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Monthly Archives: July 2017
As freedom awaits, newly paroled OJ Simpson isolated at prison for his protection – Los Angeles Times
Posted: July 22, 2017 at 8:03 am
O.J. Simpson was on the move again this time to his own cell in the Lovelock Correctional Facility.
Prison officials said Friday the former football star was removed from the general population for his own protection as he waits for his release in early October.
Brooke Keast, spokeswoman for the Nevada Department of Corrections, said after Simpson was granted parole Thursday, officials decided it made sense to keep him out of harms way.
Keast said prison officials usually dont allow hearings to be viewed by the nearly 1,700 inmates, but with the widespread attention Simpson received, that proved impossible.
When you have people who are lifers that are not going to be getting out, there are some people who might want to make a name for themselves, Keast said. Its not worth the risk.
Simpsons parole hearing like most legal issues with the 70-year-old was a spectacle that grabbed international attention. Media flooded Carson City, the small capital city of Nevada, with large array of satellite television trucks. His conviction on robbery charges nine years ago landed him in Lovelock, a speck of a town two hours northeast of Carson City, where the four-member parole board unanimously granted his release.
The decision to grant parole proved disappointing to some who were hoping Simpson would serve a longer sentence as payback for being acquitted in the 1994 double murder of his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ron Goldman.
David Montero and Matt Pearce
Goldmans father, Fred Goldman, who along with the Brown estate successfully sued Simpson in a civil lawsuit related to the deaths, told Good Morning America on Friday that the family was disappointed with the parole commissioners decision.
They never pressed him about anything," he said. "He snapped at one of the commissioners. ... The first gentleman who spoke, he snapped at him. There was no feedback to that. He lied numerous times about many things. He was never re-questioned about anything.
Goldman said the commissioners appeared to go over a checklist of conditions that make inmates eligible for parole, and they checked them off, and as long as he answered the proper number of items on the checklist, it was a done deal."
During the parole hearing, the commissioners said they received letters of support for Simpsons release as well as those who wished to see him remain behind bars, but they couldnt consider the 1995 acquittal in their deliberations.
Simpson told the board hed led a conflict-free life" and repeatedly said he was a good guy." Fred Goldman took offense at the remarks.
"Everybody in the world except him knows that he has not led a conflict-free life," Goldman said. "He beat up his first wife, he beat up Nicole numerous times, he had numerous other altercations with people over the years hardly conflict-free, nor do I suspect it'll ever be conflict-free. He's just not capable of being that person."
Kim Goldman, Ron Goldmans sister, told Good Morning America that the family had a nine-year reprieve with Simpson serving the minimum amount of time for the robbery conviction. His sentence couldve been as long as 33 years.
We're going to go back to doing what we've done. I run a nonprofit working with teenagers, I do stories on other victims and survivors, I'm raising my kids, she said. We're active in the world of victims and survivors' advocacy. We're going to continue doing those things and take it one day at a time, and if he chooses to write a book, or do a reality show, we'll be there."
Simpsons plans for when he is released indicate a desire to move to Florida, though the state would have to accept him as a parolee. He told the parole commission he wanted to be with his family already living there.
Tanya Brown, Nicole Brown Simpsons sister, told CNN on Thursday night that she watched the hearing, but said their life doesnt revolve around Simpson.
If you cant change it, you have to at least try to accept it," she said. It works for me. I know it is what it is, and I know its cliche to a lot of people, but it's what gets me through.
Sights, sounds, and the people that made the first day of 2017's Comic-Con a sight to behold.
Sights, sounds, and the people that made the first day of 2017's Comic-Con a sight to behold.
Democrats Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Tim Canova are preparing already for their August 2018 congressional primary rematch by raising and spending campaign money.
Democrats Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Tim Canova are preparing already for their August 2018 congressional primary rematch by raising and spending campaign money.
Twitter: @davemontero
ALSO
Timeline: O.J. Simpson's journey from sports legend to murder suspect to prisoner
This is what happened to all the important people in O.J. Simpson's life
Bill Plaschke: USC seems to be unwavering in its fond remembrance of former Trojan O.J. Simpson
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There is freedom in good health insurance for all – Detroit Free Press
Posted: at 8:03 am
Free Press readers Published 12:06 a.m. ET July 22, 2017
As citizens, we are not truly free if we do not have realistic access to good health care, one Free Press reader wrote.(Photo: TNS)
Free Press readers share their opinions on the health care reform debate in Washington:
Our national anthem ends with the words land of the free and home of the brave. As citizens, we are not truly free if we do not have realistic access to good health care. Republicans, pushing for the repeal and replacement of the ACA, and now just the repeal, are selling the warped notion that freedom is the right to choose to not have insurance, or to have a junk insurance policy. I doubt this freedom is ever chosen by those with financial means.
This version of freedom is packaged and sold to less affluent Americans because, for many of them, obtaining health care currently requires hard choices. Our countrys version of freedom should not be that we allow vulnerable citizens the choice to meet other essential needs while they forgo health insurance and gamble that they will not become sick. For this wealthy, bountiful country, freedom should be something more noble than that.
Freedom should be the ability to choose to leave your current job and start a new business, knowing that you can buy health insurance, and that pre-existing conditions will not affect your ability to obtain or keep that insurance. Freedom is saving and planning for retirement and not worrying that you will lose all of that hard-earned retirement savings should you become ill or have an accident. Freedom is retiring when you want, without having to wait until age 65 when you will be eligible for Medicare. Freedom is not worrying about how you will pay for doctors visits, hospital visits, a childs birth, medicines, or expensive lifesaving treatments. Shouldnt we want these freedoms for all Americans?
If the Republicans repeal the ACA or fail to work with Democrats to fix the ACA, many Americans will be denied the essential freedom to live healthy lives without fear of whether they can pay for it.
Lauren Lisi
Huntington Woods
People forget or never realized how long it took to get a health care plan for all Americans. Finally came the Affordable Care Act. It works to a large degree but has weaknesses. Those problems could have been overcome without so many wasted months if the GOP accepted the ACA and worked to make it a success. Of course, that would mean working for the benefit of the American people rather than the party.
Ron DePentu
Canton
The Republicans had seven years to come up with their version of a health care plan they chose to spend it on meaningless repeal votes on the Affordable Care Act. When it came time to deliver their plan, after claiming for years that they had all the answers, a chosen few went behind closed doors and threw something together in a few short weeks and their own party couldnt support it.
One of the most disturbing things that has come out of all of this is that Mitch McConnell threatened the recalcitrant senators by vowing to work with the Democrats to get a bipartisan agreement if the Republicans didnt fall in line. Well, heaven forbid! Work together for the common good of the American people? Thats something that the Senate on both sides of the aisle seems to have forgotten is their purpose.
Lenore S. Litwin
South Lyon
There is an answer to the health care/health care insurance problem in this country. All federal employees starting with the president down should be on the same plan as citizens. All state employees from the governors down should be on the same plan as citizens. Once that is accomplished I think that federal and state governments will very quickly come up with an excellent health plan for all of American citizens.
M. Chudnov
Farmington Hills
Wouldnt it be something if Congress rallied around Sen. John McCain, and came together to reach a consensus for a health care bill. They certainly have not felt compelled to rally around the people they represent.
Ron Ustruck
Davisburg
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There is freedom in good health insurance for all - Detroit Free Press
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The Temptations at Freedom Hill, 5 Things To Know – The Oakland Press
Posted: at 8:03 am
The Legends of Motown featuring the Four Tops, the Temptations, the Spinners and the Stylistics
7:30 p.m. Sunday, June 23.
Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre at Freedom Hill, 14900 Metropolitan Parkway. Sterling Heights.
Tickets are $59.50-$125.50 pavilion, $25.50 lawn.
Call 586-268-9700 or visit palacenet.com.
In any discussion of Motown, the Temptations are among the first acts mentioned -- with good reason.
The quintet, formed as the Elgins in 1960 and later known as the Primes, is one of Motowns most successful groups, with 25 Top 20 singles and the distinction of being the first Motown act to win a Grammy Award. The Tempts are in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and also received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2013.
And the Tempts are still going, under the auspices of co-founder Otis Williams and with some formidable projects in motion for the near future.
The Temptations big project at the moment is Aint Too Proud To Beg: The Temptations, a musical directed by Tony Award winner Des McAnuff and opening Sept. 15 at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre in California, with plans to move to Broadway later on. I just had the pleasure of being there to see (rehearsals) and I was moved to tears, Williams (nee Miles), 75, says by phone from his home in California. I cant put it into words; Its gonna be good. Id like to think (audiences) will take away a greater perspective and to some extent a respect of what we have gone through and why were still around doing it and people want to see it.
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Williams -- who wrote the best-selling Temptations, a 1988 autobiography that was adapted into an NBC miniseries 10 years later -- is also hoping the Temptations will be doing some recording soon, hopefully releasing the groups first new studio albums in nine years. Were getting ready to go back in (to the studio), he says. Were going to sit down with our producers soon and figure it out. Well be doing some original tunes and well be doing some cover tunes; That much I know. We used to record an album twice a year, so to put something out after nine years will be a special moment in Tempts history.
Like Duke Fakir in the Four Tops, Williams is the lone Temptations founding member still alive and actively performing, and he doesnt take that distinction lightly. Were just blessed to continue on, Williams says. The Four Tops are fine, and the Tempts and myself, and (Henry) Fambrough of the Spinners, because hes the last original member from that group...Im just glad that we are able to continue this music and this group that people have come to know and love.
Among the Temptations many career anniversaries, this year marks the 45th for Papa Was A Rollin Stone, a chart-topping hit that won three Grammy Awards. The song was first released earlier in the year by the Undisputed Truth, and the Temptations didnt want to do it at first, according to Williams. We were tired of the psychedelic stuff. We had the Ball Of Confusion, the Could Nine, the Runaway Child, I Cant Get Next To You. We wanted to go back to the Just My Imagination and My Girl sort of feel. So we almost passed on Papa Was A Rollin Stone, but (producer) Norman Whitfield said, Itll be a hit, so we stopped bickering and went into the studio and recorded it, and it came out and it was the No. 1 record and everything and turned out to be one of our big hits.
As the 50th anniversary observation of the Detroit riots begins Sunday, July 23, Williams recalls his experience as primarily trying to stay out of the fray. I was getting ready to go to the Chit Chat Lounge to see the Funk Brothers play and I heard about whats going on and said, Id best go home, Williams remembers. I got home and sat down and looked at the news and all hell had broken loose. I said, Wow, if that isnt a hell of a thing... It was scary. But one of the things I remember is that as bad as the riot was and marshal law and all that, when they finally let the city start moving about I said, Lemme go see what happened to Motown, and it was untouched, not one brick scratched or anything. I thought that was something special.
If You Go
The Legends of Motown show, featuring the Four Tops, the Temptations, the Spinners and the Stylistics, is at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, June 23 in the Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre at Freedom Hill, 14900 Metropolitan Pkwy., Sterling Heights. Tickets are $59.50-$125.50 pavilion, $25.50 lawn. Call 586-268-9700 or visit palacenet.com.
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The Temptations at Freedom Hill, 5 Things To Know - The Oakland Press
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Trump signs off on plan to allow US navy more freedom to patrol in South China Sea – South China Morning Post
Posted: at 8:03 am
US President Donald Trump has approved a plan to allow the US navy more freedom to carry out patrols in the South China Sea, in a move that could be seen as a challenge to Chinas maritime claims in the disputed waters, a far-right US news website reported.
US patrols challenging Beijing in South China Sea will continue, says US Navy commander
The plan, submitted to the White House in April by Defence Secretary Jim Mattis, outlines a full-year schedule of when US navy ships will sail through contested waters in the South China Sea, Breitbart News cited a US official as saying.
Under the plan, the White House will be aware of all planned freedom of navigation operations so it will not be a surprise when requests come up the chain of command, and they will be approved faster than before, the official said.
US Navy carrier group begins South China Sea patrols
The faster approval process means the operations can be conducted on a very routine, very regular basis, as part of a programme to keep the waters open, rather than as a one-off event, the person said.
It is not yet clear if the plan is part of a larger Asia-Pacific strategy or whether it is simply designed to make freedom of navigation operations more routine in the South China Sea.
China shows US its military muscle with patrol off Hong Kong waters amid rising maritime tensions
Under President Obamas administration, the Pentagon was required to send requests to conduct such operations to the National Security Council, where they would stall, the website report said.
There was a concern of doing anything that would cause anybody to get their feathers ruffled, the official was quoted as saying.
Chinas coastguard staking claim to contested reefs in South China Sea
Despite tough rhetoric during Trumps campaign trial, the US did not conduct any freedom of navigation operations in the South China Sea until late May, when the USS Dewey sailed within 12 nautical miles of Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands.
Mischief Reef is controlled by mainland China, which has built airstrips in the region, but is also claimed by the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam.
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Freedom comes with concomitant responsibility – Vanguard
Posted: at 8:03 am
By Francis Ewherido
As parents gathered in the chapel of St. Gregorys College, Ikoyi, Lagos, for the Holy Mass to commence the graduation ceremonies of their children last Saturday, one feeling was mutual: joy. Beyond that, there were divergent feelings.
For some parents, St. Gregorys was a refuge for their children while away from home. Now they are moving to the university with cultism and other social vices and they are worried about how their children would cope. Some are worried about how their children will manage the new found freedom when they get to the university.
Those who will send their children to private universities or foreign universities were probably dealing with the arithmetic of the increased expenses. But while parents were struggling with their mixed emotions, the graduating students were chatting away in low tones, hugging and back-slapping themselves before the Mass started. They were certainly cherishing their impending freedom, away from the regimented life at St. Gregorys: low hair cut, waking up at a specific hour, food timetable, etc.
The homilist and St. Gregorys Assistant Administrator, the very cerebral Rev. Fr. John Njorteah, correctly gauged the feelings of the students. Seizing the opportunity of talking to them together for probably the last time, he told them some home truths about life out there. Parents kept nodding as Fr. John spoke. Please find below excerpts of the homily, a reference for every teenager and young adult.
My dear little ones, as you step out of this college today to go into the world, I humbly implore you to listen attentively to me as I share with you the word of God on this auspicious occasion. First, I would like you all (the graduands) to look around and see yourselves again. Today marks the end of your gathering together as a group.
Never shall you all be complete as a class. You have journeyed together as a group and today you are beginning another journey on your own. Yes, your individuality will be key in determining the extent you will go in life.
My dear friends, for some years now the college has taught and protected you, and now you are being unleashed into the world. This is the world that is full of evils and times have really changed. Insecurity is at its peak, kidnapping has become commonplace, economic hardship is killing our people, suicides and suicidal attempts are becoming rife among our people. Our cultural values are being eroded in the wake of imitating western trends and fashions, and there is less of everything in the world today.
Our phones have become wireless; cars, keyless; our dresses have become sleeveless, our youths, jobless; our leaders, shameless; our relationships, meaningless; our attitudes, careless; our feelings, heartless; our education, valueless and our children manner-less (ill-mannered).
Do not, therefore, fail to make recourse to the good training you had in the college. Indeed friends, you have been given the flesh of moral discipline and uprightness. Remain firm and sturdy in this path. Lies fill the length and breadth of the social media and move faster than the speed of light; thanks to the power of the internet.
Your academic foundation is one that is the envy of many who are not privileged and who might have desired to be beneficiaries. Let it not amount to naught. Your desire for freedom is realised. Know your freedom comes with responsibility. The era of pushing the blame to someone else gives way to the era of I did it. Put your future in good handsyour own.
Remember that we led you to God, allow Him to accompany you through your life. You were always instructed that there is a God who seeks the response of your love and wants you never to forget Him. Today, there is a neo-atheism.
Denial of spiritual realities and replacing God with money. We see the extent to which money has driven people to do the unimaginable in the country. Do not live above your means. Do not impress anyone. Practice your faith, live your faith and be glad to share it. Do not be ashamed to live for God.
Your time is limited, so dont waste it
living someone elses life. Dont let the noise of other peoples opinion drown your own inner voice. Be focused and firm on whatever path you want to tow in the university and with Gods help you will succeed. Remember that bad company corrupts good manners. Choose your friends and do not let your friends choose you, and ensure that you do not make friends with people of questionable character.
Today, you have a new mother in this institution, please do not put her to shame by your conduct and ways of life. Just as Jesus Christ enjoined his disciples in Mt. 28:19 to Go therefore make disciples of all nations, in the same way you are being charged to become ambassadors of this college, and see to it that you contribute your own quota to the growth and development of this institution.
Continue to rely on the promise of Christ to you in the gospel reading when he says, In the world you will suffer, take courage for I have overcome the world. You are being charged then to heal and not to contaminate the world, to build and not to destroy, to uplift and not to bring down, to support and not to oppose, to renew and not to ruin.
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Review: Primus plays it weird in hot Freedom Hill show – The Oakland Press
Posted: at 8:03 am
STERLING HEIGHTS -- Sterling Heights, eh? virtuosic bassist and enigmatic Primus front man Les Claypool asked the sold-out Freedom Hill crowd on Thursday night, July 20, as his band commenced its set. In case you stumbled into the wrong venue, we are not a Foreigner cover band.
It was an ironic witticism from a man who has made a career on incongruity. Perhaps best known as the textbook weirdo who wears a derby hat and penned the iconic South Park theme song, Claypool is thought of by throngs of his rabid fans as one of the most inventive bassist who ever drew breath, an acid-soaked cross between Larry Graham and Jaco Pastorius. Over the course of Primus 75-minute set, Claypool moved the needle on his legend.
Appearing after a raucously loud if straightforward performance by stoner metal outfit Clutch, Primus which formed in Northern California over 30 years ago -- took the stage to circus music, as is its wont. Signaled by drummer Tim Alexanders cymbal hits, Claypool and company immediately launched into the supremely weird Too Many Puppies. Alexanders polyrhythmic playing was MVP from the get-go, while Claypools emotional note choice was set off by the versatility of guitarist Larry LaLonde who, for the lions share of the night, oscillated between hardcore thrash metal licks and cleanly rendered psychedelic euphoria.
Save for a new song mid-set, which Claypool promised the crowd was going to bring goblin rock back into common parlance, the trio focused on exploring the outer limits of some of the most well-loved pieces in its catalog. Frizzle Fry was ramped up in the live set, breaking from the composition and entering a space somewhere between free jazz and metal. The improvised section stretched out in epic fashion, while freakish imagery of green neon eyes and dayglo American flags flashed upon three colossal LED screens.
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The centerpiece of the show was coiled around the dark psychedelia of Jillys On Smack, which saw Claypool performing on an upright bass and donning a pig mask while Alexander and LaLonde occupied the negative space with a sense of musical urgency. The song ultimately melded with the staccato rhythms of Mr. Krinkle with, as always, Claypools slap bass intensity taking the spotlight. The valorous musical forays resolved themselves into the beginnings of a straightforward and satisfying Jerry Was a Race Car Driver, the song that shot the band to momentary stardom during the early. Customary satirical chants of Primus Sucks! filled the shed, the official Primus fan seal of approval for a job well done at the nights end. And the adoration was reciprocated by the trio.
We liked you so much, Michigan, that we played right up against our curfew, Claypool said, suddenly realizing it was five minutes until 11 p.m. and the group was short on time after getting sidetracked by their fierce predilection for audacious improvisation and musicianship. Its hard to say that Primus stand alone, because it doesnt; the band is just one in a long tradition of quintessentially risky bands. But its only getting more compelling the higher its mystery rises.
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Editorial: Death of a brave freedom fighter – The Providence Journal
Posted: at 8:03 am
One of the world's great champions of freedom has passed. Liu Xiaobo, 61, a literary critic, civil rights activist and 2010 Nobel Peace Prize winner, died on July 13 after losing a battle against lung cancer.
Mr. Liu followed in his fathers footsteps and became an academic, a lecturer at Chinas Beijing Normal University in literature, with tenures at Columbia University, the University of Hawaii and the University of Oslo.
But what he became known for was something quite different than literary criticism.
Mr. Liu opposed his countrys Marxist philosophy, and supported the concept of freedom. He said in a Nov. 27, 1988 interview with Open Magazine, modernization means wholesale westernization, choosing a human life is choosing a Western way of life.
Chinas Communist regime was obviously not pleased with the expression of such views. The safest thing Mr. Liu could have done was to remain outside the countrys perimeters.That is not what heroes do, however.
In June 1989, Mr. Liu left Columbia and returned to China to help support students during the Tiananmen Square protests.He organized a three-day event later described as the Tiananmen Four Gentlemen Hunger Strike. He called for an end to class struggle, and helped in the negotiations between students and the army to help prevent further bloodshed.
For that, hewas arrestedand went to Qincheng Prison. The state-run media called him a mad dog and black hand." He lost his university position several months later.
He was imprisoned several more times in his life.
There was a six-month sentence in 1995, on the sixth anniversary of the Tiananmen uprising, and three years in a labor education camp from1996 to 1999. Finally, his 11-year sentence in 2008 for suspicion of inciting subversion of state power led to an extended stay at Jinzhou Prison and, as his health failed, a trip to Shenyangs First Hospital of China Medical University, where he passed away.
Mr. Lius participation in a 1993 documentary film enabled him to travel to Australia and the United States, and provided him with a rare chance to escape. But he returned to the country of his birth to defend freedom against tyranny.
Through it all, he continued to write about politics and human rights (although he was banned from publishingin mainland China). This includes his powerful 1992 memoir "The Monologues of a Doomsday's Survivor," his notable work of political criticism called "A Nation That Lies to Conscience," and other articles, poems and collections.
He was also involved with creating Charter 8, a 2008 manifesto signed by more than 300 Chinese citizens. It called for freedom of expression, religion and assembly, for privatizing state enterprises, and for eliminating one-party rule. More than 10,000 signatures have been added since.
China vigorously opposed his nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize, initiated by such important figures as Vaclav Havel, Desmond Tutu and the Dalai Lama. (His wife, Liu Xia, was even put under house arrest.) Yet, the committee didnt back down and bestowed him with the honor for his long and nonviolent struggle for fundamental human rights in China.
Liu Xiaobo stood up to the Chinese Communists, and defended Western values to his dying breath. In a world of timidity and compromise, he stood for the rights of every human being. In short, he led a heroic life.
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Lyft to Develop Self-Driving Car Technology in New Silicon Valley Facility – New York Times
Posted: at 8:03 am
Lyft is taking a markedly different approach from Uber. While Ubers self-driving plans have mostly been a solo effort, Lyft has announced what it calls its Open Platform Initiative, a way to develop autonomous vehicle technology in conjunction with automakers and technology companies.
We want to bring the whole industry together with this, and we think theres a unique opportunity in time right now for Lyft to become a leader while doing it, said Raj Kapoor, Lyfts chief strategy officer, in a press event at the companys San Francisco headquarters.
Perhaps the best way to understand the initiative is through the lens of the smartphone.
Ubers approach is closer to that of Apple: Both companies want to control most of the product, whether the software or the hardware.
Lyft, in contrast, is acting a bit more like Google in its development of the Android operating system. Both companies are creating software that many different hardware manufacturers can use, while developing the technology collaboratively with hardware partners. In Lyfts ideal world, that could mean a quicker spread of Lyfts technology among automakers.
Automakers are scrambling to develop their own self-driving technology as they imagine how they might operate in a future in which fewer people own cars. Collaborating with Lyft could help bring that technology to market faster, while automakers could provide Lyfts ride-hailing network with more cars to serve riders.
Lyft is seeing early signs of traction. Early partners include Waymo, nuTonomy, Jaguar, Land Rover and General Motors. The public details of the partnerships are scant, but all of the companies have committed to working together to make self-driving cars commonplace.
There are potential drawbacks. Partners could decide to leave the Open Platform Initiative and develop their own software. Or companies could be wary of teaming up with Lyft because it is developing its own self-driving system.
Lyft executives believe that the self-driving-car race is in its early days, and that companies that may consider one another rivals still have much to gain from collaborating and learning while building the automobile fleets of the future.
Lyft is not getting into the business of manufacturing a car, Mr. Kapoor said. Were on our way to creating a self-driving system. Then the auto industry can bring it to life.
A version of this article appears in print on July 22, 2017, on Page B6 of the New York edition with the headline: Lyft Sets Open Platform Approach to Self-Driving Cars.
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Lyft to Develop Self-Driving Car Technology in New Silicon Valley Facility - New York Times
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State AGs are flexing their muscles to protect your technology privacy – The Hill (blog)
Posted: at 8:03 am
Headlines for state attorneys general (AGs) have been dominated by tangles with the Trump administration from the travel ban case going to the U.S. Supreme Court to challenges to legacy regulations at federal agencies. Less visible are actions by state AGs to push forward their interests and influence in technology-oriented consumer products, as highlighted in panel topics at various attorney general meetings this summer.
An attorney general is often known as the top cop in his or her state. However, rather than having widespread criminal prosecutorial powers, state AGs utilize broad consumer protection authority. Particularly in assessing deceptive and unfair acts and practices with consumer-facing business, AGs are market regulators and enforcers.
For years, data breaches have been big news for state AGs, as there remains no federal compliance standard. Individual states maintain their own requirements for notification in case of a breach, and they are enforced by state AGs. Some states take the opportunity to establish heightened privacy standards for the types of data that companies can collect. For instance, the Illinois legislature recently passed legislation to restrict geolocation data, and the rules are to be enforced by the attorney general. Moving from reactive roles to proactive interests, state AGs are mapping out technology sectors where they see significant instances of security and privacy at stake.
Three huge technologies that will shape the future of consumers have the current interest of state AGs: driverless cars, the internet of things, and artificial intelligence. The interconnectedness of computing devices along with the capture of personal data, including at times when a consumer may be unaware, has some state AGs on high alert.The concern from AGs is not a particular innovation itself, but rather a self-realization of how AGs themselves should react to the seismic shift in consumer preferences where a desire for efficiency, personalization and freedom is trumping traditional notions of consumer protection.
First, with driverless or autonomous vehicles and connected cars, we have the Jetsons becoming reality. A fleet of cars without drivers roams the streets of Pittsburgh, and a production vehicles will show up at your door. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration categorizes five levels of automated driving from level one, which includes cruise control, to levels four and five, in which the vehicle monitors all roadway conditions and reacts appropriately. Between the ends of this spectrum is an incremental revolution, as more and more driver assistance features are introduced into vehicles.
With the productivity and safety gains for those no longer seated behind a steering wheel, state AGs recognize potential privacy concerns with location data, driving habits and occupant identification that could be at risk of unauthorized use or disclosure. State AGs will also seek to defend their state laws from the preemptive effects of federal regulations that may otherwise be necessary to usher the advancement of driverless technology. With state AGs clearly having a role to influence the driverless industry and its future, proactive engagement with AGs, even in spite of their enforcement role, is critical.
Second, the internet of things (IoT) describes smart devices connected together. Smart devices may be activated remotely, may detect information independently, or may be able to learn and repeat functions. IoT devices collect information from a persons home or surroundings, some which may be personal. Earlier this year, for instance, the FTC and the New Jersey attorney general scored a $2.2 million settlement with a TV manufacturer that collected viewing histories.
For state AGs, IoT enforcement considerations involve unfair and deceptive acts and practices. These include, for example, giving no notice to consumers about personally identifiable information that may be collected and possible HIPAA violations in sharing confidential health information. The proliferation of non-secure connected devices creates growing risks.
Last year, the Mirai virus searched the internet for vulnerable IoT devices, attacked them using common manufacturer default settings, and infected devices to control them for additional attacks. State AGs are aware of ways in which IoT devices from cordless tea kettles to connected medical devices could be compromised when poor security opens up possibilities to gain access to a wireless home network.
Third, artificial intelligence, or AI, certainly brings images of science fiction. AI involves computers performing tasks in ways that would otherwise require human intelligence, such as recognizing speech, having visual perception, or making decisions. Last year, an AI robot journalist wrote 450 stories on the Olympics, and sch superhuman feats will continue, as AI learns to understand pictures and videos of events.
State AGs understand how AI may be useful for law enforcement, such as managing unregistered drones by taking them safely out of the sky. This method of using technology advances to manage technology risks is certainly appealing and needs to be better understood by AGs across a variety of industries.
State AGs have already been receiving a similar education with their regulatory and enforcement authority toward the sharing economy, as traditional methods of consumer protection do not fit. More so, AI will transform our economy as a whole, which has state attorneys general considering how their consumer protection roles must change.
Joseph Jacquot is a partner at Foley & Lardner LLP. He previously served as chief deputy attorney general of Florida and as deputy chief counsel for the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee.
The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.
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Together, technology and teachers can revamp schools – The Economist
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Together, technology and teachers can revamp schools - The Economist
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