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The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: September 2021
Why You Only Hear One Side Of The Debate Over Life’s Origin – The Federalist
Posted: September 8, 2021 at 10:02 am
If you thought the misinformation, indoctrination, and viewpoint suppression perpetrated by Big Tech, schools, and the corporate media were limited to politics, think again. One of the many fronts of the war for the right to dictate what you believe is the scientific, religious, and metaphysical debate over where you came from.
A recent University of Michigan survey claims Evolution now accepted by majority of Americans, or 54 percent. Salon declared the debate over, posting the headline Science quietly wins one of the rights longstanding culture wars, calling it a setback for purveyors of pseudoscience. What role does information suppression play in this trend?
In 2006, an article in the journal Nature reported 70 years of enforced atheism and official support for darwinism in the Soviet Union were causing a public backlash against evolution in post-Soviet Russia. During the Soviet era, virtually everyone accepted Darwinism, largely due to government indoctrination and a lack of intellectual freedom. Could a similar intolerance be responsible, at least in part, for increased public acceptance of evolution in the United States?
More than 1,100 scientists have signed a list agreeing they are skeptical of claims for the ability of random mutation and natural selection to account for the complexity of life. As a scientist, Ive signed that list. But as an attorney, I can attest that many of these scientists and others who are afraid to sign the list face discrimination because they wont toe the Darwinian line.
Earlier this year physicist Eric Hedin published a book titled Canceled Science, telling how Ball State University investigated him after he briefly covered intelligent design in an interdisciplinary elective seminar. When science faculty are prohibited from merely mentioning minority scientific viewpoints, its no wonder that many students gravitate towards Darwinism. Theyve heard nothing else.
Big Tech also makes it hard to find scientific information that challenges Darwin. In 2020, the journal BioEssays published an editorial calling for mandatory disclaimers and color coded banners on search engines to warn people about factual errors on websites supporting intelligent design. Yet while these websites are being targeted, Wikipedia is perpetuating biased and inaccurate information about the Darwinism/intelligent design debate.
Wikipedias intelligent design entry editorializes within the first five words that such a belief is pseudoscientific, and editors notoriously resist changes that add balance or accuracy. This led Wikipedias co-founder Larry Sanger, a self-described agnostic who believes intelligent design to be completely wrong, to slam the entry as appallingly biased. It simply cannot be defended as neutral. Yet Wikipedia is undoubtedly where countless people become informed and misinformed about evolution and intelligent design.
Wikipedians justify censorship of pro-intelligent design views by citing a consensus thats enforced by the scientific community and education system. In the United States, public schools almost universally teach evolution in a pro-Darwin-only fashion that censors any science that challenges the status quo.
Consider the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS), which take what The New York Times called a firm stand that children must learn about evolution. Out of 50 states, 44 have adopted these standards or something like them. They call for students to learn that common ancestry and biological evolution are supported by multiple lines of empirical evidence, with no mention of counterevidence. Does this require simply knowing about evolution and understanding the arguments, or does it force students to affirm support for evolution?
The NGSS inform students that similarities among vertebrate embryos indicate common ancestry, parroting many biology textbooks which overstate the degree of similarity between fish, bird, and mammal embryos. But neither the NGSS nor many textbooks mention peer-reviewed studies showing that vertebrate embryos start development differently. As a 2010 paper in Nature explained, Counter to the expectations of early embryonic [similarities], many studies have shown that there is often remarkable divergence between related species both early and late in development.
In high school, the NGSS teaches that similarities in DNA sequences across different species also support common ancestry. But the NGSS ignores that the scientific literature is replete with conflicts between DNA-based evolutionary trees.
An article in New Scientist, titled Why Darwin was wrong about the tree of life, observed [m]any biologists now argue that the tree concept is obsolete and needs to be discarded. It quoted scientists saying things like We have no evidence at all that the tree of life is a reality or Weve just annihilated the tree of life.
Likewise, a 2012 paper in Annual Review of Genetics could not reconcile universal common ancestry with the genetic data, and concluded life might indeed have multiple origins. The NGSS ignores such studies, presenting dumbed-down science in support of neo-Darwinian theory.
When the public lacks access to scientific information that challenges evolution because Darwin-doubting scientists are hounded out of academia, schools refuse to acknowledge peer-reviewed science that contradicts the standard evolutionary paradigm, and Big Tech obscures accurate information about intelligent design we dont have to wonder why public support for evolution is increasing. Under such a dogmatic system, what outcome would be expected other than increased support for evolution?
To be clear, Im not proposing some conspiracy theory. No conspiracy is needed to understand that power structures often systematically marginalize people and viewpoints that are in the minority, and thats exactly whats happening here. Whats concerning is that this is happening within the scientific community, where freedom of inquiry is supposed to thrive, and its happening on one of the most important topics for all humanity: our origins.
The Darwinism debate is a bellwether for larger issues of intellectual freedom in America. Support for evolution may be increasing, but if this is being driven by trends resembling Soviet-style information suppression, this isnt a road we want to traverse.
Casey Luskin holds a Ph.D. in Geology from the University of Johannesburg, a law degree from the University of San Diego, and is a California-licensed attorney. He works as Associate Director of the Center for Science and Culture at Discovery Institute, in Seattle.
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Why You Only Hear One Side Of The Debate Over Life's Origin - The Federalist
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Quantum computing startup Quantum Machines raises $50M – VentureBeat
Posted: at 10:01 am
The Transform Technology Summits start October 13th with Low-Code/No Code: Enabling Enterprise Agility. Register now!
Quantum Machines, a company thats setting out to bring about useful quantum computers, has raised $50 million in a series B round of funding as it looks to fund expansion into quantum cloud computing.
Founded out of Tel Aviv in 2018, Quantum Machines last year formally launched its Quantum Orchestration Platform, pitched as an extensive hardware and software platform for performing the most complex quantum algorithms and experiments and taking quantum computing to the next level by making it more practical and accessible.
Based on principles from quantum mechanics, quantum computing is concerned with quantum bits (qubits) rather than atoms. While still in its relative infancy, quantum computing promises to revolutionize computation by performing in seconds complex calculations that would take the supercomputers of today years or longer. The societal and business implications of this are huge and could expedite new drug discoveries or enhance global logistics in the shipping industry to optimize routes and reduce carbon footprints.
Quantum Machines is focused on developing a new approach to controlling and operating quantum processors.
Quantum processors hold the potential for immense computational power, far beyond those of any classical processor we could ever develop, and they will impact each and every aspect of our lives, Quantum Machines CEO Dr. Itamar Sivan said in a press release.
Venture capital (VC) investments in quantum computing have been relatively modest, but Ionq became the first such company to go public via a SPAC merger in March. And a few months back, PsiQuantum closed a $450 million round of funding to develop the first commercially viable quantum computer, with big-name backers that included BlackRock and Microsofts M12 venture fund. Microsoft also launched its Azure Quantum cloud computing service, which it first announced back in 2019, in public preview.
So quantum computing appears to be gaining momentum, as evidenced by Quantum Machines latest raise. The company had previously raised $23 million, including a $17.5 million series A from last year, and its series B round was led by Red Dot Capital Partners, with the participation from Samsung Next, Battery Ventures, Valor Equity Partners, Exor, Claridge Israel, Atreides Management LP, TLV Partners, and 2i Ventures, among others.
The company said it plans to use its fresh capital to help implement an effective cloud infrastructure for quantum computers.
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Quantum computing startup Quantum Machines raises $50M - VentureBeat
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Quantum Computing Breakthrough: Entanglement of Three Spin Qubits Achieved in Silicon – SciTechDaily
Posted: at 10:01 am
Figure 1: False-colored scanning electron micrograph of the device. The purple and green structures represent the aluminum gates. Six RIKEN physicists succeeded in entangling three silicon-based spin qubits using the device. Credit: 2021 RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science
A three-qubit entangled state has been realized in a fully controllable array of spin qubits in silicon.
An all-RIKEN team has increased the number of silicon-based spin qubits that can be entangled from two to three, highlighting the potential of spin qubits for realizing multi-qubit quantum algorithms.
Quantum computers have the potential to leave conventional computers in the dust when performing certain types of calculations. They are based on quantum bits, or qubits, the quantum equivalent of the bits that conventional computers use.
Although less mature than some other qubit technologies, tiny blobs of silicon known as silicon quantum dots have several properties that make them highly attractive for realizing qubits. These include long coherence times, high-fidelity electrical control, high-temperature operation, and great potential for scalability. However, to usefully connect several silicon-based spin qubits, it is crucial to be able to entangle more than two qubits, an achievement that had evaded physicists until now.
Seigo Tarucha (second from right) and his co-workers have realized a three-qubit entangled state in a fully controllable array of spin qubits in silicon. Credit: 2021 RIKEN
Seigo Tarucha and five colleagues, all at the RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science, have now initialized and measured a three-qubit array in silicon with high fidelity (the probability that a qubit is in the expected state). They also combined the three entangled qubits in a single device.
This demonstration is a first step toward extending the capabilities of quantum systems based on spin qubits. Two-qubit operation is good enough to perform fundamental logical calculations, explains Tarucha. But a three-qubit system is the minimum unit for scaling up and implementing error correction.
The teams device consisted of a triple quantum dot on a silicon/silicongermanium heterostructure and is controlled through aluminum gates. Each quantum dot can host one electron, whose spin-up and spin-down states encode a qubit. An on-chip magnet generates a magnetic-field gradient that separates the resonance frequencies of the three qubits, so that they can be individually addressed.
The researchers first entangled two of the qubits by implementing a two-qubit gatea small quantum circuit that constitutes the building block of quantum-computing devices. They then realized three-qubit entanglement by combining the third qubit and the gate. The resulting three-qubit state had a remarkably high state fidelity of 88%, and was in an entangled state that could be used for error correction.
This demonstration is just the beginning of an ambitious course of research leading to a large-scale quantum computer. We plan to demonstrate primitive error correction using the three-qubit device and to fabricate devices with ten or more qubits, says Tarucha. We then plan to develop 50 to 100 qubits and implement more sophisticated error-correction protocols, paving the way to a large-scale quantum computer within a decade.
Reference: Quantum tomography of an entangled three-qubit state in silicon by Kenta Takeda, Akito Noiri, Takashi Nakajima, Jun Yoneda, Takashi Kobayashi and Seigo Tarucha, 7 June 2021, Nature Nanotechnology.DOI: 10.1038/s41565-021-00925-0
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Quantum Computing Breakthrough: Entanglement of Three Spin Qubits Achieved in Silicon - SciTechDaily
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Quantum computing breakthrough achieved, road to the future begins now – TweakTown
Posted: at 10:01 am
A team of researchers has achieved what is being described as a "breakthrough" in quantum computing.
VIEW GALLERY - 2 IMAGES
The achievement comes from a team of researchers at the RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science, who have been able to entangle a three-qubit array in silicon with high accuracy of predicting the state the qubit is in. For those that don't know, instead of using bits to make calculations and perform tasks like a typical computer does, quantum computers use quantum bits, or qubits.
The device the researchers created used three very small blobs of silicon called quantum dots, and each of these dots can hold one electron. The direction of the spin of the electron encodes the qubit. With that in mind, it should be noted that a "Two-qubit operation is good enough to perform fundamental logical calculations. But a three-qubit system is the minimum unit for scaling up and implementing error correction", explains Tarucha.
False-colored scanning electron micrograph of the device. The purple and green structures represent the aluminum gates, per scitechdaily.com.
After successfully entangling two qubits, the team of researchers introduced the third qubit and was able to predict its state with a high fidelity of 88%. Tarucha added, "We plan to demonstrate primitive error correction using the three-qubit device and to fabricate devices with ten or more qubits. We then plan to develop 50 to 100 qubits and implement more sophisticated error-correction protocols, paving the way to a large-scale quantum computer within a decade."
For more information on this story, check out this link here.
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Quantum computing breakthrough achieved, road to the future begins now - TweakTown
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Quantum More Than Just Computing – Todayuknews – Todayuknews
Posted: at 10:01 am
Dr Najwa Sidqi, Knowledge Transfer Manager of Quantum Technologies at KTN, explains that, despite the media focus on computing, quantum technologies are far broader than you might think, and they are set to impact the world dramatically
Throughout history, there have been revolutionary technological innovations that have changed the way the world operates and quantum technology is set to be the next of these developments. While quantum computing is regularly discussed in the media, it is largely hogging the limelight thats right, the scope of quantum tech is far broader than just increasing computing power beyond anything that is currently available. With some of it very close to the market, its quite strange that we dont hear about all the other elements of quantum technology that are soon going to change our lives.
In recent years, the advancement of technology has been seen through our ability to shrink things down and get more processing power out of a smaller surface area. The problem is, there is a limit to how small we can go while we use electrons as our basic building block of computing (literally the difference between a 1 and a 0 to a computer). If, however, we were able to utilise smaller subatomic particles, such as photons, we could increase the power of our technology considerably.
But as weve learnt to manipulate and measure the energy of individual photons, weve come to realise that its applications go beyond simply boosting the processing power of our PCs. And thats why quantum technology is broader than quantum computing.
So, why does computing take up so much of the focus? Its simple really, the benefits of quantum computing are easy to get your head around and apply to just about every sector. All industries, from finance to construction and nuclear energy to farming, require at least some level of computing.
The other key reason is that its the big names in IT, Google, IBM and Microsoft, that are driving the development of quantum computing, each devoting huge amounts of resource to it and generating a lot of media interest too.
So, what are some other applications of quantum technology? Well, thats the exciting thing. The applications are enormous and could well be endless.
Right now, theres exciting work being done in quantum communication, which allows for infinitely more complex data encryption than what is currently available.
Quantum sensing is another incredible field of research and development that will take our ability to precisely measure electromagnetic waves, fields and forces so much further forward that its hard to comprehend the impact on scientific understanding.
Quantum imaging has the potential to revolutionise metrology in a number of fields, with applications in gas leak detection to non-invasive in vivo imaging in healthcare. So, how far off into the distant future are these technologies of tomorrow? Well, not too distant at all, in fact theyre already being commercialised.
Companies such as QLM Technology use a quantum gas imaging LIDAR to detect and monitor greenhouse gases. The photon-precise sensor allows organisations to effectively monitor and map the locations and flow rates of gas leaks with high-sensitivity imaging that shows plume shape and concentration.
Likewise, ID Quantique, based in Switzerland, is already leading the world in quantum-safe encryption solutions. Their products are in use by governments, enterprises and research labs across the world.
OK, yes, quantum computing is very exciting, but its not the only quantum technology thats going to improve our lives. There are exciting developments occurring throughout the field of quantum technology which deserve the same amount of attention, and theyre right around the corner!
If youre interested in quantum R&D, theUK National Quantum Technologies Showcaseis taking place on Friday 5th November in the Business Design Centre, London. It will bring together around 60 of the UKs most exciting projects from across the Quantum landscape. The event will also be streamed live for virtual attendees. Exhibitors can register nowhere and delegates will be able register in September, Id love to see you there.
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Memory devices on satellites to enable the quantum internet – University of Strathclyde
Posted: at 10:01 am
The installation of memory and repeater devices in space, to enable use of the quantum internet, have been proposed in research by the University of Strathclyde and an international collaboration.
The study suggests that quantum memories (QM), which store information in quantum form, and repeaters, which are used in the transmission of the information, can be deployed to facilitate use of advanced internet technology. This is done through distribution of quantum entanglement, a phenomenon in which two particles are interlinked, potentially at vast distances from each other.
The research showed that satellites equipped with QMs provided entanglement distribution rates which were three orders of magnitude faster than those from fibre-based repeaters or space systems without QMs.
The study has been published in the journal npj Quantum Information. It was led by Humboldt University in Berlin and also involved the Institute of Optical Sensor Systems of the German Aerospace Center (DLR) and JPL (Jet Propulsion Laboratory NASA).
Dr Daniel Oi, Senior Lecturer in Strathclydes Department of Physics, a partner in the research, said: We show in this paper that this method would have much higher performance than previously proposed schemes and we identify promising physical systems with which to implement it.
The work is connected to wider work at Strathclyde on Quantum Technologies, and in particular Space Quantum Communication research that includes several space missions due to be launched in the next few years.
Global-scale quantum communication links will form the backbone of the quantum internet. Exponential loss in optical fibres means that there is no realistic application of this beyond a few hundred kilometres but quantum repeaters and space-based systems offer a solution to this limitation.
The proposal in the research uses satellites equipped with QMs in low-earth orbit. It is focused on the use of quantum key distribution (QKD) for encryption and distribution, and of QMs to synchronise detection events which could otherwise have been happening by chance.
The researchers describe their study as a roadmap to realise unconditionally secure quantum communications over global distances with near-term technologies.
The paper states: With the majority of optical links now in space, a major strength of our scheme is its increased robustness against atmospheric losses. We further demonstrate that QMs can enhance secret key rates in general line-of-sight QKD protocols.
AQuantum Technology Cluster is embedded in the Glasgow City Innovation District, an initiative driven by Strathclyde along with Glasgow City Council, Scottish Enterprise, Entrepreneurial Scotland and Glasgow Chamber of Commerce. It is envisaged as a global place for quantum industrialisation, attracting companies to co-locate, accelerate growth, improve productivity and access world-class research technology and talent at Strathclyde.
The University of Strathclyde is the only academic institution that has been a partner in all four EPSRC funded Quantum Technology Hubs in both phases of funding. The Hubs are in: Sensing and Timing; Quantum Enhanced Imaging; Quantum Computing and Simulation, and Quantum Communications Technologies.
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Memory devices on satellites to enable the quantum internet - University of Strathclyde
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Future in the cloud for encryption – Capacity Media
Posted: at 10:01 am
06 September 2021 | Alan Burkitt-Gray
Traditional PKI methods of encrypting data are about to fall to the onslaught of quantum computing. Arqit, a start-up led by David Williams thinks it has a quantum-based solution, he tells Alan Burkitt-Gray
A start-up company that is expected to be valued at US$1.4 billion by the end of August is launching its quantum-based telecoms encryption service in the middle of July. Arqit, founded by satellite entrepreneur David Williams, is launching QuantumCloud, a platform-as-a-service (PaaS) for telecoms, including consumer, industrial and defence internet of things (IoT), he tells me.
Early customers, including BT and other telcos that he doesnt want to name, have already signed contracts and used the cyber security software, but Arqit is likely to be thrust into greater prominence imminently, when a Nasdaq-listed special purpose acquisition company (Spac) buys it in a deal that will value it at $1.4 billion.
Williams and a small number of co-founders will own 45%, he tells me a stake that will be worth $630 million to him and his colleagues.
A former banker, Williams, who is now chairman of Arqit, was founder and CEO of Avanti, a UK-based company that runs a fleet of geostationary satellites called Hylas with government, military and commercial customers. He left Avanti in August 2017 and a month later set up Arqit.
Being the founder of two satellite companies is a pretty remarkable record after seven years working for three banks following a degree in economics and politics. (He also notes that he was the yard-of-ale champion at the University of Leeds.)
However, his first start-up, Avanti Communications, has not fared well over the past year, long after Williamss departure. In February 2021 its existing junior lenders injected $30 million of new capital, and its so-called super senior facility, which was due for repayment in February, was extended, but only to the end of January 2022.
Existential threat
But Arqit has moved into a completely different market, addressing something the company calls an existential threat to the hyperconnected world. Why? The legacy encryption that we all use, designed in the 1980s, has done a great job but is now failing us, says Arqit on its website. It was never intended for use in our hyper-connected world. The breaches caused are seen around us daily.
At the same time, there is a bigger problem. Quantum computing now poses an existential threat to cyber security for everyone. As a result, the world must begin a global upgrade cycle to replace all encryption technologies, an upgrade unlike anything we have seen before, says the company.
Dont bother patching and mending, says Arqit. Dont take risks with incremental improvements to public key encryption which is no longer fit for purpose.
Encryption using public key infrastructure (PKI) emerged from the communications intelligence community around 1971 in work by James Ellis at the UKs Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) and was then developed further in 1976 through work in the US and Israel by Whit Diffie and Martin Hellman and separately by Ronald Rivest, Adi Shamir and Leonard Adleman (known, from their initials, as RSA).
So, the idea is virtually half a century old. But in that time, certainly in the past decade, it has done us well. If the URL of a website starts https://, you know its encrypted to those 1970s standards. It means we are reasonably confident we can type our credit card details into a hotel, theatre, travel or shopping site. Messaging apps such as Signal and WhatsApp use encryption based on these PKI principles.
No one trusts PKI
However, no one trusts PKI any more, says Williams. The safest way of delivering keys to a battlefield is now to put them on a dongle and fly them in by helicopter.
At the heart of the problem is the fact that quantum computers are coming, and quantum computers are fast. Diffie and Hellman, and the RSA trio, calculated that if it took weeks or months to decrypt a message, PKI was secure. Breaking the code would be computationally infeasible, to use the term the crypto community likes.
By perhaps as soon as next year, quantum computers will be able to work so fast that they will have decrypted the text in a usable period of time. The challenge will no longer be computationally infeasible. Someone intercepting a transaction could find your credit card details within an hour or so, and use them. So, thats why there is pressure to upgrade to a new system of key exchange, a replacement for PKI.
However, the security people have something more to worry about. Many suspect that for years governments and other organisations have been squirrelling away in their vaults traffic that is encrypted to current standards, knowing that, any time soon, they will be able to crack it.
Think of all those politicians, on all sides of the global political divides, who have been conspiring via WhatsApp. Think of all those whistleblowers who have leaked information to law enforcement authorities or journalists via Signal. Think of all those criminal organisations that have been using Telegram for their plans.
Lemon juice and milk
Thats why PKI, the current crypto infrastructure, is facing what Arqit calls an existential threat. Pretty soon, it will be as outmoded as writing Xf buubdl bu ebxo upnpsspx* in lemon juice or milk and sending it via carrier pigeon. Dont bother with minor fixes, says Arqit. Its wrong to patch and mend, or to take risks.
The future lies in symmetric keys, with a new way of distributing them. Symmetric keys are provably secure against any attack, including quantum computing, says the company.
The problem is that, until now, there has been no safe way to distribute them. Arqit says that it offers a method to create those keys at scale, securely, at any kind of endpoint device. We have invented a method of creating unbreakable encryption keys locally, both at the edge and in the cloud, says Williams.
Arqit has a solution. Its called Arq19, pretty much for the same reason Covid-19 has that suffix: 2019 was our Eureka moment, he smiles.
These are systems he calls global and trustless, a confusing term. It seems to mean you cant trust it, but what Williams and Arqit mean is that you dont have to trust it, as keys will never be stored in any system, so they cannot be stolen, but they can be put on devices within less than half a second to enable a high level of security.
We create hardware storage modules in a number of places he says London, New York, Sydney, for example. But those arent the keys. They are clues, a process involving shared secrets to create brand-new symmetrical encryption keys. No, I dont understand either; but how many people in 1936 understood Turings famous paper, On Computable Numbers, which started the computer revolution? (Turing went on to work during World War Two at GCHQs predecessor at Bletchley Park, in what is now the English city of Milton Keynes.)
Arqit can deliver its keys in unlimited group sizes, says Williams. The traditional PKI approach is for two-way communications Alice and Bob, in the crypto communitys terminology.
But what Williams is looking for is a system that will work with Alice, Bob, Catherine, Dave, Eve and a whole telephone directory.
For example, says Williams, they can deliver keys to international telecoms networks, and we can change the key every second if we want. He says that will result in ultra-secure software defined networks (SDNs).
We can deliver quantum keys in a manner thats global and trustless, says Williams. The company will use a small fleet of satellites, weighing 300kg each, that is being built by QinetiQ, a company formed 20 years ago by the privatisation of part of the UK governments Defence Evaluation and Research Agency.
BT has an exclusive deal to distribute Arqits QuantumCloud services in the UK, and the Japanese firm Sumitomo has a deal as the first big international customer, says Williams.
It is working with telcos to encrypt traffic on Japanese fibre cables, he adds.
These are contracts with distributors that have been signed, but the companys first contract with a corporate user went live in June, he says, although he will not name the partner, except that it is a big global corporation. It is an enterprise customer and is not BT.
The eventual market will include the internet of things (IoT) and connected cars, enterprise and connectivity, he said. Cost will be low, says Williams. Users will pay a tiny fraction of a dollar for each key created.
Heir to Turing
Williams has gathered around him a range of technical, crypto and management talent. CTO and co-founder with Williams is David Bestwick, who was also a co-founder and CTO of Avanti. Theres a chief cryptographer who was at GCHQ: think of David Shiu as the inheritor of the tradition founded by Turing 80 years ago.
There are other ex-GCHQ people, too, and a retired air vice-marshal and a former lieutenant general in the US Air Force. And more, including experts in telecoms, IT and a chief software engineer who was at McAfee. And a former head of operations at 10 Downing Street.
These people are well connected. Well see what they achieve.
Though, will we be able to find out, or will it all be encrypted?
*Xf buubdl bu ebxo upnpsspx means just We attack at dawn tomorrow, using the so-called Caesar cipher, as reputedly used by the Roman dictator
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Hit or Stand – Blackjack Strategy Game & Trainer
Posted: at 10:01 am
Blackjack Odds: Playing Hit or Stand will improve your blackjack strategy, and increase your chances of winning money. However, unless you count cards, the odds of blackjack are against you, even if you are a perfect player. By chance, the outcome may sway in your favor from time to time; but the rule is: the more you gamble the more money you lose.
Gambling Addiction: Gambling is addictive, really. If you find yourself spending an unreasonable amount of time in casinos, or if you find that gambling is having a negative impact on you life and finances, seek help. There should be nothing embarrassing about it. Visit the Gambler's Anonymous website to learn more.
Counting Cards: While counting cards can put the odds of blackjack in your favor, it requires a huge time commitment. It is difficult to learn, and very time consuming to play. You can learn about counting cards from books on our blackjack book list and from websites on our links page. Please remember that many blackjack books and websites are trying to sell you something. They have incentives to convince you of the ease and profitability of card counting. Also note that online casinos shuffle the deck after each deal, so it is impossible to count cards when playing blackjack online.
Gambling can be fun and harmless, if you expect to lose. View your losses as the ticket price for a night of entertainment.
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The Valuation of Skillz Stock Remains Excessive – Investorplace.com
Posted: at 10:01 am
Skillz (NYSE:SKLZ) stock appears to have climbed recently due to takeover speculation and a boost from Reddit traders.
Source: NYCStock / Shutterstock.com
But I believe that the takeover speculation is likely unwarranted, while SKLZ stock remains extremely overvalued.
A publication called CTFN suggested that a casino could look to buy Skillz because there has been consolidation between casinos and online gaming, Seeking Alpha reported.
Skillz, however, does not feature gambling or emphasize games that gamblers traditionally enjoy such as poker, craps, or blackjack. It does appear to have a blackjack game and a poker game, but they arent a big part of Skillzs offerings.
As Casino.org explained in an Aug. 2 article, The bulk of the games featured on Skillz arent traditional casino fare, such as blackjack, craps, or poker.
And its tournaments with cash prizes involve traditional videogames, rather than traditional gambling games.
Given these points, its obvious that most of Skillzs customer base are probably fans of traditional video games. Casinos and companies that feature traditional gambling games online (known as iGaming) are targeting different types of consumers.
Specifically, theyre seeking consumers who enjoy the traditional gambling games, whether online or in-person or both. Thats why DraftKings (NASDAQ:DKNG), in an effort to expand its iGaming offerings, bought Golden Nugget (NASDAQ:GNOG), which owns many casinos and an online gambling site. Thats why MGM (NYSE:MGM) launched a joint venture called BetMGM, which specializes in iGaming and sports gambling.
Skillz has very limited iGaming infrastructure, and it caters to fans of traditional videogames, not lovers of iGaming and sports betting. Therefore, it would make no sense for a company that specializes in iGaming, operating brick-and-mortar casinos, and/or sports betting to buy Skillz.
Skillz is changing hands for nearly 13 times analysts average 2021 top-line estimate for the company. Ive heard value investors say that stocks which are trading at ten-times revenue are too expensive.
I believe that, if a company is growing explosively, has a huge addressable market, is moving towards profitability, and has great disruptive potential, ten or even 20 times revenue could be a worthwhile price to pay for long-term, growth investors.
But as far as I can tell, Skillz does not have any of these attributes.
In Q2, its top line climbed 52% year-over-year. I think thats impressive growth, but I wouldnt call it explosive. As Ive pointed out in other columns, many video games now have online multiplayer options, giving Skillz plenty of competition, and there are signs that eSports, which appears to be the main area in which Skillz has a strong competitive advantage, is not a very large market. Finally, the companys EBITDA, excluding certain items, dropped $283 million YOY last quarter, falling to -$31.6 million.
There are concrete signs that the popularity of video games is waning as economies reopen. For example, Take-Two Interactive (NASDAQ:TTWO) recently provided a lower-than-expected Q2 bookings estimate, causing its stock to fall sharply.
And in July, video game sales rose just 10% YOY. I wouldnt call that impressive or explosive growth.
Finally, Ive predicted for a couple of months that meme stocks would weaken. Although some meme stocks have been making a bit of a comeback in recent weeks, many, if not, most of them are already down a great deal from their recent highs. For example, SKLZ stock itself has fallen to around $12, versus its July 28 high of around $14.70.
I continue to expect most meme stocks to weaken over the longer term.
The takeover speculation about Skillz is unrealistic, while the company does not have any of the characteristics that a good, highly valued growth stock should have. Whats more, its facing a number of important macro challenges.
In light of these points, I continue to recommend selling SKLZ stock.
On the date of publication, Larry Ramer held a long position in MGM stock.
Larry Ramer has conducted research and written articles on U.S. stocks for 14 years. He has been employed by The Fly and Israels largest business newspaper, Globes. Larry began writing columns for InvestorPlace in 2015. Among his highlysuccessful, contrarian picks have been GE, solar stocks, and Snap. You can reach him on StockTwits at@larryramer.
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Nate Bargatze Is the Nicest Man in Stand-Up – The Atlantic
Posted: at 10:01 am
Once the limousine door closed, a dozen of Nate Bargatzes closest friends and family members began reciting their favorite jokes from the sold-out show hed just finished in Reno, Nevada. There was the one about never asking a fitness junkie for advice on losing weight, lest they warn you about eating too much fruit. (Lets get to that point, all right? Bargatze had said. I dont think Im at where Im at because I got into some pineapple last night.) And the one about his hometown of Old Hickory, Tennessee, being named after Andrew Jackson, and a reporter informing him that the seventh president had been a bad person. (You know, we didnt know him or anything, hed deadpanned.)
As we rode through Reno on a 100-degree July night, I asked Bargatze what moment from the show stood out to him. It was the bit, he said, about the woman at a comedy club in Grand Rapids, Michigan, whose siren of a laugh was so distracting that the staff had to ask her to keep silent for the rest of the show. The joke skewered her parents for not correcting this when she was young, then segued into Bargatzes lament about carrying his own bad habits into adulthood. It was one of the high-decibel points of the show, but thats not why Bargatze brought it up.
I just need to be super careful with anything that could be seen as making fun of someone, Bargatze said. Maybe she had a disability or something. In fact, as his joke tactfully made clear, she did not appear to have a disabilityjust an unbearable laugh. And yet he seemed nervous. Ive seen shows where comedians cracked about someone not clapping, then realized theyve only got one hand, or joked about someone wearing sunglasses inside, then realized theyre blind, he said. I never want to put myself in that situation. I never want to be mean.
Bargatze, 42, who spent years toiling in front of single-digit crowds, had just kicked off the biggest headlining tour of his career. He was on his way to board a chartered plane to Las Vegas for two more sold-out shows. Some of his dates were selling out 10 months in advance, and he and a team of Hollywood writers were in discussions with Netflix about an eponymous sitcom. Yet here he was, spending his post-launch limo ride worrying that he may have inadvertently offended someone who wasnt there with a story that was meant to highlight his own deficiencies.
The legends of stand-up, from Lenny Bruce to Richard Pryor to Dave Chappelle, were subversive, antagonistic, troublemaking. Bargatze is none of those things. He worries constantly about alienating his audience or hurting someones feelings. His act is slow, almost soothing, as he plods through nonthreatening tales of his own mediocrity. He comes across as a walking Xanax, helping audiences slow down and, as he says, shut off their brains for an hour.
From the January/February 2013 issue: Monty Python, the Beatles of comedy
If comedy is a proxy for the mood of American society, Bargatzes sudden popularity suggests that hes tapped into something powerful: the discontent with our discontent. He insists that stand-up can be a great unifier, bridging the divides that have emerged within families, among friends, between red states and blue states. People are worn out, he told me. It seems like every form of entertainment these days has to have a message, and its gotten old.
Bargatze broke out during Donald Trumps presidency with the first of two hour-long Netflix specials. A college dropout who insists hes too dumb to make informed decisions for himself, let alone lecture anyone else, he never talks about politics. He goes nowhere near race or identity issues. He maneuvers so gingerly around other subjectsreligion, gender roles, the fracturing of Americathat they feel untouched.
The comedian to whom Bargatze is most often compared is Jim Gaffigan, the churchgoing family man from Indiana whose punch lines revolve around parenting and food. But even Gaffigan picked a side in the summer of 2020, when he called Trump a fascist on Twitter and suggested that his voters were part of a hapless cult. Gaffigan was denounced in the Wall Street Journal opinion section and sworn off by countless fans across Red America.
When I mentioned this episode to Bargatze, he exhaled hard and gazed skyward, like a bystander asked to describe a car wreck. I dont have the stomach for that stuff, he said. I dont have it in me to make people uncomfortable.
From the September 2015 issue: Caitlin Flanagan on how comics have to censor their jokes on college campuses
Instead Bargatze takes his audiences on strange, circuitous journeys that rarely conclude with an obvious punch line. He tells stories about sleeping in a hotel room with the lights on because he couldnt find the switch, and being intimidated by his 9-year-old daughters homework, and accidentally ordering coffee with whipped cream instead of with cream.
Gaffigan told me that from the first time he saw Bargatze perform, he was impressed that Bargatze could be so unhurried, so inoffensiveand yet also rollickingly funny. Comedy is all about authenticity and point of view, he said. Nate is your buddy from a small town. Being so unaware, and discovering through his observations, thats what makes Nate funny. His jokes dont make a judgment.
Raised by strict Southern Baptist parents, Bargatze was the class clown who never got in trouble, the life of the party who never went to parties. But he was never academically inclined, either. After high school, he bounced from job to job. He worked construction. He sold cellphones at a Walmart kiosk. He delivered furniture. He put on drunk-driving simulations at high schools. Finally, he did some remedial coursework at a community college, then enrolled at Western Kentucky University. He promptly flunked every courseeven bowling, despite having once rolled a 266. He just didnt show up, his father, Stephen, told me.
When he came home, Bargatze told his parents that he wanted to pursue comedy. (They took the news well; his father made a living as a clown and a magician, a source of material for his sons future act.) At his first open-mic event, Bargatze squirmed watching his parents sit through hours of expletive-laden acts before he went on. I knew then and there I was going to be clean, Bargatze told me. I just couldnt imagine my parents coming to watch a show and Im up there being dirty.
He spent two years in Chicago without landing a single paid gig, then moved to New York, where he caught a break at the famed Boston Comedy Club. He was a barker, handing out flyers in Greenwich Village, compensated with free stage time at nights end. (He walked dogs and drove a FedEx truck during the day to pay the bills.) For years, Bargatze would take the stage after 1 a.m., when only four or five people were left in attendance. But he got to watch stars like Dave Chappelle and Louis C.K. hone their craft, and he studied up-and-comers such as Bill Burr and Patrice ONeal.
Bargatze also began drinking hard, and his act became edgier. He started swearing from the stage, and told stories about getting blackout drunk. He poked fun at overweight people, and introduced an eyebrow-raising bit about sex workers being murdered in New York City.
Bargatze told me he got very close to that edge of sabotaging his career because of alcoholism. He no longer drinks, and he hasnt cursed onstage in more than a decade. And the bit about sex workers? It became something of an inflection point. I had a girl message me on Twitter. She was a prostitute. And she was really, really hurt by it, Bargatze told me. And I just felt horrible. Like, heres this person whos really sad because of something I said. You know? I told myself I would never do that again.
Before every performance, in the dressing room backstage, Bargatze pulls out an index card and writes down his set list. The one- or two-word prompts spill down in columns from left to right, usually 30 to 40 in total. The habit reinforces his memorization while also offering a final chance to reshuffle the act.
On his last night in Las Vegasas his father warmed up the crowd with a magic actBargatze told me there would be some changes to the show. His joke about a scientific proposal to dim the sun, one hed giddily previewed just before the Reno show, was out. Instead, he was inserting new materialat the very top of the show, something his comedy hero, Jerry Seinfeld, calls a rookie mistakethat hed written hours earlier while bleeding money at a blackjack table. The gist was that Vegas dealers flipped cards too fast, so rather than trying to keep up, he would watch their facial expressions the way someone studies a flight attendants reactions on a bumpy flight: Am I going to be okay here?
The blackjack bit won roaring approval. Blackjack dealers do move too fast, and he does seem too dumb to do such speedy math. The sun-dimming joke had failed for the very reasons the blackjack joke succeeded. Bargatze was roasting the scientists floating the idea, rather than turning the joke inward, suggesting that its the kind of solution to climate change youd expect him to come up with.
What makes Bargatze so effective during these fraught times, Gaffigan told me, is his embrace of victimless comedy. But this isnt quite right. What Bargatze does is make himself the victim of his jokes, turning anecdotes into uncharitable assessments of his own intelligence.
The irony is that his comedy is really smart. His yarn about driving past a dead horse lying on the side of the road, which sent him racing down mental side streetsHow heavy is a dead horse? Would friends help move it? Which body part is easiest to lift?is so entertaining that it distracts from the jokes ultimate destination. The horse was alive, Bargatze discovered on the drive back. He just didnt know horses could lie down to sleep.
Burr, one of the most successful comics working today, told me that Bargatzes humor stems from his capacity to embody a certain type. Theres always the stereotype of the southern guy with the thick accent and theyre not smart. Its such a dumb stereotype, Burr said. But Nate knew how to make that work for him.
Burr recalled how he and Bargatze bonded years ago over their shared disdain for New Yorks cultural self-importance: Some of these badasses from Brooklyn used to make fun of the South, and Nate would take them on and destroy them. It was just amazing to watch.
That might sound out of character for the understated comedian. But if theres one subject that gets Bargatze worked up, its coastal condescension. In the time I spent with him, he kept flashing irritation with how places like his hometown are portrayed in popular culture. I do hate the way people in New York and L.A. talk about the Southwere all a bunch of rednecks running around screaming the Nword, he said.
It was a hint that Bargatze does have strong opinions about divisive subjectsopinions that would undermine his unifying image and, very possibly, damage his commercial appeal if he expressed them onstage. Reading my mind, he added: Im trying to ride the line here. Because I want to be able to sell out a theater in San Francisco one week and Mobile, Alabama, the next week. You know?
After his show, as we looked out across the shimmering Las Vegas skyline, I asked Bargatze whether he worried that his onstage persona as an aw-shucks southerner might contribute to a caricature of the people and places he loves. He seemed puzzled by the question. Look, I am dumb, he said. Thats not the South being dumb; thats just me.
Maybe he is dumb. Or maybe, I suggested, hes smart enough to see how coming across as simpleminded could work to his advantage.
Bargatze allowed a knowing smirk. I just want to be funny, he said. That ought to be enough.
This article appears in the October 2021 print edition with the headline The Xanax of Stand-Up.
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