The conversational artificial intelligence (AI) market generated $3.2 billion and is predicted to reach $15.0 billion in 2024, advancing at a 30.2%…

Conversational AI Market Research Report: By Component (Platform, Service), Deployment (Cloud, On-Premises), Type (Chatbot, IVA, IVR), Industry (BFSI, Retail and E-Commerce, Healthcare, Hospitality, Telecom, Media and Entertainment), Technology (Natural Language Processing, Machine Learning, Automated Speech Recognition), Application (Customer Support , Personal Assistant, Branding and Advertisement, Customer Engagement and Retention, Onboarding and Employee Engagement), Geographical Outlook (U.

New York, Jan. 30, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Conversational AI Market" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p05842913/?utm_source=GNW S., Canada, U.K., Germany, France, Russia, Italy, China, Japan, India, South Korea, Australia, Brazil, Mexico, U.A.E., Saudi Arabia, Turkey, South Africa) - Global Industry Analysis and Forecast to 2024

In 2018, the conversational artificial intelligence (AI) market generated $3.2 billion and is predicted to reach $15.0 billion in 2024, advancing at a 30.2% CAGR during 20192024. The market is growing due to the rising demand for AI-powered customer support services, positive return on investment (ROI) for companies deploying conversational AI solutions, and increasing number of solution providers in the market. Conversational AI refers to the application of intelligent virtual assistants (IVA), intelligent interactive voice response (IVR), and chatbots in different industries for automating interactions with the customer and creating a personalized customer experience. On the basis of technology, the conversational AI market is divided into automated speech recognition, natural language processing, machine learning, and others (which include cognitive computing, computer vision, image processing, and video recognition). During the forecast period, the machine learning division is predicted to witness the fastest growth. The reason for this is that the conversational AI solutions are able to learn from previous responses to several queries, with the help of this technology, which further increases the ability of machines in answering questions. In terms of application, the conversational AI market is categorized into onboarding and employee engagement, branding and advertisement, customer support, customer engagement and retention, and personal assistant. The personal assistant category is predicted to grow at the fastest CAGR, of 31.0%, during the forecast period. This is because of the conversational AI solutions, such as IVA and chatbots, that act as a personal assistant and are able to control ones schedule and organize social and business meetings on behalf of the person. The technology further conveys such details to the person through webpage, calendar, and inbox.Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05842913/?utm_source=GNW

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The conversational artificial intelligence (AI) market generated $3.2 billion and is predicted to reach $15.0 billion in 2024, advancing at a 30.2%...

Heres how Compass uses artificial intelligence to support its agents – Inman

The vast majority of what we do will disappear into the regular tools agents use every day, Compass CTO Joseph Sirosh said on stage at Inman Connect New York.

Amid all the market place disruption, news-making acquisitions and lawsuits Joseph Sirosh, the chief technology officer at the well-funded brokerage Compass, believes the companys goal and mission are pretty straightforward.

Joseph Sirosh | Photo credit: Compass

Compass, to me, is an idea, Sirosh said at Inman Connect in New York on Thursday. Agents grow their business and we invest as much as possible in agents growing their business with technology.

Compass has grown its technology team massively in the past year, nearly tripling it since Sirosh took the role. The company has pulled in talent from some of the worlds top technology companies like Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and Google.

Among the key areas Compass has focused is artificial intelligence (AI), Sirosh, the former CTO of AI at Microsoft and the CTO of consumer at Amazon, told Clelia Peters, the president of Warburg Realty and Inmans editor-at-large, atInman Connectat the Marriott Marquis in New York City.

AI in real estate, according to Sirosh, is going to empower both the consumer and the agent. Compass, right now, is incorporating predictive AI into its search tools.

With even a few letters being typed, you pick the right search query, Sirosh said.

Eventually, the search will be smarter, thanks to AI. Consumers will be able to search by picture, like throwing a photo of a craftsman-style home into a reverse image search to bring up photos of other craftsman homes on the market, whereas right now, most home searches are limited to geographical locations, and numbers of beds or bathrooms.

Compass is also powering its customer relationship management tool (CRM) with artificial intelligence, by helping agents stay on top of their sphere.

Staying in touch with your sphere of influence is hard work, you have thousands of contacts, Sirosh said. Lots of agents tell me they have lost hundreds of thousands of dollars because they didnt follow up. Consistency of follow up is one of the most challenging things.

Eventually, artificial intelligence will power the platform experience in real estate, Sirosh explained, where the entire ecosystem of what the agent and consumer needs will be connected in one place. The platform begins with listings, where the agents can acquire a listing, make it searchable, price it and market it. Then on the other side, the agent can organize listings for consumers, schedule tours and the consumer can even make an offer.

It sounds all obvious but the reality is, this is done in a fragmented way, Sirosh said.

Sirosh compared it to the experience of listening to music. It used to be recorded in an analog way from a guitar, then pressed into a record and youd go to the record store and buy a physical record by word of mouth or someone elses recommendation. Now, AI pushes recommendations right to an app on your phone and your music listening and discovery journey is guided by AI.

Getting agents to adopt technology is always a challenge, of course, but Sirosh explained that the best technology is the technology you dont even know is there.

The vast majority of what we do will disappear into the regular tools agents use every day, Sirosh said. [Those tools] will become more simple and effective.

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Heres how Compass uses artificial intelligence to support its agents - Inman

Automation and AI sound similar, but may have vastly different impacts on the future of work – Brookings Institution

Last November, Brookings published a report on artificial intelligences impact on the workplace that immediately raised eyebrows. Many readers, journalists, and even experts were perplexed by the reports primary finding: that, for the most part, it is better-paid, better-educated white-collar workers who are most exposed to AIs potential economic disruption.

This conclusionby authors Mark Muro, Robert Maxim, and Jacob Whitonseemed to fly in the face of the popular understanding of technologys future effects on workers. For years, weve been hearing about how these advancements will force mainly blue-collar, lower-income workers out of jobs, as robotics and technology slowly consume those industries.

In an article about the November report, The Mercury News outlined this discrepancy: The study released Wednesday by the Brookings Institution seems to contradict findings from previous studiesincluding Brookings ownthat showed lower-skilled workers will be most affected by robots and automation, which can involve AI.

One of the previous studies that article refers to is likely Brookingss January 2019 report (also written by Muro, Maxim, and Whiton) titled Automation and Artificial Intelligence: How machines are affecting people and places. And indeed, in apparent contradiction of the AI report, the earlier study states, The impacts of automation in the coming decades will be variable across occupations, and will be visible especially among lower-wage, lower-education roles in occupations characterized by rote work.

So how do we square these two seemingly disparate conclusions? The key is in distinguishing artificial intelligence and automation, two similar-sounding concepts that nonetheless will have very different impacts on the future of work here in the U.S. and across the globe. Highlighting these distinctions is critical to understanding what types of workers are most vulnerable, and what we can do to help them.

The difference in how we define automation versus AI is important in how we judge their potential effects on the workplace.

Automation is a broad category describing an entire class of technologies rather than just one, hence much of the confusion surrounding its relationship to AI. Artificial intelligence can be a form of automation, as can robotics and softwarethree fields that the automation report focused on. Examples of the latter two forms could be machines that scurry across factory floors delivering parts and packages, or programs that automate administrative duties like accounting or payroll.

Automation substitutes human labor in tasks both physical and cognitiveespecially those that are predictable and routine. Think machine operators, food preparers, clerks, or delivery drivers. Activities that seem relatively secure, by contrast, include: the management and development of people; applying expertise to decisionmaking, planning and creative tasks; interfacing with people; and the performance of physical activities and operating machinery in unpredictable physical environments, the automation report specified.

In the more recent AI-specific report, the authors focused of the subset of AI known as machine learning, or using algorithms to find patterns in large quantities of data. Here, the technologys relevance to the workplace is less about tasks and more about intelligence. Instead of the routine, AI theoretically substitutes for more interpersonal duties such as human planning, problem-solving, or perception.

And what are some of the topline occupations exposed to AIs effects, according to Brookings research? Market research analysts and marketing specialists (planning and creative tasks, interfacing with people), sales managers (the management and development of people), and personal financial advisors (applying expertise to decisionmaking). The parallels between what automation likely wont affect and what AI likely will affect line up almost perfectly.

Machine learning is especially useful for prediction-based roles. Prediction under conditions of uncertaintyis a widespread and challenging aspect of many information-sector jobs in health, business, management, marketing, and education, wrote Muro, Maxim, and Whiton in a recent follow-up to their AI report. These predictive, mostly white-collar occupations seem especially poised for disruption by AI.

Some news outlets grasped this difference between the AI and the automation report. In The New York Timess Bits newsletter, Jamie Condliffe wrote: Previously, similar studies lumped together robotics and A.I. But when they are picked apart, it makes sense that A.I.which is about planning, perceiving and so onwould hit white-collar roles.

A very clear way to distinguish the impacts of the two concepts is to observe where Brookings Metro research anticipates those impacts will be greatest. The metros areas where automations potential is highest include blue-collar or service-sector-centric places such as Toledo, Ohio, Greensboro, N.C., Lakeland-Winter Haven, Fla. and Las Vegas.

The top AI-exposed metro area, by contrast, is the tech hub of San Jose, Calif., followed by other large cities such as Seattle and Salt Lake City. Places less exposed to AI, the report says, range from bigger, service-oriented metro areas such as El Paso, Texas, Las Vegas, and Daytona Beach, Fla., to smaller, leisure communities including Hilton Head and Myrtle Beach, S.C. and Ocean City, N.J.

AI will also likely have different impacts on different demographics than other forms of automation. In their report on the broader automation field, Muro, Maxim, and Whiton found that 47% of Latino or Hispanic workers are in jobs that couldin part or whollybe automated. American Indians had the next highest automation potential, at 45%, followed by Black workers (44%), white workers (40%), and Asian Americans (39%). Reverse that order, and youll come very close to the authors conclusion on AIs impact on worker demographics: Asian Americans have the highest potential exposure to AI disruption, followed by white, Latino or Hispanic, and Black workers.

For all of these differences, one important similarity does exist for both AI and broader automations impact on the workforce: uncertainty. Artificial intelligences real-world potential is clouded in ambiguity, and indeed, the AI report used the text of AI-based patents to attempt to foresee its usage in the workplace. The authors hypothesize that, far from taking over human work, AI may end up complementing labor in fields like medicine or law, possibly even creating new work and jobs as demand increases.

As new forms of automation emerge, it too could end up having any number of potential long-term impactsincluding, paradoxically, increasing demand and creating jobs. Machine substitution for labor improves productivity and quality and reduces the cost of goods and services, the authors write. This maythough not always, and not foreverhave the impact of increasing employment in these same sectors.

As policymakers draw up potential solutions to protect workers from technological disruption, its important to keep in mind the differences between advancements like AI and automation at largeand who, exactly, theyre poised to affect.

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Automation and AI sound similar, but may have vastly different impacts on the future of work - Brookings Institution

Artificial Intelligence and Cyber Security: modern concepts that ensure the safety of rail transportation – Logistics Middle East

The 2020 Railway Forum, organised by the Saudi Railway Company (SAR) under the patronage of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, concluded its sessions today. Participants discussed railway security and safety, the future of digital railways and the concept of the integration of security and safety elements, and the role of artificial intelligence and "5G" technology in the sector.

Talal AlAnazi, director corporate HSE & industrial security at Maaden, spoke about security and safety in transportation, explaining that Maaden adopts the concept of improving industrial safety and security, given its importance in the work environment. He said: "We aspire to move from a culture of research and fix, in industrial safety and security, to a culture of expectation and prevention of risks before they occur." He referred to the application of Maadens "safety steps" initiative, which aims to reduce risks by replacing the culture of "reaction" with a culture of "proactivity" throughout all of the company's business.

Abdullah Al-Yousef, Engineering support services director at SAR, talked about the most important challenges facing the railway sector in the Kingdom. He explained that the immaturity and lack of culture in dealing with trains is among the most important of such challenges, drawing attention on the need to work in order to raise awareness about safety, whether for employees and workers in the sector, or the general public.

Al Yousef also highlighted the need to possess engineering and technical solutions, but at the same time deal intelligently with such technology, and employ it in the correct framework. He pointed out that SAR launched a series of awareness campaigns related to safety, in all villages, cities and areas close to the railways, in addition to engaging in social networking platforms to raise awareness, as well as sending text messages to citizens and residents. He said that many workshops and lectures have been held for employees and workers at SAR to raise awareness about the importance of safety and security in the sector.

SARs Engineering support services Director expressed the company's readiness to receive any technical ideas from forum participants, to support the security and safety of the railways.

For her part, Kai Taylor, from French group Thales, underlined the need to invest in youths creative energies in transferring technology and making great use of it. He pointed out that we will have bright days, if we predict the future, and develop the right technologies, and use them in various sectors, especially transport and communications. He also insisted on the need to have trains reach remote areas, and the use of 5G technology.

Matthias Schubert, executive vice president Mobility at TV Rheinland Group, said that the innovation sector is one of the important sectors that have made progress in the field of automation, pointing to the need to implement the important standards of security and safety in transportation, since it is impossible to sacrifice passenger safety.

For his part, Engineer Abdul Jabbar bin Salem, regional operations director Mena Infrastructure for the Middle East and North Africa at SNC Lavalin, talked about the importance of cyber security in the transport sector and railways, which has become more sophisticated and smarter according to him.

During the "Future of Railways" session, the Business Development Transport Solutions of at "Huawei" stressed the importance of using fifth-generation technology in railways, as it contributes to reducing costs and energy, while increasing efficiency. He added that "digital transformation is an opportunity, to provide a unified system of controls for safety and security".

Javier de la Cruz Garca Dihinx, CAF Rail Digital Services managing director, explained that digital transformation is an urgent and important issue in the transport and railway sector, through which systems can be integrated with each other.

And Andres De Leon, CEO of HyperLoopTT, spoke about hyperloop trains, explaining that they are fast, human-focused, sustainable, profitable, and have returns, indicating that through them Europe can be interlinked in a few hours.

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Artificial Intelligence and Cyber Security: modern concepts that ensure the safety of rail transportation - Logistics Middle East

Why are we so scared of Artificial Intelligence development? – Open Access Government

The proliferation of technology throughout society has been rapid. As with any kind of societal shift, it has led to the excitement for the future and concern around new risks; particularly when it comes to job security. Indeed, academic institutions such as the University of Oxford suggesting that 47% of the current job market will be made obsolete due to rapid advancements in tech over the next 25 years have done nothing to calm public nerves.

Such staggering numbers are inevitably eye-catching, but not always helpful. Indeed, they tend to result in black hole baseless panic. As German philosopher Immanuel Kant suggested, it is within human nature to project things to infinity, regardless of the evidence.

Thankfully, a growing body of evidence indicates the future relationship between tech and humanity will be prosperous and peaceful. Thats partly because humans have some innate qualities that will be difficult for machines to ever replicate, meaning we will always be needed for the proper operation of society.

This view is supported by the experts; the World Economic Forum has predicted that whilst 75 million jobs could be lost to tech between 2020 and 2025, a further 133 million new roles will be created. These will be in the maintenance, management and oversight of the tech jobs, many of which are yet to be created

Pedros Domingos, a professor at the University of Washington and expert on the future relations between man and machine, suggests that AI will lead to the creation of roles that we cannot yet understand. After all, if you asked a person in the 1980s to describe the role of an app developer, theyd be uncertain. Indeed, this is the case for those of us today trying to imagine the world of work in 2030 or 2050 there are too many variables for us to make an effective prediction. One thing is sure: therell be new jobs for people to fill.

However, the new jobs created wont just be about creating and maintaining the new technology this will partially make up the job creation, of course, although newly carved human roles in the future workforce will involve working with machines.

This refers to how AI will be able to augment and complement, rather than replace, what humans are already able to do. A fantastic example comes from Prospex. This tech, developed by Fountech Ventures, is an AI program that can generate leads for salespeople. So, rather than spending hours manually trawling through databases to find business leads, the technology rapidly compiles lists of people to contact. As such, salespeople can focus on their passion, amplify their skills and delegate all of the drudgery to a machine.

Another example arrives from Autodesk, who have developed an AI program called Dreamcatcher. It too has a simple proposition: generating new designs based on assigned parameters. So, if you were designing a new table, youd input code for legs, tabletop, etc., and it then generates a multitude of options based on the designers preferences. The latter is then able to choose or amend a design as needed. So, we see human creativity flourish, thanks to collaboration with AI technology.

The future collaboration between man and machine will also be characterised by a more obvious aspect: the automation of repetitive tasks. For the millions of people worldwide who still work in factories, this might be a worrying prospect. However, the reality is more complex and, indeed, positive.

In fact, it will likely entail more fulfilling roles and the example of chatbots illustrates this point clearly. They are able to access vast amounts of data and are usually positioned at the beginning of the customer contact experience. Here, they answer questions and direct customers to call centres, where a specialised, human response can be given if needed. For the customer, it means a more efficient service. And for workers, it means dealing with more interesting issues rather than asking what is your customer reference? all day certainly a win-win.

John E. Kelly III, executive vice president at IBM asserted that, collaboratively, humans and machines working together always beat or make a better decision than a man or a machine independently and I agree. As long as experts treat this new technology with care, there will be no limit to what man and machine can collectively achieve.

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Why are we so scared of Artificial Intelligence development? - Open Access Government

Edward Snowden warns that Assange and Greenwald prosecutions mark new stage in assault on press freedom – World Socialist Web Site

Edward Snowden warns that Assange and Greenwald prosecutions mark new stage in assault on press freedom By Oscar Grenfell 30 January 2020

In an opinion piece published in the Washington Post on Sunday, National Security Agency (NSA) whistleblower Edward Snowden warned that US charges against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and a Brazilian prosecution of Intercept journalist Glenn Greenwald are the spearhead of a campaign by governments around the world to abolish press freedom.

Calling for all supporters of democratic rights to rally to the defence of both Assange and Greenwald, Snowden wrote: The most essential journalism of every era is precisely that which a government attempts to silence. These prosecutions demonstrate that they are ready to stop the pressesif they can.

Snowdens voice carries the weight and authority of a courageous individual who risked everything to alert the population to government crimes. In 2013, Snowden revealed mass NSA spying on the American and world population, as well as on the political rivals of US imperialism, including its own formal allies, in violation of the US constitution and international law.

For these actions, he has been relentlessly hounded by the US government and its intelligence agencies. His successful flight to Russia and bid for political asylum was carried out with assistance from WikiLeaks.

Snowdens appeal comes at a crucial stage in the fight to free Assange. British court hearings for the WikiLeaks founders extradition to the US, where he faces Espionage Act charges and the prospect of life imprisonment, begin on February 24. If extradited, Assange would be prosecuted over his role in WikiLeaks publishing activities, including its exposures of war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan and human rights abuses at the US military prison at Guantnamo Bay.

The British judiciary, and all of the official political parties, have already greenlighted what can only be termed an extraordinary rendition operation. The US Department of Justice has made clear Assange would be denied the First Amendment protections for freedom of the press and free speech, despite the fact that he has been charged under domestic US law.

Glenn Greenwald was charged last week in Brazil with conspiracy and hacking offences for his role in exposing how Brazilian officials used an anti-corruption probe to railroad political opponents of the countrys fascistic president Jair Bolsonaro in the lead-up to the countrys 2018 national election. Snowden described the prosecution of Greenwald as a straightforward attempt to intimidate and retaliate against Greenwald and the Intercept for their critical reporting on the Brazilian government.

In his article, headlined Trump Has Created a Global Playbook to Attack Those Revealing Uncomfortable Truths, Snowden noted that this attack was a direct application of the Assange precedent.

The NSA whistleblower wrote: The legal theory used by the Brazilian prosecutorsthat journalists who publish leaked documents are engaged in a criminal conspiracy with the sources who provide those documentsis virtually identical to the one advanced in the Trump administrations indictment of [Assange] in a new application of the historically dubious Espionage Act.

The arrest and unveiling of a US indictment against Assange last year has also been followed by police raids against journalists in Australia, and threats by the French government to prosecute journalists for exposing its complicity in the Saudi-led war on Yemen.

The connection between the US attacks on Assange and Brazils move against Greenwald is likely even more direct. In comments this week, the Intercept journalist noted that the Bolsonaro government would not have initiated a prosecution without receiving the go-ahead from the Trump administration. The US State Department has said nothing about the charges against Greenwald. In other words, the same political forces are spearheading the persecution of both Assange and Greenwald.

Snowden pointed to the way in which the Trump administration has accelerated a protracted government assault on press freedom.

The NSA whistleblower commented that while former US President Barack Obama initiated the US-led vendetta against Assange, his administration did not publicly-unveil charges against the WikiLeaks founder over his publishing activities, for fear of triggering a constitutional crisis. Instead, the Obama administration used US allies, including Sweden and Britain, to concoct a sexual misconduct frame-up against Assange that was used to blacken his name and deprive him of his liberty.

The attempt to prosecute Greenwald similarly represented a rapid escalation, after an August 2019 order from a Brazilian Supreme Court judge banned the police from even investigating the journalist.

Snowdens article followed an opinion piece in the New York Times by Intercept reporter James Risen, who warned that the cases against Julian Assange and Glenn Greenwald may be models for a crackdown. It noted that the charges against Greenwald were eerily similar to those contained in the US Espionage Act indictment of Assange.

Risen wrote: Both cases are based in part on a new prosecutorial conceptthat journalism can be proved to be a crime through a focus on interactions between reporters and their sources. Prosecutors are now scrutinizing the processes by which sources obtain classified or private information and then provide it to journalists. Since those interactions today are largely electronic, prosecutors are seeking to criminalize journalism by turning to anti-hacking laws to implicate reporters in the purported criminal activity of their sources in gaining access to data on computers or cellphones without authorization.

He noted that if this model were successful, it would provide the government with a detour around the First Amendment protections of the US constitution and would imperil journalists everywhere.

The publication of articles defending Assange in two of the largest daily newspapers in the US underscores the fears of the major media corporations that this campaign could disrupt their decades-long collaboration with governments and state authorities and their lucrative business models.

For years, the New York Times, the Washington Post and other mainstream publications have aided the assault on press freedom, including by repeating the official smears used to discredit Assange. Both publications promoted the bogus Swedish sexual-misconduct allegations against him.

The Times collaborated with Assange in 2010 on the very publications over which Assange has been charged. By 2011, however, they had thrown the WikiLeaks founder to the wolves and undermined his First Amendment protections by falsely claiming that he had functioned as a source and not a co-publisher.

Risens piece, even as it warned against the implications of Assanges persecution, gave succour to the unsubstantiated assertions of the Democratic Party and the intelligence agencies that he functioned as an agent of the Russian government in 2016.

In reality, WikiLeaks 2016 publications proved that the Democratic National Committee had sought to rig the Democratic Party primaries against Bernie Sanders in favour of Hillary Clinton, in violation of its own rules. They demonstrated that Clinton had promised multi-billionaire bankers that she would govern in their interests and support more predatory US military interventions.

Risen has long promoted the discredited Russiagate conspiracy theory, including by slandering Assange. This underscores the fact that there will be no genuine defence of the WikiLeaks founder, or of democratic rights, from the corporate press, which is thoroughly integrated into the state apparatus. It demonstrates that the fight to free Assange and all class war prisoners, and to defend Greenwald, requires the development of an independent political movement of the working class.

2019 has been a year of mass social upheaval. We need you to help the WSWS and ICFI make 2020 the year of international socialist revival. We must expand our work and our influence in the international working class. If you agree, donate today. Thank you.

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Edward Snowden warns that Assange and Greenwald prosecutions mark new stage in assault on press freedom - World Socialist Web Site

Human rights report to oppose extradition of Julian Assange to US – The Guardian

Julian Assanges detention sets a dangerous precedent for journalists, according to politicians from the Council of Europes parliamentary arm, who voted on Tuesday to oppose the WikiLeaks founders extradition to the US.

The words of support for Assange and implicit criticism of the UK government will be contained in a final report produced by the Labour peer Lord Foulkes for the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, which focuses on upholding human rights across the continent.

Assange is being held in Londons Belmarsh prison prior to an extradition hearing that will begin in February. A US grand jury has indicted him on 18 charges 17 of which fall under the Espionage Act around conspiracy to receive, obtaining and disclosing classified diplomatic and military documents.

Foulkes had drafted an initial report Threats to Media Freedom and Journalists Security in Europe that will now contain amendments referring to Assange tabled by a number of European parliamentarians.

One of the amendments backs the recommendation of the UN special rapporteur on torture who called last year for Assanges release and for extradition to the United States to be blocked. The other states that his possible extradition to the US would set a precedent and threaten journalists freedoms in all member states.

Foulkes told the Guardian that campaigners and supporters of Assange had written to him while he was writing the report, which addresses media freedoms and threats to journalists in countries including Russia, Turkey and Malta, and asked that he consider including an amendment mentioning Assange.

As a rapporteur for the assembly, he said it was not his role to do so but that colleagues from other states had done so.

He added: I was in favour of him being sent back to Sweden when there were allegations against him to face, but as far as the US is concerned I think there would be deep concerns if he were to be sent there.

While the report is non-binding on the UK or on British courts, Assanges supporters are likely to cite it as a moral weight in their campaign to stop his extradition.

If convicted, Assange faces a prison term of up to 175 years.

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Human rights report to oppose extradition of Julian Assange to US - The Guardian

Wikileaks Proved Maggie Haberman Is a Dem Operative and Her NYT ‘Expose’ Should Go in the Garbage | News and Politics – PJ Media

Maggie Haberman and her "bombshell" article in the New York Times about John Bolton's manuscript, and claims that he holds information that could convict the president, should be completely ignored or mocked for what it is: planted opposition strategy. It is an indisputable fact that Haberman was used by the Hillary Clinton campaign to "plant" stories favorable to Clinton in the press. John Podesta's hacked emails prove it. For those of you who have forgotten, here's what campaign staff said about Haberman. (Emphasis mine.)

As discussed on our call, we are all in agreement that the time is right place a story with a friendly journalist in the coming days that positions us a little more transparently while achieving the above goals.

Who: For something like this, especially in the absence of us teasing things out to others, we feel that it's important to go with what is safe and what has worked in the past, and to a publication that will reach industry people for recruitment purposes.

We have has [sic] a very good relationship with Maggie Haberman of Politico over the last year. We have had her tee up stories for us before and have never been disappointed. While we should have a larger conversation in the near future about a broader strategy for reengaging the beat press that covers HRC, for this we think we can achieve our objective and do the most shaping by going to Maggie.

Democrats can do the "most shaping" of their narrative by going to Maggie. Isn't that special? Now, fast-forward to Haberman's latest "bombshell" about John Bolton's manuscript that was perfectly timed to disrupt the Senate impeachment hearings. The release of the allegations was maximized to cause the maximum upset and chaos possible right at the beginning of the Senate trial. Does anyone think that was an accident? Haberman is a literal known operative for the Democrat Party. She is the one they go to when they want a story "placed." Anyone using anything she writes for any purpose other than to line a birdcage or wrap fish should be ashamed of themselves.

Instead of being censured by the journalistic world for purposefully helping a presidential contender with her messaging instead of objectively reporting the news, Haberman won a Pulitzer! This is how Democrats work. They cheat, lie, and scheme and then they give awards to one another for doing it. Look for Haberman to be awarded again sometime soon for her role in this new charade.

If Republican senators don't point this out, they are missing an opportunity to expose how the Democrats work and the massive amount of manipulation and control that Democrats hold over the media.

Megan Fox is the author of Believe Evidence; The Death of Due Process from Salome to #MeToo, and host of The Fringe podcast. Follow on Twitter @MeganFoxWriter

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Wikileaks Proved Maggie Haberman Is a Dem Operative and Her NYT 'Expose' Should Go in the Garbage | News and Politics - PJ Media

Will Someone Ask the Crowdstrike Question at the Impeachment Hearing, Please! – The Union Journal

In the last day of examining in the United States Senate impeachment hearings, there is one topic that is forgottenCrowdstrike This company apparently verified in June 2016 that the DNCs e-mails were hacked, as well as they were hacked by Russia.President Trump assumed it called for reference in his discussion with the recently chosen UkrainianPresident This is the prefer he asked.

The demand that President Trump made on his phone call to President Zelinsky in the Ukraine managed Crowdstrike, however nobody is touching this issue in the SenateHearings The President claimed:

The corrupt FBI as well as Mueller group declared that DNC e-mails launched by WikiLeaks prior to the 2016 political election were hacked by Russia, however neither entity evaluated the DNC web server which was apparently hacked. They gave no evidence of this.

The DNC rather employed a company Crowdstrike, with links to Mueller as well as previous Obama Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, that gave a redacted record to the FBI as well as Mueller specifying the e-mails were hacked by Russia.

Former NSA whistleblower Bill Binney asserts he has proof the DNC e-mails were not hacked however replicated probably on a flashdrive or something comparable.

The days simply do not build up. In April 2016 George Papadopoulos was informed by the notorious Maltese teacher Joseph Mifsud that Russia had Hillarys e-mails.

But Crowdstrike really did not check out Hillarys e-mails till May 2016 when they in some way declared that the Russians had actually hacked right into the DNC. The timing does not build up.

WikiLeaks insurance claims to today that they did not get Hillarys e-mails via a state star.

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Will Someone Ask the Crowdstrike Question at the Impeachment Hearing, Please! - The Union Journal

In the next war, soldiers will leave their smartphones at home – The Japan Times

LONDON As the 1st Brigade Combat Team of the U.S. 82nd Airborne Division departed for the Middle East amid rising tensions with Iran, their divisional commander gave a simple order. All personnel entering the region were told to leave smartphones and personal devices in the United States.

It was a clear sign of growing official nervousness over the potential vulnerability of items that had become an unquestioned fact of life for soldiers and civilians alike, but which Washington fears potential foes could track, exploit and use for targeting. Such concerns are far from new but were regarded less seriously when Americas primary enemies were seen as nonstate groups such as Islamic State, the Taliban and al-Qaida. Now Washington is worried about other nations not just Iran, but Russia and China which are seen as a much more existential threat.

It also points to a much greater trend. Across the board, the communications revolution and the vast sea of data it produces has made surveillance much easier, a trend likely to be magnified by the growth of artificial intelligence.

It has also facilitated the mass leaking of phenomenal amounts of information, as demonstrated by National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden. And simultaneously, it has overturned decades of tradecraft in espionage and associated fields, where despite the rise in fake news and online trickery, spy agencies like the CIA now reportedly find it almost impossible to maintain the multiple false identities on which they once relied.

The foundations of the business of espionage have been shattered, former CIA official Duyane Norman said in a Yahoo News report, which outlined how foreign governments have become much better at tracking real and covert U.S. identities through phone and bank records, facial recognition and even the records of off-the-shelf DNA tests. The debate (within the intelligence community) is like the one surrounding climate change. Anyone who says otherwise just isnt looking at the facts.

For military commanders, the options are also becoming limited. In Russias war with Ukraine, Moscows forces have shown remarkable skill in targeting counterparts on the battlefield as soon as they use their phones or radios. According to the U.S.-based Military Times, the U.S. Marine Corps already bans troops from taking personal devices on Middle East combat deployments. The U.S. Navy says it is reconsidering its rules, while the army says such decisions as with the 82nd Airborne are at the personal discretion of commanders.

Decisions are inevitably compromises. Taking away devices reduces the ability of personnel not just to talk to their families but can complicate communications and organization. However, concerns are growing fast. This month, the Pentagon also demanded personnel stop using the Chinese-owned TikTok application, with other similar platforms including WhatsApp also added to some blacklists.

Reducing careless talk and unnecessary radio and other emissions is hardly new. As far back as World War I, British commanders discovered telephone systems in forward trenches had often been compromised by German signalers and did everything they could to ensure the most sensitive messages were instead carried by hand or word of mouth. Naval vessels, military aircraft and particularly submarines have long done everything possible to mask their signatures, particularly near enemy territory. Recent years, however, have seen growing lapses, including from those who might have been expected to know better.

In early 2018, data released by fitness app Strava identified assorted U.S., Russian and even Iranian secret bases in Syria where military personnel and contractors appeared to have recorded their exercise runs without realizing they would be highlighted and widely shared. The U.S. military has now gone so far as to incorporate such mistakes into training exercises, killing off an entire unit in one drill after a soldier posted a selfie photo whose geo-tagging gave away their position.

Authorities are also nervous about nonaccidental releases of information. This November, White House and military staff removed smartphones from reporters and presidential aides for the duration of U.S. President Donald Trumps unannounced Thanksgiving trip to Afghanistan, which appeared as much about ensuring the news did not leak as worries the phones themselves might be tracked.

In terms of the latter, the greatest threat will come when artificial intelligence and voice recognition software reach the point where phones can be used to monitor nearby conversations without use of a human analyst or translator. That may come sooner rather than later one reason why some security experts are extremely nervous about Chinese firm Huawei being at the heart of 5G phone networks in several European countries, including Britain, which on Tuesday announced it will allow Huwei a limited role despite U.S. objections.

For authoritarian states like China and Iran, both witnessing a major spike in often smartphone-coordinated protest and unrest, being able to access and track electronic devices and the population at large is seen as a priority. Most notably in Xinjiang province but also across the country, Beijing is turning China into the most sophisticated surveillance state in human history. Within its borders, China already has considerable, sometimes almost exhaustive, access to data and devices. Faster and more incisive artificial intelligence and machine learning will dramatically extend that reach.

The question for Western states will be how effectively their potential foes can repurpose that technology to gather information outside their borders. The U.S. and its allies have become used to being able to use whatever devices and communications they wished since the Berlin Wall fell. Those days are ending fast.

Peter Apps is a writer on global affairs.

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In the next war, soldiers will leave their smartphones at home - The Japan Times