Artificial Intelligence in space: Scientists get 1.1M to help local areas in UK recover from impact of COVID-19 – Silicon Canals

While we are getting through the coronavirus, its repercussions on the economy are bound to linger for some time. The UK governments Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Govt (MHCLG) has taken this into account to announce new funding for jump starting projects. These projects are aimed at helping recover local areas from the impact of COVID-19. Under the funding, 59M (65.6 million) of projects across Cornwall will share 14.3M (15.9 million) of Getting Building Fund investment, supporting 1,100 jobs.

One of the notable funding from MHCLGs new funding goes to the Goonhilly Satellite Earth Station. It has been awarded 996,817 (1.1M) from the Governments Getting Building Fund for its new Cornwall Institute for Space AI and Receiver Factory. Goonhilly will also be working with the University of Manchester, University of Oxford, University of Leeds and University of Hertfordshire.

A space AI institute and receiver factory at Goonhilly Earth Station. A 3.77m project led by Goonhilly Earth Station Ltd will involve commercial operators across sectors including space, data science, and high-performance computers as well as a consortium of leading universities to progress innovation in space-related artificial intelligence (AI), data analytics, machine learning and advanced manufacturing. The investment will lead to manufacturing and specialist test facilities at Goonhilly for deep space, radio astronomy, and space telecommunication receivers for new and existing markets across the UK and internationally, the official release states.

Located on Goonhilly Downs near Helston on the Lizard peninsula in Cornwall, England, the Goonhilly Satellite Earth Station is a radiocommunication site. Goonhilly will feature a space for companies that can use the facilities and work with the team on various ideas. One of such ideas is delving into different fields of study such as artificial intelligence, machine learning and radio astronomy, which are interconnected. The team will develop algorithms in one field and apply it to solve problems across other fields as well.

The new Receiver Factory acts as an advanced manufacturing facility that can be used to develop Goonhillys own equipment. This in-house manufacturing helps ensure its services are up to the quality it holds, and also to build products to print for third parties. The scientists working at Goonhilly contribute their knowledge of antenna design, space communications, electronics, software and mechanical engineering to develop advanced products for space communication and other related sectors.

Ian Jones, Chief Executive of Goonhilly Earth Station, says, The Getting Building Fund will support a unique opportunity to bring together the important existing telecommunications assets at Goonhilly alongside investment in state-of-the-art testing and manufacturing. This is an important move forward in Cornwalls space journey developing new capabilities in invention, build and production for a growing global market. This will establish Goonhilly as the premier UK site for satellite receiver manufacture combined with innovation in artificial intelligence and machine learning.

Image credits: Goonhilly Earth Station on Twitter

Check out the innovations that took home the Blue Tulip Awards this 2020

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Artificial Intelligence in space: Scientists get 1.1M to help local areas in UK recover from impact of COVID-19 - Silicon Canals

This Week in Technology + Press Freedom: Aug. 9, 2020 – Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

Reminder! If you havent had a chance to fill out our five-minute survey about This Week in Technology and Press Freedom, please take a few moments to do so. Your answers will help us understand what content you want to see in the newsletter, when you want to hear from us, and more. This survey will be open until 5 p.m. ET on Aug. 24. We really appreciate your feedback!

Heres what the staff of the Technology and Press Freedom Project at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press is tracking this week.

TPFPs Linda Moon recently discussed leaks, government surveillance, and protecting sources during a conversation with Barton Gellman, an award-winning journalist and author of Dark Mirror: Edward Snowden and the Surveillance State.

Gellman, now a staff writer at The Atlantic and senior fellow at the Century Foundation in New York, led The Washington Posts reporting on classified National Security Agency documents he received from former intelligence officer and contractor Edward Snowden. The documents revealed theremarkable powerof the NSAs surveillance programs, and Gellmans stories on the documents prompted national discussions about privacy and national security.

Gellman and Moon discussed the obstacles Gellman faced in obtaining and publishing accurate information while keeping himself and his sources safe.

Once Gellman found a credible source in Snowden, he looked for a news organization that would back him and bear any potential legal risks. This led Gellman to go to the Post, his former employer. With the Posts support, he was able to scour tens of thousands of documents received from Snowden and break stories one by one.

Gellman has a long history of championing free speech. As the editor of his high school newspaper, Gellman commissioned stories about teen pregnancy. The schools principal fired him for the stories and burned the printed newspapers. Gellman and two friends sued her on First Amendment grounds.

Gellman eventually won a favorable settlement, but by then he was in college and unable to publish the stories. That taught me something about the efficacy of litigation, he said. Sometimes you win in principle but not in practice. Its not always the right answer, but sometimes its indispensable.

As a client of Reporters Committee attorneys, Gellman is currently pursuing government records mentioning his name through Freedom of Information Act litigation. He made a series of FOIA requests for those records over six years ago, after seeing his name in Snowdens documents. Gellmans FOIA case is as relevant as ever: As discussed below, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security has recently been gathering intelligence on journalists.

Gellman said that although he is sometimes persuaded by government officials not to publish certain material, other times publication is in the public interest. If we didnt have reporters making decisions on the margins, he said, then you would never know there was a torture program after 9/11. You would never know about secret prisons. You wouldnt know about unlawful domestic surveillance.

Gellman added, Over the history of this country, people have done bad things with this national security power. Theyve experimented on human beings. And I just cant accept a set of rules that would say the government is entitled to keep that secret forever.

Sign up for This Week in Technology and Press Freedom to access the full interview.

Sasha Peters

The Reporters Committee recently filed afriend-of-the-court briefinLokhova v. Halper, a case in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. The plaintiff claimed that hyperlinks to previous news stories, as well as third-party tweets linking to those stories, constituted republication and restarted the statute of limitations clock on her defamation claims against four news organizations. The lower court disagreed. The Reporters Committees brief, joined by 29 media organizations, highlights the legal and policy concerns that would arise if the appellate court held otherwise.

The Reporters Committee, along with the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, also filed afriend-of-the-courtbrief inAlasaad v. Wolf, a case in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. A federal district court in Boston previouslyfoundthat suspicionless border searches of electronic devices violate the Fourth Amendment, but held that border officers need only reasonable suspicion, rather than probable cause, to conduct such searches going forward. The plaintiffs, a group of U.S. citizens and one lawful permanent resident who had their devices searched at border entry points, now challenge that determination. The Reporters Committees brief in support of the plaintiffs highlights the implications of electronic device searches for newsgathering and argues that warrantless searches at the borderviolate the First Amendment.

The U.S. Department of Homeland SecurityremovedBrian Murphy from his post as acting undersecretary for intelligence and analysis after The Washington Post reported that Murphys office compiled intelligence reports on two journalists who published unclassified information about DHSs activities in Portland, Oregon. In response to the Posts reporting, the Reporters Committee issued astatementnoting that federal law prohibits the creation of dossiers on journalists precisely because doing so can morph into investigations of journalists for news coverage that embarrasses the government, but that the public has a right to know.

A day afterreportssurfaced that the materials for a mandatory media training course taken by all Department of Defense personnel referred to protesters and journalists as adversaries, Defense Secretary Mark Esperdirected the Pentagonto update the language to refer to those trying to obtain information as unauthorized recipients. Several former government officials criticized the language choice, including former Pentagon Press Secretary George Little, who called the characterization appalling and dangerous.

After the Trump administration withheld congressionally approved funds from The Open Technology Fund, a U.S. internet freedom organization, OTF wasforcedto stop 49 of its 60 projects, likely impacting the ability of millions of people around the world to access the internet and uncensored news from Voice of America. Notably, OTF works to protect journalists and their sources from digital attacks, raising concerns that halting support of its tools could threaten secure operating systems in surveillance-heavy countries and endanger those who rely on the organizations work.

The White House is once againfacing a lawsuitdemanding that Trumps personal Twitter account unblock users who are critical of him. Two years ago, a federal judge found that his blocking practicesviolatedthe First Amendment, a rulingupheldby an appeals court.The new lawsuit alleges that while Trump unblocked some critics, he refused to unblock, among others, those who were blocked before he took office.

The security firm FireEye recentlyreportedthat a group of hackers have been breaking into legitimate Eastern European news sites to spread anti-NATO disinformation. The disinformation campaign involves hackers spreading the fakenews articles on social media before they are taken down. According to FireEye, the hacking operation has been active since at least March 2017.

Former CIA Director John Brennandetailsin his new memoir how the White House specifically restricted his access to classified files after he left the agency, a permission often granted to former directors who are writing books because the manuscripts undergo governmental review for national security information. Brennan alleged that access restrictions were in retaliation for his criticism of the Trump administration.

Smart read

The National Security Agency has posted apublic advisoryon how to avoid location data tracking on mobile devices. Ultimately, if you really dont want to be tracked, NSA officials say, leave your phone at home.

Gif of the Week:This marks the last newsletter for our colleague Linda Moon, who will be wrapping up her fellowship with the TPFP team early this week. We miss you already, Linda, and best of luck on the next chapter!

Like what youve read?Sign up to get This Week in Technology + Press Freedom delivered straight to your inbox!

The Technology and Press Freedom Project at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press uses integrated advocacy combining the law, policy analysis, and public education to defend and promote press rights on issues at the intersection of technology and press freedom, such as reporter-source confidentiality protections, electronic surveillance law and policy, and content regulation online and in other media. TPFP is directed by Reporters Committee Attorney Gabe Rottman. He works with Stanton Foundation National Security/Free Press Fellow Linda Moon, Legal Fellows Jordan Murov-Goodman and Lyndsey Wajert, and Legal Intern Sasha Peters.

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This Week in Technology + Press Freedom: Aug. 9, 2020 - Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

This week in TikTok: So is it getting banned or what? – Vox.com

Hello from The Goods twice-weekly newsletter! On Tuesdays, internet culture reporter Rebecca Jennings uses this space to update you all on whats been going on in the world of TikTok. Is there something you want to see more of? Less of? Different of? Email rebecca.jennings@vox.com, and subscribe to The Goods newsletter here.

If you or someone you love has recently been forced to know or care about what TikTok is, first of all, Im sorry, this app will take over your life.

Second of all, when was the last time normal people got this riled up about a potential sale of a foreign tech company? I certainly cant recall, but underneath all the news is Trump banning the app? Is Microsoft buying it? Are the faceless, omnipotent gods at TikTok stealing data? are anxieties about China and, specifically, fears that the US may not be the one setting the ground rules of the internet.

On August 6, President Trump issued executive orders that would ban two apps, TikTok and WeChat, from operating in the US if they were not sold by their respective Chinese parent companies by September 15. (In response, TikTok is now suing the Trump administration.) National security concerns over how the Chinese government could force TikTok to hand over American user data or censor content sensitive to the Communist Party of China have been brewing for more than a year.

Both Microsoft and Twitter have reportedly been in talks to acquire TikTok, though a sale would be incalculably messy: Microsoft isnt trying to buy TikTok, its trying to buy TikTok in the US, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, and as my colleague Russell Brandom explains at The Verge, no one has ever split up a social network along regional lines; its unclear whether thats even possible. That central problem is much harder than anyone is willing to admit, he writes.

Meanwhile, the vultures are swarming. Last week Instagram launched its long-in-the-works copycat product, Reels, in the US. (Snapchat also has a competitor feature.) Though Reels is functionally identical to TikTok, it is as of yet unable to recreate the particular joy and originality of its predecessor, and most of the content seems like a sad facsimile of TikToks most boring memes.

But back to why any of this matters to people who dont otherwise care about viral dances or technology companies. The best and most clear-headed take on all of this, in my opinion, comes from Sarah Jeong, also writing for The Verge. She dubs the central strategy in play here information-nationalism, or the idea that to point out a countrys failures and human rights abuses is to make it weak (e.g. to accurately describe slaverys history in the US is to slander America).

The US, she argues, is afraid of TikTok because the country has made it an avatar of the Chinese approach to tech. The irony here, though, is that there are plenty of reasons to be actively terrified of how US tech companies and its own government use that same data, particularly the information revealed by Edward Snowden in 2013; when American politicians extoll the virtues of Silicon Valley while stoking fears about China, its rather hypocritical.

Just like China had tried to use Google to spy on its activists, the National Security Agency had been secretly collecting bulk data from almost every American company you could think of, she writes. The federal government has made it harder to see numbers on coronavirus infections. The president has even said on the record that increased testing will make him look bad. The logic behind this is the same logic that drove the Chinese Communist Party to hide the pandemic in Wuhan in the very early days, much to everyones detriment. The similarities in their behavior will not stop the president from blaming China for a cover-up thats exactly how information-nationalism works.

Even if Instagram Reels takes off, or even if TikTok is turned to dust with the stroke of a pen, it wont matter, because while TikTok may be the first Chinese social media company to succeed on a truly global level, it likely wont be the last. If the US believes that this is a problem, information-nationalism isnt the answer.

On TikTok, some memes are funny, many are cringe, and a few are incredibly disgusting (do not click on that link unless you want to watch videos of people eating cereal with milk out of each others mouths). But among the worst and most insidious is the prevalence of digital blackface, in which white creators lip-sync to Black peoples voices or mimic their affectations. Digital blackface has always been a problem on the internet, and on TikTok, where mimicry is the lingua franca, its found new fertile ground.

In this months Wired cover story, Jason Parham explores how TikTok has shaped this evolution, where memes like Hot Cheeto Girl and audio like Nene Leakess whew chile, the ghetto have become fair game for white creators. Said one woman interviewed for the story, When you call them out, its, Anyone of any race can be a Hot Cheeto Girl. No sweetheart, we know what youre doing. We know that the Hot Cheeto Girl is just a derivative of the ghetto girl, the hood rat, the Shanaynay that people used to call Black and Latinx women.

The piece also includes a series of disturbing statements from TikTok creators on the racism theyve experienced on the app, either from fellow users or from the technology itself videos get taken down because sign language is read as a gang symbol, censorship of reactions to racist videos but no action taken on the racist video itself. Its now common for Black creators to keep a backup account for when their main account eventually gets suspended for some nebulous violation.

Most illuminating in Parhams piece, though, is when he details the importance of seeing images of Black people online, and TikTok, despite its apparent issues, has been a home for many Black creators. Here he is talking about what the early days of social media as a Black person were like:

It wasnt until college, where I spent hours a day clicking through Facebook, feeling connected to a world and the people who made it for what felt like the very first time, that I finally began to articulate what part of me had known since boyhood: that images make us true. From my laptop screen I gazed out into a kind of Black Universe. Here were Black people doing what we do: playing spades at a barbecue; hanging out with family members back home, caught mid-laugh. We posed for the camera every chance we got because we understood, though we never spoke it, that wed exist here somewhere forever. There was air in our lungs, fire in our bones. When white people attempt to put on that Blackness for TikTok, this is what theyre erasing.

This was a rather depressing newsletter, so please enjoy this incredibly soothing video of a self-proclaimed cottagecore lesbian preparing a picnic for her girlfriend. The sandwich looks so good!

Support Voxs explanatory journalism

Every day at Vox, we aim to answer your most important questions and provide you, and our audience around the world, with information that has the power to save lives. Our mission has never been more vital than it is in this moment: to empower you through understanding. Voxs work is reaching more people than ever, but our distinctive brand of explanatory journalism takes resources particularly during a pandemic and an economic downturn. Your financial contribution will not constitute a donation, but it will enable our staff to continue to offer free articles, videos, and podcasts at the quality and volume that this moment requires. Please consider making a contribution to Vox today.

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This week in TikTok: So is it getting banned or what? - Vox.com

Meet the cast of Netflix movie Project Power – RadioTimes

Netflix has been on top form when it comes to releasing new blockbusters lately and the next film to fall into that category is Project Power, which takes place in a near future where anyone can take a pill that will briefly give them superpowers, but may also cause their death.

Its a killer premise and luckily the streaming giant has managed to assemble a cast to match, with Jamie Foxx, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Dominique Fishback all taking on main roles.

Read on for everything you need to know about the cast, including who theyre playing and where they might have seen them before.

Netflix

Who is Art?

What else has Jamie Foxx been in? Foxx is one of the biggest names in Hollywood, having won a Best Actor Oscar for his performance as Ray Charles back in 2004 and appeared in a slew of big budget films since, including Django Unchained, Baby Driver and The Amazing Spider-Man 2.

Other big screen highlights include roles in Collateral, Dreamgirls and Just Mercy whilst he is also a Grammy Award-winning musician, with four top ten albums to his name as a producer.

Netflix

Who is Frank?

What else has Joseph Gordon-Levitt been in? Gordon-Levitt first gained recognition as a child actor in films including 10 Things I Hate About You, before having a hugely successful spell in the late 00s and early 10s with roles in a wide range of Hollywood hits such as (500) Days of Summer,Inception, The Dark Knight Rises, 50/50 and Looper.

More recent roles include playing Edward Snowden in the 2016 biographical film Snowden, and the lead role in the Amazon Studios action thriller film 7500.

Netflix

Who is Robin?

What else has Dominique Fishback been in?Fishback is best known for her work on the small screen, having had recurring roles in the 2015 miniseries Show Me a Hero and sketch comedy show Random Acts of Flyness, as well as being a series regular on HBO series The Deuce. Big screen performances have included roles appearances in The Hate U Give and Night Comes On.

Netflix

Who is Biggie?

What else has Rodrigo Santoro been in?Santoro has had a number of main roles in TV shows both in English and Portuguese with his most high-profile small screen roles being Hector Escaton on Westworld and Paulo on Lost. On the big screen, notable appearances have included Love Actually, 300 and I Love You Phillip Morris, while he has also won numerous acting awards in his native Brazil.

Netflix

Who is Captain Crane?

What else has Courtney B. Vance been in?

Who is Gardner?

What else has Amy Landecker been in?

Who is Newt?

What else has Machine Gun Kelly been in?

Who is Landry?

What else has Allen Maldonado been in?

The supporting cast also includes Tait Fletcher (Westworld) as Wallace, Andrene Ward-Hammond (Just Mercy) as Irene, Mike Seal (The Walking Dead) as Taylor, Kyanna Simpson (Black Lightning) as Tracy, C.J. LeBlanc (Just Mercy) as Miggs, CG Lewis (Looking for Alaska) as Tommy and Joseph Poliquin (Greyhound) as Indo.

Project Power arrives on Netflix on Friday 14th August. Check out our lists of the best TV shows on Netflixand thebest movies on Netflix, or seewhat else is on with our TV Guide

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Meet the cast of Netflix movie Project Power - RadioTimes

Why Britain is being forced to pick sides in a global battle for control of the web – Telegraph.co.uk

Trump himself has also set the tone: he is a lifelong Sinosceptic with a zero-sum view of international relations, elected on a platform of overturning his predecessor's comfortable free-trade consensus and now facing an uphill climb for re-election.

But Prof Weber argues that a Democrat president might actually be doing the same. Rather than a disruptive leader demolishing American globalism, he sees a rational response to the worldwide decay of the trust that enabled the "free and open internet" which was "always a mythology".

For years, he says, many countries did try to lower the boundaries between the mutually-compatible networks that made up the internet. Then the Edward Snowden surveillance revelations of 2013 put foreign governments on notice that the "free and open internet" was "mainly a US intelligence collection site".

American talk of the global internet as a tool for "revolution" also hastened its end. "Dictatorships of the third world really learned from that, and they learned to be nervous of the internet," says Prof O'Hara, co-author of the "four internets" paper.

At one point the US government even covertly funded an underground social network in Cuba, nicknamed "Cuban Twitter". The hope was to incite unrest by unleashing the "wild colt" of online dissent, much as then secretary of state Hillary Clinton had hailed Twitter's role in the Arab Spring. The project was shut down in 2012.

Meanwhile, the US itself became a target of government hackers. Russia's election interference in 2016 showed Americans that the internet could harm them too as did China's increasingly aggressive campaign of cyber-espionage, part of a lurch back towards authoritarianism under President Xi Jinping.

The internet, it turned out, was not a new world or better but simply a new "layer" of the dirty old one, just as capable of becoming a battlefield.

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Why Britain is being forced to pick sides in a global battle for control of the web - Telegraph.co.uk

China: "The US is not qualified to build a coalition of ‘clean countries’ because itself is dirty all over" – DatacenterDynamics

"The new science and technology revolution, driven by information technology, is picking up speed," Yi continued.

"China will continue to work with all countries to maintain a fair, just, open and non-discriminatory business environment, promote international exchanges and cooperation in science and technology, and ensure that safe, reliable and quality information technology will boost global economic recovery and help improve people's lives around the world. We hope that the US will give up its obsession with its narrow self-interest, and return to the right track of openness and cooperation."

The comments came hours before US President Trump signed executive orders seeking to ban ByteDance's TikTok and Tencent's WeChat.

While Yi's assertions of US surveillance are well documented, his claim of a "fair, just, open and non-discriminatory business environment" in China is less well documented. US tech corporations face severe restrictions, and must work with a local partner - which is why Amazon Web Services made a deal with Beijing Sinnet Technology, while Microsoft and IBM have turned to 21Vianet Group. Apple uses state-owned Guizhou-Cloud Big Data Industry (GCBD), and previously had a contract with China Telecom.

Within the mainland, it operates a vast surveillance and censorship network focused on quelling dissent, and building citizen scores on each individual. In Xinjiang, where it is committing human rights abuses on the Xuighur population, it is beta testing more invasive forms of surveillance, with an eye to eventually being able to predict who will prove disloyal.

Outside of China, it is less clear how aggressive its surveillance efforts are - although its use of state-backed hackers to steal Western companies' intellectual property is well documented. In much of the developing world, its state bank offers low interest 'concessional loans,' where the money is used to build infrastructure using Chinese companies.

Among them is Huawei, which has benefited from billions in state loans. Sometimes the money is used to help fund data center developments, other times fiber infrastructure. Increasingly, it is used to try to replicate China's surveillance system overseas.

"China is always a firm defender of the international order and the international system," Yi said, saying it contrasted the US's interventionist approach. "In the past seven decades and more since the founding of the People's Republic, China never started a war, or occupied an inch of land of others." While it is true that the US has been far more active in promoting coups around the world, and engaged in numerous official and unofficial wars, China is currently occupying contested territory in India. The conflict led to TikTok and WeChat being banned in the country.

In the interview, Yi also mischaracterized China's involvement in the South China Sea as peaceful and said that "it should not be a wrestling ground for international politics." The nation claims most of the sea as its own, in contravention of international law, and has been building artificial islands to extend its claim.

Yi said disputes in the region should be solved by dialog and mutual consensus, and repeatedly pointed to the importance of the UN. But a 2016 UN arbitration ruled in favor of the Philippines in a dispute over territory, which China has ignored.

Philippine President and mass murderer Rodrigo Duterte addressed the issue in a July national statement amid growing criticism over inaction following Beijings increasingly aggressive moves in adjacent waters. China is claiming it, we are claiming it. China has the arms. We do not have it. So, its as simple as that. They are in possession of the property so what can we do? he admitted.

To gain the territory back, we have to go to war. And I cannot afford it. Maybe some other president can but I cannot. Im useless when it comes to that. Really, Im useless to that. I cant do anything. I cannot, Duterte said. This week, Duterte banned joint exercises with the US in the sea.

"China's US policy is always consistent and stable," Yi continued.

"In the meantime, we are also prepared for possible bumps and storms ahead. The US move to turn China into an adversary is a fundamental, strategic miscalculation. It means that the US is funneling its strategic resources in the wrong area.

"We are always ready to develop a China-US relationship featuring no conflict, no confrontation, mutual respect and win-win cooperation based on coordination, cooperation and stability. In the meantime, we will firmly defend our sovereignty, security and development interests, because this is a legitimate right inherent in China being an independent sovereign state."

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China: "The US is not qualified to build a coalition of 'clean countries' because itself is dirty all over" - DatacenterDynamics

Wicker: Time to address online censorship – The Vicksburg Post – Vicksburg Post

Our nation has always defended free speech and the right to express different viewpoints. Until recently, it was fair to assume U.S. internet companies were committed to those same rights. But in the last few years, reports have uncovered a disturbing trend of online platforms censoring conservative speech.

In 2018, for example, Twitter was exposed for shadow banning prominent conservatives on the platform, meaning their profiles were made difficult for users to find. Some of the more well-known figures who were shadow-banned include Republican Party Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, former Congressman and current White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and Donald Trump Jr.

And just days ago, Facebook and Twitter removed posts from President Trumps accounts, while incendiary statements from Russian President Vladimir Putin and Irans Ayatollah remain.

Google has also done its share to frustrate conservatives.

Recently, Google threatened to block the conservative news site The Federalist from receiving ad revenue because they had not removed certain offensive content in their comment section. The comments may indeed have been derogatory and unacceptable, but it is telling that Google singled out a conservative website for special scrutiny. Google has not applied that same standard to other platforms with comment sections including YouTube, which Google happens to own.

Americans recognize tech bias

Googles selective hostility towardThe Federalistrevealed what most Americans already believe: that tech companies are politically biased. According to a 2018 Pew study, seven out of 10 Americans believe social media platforms censor political viewpoints that they find objectionable.

These concerns are all the more weighty given the immense power that these corporations wield in our society. More and more of our daily business is taking place online, and our dependence upon internet firms is only accelerating with the pandemic.

As we near the 2020 election, Americans have real concerns about whether online platforms will treat campaigns on both sides of the aisle fairly and equally. And these concerns are justified. Americans are right to be worried about interference by powerful tech firms that are increasingly out of touch with mainstream political views.

Reforms to protect a diversity of views

Tech companies are able to censor a wide range of content thanks to provisions in the Communications Decency Act. Passed in 1996, this law protects interactive computer services, like Facebook, from being sued for content posted by their users. It also allows these companies to censor content they consider to be obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable.

I am concerned that platforms have abused the term otherwise objectionable and have used it to suppress content that they simply disagree with or find distasteful. When Congress passed the law in 1996, the intent was to protect companies when they censor obscene or indecent material not political views they do not like. If the abuses continue, this law risks negating the values at the heart of our First Amendment.

Given recent cases of censorship, Congress should revisit the Communications Decency Act and make it clear that companies cannot enjoy special immunity from lawsuits if they censor political speech. Recently the Commerce Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, Innovation and the Internet convened a hearing to consider this issue.

As chairman of the full Commerce Committee, I intend to pursue this matter thoroughly and evaluate what changes are needed to the law.

Congress needs to ensure the internet remains a free and open forum where diverse political views can be expressed. Doing so can help preserve our great tradition of free speech in the digital age.

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Wicker: Time to address online censorship - The Vicksburg Post - Vicksburg Post

IBM creates an open source tool to simplify API documentation – TechRepublic

OpenAPI Comment Parser for developers aims to make good API documentation easy to write and read.

Image: IBM

APIs are essential to programming, but they can get complicated. IBM has launched a new tool for developers that should make writing API documentation a bit easier: The OpenAPI Comment Parser.

"Developers need instructions on how to use your API and they need a way to try it out. Good documentation handles both," IBM developer advocate Nicholas Bourdakos said in a blog post about the new developer tool.

OpenAPI is a specification that was built as a language-agnostic interface for RESTful APIs, "which allows both humans and computers to discover and understand the capabilities of the service without access to source code, documentation, or through network traffic inspection," said API tool maintainer Swagger.

The Comment Parser is designed to work around a problem that Bourdakos said is common for developers working with the OpenAPI specification: OpenAPI specs for recording comments have to be built and maintained manually, which means they often get forgotten and become bloated and useless.

SEE: Quick Glossary: DevOps (TechRepublic Premium)

"The goal of OpenAPI Comment Parser is to give developers a way to generate this OpenAPI spec from comments inline with their code," Bourdakos said.

The OpenAPI spec under the Comment Parser lives inside the code, broken up into smaller pieces that can be more easily updated because the need to go searching through a giant spec file is eliminated. "On average, this new format has been shown to reduce the amount of spec needed to be written by 50%," Bourdakos said.

Bourdakos gives a demonstration of how the OpenAPI Comment Parser works in a video, where he uses Docusaurus along with the Comment Parser to make an API documentation site. The graphical layout of the site pulls OpenAPI spec comments from his code and lays it out in an easy-to-see fashion using markdown.

The Docusaurus interface makes comments easy to see, search, and review, and because they're written in-line with the code, thanks to the Parser, a developer who needs to make changes to a particular section can simply update that comment.

The Comment Parser, Bourdakos said, is designed to make developer's lives easier by eliminating superfluous documentation code. Not only does this save time, but it also makes the code itself more manageable, he said.

SEE: Top 5 programming languages for systems admins to learn (free PDF) (TechRepublic)

Documentation generation by the Comment Parser can also be used to test the API, so developers can spend "less time waiting for a frontend to be built or having to rely on other tools in order to test drive their API," Bourdakos said.

IBM's OpenAPI Comment Parser was built for use with Node.js, but its command line interface will work with any language that uses a similar comment style. IBM will be adding support for additional "popular languages" in the future.

In the meantime, Devs that use Node.js or a language with a similar commenting format can now try the OpenAPI Comment Parser.

From the hottest programming languages to the jobs with the highest salaries, get the developer news and tips you need to know. Weekly

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IBM creates an open source tool to simplify API documentation - TechRepublic

1Password is coming to Linux – ZDNet

Maybe you can remember dozens of complex passwords, I can't. That's why password managers, such as 1Password, Keeper, and LastPass, are so important. Now, AgilBits, 1Password's parent company, has finally listened to their customers who have been asking for a Linux version for a decade. At long last, the company announced, "1Password is coming to Linux."

Don't get your credit cards out yet though. True, the first development preview version of 1Password is out now. But it's not ready for prime-time yet. It's not a finished product. "For example, the app is currently read-only: there is no item editing, creation of vaults, or item organization."

So, if you want to test it, go for it. But it's in no way, shape, or form ready for a production system or even your home setup. The company suggests that, for now, its Linux customers use 1Password X in their browsers.

So, why not just use 1Password X? Because 1Password will handle far more than just web passwords. You will also be able to use it with FTP, SSH, and SMB network passwords.

On the backend, 1Password runs on Rust, a secure systems programming language that has made a lot of waves in the Linux community. For end-to-end encryption, it uses the open-source ring crypto library. This library's code springs from the BoringSSL, OpenSSL fork. The application interface is being written with the React JavaScript library.

If you work on an open-source team which needs a password manager, the company will give you, and everyone on your team, a free account. To get it, simply open a pull request against its 1Password for Open Source Projects repo.

The program, when completed, will come with the following features:

Simple and secure installs using apt and dnf package managers

Automatic Dark Mode selection based on your GTK theme

Tiling window manager support and descriptive window titles

Unlock with your Linux user account, including biometrics

System tray icon for staying unlocked while closed

X11 clipboard integration and clearing

Keyboard shortcuts

Data export

Unlock multiple accounts with different passwords

Create collections to organize data across accounts and vaults

All versions of 1Password work with your data files synced on 1Password's servers. The company claims it doesn't track users. But you can also save your passwords locally and sync your data file on a server on your own local area network or a Dropbox or iCloud account.

Want to check it out? Read the guide Get to know 1Password for Linux to get started. There are signed apt and rpm package repositories for Debian, Ubuntu, CentOS, Fedora, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). There's also an AppImage available for other distributions. 1Password intends to support all major desktop Linux distros.

After an initial 30-day free trial, a 1Password personal subscription costs $36 per year and comes with 1GB of personal storage. A five-user family subscription costs $60 annually. 1Password Business accounts add advanced access control, with activity logs and centrally managed security policies. These cost $96 per user per year, and include 5GBs of document storage anda free linked family account for each user.

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1Password is coming to Linux - ZDNet

Python may be your safest bet for a career in coding – Gadgets Now

Whether you are looking to add a new programming language to your skillset, or to venture into coding, Python is today the safest bet.

Python is a high-level language, but its more like the English you speak and write. If you read a snippet of code in Python, its easy to figure out the intention behind the code, what the algorithm is trying to do. This makes Python very easy to learn, says Nabarun Pal, an infrastructure engineer and one of the key organisers of PyCon India (Python Conference) 2020, due in October. Nabarun and Sayan Chowdhury, a Linux software engineer and PyCon chair, were our guests at the eleventh edition of Times Techies Webinars.

Python, which broke into the tech scene around the early 90s, is free and open source. But its current chartbuster status owes a lot to the community of developers and the vast collection of libraries (packages) that can be fitted into any problem you are trying to solve. Python has a huge universe of libraries or packages. If you are building a web application, you have Django and Flask, suiting different purposes. Similarly, packages are available for desktop, infrastructure and mobile applications, and for data science, visualisation, research and machine learning. Micropython and Circuitpython let you tinker with hardware, says Pal.

Pal and Chowdhury say this sets Python apart from most other languages, which are useful for specific purposes. R, for instance, is great for data science, but not for much else.

Python drives a range of activities in AI. For data science, some of the most powerful libraries are Pandas, Jupyter and Numpy, which are designed for heavy duty tasks. There are also packages for visualisation, besides the machine learning packages like Keras, Tensorflow and Pytorch.

If you are looking to build something faster, Python is the ideal choice. Instagram is a famous example. From image processing to infrastructure to ML, Python can practically do everything for you, says Chowdhury. Companies that use a lot of Python include Nasa, Uber, Facebook, YouTube, PayPal, Reddit and Pinterest.

Academia too uses a lot of Python. The popular packages used for research, say, for molecular analysis, are MDanalysis, Astropy and SunPy.

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Python may be your safest bet for a career in coding - Gadgets Now