Daily Archives: October 7, 2020

SpaceXs Mars-Colonizing Starship Is Ready for Its First Huge Test – Observer

Posted: October 7, 2020 at 8:51 am

The newest prototype of SpaceXs moon-landing and Mars-colonizing spaceship, Starship, is expected to undergo its first high-altitude test flight this month. The giant spacecrafts development site in Boca Chica, Texas has been extremely busy over the past few weeks with preparation for the big test.

Starship is SpaceXs ultimate rocket designed for future interplanetary trips. Two previous prototypes, Starship SN5 and SN6, successfully performed 500-foot-high (150 meters) hops in a test flight last month. The latest prototype, SN8, aims to fly up to 50,000 feet (9.3 mile) above sea level, paving the way for SpaceXs next target to reach Earths orbit.

On Friday, Elon Musk said on Twitter that an orbit-reaching prototype called V1.0 would be revealed before the end of October. Starship update coming in about 3 weeks, he tweeted. The design has coalesced. What is presented will actually be what flies to orbit as V1.0 with almost no changes.

A number of smaller tests need to take place before SN8 takes to the sky. The giant cylinder-shaped rocket, weighing over 150,000 pounds, was rolled to the launch pad in Boca Chica and hooked into a ground support system on September 26. Due to weather-induced delays, SN8 was held on-site for four days before being lifted onto one of the pads test stands. Technicians then began the process of installing the mounts temporary hydraulic ram (used to simulate engine thrust) to the rockets thrust puck.

See Also: Elon Musk Says SpaceX Could IPO StarlinkBut Only Under One Big Condition

Like previous prototypes, SN8 will need to pass a proof test to make sure that the rocket (filled with liquid nitrogen) wont leak under the pressure equivalent to the thrust of three Raptor engines. SN8 will be the first Starship prototype to be fired up by three Raptor engines at the same time, which would more than 600 metric tons (1.3 million pound-force) of thrust.

After that, the rocket will be paired with a nosecone and flaps and undergo two or more static fire tests with the actual engines.

Meanwhile, SpaceX is assembling additionalStarship prototypes for more tests. The next-generation model, Starship SN9, is now fully stacked inside the Boca Chica facility. Local reporters have also spotted SN10 and SN11 at the development site, although SpaceX hasnt confirmed progress on those projects.

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How 3D Printing in Space Will Help Put a Million People on Mars – Observer

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Mention space missions, what may first come to mind is either rocket blastoffs, spaceships voyaging toward another planet or astronauts walking in the black of vacuum in fat spacesuits. All of those things are made on Earth, but for both convenience and long-haul trips, building thingsin space is an increasingly important aspect of space travel.

If were going to colonize Mars, we absolutely have to have the ability to do manufacturing there and ideally using local materials, Andrew Rush, president of Made In Space, Inc., a Jacksonville, Florida startup specializing in 3D printing in space, tells Observer.

Made In Space is the first company to successfully manufacture an object in an off-Earth environment. In 2016, NASA commissioned Made In Space to install a permanent 3D printer on the International Space Station to produce tools, equipment and whatever onboard astronauts might need.

In a recent interview with Observer, Rush broke down the intriguing science of manufacturing in microgravity environments and why this technology is key in the human races quest for interplanetary industrialization.

How is 3D printing in space different than 3D printing on Earth?

The end goal is the same, which is to build stuff in real-time to meet user need. The biggest difference in space is that we dont have the benefit of gravity to help us put things where we want to put them, so we have to rely on other forces to do the depositing of material.

Also, in a zero-gravity environment, we dont have any natural convection like air currents that move naturally to help with cooling. So we have to build thermal control into the 3D printing system to keep the hot parts hot and the cool parts cool.

Basically you are creating an Earth-like environment inside the 3D printing machine.

Yes. Thats a good way to say it.

One of the great things about manufacturing in microgravity, though, is that we can actually make structures that wouldnt be able to support their own mass if they were on Earth. That allows us to do really interesting things. For example, we can make a spiderweb-like structure that can hold and stabilize its own weight in space. But if you put it down on the ground, it would collapse under the weight of its own mass.

With 3D printing, we can directly make that kind of objects in space instead of making it on Earthand then blasting it into space.

How big is the device thats currently on the space station?

Its about the size of a decent microwave. But really, the size of our printers depends on what needs to be printed and the amount of space available. We have some printers that can make structures much bigger than the printers themselves. They can operate outside the ISS in the vacuum of space.

What kind of objects has that printer made? And what are they made of?

It has made a wide variety of stuff, such as ratchets that can be used to tweak things down, radiation covers for different science experiments and student-designed art.

Right now, we have three materials on the space station. We have acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), which is kind of like Lego plastic and a common material used in 3D printers on Earth as well. Then, we have a high-density polyethylene (HDPE) thats a more flexible and food-safe plastic. Polyethylene is also what milk jugs are made out of. Then, we also have a Polyetherimide/Polycarbonate (PEI/PC), which is an aerospace-grade polymer that produces stronger, more heat-resistant materials. It can actually hold strength in a vacuum and a low-temperature environment in space.

Can you give an example of how 3D printing can be used in future space missions, such as colonizing Mars?

The key to colonizing anywhere is bringing tools and living off the land. If were going to colonize Mars, we absolutely have to have the ability to do manufacturing there and ideally using local materials. What weve been doing in space for the last several years is developing manufacturing technology that can work off of Earth. By the time we move to Mars, larger versions of these 3D printers can be used to lay foundations and build out our habitat there.

Speaking of Mars colonization, Elon Musk has said he wants to send one million people to Mars by 2050. Do you think thats a realistic timeline?

I think 2050 is a realistic target. Im very excited about returning humans to the moon in this decade. I think once we return to the moon, its realistic to say that Mars is within our reach in another 10 years.

Made In Space was the first company to send a 3D printer to the ISS (in 2016). How has 3D printing in space evolved in the past four years? Have you had any notable competitors?

Weve had some governmental competition. 3D printing is a high interest to the European Space Agency (ESA). Russia has done some experiments in this area. So has China. And weve seen other companies in the U.S. that are very interested, too.

How has COVID-19 affected your company, whether its R&D or the business side of things?

COVID-19 has obviously shocked every aspect of our personal and professional lives. Were not immune to that at all. Weve been extraordinarily fortunate to have customers, especially NASA.

Weve been trying really hard to make sure that were continuing to execute our visions while doing that in a way thats as safe as possible for our team and other organizations we work with.

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A Machine Learning Tool Supports the Search for New Craters on Mars – Science Times

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Planetary scientists and artificial intelligence (AI) researchers have collaborated on a machine learning tool that helped discover new craters on Mars - including small impacts left by a meteor about eight years ago.

Between March 2010 and May 2012, a meteor flew over Mars, burned, and eventually disintegrated into smaller pieces that crashed into the planet's surface. This left unusually small - and relatively easy to miss, at only 4 meters (13 feet) wide - craters. With the help of its AI-driven tool, NASA scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California are looking forward to reduced lead time and increased findings on the Red Planet's surface.

(Photo: Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)PASADENA, CA - MAY 27: Principal Investigator, HiRise Camera on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, Brian Portock talks to reporters in front of an image of a crater taken during the descent of the Phoenix Mars Lander during an update briefing, two days after landing in a northern polar region of Mars, at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) on May 27, 2008, in Pasadena, California. The Phoenix Mars Lander is the newest hope in the search for signs of life on Mars. Fewer than half of the Mars missions have made successful landings. At a cost of $420 million, the Phoenix Mars Lander has flown 422 million miles since leaving Earth in August 2007.

Usually, NASA scientists have to manually analyze the images taken by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) in search of uncommon phenomena in the Red Planet's surface - avalanche, shifting sand dunes, dust devils, and more. Throughout the MRO's 14-year service, it has provided data that allowed the space agency to find more than 1,000 craters. Most of these discoveries begin with the Context Camera installed in the orbiter, taking extremely large yet low-resolution images of the planet's surface, covering hundreds of miles per shot.

RELATED: Elon Musk on Mars Colonization: "Good Chance You'll Die"

Craters are detected through their blast marks, making them visible from the low-res images. However, the craters themselves remain virtually invisible, which leads to the next process. Using the High-Resolution Imaging Experiment (HiRISE). It provides clearer, more detailed pictures of the target. In fact, its vision system can detect even the tracks left behind by the Curiosity rover. Additionally, the research team allows the public to put in their specific request through the HiRISE HiWish website.

This next process, according to a NASA press release, takes around 40 minutes for a researcher to go through a single Context Camera image. To cut the time required, the JPL team created a machine learning tool called the Automated Fresh Impact Crater Classifier. The AI tool is a part of a wider effort among Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientists called COSMIC - for Capturing Onboard Summarization to Monitor Image Change - that aims to continuously improve Mars orbiters.

JPL researchers trained the crater classifier by providing it with a total of 6,830 Context Camera images, including locations that contained impacts already identified and confirmed by HiRISE. The images provided to the machine learning tool also included images with no impacts, to also train the tool to identify what not to look for.

After the training phase, the crater classifier was deployed on Context Camera's repository of more than 100,000 pictures. A process that used to take 40 minutes is now accomplished on an average of 5 seconds, thanks to a set of high-performance computers operating in parallel within JPL's supercomputer cluster.

"It wouldn't be possible to process over 112,000 images in a reasonable amount of time without distributing the work across many computers," explained Gary Doran, a computer scientist at JPL. The team was challenged at first with running 750 copies of the classifier across the entire cluster.

RELATED: Deep Learning Model Outperforms NPC, Player Records in Gran Turismo

However, a human operator still checks the data returned by the AI tool. Kiri Wagstaff, also a JPL computer scientist, explained that AI tools still can't do the "skilled analysis" that a scientist can do.

Check out more news and information on Mars in Science Times.

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Chapel Hill firm raises roughly $13.5M to buy stake in Elon Musk’s SpaceX – WRAL Tech Wire

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CHAPEL HILL A fund established byMorgan Creek Capital Managementto buy a stake in Elon Musks Space X has raised roughly $13.5 million.

The Chapel Hill-based firm closed on the round under the business nameMorgan Creek Private Opportunities, LLC Series F- SpaceX on Thursday, according to a securities filing.

Seventy-three investors from 45 states contributed to the round, which kicked off Sept. 17.

Founded in 2012, SpaceXs goal is to reduce space transportation costs to enable thecolonization of Mars. Already, it has developedseveral launch vehicles, theStarlinksatellite constellation, theDragoncargo spacecraft, and flown humans to the International Space Station on theCrew Dragon Demo-2.

Last month, it reached an agreement with the US Space Forces Space and Missile Systems Center to recover the first stage booster. In May, it also teamed up with NASA to use SpaceXs Crew Dragon capsule for its first crewed launch in more than a decade.

Meanwhile, its also a busy time for Morgan Creek.

In October, it established another Opportunities Fund one of several in recent months toexplore blockchain opportunities. Total raised: $60.9 million.

The firm isa SEC-registered investment adviser providing investment management services to institutional and qualifying clients such as endowments, pension plans, foundations and family offices.

According to its website, the firm provides asset allocation, manager selection, and portfolio construction based on the University Endowment Model.

It also has offices in New York and Shanghai.

Beautiful sight: Trump hails NASA-SpaceX launch, Musk, astronauts

Chapel Hill firm raises $60.9M from 11 investors for blockchain opportunities fund

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Buildings on Mars to be 3D printed using insect chitin – The Times Hub

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Buildings on Mars and other planets, scientists from the Singapore University of Technology and Design have proposed 3D printing using organic polymer chitin, which is found in the exoskeletons of crustaceans and insects. According to the authors of the development, this technology was originally created for waste-free ecosystems in an urban environment, but it turned out to be so effective that it can be used in the colonization of lifeless objects in the Universe.

Image via: Flickr.comSince shipping building materials to other planets can be incredibly expensive, scientists are looking for alternatives. It was proposed to use regolith to create premises on Mars. This is the dust and sand that covers the Red Planet, however, to obtain concrete, a lot of water is required, and its reserves are quite limited. The use of modern construction equipment also faces problems. Singaporean scientists seem to have found a way out. They propose to build buildings on a 3D printer using insect chitin. This material can be used for construction, and the animals themselves can become an excellent source of protein for colonizers.

Scientists have already conducted laboratory experiments in which they mixed a compound of chitosan and acetic acid with the mineral equivalent of Martian soil. The result is a high-quality and durable building material. Moreover, such production may be completely waste-free.

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The United Arab Emirates eyes a foothold on the Moon plans for a crewless mission in 2024 – Blasting News United States

Posted: at 8:51 am

The moon is the new destination of the United States, the Soviet Union, China, and the United Arab Emirates. America had sent the first man to the moon in the 1960s and subsequently diverted its attention to concentrate on Mars, where it has two robots operating 24x7. China has landed its robot on the far side of the moon, an area no one has yet thought of exploring. Donald Trump wants NASA to revisit the moon and send a woman there by 2024.

On its part, the Los Angeles Times reveals the United Arab Emirates has plans for an unmanned mission to the moon, also in 2024. A top Emirati official says its success would mean the United Arab Emirates could become only the fourth country to achieve that milestone.

It has been active in the field of space research in recent years. An Emirati space probe is already heading to Mars. United Arab Emirates launched it a couple of months earlier.

Moreover, in preparation for the probable moon landing, it had sent one of its astronauts to the International Space Station. The purpose was to get trained, gain experience, and be acquainted with the intricacies of working in space. These might set the foundation for the future. In 2017, there was news that the United Arab Emirates UAE wanted to develop an astronaut corps.

Los Angeles Times quotes the ruler of UAE who conveyed via Twitter - "It will be an Emirati-made lunar rover that will land on the surface of the moon in 2024 in areas that have not been explored previously by human missions." He is Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, who also serves as the vice president and prime minister.

He maintained silence on issues like areas that the United Arab Emirates would explore on the moon or the methodology of launching the rover into space.

The United Arab Emirates launched its mission to Mars from Tanegashima Space Center in Japan. The name of its orbiter is "Amal" or "Hope." Mitsubishi Heavy Industries was involved in launching the probe to the red planet and said a decision on the moon rover's launch is yet to be taken.

Los Angeles Times describes the 22-pound moon rover. There would be a range of cameras and photographic equipment installed in it to study the surface. The rover would also check out the moon's mobility and the interaction of different surfaces with lunar particles. The United Arab Emirates is a late starter and is determined to make its presence felt.

It is obviously upbeat about its space-related activities. The United States, the Soviet Union, and China have proved their worth. Each country has an agenda of its own, which revolves around the availability of natural resources on the alien surface. It will provide an impetus to robotics, artificial intelligence, and Renewable Energy. These are important when planning for activities in remote regions.

The success of Moon mission 2024 would make the United Arab Emirates the fourth country to have accomplished the feat. Others like India and Israel tried but failed, and the United Arab Emirates is hopeful. Los Angeles Times adds that the Mars probe "Amal" would reach the red planet in February 2021.

That is the year the United Arab Emirates celebrates 50 years of its existence. By September, its Mars rover would become active. It would transmit data on the Martian atmosphere for sharing with others, and the United Arab Emirates hopes to colonize the planet by 2117, says Los Angeles Times.

According to Al Jazeera, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai emirate, announced that the Moon rover's name would be Rashid after his late father, Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum. The ruler of Dubai emirate also said participating in the moon exploration is "part of the United Arab Emirates' space strategy." It would help build new knowledge capabilities and advance the country's "scientific, technical, and research environment." He also said the lunar rover's construction would be on the state's land and by its engineers.

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Moving the flip zone: Democrats march deeper into suburbs – The Denver Post

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ByAngeliki Kastanis, Josh Boak and Dario Lopez-Mills

PHOENIX When Katherine Rutigliano and her husband moved away from San Francisco in 2013, they figured they would never meet a fellow Democrat again.

But housing was affordable around Phoenix. No more cramped condo. No more suffocating mortgage payments. No more tech-boom exhaustion. Everything would be easier for them and their kids in the suburbs everything, that is, except talking politics with neighbors.

Then came an unexpected visitor at the door. It was a Democratic volunteer rounding up votes ahead of the 2018 Senate election. Rutigliano invited her in and inspected the map on her iPad. She was elated to see all the flashing lights that marked where Democrats lived in her stucco neighborhood on the northern edge of Phoenix.

These San Francisco transplants were not alone.

It was like Christmas, said Rutigliano, 37, a mother of three and trained chef who is now sending out mailers for local Democrats.

Rutigliano didnt realize it, but she had moved her family to what is now the front lines in American politics. Once firmly in Republican control, suburbs like hers are increasingly politically divided a rare common ground shared by Republicans and Democrats.

As such, they are poised to decide not just who wins the White House this year but also who controls the Senate and the contours of the debate over guns, immigration, work, schools, housing and health care for years to come.

The reasons for the shift are many. Suburbs have grown more racially diverse, more educated, more economically prosperous and more liberal all factors making them more likely to vote Democratic. But demographers and political scientists are just as likely to point to another trend: density. Suburbs have grown more crowded, looking more and more like cities and voting like them, too.

For decades, an areas population per square mile has been a reliable indicator of its political tilt. Denser areas vote Democratic, less dense areas vote Republican. The correlation between density and voting has been getting stronger, as people began to sort themselves by ethnicity, education, personality, income and lifestyle.

The pattern is so reliable it can be quantified, averaged and applied to most American cities. At around 800 households per square mile, the blue of Democratic areas starts to bleed into red Republican neighborhoods.

A purple ring call it the flip zone emerges through the suburbs.

But the midterm elections of 2018 showed that the flip zone has moved in the era of President Donald Trump, with dramatic consequences. When Democrats across the country penetrated deeper into the suburbs, finding voters farther away from the city, they flipped a net 39 House districts and won a majority of the chamber.

An Associated Press analysis of recent election results and density shows Democrats in Arizona moved the flip zone 2 miles deeper into the suburbs from 2016 to 2018, reaching right to the northern edge of Interstate 101 in Phoenix into areas filled with cul-de-sacs of homes and backyards large enough for swimming pools. The shift helped them win a Senate seat for the first time in 24 years.

The APs analysis essentially maps the challenge Trump and his Republican Party are facing today. Polling shows the president trailing Democrat Joe Biden badly in many key suburbs in battleground states. To hold the White House and control of the Senate, he and his party must stop the flip zone from moving farther out again.

Republicans are working against the recent trend in metros across the country. In 2018 in Milwaukee, the flip zone moved out less than half a mile as Wisconsin elected a Democratic governor. Its distance from city hall grew 2.6 miles in Richmond, Va., helping deliver the congressional seat once held by a conservative House majority leader, Eric Cantor.

Many political scientists think the trend toward political segregation has put the Democratic Party at a disadvantage. Its voters are more concentrated in cities. Republicans are dispersed across larger areas, making it easier for that party to draw favorable districts and win a majority of legislative seats even if it loses the total vote count. In 2018, Wisconsin Democrats received 53% of state assembly votes in 2018, yet they hold only 36 of the 99 seats in the chamber. Under the Electoral College, Republicans have twice in the modern era won the White House despite losing the popular vote.

The geographic divide has also had a real impact on policy and politics. The needs of cities and farm towns are often perceived as being in conflict a tug of war between Republican and Democratic voters over resources. Until recently, scant racial diversity in the suburbs had allowed Republican politicians to cater to the concerns of white voters and prey on their biases.

The geographic split also has exacerbated the tensions on display during the pandemic. Dense, Democratic areas were hit first by the coronavirus, allowing Trump to initially describe the disease as an urban problem and attack Democratic leaders for mishandling the response. Similarly, civil rights protests have been largest and most contentious in cities, and Trump has blamed their Democratic mayors.

Jonathan Rodden, a Stanford University political scientist and author of the 2019 book Why Cities Lose, said this political divide on density has eroded the shared responsibility among elected leaders. Instead, they think of themselves as representing different voter groups and that gives them less incentive to work together.

Municipal officials can blame state and federal officials, who in turn blame lower-level officials, Rodden said.

But he also believes the geographic divides can focus voters on local issues, where theyre more likely to have an impact, and lead to more local activism.

After the Arizona teacher strike in 2018, Democrats organized with the goal of increasing pay and reducing class sizes issues with real impact on suburban families. A study by the Morrison Institute at Arizona State University had found teachers earned higher salaries in 2001 than in 2016 after adjusting for inflation. The effort galvanized local Democrats to elect Kathy Hoffman as state superintendent of public instruction, ending a 24-year Republican grip on the office.

There are a lot of classrooms that dont have certified teachers because the teacher pay is so god-awful, said Mary Witzel, a retiree and member of a Democratic precinct committee in the Phoenix flip zone. The whole education situation in Arizona is causing a lot of people who have never been engaged before to start paying attention.

Cliche campaign ads might show acres of wheat and bustling cities, but the United States is a suburban nation.

AP VoteCast, a survey of the electorate, found that 52% of voters in 2018 said they live in suburbia. Its not surprising that Trump and Biden have been tussling over suburban voters for months.

Trump has suggested that efforts to racially integrate the suburbs would destroy those communities with crime and poverty, despite clear data showing that many suburbs are increasingly diverse. At the first presidential debate, he accused Biden of wanting to kill off the suburbs.

Our suburbs would be gone, and you would see problems like youve never seen before, Trump said.

He wouldnt know a suburb unless he took a wrong turn, Biden responded. This is not 1950. All these dog whistles on racism dont work anymore.

In fact, not all suburbs are alike, and knowing them can be difficult.

There are the English-style garden cities built a century ago for the affluent. Following World War II, mazes of Cape Cod houses and ranches sprawled near highways. There are gated communities, over-55 communities, planned communities, working-class suburbs, inner-ring suburbs and distant exurbs and all have their own local characteristics.

Likewise, these battleground areas the flip zones are not uniform, APs analysis shows.

Now the suburbs are the places delivering a referendum on Trump. And neatly manicured neighborhoods conceal a more complicated political biosphere.

Trumps election caused Marshall Militano, 73, to leave his morning Bible study. He gave his life to Jesus Christ twice, first at a 1959 Billy Graham crusade in Madison Square Garden and again three decades later after dealing with drug and alcohol addictions.

The former long-haul trucker met his wife at church. He could not understand how so many in his breakfast fellowship saw the president as defending Christianity. Trump had stiffed contractors as a real estate developer and mocked veterans and immigrants showing none of Gods grace.

Living in Glendale to the northwest of Phoenix, Militano turned on his computer two years ago and switched his voter registration from independent to Democrat. He and his wife cried after he told her.

I want our country to get back to calm, he said. Im not talking about kumbaya Im talking about rational. We havent done anything in this country in four years except hate.

Along the same streets, Republican Michael Nudo sees the new partisan tensions.

The 27-year-old was concerned by sometimes violent civil rights protests in distant cities this summer. He believes people in Glendale, where he lives and volunteers for the local GOP, want the stability of law and order. Republican leaders, he says, understand that.

Still, hes started carrying a gun in his truck because with whats going on in our country, you dont know what youre going to end up in the middle of.

Nudo grew up in the flip zone when it was more securely Republican territory. During his freshman year in high school, his family lost their house to foreclosure as millions of other Americans did during the Great Recession. Then their rental house was foreclosed on, and they had to move again.

The experience instilled in him a conservative belief that the government, like families, must be financially responsible.

Now Nudo sees that housing crash as the beginning of another wave of change in his hometown a huge turnover. As the economy recovered, big companies relocated workers from around the country. Others moved in chasing low housing prices and lower taxes and bringing their politics with them. The Phoenix area became splintered.

You can walk across the street and be in a whole other community, whole other city, he said. But theyre your neighbors.

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If the Democrats win the Senate, Big Tech better be ready for a bigger fight – MarketWatch

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If the Democrats manage to win control of the Senate in the coming election, the pressure on Silicon Valley would only grow.

Democratic senators have signaled a willingness to make substantial changes to antitrust law and advocate breakups of the largest American tech companies, including campaigning for president on the issue. If the party can flip four seats, those same senators such as Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts could be in position to act against some of their favorite targets, including Facebook Inc. FB, -2.26% and Google parent Alphabet Inc. GOOGL, -2.14% GOOG, -2.19%

GOOG, -2.19% If Democrats wrest control of the U.S. Senate on Nov. 3 (or in the following days and weeks it takes to count ballots), it could lead to the first major changes in antitrust law in a generation, Joel Mitnick, a former Federal Trade Commission trial lawyer who specializes in antitrust issues, told MarketWatch.

A late July Congressional hearing, in which David Cicilline, a Democrat from Rhode Island, chairman of House Subcommittee on Antitrust, and other Democrats grilled three of the four companies under investigation, could offer a template on how a Democratic-controlled Senate would approach the Big Four. A report from Cicillines subcommittee, expected soon, reportedly recommends splitting up companies and limiting their future acquisitions.

Read more: House Democrats proposing to split big technology firms, reports say

Klobuchar is in line to chair the Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy, and Consumer Rights, where she is the ranking Democratic member, and has held hearings and proposed new antitrust law. A Senate Judiciary hearing last month offered the clearest intent from Klobuchar and [Sen. Richard] Blumenthal [of Connecticut] to change the antitrust standards in ways that benefit prosecutors and claimants, Carl Szabo, vice president and general counsel of NetChoice, a trade association with two dozen e-commerce members that include Google, Facebook, eBay Inc. EBAY, -4.07%, and Airbnb told MarketWatch.

In March, Klobuchar introduced the Anticompetitive Exclusionary Conduct Prevention Act, which prohibits anticompetitive exclusionary conduct that risks harm to the competitive process. The bill co-sponsored by Blumenthal and Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J. in August introduced the Monopolization Deterrence Act to crack down on monopolies that violate antitrust law. And in June, Klobuchar and Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, introduced legislation to help prevent anticompetitive mergers, the Merger Filing Fee Modernization Act.

They want to make more rules enforceable; make it easier to bring these actions, Szabo said.

The Trump administration is reportedly investigating Google, Facebook, Amazon.com Inc. AMZN, -3.10% and Apple Inc. AAPL, -2.86% for antitrust issues, amid concurrent state inquiries and lawsuits from competitors. The Justice Department is reportedly seeking to file suit against Google in October, while the Federal Trade Commission hopes to take similar action against Facebook by the end of the year, according to multiple reports.

For more: Big Tech is turning on one another amid antitrust probes and litigation

The presidential candidates are not actually that far apart on their statements on tech companies, but the Democrats relationship with Big Tech has changed since the Obama administrations policies that alternately promoted, permitted, or ignored the industry. Robert Kaminsky, an analyst at Capital Alpha Partners, expects a Biden-Harris administration would seek tech-focused legislation, but focus more on consumer data and platforms than antitrust law.

See: Heres where Biden and Trump stand on antitrust, social media and other tech issues

We see a Democrat Senate providing a Biden administration with a better chance of passing privacy legislation and making changes to Section 230 liability protections, but jurisdictional issues within Congress still present a challenge to finding consensus, Kaminsky told MarketWatch.

We dont see antitrust as a huge White House focus in a Biden presidency, financial analysts at Beltway political newsletter Height Commentary wrote, adding that they would expect Bidens appointees at the Justice Department and FTC to take a much more aggressive stance than past administrations.

The X-factor could be Warren, who as a presidential candidate loudly advocated for the breakup of Facebook and Google. Whether as a member of a Biden administration, or in her current role in a Democratic-controlled Senate, Warren has shown no hesitancy in advocating drastic measures.

Americans all across the country are seeing how Big Tech has used its massive power to harm our economy and our democracy, Warren said in a statement to MarketWatch. When Democrats win in 2020, it should be a top priority for us to stop these giants from rigging the rules in their favor and against everyone else.

The tone and rancor of a recent three-and-a-half-hour meeting with a Google executive illustrates how much has changed in an increasingly soured relationship between Silicon Valley and the Beltway. Trillion-dollar valuations and record revenue and profits by its biggest names compounded by competitors claims of monopolistic business behavior and consumer outcry over privacy violations and misinformation has turned both major political parties against the industry.

You are in the thankless task of defending the indefensible. Google deserves antitrust action. It has been a stunning abuse of market power, Blumenthal told Donald Harrison, president of global partnerships and corporate development at Google, during a Sept. 15 committee hearing entitled, Stacking the Tech: Has Google harmed competition in online advertising?

An imminent Justice Department antitrust action against Google could be the beginning of a reckoning in antitrust laws, Klobuchar said. I just want our capitalistic system to work. You simply cant have one company dominate this market.

Read more: Antitrust questions bruise but dont break Big Tech CEOs in historic hearing

Democrats would intensify the momentum [of antitrust actions] on Facebook, Google, and Amazon, Bhaskar Chakravorti, dean of global business at the Fletcher School at Tufts University, told MarketWatch. It would be a continuation of the late-summer hearings. Those three companies are in the crosshairs. Apple is a little bit to the side.

One company with an especially large target is Facebook, the subject of scathing comments from Klobuchar in her presidential campaign kickoff event in Minnesota in February.

We need to put digital rules in the law to protect privacy, said Klobuchar, an ardent critic of Facebook who is also co-author of a data-privacy bill. For too long, the big tech companies have said, Dont worry, we have your back.

Klobuchars animus toward Facebook could receive support from a theoretical Biden Administration. The former vice president called Facebook the nations foremost propagator of disinformation about the voting process last month in a letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

Not everyone is convinced a Blue Wave will translate into punitive actions against some of the worlds most-valuable companies. Paven Malhotra, a Silicon Valley lawyer who specializes in intellectual property, told MarketWatch that a Democratic president and Senate is unlikely to make tech a high priority.

They will continue a DOJ action against Google, I imagine, but it may get lost with actions to reverse actions over the past four years on health care, education policy, trade, climate change and everything else.

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If the Democrats win the Senate, Big Tech better be ready for a bigger fight - MarketWatch

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ICYMI: Ricketts, Osborne Among Those Opposed To Expanded Gambling – KLIN

Posted: at 8:49 am

Gambling with the Good Life hosted a press conference at the state capitol with Tom Osborne, Governor Pete Ricketts, Governor Kay Orr, state senators, Nebraska Family Alliance, and other community leaders opposed to gambling initiatives 429, 430, and 431.

These initiatives seek to change Nebraskas constitution to allow all forms of gambling at horse tracks and would also allow Native American tribes to have their own casinos. A licensed racetrack could race horses one day a year and offer casino gambling 24/7/365.

Tom Osborne, who serves as Honorary Chairman for Gambling with the Good Life, said These initiatives will certainly damage the quality of living in Nebraska. The people that bear the greatest burden of this problem will be families, spouses, and the children of those who have a gambling problem. They pay the greatest price. Osborne also spoke of his time and experiences in Congress, saying I asked several of my colleagues in Congress who had been living in states where they had expanded gambling, was this a good thing or a bad thing? 100% of those individuals said this is the worst mistake we ever made, we never should have started it. Once you start it, youre never going to undo it.

Governor Pete Ricketts said, Nebraskans are hardworking, they value prudence, fiscal responsibility, taking care of their families, and are involved in their communities, schools, and churches. And casino gambling is opposed to all those values. Gambling addiction and gambling is bad for our state. The Governor concluded his remarks by stating We already fight gambling addiction here in our state. This will make it so much worse. It will put it in our communities, it will put it all across our state. Thats why Im against expanding gambling in the state of Nebraska.

Governor Kay Orr said, Theres a false narrative out there from the other side that wants to expand gambling, and were grateful for any help we can get to educate the people so we dont take that step. By text or phone call I did get the support ofGovernor Heineman, Senator Bob Kerrey, and Senator Johanns. They join me and others in support of our effort to educate the people of the state of Nebraska.

Nate Grasz, Policy Director for Nebraska Family Alliance, said, Without question, the gambling initiatives on the ballot are bad for families, bad for business, and bad for Nebraska. Casino gambling creates social costs that ruin lives, families, businesses, and communities. But gambling operators dont pay for these harms. Taxpayers do. We cannot lower taxes by draining more money from local economies, driving people deeper into poverty, and increasing addiction, social costs, and destroyed families. When it comes to casino gambling, the house always wins. So in order for the gambling interests to win, its our own citizens who must lose.

Dan Hazuka, GWTGL board member and a victim of a family members gambling addiction, said, My father was an alcoholic and he gambled everything away, so I really can understand it. We lost everything. If you think for one minute we are going to lower our taxes becauseof this, youre wrong. They keep saying keep the money in Nebraska, well its not going to stay here. It is going to cost for every dollar that you bring in three or four dollars in social costs. I am positive of that.

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ICYMI: Ricketts, Osborne Among Those Opposed To Expanded Gambling - KLIN

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Pandemic first for Maryland casinos: More gambling than a year ago – WTOP

Posted: at 8:49 am

Despite strict limits on the number of patrons allowed on gaming floors, Marylands casinos reported combined gaming revenue in September that was slightly higher than a year ago. It's the first time that's happened since February.

Despite strict limits on the number of patrons allowed on gaming floors, Marylands casinos reported combined gaming revenue in September that was slightly higher than a year ago. Its the first time thats happened since February.

Marylands six casinos generated $143.7 million in gaming revenue in September, up 1% compared to September 2019. Maryland will collect $59.7 million of that for various state programs, up about 1%. The states Education Trust Fund gets $43.4 million of that.

Gaming revenue at MGM National Harbor, the states largest casino, was $57.5 million in September, down .4% from last September.

Live! Casino & Hotel had $49.2 million in gaming revenue last month, up 3% from a year ago.

Baltimores Horseshoe Casino had $17.6 million in September gaming revenue, down 5.1%.

The states three smaller casinos all had year-over-year gains:

Marylands casinos are operating at a maximum 50% capacity, and not all on-property bars, restaurants and retail stores have reopened.

MGM National Harbor slashed its workforce by 25%, or almost 780 jobs, in August.

Maryland Lottery and Gaming posts monthly and year-to-date gaming revenue distributions online.

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Pandemic first for Maryland casinos: More gambling than a year ago - WTOP

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