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Monthly Archives: July 2020
Not publicizing black & brown mugshots is not fixing the racial problem with the justice system it’s hiding it – RT
Posted: July 15, 2020 at 9:45 pm
News outlets and even police departments are ending the publication of jail booking photos, claiming they foster stereotypes because minorities are more often arrested. But hiding inequities in the system doesnt fix them.
The Sacramento Bee, the Orlando Sentinel, theHouston Chronicle and a number of other city papers across the US have curtailed the practice of publishing mugshot slideshows, image galleries showing booking photos of arrested individuals who havent yet been convicted of crimes.
With exceptions for celebrity mugshots, suspected serial killers, threats to public safety, and hate crime suspects, the move is intended to counter racial stereotypes about criminality.
The papers have a point about the galleries lack of context a wordless array of scowling black and brown faces may indeed give the false impression that this is what all criminals look like. Some of the most destructive and dangerous criminals, the ones stealing your (or your parents) retirement savings or bombing civilians in the Middle East are unlikely to ever appear in one of these rogues galleries (or, alas, to be arrested at all). And publishing a persons mugshot before theyre even tried for a crime does impinge on the prisoners constitutional right to the presumption of innocence.
But sweeping these racial disparities under the rug doesnt solve the underlying problem of black and brown peoples overrepresentation in the criminal justice system. Indeed, its quite telling that police departments are now climbing aboard the no-mugshots bandwagon, suggesting a big fat ulterior motive lurking beneath the virtuous surface. San Francisco police announced earlier this month they will no longer release mugshots to the public unless the individual poses a threat to the community, again as part of an effort to reduce racial stereotyping.
The department thus acknowledges black and brown people are disproportionately arrested for victimless crimes (i.e. those that dont pose a threat to the community) a relatively uncontroversial reality that has been public knowledge for years, though still something one doesnt expect to hear police admit.
Black people are more than two and a half times more likely to be arrested and six times more likely to be imprisoned on drug charges than whites, for example, even though blacks and whites use and even sell drugs at approximately the same rate. These arent hard drug users either there were more arrests for marijuana in 2018 than for real crimes like aggravated assault, arson, burglary, or sex crimes, despite over a dozen states having legalized the drug, and black people are even more disproportionately likely 3.7 times to be arrested for that drug.
But making a surface show of addressing stereotypes does not translate to actually dismantling racial and economic inequities in policing. Especially given the nationwide Black Lives Matter protests threatening their jobs, police who announce the end of published mugshots as a civil rights victory are more likely to be covering their arses than addressing systemic racism.
Like the mega-corporations who publicly grovel at BLMs feet (sometimes literally) in order to avoid being held to account for selling products or condoning labor practices that disproportionately harm poor and minority communities, police departments that stop publishing mugshots are seeking an easy way out of their PR problem.
Actually retraining officers to not immediately see a young black man standing on a corner in a poor neighborhood (that he happens to live in) as a drug dealer takes time and money, while merely not publishing that mans mugshot in the Sunday paper creates the same impression, as long as the police department takes care to notify the community about why it is no longer releasing arrest photos.
Unfortunately, that move does nothing to stop biased police practices, which can be shockingly difficult to dislodge. It took the intervention of a federal judge to convince New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg to curtail the NYPDs stop and frisk tactic, which at its height saw police harassing largely non-white (87 percent) New Yorkers, most of whom (88 percent) were innocent of any crime.
Given that its stated purpose was not to nab low-level drug offenders, but to get illegal guns off the street something achieved in just 0.1 percent of stops it was a profoundly ineffective policy.
Retraining police isnt easy, but it must be done if the US is to truly become a more racially equitable society. While corporate Democrat fronts like BLM are apparently content with cosmetic reforms and paying lip-service to social justice, black communities are devastated by the justice system, which often serves up anything but for those without the funds to buy it.
As for the newspapers, merely failing to report news that doesnt fit the narrative falls so short of real social justice as to be laughable. Is it any wonder journalism is a dying industry?
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The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.
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Sunday Goods Announces Ongoing Donation Campaign and Official Partnership with Last Prisoner Project – PRNewswire
Posted: at 9:45 pm
PHOENIX, July 14, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Cannabis brand Sunday Goodshas announced their new donation campaign over the weekend. Each Sunday, the brand will donate 5% of Sunday proceeds from their newly opened Phoenix, Arizona dispensary to a cannabis focused non-profit, rotating quarterly. In Q3 2020 they have partnered with the Last Prisoner Project, a non-profit organization that focuses on criminal justice reform initiatives related to cannabis crimes.
Michael Wang, Sunday Goods CEO, says that the brand is "excited to be taking their first steps towards justice and equality, and are committed to making a change within the cannabis community" referencing the racial injustice that is still prevalent within the cannabis industry.
ABOUT SUNDAY GOODSSunday Goods believes that everyone should have the opportunity to experience cannabis in the way that is right for them. We're here to make people feel good, with a cannabis experience that's just right for each person, each time. Enjoy all-natural, top-quality cannabis that produces specific effects through high-integrity growing. Visit http://www.sundaygoods.comto learn more or Leaflyto shop.
ABOUT LAST PRISONER PROJECTThe Last Prisoner Project (LPP) is a coalition of cannabis industry leaders, executives and artists dedicated to bringing restorative justice to the cannabis industry. LPP is dedicated to releasing cannabis prisoners and helping them rebuild their lives. As the United States moves away from the criminalization of cannabis, giving rise to a major new industry, there remains the fundamental injustice inflicted upon those who have suffered criminal convictions and the consequences of those convictions. Through intervention, advocacy and awareness campaigns, the forces behind the Last Prisoner Project will work to redress the past and continuing harms of these unjust laws and policies and are dedicated to making sure that every last victimless cannabis prisoner walks free. Visitwww.LastPrisonerProject.org or text FREEDOM to 24365 to donate and learn more.
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Nanotech injections successfully restore vision in blind rats – Digital Trends
Posted: at 9:44 pm
An international team of scientists have restored the vision in blind rats using a nanoparticle-based artificial retina prosthesis that can be injected directly into the eye. The scientific advance has been successfully demonstrated for a period of eight months without the need for surgery. While it is still early days for the research, it suggests it might one day be possible to use the conjugated polymer nanoparticle (P3HT-NP) treatment in humans to correct eye problems ranging from hereditary retinal dystrophies to the incredibly common age-related macular degeneration.
In our liquid retina device, P3HT nanoparticles spread out over the entire subretinal space and promoted light-dependent activation of spared inner retinal neurons, recovering subcortical, cortical and behavioral visual responses, Fabio Benfenati, research director at the Italian Institute of Technology, told Digital Trends. We think that P3HT-NPs provide a new avenue in retinal prosthetics.
Retinal prostheses refer to implantable devices that are designed to help restore sight in patients with retinal degeneration. They work by introducing visual information into the retina through the electrical stimulation of surviving retinal neurons. While promising, current retinal prostheses have so far been shown to only return low-resolution vision: Useful for things like distinguishing between light and dark or recognizing simple shapes and objects. This new nanotech approach appears far more promising, offering significantly higher resolution. After just one injection, activity in the rats visual cortex and visual acuity were the same as those found in healthy rats.
As noted, there is still far more research that needs to be carried out before this approach is tried in humans. But Benfenati suggested that this is part of the road map forward.
The most obvious development is to approach the first-in-human application with the current technology that will provide the most complete answers, he said. This will include a step in larger animals and a long-term study of the nanoparticle fate. I foresee that it will require a few years to be accomplished.
A paper describing the work, titled Subretinally injected semiconducting polymer nanoparticles rescue vision in a rat model of retinal dystrophy, was recently published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
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Nanotech injections successfully restore vision in blind rats - Digital Trends
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These are 8 of the most fashionable face masks you can buy – from Nanotech to Reebok and Etsy – News Post Leader
Posted: at 9:44 pm
Are you in the market for some face masks? (Photo: Shutterstock)
Across the UK, the rules around wearing face masks in public have changed since the virus first swept across the country.
In Scotland, masks are mandatory both on public transport and in shops. In England, masks are currently mandatory on public transport and will be made mandatory in shops on 24 July.
With wearing face masks becoming mandatory and now much more normalised in the UK, people have been sizing up their options for stylish face coverings.
So whether youre looking for something plain black, with a funky design, or designer branded, here are some of the most fashionable face masks on the market.
It is worth noting that none of the masks included in this round-up are categorised as medical grade masks or PPE, but they can help stop the spread of the virus via droplets in the air.
Reebok Face Cover12.95 for 3
Reebok is selling its own branded face mask on its website. The mask is a simple black design with the Reebok logo in white on the right hand side of the mask.
The website states: Help stop the spread. Made with soft, breathable fabric, the Reebok Face Cover is comfortable, washable and reusable for practicing health habits every day.
The masks are available in a pack of three in either large or small size for 12.95, and shipping costs an extra 3.99.
The website explains that 2 from every pack of face coverings sold goes to Save The Childrens Global Coronavirus Response Fund.
Waylife Star Wars Darth Vader FaceEtsy, 7.90
The clothes we wear are an expression of who we are, and the same thinking can be applied to face coverings.
This best selling face mask on Etsy comes with the design of Darth Vader's mask on the front, and a pocket in the back that allows for a replaceable filter to be changed out for each usage.
The mask itself costs 7.90, but shipping will cost extra depending where youre located.
Etsy offers a huge variety of face masks in different designs, patterns and colours, meaning you can find one that suits your personality - even if youre not a Star Wars fan.
Adidas Face Cover12.95 for 3
Adidas is selling its own face covering as well, which is similar to Reebok in the sense that it is a plain black mask with the Adidas name and logo in white on the right hand side.
The masks are also sold in packs of three in either large or small for 12.95.
2 from each mask sold is also donated to the Save The Childrens Global Coronavirus Response Fund.
The Adidas face masks are sold out at the moment, but you can enter your email address to be alerted when theyre back in stock.
Nike Strike Snood16.95
While Nike doesnt specifically sell a face covering, it does sell a snood, which offers the same coverage as other face masks on the market, as none of these face masks are medical grade or PPE quality.
The snood, featuring the Nike tick, covers your nose, mouth and neck with soft fleece, and it locks over your ears for full coverage.
Its available in black or brown in S/M or L/XL sizes for 16.95.
Great British Designer Face Coverings15
Great British Designer Face Coverings: Reusable, for People and Planet is a joint campaign between the British Fashion Council and Bags of Ethics.
The campaign aims to manufacture and sell face masks that are sustainable and reusable.
The masks have been designed in London by six British designers: Halpern, Julien Macdonald, Liam Hodges, Mulberry, RAEBURN and RIXO.
The aim is to raise 1 million with 100 per cent of sale profits being split between NHS Charities Together Covid-19 Urgent Appeal, British Fashion Council Foundation Fashion Fund and Wings of Hope Childrens Charity.
The face masks come in loads of different designs and patterns and are available for 15 for a pack of three which also includes two protective pouches.
Nanotech face mask11
This Nanotech face mask from Scientific Labs has a water resilient layer that prevents droplets filtrating both in and outside the mask.
Reusable and washable, its made in the UK using sustainable materials.
The mask itself is plain black with no logos or branding, and is available in one size for 11.
Bespoke Face Coverings from Alice Cox Creative10 - 15
If youre looking for a face mask thats unique rather than choosing from pre-made designs, Alice Cox Creative is the place for you.
With more than 30 different fabrics to choose from, you can have a specially made bespoke mask that youre not going to see someone else with.
They are sold for 10 each, potentially 15 depending on the fabric you want.
Features include a pocket for filters and non-elastic straps that wont irritate your ears.
Contrado Custom Face Masks20 for 4
Contrado is the perfect brand for creatives who want to design their own masks. However, you can also shop pre-made designs as well.
Masks are available in small, medium, large or extra large and in packs of four for 20.
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Aircraft Nano Coating Market Report 2020: Acute Analysis of Global Demand and Supply 2025 with Major Key Player: AnCatt, Applied Thin Films,…
Posted: at 9:44 pm
Due to the pandemic, we have included a special section on the Impact of COVID 19 on the Aircraft Nano CoatingMarket which would mention How the Covid-19 is Affecting the Industry, Market Trends and Potential Opportunities in the COVID-19 Landscape, Key Regions and Proposal for Aircraft Nano Coating Market Players to battle Covid-19 Impact.
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Key Companies/Manufacturers operating in the global Aircraft Nano Coating market include:AnCatt, Applied Thin Films, FlightShield, Glonatech, CHOOSE NanoTech, General Nano, HR ToughGuard, Surfactis Technologies, Tesla NanoCoatings and More
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Years Considered to Estimate the Aircraft Nano Coating Market Size:History Year: 2015-2019Base Year: 2019Estimated Year: 2020Forecast Year: 2020-2025
Key questions answered in the report:
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The evolution of how Marvel animated Iron Man – Business Insider Australia
Posted: at 9:44 pm
Following is a transcript of the video.
Narrator: If you look at Iron Mans first suit, the Mark 1, and compare it to the heros nanotech suit from Avengers: Endgame, a lot has changed.
But its not just the technology in the world of the MCU. Animation tech has evolved in our world, the real world, to make this suit possible on the big screen, something that Marvel couldnt have dreamed of creating just 11 years earlier.
To get from here to here required a decade of innovation, 10 Marvel movies, and a lot of work on movies with no superhero in sight.
Lets start where Tony Starks story began: in that cave in 2008s Iron Man. In this scene, Tony Stark is a man in a giant metal suit trying to escape a cave. So what better way to make it seem real than by using a real man in a real metal suit?
Iron Man director Jon Favreau is known for pushing the envelope with his projects like The Lion King and The Mandalorian. But back then, he wasnt confident that CGI could convincingly create a full Iron Man suit. So they went practical. For that first bulky cave suit, he enlisted the help of the legendary Stan Winston Studio, now called Legacy Effects, to make this 90-pound version of the Mark 1 with epoxy armour shells, flexible urethane, leather, and aluminium. And for the project, Winstons team perfected a metallic chrome paint that would be used for other projects years down the road.
But the film had to rely on CGI for this section of the scene, because the practical suit was just too large for either Robert Downey Jr. or his stunt double to move around in. That left the challenge of creating the first digital Iron Man suit audiences would see up to The Embassy in Vancouver.
Their accomplishment wouldnt have been possible without the practical work from Stan Winstons studio. They modelled the digital suit closely after the real suit, even going so far as getting pieces of that real suit flown to Canada for reference. The digital version was so detailed that it even captures these text markings and textures.
And to create a realistic metallic reflection, The Embassy used the knowledge they learned from working on car commercials to influence how they shaded the digital version of the suit.
Winston Helgason: We learned a lot about car paint, about clear coat, how light plays on cars, how they react to their environment, which, theyre essentially mirrors of their environment.
Narrator: But that was just the Mark 1. The Mark 2 would have to be sleeker and more refined and have a polished coat that would accurately reflect light like the night sky in this scene.
Once again, Favreau had Stan Winston create a real version of this suit, but what youre looking at here is completely computer generated. Just like with the Mark 1, FX studio Industrial Light & Magic, ILM for short, used that practical version of the suit as the basis for its digital version. ILM was so successful that when Favreau saw it, he couldnt tell the difference between the real and the fake.
Ben Snow: And we showed it to Jon and the Marvel team, and theyre like, OK, well, which bits did you replace? And were like, Actually, we replaced all of it. [laughs]
Narrator: Without this early work in the first Iron Man, which convinced the filmmakers and the world of what VFX could do, the wild world of Marvel as we know it might not exist.
Thor: No! [exploding]
Narrator: But the true test of the CGI would come with the Mark 3, Iron Mans most recognisable look. This had to be perfect for the film to work and resonate with fans. ILM wanted to prove both that they could make the CGI character move the right way and that his metal armour matched the personality of Tony Stark.
ILM had worked with shiny car surfaces in 2007s Transformers, which ultimately helped them nail down the outer layer of the Mark 3. They made the suit look more like a glossy sports car than industrial metal, as Marvel initially planned.
Ben: We ended up saying, you know what? Its Tony Stark. Hes a playboy. You know, hes rich. Hes not gonna have an industrial-forklift-type suit. Hes gonna want a sports-car suit.
Narrator: The basic design was based on Marvel comic-book artist Adi Granovs Iron Man illustrations. But one of the biggest challenges with replicating this 2D suit in real life was that the comic version was designed with heroic proportions that dont match real human beings. So they tweaked the model to be shaped as if a real human being were inside, something they would later decide to change.
Ben: But when it came to Iron Man, we tried to be very, like, oh, no, a real guy could fit in this suit, and the real mechanism between the suit and the guy is there. Now, the guy would have to be extremely thin to really fit into it.
Narrator: At the onset of Iron Man 2, motion-capture technology had really advanced, which made it possible for them to use a combination of practical and CGI suits.
Various practical versions of the Mark 3 suit were built by Stan Winstons team, which could be worn in pieces based on which parts of Robert Downey Jr. were seen on camera at the time. The rest of his body was often covered in a motion-capture suit, which would be filled in later with CG suit pieces. This would help his performance, since he didnt have to struggle under the bulk and weight of the full suit.
ILM used its custom motion-capture technology, called IMoCap, which they had fine-tuned in 2003s Pirates of the Caribbean, to animate the CG parts of the suit. Since Robert Downey Jr.s head wasnt animated, it had to match up perfectly, or else it would look wobbly and disjointed.
In several of the films, Robert Downey Jr. often just wore these shoulder pads, or what they called a football suit. These shots required a lot of CGI cleanup on the spaces in between, like his neck and joints.
VFX artists really advanced the motion tracking in Iron Man 2, and you can see a good example of that here in this Japanese garden scene. The actors only wore partial helmets and tracking suits. The rest of their suits are CGI. And in this particular scene, ILM didnt even need to use a tracking suit at all. They built the CGI suit right around Robert Downey Jr., who was only wearing a tuxedo.
This took a lot of time and effort to get right, but it ultimately set the bar for future films in terms of what they could animate without mo-cap suits.
Another major improvement from the first film in Iron Man 2 was the shading, or how the suit was lit. ILM started using image-based lighting tools they developed from their work on 2009s Terminator Salvation to light the suit and make it look more realistic. This process involved taking high-res pictures of the environment and using those as a guide to more accurately and easily light the suit. This ultimately helped Iron Man look even better, allowing them more time to focus on the finer details.
Ben: It meant that we were able to speed up our process and spend a lot more time making things creatively look good instead of, you know, just like, oh, is it even looking real or not?
Narrator: Not only did the animation evolve as the VFX technology advanced, but each new film also posed new challenges for animators based on the story. For instance, when it came to 2012s The Avengers, it was the script that pushed how the character would be designed and animated. Instead of hand thrusters, Iron Man would get a rocket pack attached to the back of his suit, which allowed the design team leeway to develop new poses for the character while freeing up the heros hands.
Or take a look at this sequence, known internally as the car-wash scene. Because of this brand new way Marvel writers envisioned how Tonys suit would attach to him, animators for the first time had to figure out how the inside of Iron Mans suit would function, which none of the VFX studios Marvel worked with had to think much about before.
Jeff White: We had to build a lot of new interior pieces, kind of figure out, like, what the interior tech of the suit would look like as it joined together.
Narrator: This was particularly challenging, since hes walking the entire time while de-suiting, a first in the series. ILM had to create models for each piece of the suit and track them individually with his movement.
And take a look at this battle scene with Thor in the mountaintop. Notice all of the blue light? The minor detail caused a major headache with animators at Weta Digital when it came to colouring Iron Mans suit.
Marvel maintains a strict colour bible, which keeps track of the exact hues that are supposed to be used across the various films. The brushed-gold surface here was based on Weta Digitals work on the One Ring in Lord of the Rings, and they were able to recreate this colour fairly easily. But the red, on the other hand
Guy Williams: Its actually a red clear coat, which means that the red pigment itself actually has density. And on top of that, theres actually little metal shavings suspended in that dense paint.
Narrator: Which can cause problems when you mix in light from the environment. In this case, the red and blue made purple.
Guy: You know, one of the first things we ran into back then was that you take a suit like that and put a blue light on it, and it starts to give you weird colours. It starts to wanna go really burgundy, you know, sort of a mulberry colour very fast.
Narrator: Balancing the colour would end up being much easier and faster in the later films, as Weta developed new advanced rendering technology that worked with various wavelengths of light. And this, as was the case with ILM and its shading technology, would make the suit look better overall.
Guy: We spent a lot of time trying to make that car paint look just that little bit cooler or trying to make the lighting work a little bit better, and not just trying to get rid of weird shadows or weird colours.
Narrator: While the earlier films mostly focused on the movements of one individual suit, Iron Man 3 introduced a whole slew of new suits, about 20 in a single scene that each had to be animated in different ways.
Typically, to animate Iron Man, they would use whats called a puppet. And theres a limited number of ways this puppet can move. So Weta developed new tools for its animators to use to alter the rig of the puppet to increase the freedom of movement so each suit could have more character and style.
Guy: We rejigged the entire process to allow the animator to go in and take the high-resolution suit and just, you know, like with an X-Acto knife, he cut on different planes, and cut different parts of it out and put hinges on them on the fly, so that he could actually, you know, the animator could define how the suit grew.
Narrator: One of the challenges that comes with more freedom of movement, however, is making sure Iron Mans metal plates dont run into each other and figuring out where all the pieces go when he does a simple motion like raising his arm.
Alexis Wajsbrot: I think the main challenge we had on Iron Man 3 was the shoulders. He had huge, huge shoulder pad.
Narrator: But it wasnt just these major battle scenes that were difficult. They often had to also spend time figuring out how he moved in more mundane scenarios. We saw for the first time in Iron Man 3 scenes where he is doing these very non-heroic actions, like giving a massage or simply sitting on a couch. Its easier to hide any errors and subtleties in a cloud of dust or debris, according to ILM. When he isnt fighting someone, every detail is right out there in the open.
Iron Man 3 also had Tony Stark reacting and performing along with the suit assembly for the first time, a step up from the walking car-wash scene in The Avengers, as Marvel wanted an even more advanced look to the tech. This was especially difficult, according to VFX studio Trixter, since they had to combine rigid metal pieces and flexible human body parts while making it all look seamless. 24 separate parts were first disguised as what Trixter calls amorphous, mystery slick pieces of technology, alien to any distinguishable suit parts. Each would then transform into the familiar suit pieces as they flew towards him.
As the series evolved from using practical effects in Iron Man to a mix of practical and CGI to mostly CGI in later films, suddenly the suit, which was originally tweaked to be more human, would now be tweaked to be more heroic again. We first saw subtle changes in The Avengers with his legs.
Guy: Little, little fact that a lot of people probably dont know: Iron Mans legs are longer than a humans legs.
Narrator: His ankle would also have to be a mere inch and a half across inside the suit. Iron Man was also slimmed down a bit in Avengers: Age of Ultron to give him more of a comic superhero silhouette.
Ben: A slightly tighter waist. That sort of thing. A little beefy around the shoulders.
Narrator: But the suit evolved yet again in the last two films, forcing the animators to evolve as well and take a whole different approach to how the suit would build and move. Tony Stark was now using nanotechnology, so instead of moving around and tracking solid pieces like they did with the car-wash scene and the scene in his workshop, they had to establish a whole new process for his suit assembly.
Nanotech involves multiple layers of simulations. A liquid-metal simulation would morph to the target shape, because they wanted the transformation to feel organic. But they had to make sure it still felt rigid and that it did not stretch like Spider-Mans suit would. The animators relied on accurate shading, a technique used throughout the franchise, to accomplish this.
Sean Walker: The main visual trickery is that through the shading, we, it looked like metal every single time.
Narrator: Robert Downey Jr. reportedly came up with the idea of having Tony Starks sweat suit tighten before the armour shell appears, similar to Spider-Mans suit, which you can see here. Because it would be difficult for the material to form a shell around loose clothing. If you look closely, octagonal shapes attach together to form the outer layer, while an inner layer of tech and circuitry builds beneath it.
Framestore actually created this multilayer effect using animation tools from its work on 2015s Poltergeist.
For Endgame, this nanotech suit evolved slightly to be a bit more rigid, with pieces locking into place, more like the suit we saw in Captain America: Civil War.
Sean: We took the lessons that we learned from Infinity War and applied it to Endgame. So it was the same technology really, but we just had a better handle on it, really.
Narrator: While Iron Mans death was the last time we would see the nanotech suit, this wouldnt be the last time we saw Iron Man, as Marvels innovation continued for his one final cameo in Spider-Man: Far From Home.
This suit was also created by Framestore, and it was actually based on the suit in Captain America: Civil War because it was more solid looking than the nanotech suit in Avengers: Endgame.
To make this suit, they took the same Civil War model and literally broke it down, destroyed it, and created the insides, which consisted of various wires and circuit boards, using an early scene in Age of Ultron as inspiration.
Theres more detail in the top half of the suit because more of that is shown up-close on camera. And to achieve the undead look, first they added the signature metallic sheen of Iron Man, and then they added the layers of dirt and rust.
Alexis: To be fair, the suit is almost not recognisable by the end of the process.
Narrator: So after 11 years of development to perfect Iron Mans CGI suit, it ultimately was destroyed.
By using advancements in 3D-modelling and motion tracking, experimenting with new lighting techniques, and using realistic-looking practical models as a base, they were able to create something that continually felt fresh, futuristic, and real as it evolved in the story.
Guy: It wasnt like anybody had thought that a person could wear a suit of powered armour and it would look anything other than like a guy in old knight armour wobbling around on a set. Hes so crafted on so many levels. Theres so much thought that goes into every little panel that moves, that youre intrigued, and youre compelled to keep watching him and find out whats gonna happen.
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United States v. Gratkowski Beware of Inanimate Objects That Violate Your Privacy – JD Supra
Posted: at 9:43 pm
In Philip K. Dicks novel Ubik, the sci-fi legend warned the world of the dangers of inanimate objects that could violate our privacy.[1] In a virtual nod to Ubik and Dick, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the privacy protections of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution do not apply to records of Bitcoin transactions held by a major digital asset trading platform. Faced with the novel question of whether an individual has a Fourth Amendment privacy interest in the records of their Bitcoin transactions, the Fifth Circuit, in United States v. Gratkowski, found that Bitcoin data akin to bank records does not have a constitutional right to privacy or unreasonable search.
In United States v. Gratkowski, federal agents analyzed the publicly viewable Bitcoin blockchain and subpoenaed a leading digital asset trading platform for all information on the customers of the trading platform whose accounts had sent Bitcoin to a child-pornography website. In response to the subpoena, the trading platform identified Gratkowski as one of these customers. Federal agents then obtained a search warrant for Gratkowkis house, which resulted in the discovery of child pornography in his possession.
Generally, a person must have a reasonable expectation of privacy in an item for Fourth Amendment protections to attach.[2] Under the third-party doctrine, a person generally has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties.[3] Gratkowski argued that his Bitcoin information should receive the same protections as those set out in Carpenter v. United States, which expanded Fourth Amendment protections by limiting the applicability of the third-party doctrine in the context of cell phones.[4]
Relying on the United States Supreme Courts ruling in Carpenter,[5] which limited the applicability of the third-party doctrine in the context of cell phones, Gratkowski claimed that the federal agents infringed upon his Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches. Gratkowski argued the Government violated his reasonable expectation of privacy in the records of his Bitcoin transactions recorded on the Bitcoin blockchain that were executed at the crypto trading platform.
The Fifth Circuit, affirmed the decision of the district court, rejected Gratkowskis argument, and concluded the information on the Bitcoin blockchain is analogous to bank records which are subject to the third-party doctrine and not protected under the Fourth Amendment. The court reasoned that like bank records, the Bitcoin blockchain identifies (1) the amount of Bitcoin transferred, (2) the Bitcoin address of the sending party, and (3) the Bitcoin address of the receiving party. The court also opined that since every Bitcoin user has access to the public Bitcoin blockchain which is a not a permission based distributed ledger technology and can see every Bitcoin address and its respective transfers, Bitcoin users are unlikely to expect that this information will be kept private.
The Fifth Circuit also held the records at the digital asset trading platform were akin to bank records, finding no reason for treating these records and records at other trading platforms any differently than traditional banks. The court reasoned the trading platform and traditional banks both are subject to the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) as regulated financial institutions, whose records provide only limited information about a persons virtual currency transactions. The court also suggested that Bitcoin users have the option to maintain a higher level of privacy by transacting without a third-party intermediary exchange, albeit this would require greater technical expertise.
Despite the fact that Bitcoin users enjoy a greater degree of privacy than those who use other money-transfer means, transaction information under this ruling is not protected under the Fourth Amendment. It is unclear how the Fifth Circuit would have ruled if the defendants data had been stored in a permissioned blockchain. However, the determination of the court that a digital asset trading platform is deemed a financial institution, does not bode well for the argument that digital assets stored on a permissioned blockchain will be protected by the Fourth Amendment.
The Fifth Circuits conclusion that the records of crypto currency trading platforms are not protected by the Fourth Amendment because the trading platform is a regulated financial institution could also possibly open the door to the argument that records maintained by digital asset trading platforms are subject to the protections of the federal Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978 (RFPA).[6] Subject to certain limitations such as national security subpoenas, RFPA requires federal government officials to follow certain procedures when seeking customer financial information from a financial institution. RFPA also requires financial institutions to take a number of steps before releasing the information. The customer must receive a written notice of the governments desire to obtain the records, the customer must be told why the records are being requested, and the customer must told the steps they can take to protect the information. RFPA includes a number of exceptions to when the customer must be given notice and places restrictions on a customers ability to prevent the information from being released.
If digital asset trading platforms are deemed financial institutions by virtue of being subject to the BSA, the records of clients at such institutions may be subject to the protections of RFPA discussed above.
[1] Philip K. Dick, Ubik (196); see also April Glaser, Philip K. Dick Warned Us About the Internet of Things in 1969, Slate (Feb. 10, 2015), available at: https://slate.com/technology/2015/02/philip-k-dick-s-1969-novel-ubik-on-the-internet-of-things.html.
[2] United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400, 406 (2012)
[3] Smith v. Maryland, 442 U.S. 735, 74344 (1979)
[4] 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018),
[5] Carpenter v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2206, 2217 (2018)
[6] 12 U.S.C. ch. 35, 3401 et seq.
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Family of George Floyd files lawsuit against city of Minneapolis and 4 former police officers – CNBC
Posted: at 9:43 pm
A protester wearing a mask holds a large black power raised fist in the middle of the crowd that gathered at Columbus Circle.
Ira L. Black | Getty Images
Members of George Floyd's family filed a lawsuit in federal court Wednesday against the city of Minneapolis and the four police officers involved in his fatal arrest in May.
The suit, filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota, alleges that the officers violated Floyd's constitutional rights. It claims that the city "caused officers [to] act with impunity and without fear of retribution" and failed to properly train police.
The family is seeking unspecified financial damages in addition to the appointment of a "receiver or similar authority" to ensure that the city "properly trains and supervises its police officers."
Video of Floyd's Memorial Day arrest shows former Minneapolis police officerDerek Chauvin, who is white, kneeling on Floyd's neck while Floyd, who was Black, cries out that he cannot breathe. According to charging documents, Chauvinheld his knee on Floyd's neck for about eight minutes.
Floyd's death while in police custody sparked weeks of protests against police violence around the globe.
Ben Crump, an attorney for the family, said at a press conference announcing the lawsuit that the case was "unprecedented."
"With this lawsuit, we seek to set a precedent to make it financially prohibitive" for police to "wrongfully kill marginalized people, especially Black people, in the future," Crump said.
"The city of Minneapolis has a history of policies and procedures and deliberate indifference when it comes to the treatment of arrestees, especially Black men, that cries out for training and discipline," he said.
The four officers involved in Floyd's arrest are facing charges, and Minnesota is pursuing an investigation into the "policies, procedures, and practices" of the Minneapolis Police Department over the past decade.A separate federal investigation into the arrest is also underway.
The suit names Chauvin as well as the other former officers involved in the arrest, Tou Thao, Thomas Lane and J. Alexander Kueng. The lawsuit claims that Chauvin's actions were unreasonable and that each of the other former officers had a duty to intervene to stop him.
"Every reasonable officer would have known that using force against a compliant, handcuffed individual who is not resisting arrest constitutes excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment," the suit says. The suit also alleges that each of the former officers "had a duty to intervene on behalf of a citizen whose constitutional rights were being violated in their presence by another officer."
Chauvin has been charged withsecond-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. The other former officers were charged with aiding and abetting second-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. All four were fired from the police department.
The suit claims that Minneapolis "frequently fails to terminate or discipline officers who demonstrate patterns of misconduct." It alleges that the Minneapolis Police Department "has observed unlawful or otherwise improper conduct by Chauvin throughout his career but has tolerated it and refused to remedy or mitigate it."
The suit says that the Minneapolis Police Department characterized neck restraints as "non-deadly" force "and did not warn it can cause death" from 2012 until June.
"Training materials offered to officers in 2014, including Defendants Chauvin and Thao, depict an officer placing a knee on the neck of an arrestee who is handcuffed in a prone position," the suit says.
Attorneys for the former officers either declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment. A judge last week imposed a gag order barring the attorneys from discussing the cases against the officers with the media.
Minneapolis interim City Attorney Erik Nilsson said in a statement that the city was reviewing the lawsuit and that Floyd's death was a "tragedy."
"Criminal charges are pending against four Minneapolis police officers and it's very important that the criminal case proceed without interference," Nilsson said.
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Local restaurants making their own policies on masks – 13abc Action News
Posted: at 9:43 pm
The latest order by Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer leaves staff and business owners in a tough position.
Whitmer's newest order requires businesses to refuse entry to anyone not wearing masks, unless they are under five years old or have a medical condition. It's up to the business to enforce the rule
Pete's Garage has been operating in Monroe, Michigan for more than 40 years. The well-known restaurant, whose owners also run Michigan Bar & Grille, published a Facebook post that is taking heat online, even after being altered multiple times.
The restaurants original post stated:
IF YOU HAVE A MEDICAL CONDITION THAT PREVENTS YOU FROM WEARING A MASK, YOU DONT NEED TO WEAR ONE
IF YOU ARE NOT WEARING ONE, WE WILL ASSUME THIS IS THE CASE. DUE TO HIPPA, AND THE FOURTH AMENDMENT, WE WILL NOT ASK YOU ABOUT YOUR CONDITION.
The restaurant has signs posted on the door for their new guidelines, which also include touchless URL menus on tables, seating 6-feet apart, and parties required to be less than 10 people.
Manager Brittany Van Riper says when it comes to medical conditions that may exempt a customer from wearing a mask, Theres no way of really telling, thats at the trust of our customers and the trust of our staff.
Michigan businesses failing to require masks could face a misdemeanor, a $500 fine, and possibly losing their license.
In Toledo, the Ottawa Tavern and other restaurants on Adams Street took a different approach, with their new slogan: "Mask on your face until your butt is in place."
Ottawa Tavern owner Zack Jacobs says he came up with the phrase. Jacobs says the new signage and blanket policies make the dining experience safer for staff and customers.
Face masks are also offered at the door, costing a dollar.
The official policy of all bars on Adams Street: Mask on your face til your butt is in place!
If you are a person who is compromised and unable to wear a face mask, then maybe going out in public during a pandemic isnt the wisest move for you to begin with, Jacobs said. Consider your own health and safety and making your own good choices for your health and safety before you step out into a local business thats just trying to stay open and serve our customers in a safe way.
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OPINION: Weed should regulate its surveillance – News – Mount Shasta Herald
Posted: at 9:43 pm
Take a drive throughout the town of Weed and youll surely come across odd looking cameras topped with a blinking blue light. Theyre primarily intended for traffic monitoring, one city employee told me. But their pervasiveness without an accompanying city ordinance has gone on too long and the city risks jeopardizing its citizens civil liberties.
One of the more prominent of these cameras is mounted to a telephone pole on Main Street. From its vantage point, the main street camera is particularly concerning for its possible ability to surveil regular goers to the nearby dispensary, bar, and bank. Some months ago, a camera was mounted at the intersection of Broadway and Roseburg overlooking a historically African-American predominant residential area.
While the intention to monitor traffic is merited, there is an unfortunate propensity for these technologies to expand in their reach and scope. In San Diego, for example, the city council in 2016 sold the public on a new smart streetlight program. Armed with an array of sensors, the street lights feature wide angle cameras and the ability to upload collected data to a cloud storage database.
The City of San Diego applauded the smart street lights for their energy efficiency and future applications in regards to improving traffic, saying the lights would help City staff provide better services to our residents and increase efficiencies for City operations.
But, the mission creep settled in quickly. In 2019 reports surfaced that San Diegos contract with the streetlight vendor, General Electric, allowed unrestricted rights to the data gathered by the cameras and sensors, including the right to sell the data to third parties.
By early 2020, it was clear that the San Diego police were not even using the streetlights for the primary purpose of traffic control or monitoring, but instead were looking into alleged criminal activity. Then, in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests in June of 2020, police used the cameras to investigate protestors. This type of surveillance can have a considerable chilling effect on First Amendment activity.
Though it is of course desirable for police to effectively utilize the tools at their disposal, this much is clear: with a poor regulatory regime, no oversight, and little transparency, the benign traffic monitoring cameras went above and beyond their explicitly stated purpose. And it does not help that some vendors specifically market their wares to city officials as enabling infrastructure by hosting third party sensors. Meaning, that other sensors and software can be incorporated later.
It would have been prudent for the City of Weed to have had a privacy policy in place prior to the acquisition of surveillance technology. For starters, there is virtually no transparency on the issue; information related to it is not readily available. A search of the words camera, surveillance, or privacy on the City of Weeds website returns no pages nor documents. Compare that with the gold standard set by the City of Oakland, which has its policies enshrined as a dedicated chapter in its municipal code.
Policy 378 of the Weed Police Department Policy Manual does have a section on a Public Safety Video Surveillance System. The policy deserves kudos for specifying that the cameras should be conspicuous, and that they will not record audio, but otherwise the policy is neglectful for its porous standards.
Proponents of the cameras might counter that these are only keeping an eye on the public thoroughfare; there is no expectation of privacy, and therefore it would not be a Fourth Amendment violation, per se. But as the California State Auditor once noted, [The United States Supreme Court] has decided cases involving other electronic surveillance [...] the court has found that certain electronic data that reveal individuals movements over an extended period of time, if gathered, do at some point impinge on privacy.
Even in public, there still needs to be a concern over surveillance.
Furthermore, there is nothing stopping the Weed Police Department (WPD) from acquiring more invasive technology. Policy 378.3.3 says it can integrate its video surveillance equipment with gunshot detection, incident mapping, crime analysis, license plate recognition, facial recognition and other video-based analytical systems may be considered based upon availability and the nature of department strategy.
Not only has gunshot detection, facial recognition, predictive policing, and license plate recognition systems come under fire for being flawed and having negative impacts on civil liberties, but in the WPDs response to an inquiry from the California State Auditor, WPD said that there are no plans to use an automated license plate recognition system. If this is the case, then why do they need a surveillance system capable of doing so?
The video retention policies stand out as another big risk. Absent of being used in litigation, Policy 378.5 says that the retention schedule [is] a minimum of one year. However, the media is seemingly not regularly cleared automatically after that time as the city attorney needs to explicitly sign off before the video can be deleted.
This is not to say that the City of Weeds efforts up to this point have been in bad faith. Rather, given that the city now has these technologies at their disposal, it is imperative that guidelines are made now to prevent future abuse. Without specific policies there is no guarantee that the civil liberties of the residents are being respected. The genie must be kept in its bottle. An ordinance requiring city council approval for the acquisition of surveillance technology and mandated standards is needed.
Jonathan Hofer was born and raised in Weed. He is a former political science researcher at the University of California, Berkeley and currently works as a research associate at an Oakland based public policy think tank working on municipal surveillance and the impact of emerging technologies on civil liberties.
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