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Monthly Archives: August 2017
Tesla CEO Elon Musk Thinks Artificial Intelligence Is Scarier North Korea Nukes – TheStreet.com
Posted: August 13, 2017 at 2:16 am
Always tweeting Tesla ( TSLA) CEO Elon Musk doesn't seem too scared of North Korean nuclear missiles striking his U.S. based Gigafactory.
But he is worried about the long-range effects of more powerful computers.
"If you're not concerned about AI safety, you should be. Vastly more risk than North Korea," Musk tweeted on Friday night.
While Musk's comments seem somewhat bombastic, they do shed light on the growing influence of artificial intelligence on humanity.
If you always have a caramel macchiato on Mondays, but Tuesdays call for the straight stuff, a double espresso, then Starbucks is ready to know every nuance of your coffee habit. There will be no coffee secrets between you, if you're a Rewards member, and Starbucks.
This fall as Starbucks rolls out more of its new cloud-based Digital Flywheel program, backed by artificial intelligence (AI), the chain's regulars will find their every java wish ready to be fulfilled and, the food and drink items you haven't yet thought about presented to you as what you're most likely to want next.
So targeted is the technology behind this program that, if the weather is sunny, you'll get a different suggestion than if the day is rainy. Or expect suggestions to vary on the weekend or a holiday, as opposed to a regular workday. If it's your birthday, Starbucks will offer a personalized birthday selection. If you patronize a Starbucks other than you're regular haunt, Starbucks will know that too.
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Tesla CEO Elon Musk Thinks Artificial Intelligence Is Scarier North Korea Nukes - TheStreet.com
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ARMED FORCES – Youngstown Vindicator
Posted: at 2:14 am
Published: Sun, August 13, 2017 @ 12:04 a.m.
ARMED FORCES
VETERANS
Veterans Service office to be closed
YOUNGSTOWN
The Mahoning County Veterans Service Commission office at Oakhill Renaisssance Place, 345 Oak Hill Ave., Suite 100, Youngstown, will be closed Friday.
Facilities offer alternative medicine
SANTA MONICA, CALIF.
More than 80 percent of military health care facilities offer some form of complementary and alternative medicine, in addition to conventional medicine, mainly for pain management and psychological disorders, according to a new study from the RAND Corp.
Complementary and alternative medicine includes practices such as acupuncture, chiropractic, stress management/relaxation therapy, progressive muscle relaxation, yoga, biofeedback and massage. About a third of the general population report using these therapies.
For the military, these treatments are one more tool in the toolkit for dealing with issues such as chronic pain, and they can offer an alternative to opioid drugs. In addition, some of the mind/body practices can be effective for the reduction of post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms, said Patricia M. Herman, lead author of the study and a senior behavioral scientist at RAND, a nonprofit research organization.
BASIC TRAINING GRADS
Air Force: Reserve Airman 1st Class Daniel R. Phillis, a 2014 graduate of West Branch High School, Beloit, the son of Richard Phillis of Salem and Marcia Phillis of Beloit.
Items of note for the Armed Forces Digest can be sent to The Vindicator, Regional Desk, P.O. Box 780, Youngstown 44501-0780, or emailed to William K. Alcorn at alcorn@vindy.com.
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FDA warns of contamination of multiple drugs, dietary supplements … – Bucks County Courier Times
Posted: at 2:13 am
Liquid vitamins for infants and children are among several supplements and drugs that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is advising consumers and health care professionals not to use due to risk of severe infection.
The FDA is advising against using any liquid drug or dietary supplement products manufactured by PharmaTech LLC of Davie, Florida, and labeled by Rugby Laboratories, Major Pharmaceuticals and Leader Brands, due to potential contamination with the bacteria Burkholderia cepacia (B. cepacia) and the risk for severe patient infection.
The drug and dietary supplement products made by PharmaTech include liquid docusate sodium drugs (stool softeners), as well as various dietary supplements including liquid vitamin D drops and liquid multivitamins marketed for infants and children.A lab test done by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found a strain of B. cepacia in samples of the stool softeners.
B. cepacia poses a serious threat to vulnerable patients, including infants and young children who still have developing immune systems, said FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb. These products were distributed nationwide to retailers, health care facilities, pharmacies and sold online making it important that parents, patients and health care providers be made aware of the potential risk and immediately stop using these products.
According to the CDC, B. cepacia poses the greatest threat to hospitalized patients, critically ill patients and people with health problems such as weakened immune systems and chronic lung diseases. The symptoms of B. cepacia infections vary widely from none at all to serious respiratory infections. It can spread from person-to-person by direct contact and is often resistant to common antibiotics.
Consumers, pharmacies and health care facilities should immediately stop using and dispensing all liquid drug and dietary supplement products manufactured by PharmaTech and labeled by Rugby Laboratories, Major Pharmaceuticals and Leader Brands.
This is not the first time the FDA has advised patients against using liquid docusate (stool softening) drug products manufactured at PharmaTech's Davie, Florida, facility. The FDA issued an advisory in 2016 after the products were implicated in the CDC's public health investigation into a multistate outbreak of B. cepacia infections.
The FDA encourages health care professionals and consumers to report adverse events or quality problems experienced with the use of drugs and dietary supplements products to the FDAs MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program:
Complete and submit the report online at http://www.fda.gov/medwatch/report.htm; or download and complete the form, then submit it via fax at 1-800-FDA-0178.
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FDA warns of contamination of multiple drugs, dietary supplements ... - Bucks County Courier Times
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Editorial: Why taking supplements can be risky – San Francisco Chronicle
Posted: at 2:13 am
Chronicle Editorial Board
Some of the dietary supplements Nicholas Chrysanthou takes to deal with his over 80 food allergies, on the kitchen counter of his home in Houston, TX, June 28, 2017. (Michael Wyke / For the Chronicle)
Some of the dietary supplements Nicholas Chrysanthou takes to deal...
Health-conscious people may want to think twice before taking dietary supplements. Researchers have found a significant increase nationwide in calls to poison control centers related to vitamins, herbs and other supplements. These calls have increased along with the growth of supplement sales in the U.S.
Between 2000 and 2012, there have been around 275,000 calls about over-the-counter supplement exposure. The most serious of the poisoning cases often concerned young children, stricken with breathing problems and seizures. The Journal of Toxicology report found ma huang, yohimbe and energy products were associated with the greatest toxicity.
Over-the-counter dietary supplements are not held to the same rigorous safety standards as medications or food products. The lack of oversight can lead products to be contaminated, mislabeled or of inconsistent quality.
Some embrace supplements as offering a last bastion of freedom over what goes into their bodies. Many patients turn to herbal remedies for a natural approach to health care and to avoid costly medications.
However, without clinical trials and other safety precautions, consumers cant know the potential side effects of certain supplements, particularly when taken with other medications. The study results indicate a need for stronger oversight by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Politics has blocked that kind of oversight for years. So, at the very least, check with a doctor before deciding to be a human guinea pig.
This commentary is from The Chronicles Editorial Board. We invite you to express your views in a letter to the editor. Please submit your letter via our online form: SFChronicle.com/letters.
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Editorial: Why taking supplements can be risky - San Francisco Chronicle
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SoundCloud Gets New Investment Round, Lives to Stream Another Day – Motherboard
Posted: at 2:12 am
Motherboard | SoundCloud Gets New Investment Round, Lives to Stream Another Day Motherboard There are comics making fun of Yippies*, talk of early nootropic brain enhancement and life-extension, and the assertion that 'science without feminism is apocalypse.' In one tiny panel placed in the corner of one page, a company showcases mail-order ... |
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SoundCloud Gets New Investment Round, Lives to Stream Another Day - Motherboard
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Mutant Yippies, LSD, and Cyberpunks: The Story of the Space Age Newspaper ‘High Frontiers’ – Motherboard
Posted: at 2:12 am
Motherboard | Mutant Yippies, LSD, and Cyberpunks: The Story of the Space Age Newspaper 'High Frontiers' Motherboard There are ads for nonsensical inventions straight out of an episode of Rick and Morty. There are comics making fun of Yippies*, talk of early nootropic brain enhancement and life-extension, and the assertion that 'science without feminism is apocalypse.'. |
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The Zeitgeist Movement (India)
Posted: at 2:12 am
The Zeitgeist Movement isaglobalgrass-roots organizationfocused on achieving a paradigm shifttoward a sustainable futurefor our planetin which all needs are metand human potential can be realized.
Welcome to The Zeitgeist Movement India Chapter
Even as youre reading this, something incredible is happening all over the world. People are waking up to a new reality, where mindless jobs, conflict, stress, inflation, poverty, hunger, debt, climate change and all other perils of the current world simply do not exist.
By your interest in the movement, youve expressed your inclination to help shape our wonderful future! We encourage you to go through each and every tab and link on this website thoroughly.
In order to understand the movement in detail, we encourage you to go through at least the following links in the order theyre mentioned below. There are quite a few, so you might want to stagger them over a few days (or weeks, based on your schedule). Do add them to your Favorites/Bookmarks, so you can revisit them later.
Once you have gone through the material below, and you find that your thinking and views resonate with those of the movement, if you havent subscribed to us already, please consider doing so at the Registration link provided in this page. Youll discover a growing number of like-minded people who want to make this world a better place.
Register and get updates on events related to The Zeitgeist Movement in India.
Read the global mission statement.
Get to know how this movement works.
Access to the various (free) resources required to understand the aims, goals and direction of the movement.
If any links on this site do not work, please do let us know atinfo [at] tzmindia [dot] comso that we can correct them.
We wish you a wonderful journey in the movement.
In solidarity,
The Zeitgeist Movement India Chapter
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Monroe chamber prepares for economic growth – Martins Ferry Times Leader
Posted: at 2:11 am
WOODSFIELD Monroe County business leaders and government officials are counting on an upswing in the local economy, mostly due to activity in the oil and natural gas industry.
Barbara Carslund of the Monroe County Chamber of Commerce said she is optimistic that jobs and industry are on their way to the county, and her organization is helping to pave the way for progress. According to Carslund, the county is poised to reap the benefits of the oil and gas explosion, and the county must be prepared to take advantage of the economic expansion by helping existing small businesses expand and by helping those who would like to open new businesses.
We are working right now with the oil and gas industry and trying to get our local businesses trained in cooperation with the Small Business Development Center in Marietta, Carslund said. They offer many services as the regional office there in Marietta, but we are working to get more training sessions here in Monroe County.
The Small Business Development Center is a free public resource providing technical assistance for small businesses. There are 28 SBDCs throughout Ohio that provide no-cost, confidential, in-depth, one-on-one counseling for businesses that will or currently employ under 500 employees. Additional services include training, e-counseling, quality-based assessments, technical assistance, loan packaging guidance, and information on federal, state, and local regulations and programs, according to Ohio.gov.
The SBDC network is provided through a partnership between the Ohio Development Services Agency, the U.S. Small Business Administration, Ohio chambers of commerce, colleges and universities, and economic development agencies. Together, they contribute more than $10 million toward support of small business development in Ohio, including in Monroe County.
The Monroe County Chamber of Commerce heard from John Voorhies of the Marietta SBDC on Tuesday, when he outlined his agencys services for small businesses. He said his organization helps with business plans, programs, marketing, accounting, bookkeeping, taxes, regulatory compliance, public relations and access to capital.
I cover four counties Monroe, Washington, Noble and Morgan counties. My job is to help you with business plans, Voorhies said. Ive got great research available to you, great programs that we use. I can really whittle down a lot of information for you. We can help you with your financials, which is really important. It usually boils down to marketing and financing.
Voorhies said his organization can also help existing businesses to increase profits and expand production.
We will do actual evaluations to determine areas where you can improve, and determine areas where you are doing great, Voorhies added. Right now, between our three regional offices we are pushing close to $4 million in impact. Since October I have started 40 businesses. Most of those businesses are one or two or three employees. If I can keep them going for two or three years, and the next thing is they are hiring someone else, then I am doing my job. That is what Im supposed to do.
Voorhies encouraged the use of his organization for everything from filling out LLC paperwork to general advice, and especially marketing on social media.
I am a resource, and Im free. How can you beat free? Free is good, Voorhies said.
The SBDC will be holding a free training session at the Monroe County Chamber of Commerce on Sept. 14 titled Accounting 101. Call the Monroe County Chamber of Commerce at 740-472-5499 to register for the class.
Carslund said the Monroe County chamber will be hosting more training sessions within the county, and she encourages those who are interested in learning more about opening up a new business to attend the training sessions, as well as other chamber events.
Encourage people to come to these sessions so we can keep this training here in Monroe County so they dont have to go to Cambridge or Marietta, Carslund said. If you have suggestions on topics, please be sure to let us know.
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Monroe chamber prepares for economic growth - Martins Ferry Times Leader
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DAVE HANSEN: Foxconn deal vs. automation trend – La Crosse Tribune
Posted: at 2:10 am
Lawmakers will soon have an important decision to make that will have an outsize impact on our state for years to come: whether or not to approve a deal made by Gov. Walker that could send up to $3 billion in direct cash payments to Taiwanese-based Foxconn to build a manufacturing plant in southeast Wisconsin.
In my initial response to the news I urged my colleagues to proceed with caution. Not only is this an incredibly expensive offer (it could cost the average family in Wisconsin $1,200 and take 25 years or more before state taxpayers break even!) but it could set a precedent with how we approach future economic development at a time when more and more industries are moving to automation as a way to reduce labor costs.
Foxconn is at the forefront of this effort with its publicly stated goal of fully automating its manufacturing process to the greatest extent possible. Theyve already begun by laying off 60,000 workers in China who were earning $3.25 an hour and replacing them with robots.
This begs the question: If they are laying off workers to save $3.25 an hour, why are they willing to pay their workforce here in Wisconsin what appears to be five to seven times that amount?
Since Gov. Walkers initial announcement, Foxconn has already said their plan is to create 3,000 jobs rather than the 13,000 Walker claimed. They also said that manufacturing jobs would pay $13-$15 per hour, which is far less than the $53,000 initially promised.
So what to make of this deal? How does Foxconn plan to make the economics of this deal work for them if they are already replacing thousands of lesser-paid employees with robots? Is it realistic to think that any manufacturing jobs created at Foxconn will still be performed by humans 10, 15 or 25 years from now? It is likely that most of the promised jobs will be automated well before the 2043 break-even date.
According to Walkers plan, state taxpayers will pay to help Foxconn build its plant and local taxpayers will help pay for infrastructure improvements related to the plant. There is even $250 million in borrowing proposed to reconstruct I-94 between Milwaukee and Illinois despite the fact that the governor and Republicans cannot agree on a long-term fix for the billion-dollar deficit in the Transportation Fund.
This all amounts to potentially billions of state and local tax dollars being spent to help a foreign corporation build a plant in which the majority of jobs will likely be done by robots.
If that is the case, then its time we have a larger discussion about what constitutes a job for the purpose of providing economic development assistance and the impact that these new technologies will have on our workforce.
Recent reports suggest that 47 percent of all jobs in the U.S. could be lost to automation in the next 20 years. Those jobs range from manufacturing to retail to the legal and medical fields and beyond. According to a CBS report, even Wall Street is expected to replace nearly 230,000 jobs in the next eight years with machines.
Whether or not these new technologies lead to new jobs that provide better pay and benefits or to large-scale unemployment, one thing is certain: This change is coming rapidly and were not prepared to deal with its impact.
Regardless of where you stand on the Foxconn deal, their stated goal of full automation is not unique to the world we are now living in. It is time for the Legislature to take the issue of automation seriously and do what needs to be done to protect the best interests of taxpayers, our families and our workforce.
Democrat Dave Hansen, Green Bay, represents the 30th state Senate district.
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DAVE HANSEN: Foxconn deal vs. automation trend - La Crosse Tribune
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Dani Garavelli: Fight on our hands to root out slavery – The Scotsman
Posted: at 2:09 am
Beauty salons and nail bars have become notorious for using forced labour. Picture: Getty/iStockphoto
Public vigilance is as important as legislation in tackling the vicious exploitation of migrants and the homeless, writes Dani Garavelli.
A week or so ago, I got my nails done for only the second time in my life. Because I have an aversion to upmarket salons frequented by perfectly coiffured ladies who know the difference between True Cobalt and Crystal Curacao, I picked a small, insalubrious shop staffed, as it turned out, mainly by immigrants.
It was only as I was being dropped off outside that it occurred to me maybe this wasnt somewhere I ought to be patronising. Nail bars are, after all, among the businesses listed as centres for trafficking. And so as the young woman buffed and polished I subjected her to an interrogation on her life, her work and her long-term aspirations.
She quite readily told me she was from Iran, was studying English at a Glasgow college and hoped to become a beautician. It all seemed above board, but without more understanding of how these things work, how could I be sure?
Modern slavery is a growing social evil that is only now beginning to get the public attention it deserves. Last week, the National Crime Agency (NCA) said there are currently more than 300 live police operations, with trafficking in every town in the UK. Earlier estimates of 10,000-13,000 victims are thought to be the tip of the iceberg and the problem is so widespread ordinary people will be coming into contact with those affected on a regular basis.
Hours later, it emerged members of a traveller family had been convicted of running a modern slavery ring in Lincolnshire. There were 18 victims, aged between 18 and 64. One, who had worked for the family for 26 years, was forced to dig his own grave and told thats where youre going if he did not sign a false work contract.
The gang targeted homeless drifters, often with complex drug and alcohol issues, offering food and accommodation at construction sites around the county. The men were forced to work for little or no wages on the sites or for businesses repairing properties and tarmacking drives, while family members enjoyed holidays in Barbados.
Across Lincolnshire, there will be householders whose leaks were mended and gutters cleared by men who were held against their will. But we dont expect this sort of thing to happen in a First World country in the 21st century, so we remain oblivious to it.
The homeless are not the only people preyed on; undocumented migrants are particularly vulnerable to gangs who promise them a better life in a foreign country, only to force them to work in brothels, building sites, fishing boats and farms.
Last week, the Modern Slavery Index 2017 pinpointed five countries Romania, Greece, Italy, Cyprus and Bulgaria all key entry points for refugees, as posing the highest risk in the EU.
Nor is there any reason to suppose Scotland has escaped unscathed; in May, a BBC investigation, Humans For Sale, found Glasgow was being targeted by gangs from Eastern Europe, with Govanhill a particular hotspot.
The scale of the problem is not new to those who work in the human rights field. Long before Fiona Hill, the much maligned aide to Theresa May, helped coordinate the Tories disastrous general election campaign, she spearheaded the Modern Slavery Act 2015 one of the few positive dividends of her bosss time at the Home Office.
Last week, human rights barrister Cherie Blair said the Act had been instrumental in shining a light on a problem which like child sexual abuse has always existed. Some critics believe the NCA has been sluggish in its response, but now the issue is high on the political agenda, it seems to be upping its game. Earlier this year, the Joint Slavery and Trafficking Analysis Centre was set up to provide high quality intelligence to support its efforts.
But what should other parties be doing to help tackle the problem? Well, large companies have a duty to ensure no link in their supply chain is engaged in forced labour.
Under the Modern Slavery Act, organisations with worldwide revenues of at least 36 million who conduct business in the UK are required to publish a transparency statement describing the steps they have taken to ensure their business is free from modern slavery and human trafficking.
Yet last year it emerged that KozeeSleep, which supplied mattresses to several respected retailers, relied on scores of trafficked and enslaved Hungarian workers paid less than 2 a day.
Recent research suggested two-thirds of companies with turnovers above the threshold did not yet have full supply chain visibility (the ability to track parts, components or products in transit from the manufacturer to their final destination). And of those which did, only 41 per cent were sure that their UK workers were earning the minimum wage.
Unless businesses are prepared to carry out stringent checks, encourage whistle-blowing and devise a strategy for phased withdrawal if exploitation is discovered, it is unlikely the law will have the desired impact.
Ordinary members of the public have a responsibility too: to educate themselves on forced labour and report any suspicions to the authorities. In the past few years, we have become more aware of child sexual exploitation. As the scandals in Rochdale, Rotherham and Oxford unfolded, we learned hundreds of young girls had been groomed by men working in the night-time economy. The abuse happened in plain sight, but no-one acted because no-one understood what was going on.
Now, thanks to public information campaigns, we know what to look out for: underage girls hanging around kebab shops and taxi ranks, missing school and/or displaying inappropriate sexualised behaviour, for example.
We need similar campaigns to highlight the issue of modern slavery. Already the charity Unchosen has created postcards with a list of warning signs, such as people being moved around en masse at odd hours of the day, people who appear isolated from their community, people who live with their employer and people who are overly wary of the police.
We should also become more informed consumers; we should put pressure on companies to take human trafficking seriously and to publish information on their supply chains on their websites.
The idea that 184 years after the Slavery Abolition Act, people are still being held against their will and forced to work for no or little pay, is abhorrent. It is up to us all to put an end to it.
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Dani Garavelli: Fight on our hands to root out slavery - The Scotsman
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