A Nollywood film about two women in love faces an uphill battle in a country where homophobia is rampant – The Philadelphia Tribune

Two women lay in bed in a tight embrace, one is stroking the other's hair and whispers that she is in love with her.

These intimate scenes wouldn't be out of place in a Hollywood movie, but in Nigeria's film industry, Nollywood, they are near taboo.

But Nigerian filmmaker Uyaiedu Ikpe-Etim says she is tackling the subject head-on in her new film titled "Ife," to create space for queer characters in the country's prolific movie industry.

"Ife'" means love in the Yoruba language, spoken in West Africa, and most prominently in southern Nigeria.

LGBTQ characters are described poorly in Nollywood and are viewed in problematic roles that encourage violence or judgment from viewers, Ikpe-Etim says.

"I'm queer so 'Ife' is dear to my heart. I wanted to represent LGBTQ characters in a different light than how they are shown in past stories, to change how heterosexuals view them," she explained.

Homophobia in Nigeria

The story centers on two women Ife and Adaora and the uncertainty surrounding their relationship. It is created in partnership with Equality hub, an NGO in Nigeria focused on fighting social injustices against sexual minorities.

"They come into problems when they are not certain of the future of their relationship considering that these two women live in Nigeria which is a homophobic country," she said of the storyline.

In the West African nation where homophobia runs rampant,Ikpe-Etim is anadvocate for the country's lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer (LGBTQ) community.

Homosexuality is illegal in Nigeria. The Same-Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act of 2014 says anyone found guilty of homosexuality faces up to 14 years in prison.

A 2019 survey by The Initiative for Equal Rights (TIERS), a Nigerian human rights organization, found that 75% of people in the country support the continued enforcement of the anti-gay laws.

Censorship of queer films

Ikpe-Etim, 31, says "Ife" has no fixed release date yet but will be out before the end of the year.

What is certain is that it faces an uphill battle with Nigeria's film censors, who have said they may "go after the producers," if they find that the film promotes homosexuality.

Adedayo Thomas, executive director of the NFVCB, told CNN the board will not approve films that promote themes that don't conform with the country's "constitution, morals and traditions."

"We are monitoring the progress of the movie, and if it goes against the law by promoting homosexuality, we will be forced at some point to go after the producer and executive producer," he added.

According to Thomas, Ife was never submitted to the NFVCB before its trailer was released, making it impossible to classify or censor the film.

"We look at the content of the film and we look at the end. For example, in a movie that glorifies fraud, we look at how it ends, did the fraudster meet their waterloo? How the movie ends will determine our censorship. You wouldn't watch your kid to watch a film that glorifies fraud," he told CNN.

"Ife's" producer Pamela Adie says agencies like NFVCB suppress the creativity of filmmakers.

"If there is a demand for films like Ife and if people want it, and the censor's board does not approve then it means they are indirectly stifling the creative powers of filmmakers. To deny a film simply because of queer characters is discrimination," she said.

Stereotyping queer characters

Nollywood has always had a problematic relationship with its queer characters, portraying them as mentally ill, under the influence of witchcraft or troubled.

In Emotional Crack, a 2003 film, one of the lead characters, Camilla falls in love with Crystal, a married woman who suffered domestic abuse from her husband.

Both women kicked off a relationship that eventually ended when Crystal became unsure of remaining in a same-sex relationship.

While the film was one of the country's early introductions into LGBTQ relationships, it repeated damaging stereotypes like branding Camilla as violent, predatory, and suggested that Crystal's lesbianism was as a result of being mistreated by a man.

Similarly, in a 2010 film, "Men in Love," the affair of the lead couple was explained away by a "strong satanic bond."

Adie told CNN that she wants to challenge other filmmakers in Nollywood to create more nuanced queer stories devoid of the usual stereotypes.

"My hope is that Ife shapes things up, and mainstream Nollywood starts to think about stories that portray the reality of LGBT Nigerians," she explained.

The 36-year-old added that "Ife" is one of few films with a focus on lesbians in Nigeria, "a lot of representation has been geared towards gay men," she says.

Outpouring of support

Nigeria is not the only country with strict rules regarding films with strong LGBTQ representation.

In April 2018, Rafiki was banned by Kenya's Film and Classification Board (KFCB) because of its intent to "promote lesbianism," in the East African nation.

Despite the challenges around creating queer centered films in Nigeria, Adie says there has been an outpouring of support for "Ife" from audiences in the country.

"It is something that is groundbreaking. We have received support, from when we released the poster to the trailer. It feels like people didn't know they wanted this kind of content till now."

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A Nollywood film about two women in love faces an uphill battle in a country where homophobia is rampant - The Philadelphia Tribune

Letters to the editor for July 25, 2020 – Opinion – Palm Beach Post

Vote by mail

We enter a time of some turmoil, and for reflection in many areas. Changes some accomplished, some still to develop are often met with uncertainty. We look for means to address and calm concerns and have, and should express, hope for certainty in the future.

Either to solidify a position or advocate for change, our voice is heard and recorded in the single most effective way the opportunity to cast our vote. Its easy. Call your Supervisor of Elections at 352-374-5252, email kbarton@alachuacounty.us or go to http://www.votealachua.com and have them send you your absentee ballot in the mail.

And theres no postage due to return it. Just ask then vote.

Bill Salmon, Gainesville

What took so long?

In the span of six days, the first African-American leader of a U.S. military service was confirmed (General Charles Q. Brown as Air Force chief of staff), the Navys first black female fighter pilot completed her training (LTJG Madeline Swegle), and the first woman joined the U.S. Army Green Berets (unnamed for security reasons). These are tremendous accomplishments, and should be lauded as such.

I have just one question: What took so long?

The ban on women in combat was lifted almost 30 years ago, in 1993. The U.S. military was desegregated more than 70 years ago in 1948.

While the accomplishments of General Brown, LTJG Swegle and the unnamed Green Beret deserve recognition, it is with a heavy heart that we must also acknowledge that these achievements come far too late for a nation that espouses the equality of all mankind.

Will Atkins, Gainesville

Questionable decisions

I didn't know whether to laugh or cry at a few recent letter writers claiming the Obama administration was scandal-free, because that statement is untrue.

Barack Obama also wasn't free from some questionable decisions. Remember when the Benghazi tragedy started from a video? Do the IRS scandal, Operation Fast & Furious, leaving Iraq and allowing ISIS to be born, the moving Syria "red line," waging war on Libya without Congress consent, ransoms paid for hostages with foreign currency and an unmarked plane in the middle of the night, the Bowe Bergdahl swap, the veto of the 9/11 crime bill, claiming Affordable Care Act coverage and doctors wouldn't change if you wanted to keep them, his 2008 and 2016 apology tours, the Veterans Affairs scandal, the Colorado environmental disaster and commuting the sentences of Chelsea Manning and Oscar Lopez Rivera ring any bells?

When the current investigation by John Durham is completed, we may have to add the spying and criminalizing of Michael Flynn.

Cathy Anderson, Williston

Significant achievements

A recent letter writer complained about what he considers a lack of significant achievements during the Obama administration. So let me educate the author of this letter.

Despite the fact that President Obama inherited a terrible economy during the great recession, the stock market tripled and the unemployment rate decreased from over 10% at the beginning of his administration to less than 5% at its end. Significant legislative achievements include the Affordable Care Act, through which 20 million people received health insurance; the Dodd-Frank Act, which limited the ability of banks to participate in the risky financial transactions that caused the great recession; and establishment of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Regarding the war on terrorism, many al-Qaida leaders, including Osama bin Laden, were terminated during the Obama administration.

President Obama also tried his best to combat climate change and improve environmental conditions for future generations.

T.J. Ronson, Micanopy

Write a letter

Letters to the editor should be emailed to letters@gainesville.com. Letters should be 150 words or fewer and include the writers full name, city of residence and contact information.

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Letters to the editor for July 25, 2020 - Opinion - Palm Beach Post

Pro-encryption fight hindered as US appeals court refuses to unseal papers – Reclaim The Net

In 2018, a judge of the US District Court in Fresno, California ruled that federal and state prosecutors could not force Facebook to wiretap conversations of users of its Messenger app.

By doing that, Facebook would have broken the end-to-end encryption feature that it promises users but investigators, who were after an international crime gang at the time, asked a lower court to order Facebook to carry out the act, based on the Wiretap Act, that is used to compel phone companies to spy on customers in order to assist the police.

The judge said that Facebook was not in contempt of court when it refused. But the judge never explained why exactly that was the case and this is a big question to be answered, especially amid ongoing controversy over what tech companies are obligated to do.

If others knew what motivated the ruling that said Facebook didnt have to comply, they would have a landmark judgment that would inform their own actions, i.e., let them know how far federal authorities could go in forcing them to spy on users.

Double your web browsing speed with today's sponsor. Get Brave.

The American Civil Liberties Union then tried to persuade the Eastern District of California court to unseal the ruling in the interest of the public, at a minimum providing information about the legal reasoning behind the original decision that went in Facebooks favor but this was rejected.

Now a federal court of appeals has also rejected the same request from a number of digital rights groups to unseal the ruling, citing the stronger right to protect investigations.

We obtained the filing for you to read here.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation and the American Civil Liberties Union were among those who asked for the judgment to be unsealed, as the public had the right to learn about the reasoning that absolved Facebook of responsibility as it would help other companies also be able to argue their case against government spying.

Reuters said that the US Justice Department is behind the decision to keep the ruling secret, while the appeals court announced that the document was also unpublished in other words, cant be used as a precedent in similar future cases.

Facebook is not alone in trying to fend off authorities who want it to break or backdoor its encryption, as Apple was involved in a similar skirmish with the FBI in 2016 in the San Bernardino case.

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Pro-encryption fight hindered as US appeals court refuses to unseal papers - Reclaim The Net

Cloud Encryption Software Market Outlook 2020: Global Opportunity and Demand Analysis, Market Forecast -2026 – Owned

This report focuses on the globalCloud Encryption Softwarestatus, future forecast, growth opportunity, key market and key players. The study objectives are to present the Cloud Encryption Software development in North America, Europe, China, Japan, Southeast Asia, India and Central & South America.

The report can be useful in terms of understanding the key industry trends occurring at the present. At the same time, it goes back in the past as well, to analyse the effects of the same at the present. Based on these details, one can take key business decision regarding the investment and other aspects of the market. Here the analysis has been done keeping the forecast period of 2020-2026.

Request a Free Sample Report, Click Here @ https://www.wiseguyreports.com/sample-request/5040456-global-cloud-encryption-software-market-size-status-and-forecast-2020-2026

The key players covered in this studyGemaltoHPEIBMMicrosoftSymantecThales E-SecurityCiphercloudNetskopeTrend MicroParablu

Market Segmentation

The Cloud Encryption Software market is segmented to provide information on the company level, global level, and regional level markets. The divisions provide a clear snapshot of the global market at various levels and phases. The segmentation is done based on factors such as product types, applications, geographical areas, and companies. The product type segmentation discusses the various varieties of products that are available in the global market along with the description of those products. The regional segmentation of the global market is done to provide a clear understanding of the market in various regions or countries. The study of the global Cloud Encryption Software market includes some of the key countries and regions in it. The segmentation based on application provides the overall applications of the global market and its products. The key players name and descriptions are provided in the segmentation based on the companies.

Market segment by Type, the product can be split intoCloud-basedOn-premise

Market segment by Application, split intoBFSIManufacturingHealthcareGovernmentOthers

Regional Description

The report analyses the market in a domain specific way. In this context, both the international and regional market for the concerned product and service segment can be analysed. The peak points of the market, as well as their lower ends can be thoroughly identified through the report. It can be useful in terms of having a thorough assessment.

As far as identifying the key markets are concerned, those like North America, Latin America, and Asia Pacific, Europe, and the Middle East and Africa are indeed the most prominent markets. Apart from these, one can get the domain specific report as well.

NOTE : Our team is studying Covid-19 and its impact on various industry verticals and wherever required we will be considering Covid-19 footprints for a better analysis of markets and industries. Cordially get in touch for more details.

Table of Content

1 Report Overview

2 Global Growth Trends by Regions

3 Competition Landscape by Key Players

4 Breakdown Data by Type (2015-2026)

5Cloud Encryption Software Breakdown Data by Application (2015-2026)

6 North America

7 Europe

8 China

9 Japan

10 Southeast Asia

11 India

12 Central & South America

13 Key Players Profiles

14 Analysts Viewpoints/Conclusions

15 Appendix

Continued

Make an enquiry of this Report @https://www.wiseguyreports.com/enquiry/5040456-global-cloud-encryption-software-market-size-status-and-forecast-2020-2026

Contact Us:

Norah Trent

Partner Relations & Marketing Manager

[emailprotected]

Ph: +1 (339) 368 6938 (US)

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Cloud Encryption Software Market Outlook 2020: Global Opportunity and Demand Analysis, Market Forecast -2026 - Owned

One Network Operating System To Rule Them All – The Next Platform

Networks may not be the most expensive thing in the datacenter they typically comprise about 10 percent to 15 percent of the cost of a distributed system, including cables, transceivers, switches, and routers but they are without a doubt the most complex part of distributed systems. And anything that can cut down on both complexity and cost at the same time should have a fairly easy time selling in the datacenter.

This is, after all, how chip makers like Broadcom (eaten by Avago, which took its name), Fulcrum Microsystems (eaten by Intel and then largely ignored), and Mellanox Technologies (eaten by Nvidia and now the cornerstone of its datacenter-as-computer strategy) paved the way for merchant silicon for datacenter switching more than a decade ago, and this is how newer merchant silicon suppliers such as Innovium (not acquired yet) and Barefoot Networks (eaten by Intel last year) have been able to carve their niches as well.

While companies certainly want choice when it comes to the chips in their switches and are increasingly demanding more open and less costly routing chips when it comes to network operating systems, they are sick of making choices. Or more precisely, they are sick and tired of having choices thrust upon them. Switching is like the RISC/Unix operating system era, where vendors had their own silicon and a flavor of Unix that was just enough alike the others it could be called Unix and offer a certain degree of portability between platforms. But these RISC/Unix systems had enough differences when it came to their APIs and the way they were operated that it was nonetheless still hard to move from platform to platform. With routers, the situation is more like the proprietary minicomputers that predate the RISC/Unix revolution in servers in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The chip is closed and the operating system is closed and there really is not interoperability or porting.

What companies really want in networking is something is akin to the situation with Linux, and we think companies would be willing to give up on having source code if they can get a unifying network operating system that can do switching and routing in the on-premises datacenter and also span the public clouds, bringing their networks under the same unifying control plane. And if they could smash the hegemony of Cisco Systems and Juniper Networks in the routing space and provide an equal or better operating system than the switch and router suppliers do individually while also driving down the cost of the NOS and supporting a wider array of switch/router ASICs, all the better.

Arrcus, an upstart network operating system supplier that we have gotten to know over the past three years, wants to be the NOS of choice for modern datacenters. And not just for the enterprises that want to emulate the hyperscalers and large public cloud providers, who have created their own NOS stacks, but also for those hyperscalers and large public cloud providers themselves. Thats a pretty bold move, but network operating systems are difficult and tricky and if hyperscalers and cloud builders could get out of creating this software, they would.

Like the hyperscale datacenter operators, Arrcus took a clean slate approach when it created ArcOS, its network operating system. And also like the hyperscalers and cloud builders in the United States, Arrcus also took a routing-centric approach to datacenter networking.

Arrcus uncloaked from stealth mode two years ago, and its technical team is led by Keyur Patel, the companys chief technology officer and formerly a distinguished engineer at Cisco for 14 years, and Derek Yeung, who is chief architect and formerly at Cisco in various engineering leadership roles for 25 years. Patel and Yeung are among the worlds experts on various routing protocols, including the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) that is favored by hyperscalers and cloud builders for their hybrid switch/routing gear. So it is no surprise, then, that Arrcus has pitched itself as the substrate to bind switching and routing together on merchant silicon, and leading us to quip in a subsequent analysis of the ArcOS platform that the switch-router war is over and the hyperscalers have won. In our coverage describing what is going on within the networks of the hyperscalers, we pointed out that the old network adage switch when you can and route when you must has been turned on its head and now these massive datacenters route when they can with deep buffer ASICs and switch when they must with shallow buffer ASICs. The latter are much cheaper, and the whole shebang brings a unified switch/routing infrastructure inside the datacenter.

But all of this is even more complicated, even among the hyperscalers, which use a mix of their own network operating systems and control planes as well as those provided by switch makers such as Cisco, Arista Networks, Mellanox, Innovium, and sometimes Intel thanks to Barefoot Networks.

We talk to customers in the enterprise and communications service provider portions of the market, Devesh Garg, founder and chief executive officer at Arrcus, tells The Next Platform. They have data and applications that they run on premises, and they also run at the edge of the network and are increasingly availing themselves of the cloud. But these are all very disparate, siloed, non-communicative, inefficiently connected environments. They want networking infrastructure that can provide any service, anytime, anywhere. We are able to do this because of the power of one simple network, one scalable architecture, and one seamless experience to connect billions of devices. If you get your switches and routers from the same vendor, or from a mix of them, they not only have different operating systems, but even within one company they have inconsistent data models and inconsistent ways that the same hardware equipment communicates. Adding the edge and the cloud to this hodge-podge only makes it worse for them.

And, as it turns out, better for Arrcus, which is launching two new features of its platform, called Virtual Distributed Routing and Multi-Cloud Networking to the stack, expanding not only its total addressable market, but the places where ArcOS and its adjuncts can run. VDR allows companies to create virtual routers out of fabrics of merchant switch/router silicon as Google and the other hyperscalers have done, and MCN allows for ArcOS to be deployed as a unifying substrate across on premises, cloud, and hybrid infrastructure that might consist of multiple public clouds or a mix of on premises and public cloud. (We will be drilling down into the capabilities separately.)

This transformation for ArcOS didnt happen overnight, of course. It has been a steady march for Arrcus from the time it uncloaked in 2018 until today. But even though Garg and his colleagues did not initially about the full breadth of capabilities they wanted to bring to bear, this was, he says, always part of the plan.

I have worked at a bunch of different startups, as well as advised them at Bessemer Venture Partners, and it is important to not try to boil the ocean during the inception of the company, says Garg. Amazon Web Services, Facebook, and Google have led the way, though, and they have showed us how to do it.

And, we would add, perhaps teach some of the hyperscalers and cloud builders a thing or two about how to unify the software for their necessarily disparate hardware. At some point, having thousands of PhDs reinventing this wheel will not make much sense. But, then again, the hyperscalers and cloud builders have nearly infinite money to invest in whatever they feel like doing, they like having perfect control of their platforms, and they often reinvent wheels as a matter of pride as well as curiosity. Which is why they still create everything from their own Linux kernels (and with Microsoft Azure, their own Windows Server kernel) and everything else that runs on top. We are somewhat skeptical that the AWS or Google will ever let go of their network operating system, but Facebook could if it thought it could use a better one and so could Microsoft, despite its heavy investment in SONiC and SAI. In fact, Microsoft is the natural company to buy Arrcus and commercialize networking software as it has done for systems with Windows Server. Why not?

But none of that is necessary for Arrcus to be successful. With the annual cadence of updates to ArcOS, the company has been able to grow its total addressable market by around a factor of 7.5X, from the IP Clos fabric based on routing protocols that are reimplemented completely from scratch and multithreaded so they run well on any kind of modern iron something that Garg contends no other NOS supplier can boast because even if they have expanding the threading, and therefore the performance of certain parts of their NOS stack, they have neglected other parts which still run poorly. (We will be chasing down these issues in the future with all the major switch vendors to see how they stack up.)

ArcOS could be deployed on top of rack, leaf, spine, and spline layers of the fabric and initially could be supported on Broadcom switch ASICs in the Tomahawk shallow buffer and Jericho deep buffer families. Over time, switch ASICs from Barefoot Networks, Innovium, and Marvell have been added and equally importantly, network functions can also be offloaded into containers running on X86 or Arm processors as well.

Last year, Arrcus added capabilities to do route-reflecting with BGP as well as routing to the host and peering, which nearly tripled its TAM to around $22 billion. And with the capabilities that Arrcus is adding now, which include support for Ethernet Virtual Private Network (EVPN) and Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN) for stitching together Layer 2 switching networks over Layer 3 routing to scale them, plus segment routing and the new Virtualize Distributed Routing and Multi-Cloud capabilities, Garg says that the TAM has nearly tripled again to more than $60 billion.

To capitalize on that opportunity is going to take some expertise, some cash, and a whole lot of pushing. There will no doubt be some pulling on the part of some hyperscalers, cloud builders, and other large enterprises and service providers who have had it up to their ears dealing with this complexity how do you think Linux and Windows Server came to dominate the datacenter? and will be willing to give ArcOS a try in proofs of concept. And capturing more of the market and smashing the hardware silos and crossing the software moats that NOS suppliers have created will require more than just the freedom to choose switching and routing hardware and unifying the software substrate in the network. It is going to take a radically better price/performance argument which is precisely how proprietary minicomputers ate share from mainframes, how RISC/Unix ate share from proprietary minicomputers and mainframes, how Linux and Windows Server ate share from all of the above, and how cloud providers are going to use virtualized Linux servers running either Linux or Windows Server to pull some of those servers onto the cloud.

This is ever the way, and such transformation is inevitable. Why should networking somehow be immune? It isnt, and the open sourcing of so many different NOSes over the past few years came to nothing, in the long run, just as RISC/Unix did in the datacenter. And it had very little to do with open source and more about the quality of the software being written. Linux was a threat to Microsoft and Microsoft responded by making Windows Server better. That is why these two platforms dominate. That one is community developed and that the other is created by experts is not precisely incidental there are those who will only deploy open source software as a matter of almost religion. But, then again, look at all of those hyperscaler and cloud provider NOSes that are not open and that dominate the networks of the world (albeit among a handful of vendors) and all of the open source NOSes that utterly failed to move the needle. Aristas Extensible Operating System (EOS) for switches might be based on Linux, but it is not open source any more than Ciscos NX-OS or IOS are. And in the datacenter, these are the three dominant operating systems, even at some of the hyperscalers and cloud builders.

This battle of the NOS is only just getting started, and Nokia entering the datacenter NOS market (which we will cover shortly), Nvidia buying Mellanox and then Cumulus Networks, and Microsoft pushing SONiC/SAI and others getting on board while at the same time buying Metaswitch Networks in May to attack the telco market and build out its 5G software strategy is only round two in this long fight. But in the end, Arrcus will be right, no matter how much share it does or doesnt get. This moat, this final moat in the datacenter, will be filled in and the tying of hardware and software will not stand.

Provided the software is good, of course, and the right people can tell its story and help drive it.

Garg says that after ArcOS has only been in the field for a little more than a year, it has more than ten revenue-generating customers, with uses in the datacenter for enterprises and cloud service providers as well as edge use cases with telcos and other service providers. By their nature, these are not small deals. The company has more than 50 additional big customers that are evaluating ArcOS and the pipeline of opportunities is in excess of $100 million already. Garg is taking a land and expand strategy, starting with a particular use case in the datacenter or at the edge and then working to expand ArcOS usage within existing customers as it also seeks to keep adding new customers. Early customers are already in place for the VDR and MCN capabilities announced this week, which could potentially grow that pipeline as Arrcus gets its footing with these.

With networking being of such strategic importance to large enterprises, hyperscalers, cloud builders, and various service providers, Garg cant say much about customers to date, but did share this:

Arrcus has been getting faster to support new merchant silicon and can get through the qualification process a lot faster than the incumbent switch makers when there is a big change. (This could get more difficult or less so depending on the nature of the next batch of customers that come in. Its hard to say.) The key datapoints that jump out here are that the routing performance is blowing the incumbents mostly Cisco and Juniper in routing out of the water, and this is also leading customers to move down to the switching network and up to the wide area network and backbone as they get experience with ArcOS. The scale of the control plane, which is distributed and independently scalable from the switching and routing itself, is also a big differentiator for Arrcus, and so is the lower price tag that ArcOS has compared to those incumbent NOSes.

It also helps to have influential friends in high places. As part of this announcement, Arrcus is expanding its technical advisor board with three new members. Sumeet Arora, formerly senior vice president and general manager of the Service Provider business at Cisco and currently SVP and head of engineering at ThoughtSpot, is now helping out. Dave Ward, who is chief executive officer at PacketFabric and who was previously chief technology officer and chief architect of Cisco as well as a distinguished Fellow at both Cisco and Juniper, has joined the Arrcus advisory board. So has Vijay Gill, who is currently senior vice president of engineering and product at Twilio; Gill previously had that same job at DataBricks (the commercializer of the Spark in-memory analytics platform) and held senior roles at both Microsoft, Google, AOL, and Worldcom implementing their internal networks.

Up next, we will explain why the world needs a virtual distributed router and then follow that up with what it means to create a network stack that can run across multiple clouds that have their own ideas about how to do networking that are not always perfectly aligned with on premises networks and yet which need to be lashed together and taught to behave.

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One Network Operating System To Rule Them All - The Next Platform

Pro-Trump women’s group seeks to paint message on NYC streets, citing Black Lives Matter murals – TribLIVE

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Pro-Trump women's group seeks to paint message on NYC streets, citing Black Lives Matter murals - TribLIVE

David Arbeitman: Columnist provides sanitized version of history – GazetteNET

Published: 7/24/2020 4:47:58 PM

Jay Fleitmans Securing liberty for all (July 7) is plagued by bias and important omissions. If we are to distill his message to its essence, the gist of his column seems to be be proud of our country and look on the bright side.

This strikes me as particularly tone-deaf during our pandemic, economic recession, police violence and systemic racism, and climate emergency. Yes, there is a nod to the decimation of the indigenous native population and slavery, which he refers to as great blots in American history but no recognition that social injustice and racism is not just a relic of the past, but institutionalized into the fabric of our current society.

In reviewing our tumultuous past, he highlights anarchist bombings, labor unrest and communist subversion as notable threats to our democracy, but neglects to mention that the McCarthy era was a much greater threat to our democracy than any communist subversion.

For a person who claims to be a defender of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights including the First Amendment he does not explicitly reject Trump repeatedly attacking a free press and labeling the news media as the enemy of the people.

As a student of history, is he not aware that Hitler and Stalin used the same terms to muzzle dissenting opinions and criminalize criticism of their regimes? While he presumably celebrates the right to peaceably assemble, he portrays protesters as rioters and looters, even though the vast majority were peaceful when exercising their First Amendment rights.

I, for one, am quite relieved that Fleitman is not teaching U.S. history to our students in our public schools as he would present a sanitized version of our history. I believe that the greatest threat to our democracy and our national security is President Trump. In accepting and encouraging help form foreign powers to help him steal the election, Trump showed and continues to show disdain for our Constitution and our electoral process.

Those who do not stand up to would-be dictators who threaten our democracy are complicit in undermining democratic values and the rule of law and will be judged harshly by history.

David Arbeitman

Florence

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David Arbeitman: Columnist provides sanitized version of history - GazetteNET

Warren, city of Rochester sued over curfew – WXXI News

Stanley Martin, a lead organizer with Free the People Roc, an activist group thats recently been at the center of Rochesters Black Lives Matter movement, is suing Mayor Lovely Warren and the city of Rochester over the curfew enacted by the mayor on July 15. Shes joined in the suit by the Rochester chapter of the National Lawyers Guild.

In a lawsuit filed in federal court Friday, Martin and the Lawyers Guild ask the court to strike down the curfew, arguing that it violates the First Amendment right to free speech and the right to peaceably assemble. Additionally, the plaintiffs argue that because Warren implemented the order for the purpose of targeting people in Black and brown neighborhoods, it also violates the Equal Protection clause, reads the filing.

Warren ordered the curfew after a spate of violent incidents in the city. As they announced the curfew, city officials said that 20 people had been shot or stabbed over a two-week period. Warren noted that large parties preceded many of the incidents.

The mayor renewed the curfew Tuesday and has said shell continue to renew it every five days until the violence ceases.

The curfew prohibits gatherings of five or more people in public places -- including sidewalks and parks -- and 10 or more people gathered in private between the hours of 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. Anyone accused of violating the curfew can be charged with a misdemeanor.

We remain confident that the mayors order regarding public gatherings after 11 p.m. will withstand legal scrutiny, city spokesperson Justin Roj said Friday.

Free the People Roc, which has held weekly Black Lives Matter rallies in Rochester since May 30, held a protest against the curfew the day it was announced. It started at 11 p.m. in Martin Luther King Jr. Park and lasted until roughly 2 a.m., when police arrested 30 people and charged them with violating the curfew. According to the complaint, among those arrested were members of Free the People Roc and the Lawyers Guild, who were acting as legal observers.

Martin and the Lawyers Guild claim that those arrests violated their free speech rights. Theyre asking the court to order the city to refrain from interfering or otherwise policing lawful and peaceful assemblies and protests in the city of Rochester, to cease enforcement of the curfew, and for officers to refrain from covering their names and badge numbers when they are on duty, as well as to provide the name and badge number upon request.

The lawsuit alleges that when Katherine Adamides, a legal observer with the Lawyers Guild, tried to write down the names of 19 police officers lined up at the scene of the protest, 14 of them covered their names with tape, their hands, or their arms. Three of the officers, it claims, covered their badge numbers.

Jeremy Moule is CITY's news editor. He can be reached atjmoule@rochester-citynews.com.

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Warren, city of Rochester sued over curfew - WXXI News

Top Machine Learning Algorithms, Frameworks, Tools and Products Used by Data Scientists – Customer Think

A recent survey by Kaggle revealed that data professionals used a variety of different algorithms, tools, frameworks and products to extract insights. Top algorithms were linear/logistic regression, decision trees/random forests and Gradient Boosting Machines. Top frameworks were Scikit-learn and TensorFlow. Top tools for automation were related to model selection and data augmentation. While half of the respondents did not use ML products, the top products used were Google Cloud ML Engine, Azure ML Studio and Amazon Sagemaker.

Machine learning is employed by data scientists to find patterns and predict important outcomes. The application of machine learning reaches across industries (e.g., healthcare, education) and professions (e.g., marketing, content management), and data professionals have many different tools, methods and products they can use to extract useful insights. Kaggle conducted a survey in October 2019 of nearly 20,000 data professionals (2019 Kaggle Machine Learning and Data Science Survey) that reveals the variety of ways they solve their machine learning problems. Todays post is about the machine learning methods and tools data professionals used in 2019.

Figure 1. Top Machine Learning Algorithms Used in 2019. Click image to enlarge.

The survey included a question for data professionals, Which of the following machine learning algorithms do you use on a regular basis? Select all that apply. On average, data professionals used 3 (median) machine learning algorithms. The top 10 machine learning algorithms used were (see Figure 1):

Adoption rates for the top two algorithms were the highest for data professionals who self-identified as statistician and data scientist. Adoption rates were around 10 percentage points higher for these data pros (e.g., ~80% for linear/logistic regression, ~70% for decision trees and random forests).

Arecent poll by KDNuggets found similar results to the current study. In their study, machine learning methods also included regression (56%), decision trees/rules (48%), random forests (45%), Gradient Boosting Machines (23%).

Figure 2. Machine Learning Frameworks Used. Click image to enlarge.

The survey included a question, Which of the following machine learning frameworks do you use on a regular basis? Select all that apply. On average, data professionals used 2 (median) machine learning frameworks. The top 10 machine learning frameworks used were (see Figure 2):

Figure 3. Machine Learning Tools Used. Click image to enlarge.

The survey also asked all data professionals about the machine learning tools they used. A little over half of the respondents (53%) indicated that they did not use any automated machine learning tools. The most used automated machine learning tool used were (see Figure 3):

Figure 4. Machine Learning Products Used. Click image to enlarge.

The survey also asked all data professionals about the machine learning products they used. A little over a third of the respondents (38%) indicated that they did not use any machine learning products. The most used automated machine learning products used were (see Figure 4):

I conducted a principal components analysis of all the various machine learning utilities to identify groupings of these machine learning methods. I found a fairly clear 9-component solution:

Azure Machine Learning Studio stood out as the lone product as it did not load on any of the 9 components.

The pattern of results show that the various machine learning methods tend to be used together. For example, when ML automation tools are used, data professionals tend to use all of them. Similarly, data professionals either tend use all Google products or use none of them. Data professionals who employ evolutionary approaches also tend to use generative adversarial networks.

The results of the Kaggle survey of nearly 20,000 data professionals reveals the most popular machine learning algorithms, products, tools and frameworks.

While machine learning is still a hot and growing field of data science, over a third of the respondents do not use any ML products. Top algorithms used were linear/logistic regression, decision trees/random forests and Gradient Boosting Machines. The most used machine learning frameworks were Scikit-learn and TensorFlow. Top tools for machine learning automation were related to model selection and data augmentation. The top products used were Google Cloud ML Engine, Azure ML Studio and Amazon Sagemaker.

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Top Machine Learning Algorithms, Frameworks, Tools and Products Used by Data Scientists - Customer Think

Commentary: America must invest in its ability to innovate – MIT News

In July of 1945, in an America just beginning to establish a postwar identity, former MIT vice president Vannevar Bush set forth a vision that guided the country to decades of scientific dominance and economic prosperity. Bushs report to the president of the United States, Science: The Endless Frontier, called on the government to support basic research in university labs. Its ideas, including the creation of the National Science Foundation (NSF), are credited with helping to make U.S. scientific and technological innovation the envy of the world.

Today, Americas lead in science and technology is being challenged as never before, write MIT President L. Rafael Reif and Indiana University President Michael A. McRobbie in an op-ed published today by The Chicago Tribune. They describe a triple challenge of bolder foreign competitors, faster technological change, and a merciless race to get from lab to market.

The governments decision to adopt Bushs ideas was bold and controversial at the time, and similarly bold action is needed now, they write.

The U.S. has the fundamental building blocks for success, including many of the worlds top research universities that are at the forefront of the fight against COVID-19, reads the op-ed. But without a major, sustained funding commitment, a focus on key technologies and a faster system for transforming discoveries into new businesses, products and quality jobs, in todays arena, America will not prevail.

McRobbie and Reif believe a bipartisan bill recently introduced in both chambers of Congress can help Americas innovation ecosystem meet the challenges of the day. Named the Endless Frontier Act, the bill would support research focused on advancing key technologies like artificial intelligence and quantum computing. It does not seek to alter or replace the NSF, but to create new strength in parallel, they write.

The bill would also create scholarships, fellowships, and other forms of assistance to help build an American workforce ready to develop and deploy the latest technologies. And, it would facilitate experiments to help commercialize new ideas more quickly.

Todays leaders have the opportunity to display the far-sighted vision their predecessors showed after World War II to expand and shape of our institutions, and to make the investments to adapt to a changing world, Reif and McRobbie write.

Both university presidents acknowledge that measures such as the Endless Frontier Act require audacious choices. But if leaders take the right steps now, they write, those choices will seem, in retrospect, obvious and wise.

Now as then, our national prosperity hinges on the next generation of technical triumphs, Reif and Mcrobbie write. Now as then, that success is not inevitable, and it will not come by chance. But with focused funding and imaginative policy, we believe it remains in reach.

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Commentary: America must invest in its ability to innovate - MIT News