Why neural networks struggle with the Game of Life – TechTalks

This article is part of ourreviews of AI research papers, a series of posts that explore the latest findings in artificial intelligence.

The Game of Life is a grid-based automaton that is very popular in discussions about science, computation, and artificial intelligence. It is an interesting idea that shows how very simple rules can yield very complicated results.

Despite its simplicity, however, the Game of Life remains a challenge to artificial neural networks, AI researchers at Swarthmore College and the Los Alamos National Laboratory have shown in a recent paper. Titled, Its Hard for Neural Networks To Learn the Game of Life, their research investigates how neural networks explore the Game of Life and why they often miss finding the right solution.

Their findings highlight some of the key issues with deep learning models and give some interesting hints at what could be the next direction of research for the AI community.

British mathematician John Conway invented the Game of Life in 1970. Basically, the Game of Life tracks the on or off statethe lifeof a series of cells on a grid across timesteps. At each timestep, the following simple rules define which cells come to life or stay alive, and which cells die or stay dead:

Based on these four simple rules, you can adjust the initial state of your grid to create interesting stable, oscillating, and gliding patterns.

For instance, this is whats called the glider gun.

You can also use the Game of Life to create very complex pattern, such as this one.

Interestingly, no matter how complex a grid becomes, you can predict the state of each cell in the next timestep with the same rules.

With neural networks being very good prediction machines, the researchers wanted to find out whether deep learning models could learn the underlying rules of the Game of Life.

There are a few reasons the Game of Life is an interesting experiment for neural networks. We already know a solution, Jacob Springer, a computer science student at Swarthmore College and co-author of the paper, told TechTalks. We can write down by hand a neural network that implements the Game of Life, and therefore we can compare the learned solutions to our hand-crafted one. This is not the case in.

It is also very easy to adjust the flexibility of the problem in the Game of Life by modifying the number of timesteps in the future the target deep learning model must predict.

Also, unlike domains such as computer vision or natural language processing, if a neural network has learned the rules of the Game of Life it will reach 100 percent accuracy. Theres no ambiguity. If the network fails even once, then it is has not correctly learned the rules, Springer says.

In their work, the researchers first created a small convolutional neural network and manually tuned its parameters to be able to predict the sequence of changes in the Game of Lifes grid cells. This proved that theres a minimal neural network that can represent the rule of the Game of Life.

Then, they tried to see if the same neural network could reach optimal settings when trained from scratch. They initialized the parameters to random values and trained the neural network on 1 million randomly generated examples of the Game of Life. The only way the neural network could reach 100 percent accuracy would be to converge on the hand-crafted parameter values. This would imply that the AI model had managed to parameterize the rules underlying the Game of Life.

But in most cases the trained neural network did not find the optimal solution, and the performance of the network decreased even further as the number of steps increased. The result of training the neural network was largely affected by the chosen set training examples as well as the initial parameters.

Unfortunately, you never know what the initial weights of the neural network should be. The most common practice is to pick random values from a normal distribution, therefore settling on the right initial weights becomes a game of luck. As for the training dataset, in many cases, it isnt clear which samples are the right ones, and in others, theres not much of a choice.

For many problems, you dont have a lot of choice in dataset; you get the data that you can collect, so if there is a problem with your dataset, you may have trouble training the neural network, Springer says.

In machine learning, one of the popular ways to improve the accuracy of a model that is underperforming is to increase its complexity. And this technique worked with the Game of Life. As the researchers added more layers and parameters to the neural network, the results improved and the training process eventually yielded a solution that reached near-perfect accuracy.

But a larger neural network also means an increase in the cost of training and running the deep learning model.

On the one hand, this shows the flexibility of large neural networks. Although a huge deep learning model might not be the most optimal architecture to address your problem, it has a greater chance of finding a good solution. But on the other, it proves that there is likely to be a smaller deep learning model that can provide the same or better resultsif you can find it.

These findings are in line with The Lottery Ticket Hypothesis, presented at the ICLR 2019 conference by AI researchers at MIT CSAIL. The hypothesis suggested that for each large neural network, there are smaller sub-networks that can converge on a solution if their parameters have been initialized on lucky, winning values, thus the lottery ticket nomenclature.

The lottery ticket hypothesis proposes that when training a convolutional neural network, small lucky subnetworks quickly converge on a solution, the authors of the Game of Life paper write. This suggests that rather than searching extensively through weight-space for an optimal solution, gradient-descent optimization may rely on lucky initializations of weights that happen to position a subnetwork close to a reasonable local minima to which the network converges.

While Conways Game of Life itself is a toy problem and has few direct applications, the results we report here have implications for similar tasks in which a neural network is trained to predict an outcome which requires the network to follow a set of local rules with multiple hidden steps, the AI researchers write in their paper.

These findings can apply to machine learning models used logic or math solvers, weather and fluid dynamics simulations, and logical deduction in language or image processing.

Given the difficulty that we have found for small neural networks to learn the Game of Life, which can be expressed with relatively simple symbolic rules, I would expect that most sophisticated symbol manipulation would be even more difficult for neural networks to learn, and would require even larger neural networks, Springer said. Our result does not necessarily suggest that neural networks cannot learn and execute symbolic rules to make decisions, however, it suggests that these types of systems may be very difficult to learn, especially as the complexity of the problem increases.

The researchers further believe that their findings apply to other fields of machine learning that do not necessarily rely on clear-cut logical rules, such as image and audio classification.

For the moment, we know that, in some cases, increasing the size and complexity of our neural networks can solve the problem of poorly performing deep learning models. But we should also consider the negative impact of using larger neural networks as the go-to method to overcome impasses in machine learning research. One outcome can be greater energy consumption and carbon emissions caused from the compute resources required to train large neural networks. On the other hand, it can result in the collection of larger training datasets instead of relying on finding ideal distribution strategies across smaller datasets, which might not be feasible in domains where data is subject to ethical considerations and privacy laws. And finally, the general trend toward endorsing overcomplete and very large deep learning models can consolidate AI power in large tech companies and make it harder for smaller players to enter the deep learning research space.

We hope that this paper will promote research into the limitations of neural networks so that we can better understand the flaws that necessitate overcomplete networks for learning. We hope that our result will drive development into better learning algorithms that do not face the drawbacks of gradient-based learning, the authors of the paper write.

I think the results certainly motivate research into improved search algorithms, or for methods to improve the efficiency of large networks, Springer said.

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Why neural networks struggle with the Game of Life - TechTalks

50 Latest Data Science And Analytics Jobs That Opened Last Week – Analytics India Magazine

Despite the pandemic, data scientists remain to be one of the most in-demand jobs. Here we list down 50 latest job openings for data science and analyst positions in cities such as Bangalore, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Pune and more, from last week.

(The jobs are sorted according to the years of experience required).

Location: Hyderabad

Skills Required: Machine learning and statistical models, big data processing technologies such as Hadoop, Hive, Pig and Spark, SQL, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Mathematical modelling using biological datasets, statistical and advanced data analytics preferably using R, Python and/or JMP, hands-on experience in data modelling, data analysis and visualisation, database systems like Postgres, MySQL, SQLServer, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Quantitative analytics or data modelling, predictive modelling, machine learning, clustering and classification techniques, Python, C, C++, Java, SQL, Big Data frameworks and visualisation tools like Cassandra, Hadoop, Spark, Tableau, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Advanced analytics, machine learning, AI techniques, cloud-based Big Data technology, Python, R, SQL, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala

Skills Required: Data mining techniques, statistical analysis, building high-quality prediction systems, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Advanced ML, DL, AI, and mathematical modelling and optimisation techniques, Python, NLP, TensorFlow, PyTorch, Keras, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Java, Python, R, C++, machine learning, data mining, mathematical optimisation, simulations, experience in e-commerce or supply chain, computational, programming, data management skills, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Statistics, Machine Learning, programming skills in various languages such as R, Python, etc., NLP, Matlab, linear algebra, optimisation, probability theory, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Knowledge of industry trends, R&D areas and computationally intensive processes (e.g. optimisation), Qiskit, classical approaches to machine learning, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Java, C++, Python, natural language processing systems, C/C++, Java, Perl or Python, statistical language modelling, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Khed, Maharashtra

Skills Required: Statistical computer languages like R, Python, SQL, machine learning techniques, advanced statistical techniques and concepts, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Foundational algorithms in either machine learning, computer vision or deep learning, NLP, Python, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Hyderabad

Skills Required: SQL CQL, MQL, Hive, NoSQL database concepts & applications, data modelling techniques (3NF, Dimensional), Python or R or Java, statistical models and machine learning algorithms, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Anekal, Karnataka

Skills Required: Machine Learning, deep learning-based techniques, OpenCV, DLib, Computer Vision techniques, TensorFlow, Caffe, Pytorch, Keras, MXNet, Theano, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Vadodara, Gujarat

Skills Required: Large and complex data assets, design and build explorative, predictive- or prescriptive models, Python, Spark, SQL, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Remote

Skills Required: Machine Learning & AI, data science Python, R, design and develop training programs, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Integrating applications and platforms with cloud technologies (i.e. AWS), GPU acceleration (i.e. CUDA and cuDNN), Docker containers, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: ETL developer, SQL or Python developer, Netezza, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Machine learning, analytic consulting, product development, building predictive models, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Hyderabad

Skills Required: Hands-on data science, model building, boutique analytics consulting or captive analytics teams, statistical techniques, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Statistical techniques, statistical analysis tools (e.g., SAS, SPSS, R), statistical analysis tools (e.g., SAS, SPSS, R), etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Probability, statistics, machine learning, data mining, artificial intelligence, big data platforms like Hadoop, spark, hive etc

Apply here.

Location: Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala

Skills Required: ML and DL approach, advanced Data/Text Mining/NLP/Computer Vision, Python, MLOps concepts, relational (MySQL) and non-relational / document databases (MongoDB/CouchDB), Microsoft Azure/AWS, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Data structures and algorithms, SQL, regex, HTTP, REST, JSON, XML, Maven, Git, JUnit, IntelliJ IDEA/Eclipse, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Delhi NCR, Bengaluru

Skills Required: Python, R, GA, Clevertap, Power BI, ML/DL algorithms, SQL, Advanced Excel, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Hyderabad

Skills Required: R language, Python, SQL, Power BI, Advance Excel, Geographical Information Systems (GIS), etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Python, PySpark, MLib, Spark/Mesos, Hive, Hbase, Impala, OpenCV, NumPy, Matplotlib, SciPy, Google cloud, Azure cloud, AWS, Cloudera, Horton Works, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Mumbai

Skills Required: Programming languages (e.g. R, SAS, SPSS, Python), data visualisation techniques and software tools (e.g. Spotfire, SAS, R, Qlikview, Tableau, HTML5, D3), etc.

Apply here.

Location: Hyderabad

Skills Required: Neural networks, Python, data science, Pandas, SQL, Azure with Spark/Hadoop, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Strong statistical knowledge, statistical tools and techniques, Python, R, machine learning, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: R or Python knowledge (Python+DS libraries, version control, etc.), ETL in SQL, Google/AWS platform, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: R, Python, SLQ, working with and creating data architectures, machine learning techniques, advanced statistical techniques, C, C++, Java, JavaScript, Redshift, S3, Spark, DigitalOcean, etc.

Apply here.

Location: Bangalore

Skills Required: Data-gathering, pre-processing data, model building, coding languages, including Python and Pyspark, big data technology stack, etc.

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50 Latest Data Science And Analytics Jobs That Opened Last Week - Analytics India Magazine

Why Deep Learning DevCon Comes At The Right Time – Analytics India Magazine

The Association of Data Scientists (ADaSci) recently announced Deep Learning DEVCON or DLDC 2020, a two-day virtual conference that aims to bring machine learning and deep learning practitioners and experts from the industry on a single platform to share and discuss recent developments in the field.

Scheduled for 29th and 30th October, the conference comes at a time when deep learning, a subset of machine learning, has become one of the most advancing technologies in the world. From being used in the fields of natural language processing to making self-driving cars, it has come a long way. As a matter of fact, reports suggest that by 2024, the deep learning market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 25%. Thus, it can easily be established that the advancements in the field of deep learning have just initiated and got a long road ahead.

Also Read: Top 7 Upcoming Deep Learning Conferences To Watch Out For

Being a crucial subset of artificial intelligence and machine learning, the advancements in deep learning have increased over the last few years. Thus, it has been explored in various industries, starting from healthcare and eCommerce to advertising and finance, by many leading firms as well as startups across the globe.

While companies like Waymo and Google are using deep learning for their self-driving vehicles, Apple is using the technology for its voice assistant Siri. Alongside many are using deep learning automatic text generation, handwriting recognition, relevant caption generation, image colourisation, predicting earthquakes as well as for detecting brain cancers.

In recent news, Microsoft has introduced new advancements in their deep learning optimisation library DeepSpeed to enable next-gen AI capabilities at scale. It can now be used to train language models with one trillion parameters with fewer GPUs.

With that being said, in future, it is expected to see an increased adoption machine translation, customer experience, content creation, image data augmentation, 3D printing and more. A lot of it could be attributed to the significant advancements in hardware space as well as the democratisation of technology, which helped the field in gaining traction.

Also Read: Free Online Resources To Get Hands-On Deep Learning

Many researchers and scientists across the globe have been working with deep learning technology to leverage it in fighting the deadly pandemic COVID-19. In fact, in recent news, some researchers have proposed deep learning-based automated CT image analysis tools that can differentiate COVID patients from the ones which arent infected. In another research, scientists have proposed a fully automatic deep learning system for diagnosing the disease as well as prognostic analysis. Many are also using deep neural networks for analysing X-ray images to diagnose COVID-19 among patients.

Along with these, startups like Zeotap, SilverSparro and Brainalyzed are leveraging the technology to either drive growth in customer intelligence or power industrial automation and AI solutions. With such solutions, these startups are making deep learning technology more accessible to enterprises and individuals.

Also Read: 3 Common Challenges That Deep Learning Faces In Medical Imaging

Companies like Shell, Lenskart, Snaphunt, Baker Hughes, McAfee, Lowes, L&T and Microsoft are looking for data scientists who are equipped with deep learning knowledge. With significant advancements in this field, it has now become the hottest skill that companies are looking for in their data scientists.

Consequently looking at these requirements, many edtech companies have started coming up with free online resources as well as paid certification on deep learning to provide industry-relevant knowledge to enthusiasts and professionals. These courses and accreditation, in turn, bridges the major talent gap that emerging technologies typically face during its maturation.

Also Read: How To Switch Careers To Deep Learning

With such major advancements in the field and its increasing use cases, the area of deep learning has witnessed an upsurge in popularity as well as demand. Thus it is critical, now more than ever, to understand this complex subject in-depth for better research purposes and application. For that matter, one needs to have a thorough understanding of the field to build a career in this ever-evolving field.

And, for this reason, the Deep Learning DEVCON couldnt have come at a better time than this. Not only it will help amateurs as well as professionals to get a better understanding of the field but will also provide them opportunities to network with leading developers and experts of the field.

Further, the talks and the workshops included in the event will provide a hands-on experience for deep learning practitioners on various tools and techniques. Starting with machine learning vs deep learning, followed by feed-forward neural networks and deep neural networks, the workshops will cover topics like GANs, recurrent neural networks, sequence modelling, Autoencoders, and real-time object detection. The two-day workshop will also provide an overview of deep learning as a broad topic, which will further be accredited with a certificate for all the attendees of the workshop.

The workshops will help participants have a strong understanding of deep learning, from basics to advanced, along with in-depth knowledge of artificial neural networks. With that, it will also clear concepts about tuning, regularising and improving the models as well as an understanding of various building blocks with their practical implementations. Alongside, it will also provide practical knowledge of applying deep learning in computer vision and NLP.

Considering the conference is virtual, it will also provide convenience for participants to join the talks and workshops from the comfort of their homes. Thus, a perfect opportunity to get a first-hand experience into the complex world of deep learning along with leading experts and best minds of the field, who will share their relevant experience to encourage enthusiasts and amateurs.

To register for Deep Learning DevCon 2020, visit here.

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Why Deep Learning DevCon Comes At The Right Time - Analytics India Magazine

TikTok Confesses to Restricting LGBTQ+ Hashtags on the App – HYPEBAE

Last year, TikTok was under fire for censoring LGBTQ+ content on its app in specific countries. Now, the video platform has admitted that it has been shadow banning LGBTQ+ hashtags, including the words gay, lesbian and transgender.

According toDazed,the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) exposed the company and stated that it also censored the terms in other languages like Russian, Estonia, Bosnian and Arabic. TikTok users posting videos with these hashtags are given the impression their posts are just as searchable as posts by other users, but in fact, they arent, according to ASPIs report. In practice, most of these hashtags are categorized in TikToks code in the same way that terrorist groups, illicit substances, and swear words are treated on the platform.

A TikTok spokesperson denied the news and insisted that the shadow ban was a localized approach to moderation, as perPink News.The representative then confessed that some terms were incorrectly moderated and that the company would look into the issue. We want to be crystal clear that TikTok strongly supports our LGBTQ+ creators around the world and is proud that LGBTQ+ content is among the most popular category on the platform with billions of views, they continued.

Stay tuned while we wait for more updates on the situation. In case you missed it, TikTok secretly collected data from Android devices for a year.

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TikTok Confesses to Restricting LGBTQ+ Hashtags on the App - HYPEBAE

TikTok caught out suppressing LGBTI+ and political hashtags – ABC News

Despite being a platform known mostly for funny dances and viral trends, TikTok has found itself in the headlines again.

According to a new report from the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, the platform has been censoring hashtags related to the LGBTI+ community, political issues and certain leaders.

Among the banned terms are 'gay' in multiple languages including Russian and Arabic, #acab and "Putin is a thief" in Russian.

"TikTok had previously said they were taking down or moderating content based on geolocation and based on local laws," says Daria Impiombato, one of the researchers who worked on the report.

"But in reality we have found that several hashtags like 'gay' in Russian or Arabic are actually being censored globally."

Daria and her colleagues said these terms are effectively "shadowbanned."

That means videos using the tags don't show up in your feed or when you search for them, even though they can still be accessed by actually clicking on the tag itself when you've uploaded a video.

TikTok is a social media app that allows people to create video clips and share live broadcasts.

TikTok is a social media app that allows people to create video clips and share live broadcasts.

"We published a video with the hashtag 'gay' in Russian and clicking through that hashtag we were actually redirected through to the hashtag page and we could find thousands of videos that had accumulated millions of views, but when you searched through the search function on the app you could find nothing."

Daria says shadow bans are having an impact on users around the world, including here in Australia.

"We have searched from Australia and we still couldn't access that content; it impacts all those people who speak those languages."

The ABC understands that some tags were restricted by TikTok to comply with local laws, but others were suppressed because the company believed they were being used to search for porn on the platform.

"Our policies and practices are informed by experts across the field and continually evolve to meet the needs of our vibrant community," the company said in a statement.

"We've committed to making our moderation policies, algorithm, and data security practices available to experts, which no other company in our space has been willing to do,"

"We are deeply committed to inclusivity and proud that content celebrating our diverse community is among the most popular on TikTok."

Even though TikTok is the platform copping heat right now, plenty of other social media companies have been called out for allegedly discriminating against queer content.

Queer YouTube creators have accused the site of demonetising their videos and Instagram has been criticsed for algorithms that labelled images of gender diverse people of colour as ads for sex work.

Tina and Renee Dixson, are ANU PhD Candidates and co-founders of the Forcibly Displaced People Network, the first Australian LGBTIQ+ Refugee-led community organisation.

They say this kind of shadow banning isn't just a problem on TikTok and it's having serious consequences.

"They're all guilty in this," says Renee.

"They're not only erasing your existence, they cut out the possibilities to connect with your community."

Tina says by shadowbanning LGBTI+ tags, TikTok is cutting off opportunities for queer people to connect with their community in countries where their sexuality is already not accepted ."In so many cases people are reliant on that representation to see that they're not alone," she says.

Tina [left] and Renee Dixson are ANU PhD Candidates and co-founders of the Forcibly Displaced People Network, the first Australian LGBTIQ+ Refugee-led community organisation.

Tina [left] and Renee Dixson are ANU PhD Candidates and co-founders of the Forcibly Displaced People Network, the first Australian LGBTIQ+ Refugee-led community organisation.

"What they want is to be seen and to know their lives are legitimate and valid."

"When we're suppressing any mentions, especially positive mentions... this actually has really negative consequences for people because they don't see themselves represented."

Tina and Renee have got some suggestions for how the social media giants can up their game, by tackling the root causes of homophobia and transphobia rather than queer tags.

"Every time we report any homophobic or transphobic behaviours against the content we post... every single time it says it doesn't violate community guidelines," Tina says.

"If we can create an algorithm that can detect a woman's nipple on an instagram picture and ban it, then clearly we can create an algorithm that would detect homophobia, transphobia and racism and ban it."

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TikTok caught out suppressing LGBTI+ and political hashtags - ABC News

Facebook: Those Who Violate Community Standards and are Banned "May also Lose Access" to Oculus Games – Niche Gamer

Facebook have confirmed those who violate their Community Standards and have their account banned may also lose access to their Oculus games.

As previously reported, Oculus announced that users would need to merge their account with a Facebook account from October 2020. If a user does not merge their accounts, they continue using their Oculus account for two years (with support for those accounts ending January 1st 2023).

Judging by the comments to both the tweet and the blog post users were not happy. Many accused Facebook of inflating their user numbers via merging accounts (or users having to create new ones), and concerns over the privacy of the social media platform.

Several have stated they will switch to competitors, or demand a refund [1,2,3,4,5]. One user even prompted a response from VR rival HTC Vive on Twitter.

Now, Road to VR reports users will lose access to their Oculus games if they violate Facebooks Community Standards. A Facebook spokesperson made the following statement to Road to VR.

If you log in using your Facebook account or merge your Oculus and Facebook accounts and violate the Facebook Community Standards, Conduct in VR Policy or other terms and policies on any of our platforms your access to or use of Oculus products may be impacted. If your account is fully disabled as a result of this violation you may also lose access to your [games and content]. We are committed to keeping all of our platforms safer.

Road to VR also report that permanent bans would be reserved for (in Road to VRs words) the most egregious violations.Less violations could lead to suspensions which would (in Road to VRs words) restrict the use of Oculus headsets for up to thirty days.

Other violations would include using a fake name or date of birth. The spokesperson claimed fake accounts would be flagged, meaning users would have to resolve the violation before regaining full access to the headset.

Even so, Road to VR reports the company says that users can choose a pseudonym to associate with their VR activities and maintain a list of VR friends that is separate from their Facebook friends.

The phrasing of the statements also do little to inspire confidence. Restrict may mean anything from losing any ability to playing any Oculus games, or that social and online multiplayer features would be disabled.

Asked for further details, such as if suspended accounts could play Oculus offline, the spokesperson told Road to VR that many details had to be worked out. More details will be revealed in October.

The Community Standards rules are designed to prevent harmful content being shared online, such as abuse and scams. However, Facebook has fallen under criticism for stifling free speech, and relying on automated bots to detect violating content (with false-positives).

There have also been claims of censoring whistle blowing (or removing unfounded conspiracy theories), and a bias against those with conservative political beliefs. This is also true of Twitter.

Twitter has tried desperately to curb abusive accounts, and prevent users from being dunked on- no matter the reason. These have included limiting an abusive tweets visibility, allowing users to control who can reply to them, and even changing the default egg avatar due to its association with harassment.

The former- better known as shadow banning- even resulted in Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey having totestifyto the US House Energy and Commerce Committee. This was due to allegations of censorship, especially aimed at those with republican beliefs. Twitters terms of service (as of January 2020) effectively wrote shadow banning into their terms [1,2,3].

On May 28th, United States President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Preventing Online Censorship,after Twitter marked one of his tweets as deceptive. President Trump had expressed concern that mail-in ballots will be anything less than substantially fraudulent.

In summation, the executive order ascertains that social media is the modernpublic square.As such they would lose their protections from being liable for what users post, if they use their power over a vital means of communication to engage in deceptive or pretextual actions stifling free and open debate by censoring certain viewpoints.

Image:Oculus,Wikipedia

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Facebook: Those Who Violate Community Standards and are Banned "May also Lose Access" to Oculus Games - Niche Gamer

Government urged to extend eviction ban to avoid cliff-edge for renters – The Independent

Labour is demanding the government perform an eleventh-hour U-turn and extend the eviction moratorium until they have a credible plan to ensure people do not lose their homes as a result of the pandemic.

With just six days remaining until courts can once again begin procession proceedings, shadow housing secretary Thangam Debbonaire warned of a cliff-edge facing thousands in the rental sector.

In an attempt to alleviate concerns over the imminent lifting of the ban, the government extended the notice period for renters are given to leave a property from three to six months, excluding cases involving anti-social tenants.

While welcoming the measures that would prevent the misery of tenants facing eviction over the festive period, charity Shelter warned those people who were served notices by landlords before August could still face automatic eviction when the moratorium expires.

The organisation has previously warned that 174,000 tenants were threatened with eviction by landlords or letting agents by the end of June.

And for renters served notice after August, the measures simply delay the threat of homelessness, they added. With the double-whammy of recession and the furlough scheme ending next month, and thousands in financial peril, the government must support the renters most in need with paying their rent.

Ahead of the resumption of courts hearing eviction cases, Ms Debbonaire told a roundtable discussion on Tuesday: We have been warning the government for months about the potential rise in homelessness if they lift this ban without a plan.

Echoing Shelters comments, the Labour MP said extending eviction notice periods to six months, from three, doesnt help people who were served notice before August.

She added: Unfortunately the government has in my view been far too slow. The government did U-turn at the last minute last month and they brought in this very short extension. This was welcomed, but in my view theyve wasted that time and were still facing largely the same cliff-edge this Sunday that the government narrowly avoided at the end of August.

I believe the government should not lift the ban until theyve got a credible for how to make sure people do not lose their homes because of coronavirus.

One tenant, speaking on the condition of anonymity at the roundtable discussion hosted by campaigning group Generation Rent, said that just before the pandemic hit they were made redundant and had enough money to cover just the first rental payment of the lockdown.

After that I had to tell my landlady that look Im only going to be able to cover what the government gives me and the government gives me less than a third of what my rent is, which is just below the market rate in south-east London.

Ive been paying that since, but Ive gone into arrears of a few thousand pounds now. Ive been looking for work but because of the Covid situation its a lot tougher now. Ive also got mental health issues and its really impacted my anxiety severely.

He added: I wanted the government to say, even temporarily while this crisis is going on, we will actually cover the market rate of the rent.

At the moment its extremely tough and its having a real impact. Luckily, I havent had an eviction notice or anything yet, unlike some others. But you never know when that comes through once that comes through its the end game because Ive got nowhere else to go.

A second tenant on Tuesday afternoon urged the government to extend the eviction ban amid rising cases of coronavirus and fears of the UK is experiencing a second wave of the pandemic. While the renter said they had not received an eviction note, the landlord was consistently asking whether they have found another property.

Everytime he sees me, everytime he sends me a text: You find another property. Although he didnt send me an eviction note, its not good to live under that pressure."

A third tenant speaking at the roundtable, who lives in an east-London block, said they had been served a section 21 notice by their landlord, dated for 21 September the day after the moratorium on evictions ceases in England and Wales.

A lot of people in the building are young freelancers, people working in the gig economy. So the Covid crisis hit us in a particular way, with lots of people loosing income, including my partner, who shares the rent with me, the tenant said.

In an attempt to alleviate financial pressures, tenants in the building wrote a letter to the landlord asking for a rental discount during the crisis, or at least a guarantee that no-one evicted if they couldnt pay.

They added: We were very surprised at the response we got. The letter received said we were supposedly saving money on cancelled holidays and lunches that we could use to pay the rent in full. So, we received no discount whatsoever.

The National Residential Landlords Association, which has previously called for government support for those suffering rent arrears, however, urged the government to keep its word and ensure that urgent repossession cases can be heard again after 20 September.

They added: We need the courts to deal with cases where tenants are committing anti-social behaviour or where there are long-standing rent arrears that have nothing to do with the pandemic. Over the last six months landlords have been powerless to take any action against those who cause misery for fellow tenants and neighbours. This has to end.

Speaking last week, Mr Jenrick said: We have protected renters during the pandemic by banning evictions for six months the longest eviction ban in the UK. To further support renters we have increased notice period to six months, and unprecedented measure to help keep people in their homes over the winter months.

It is right that we strike a balance between protecting vulnerable renters and ensuring landlords whose tenants have behaved illegally or anti-social ways have access to justice. Our legislation means such cases will be subject to shorter notice periods and then prioritised through the judiciarys new court processes.

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Government urged to extend eviction ban to avoid cliff-edge for renters - The Independent

Matt Hancock says COVID test issues will take ‘weeks’ to fix as MPs accuse government of ‘fiasco’ – Yahoo Finance UK

The government has admitted its coronavirus testing issues will take weeks to solve.

Health secretary Matt Hancock has been accused of presiding over a fiasco amid signs of massive strain on the testing system.

Issues have included huge queues for tests, people reporting they have been unable to get tests, and others being offered tests hundreds of miles from their homes.

It has meant suspected COVID-19 patients with acute medical needs, as well as people in care homes, will now be prioritised under plans to ration tests.

Hancock was summoned to the House of Commons on Tuesday to answer an urgent question on the situation.

He was invited by his predecessor, Jeremy Hunt, to assure the testing problems would be solved in a weeks time.

However, Hancock would only say: We will be able to solve this problem in a matter of weeks.

In [Hunts] own constituency yesterday 194 people got their tests. So we are managing to deliver record capacity but as he well knows, demand is also high and the response to that is to make sure we have prioritisation, so that the people who most need it can get tests that they need.

People queuing for a walk-in testing centre in Bolton last week. (AFP via Getty Images)

Among the examples MPs fired at Hancock were:

Labours shadow health secretary Jon Ashworth accused Hancock of losing control of this virus as he said: People want to know when they will get a test and when this mess will be fixed.

Today there will be thousands of ill people trying to book a test only to be told none are available.

When will ill people no longer have to travel hundreds of miles for a test that should be available on their doorstep?

Hancock, who has been accused by Labour MPs of overseeing a complete fiasco and shambles, countered: When you have a free service, its inevitable that demand rises. The challenge is to make sure we prioritise the tests we have as a nation to those who most need it.

He also claimed the average distance travelled to a test site is now 5.8 miles, down from 6.4 miles last week.

Figures on Monday showed 2,621 confirmed new infections, with Hancock acknowledging the epidemic is growing.

On Monday, the governments rule of six coronavirus law came into force, banning most social gatherings of more than six people in England.

However, confusion continued to reign on Tuesday over the ban on mingling, with home secretary Priti Patel accused of not understanding her own laws by a human rights barrister after she wrongly said two families of four stopping for a chat on the way to the park constituted illegal mingling.

Meanwhile, a top officer toldGood Morning Britainthat officers were still unsure how to uphold the new law, whichbans any social gatherings of over six people.

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Matt Hancock says COVID test issues will take 'weeks' to fix as MPs accuse government of 'fiasco' - Yahoo Finance UK

Judd Apatow Criticizes Hollywood’s Censorship For International Market: China Has Bought Our Silence With Their Money – Deadline

According to Judd Apatow, Hollywoods desire to bring home major box office wins in China and Saudi Arabia comes at the cost of meaningful and truthful content.

The director, comedian and producer sat down with MSNBCs Ari Melber to talk comedy and the industrys content censorship when catering to international markets. During the Mavericks with Ari Melber conversation, The King of Staten Island helmer said that people should turn their attention to the corporate type of censorship that happens to films when presented in content-strict countries including China, Saudi Arabia and North Korea.

A lot of these giant corporate entities have business with countries around the world, Saudi Arabia or China, and theyre just not going to criticize them and theyre not going to let their shows criticize them or theyre not going to air documentaries that go deep into truthful areas because they make so much money, Apatow told the MSNBC host.

Apatow added that such censorship completely shut(s) down critical content about important stories including those spotlighting human rights issues in aforementioned countries. He went on to single out China, noting that the countrys ability to block off investigative documentaries and films criticizing the nation and its leadership warrants concern.

He said that larger content corporations, who may care more about making money, are more likely to reject stories about human rights abuses in China, such as those regarding Muslim concentration camps, in the pitch process.

No one would buy the pitch, he said. Instead of us doing business with China and that leading to China being more free, what has happened is that China has bought our silence with their money.

The director voiced the need for movies that shine a light on human rights issues, challenge the actions of elected officials and inform the worldwide audience. Without them, the entertainment market may face consequences far greater than box office losses, he said.

What is a result of that is that we never wake up our country or the world, through art or satire, that people are being mistreated in our country or other countries and thats very dangerous, he said.

Apatows comments come after Disneys Mulan faced backlash for filming in the Xinjiang province, where Uighur Muslims have been detained in mass internment camps. U.S. Senator Josh Hawley accused Disneys movie of whitewashing the ongoing genocide of Uighurs and other Muslim ethnic minorities during the production of Mulan.

Watch the full clip above.

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Judd Apatow Criticizes Hollywood's Censorship For International Market: China Has Bought Our Silence With Their Money - Deadline

Bangladesh in the Shadow of Censorship The Diplomat – The Diplomat

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Independent Bangladesh has witnessed both military rule and the establishment of democratic institutions; throughout, the press have continued to suffer at the hands of not only various censorship laws, but also a number of sedition and criminal libel laws. With increasing use of social media in the recent decade, one of the most draconian laws, the Digital Security Act 2018, allows for conducting searches and arresting individuals without a warrant, and criminalizes various forms of speech.

Bangladesh now ranks 151st among 180 countries, with the lowest score for press freedom among all South Asian countries, according to Reporters without Borders (RSF). In the two years since the Digital Security Act was passed, Bangladesh has dropped five places.

In the article, we reflect on how freedom of speech in Bangladesh has evolved since the countrys birth.

Liberation and the Ensuing Chaos

After Bangladeshs brutal fight for independence from Pakistan in 1971, the country witnessed a period of intense upheaval as it rose from the ashes of war. The countrys constitution, designed in 1972, upheld secular ideals. However, with the assassination of the countrys founding father, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, in 1975, secularism slowly started eroding. A significant development can be noted in the fact that the phrase Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahim (In the name of God, most Gracious, most Compassionate) was introduced into the constitution during Ziaur Rahmans era, indicating Islams superiority over other religions.

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Also while Rahman was in power, the country saw strict rules imposed on the press. Naeem Mohaiemen, a political analyst, writes that it became an offense in that period to criticize the martial law in any way. Press reports about attacks on journalists were focused on non-state actors, he writes further.

In 1982, General Hussain Muhammad Ershad rose to power through a bloodless coup. His regime had a troubled relationship with the press, as observed by Mohaiemen and many others who lived through that period.

His era was marked by a continuous cat and mouse game between the press and the regime, with newspapers and magazines getting censured for reports, and then immediately committing the same offense. The period was also marked by the use of coded signals in the press (e.g., romance stories that were actually about a corruption scandal) as well as a thriving parallel press of underground leaflets and pamphlets, writes Mohaiemen.

One journalistic platform, Ittehad, was banned shortly after publishing the first criticism about the regime.

The decade following Ershads rise saw the frequent usage of issuing Press Advice to outlets, guiding them about what not to print. It was during his regime that Islam was formally introduced as the state religion of Bangladesh, setting a stage for extremism to exercise its influence (notably, through charges of blasphemy) in the coming years. Veteran journalist Syed Badrul Ahsan writes, General Hussein Muhammad Ershad did lasting damage to the Bangladesh idea through imposing the concept of a state religion.

As the regimes grip on dissent was slowly weakening, martial law was re-imposed in 1985 following political protests. The government became careful about international publications. In 1986, a London-based Bengali weekly, Janomat, was banned, among other publications like The Hindu from India. We see from Mohaiemens analysis how seven journalists were arrested during that time under the 1974 Special Powers Act. After a state of emergency was declared in November 1987, a martial law regulation ordered that reports opposing the upcoming elections and covering the protests remain prohibited. In 1988, a national press ban on reporting about election violence (which claimed at least 13 lives, as seen from Mohaiemens analysis) was declared. Censorship coupled with a turbulent political climate continued until the regime fell owing to a pro-democracy mass uprising backed by students and members of civil society, among others who sought democracy in December 1990.

Turbulence and Democracy

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With the advent of democracy in the political arena of Bangladesh in 1991, power mostly alternated between the two political parties the Awami League and Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). Both leaders of the parties had a similar approach toward media censorship; the only difference lay in the subjects that were monitored more heavily, which were simultaneously used to target critical voices.

BNP leader Khaleda Zia was the first democratically appointed prime minister of the nation; it was during her rule that blasphemy cases and politics of religion skyrocketed. Possibly one of the most infamous cases in the history of independent Bangladesh was that of Taslima Nasreen. In 1993, in an increasingly Muslim (rather than secular) Bangladesh, Nasreen published her novel titled Lajja (or Shame) set in the mise-en-scene of the anti-Hindu riots in the country as a consequence of the Babri Masjid demolition the year before. The government immediately banned the book. What aggravated the situation was a gravely misquoted interview in The Statesman newspaper of India, where, as Nasreen later clarified, her call for a reassessment of Shariah was incorrectly stated as the need to revise the Quran to ensure womens rights. Although there had been noteworthy blasphemy cases in the past, Nasreens indictment roused Islamists in the country in a whole new way, allowing groups such as Touhidi Janata Jamat to come to the national limelight. Lawsuits, death threats, a bounty announced on Nasreens head in Sylhet forced her to ultimately flee into exile. In the years to come, debates surrounding her surfaced a number of times, especially when new books were published, or because of any statement she might have passed that did not go well with religious fundamentalists.

Another topic that Awami League and BNP leaders regularly engaged in conflict over involved ownership of the political legacy of the independence war. During the BNPs regime, creative expressions and works of art that popularized the role of Sheikh Mujib in the independence struggle were banned, such as Tanvir Mokammels documentary Sreeti Ekattor (Remembrance of 1971) and Tareque Masuds Muktir Gaan (Song of Freedom).

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Similarly, conversations involving India became one particularly sensitive issue. As learned from a senior newspaper editor of the time, all licensed publications had to agree to a set of conditions, including one that instructed to not publish any news that could potentially harm relations with national allies. The ICT Act, which came into effect in 2006, was aimed to monitor information on online platforms and regulate e-commerce; the law grew to impose more serious effects in later years when social media starts to play a greater role in the lives of people.

As tensions between the Awami League and BNP flared, a caretaker government was installed for a brief period between 2007 and 2008. Local media played a big role in ending the tenure of the military during these years, defying censorship laws and not succumbing to the threats or cajoling by the authorities. Regardless, journalists during this time faced immense difficulties and were routinely picked up for interrogation. One such case involved Forum, a monthly magazine published by the countrys largest circulating English newspaper The Daily Star. In one of its issues, a cover story titled Prince of Bogra elaborated on the involvement of intelligence agencies with militant Islamist groups during the BNP era. Tasneem Khalil, the author of the report, was abducted and allegedly tortured while in custody, according to reports by Human Rights Watch (HRW). As he was also involved with international media, Khalils case caused a mass outcry globally, which finally allowed for his release. He eventually fled into exile in Sweden as a political refugee, from where he now runs an independent investigative journalism news platform called Netra News. Criticism was also stirred globally as censorship extended to international media; issues of the Economist magazine containing negative reports about the regime entered Dhaka with the relevant pages torn out.

As elections drew near, the military regime started to become increasingly unsteady, and religion once again entered the political periphery of the country. Attacks were launched on writers and students for any alleged blasphemous reference, such as when Islami Chatra Shibir threatened members of the group Udichi for staging the drama Mandar at Rajshahi University. Jamaat e Islami also announced its manifesto during this time, which included a section calling for a blasphemy law. However, the events backfired, leading to a large anti-Islamist vote bloc to emerge during the national polls.

The Rise of a Crackdown on Dissent

Journalists expected the 2009 return to democracy to be accompanied with new appreciation for the press, whose voices had made the [caretaker governments] tenure increasingly difficult. But perversely, government interference has now increased to the point that by 2012 there are regular reports of actions against a blog, blogger, or even Facebook accounts, writes Mohaiemen. He further explores how press freedoms landscape has been dotted with censorship from the start of the 2010s. Aside from press freedom, this was a time when social media and new films and exhibitions also came under the watchful gaze of censorship.

Fast forward to 2013, and the country saw a spate of assaults against writers, artists, and publishers by the forces of Islamic extremism. That year was tied to a raw nerve in Bangladeshs history the liberation war of 1971. The country came alive with protests demanding the capital punishment of an influential war criminal, Abdul Quader Mollah. A blogger and one of the organizers of the protests, Ahmed Rajib Haider was hacked to death outside his house during the protests, allegedly because he was an atheist. A group named Hefazat-e-Islam came into the spotlight during that period as it demanded the government enact blasphemy laws against atheist bloggers. It rose to prominence by harnessing the extremist Islamic ideals of its followers.

In 2015, a hit-list containing 84 names was circulated on the internet by a militant group called Ansar Bangla. Following a series of attacks and killings (the murder of Avijit Roy at the national bookfair a particularly horrific episode of the series), international writers including Salman Rushdie and Margaret Atwood urged the government to take stringent measures to ensure a space for free thinking. With the rise of a crackdown on dissent by machete-wielding extremists, it was upon the writers to ensure their own safety. After all, the Information and Communications Technology Act 2006 (amended in 2013) could be used to prosecute anyone who publishes anything on or offline that hurts religious sentiment or prejudices the image of the state, as Lit Hub noted.

As killings relatively abated and more traditional censorship grew, a hostile climate for freethinking rolled in over the years. Shahidul Alams arrest in 2018 for covering the road safety movement and speaking to Al Jazeera about what he witnessed on the ground garnered relentless criticism internationally. In the same year, the Digital Security Act came into play.

Shahidul Alams niece, Sofia Karim, an activist and architect who staunchly advocated for his release back in 2018, said:

My uncle (who always spoke out regardless of which party was in power) is one of countless citizens targeted for what should be part and parcel of every democracy: the right to criticize those who rule us through art, satire, reportage, music, poetry and human expression in all its forms. When these collapse, the void is filled with a culture of fear driven by power that operates without checks and balances. Bangladesh was created as a democracy, through pain, courage and sacrifice on the part of the people. To dismantle that is a betrayal. Repression, arbitrary arrests, torture, enforced disappearances, and extra judicial killings should not occur in Bangladesh, under this government or any other. The country deserves better.

Since the Digital Security Act was passed, 1,000 cases have been filed under the law. According to Odhikar, a Bangladeshi human rights monitor, it has been used largely by politicians and businessmen.

The latest controversy surrounding the act came as Shafiqul Islam Kajol, a photo-journalist, was arrested under the act, 53 days after his mysterious disappearance on March 10 this year. Ever since his arrest, hashtags like #freekajol and #RepealDSA have gone viral. An upsurge has also been noted in cases surrounding this act during the COVID-19 pandemic. Dhaka Tribune reports that 327 cases were filed under the Digital Security Act in the first three months of this year with the Cyber Crime Tribunal. Odhikar further claims that 59 journalists have been harassed for their work in the first three months of 2020.

A journalist, who wished to remain anonymous, told The Diplomat, We have to think twice before writing about some influential figure and alter our language. And when we are dealing with sensitive assignments, we have to be extra-alert in terms of physical safety and legal aspects. My career has been overshadowed by the hands of censorship.

Azeez Intizar and Sabrina Majed are freelance journalists focusing on South Asia.

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Bangladesh in the Shadow of Censorship The Diplomat - The Diplomat