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Ghostwire: Tokyo is more Watch Dogs 2 than The Evil Within, but that’s OK with me – PC Gamer

Posted: February 5, 2022 at 5:52 am

Ghostwire: Tokyo's hands-off preview pleasantly surprised me. Horror often isn't my thing. A game with ghosts at the forefront isn't, on the whole, an experience I would chaselet alone one with strange slenderman-like monsters and headless spirit school children. However, watching 30 minutes of gameplay changed my mind dramatically. Ghostwire is more like a Japanese ghost hunting Watch Dogs 2 rather than a city wide PT, and that's a-okay with me.

Though developer Tango Gameworks made the delightfully horrifying The Evil Within series, Ghostwire isn't trying to terrify you in the same way. This early look set my mind at ease about how scary the game was going to be. I'm not sure that's entirely a good thing for those searching for a deeply disturbing horror experience but for me, a neon-drenched ghostly action game is far more appealing.

You play Akito, a man on a mission to save Tokyo, and by extension, your family. Everyone in the city has been transformed into spirits who are slowly being lost to the void. The game nonchalantly mentions this is about 200,000 souls to save at leastno biggie. Luckily you don't have to save Tokyo on your own, because you've got ghost hunter KK living in your head. He's your guide and companion through this mess, and helps equip you for this hellish adventure.

You have a litany of tools at your disposal for dealing with these spectral forces. Your main weapon is cool dancey hand magic. Doctor Strange eat your heart out. The game calls it Ethereal Weaving and these moves can be blasted at your foes, damaging them until a core is revealed. The same Weaving technique can whip onto the core and tear it out of its monster, essentially exorcising the demon or 'visitor'. Fail to take your opportunity for an exorcism and they'll recover, so be quick..

Ethereal Weaving can also be used as a traversal tool. Though you will be spending a lot of time on the ground, the rooftops are also an essential part of Ghostwire: Tokyo's story. Hooking onto bird-like spirits called Tengu will catapult you upwards and get you to all-new vantage points.

Additionally, you take KK's spirit bow. Yeah, the game gives you a bow and you shoot phantom arrows. I'm a massive archery nerd so this was kind of hilarious to me as a concept but it's good the game gives you a solid long-range option to work with.

With these tools you sneak and scuffle your way through Tokyo, seeking out Torii gates to cleanse, revealing more of the map and loosening the hold of the bad guy, Hannya. His motivation seems to be that spirits are better off in the ether and that's where Akito and KK disagree.

The most interesting section of the preview was a timed event wherein Akito became trapped in a building-sized spirit box. The block of flats became surrounded by a wall which threatened to close and demolish the structure with you inside it. To prevent your death Akito has but a few minutes to find and destroy several orbs casting the spell. As this happens the indoor environment of this building became a geometric nightmare. Doctor Strange comes to mind once again as you're spiriting across the ceiling of a stranger's home and scrambling through landscape doorways. The effect is really nifty and you become apprehensive as you wonder what beasts could be lurking in this puzzling purgatory with you.

In between these larger elements came tidbits of world-building. When you save the souls of Tokyo residents, you have to upload them into a safebox via telephones dotted around the city. Also, because all the shopkeepers have been ghosted, stores are now operated by spirit cats who will call you a "humeown". Excellent.

For me the environment, enemies, and action all look excellent in Ghostwire: Tokyo. I have my reservations admittedly, like the constant uploading of souls and the now all-too-common map unlocking mechanic popularised by Assassin's Creed. I'm also curious as to how any of the city will feel or look different as you explore. Hopefully we'll have a wide variety of districts and enemies to fight.

Overall, I'm feeling very positive about the upcoming release of Ghostwire: Tokyo. We've just seen that the release date for the game is set for March 25, 2022 and I'm excited to see more.

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Ghostwire: Tokyo is more Watch Dogs 2 than The Evil Within, but that's OK with me - PC Gamer

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Emily Atack unveils new outlook on life as she moves on from Jack Grealish scandal – The Mirror

Posted: at 5:52 am

The TV actress was embroiled in a love scandal for the latter half of 2021 as she was linked to footballer Jack Grealish who has been in a decade-long romance with his childhood sweetheart

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Emily Atack says she 'always has to move house'

Emily Atack has flashed her toned tummy as she waxed lyrical about the benefits of exercise and dining with friends as she looks ahead to a busy few months.

The 32-year-old star ended the last year under something of a storm cloud as rumours of a romantic liaison with professional footballer Jack Grealish, 26, seemed to follow her everywhere she went.

But now she seems to be putting the drama surrounding herself and Jack who has been in a 10 year relationship with 25-year-old childhood sweetheart Sasha Attwood behind her.

Taking to Instagram on Tuesday, Emily shared a collection of photographs of herself alongside various family members, friends, and her pet dog as she teased a string of upcoming secret projects.

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Selecting a photo of herself in a fitness top and matching print exercise leggings, Emily gave an insight into her current state of mind.

Uploading the snaps to her main feed, the TV star wrote: Its amazing what a bit of exercise, slightly earlier nights, and cooking in your kitchen for your mates can do for your scrambled mind.

Ive got amazing announcements to make this week, and Ive had two weeks of freedom to get myself together, move into my new home, and surround myself with the people and the things that make me happy, all ready to take on the fresh madness thats about to begin.

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She added: Learning to look after myself better. For now anyway and added a crazy face emoji.

Photos showed Emily reviewing fresh fruit at a local market, her brother George tending to her window-box flowers, plates of food, and her sun-soaked kitchen.

Further photos showed her posing in businesswear for a mirror selfie, laughing and drinking with a male friend, posing with her father, Keith, for a selfie, posing with a gaggle of girls including her sister, Martha and a snap of herself gazing lovingly at her dog, Penny.

Emily has a trio of upcoming acting roles in post-production with a part in a sci-fi drama called Dark Cloud, a comedy called Lifecoach, and a romantic thriller called Felo De Se all coming up.

Last month, Emily got candid during an Instagram Q&A with fans hinting at some of the strain she was under in 2021 when reports raged that she had enjoyed a fling with footballer Jack.

Asked if she was happy, Emily replied: "Not always! I definitely have my struggles. But I try to fill my life with as much love as possible.

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"I definitely know how to have fun and I know how to help myself feel better. I dont always do the right thing, but Im surrounded with incredible support when I sometimes lose my way."

And taking to her Instagram Stories at another time, the Celebrity Juice star shared a poem from Yung Pueblo which may have alluded to her rumoured romantic woes from last year.

The poem read: "I was never addicted to one thing, I was addicted to filling a void within myself with things other than my own love."

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Safa Sahin’s Otherworldly Maximalism Is a Footwear Revolution – Highsnobiety

Posted: at 5:51 am

In an industry addicted to retro, Highsnobiety presents The New Vanguard of Footwear, a dedicated hub that celebrates the pioneers from around the globe who are changing the face of what today represents a multi-billion dollar industry.

Trying to sum up Safa Sahins design methodology is no easy task. In fact, when I ask the man himself to describe his approach in a few words, he has a think before laughing, saying that it should be someone else's job. Fair enough. How about absurd, otherworldly maximalism?

Having cut his teeth at smaller gigs across Turkey, Sahin eventually found his way to Nike where he honed his craft, working on some of Bevertons biggest and most advanced footwear projects. It was during this time he also began to make waves online, getting in on Instagram while it was still bubbling. Operating to an almost Stakhanovite work plan of uploading one new render every day, it wasnt before long he had amassed well over 50,000 followers on the platform. Naturally, professional suitors soon followed.

Adept at drawing up a pair of fashion week heels as he is a pair of bonkers kicks, Sahin eventually made the leap from sportswear into the luxury space. These days, he is a trusted lieutenant of Balmains Olivier Rousteing, bringing to life some of the craziest and forward-thinking footwear on the planet.

Keen to find out more, I interrupted Paris Fashion Week for a chat with the man himself.

Was there a particular sneaker that inspired your design journey as a kid?

I'm from Turkey. I grew up in a small city called Yozgat. I came to Istanbul to study footwear design at university, which was a big decision. Before that, I was a graffiti artist. I was a shoe shiner when I was 11-years-old, which looking back, is when my career technically started. Id take worn-out shoes and clean them up; painting and replacing parts. The type didn't matter. When it came to sneakers, I was always obsessed with Converse. Even when I was studying at university, it was my dream to work for the brand. I couldn't find an authentic pair because I was living in a really small town. My first sneaker was a pair of fake Converse.

So eventually you graduate from university. Where do you go from there?

I did an internship at a very small company for four months. After that period, they didn't like my designs. They came to me and said, If you don't change your designs, we're going to fire you. A week later they did!

The second job I did wasnt as a designer. It was more working with glue and putting lining and leather together. During this period I realized that I don't have good knowledge about art, so I decided to study fine art. As a graffiti artist, I already knew I had the talent. I went back to university to study for five more years. Id dabble in the shoe industry whenever I had some spare time.

I didn't get any money from my family. I earned my money to make my school payments and apartment. Sneakers were not popular in this period. Plastic shoes, high heels, and casual shoes were, but not sneakers. When Y-3 started launching sneakers, that blew my mind. Particularly models like the Qasa.

What did studying fine art teach you that graffiti didnt?

My mind totally changed. We were taught to be free. Nobody can judge you. If you draw this curve or if you draw differently to others, this is your style. This touched me and changed my mind.

It informs me to this day in that I am always trying to bring something new and not follow others. I still respect tradition I'm really curious about the techniques. But I am focusing on bringing something new.

How did your move to Nike come about?

I started to learn more about digital renders. Instagram also started around this time, and I posted every day. I targeted doing one per day for six months, no matter what. This idea came from Steve Jobs. He said to put one dot every day. One day you will realize that the dot is actually huge. After six months, I got an offer from Nike. They said, We were following you for a long time.

How did things develop from there?

They invited me to Portland. It was a big problem for me, because I couldn't speak English. They sorted a translator and told me to focus on design. Work was done about 5 PM and she would then come to teach me English for two hours every day. Every six months they collected all the designs. Some of them would go to market, some of them inspired other designers.

After Nike, what was the next step?

When I worked at Nike I was still posting stuff like high heels. I didnt have many friends there because of the language barrier, so I was focused on my work. I started getting offers from big houses and big brands, including adidas. YEEZY contacted me three times. Louis Vuitton, Versace, Giorgio Armani, Marc Jacobs, Jimmy Choo There were so many brands.

So why did you end up at Balmain?

They contacted me before, but they didnt want a freelancer at the time. I was in Vietnam for production and looking at factories when my friend from PUMA called. He said, I'm creating now the team for Balmain. Would you like to join me as had of sneaker design? He was one of the big reasons.

What are the immediate differences between working for a sports giant like Nike versus a luxury brand like Balmain?

The freedom. For example, when I came to interview for Balmain with Olivier Rousteing, I had another meeting with Louis Vuitton for the adult sneakers design position. I said to Olivier, Hey, Olivier, I have another interview tomorrow with Louis Vuitton. And he said, You can go. You have a talent. Probably it would be nice, but you will not be free there. It is exactly the same with Nike. Before starting the design project, you have to abide by certain rules stuff like the text and thickness of the sole.

Olivier was different. He told me, If you select us, I will keep you totally free. And you can do exactly what you show on your portfolio. He keeps me free and has been true to his word. I have more freedom here to make crazy sneakers.

Do you care about making something that falls in line with the Balmain DNA or do you have a free canvas to create?

Its a bit of both. Right now Im focusing on the cushioning system, like the Bbold. It still has the Balmain gold, but its totally new. Weve since rolled the system out to other models high and low. Evolution is the best word to describe this.

How do you predict sneaker design will progress in the future?

I think the silhouette will fundamentally change and they will bring in more technical things. Comfort and materials everything will be combined. It's not separate from each other. This is true of most industries, from fashion to cars.

Finally, how would you describe your aesthetic?

Experimental. Futuristic. Trying think outside of the box. I don't know, actually. There are so many words. I also like tradition. Maybe a critic should come up with it for me!

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New ITR filing: How much do you have to pay for filing updated income tax return – Mint

Posted: at 5:51 am

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has not announced any change in the income tax slab rates while presenting Union Budget 2022. However, the Finance Minister has given some respite to people filing their revised Income Tax Return (ITR). FM has announced that the revised tax filing window will remain open for two years from the year of assessment in case of less filing of tax.

"To provide an opportunity to correct such errors, I am proposing a new provision permitting taxpayers to file an updated return on payment of additional tax. This updated return can be filed within two years from the end of the relevant assessment year," Sitharaman said in her Budget speech.

How much do you have to pay for filing an updated income tax return (ITR)?

"It is proposed that an amount equal to 25 per cent or 50 per cent as additional tax on the tax and interest due on the additional income furnished would be required to be paid," said the Budget memorandum.

When reporting such additional income, the taxpayer would be required to pay additional tax. This offer does not come cheap. Those who wish to come clean have to pay an extra amount expressed in percentage terms of tax and interest payable at the time of furnishing the ITR if the updated ITR is furnished within 12 months (25%) or after 12 months but within 24 months (50%),"said tax expert Balwant Jain.

He added that the introduction of Annual Information Return (AIS) has instilled a sense of fear in the mind of taxpayers who have been evading paying full tax. Since the government does not have the requisite bandwidth to track and chase the taxpayers who have not fully declared their income or have not filed their ITR where the tax impact is not very significant, it has come out with a novel idea to offer the taxpayer the chance to come clean on their own but with certain additional cost by uploading an updated ITR by paying the tax within two years from the end of the assessment year before the income tax departments find it out," he said.

While all taxpayers have the avenue of revising their tax returns in a limited window of five months from the due date of filing of tax returns, now the updated return can be filed within a period of two years from the end of the relevant assessment year. The updated return cannot be filed to report additional loss or decrease in the tax liability. The tax is required to be paid before the filing of the updated tax return and the proof to that extent is required to be attached while filing the updated return.

As per the Budget memorandum, a new provision in section 139 of the I-T Act is being introduced for filing an updated return of income by any person, whether he has filed a return previously for the relevant assessment year, or not.

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Talking about the value of death – Daily Maverick

Posted: at 5:51 am

The Report of the Lancet Commission on the Value of Death, due for imminent release, is part of a series of publications featuring the collaborative work of a broad and diverse range of academic partners, writers, activists, and others, who investigate the worlds most urgent scientific, medical and global health concerns. Their aim is to assess a prevailing issue and provide recommendations that could change health policy or improve practice.

This particular report, subtitled Rebalancing and Revaluing Death and Dying: Bringing Death Back Into Life, is a timely, cogent and illuminating foray into an aspect of life that few seem to consider, despite it being the one thing that we have in common we, and everyone we know, will all die someday.

The Report on the Value of Death is arresting for several reasons, which benefit from a nuanced understanding of what professor emeritus at Arizona State University and author Robert Kastenbaum has termed death systems. These are the means by which death and dying are understood, regulated and managed, which Kastenbaum first described as interpersonal, socio-physical and symbolic networks through which an individuals relationship to mortality is mediated by society.

These systems are complex, multidimensional and mutable, not easily changed, and shaped by spectrum of cultural, religious, spiritual, political and legislative practices, which implicitly or explicitly determine where people die, how dying people and their families should behave, how bodies are disposed of, how people mourn, and what death means for that culture or community. (The report limits itself to death and dying, and does not examine what happens to the dead.)

Society and the medical world have considered black lives cheap.

Death systems, the authors point out, are not benign. An afterword by Mpho Tutu van Furth, a South African Anglican priest, author and activist who has lived in the US, provides a corrective to the predominantly white, wealthy and Western perspective that embeds itself in much of the reports narrative, which the commission is self-consciously aware of.

Writing from her own perspective and not on behalf of two-thirds of the worlds population who do not enjoy access to healthcare, she attests to her own experience as a black South African woman and mother to two African American children, picking apart the cultural anomalies she witnessed growing up and going some distance further.

I saw the white flight from ageing and death, she writes. Black people had no illusion we could escape death. Black South Africans did not desire immortality. In death we would be gathered with our ancestors. Going home to our forebears was considered the reward for a life well lived.

This, however, takes place in the context of malevolent racism, both in South Africa and the US. Society and the medical world, she writes, have considered black lives cheap. She squarely accuses racism as a determinant of deaths value, saying that to ascribe the correct value to death we must assign the right price to every life, and provides the example of how Covid has disproportionately affected and afflicted black people everywhere.

Initiated before the current pandemic, the report nevertheless situates itself here, yet looks to the future.

Interestingly, it presents evidence that our collective experience of death during Covid has further fuelled the fear of death, instead of the opposite. Daily death tallies and statistics have not normalised death or brought it closer, but spurred further abstraction. Supporting this claim, the report draws attention to the extreme medicalised death (for some) that Covid has provided: death that has occurred in the forbidden province of a sealed hospital, staffed by masked and muffled and often stressed personnel, with limited communication between family members. Weve had more death, but moved it even further away.

The authors note: The increased number of deaths in hospital means that ever fewer people have witnessed or managed a death at home. This lack of experience and confidence causes a positive feedback loop which reinforces a dependence on institutional care of the dying.

Medical culture, fear of litigation, and financial incentives contribute to overtreatment at the end of life, further fuelling institutional deaths and the sense that professionals must manage death. Social customs influence the conversations in clinics and in intensive care units, often maintaining the tradition of not discussing death openly. More undiscussed deaths in institutions behind closed doors further reduce social familiarity with and understanding of death and dying.

Death is essential Without it, every birth would be a tragedy and civilisation would be unsustainable.

This experience, reinforcing the pervasive idea of healthcare services as the legitimate and proper custodian of death, is a trend initiated generations ago for a bevy of reasons. The authors relay that over the past 70 years, the shifting role of family, community, professionals, institutions, the state, and religion has meant that healthcare is now the main context in which many encounter death.

A natural death, in this paradigm, is simply considered as the cessation of medical support, and, according to the social critic Ivan Illich, dying has become the ultimate form of consumer resistance. (Similarly, the co-founder of the Death Caf movement, the late Jon Underwood, found a strong parallel between death denial and consumer capitalism. We buy stuff to perpetuate the idea of immortality through ownership, to feel alive, imagining that possessions confer meaning to life. Yet even if they last, we dont.)

The responsibility of healthcare, commonly understood as the prolonging of life and avoidance of death, therefore regards death itself as a failure. At the heart of the report is an urgent and radical proposal that we unpick and redetermine what medicine should do, and revalue death, recognising that it is not only normal and natural, but valuable, and has much to teach and bestow on us. After all, we were designed to die. We are a part of nature, as the pandemic has reminded us. Death is essential, the authors write. Without it, every birth would be a tragedy and civilisation would be unsustainable.

In rediscovering the intrinsic value of death, lost in the attrition of community skills and experience in care for our dying, and the concurrent emergence of life-saving medical technologies and the outsourcing of death, we are now urged to bring death closer, to talk about it and recognise that it provides an opportunity to build and maintain the relationships that sustain life itself.

In losing death, we lose life.

That death has become rarefied, obscured, mystified and hidden is a core problem, entrenching an imbalance that the recommendations of the report attempt to address in practical terms. The commission (which is how the authors refer to themselves, continually incorporating new members and ideas and inviting participation at every turn) is essentially concerned with the different ways we die, and proposes that death, dying and grief provide an acute lens not just into different death systems but into structural inequality and power dynamics which need urgent attention and change.

For example, women are disproportionately affected by death, and are typically seen as caregivers for the afflicted and dying, spending at least 2.5 times more time than men in unpaid care and domestic work. (In my own group of death doulas and end-of-life carers, for example, I am the only person who identifies as a man in a group of 40 women.)

In addition, widows are routinely stigmatised, in both rich and poor contexts, and commonly denied access to property or assets after the death of a spouse, whose existence often defines their own, and sometimes forced into degrading post-marriage rituals (treated as common family property) or shunned from employment or society. In middle- and high-income environments too, widowhood presents difficult social barriers and loss of status, income and life chances.

We are continually reminded in many examples in this report that the impact of race, class, gender, sexuality, socioeconomic status, or other forms of discrimination on mortality rates, access to care, or the incidence of diseases or conditions, is well established. Indeed, inequality is emphatically expressed in the perverse finding that those who receive the most care often dont need it, while those who need it the most dont get it. Poor people usually experience poor death. The relatively well-off may attempt some form of inoculation via medical care, but this too tends to have an often poor result. Death could clearly be better for everyone. The authors contend that most conditions for a good death could be offered to most dying people, without costly medical infrastructure or specialised knowledge.

At the heart of this paradoxical imbalance, the report locates the prevalence of overtreatment at the end of life as a particularly pernicious and often damaging practice and one which consumes a massive proportion of healthcare budgets the world over.

A startling finding is that in the last month of a persons life, whether in a resource-rich or poor context, a stupendous spike in costs usually occurs, frequently bankrupting surviving family despite having no positive benefit to the dying, and often increasing suffering.

But perhaps this is old news for people whove found themselves in this situation, unable to delimit potentially life-extending treatment, which doesnt necessarily improve the quality of life at all, for fear of being held accountable for death, or hastening it, and going against the grain of the medical impetus to prolong. In my own experience, I recall the glee conveyed by a daughter and her terminally ill mother who had together decided to abandon the crippling costs of another round of pointless chemotherapy and go on a final road trip together instead.

Medicines remit to extend life isnt appropriate where there is no realistic prospect of influencing lifes quality. While the palliative care movement is fortunately making strong if uneven advances for limiting pain at the end of life, and building models of holistic, integrated and team-based care that includes families to provide support that focuses on improving lifes quality in balance with deaths inevitability, far too many people die of common conditions that could be treated, and with no pain relief.

The World Health Organization reports that only 14% of people needing palliative care receive it. (This is the focus of a separate Lancet Commission report but is frequently referred to here.)

The report, drawing from a deep well of research (all of which is available on the commissions website) presents fascinating evidence of the frequency of hope and bias as causes of overtreatment, further entrenching the medicalisation of death. Hope, they posit, can encourage confirmation bias, where the subconscious selection of information usually accords with a desired outcome to stay alive. This racket is often run in collusion with afflicted individuals, their worried families and healthcare professionals alike. Bias similarly expresses itself in treatments recommended with little chance of success, even at any cost.

For example, in a study of 1,193 patients with late-stage cancer, 60% and 80% respectively of those with lung cancer and colorectal cancer receiving palliative chemotherapy expected the treatment to cure their illness despite the treatment not intended to be curative. Doctors, meanwhile, routinely show bias in their assessment of the likelihood of curative treatment. Better conversations need to happen, that recognise and are free of fear.

Perhaps this is unsurprising in a system where relationships and networks are replaced with professionals and protocols. In Cape Town, I recently listened to an esteemed city official describe ways to optimise death chain management during the pandemic. Psycho-spiritual support and home-based community care were off the radar.

Of several discrete yet overlapping sections in the report, the chapter on advanced life directives is particularly convincing as evidence that a positive shift in our death systems can be achieved through a reorganisation of relationships, without much expense.

Considering the level of end-of-life you deem appropriate (such as no insertion of artificial feeding tubes) can form part of a healthy communication between family members, and provide a binding template for your instructions when you may no longer be able to convey them, especially to medical staff. This, the authors suggest, should not be regarded as a difficult conversation, but recast as an essential one. (Readers might find some assistance here)

It seems like we have lost the ability to talk about death, as though talking about it is morbid, even fatal We can perhaps embrace the idea that talking about death is good for life.

The report suggests that this conversation is seen as a process rather than an event, and draws from Atul Gawandes seminal book, Being Mortal, to help frame this. In the context of illness, he asks: What is your understanding of where you are and of your illness? What are your fears or worries for the future? What are your goals and priorities? What outcomes are acceptable to you? What are you willing to sacrifice and not? And later, what would a good day look like?

The consequences of not having these conversations are severe. Having them, on the other hand, can limit suffering and provide pathways to healthy grief and loss that is less complicated than it might be. It seems like we have lost the ability to talk about death, as though talking about it is morbid, even fatal.

The death doula movement, the palliative care movement and other cultural projects promoting awareness of death, such as Death Cafs and the death positive movement, are changing this. These have, argues the sociologist Lyn Lofland, even heralded the age of thanatological chic. Perhaps this is necessary. For a rebalancing and revaluing of death, the report suggests, entails the active promotion of death literacy, which is something we can all learn. Evidence suggests, the report says, that talking collectively about these issues can lead to an improvement in peoples attitudes and capabilities for dealing with death. We can perhaps embrace the idea that talking about death is good for life.

This requires more change. The report mentions that until relatively recently, just two generations ago, most children would have witnessed a dead body. Now however, it is deemed some kind of aberration to have seen a corpse, as something remarkable and untoward, even unnatural. Many people in mid-life have never laid their eyes on the lifeless remains of a former co-traveller. We have become alienated from death, treating it as something to be avoided. Indeed, a plethora of scientific, technological, social and even religious endeavours reveal, in their quest for immortality, a possible anxiety that life is somehow insufficient and lacking. This impulse to escape mortal confines raises some profound philosophical, ethical and practical questions, not least of which is a question about access and further inequality. (Mpho Tutu van Furths earlier testimony regarding the welcoming return home in death for black Africans is a useful counterpoint, once again.)

Several of these initiatives are briefly described in the report, encompassing a quest to preserve life through anti-ageing techniques and a confabulation of associated technologies, the lasting idea of a magical elixir, uploading a digital mind and memories to the cloud, cryogenics, cloning, the egoistic impulse to create legacy, even the belief in an immortal soul forms part of this complex which, bluntly, is an aversion to physiological death and pulling away from the thing that is most essential to life our death. The Scottish-born former director of the Institute for the Future, Ian Morrison, is quoted here, joking that Scots see death as imminent. Canadians see death as inevitable. And Californians see death as optional.

Assisted dying, which is legal in Canada, receives broad examination in the report. As it seems likely to become more widespread, according to the authors, and is the subject of increasing debate worldwide, including South Africa, the report provides a refreshing summary of questions about assisted dying that demand further inquiry. These are proposed without the delimiting taint of an imposed morality, which often confounds consideration of this very germane topic.

A similarly dispassionate yet inspired gaze is deployed into consideration of five possible future scenarios for death and dying, as well as an extensive description of the remarkable paradigm shift in Kerala, India (population 35 million) where dying from a life-limiting disease is a social problem with medical aspects rather than the commonly held converse view.

The report concludes with a list of recommendations organised into various categories and the enumeration of the qualities required for what the authors describe as a realistic utopia, a desired model inspired by the Keralan example, and a way that each of us can work to change the death systems we inhabit.

Briefly, these qualities are: that the social determinants of death, dying, and grieving are tackled; that dying is understood to be a relational and spiritual process rather than simply a physiological event; that networks of care lead support for people dying, caring, and grieving; that conversations and stories about everyday death, dying, and grief become common; and perhaps most importantly, that death is recognised as having value.

Incredibly, even though death and dying are part of life an everyday part of life affecting us all, as we are continually exposed to the death of others and live with the certainty of our own mortality, indeed, are embroiled in the twin process of living and dying in every moment as we move from birth death is not only absent from many medical conversations, but social ones too.

This report encourages the fact that we clearly have much to talk about. Death is part of life, not something that happens at the end of it. Breaking the taboo about speaking about death feels transgressive and can be revelatory.

Revaluing death, as this remarkable report suggests, has the profound ability to make lives better. The philosopher Martin Heidegger, who examined our relationship with death and who is quoted in the report, reminds us that although we may apprehend the death of others, no one else can die my death for me. Acknowledgment and contemplation of this ineluctable fact free us to authentically become who we are and, hopefully, encourage us to take up the shared responsibility of affording the same value to the death, and life, of everyone who draws breath. DM/ML/MC

Sean OConnor is a death doula and hosts the How To Die podcast, at http://www.howtodie.co.za, currently in pre-production for a second season.

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How Much Data Is in the World (And How Do You Secure It)? – Security Boulevard

Posted: at 5:51 am

We always talk about the importance of protecting data but just how much data is there in the world? And what can you do to keep your sensitive data away from prying eyes? Lets explore the answers to both of these questions

Data is the lifeblood of your organization. Its what allows you to make informed business decisions, improve the quality of your products, provide better services to your customers, and make your organization more secure. Your most sensitive data customer information, intellectual property, and trade secrets is invaluable, and cybercriminals know it. This is why getting access to your data is often the primary objective for threat actors targeting your business.

But how much data does your business have? Moreover, how much data is in the world as a whole? And how secure is all of this wealth of information? And what steps can you take to make your organizations data more secure?

Thats a lot of big questions with a lot of variables. But as we always love to say around here

Lets hash it out.

If youre wondering how much digital data is in the world well, the answer depends on the source you look at and what factors they include in their calculations. PwC estimated that the digital universe was anticipated to reach 44 zettabytes of data by 2020. Of course, this data was originally reported back in 2018, and their report was based on an IDC data projection that dated back to 2012!

Considering were now in 2022 and the daily data creation growth rate, that number is basically old news. However, it provides some idea of context when it comes to the massive amount of data that exists within our digital universe. Now, lets consider some more recent data.

In March 2021, IDC reported that more than 64 zettabytes of data were created or replicated in 2020 alone. Their latest DataSphere forecasts a 23% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) in data creation and replication between 2000-2025.

Okay, throwing these numbers around is all fine and well but what does all of this really mean in terms of how much data is in the world? If youre not a mathematician, its likely that a zettabyte means nothing to you. (Its basically gibberish to me as well!) So, before we go any further in talking about data statistics, lets quickly explore what a zettabyte actually means by giving this term a little context.

The World Economic Forum (WEF) provides a valuable table to put a zettabyte and other incomprehensible numbers into context.

For those of my fellow readers who arent particularly math- or numbers-inclined, lets simplify it a bit more: every time you move up to the next data size level, you tack on three more 0s. So, a kilobyte (1,000 bytes) becomes a megabyte (1,000,000 bytes), and a megabyte becomes a gigabyte (1,000,000,000 bytes). With this in mind, that means that 64 zettabytes (i.e., 64,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes) of data were either created or replicated in 2020 alone.

Okay, all of this is great to know but what does it all really mean? Lets put it into some context.

Netflix says that it takes about 3 GB of data to watch one hour of high-definition streaming video on your device. With this in mind, it means that Netflix requires about 72 GB of data to stream high-definition video content per day. So, thats 26,280 gigabytes of data per year. Putting it another way, thats:

This means that it takes 26.28 terabytes of data to stream HD Netflix shows or movies 24/7 on your device and were still nowhere near even one zettabyte.

Say, you were to record 1 ZB of data to CDs and store each of those discs in a standard case to protect it. If Ive done my math correctly (fingers crossed), this means it would take 1,428,571,428,571 CDs, stacked in their cases, to hold 1 zettabyte of information. Now, consider that it takes approximately 30 CD cases, when laying flat, to equal one foot in height. This means your massive stack of encased discs would stand approximately 47,619,047,619 feet tall (9,018,759 miles)!

Feeling lost? Lets make this a little easier by using a well-known New York City landmark for reference. The Empire State Building, the sixth tallest building in the United States, stands 1,454 feet tall (including the spire and antenna). This means the building stands the equal height of 43,620 stacked CD cases. This means that 1 zettabyte of data saved on stacked discs would be as tall as 32,750,377 Empire State Buildings standing on top of one another!

As another example, consider that the sun is roughly 93 million miles from Earth. (or, 92,900,000 miles if youd like to be more specific). If you were to put 93 million miles in terms of stacking CDs inside their cases, that means this life-giving red giant is approximately 16,368,000,000 stacked discs away from our planet.

Now, consider that weve been calculating these numbers based on 1 ZB of data. If you calculate this for 64 ZB of data, its the equivalent of 577,200,576 miles of stacked disc cases. So, if youre stacking CD cases with discs full of data, that stack would span the distance from Earth to the sun more than six times!

Categories of data expand far beyond any list wed have time to put together. Basically, if you have data, it needs to be secure and have backups available for when something goes wrong. But what are some examples of the types of data that organizations need to keep secure? Lets take a quick gander:

Thats a lot of data. Now that we know what kinds of data you need to protect, its time to see how companies store this wealth of information.

Data storage methods range from one organization to the next. Your organizations data storage needs will likely be different from those of other organizations in part because of the types of data you need to store. Here are a few of the ways you can store data:

Some companies store all of their data onsite while others store everything in the cloud. There are some organizations that adopt hybrid cloud approaches storing some data in the cloud and other data on prem that fall somewhere in the middle and offers the best of both worlds. And, finally, there are larger enterprises that are adopting multi-cloud strategies, which means that they use two or more cloud vendors.

So, what methods do enterprises and other organizations use to store their data and support their workloads? Lets explore the following survey-based predictions data from the Spiceworks report The 2022 State of IT:

You can see the shift in how organizations are breaking up their IT budgets:

Entrusts 2021 Global Encryption Trends Study data shows that three in five (60%) of organizations transfer sensitive or confidential data to the cloud whether or not it is encrypted. Basically, this means theyre uploading plaintext data to servers that unauthorized individuals could potentially access without having some other data security mechanism such as tokenization or data masking in place to make that data unusable. Not a good idea, and certainly not an industry best practice!

Regardless of which approach your organization takes, the big takeaway here is that you need to store this data as securely as possible. This can be done in several ways, depending on the platform or data storage method in question. And no matter which method you choose, just make sure that you have multiple current backups of your data!

Asking why you need to secure your data is like asking why you breathe: its a necessity for life in this case, the life of your organization. Taking steps to encrypt your data is necessary for operating a business or organization. After all, if you dont protect your customers and organizations most sensitive assets, you likely wont remain in business very long. Or, at the very least, youll suffer major financial setbacks and reputational harm.

Cyber security and data security best practices exist for a reason use them to your advantage and keep your valuable data safe and secure. Of course, there are plenty of reasons why you need (and should want) to keep your data secure. Here are a few quick ones:

Data from Sonicwall shows that ransomware increased substantially in Q3 2021. Many modern ransomware attacks are double-edged swords: attackers not only prevent you from accessing your data, but they also may choose to steal your data so they can use it, publish it online or sell it to other bad guys. And they frequently do this regardless of whether you agree to pay the demanded ransom.

By and large, bad guys want easy targets; theyre looking for the low-hanging fruit that offers a potentially big payday for the least amount of effort. Why work harder when they can work smarter, right? While it may be a challenge to be the most secure company in your industry, you should at least be more secure than your competitors.

Spoiler alert: customers want to do business with companies and organizations that they have confidence in. Your customers are going to have a hard time trusting you if you cant be bothered to protect their sensitive data and information.

2021 research from Okta and YouGov shows that 47% of customers will completely cut ties with companies that experience data breaches or reportedly misuse data. Furthermore, their survey respondents also indicate the following:

Needless to say, having ineffective security measures can result in losses of customer relationships, sales, profits, and future business opportunities.

Ever heard of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)? How about the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standards (PCI DSS)? HIPAA? CCPA? The list of regulations goes on and on. These are all powerful data security regulations that require the secure storage and transmission of data. If youre not compliant with them, youll quickly find yourself in the hot seat and facing substantial fines. Amazon learned that the hard way when they got hit with a $887 million fine for GDPR violations.

Still struggling with coming to terms with having to invest the time, money, and other resources to securing data? Ask yourself the following rhetorical question: Why bother generating or collecting valuable information if youre just going to hand it over to your competitors, cybercriminals, or other unauthorized users without a fight?

When it comes to data security in the internet age, a central part of the conversation revolves around encryption and the framework of technologies, processes, and procedures that support it. Public key infrastructure, or PKI, is what makes secure data transmissions and communications possible on public networks.

We wont get into everything PKI entails in a technical sense here; thatll take way too much time and take us off the topic at hand. However, you can put public key infrastructure to work to help keep your data secure both while its at rest and in transit.

Heres a quick overview of some ways that you can make your IT infrastructure and data more secure:

Of course, theres another critical element to keeping data secure: you need to know where every bit of data is located and who (or what) has access to it. This entails performing regular audits and maintaining a current inventory of assets. You cant protect what you dont know you have.

Securing your data is both an industry best practice and a regulatory requirement. And from a customers perspective, keeping their data secure is a requirement if you want to keep their business. If they dont believe their data is secure with you, then research shows theyre likely to voice their dissatisfaction with their wallets by business with your competitors.

To stay compliant with industry regulations, protect your brands sterling reputation, and maintain customer relationships, its vital to view data security as a primary focus. Now that you have some idea of how much data there is in the world and why its so important, its easy to see why you must do everything possible to keep it secure.

*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Hashed Out by The SSL Store authored by Casey Crane. Read the original post at: https://www.thesslstore.com/blog/how-much-data-is-in-the-world-and-how-do-you-secure-it/

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The trouble with tradition | Ben Sixsmith – The Critic

Posted: February 1, 2022 at 2:49 am

In the introduction to his recent book What Happened to Tradition? Tim Stanley writes about the rebuilding of Notre Dame and horrendous ideas for its modernisation:

Sanity prevailed. The French Senate voted to rebuild Notre Dame to look exactly as it had before, a deference to history, a rare acknowledgement that, when it comes to comparing old and new architecture at least, things aint what they used to be.

Not so fast. Since Stanleys book was published, plans have emerged to remove elements of the interior of Notre Dame to make it more accessible, and to feature contemporary artwork on its walls. Its Notre Dame turned into Disneyland, protested one French critic.

What is it about trad discourse that makes me want to eat my tongue?

In a time of such irreverence towards the past it might seem ridiculous to pick on traditionalists like mocking short-sightedness in the land of the blind.

Who even are traditionalists? The term has different meanings. For traditional conservatives, like Mr Stanley, it refers to the defence of values, rituals and customs that have lasted long enough to prove their worth. For religious traditionalists it refers to doctrinal orthodoxy. For a loose network of people on social media platforms it refers to either, but also to a passionate enthusiasm for uploading photographs of slim young women in regional dresses and arguing about whether civilisation fell in 1789 or before.

To be clear, I think that many traditional values and customs are vastly preferable to their alternatives, and that people who adhere to them more closely than I do tend to have better, happier lives than mine. So, what is it about trad discourse that makes me want to eat my tongue?

In case you had not guessed, it is the Twitter crowd that sometimes makes me want to dine on my own organs. Not always! But sometimes. They have righteous opinions, and funny memes, and nice aesthetics, but they also often have that lofty moralism in the grip of which people project austere judgement without ever turning their cold-eyed gaze inwards. They often enjoy those competitive displays of ideological purity that begin with someone saying that pornography is bad and end with someone saying that showing your ears in public is a mortal sin. They often have rhapsodic notions of their future on a little farm with ten children and a wife who somehow keeps her figure, even as they live in London, work in IT and camp out in the direct messages of unattainable women. There is a pervasive sense of unreality, as if an ideological universe is being created that bears no relation to the world in which we live.

Yet having decried blinkered outward judgement, I can hardly be hypocritical. Does my disdain towards trad content reflect some measure of guilt towards my own failings? Perhaps. But it also reflects some measure of political guilt on behalf of the tradition that in a small way I represent. Would young trads seem so aimless if they had a clearer path?

In a recent tribute to the late Roger Scruton, Giles Fraser writes:

Cherishing things in the face of their passing away, their intrinsic mortality, is a kind of heroic loving resistance to the fragility of human life.

There is some truth to this, of course, but if conservatism and traditionalism can be reduced to elegiac mourning they have failed. The plausibility of this suggestion has many roots, but one of them is the insistence on defending traditional values, rituals et cetera on the basis of their being traditional.

Tradition, if it has any value, must speak to the future

How many times, for example, have conservatives (myself included) referenced Chestertons Fence the theory that if you want to destroy something you must comprehend why it exists as if such bloodless warnings would delay a gung-ho property developer? How many times have we chirped that things are difficult to build and easy to destroy as if anyone is listening? Never mind standing athwart history crying stop, as was William F. Buckley Jr.s original intention for National Review. Too often we have been skulking inside history mumbling steady on.

Westerners have in countless ways abandoned our traditional values, rituals and customs, and we cannot resurrect traditions on the grounds of their being traditional. Do not misunderstand me here. I am not saying you cannot revive a tradition. But if it can be accomplished it is on the basis of its being useful, moral, beautiful or true (or all of the above) on the basis of, as Stanley rightly comments in his book, the original truth that [it] was built to express. A habit perseveres until it is broken and people have to know why they should take it up again. That this strikes some of us as excessively rationalistic is beside the point. We cannot will ourselves out of that rationalism any more than a miniature boat can be inserted into a bottle whole.

Besides, tradition, if it has any value, must speak to the future even as it speaks of the past. Almost a hundred years ago, in The Waste Land, T.S. Eliot wrote a shockingly modern poem that carried tradition, as he advised young poets to do in Tradition and the Individual Talent, in its bones. To conform merely would be for the new work not really to conform at all, wrote Eliot in that fine essay, It would not be new, and would therefore not be a work of art. A new traditionalism, if it emerges, must be strikingly original.

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2022 Tax Filing Season: Nine Things You Need to Know – JD Supra

Posted: at 2:49 am

The 2022 tax season is upon us. With what promises to be an unusual tax filing season, below are nine updates and tips to keep in mind.

1. Tax Returns are Lagging. On January 12, the National Taxpayer Advocate issued its 2021 report to Congress. The report highlights how the IRS is substantially behind in processing returns, the breakdown of the IRS call center, delays in processing responses to IRS notices sent to taxpayers, and a myriad of other issues. The money quote? The IRS is in crisis. Read the full report here.

2. The IRS is Ramping Up Enforcement Efforts. New enforcement agents (read: auditors) that were brought on as part of the IRSs 2021 hiring spree will finish their training this month and be released to the field. It wont stop there, because on Monday, January 24, the IRS posted job openings to hire 200 more tax attorneys in 2022. A 2022 goal of reporting and recordkeeping compliance is a must for small, medium, and growing businesses.

3. Taxpayers Should File Early and Electronically. In IR-2022-08, the IRS encouraged early return filing as soon as possible and to file electronically to help minimize the effects of potential tax season problems. Doing this has set the table to place responsibility for filing acknowledgment and refund delays on the shoulders of taxpayers by giving fair warning of significant potential difficulties. In other words, if taxpayers run into a filing problem this year, the IRS can claim that We told you to file earlier!

Further, the IRS protected its flank by releasing IR-2022-18 on the first day of filing season (Monday, January 24) urg[ing] extra caution for taxpayers to file accurate tax returns electronically to speed refunds, avoid delays.

Theres an adage that you can only have two out of the fast, cheap, and accurate categories. The IRS wants fast and accurate, pushing cost onto the taxpayer. It may be a little more expensive, but using a professional is worth saving the hassle.

4. Slightly Longer Filing Deadline. The non-extended filing deadline for individuals this year is April 18. This is because the regular deadline of April 15 falls on Washington, DCs Emancipation Day, a recognized holiday for the District. Taxpayers in Maine and Massachusetts get one more day, however. They celebrate Patriots Day on April 18, so they have a one-day reprieve and must file by April 19.

5. Child Tax Credit. Individuals who have received letters from the IRS regarding the Child Tax Credit have been reporting that they are inaccurate. This is the tip of the iceberg, as the information in the form is what the IRS has in its system, even if its inaccurate. Taxpayers who report different but accurate information on their returns will receive further correspondence from the IRS to sort out the discrepancies.

6. Relief has been Requested of the IRS. A coalition that included the American Institute of CPAs (AICPA) sent a formal letter to the IRS requesting relief for taxpayers for the 2022 filing season. It requests that the IRS:

The full letter is here. The IRS has not yet responded.

7. Photo ID is Available for Taxpayer Security. The IRS is implementing ID.me, which utilizes facial recognition software for a taxpayer to log in to their account. In order to log in to their IRS account, the taxpayer will have to take a selfie and upload a photo of their drivers license or passport to verify their identity.

Give in to the machines if you like, but luddites will continue to exist for a long time, and the IRS will have to be able to service everyone. So, if youre skeptical about uploading a picture, use the call center, but be prepared for its long wait times. Even better, delegate the hassle to a professional.

8. Enforcement Resources Focus on Small Businesses and Self-Employeds. As a reminder, OPI (Office of Promoter Investigations think return preparers) was formed in 2021 and OFE (Office of Fraud Enforcement) was moved from LB&I (Large Business and International), both now housed in the SB/SE (Small Business/Self-Employed) Division. This provides insight on where enforcement efforts are focused.

9. Grievances Were Communicated to the IRS. Finally, the National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins hosted a conference on January 20. Ms. Collins reviewed the report to Congress mentioned above, highlighting the most serious problems and data behind the expected 2022 filing problems. The most serious problems currently are:

To illustrate just how behind the IRS is, the Taxpayer Advocate recently published the below figures, outlining the work the organization had ahead of it as of late last year.

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Unlimited WhatsApp backups on Google Drive could soon end, shows report – The Indian Express

Posted: at 2:49 am

WhatsApp is one of the most popular apps for users in India, and many rely on Google Drive to backup their chats from the messaging service. However, not many of us know that WhatsApp backups to Google Drive do count against the storage space on your Google account. But all of this could soon change.

The latest report comes from WABetaInfo, which states that WhatsApp chats will also count against Google Drive storage in the future for Android users. If users are running short of space, they might be prompted to opt for a paid Google One plan. Keep in mind that on iOS, WhatsApp chats are backed up to iCloud. Apple only give 5GB free storage space on iCloud.

Google implemented a similar change for Photos in 2021, where these photos and videos uploading via Google Photos count against the free storage as well. Typically, Google offers 15GB of free storage to users to be used across Gmail, Photos, Google Drive, etc.

According to the report, the feature is still under development. The new feature would allow users to manage their WhatsApp chats when backing up on Google Drive and let the user could exclude certain message types in order to save space on Google Drive.

The report has also shared string code that showcases what the feature will look like when it rolls out. A notification saying Google Drive backup is changing will likely appear in the future. Users will get notifications when their Google Drive is almost full and they are trying to backup Google chats as well.

The report adds that while Google will still offer a certain quota to store WhatsApp backups for free, it will be a limited plan. It is not clear how much free storage will be offered. Our guess is that Google will not be too generous on this front.

For users in India, who are predominantly on Android and use Drive to backup WhatsApp chats, this will come as bad news, especially for those on free Google accounts. Thats because once the policy changes, WhatsApp chats could start taking up a significant amount of space on ones Google account and 15GB will be limiting, if one has to spread it across photos, Gmails, docs and WhatsApp backups.

Users will have to either sign up for a paid version of Google One or reduce the content which is being backed up. This also explains why WhatsApp would introduce a feature to let users skip backup for some types of messages such as media content given they are resource heavy and take up more space.

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Built secure from the ground up. | About Verizon – Verizon News

Posted: at 2:49 am

Happy final Friday of January! On todays Up To Speed Live, host Raquel Wilson shared the following updates:

Monday: Andy teased our 4Q21 Earnings with a special look at our Credo with exclusive behind-the-scenes footage.

Tuesday: Hans and the leadership team discussed our 4Q21 Results and the Credo Award was presented to all of us for making the launch of Ultra Wideband such a success.Thursday: We got the motivation we needed to keep our health and fitness goals strong with tips from the Health & Wellness Team.

With today being International Data Privacy Day, Andy Choi caught up with Sue Vinci, Verizons Chief Privacy Officer, to learn more about how when it comes to privacy, we all play a role. Sue pointed out that in a meaningful way all of us on the V team are members of the privacy team. But knowing all the details of best practices can be difficult due to the wide range of roles and locations of V teamers around the globe.

Be on the lookout for emails regarding training opportunities that will be launching soon. Note: depending on your role and location, you may receive multiple training invitations. Regardless of where you work or what we do, my team is here to provide support, so when you have questions please reach out to us via VZWeb, said Sue.

Raquel was joined by our Chief Product Development Officer Nicki Palmer. Nicki talked about how when millions of Americans are out and about, theyll often use public WiFi, not realizing they are putting their personal and business-related information at risk.

Each one of us should think twice before connecting our devices even with Bluetooth, warned Nicki. Although the average consumer probably doesnt have state secrets on their devices, a cyberattack can still reveal personal information, including login credentials and financial information.

While WiFi requires manual configuration which puts the onus on the user, our networks are built for privacy from the ground up with security in mind. And 5G further advances the security features already built into cellular networks and adds on new features to protect users from a variety of attacks:

Verizon 5G Ultra Wideband also offers superior speeds versus public WiFi. Our 5G network expansion means more and more people and businesses will be able to experience up to 10x higher speed than 4G.

Im so proud of our entire organizations work to not only plan, build, and operate the very best networks, but to create new products and experiences on these networks that move the world forward, said Nicki.

By now, you should know about The Ultra Challenge, an opportunity for each of us to make a video pitch about 5G Ultra in whatever form you think works best: sales pitch, poem, TikTok-style dance, the skys the limit! A selection of Retail Associates put together videos of their own to motivate all of us to take part. A big thank you to Retail Specialist Osmar Trujillo (Los Angeles), Retail Assistant Manager Javon Price (Cincinnati), Retail Specialist Andrew Hopkins (Belton, Missouri) and Retail Manager Zach Eldridge (Columbia, Missouri).

Submit your 5G Challenge video for a chance to win concert tickets, Verizon brand gear and more.

Videos can be submitted starting now. If youre uploading from a personal device, please drop your video at this link. If youre using a Verizon device, please use this link. Note: Please label your video submission with your name and business group. Plus, weve got a great resource page on VZWeb with all of our 5G Ultra info.

Verizon has scored 100 on the Corporate Equality Index and is considered a best place to work for LGBTQ+ Equality for 2022. Scoring high means we are a driving force for LGBTQ workplace inclusion with policies and practices committed to equality.

Thats why it was no surprise that Verizon was also recognized by JUST Capital and CNBC as part of the JUST 100. Not only were we listed in the top 10 of Americas Most JUST Companies, but we were also ranked #1 in our industry for our commitment to doing right by our customers, shareholders, society and, of course, our V Team.

Raquel wished a happy Lunar New Year to all those who will be celebrating on February 1. Starting Monday, our Employee Resource Group PACE will be launching a week full of events to celebrate.

If you have any questions, email them to live@verizon.com.

Click here for a transcript of the webcast.

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