organizations torment anyone who goes to Palestine unless its to serve in the IDF. Incorporating Palestine into a program of radical scholarship has potential to tip the balance from Im wary of her to shes gotta go. Universities are filled with individual faculty who relish punishing colleagues who dont express adequate fealty to Israel. They certainly exist on your campus.

I had no easy answer. Palestine has a way of reaffirming a persons most empathetic sensibilities, so I was confident my friend would come back invigorated. But I wasnt certain she would remain unscathed.

Just go, I finally declared. Then I felt guilty for the next two days.

It was an exemplary moment of existential silliness. After all, why is it even a question if somebody should go to Palestine? Its a terrific place to visit. Overzealous Israeli authorities are the only real threat to visitors. Travel, however, isnt neutral. Its always a political choice even when it has hedonistic ambitions. The question, then, isnt rhetorical. Understanding why going to Palestine is inadvisable allows us to discard the silly notion that were free to do as we pleasebecause of pluck or protocol.

The episode illuminates the special status to which Palestine is subject in US academe. Professors will be lauded and rewarded for visiting certain places, but Palestine isnt one of those places. It doesnt offer the sort of war porn that titillates the political imagination. How countries and regions come to be understood as worthy of adulation or sympathy depends on a constellation of policy conventions, institutional cultures, power dynamics, narrative orthodoxies, and economic interests, all of them variously in concert and at odds with one another. That the possibility of visiting Palestine evokes consternation suggests we have a case where those phenomena are largely aligned.

It also illuminates the depth of pressure certain students and faculty experience on campus. Two years ago, a joint report by Palestine Legal and the Center for Constitutional Rights found nearly 300 cases in which speech or activism around Palestine was suppressed. Those cases included disciplinary action for campus activists, the suspension of student groups, employment termination, and the cancellation of course sections.

This suppression goes beyond campus, too, though its tentacles manage to slither into our well-manicured spaces. Numerous states have introduced legislation criminalizing Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions [BDS], a highly effective, nonviolent strategy for opposing the Israeli occupation. Whatever one makes of BDS, it is indubitably a form of protected speech, as affirmed by dozens of court rulings. That so many politicians and legislative bodies are willing to make it illegal shouldnt be understood simply as constitutional negligence, but as evidence of a political culture that values power over mobilization. Countries such as France and the UK, not to mention Israel itself, have pushed to criminalize BDS. Suppressing Palestine is a transnational industry.

We need academic freedom to criticize Israel, but it takes more than academic freedom to contest the sites of power invested in protecting Israel from criticism. Most commentators, however, are too scared to name Zionism as a problem. People spend considerable time these days arguing about speech and disruption on campus, yet Palestine is shockingly absent from the conversation. Exploring the repression of ideas at universities while ignoring Palestine is like discussing LeBron James without mentioning basketball.

Palestine isnt the totality, or the crux, of todays debates about speech and resistance on campus. Theres too much repression preceding Palestine, and now in existence alongside it, for that to be true. But Palestine deeply informs the substance of those debates, and by recovering this sunken reality we can better understand the disputes around free speech and academic freedom that generate so much attention.

*****

It is impossible to speak, or be heard, with a set of impartial senses. Free speech, in both philosophy and practice, is attached to structures of power (seen and unseen, discernible and oblique, steady and unstable). Despite the states professions of fairness and benevolence, free speech is never fixed or disinterested. It is prosecuted according to circumstance. It is reified based on the needs of the audience. And it is conditioned by race, gender, nationality, class, religion, ideology, culture, sexuality, and so forth.

Take UC-Berkeley, a longtime testing ground for these matters. Its administrators proclaimed that nothing short of a near-riot would compel them to cancel a recent lecture by right wing provocateur Milo Yianopoulis. Yet last semester the same university shut down a legitimate course about Israeli settler colonization offered by a Palestinian instructor. In the end, Milos lecture was disrupted and the course was allowed to proceed. It wasnt the infallibility of a concept that changed the outcome of each situation, but an organized shift in relationships of power.

Free speech, in short, is a limited commodity pretending to be a universal ideal.

We cant understand the importance of free speech in civic or academic settings unless we also engage the politics that precede its invocation. Rallying around free speech is easy, which is why arguing about it never solves any problems. Nobody opposes free speech as an ideal. The term is often a slogan or shaming device that can be summoned in order to safeguard a viewpoint or ideology without having to confront its ethical anatomies and material consequences. Free speech isnt the actual site of contestation in our cantankerous debates. What we talk about matters more.

Here we can pivot back to academic freedom because its function on campus mirrors free speech in US society more broadly. The preservation of academic freedom as an end in itself isnt the best allocation of intellectual energy. We still have to discuss, and, ideally, resolve, the issues that generate controversy because they supersede academic freedom. Given the serious problems now facing academecorporatization, receding faculty governance, donor influence, decreased public funding, administrative bloat, systemic racism, obscene student debt, sexual violenceour campuses wont survive current trends if we refuse to analyze the structural conditions that often get reduced to frames of ahistorical disagreement.

Suppose we desire any of the following: to liberate Black people, decolonize North America, destroy a neo-Nazi resurgence, get some economic justice, free Palestine. If we treat those desires merely as rights to be practiced in controlled environments, then academic freedom becomes a pretext to normalize conventional politics. It has potential to supplement transformative writing and organizing, but that potential must be created. Academic freedom isnt inherently radical.

*****

For Palestinians, any type of freedom, including the academic variety, is acutely unavailable. Living under military occupation in the Gaza Strip and West Bank and as second-class citizens inside Israel, their lives are controlled by an unequal legal system that proffers rights according to religion (as defined by the state). Palestinians suffer extrajudicial assassination, limited movement, arbitrary arrest and indefinite detention, home demolition, restricted speech rights, harassment and torture, land expropriation, and forced exile.

There are currently 6300 Palestinian political prisoners. 700 of them just began a hunger strike, in fact. 300 of them are children. The unemployment rate in the Gaza Strip is nearly fifty percent, the highest in the world. Real per capita income is $970. Eighty percent of the population receives some sort of social assistance. Almost forty percent live below the poverty line.

Gaza has been under a land, air, and sea blockade for ten years, which has reduced its GDP by half: Israel, in cooperation with Egypt, determines what comes in and what goes out. Israeli politicians speak of putting Gaza on a diet, that is, allocating a certain amount of foodstuff for the territory based on minimal caloric requirements. At other times, those politicians speak of mowing the lawn in Gaza, which means exactly what it sounds like. The cancer rate is unusually high. Life expectancy is dismal. Fishing boats, one of the lifelines of the economy, are sometimes destroyed, or their occupants are shot at. Citizens deal with extended power cuts. Schools and hospitals are undersupplied. According to both local and international doctors, the psychological damage from the blockade and Israels periodic war crimes has been extraordinary. The children of the territory suffer abnormal levels of trauma and anxiety. There is no developed medical apparatus to mitigate these problems.

Narrowing the focus to academe, Palestinian students and professors experience forms of institutional repression that on US campuses are virtually unimaginable. For decades, universities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip have been bombed, invaded, looted, and closed for extended periods. Students, staff, and professors often cant make it to campus because of checkpoints and unexpected curfews. Their political activity is closely monitored. Professors sometimes meet class in their living rooms. It is difficult to get permission to travel abroad for conferences and research symposia. And when students graduate, they enter into an economy devoid of skilled jobs. (In this, at least, the comparison to US academe is striking.) Compounding this problem, Palestinian citizens of Israel face significant discrimination in the labor market.

I studied at Birzeit University, near Ramallah, in the summer of 2000. My best friend there was from Gaza, but didnt have permission to study in the West Bank. Both territories, mind you, are said to comprise the same country. As an illegal student, he couldnt travel to Ramallah, just down the road. The Israelis sometimes erected a mobile checkpoint between the two towns. In turn, he was stuck in the hamlet of Birzeit. Getting home to Gaza, fewer than a hundred miles away as the crow flies, would have required illegally crossing three borders, as he did to get to Birzeit in the first place. Many of the students from Gaza faced the same hardships. Plenty of students from the West Bank couldnt travel abroad, or even to nearby Jerusalem. Those with Western passports were free to explore. The foreigner had greater rights than the native, a condition to which Palestinians were accustomed. Strangers, after all, have transformed their lives into a simulation of existence, where one merely bides time, with no place to go, while impatiently narrating the dream of actually existing.

These brutal realities inhabit campus speech and they are blithely minimized when scholars make Palestine contingent on Western sensibilities. In short, we shouldnt compromise the seriousness, or the severity, of our investment in certain political sites, both geographical and imaginative, in order to accommodate the strictures of academic freedom as a self-contained phenomenon. Doing so actually limits the effectiveness of academic freedom by providing it a kind of philosophical autonomy that restricts its immersion into material politics. Academic freedom is only meaningful in relation to the sites of contestation that necessitate its presence.

When we think about the difficulties that Palestinians face in academe, then, its crucial to orient critique around the hostile conditions of repression rather than merely safeguarding ourselves against hostility.

*****

My maternal grandmother died last year. She was my connection to Palestine, having lived through the nakba, the mass expulsion of Palestinians in 1948, and the messy histories that followed. Her familys home in Palestine was forever lost to Israeli settlers and she wouldnt return to the country for four more decades, this time on a tourist visa.

She could be a difficult woman: stubborn and blunt and imperious. She wasnt one for shows of affection, but from my childhood I remember very well the protective and efficient quality of her supervision. Neither I nor my cousins dared to disobey her, but we relished the fact that in her care nobody would dare to cause us harm. When I was in high school, she regularly visited us in rural Appalachia, a place ill-suited to her cosmopolitan predilections. We never spoke much, though she was delighted when I became competent enough in Arabic to hold a conversation. She adamantly disapproved of my fledgling attempts at facial hair and nagged my mother to buy me proper clothes.

Like all memories of this variety, theyve evolved from moments of annoyance to subjects of affection. The original sentiment of one memory, however, has only intensified with time. I had driven my mom and grandmother to the grocery store. My grandmother unexpectedly opted to wait with me in the car. My daughter talks too much, she explained after my mom had left, a tacit condemnation of small-town culture. My fingers tapping the steering wheel provided the soundtrack for our tense silence. Then, out of nowhere, she began talking about Palestine. About 1948. About her village. About her displacement. About the pain that had never gone away. These things, I never forget, she concluded matter-of-factly. No. I never forget.

I was a kid in that moment, sixteen and preoccupied with teenage drama, but I understood exactly what she was telling me: that I could never forget, either. Academic freedom doesnt preserve this memory. But it damn sure gives me the right to remember.

Read the original post:

Speaking of Palestine and academic freedom Mondoweiss - Mondoweiss

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on Speaking of Palestine and academic freedom Mondoweiss – Mondoweiss

ESP32’s Freedom Output Lets You Do Anything – Hackaday

Posted: at 4:54 am


Hackaday
ESP32's Freedom Output Lets You Do Anything
Hackaday
The ESP32 is Espressif's new wonder-chip, and one of the most interesting aspects of its development has been the almost entirely open-source development strategy that they're taking. But the almost in almost entirely open is important there are ...

View original post here:

ESP32's Freedom Output Lets You Do Anything - Hackaday

Posted in Freedom | Comments Off on ESP32’s Freedom Output Lets You Do Anything – Hackaday

Illinois technology chief’s memberships cost $208K – The State Journal-Register

Posted: at 4:54 am

By John O'Connor, The Associated Press

Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner's technology czar has contracted to spend $208,000 in tax dollars for two professional memberships even though the state is without a budget and is billions of dollars in debt, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.

Hardik Bhatt, the $145,000-a-year secretary of the Department of Innovation and Technology, has had a $50,000 annual membership in the Chief Information Officer Leadership Council of the Virginia-based executive-assistance organization CEB Inc. since 2015. He's also approved a $29,000 subscription and annual renewal for his agency, known as DoIT, with CEB's Risk Leadership Council.

DoIT, an agency created by executive order shortly after Republican Rauner took office in January 2015, is responsible for upgrading Illinois' digital technology infrastructure, providing statewide computer and telecommunications and oversight, improving cyber security, more precise management of the state's $1 billion investment portfolio, and making services for taxpayers easier to access.

DoIT spokeswoman Jennifer Schultz said the membership and subscription are "strategic investments" to help the state improve on an "outdated, inefficient" and unsafe system.

"These groups provide guidance and research to states and Fortune 500 companies," Schultz said in a prepared statement. "The benefit to Illinois is to learn and implement best practices in organization design, cyber-security, IT governance and other areas to help us avoid making the same mistakes the state has made previously in IT."

But the expenditures frustrated Rep. Fred Crespo, chairman of the House Appropriations-General Services Committee, which is scheduled to hear testimony about DoIT's budgetTuesday. The Hoffman Estates Democrat blamed it partly on the fact that DoIT was created by Rauner and is not subject to legislative oversight.

Crespo said he's troubled that money is spent on these services when the two-year budget stalemate between Rauner and Democrats controlling the General Assembly has meant millions of dollars in cuts to human-service providers and higher education.

"We're trying to connect the dots, figure out how much money is being spent" by DoIT, Crespo said. "These social service providers, universities that are dying, why are spending money on new computers at the expense of all these families, all these students, all people hurting. Tell me how that makes sense?"

A spokeswoman for CEB Inc. did not respond to a request for comment. The contract for the risk leadership council says membership provides "proven best practices, research and insight, peer benchmarks, decision and diagnostic tools, executive networking, advisory support and live and online learning events."

Although the state had chief information officers prior to DoIT's birth, there is no evidence of membership or subscription payments to CEB for several years prior to 2015.

Crespo noted that after GOP Comptroller Leslie Munger was defeated in a special election in November, she transferred $71 million from general revenue funds to specially earmarked accounts that in large part benefited DoIT. The membership money is out of one of them, a fund for "data processing and informational services."

Bhatt's $50,000 leadership council memberships were paid for 2016 and 2017, as was one year of the risk-group membership. But Munger's replacement, Democrat Susana Mendoza, who has sparred with Rauner over spending, particularly for DoIT, has not paid one year of each membership, totaling $79,000. Mendoza has held up payment while seeking answers general questions from DoIT on its initiatives. But the state is ultimately obligated to pay it because Bhatt signed contracts.

"This type of waste of tax dollars is why I will always demand accountability and transparency from every state agency," Mendoza said in a statement released to the APMonday. "Right now we could use an extra $200,000 for services for children, seniors and people who need help,"

Rep. David Harris of Arlington Heights, the Republican spokesman on the House general services appropriations panel, said the CEB benefits sound like they'd be helpful to technology chiefs for Fortune 500 companies or other large corporations but wondered whether there are many public-sector members.

"It's a significant amount of money and it begs the question, is there a significant amount of benefit?" Harris asked. "Are there benefits being provided that are available in more public forums that don't cost $50,000?"

-- Contact Political Writer John O'Connor at https://twitter.com/apoconnor. His work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/john-oconnor.

Read more:

Illinois technology chief's memberships cost $208K - The State Journal-Register

Posted in Technology | Comments Off on Illinois technology chief’s memberships cost $208K – The State Journal-Register

6 ways that ‘Big Brother’ technology in ‘The Circle’ is already happening – USA TODAY

Posted: at 4:54 am

USA TODAY premieres the new trailer for The Circle, starring Emma Watson and Tom Hanks and based on Dave Eggers best-selling novel.

Emma Watson plays Mae, a young employee who gets way more than she bargained for (and way behind on her technology) at The Circle.(Photo: Frank Masi, STX Entertainment)

It isn't easy to make a movie about technology taking over/ruining the world particularly because it takes at least two years to get a movie from script to screen, allowingSilicon Valley time to create the very thing that futuristic films are trying to warn us about.

Suchis thefate that befalls The Circle, a new drama (in theaters Friday)based on Dave Eggers' 2013 novel. The movie starsTom Hanks as Eamon Bailey, aSteve Jobs-esque tech CEO, and Emma Watson as Mae, a freshman employee at The Circle who gets in over her head. Only problem is,the scariest parts of The Circle are already happening. Lets explore.

Tom Hanks stars as CEO of The Circle (which bears a familiar logo seen on his coffee cup and the wall behind him).(Photo: Frank Masi, STX Entertainment)

For starters, the company logo

The logo for The Circle, an Apple/Google/Facebook hybrid company, is a circle with a line sliced out of it. Funny, thats almost exactly the shape Uber replaced its old logo with early last year, just flipped 180degrees.

Futuristic points: 0 (scale of 1 to 5)

Behold, the year-old new Uber logo.(Photo: Lionel Bonaventure, AFP/Getty Images)

High-tech medical bracelets

Mae and her family sign up for the company medical plan, which is super-advanced and helps with her father's multiple sclerosis. But The Circle slaps a metal bracelet on her wrist, which tracks her intravenous system, her heart rateand her overall health. Sounds a lot like, um, an Apple Watch. Or health insurance-sponsored Fitbits, now a common perk at companies that offer incentives toward weekly step counts (tracking employee movement through programs like Walkadoo). But we'll allowa few points for advancement, as our smartwatches have yet tocure us.

Futuristic points: 3

Check out the medical device in 'The Circle.' Will our Apple Watches look like this in the future?(Photo: Frank Masi, STX Entertainment)

'Optional' socialization

Employees at The Circle are coerced into socializing their entire day:what theyre interested in, how theyre feeling, what their plans are. The dark side, of course, is that none of that information actually belongs to them anymore. This debate is already raging, not just forthe millions glued to Facebook, Snapchat and Instagram, but also for those who are simply scrolling through Amazon Prime on their computers.Thanks to Donald Trump's recent rollback ofInternet privacy rules passed last year by the Federal Communications Commission, it's now legal for Internet providers to sell customers'information including their search histories. Welcome to the future.

Futuristic points: 0

One account for everything

In The Circle, Eamon artfully debuts TruYou, a service that ties together all of your bank and credit card accounts into one, with a single password. Remember that time you paid for groceries with Apple Pay? Were getting pretty darn close.

Futuristic points: 1, for imagining a world in which we all don't juggle 10 passwords

Tom Hanks debuts live video broadcast from tiny unwired cameras. Imagine that.(Photo: STX Entertainment)

Livecasting your every move

After fully drinking the company Kool-Aid, Mae decides to clipa camera to her shirt andlive broadcasther entire life, morning to night. Which you can now do on Facebook Live and Instagram Live, for better or worse.

Futuristic points: 0

At least the little cameras are cute.(Photo: Frank Masi)

Eyes that watch us around the world

A cool feature introduced by Eamon is a marble-sizecamera that devotees can stickanywhere, turning the world into one giant livecast. Were not entirely at the stalker-level cameras imagined by The Circle yet, but between satellite images, omnipresent security cameras and easily hacked cameras in our computers, cellphones and tablets, were near it.

Futuristic points: 2

Read or Share this story: http://usat.ly/2pVWcSr

Here is the original post:

6 ways that 'Big Brother' technology in 'The Circle' is already happening - USA TODAY

Posted in Technology | Comments Off on 6 ways that ‘Big Brother’ technology in ‘The Circle’ is already happening – USA TODAY

Blockchain technology is the coolest thing in Indian finance right now but nobody really gets it – Quartz

Posted: at 4:54 am

Blockchain technology is the coolest thing in Indian finance right now but nobody really gets it
Quartz
It's tough to keep up with technology. And India's finance sector knows it too well. Blockchain technology, based on concepts that underpin cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, is fast gaining pace in Asia's third-largest economy but business executives ...

and more »

Read more:

Blockchain technology is the coolest thing in Indian finance right now but nobody really gets it - Quartz

Posted in Technology | Comments Off on Blockchain technology is the coolest thing in Indian finance right now but nobody really gets it – Quartz

Big Island luxury Realtor uses 3D technology to sell $11 million property – Pacific Business News (Honolulu)

Posted: at 4:54 am

Big Island luxury Realtor uses 3D technology to sell $11 million property
Pacific Business News (Honolulu)
Eileen Lacerte, co-owner of Hawaii Beach and Golf Properties, uses 3D videos to help market and sell each of her Big Island listings as technology continues to change the way Realtors and photographers showcase luxury residential real estate properties.

Read the original post:

Big Island luxury Realtor uses 3D technology to sell $11 million property - Pacific Business News (Honolulu)

Posted in Technology | Comments Off on Big Island luxury Realtor uses 3D technology to sell $11 million property – Pacific Business News (Honolulu)

Three Key Investment Challenges At The Interface of Health and Technology – Forbes

Posted: at 4:54 am


Forbes
Three Key Investment Challenges At The Interface of Health and Technology
Forbes
Lisa Suennen, the co-author of this post, is Senior Managing Director at GE Ventures, author of the Venture Valkyrie blog, and co-host, with David, of the Tech Tonics podcast. Disclosure: GE Ventures portfolio companies mentioned in this post are ...

Read more from the original source:

Three Key Investment Challenges At The Interface of Health and Technology - Forbes

Posted in Technology | Comments Off on Three Key Investment Challenges At The Interface of Health and Technology – Forbes

NFL players grab a data equalizer in era of wearable technology … – ESPN (blog)

Posted: at 4:54 am

7:00 AM ET

Kevin SeifertNFL Nation

Even at the dawn of the wearable technology era, NFL receiver Andrew Hawkins could see where it was all headed. There would come a day, Hawkins said, when player evaluation and even contract negotiations would hinge on the presumably objective data collected from chips inserted in shoulder pads for practices and games.

A player's average speed has decreased by 20 percent? He's a declining asset and merits a pay cut.

His exertion load in practice fell this season? He's not working as hard.

His average distance from defensive backs has decreased by half a yard? He can't get separation anymore.

"It's a matter of time before it gets here," Hawkins said in 2015, when he played for the Cleveland Browns. "You just have to hope there is a balance."

Indeed, the NFL Players Association appears to have produced an equalizer of sorts via a new agreement with the wearable tech company WHOOP, which was announced Monday morning.

This will provide players with their own data -- information they own and have the right to sell and distribute as they wish -- to push back against the NFL's accumulation of its own data.

The continuous biometric monitors (CBMs) will provide unique physiological information that can demonstrate strong work habits, personal discipline and high-end conditioning, among other data sets. A handful of players have already received the WHOOP Strap 2.0 device, and distribution will continue this week in Philadelphia, the site of the 2017 NFL draft.

"I can totally see it," said Ahmad Nassar, president of NFL Players Inc., the NFLPA's licensing and marketing subsidiary. "You could have a player who is super diligent in the offseason about working out and maximizing recovery scores, but also using the right amount of strain, being able to walk into a team facility and saying, 'I am someone who when I'm not here, I'm really busting my hump to be ready to go.' They can say, 'Don't just take my word for it. This data backs it up.'"

To be sure, many NFL lifers have pushed back against the influx of data into their traditionally subjective process. The league distributes location information from RFID chips after games, and most teams use some form of GPS chips in practice to measure exertion, but I struggled last month at the annual owners meetings to find a coach who found any of it vital to his daily work.

Even the Baltimore Ravens' John Harbaugh, one of the league's most open-minded coaches, called the game-day information "not particularly helpful."

"You can draw a few things from it, but it's new to our sport. Our sport is different from soccer, different from basketball. It's not as easily applied," Harbaugh added.

"All the coaches and all the organizations that are using it, and even the companies, are still trying to find out how to apply the information. What does it mean?"

In the big picture, however, industry advocates consider that viewpoint temporary and subject to evolution. Longer data histories will begin to provide more context, and more importantly, the next generation of coaches and executives will have been raised in a sports culture that includes both subjective and data-based evaluation. They'll be more comfortable with the idea and more likely to incorporate it organically.

That projection has prompted an industry scramble to align with the finite number of professional sports leagues and their athletes. The NFLPA's arrangement with WHOOP presages a number of big-picture issues that includes not only player evaluation but also the idea of personal data ownership and what that means.

The NFL uses what it collects during games and distributes some of it to its broadcast partners. Players now will have that option, as well, but Nassar acknowledged "we're in the early days" of figuring out how commercialization might work.

"It's kind of a like a gold rush at the moment," Nassar said, "where the only folks who make money are the ones who sell shovels and picks. You ask yourself, 'Is there gold in the mountains?' We think there is."

Will Ahmed, the founder and CEO of WHOOP, conceives of elite athletes as trendsetters for the multibillion-dollar exercise industry. The general public, for example, took to weightlifting in the 1980s and 1990s as it grew in popularity among athletes.

"I think there is a story to be told there," Ahmed said. "How do the best athletes treat their bodies to recover optimally from a grueling sport?"

Ahmed cited WHOOP's work with Olympic swimmer Connor Jaeger, who used a CBM during time trials leading to the Rio de Janeiro Games in 2016. Jaeger found that his body was still recovering from travel three days after arriving to the site of a trial, so he began arriving five days earlier to maximize his condition on the day of the swim.

"And he had an improvement in his times after that," Ahmed said. "One of the advantages here is understanding how travel affects recovery and realizing that recovery is a predictor of performance."

The wearable tech space remains a largely blank canvas in the NFL. But no one expects it to remain that way forever, and on Monday, the NFLPA took a seat at the table. We shall see where it goes from here.

Follow this link:

NFL players grab a data equalizer in era of wearable technology ... - ESPN (blog)

Posted in Technology | Comments Off on NFL players grab a data equalizer in era of wearable technology … – ESPN (blog)