Monthly Archives: June 2022

Defence in Amanda Todd ‘sextortion’ trial zeroes in on missing data – The Tri-City News

Posted: June 30, 2022 at 8:54 pm

Lawyer for Dutch man charged with extortion and child porn offences raises questions about gap in digital investigator's report to Crown prosecutors

A now-retired Toronto Police Service officer and a Crown witness who gave expert descriptions about online investigationswrapped up his testimony today (June 30) after three days on the stand atthe trial involving Port Coquitlam student Amanda Todd.

Warren Bulmer was flown in from Brisbane, where he now works for the Australian Federal Police.

In cross-examination on Thursday, defence counsel Joe Saulnier drilled down on data missing in Bulmers report to the Crown, as well as similarities between Facebook accounts associated with case specifically Tyler Boo and Marc Camerons.

Asked why large chunks of session data were absent from those accounts, Bulmer said he had no explanation.

However, he testified, for accounts that showed repeated terminations or log outs, the social media giant may have had security concerns and was doing its checks and balances, Bulmertold Justice Martha Devlin and the jury at BC Supreme Court in New Westminster.

For an online account named Thomas Cocopops, it also had seven months' worth of missing data, the court heard, and its device and browser didnt register when Bulmer did his analysis.

Still, Bulmer said, the user access device (UAD) coding can be changed.

Bulmer was also questioned about copies and deletions of machine cookies small files used by websites to gain information about users through their devices as well as recovered files from a devices unallocated space.

And he explained to the jury about virtual private networks (VPN), proxy servers and the Tor browser, which is also known as the dark web.

In her opening statement, prosecutor Louise Kenworthy said Crown Counsel will prove Aydin Coban of The Netherlandswas behind 22 fakeaccounts in a persistent campaign of online sextortion against Todd.

Coban has pleaded not guilty to

None of the allegations is proven in court.

The trial continues.

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Now that ‘Roe’ has been overturned, it’s up to the tech industry to protect our data – Fast Company

Posted: at 8:54 pm

Roe v. Wade is no more, but this is not 1972, the year before it was passed. In some ways, its even worse.

When the Supreme Court ruled last week that banning abortion is not unconstitutional, abortion immediately became illegal in several states with trigger laws primed to take effect with just such a ruling. Its about to become illegal in several more states in which previously passed laws restricting abortion had been blocked by federal courts.

Millions of people are about to lose access to safe, legal abortions, and those who provide abortion access or support will face consequences ranging from civil suits to arrest in some states. These are grim times for abortion access.

And the forecast is even more grim because we now live in an era of unprecedented digital surveillance. Ive spent most of my career helping to protect activists and journalists in authoritarian countries, where it is often wise to think several steps ahead about your digital privacy and security practices. Now, we must bring this mindset back within our own borders for both people providing abortion support and people seeking abortions.

The first step is operational security. Abortion providers, the staff and volunteers of abortion support networks, and those seeking abortions must immediately take steps to thoroughly compartmentalize their work and health from the rest of their digital lives. That means using aliases, using separate phones and emails, downloading a privacy-protecting browser, and being very cautious about installing applications on personal phones.

For people who are pregnant, it is important to start with an understanding of the existing threats. People who have already been prosecuted for their pregnancy outcomes were surveilled and turned in by people they trusted, including doctors. The corroborating evidence included Google search histories, texts, and emails. It is time to consider downloading Tor Browser to use for searches relating to pregnancy or abortion, using end-to-end-encrypted-messaging services with disappearing messages turned on for communications, and being very selective about who can be trusted with information about their pregnancy.

Also, it is important to look to the future and reconsider the treasure troves of data we create about ourselves every daybecause these now could be weaponized to use against us. People who may become pregnant should rethink their use of unencrypted period-tracking apps, which collect data that could be subpoenaed if they are suspected of aborting a pregnancy. They should use only an encrypted period-tracking app, such as Euki, which stores all of their user information locally on the device; but beware that if that phone is seized by the courts, the stored data may still be accessible to them. Also, people who become pregnant should carefully review privacy settings on all services they continue to use, and turn off location services on apps that dont absolutely need them.

But right now, the biggest responsibility lies with the tech industry. Governments and private actors know that intermediaries and apps often collect heaps of data about their users. If you build it, they will comeso dont build it, dont keep it, dismantle what you can, and keep the data secure.

Companies should think about ways in which to allow anonymous access to their services. They should stop behavioral tracking, or at least make sure users affirmatively opt in first. They should strengthen data deletion policies so that data is deleted regularly. They should avoid logging IP addresses, or if they must for anti-abuse or statistics, do so in separate files that they can aggregate and delete frequently. They should reject user-hostile measures like browser fingerprinting. Data should be encrypted in transit, and end-to-end-message encryption should be enabled by default. And companies should be prepared to stand up for their users when someone comes demanding dataor, at the very least, ensure that users get notification when their data is being sought.

Theres no time to lose. If Ive learned anything from a decade and a half working with vulnerable populations in authoritarian countries, its that when things start to go wrong, they will get worse very quickly. If tech companies dont want to have their data turned into a dragnet against people seeking abortions and people providing abortion support, they need to take these concrete steps right now.

It is not an option to leave frightened people to figure out their own digital security in a world where its hard to understand what data theyre creating and who has access to it.Tech companies are in a unique position to understand those data flows and to change the defaults in order to protect the privacy rights of this newly vulnerable class of users.

The Supreme Court rolled back rights by half a century on Friday, but now is not the time to shrug and say its too late and nothing can be done. Now is the time to ask hard questions at work. You hold the worlds data in your hands, and you are about to be asked to use it to be repressions little helper. Dont do it.

While others work to restore rights that were so callously stripped away, good data practices can help tech companies avoid being on the wrong side of history.

Eva Galperin is the the director of cybersecurity at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

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QAnon Is Celebrating the Return of Its Leader After 18 Months of Silence – VICE

Posted: at 8:54 pm

A man holds a placard with 'Trump loves QAnon' written while he protests against the compulsory vaccination campaign on January 9, 2022 in Brussels, Belgium. (Thierry Monasse/Getty Images)

Unraveling viral disinformation and explaining where it came from, the harm it's causing, and what we should do about it.

On Friday night, Q, the anonymous leader of the QAnon conspiracy movement, returned after more than 18 months of silence.

Shall we play the game again? the Q account wrote in their typically cryptic style on the fringe message board 8kun (formerly known as 8chan).

The unexpected return, on the same day Roe v. Wade was overturned, sent the millions of people who still adhere to the QAnon belief systemwhich claims theres a cabal of elites working to control the worldinto spasms of excitement and predictions that Qs return meant all of their wild predictions were about to come true finally.

But experts tracking the QAnon phenomenon quickly discovered that the posting of the new Q drops was, at the very least, facilitated directly by the people running 8kun, and possibly written by them.

Experts like Fred Brennan, who was the founder of 8chan before it was taken over by current owner Jim Watkins and his son Ron, discovered that the site administrators had altered the way users on the site, like Q, identified themselves, just hours before the first new Q drop appeared on Friday.

The change in the system should have meant that the secure tripcode that Q uses to verify their identity would have broken. However, when Q posted, the tripcode was the same, suggesting that someone involved in running the site had manipulated it to appear as if this was the real Q.

Jim, Ron, or someone with access to the 8kun server posted the latest Q drops, Brennan told VICE News.

His assessment was backed up by several other experts who closely track the origins and spread of QAnon.

At a bare minimum, its clear that either Q is closely coordinating with 8kun admins or the post was actually written by an 8kun admin, the anonymous founder of the Q Origins Project, which seeks to document how the movement came about, told VICE News.

Another indication that the administrators helped facilitate Qs return comes is that the new Q drops were posted using the privacy-focused browser Tor. The ability to post using the Tor browser had been disabled on 8kun since September 2021 but was enabled again just before the new Q posts appeared.

Even members of the 8kun community have been calling out the elder Watkins for his apparent role in this incident.

Either Jim Watkins is no longer in control of his admin account, or Jim Watkins did this himself, a user wrote in a message on the qresearch board where Q posts, outlining the same arguments made by Brennan.

Watkins, who has already given evidence to the January 6 committee about 8kuns role in the lead-up to the Capitol riot, has denied his involvement in posting the new messages. In a video posted to his Telegram channel, he claimedabsurdlythat he couldnt have posted the message because he was on stage speaking at a conspiracy theory conference at the time. Of course, someone else could have posted it for him, or he could have scheduled the post.

In the same video, he referred to Q and said: Welcome back, we need you.

His son Ron, who claimed to resign as administrator 8kun on Election Day 2020 and is currently running for Congress in Arizona, did not respond to a request for comment about his role in posting the new Q messages. The January 6 committee is also seeking to speak to him, but so far Ron has said he will not cooperate.

A 2021 HBO documentary suggested that Ron Watkins was the author of many of the almost 5,000 Q drops while he was working at 8kun, while a separate forensic analysis of the drops also found empirical similarities between his writing style and Qs.

But ultimately, to QAnon followers who have spent years suspending disbelief, the details of how the Q drops were posted matter very little.

It doesnt really matter whos behind the keyboard. What matters is whether Qs followers accept the new content as genuine, and what they go on to do with it. Theyre falling all over themselves to accept it as real, the Q Origins researcher said.

And across the platforms to which QAnon has retreated to after being mostly banned from mainstream platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, followers celebrated the return as a sign that they were right all along.

Many of the followers reiterated their support after Q wrote remember your oath in their second new drop on Friday night. The oath, known as the digital soldier oath, is the same one taken by all federal employees, but with the QAnon phrase Where we go one we go all appended to the end.

It was popularized by disgraced former national security adviser Michael Flynn, who posted a video of him and his family taking the oath on July 4, 2020.

For the families of those who have fallen under QAnons spell, the return of Q is a devastating blow, especially to those who felt theyd made progress in trying to get their family members back.

One of the most damaging aspects of QAnon in the period since Q last posted is the emergence of an offshoot group that believes JFK is about to be resurrected. A group of believers has spent the last eight months following a leader known as Negative 48, cutting all ties with their families, and spending huge sums of money on travel to and from Dallas, where their leader has told them the assassinated president and his dead son JFK Jr. will reappear.

A group of concerned family members has been working together to convince their loved ones to leave the group and return home. Some had recently promised to come home by the end of the month, but after this weekends Q drops, they doubled down on their belief in the conspiracy theory.

It has screwed with families again who were told by their loved ones they may be home at the end of June, Karma, an open-source researcher who is helping those families, told VICE News. We had worked hard to get to this point, for a Q drop to happen and now they want to stay.

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Moon Off-Roading In The Wild GM Electric Car That Makes Hummer EV Look Normal – SlashGear

Posted: at 8:54 pm

"One of the other firsts that we've done here at General Motors is we put the first lunar rover on the Moon," said Brent Deep, chief developmental engineer for the joint program between GM and Lockheed Martin. "We're proud to be able to supply the first rover [...] It's very humbling for me to be a part of [the rover's history], and to look at what [the Lunar Roving Vehicle engineers] did back in the Sixties to develop that rover for a really unknown environment."

Fast-forward to today, GM and Lockheed Martin are gunning for the big contract with NASA to build the Lunar Terrain Vehicle. Unlike the partnership between the General and Boeing, which was more to determine if driving on the Moon was even possible, the new partnership takes the knowledge gained from the LRV as part of the foundation in building a ride for the long-term. After all, the main mission of the Artemis program is to establish a base of operations on the Moon's South Pole, the first step in the push to colonization of the Solar System and beyond, with Mars as the next step.

Of course, it's going to take a lot to get there from here. Luckily for GM and Lockheed Martin, the key piece of the puzzle is already being drip-fed into showrooms. But we're getting ahead of ourselves here; we've got a simulator to check out first.

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A conversation with a poet whose home burned to the ground – Yale Climate Connections

Posted: at 8:54 pm

In a new collection of poetry, Open Zero, Pakistani-American poet Sophia Naz explores her grief over the loss of her Glen Ellen, California, home.

In 2017, dangerous wildfires raged across California, burning forests, businesses, and houses, including the one where Naz lived with her husband and son.

Yale Climate Connections talked with Naz about how she uses poetry to process her personal tragedy and to reflect on the consequences of climate change.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Yale Climate Connections: Tell me a little bit about your home.

Sophia Naz: Glen Ellen is a tiny little village. Its nestled in the beautiful valley called the Valley of the Moon. Its also part of the wine country of California. And we fell in love with this house because it was kind of a tree house. All the trees were growing all around it, and some of them were growing through its decks, so we were attracted to it. And so we bought this place in 2010 and then in 2017 is when the wildfires struck.

YCC: Can you tell me what happened when the fires came through?

Naz: I usually work at night, and I had built a little office cabin across from the main house where I was sitting and working. And around 10 oclock at night, when I opened the sliding glass doors, there was a very strong smell of smoke in the air. But I couldnt see any smoke. And I checked my phone to see whats going on, but there was no alert. Sometimes there are wildfires, but theyre far away, and the smoke comes from far away. So in the absence of an alert, I didnt know what to do, so I didnt do anything. I went to bed, but I couldnt really sleep, felt a bit restless.

And then around 2 oclock in the morning, the fire truck came up our lane with the megaphone saying, The fires coming at your home, and you need to leave. You need to evacuate right now. So I woke up our son, whos 14. And then we piled into the car and we left, and that was the last time I saw my home.

YCC: When you went back, was there anything left?

Naz: No, not of the house. I work as a healer. I work in traditional medicine from India. So we had renovated our old barn into a wellness center. So that was untouched by the fire. And we had a yurt on the lower part of our property. That had not been burned. And the swimming pool was there. But that was all that was left.

We did decide to, out of sheer necessity because our workplace was not burnt, to move back. And we bought a trailer. And living in the destroyed landscape was really instructive as well. Because then you realize that its not just your home thats been destroyed, its the home of all the living beings. The loss of one life form ripples out and destroys the habitat of all the other life forms.

Left: Nazs home in Glen Ellen, California, before it was destroyed in a 2017 wildfire. Right: The aftermath. (Photos: Courtesy of Sophia Naz)

YCC: Did what you were seeing around you after you moved back begin to work its way into your poetry?

Naz: Absolutely. One part of my book Open Zero is about the everyday ground realities of loss, the changed landscape the burned redwoods, the destroyed manzanitas, all of the ecology that has been so devastated. And in a way, Open Zero, part of it refers to Im living on ground zero of the loss.

YCC: Can you talk about the emotions you began wrestling with after the fire?

Naz: The immediate emotion that one feels is grief, and then the grief gives way to the feeling of loss. And those two are not exactly the same things, because grief is an immediate emotion, and loss a larger perception.

So losing my home to the wildfires, it crystallized the linkages between topics that I had written about previously as separate things like geography, history, politics, migration, racism, feminism, power structures. When you lose your home, it gives you this immediacy, an urgency, and it broadens your perspective.

These things are inextricably linked, because without the colonization of North America, and without the view of the Earth as simply a resource to be plundered and then the idea that you simply needed to remove the obstacles to that plundering, that is, the Native inhabitants without this world view, and without the enormous wealth that white settler colonialism accumulated, you wont have the current dispensation, right? So all of these things are inextricably linked.

YCC: Was writing Open Zero cathartic?

Naz: Of course. Writing is an absolute cathartic process. [Another writer] has said that writing is a way to avenge the loss. Because there are many ways in which one can avenge loss. Some people do it by singing, some people do it by painting. But if youre a writer, one of the most potent means of doing it is through writing, because it is through writing that one can recreate, as if conjuring out of thin air, a landscape that no longer exists. Because it does exist in your mind. And you can bring what exists in your mind, in your memory, and you can put it down on paper and resurrect it again in a way.

Listen: Poet Sophia Naz grieves after a wildfire took her home

YCC: Its been a few years since the fire. Has the landscape recovered?

Naz: In my home, there were 32 large trees. Im talking trees that were over 100 years old. This is not something that can be replaced and certainly will not be replaced in my lifetime. And that is just the devastating truth about climate change, the climate crisis. Behind me, as I speak, is a hillock or mound of earth where my previous house stood. The earth was rendered too unstable to build where it was built before. So we built slightly below it. So as a result, I see this pile of earth, rubble, every day. Theres a few scattered pieces of scrub growing on it, but its a perverse kind of thing. Its only partially covered by the scrub and a few grasses, but it stubbornly remains as a reminder of everything that has gone.

YCC: And knowing that youre still in the midst of this drought, and that climate change is only likely to bring more severe droughts and fires, you still made the choice to stay there. What is it like living there now?

Naz: Honestly, I dont know how long I will be able to sustain this choice, because it is getting more and more worrisome by the day, really. For now, were here and I do love being here, even though its traumatic.

Weve evacuated twice since the initial fire, and its been absolutely terrifying. There is definitely PTSD in in my life at the moment. And honestly, I do think about moving away, because Im not sure that Ill be able to sustain it literally, physically, and psychologically. It continues to take a toll on me, because every time theres a fire alarm, you can imagine what happens to my heartbeat. Its a palpable reality.

It would be a very strange thing to say that loss is a gift. But I think the gift is the realization that every day of your life is enormously precious. And in a way, its all that you have. All that you will ever know is right this minute. And as a poet, that is an enormous gift, because it changes the way that you view everything around you, and your own being, and all your relationships with the environment, with people.

YCC: Is there a poem from your book that youd be willing to share?

Naz: This poem is called After, Math.

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Before Langley Air Force Base: The muddy history of Shellbanks, Sherwood and other plantations of Elizabeth City County – Daily Press

Posted: at 8:54 pm

HAMPTON Detonations echoed across the Back River as dynamite planted under tree stumps liberated them from the loamy swamp. Away from the blasts, the chatter of men filling in craters mingled with the sounds of axes chopping and saws gnawing at Virginia pines.

And 105 years ago, the construction of the flying field in Hampton had begun.

The U.S. government had acquired the swath of land once a closely knit neighborhood of plantations between the branches of the Back River in Elizabeth City County for the militarys first installation devoted to air power. On the fringes of the Army airfield, the first laboratories of NASAs predecessor, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, were born.

Today, the chest-rattling roar of the F-22 Raptors thunders above Langley Air Force Base, which employs some 15,000 airmen and 5,000 civilians. It is the headquarters of Air Combat Command and home of the 1st Fighter Wing and 633rd Air Base Wing. The neighboring NASA Langley Research Center plays a critical role in the U.S. space program and has contributed to the first manned missions to the moon.

Perhaps lesser known but no less fascinating are the people who lived on Langley before it was Langley. Their gravestones still rest alongside military housing; the name of a plantation remains on buildings. Their stories include conquest and colonization, revolution and a daring slave escape, Civil War blunders and federal land buyers in disguise.

The second Shellbanks farmhouse, built by Hampton Institute in 1902 after fire destroyed the first, has been preserved as Langley Air Force Bases Building 90. (SSgt Gabriel Macdonald/U.S. Air Force photo)

Stop reader stop! Let Nature claim a Tear. A Mothers last and only Child lies here.

Thats the epitaph on the gravestone of Frances Hollier, who died at age 16 in 1798. She rests next to her younger sister, Ann, who died two years earlier at age 12. Their marble stones are shaded by trees among brick houses in what is still called the bases Lighter-Than-Air area from which massive airships such as the Roma once lumbered above Hampton Roads.

Another burial ground is more prominently displayed in the parking lot of the bases Riverview Event Center once the Officers Club where the Sherwood plantation house once stood. There, a set of plaques marks the remains of the Booker family along with a few other notable names: Marshall, Armistead, Von Schilling, Houseman and Jones.

Then theres Shellbank. The name is on the Shellbank Gym and on the out-of-service Shellbank Pool, and in common use it refers to a section of the base that stretches from the King Street Bridge to LaSalle Avenue.

The name conjures images of seagulls dropping oysters from lofty heights to crack them on the granite rip rap that lines the Back River. But Shellbank derives from Shellbanks, or Shell Banks. Old names for a plantation.

An unused postcard shows the Hampton Normal and Agricultrual Institute's Shellbanks Industrial Home on what is now Langley Air Force Base. Built in the early 1900s, the farmhouse served as a dormitory and classroom and has been preserved as the base's Building 90. (Courtesy of Hampton History Museum)

In 1621, Capt. Thomas Purifoy boarded the George, leaving his home in Leicestershire for a rapidly transforming Elizabeth City County an occasion noted by a plaque in the Sherwood burial plot.

The Virginia Company of London was sending settlers to the New World to find wealth and a shortcut to China.

They were colonizing an area that had been occupied for 12,000 years by Indigenous peoples. By the 1600s, Powhatan tribes such as the Kecoughtan farmed the wooded banks of the rivers that split Hampton the town formed there in 1610.

Two years before Purifoy set sail, a privateer named the White Lion docked at nearby Old Point Comfort and delivered a cargo hold of Africans beginning the slave trade in the colonies.

Elsewhere on the Virginia Peninsula, tensions between the English, who had settled Jamestown in 1607, and the Indigenous tribes were simmering. The colonists had become increasingly dependent on the Powhatan confederation for food and as an early warning system for anticipated attacks from Spain. The tribes relied on the English for metal tools and technology.

But the tribes soon realized the colonists were not here to trade. They wanted the land.

Purifoy arrived in Virginia months before the Indian Massacre of 1622 and enlisted as a commander in the second Anglo-Powhatan War, which lasted until 1632. He served in several capacities for Elizabeth City County, and by 1635 King Charles I granted him a 2,000-acre plot of land on the eastern side of what is now Langley Air Force Base.

This combo image shows a portion of the 1892 Semple Map and a Google Maps screenshot of present-day Langley Air Force Base. (Library of Congress/Google Maps screenshot)

By the 1630s, a sweet-tasting strain of tobacco developed by Jamestown settler John Rolfe was wildly popular in Europe, and the plant had become the No. 1 cash crop in Virginia. The town of Hampton was a port central to this trade.

But tobacco quickly depleted the soil and many families eventually began raising corn, wheat, alfalfa and barley.

Purifoys land was split into two plantations, with Shellbanks descending to the Lowry family and Sherwood going to the Hand-Marshall-Booker line. Other settlers established plantations in the area, including John Layden, who around 1609 became the father of the first child of English parentage born in Virginia, and Benjamin Syms, who founded the first free school in America around 1647.

George Wythe (New York Public Library)

Perhaps the most prominent farm was Chesterville, first patented by Thomas Wythe in 1676. Ruins of the plantation house still stand on NASAs Langley Research Center.

George Wythe was born on Chesterville in 1726 and became one of the nations founding fathers and a framer of the U.S. Constitution. He studied at William & Mary and became the schools first professor of law.

Wythe represented Virginia in the Continental Congress and at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. He even helped design the state seal. In 1776, he was among the first to sign the Declaration of Independence.

The Revolutionary War had raged for nearly six years when, in March 1781, a British force of about 400 sailed up the Back River.

Led by Lt. Col. Thomas Dundas, the troops landed at the mouth of Wythe Creek near present-day NASA and marched north toward an American outpost in the Tabb area. The redcoats were later met by a patriot force of about 40 men, led by Col. Francis Mallory of Hampton, in the area now known as Big Bethel. Mallory died in the skirmish, which ended in a British victory.

Seven months later and just 15 miles north, the British surrendered to Gen. George Washington at Yorktown.

According to family legend, Washington paid several visits to John Lowry at Shellbanks during his stay on the Virginia Peninsula.

Wythe had moved to Williamsburg before the Revolution and was an absentee landowner in Elizabeth City County; Lowry was one of its largest resident farmers. Lowrys 525 acres included 100 head of cattle and a substantial dairy operation along with three boats, more than 20 horses and at least 12 enslaved people. Lowry contributed to the patriot cause, according to public records, exchanging 2,400 pounds of beef for 30 British pounds.

This cyanotype photo shows the Sherwood plantation house around 1892. The home served as a barracks and then a guard house before being razed in the 1920s for the site of the Officers' Club now the Riverview Event Center. The photo was taken by Charles Herbert Hewins or Jesse Andrus Hewins, possibly for Hampton Institute's Camera Club. (Courtesy of Hampton History Museum)

Next door at the Sherwood plantation, George Booker filed a claim to recover expenses for 30 pounds of bacon and 252 pounds of beef provided to American troops. He was a prominent landowner who served in the House of Delegates and as a high sheriff and a county court justice. He was able to generate wealth and power on the backs of the 27 enslaved people who farmed his plantation.

This draft of a deposition given by Paul D. Luke, the Old Point Comfort lighthouse keeper, describes fugitive slaves of Catherine Lowry enlisting into British service during occupation in the War of 1812. The document reads: "between the fourth and tenth of July 1813 while the British troops had possession of Old P. comfort where I resided as keeper of the light House I saw three young Negro Men who I was told had just come in standing together in company with several Soldiers I walk'd up to them and ask'd where they were from and who they had belong'd to they said they were from back River and belong'd to the Widow Lowry I afterward heard a British officer ask them the same questions and receive the same answer the next day Capt Stewart of the first or second Batalion of the Royal marine Corps who commanded the Guard upon the point came up stairs into a room adjoining where I was after seating himself at a table he order'd his servant to go and tell serjeant such a one to bring one of those black fellows up when the fellow came the Capt ask'd him his name and whether he chose to enlist as a Sailor or Soldier he said as a Soldier his name was immediately taken down and the Serjeant was order'd to go down with him and bring up another and in succession a third was brought all of whom enter'd as Soldiers these were the same fellows I spoke to the Day before as mention'd above they all answer'd to the name of Lowry but I do not recollect the Christian names (...) them which was Randal as the (...)" The document is cut off at the bottom. (Courtesy of Dr. Jean Marshall von Schilling and Martha Booker, in memory of Hunter Russell Booker & Martha Chisman Booker/Courtesy of Hampton History Museum)

Paul D. Luke was the lighthouse keeper on Old Point Comfort while it was under control of the British during the War of 1812.

In July 1813, he spotted an unusual sight: Three young Black men and two Black women in the company of several soldiers.

The three men said they were enslaved fugitives from Back River and answered to the name Lowry. One woman belonged to the widow Catherine Lowry of Shellbanks; the other, to George Booker of Sherwood.

The men enlisted as soldiers with the Royal Marines, according to Lukes account, but the fate of the two women isnt documented.

Though Congress banned the trans-Atlantic slave trade starting in 1808, the domestic slave trade continued until the end of the Civil War. Some 21,000 enslaved people were shipped from Hampton, Norfolk and Portsmouth to the cotton mecca of New Orleans between 1819 and 1860, according to the Historic New Orleans Collection research center.

Rarely could enslaved people expect to spend their life on one farm among the same people, according to a 1975 dissertation on Elizabeth City County by Sarah Shaver Hughes, then a Ph.D. candidate at the College of William & Mary.

For the slaves of the post-revolutionary generation, as for the free people, life was more likely to yield disruption and discontinuity than tranquil attachment to one place and group of people, Shaver Hughes wrote, though with the difference that for the slave these changes were imposed, not chosen.

Even the enslaved people who remained faced the prospect of being sold or rented out to other families.

You suffered the horror of having your children, spouse, parents, siblings, beloved friends sold from you, never to see them again, historian, author and Norfolk State University professor Colita Nichols Fairfax said in an interview.

Still, Black labor was different in Elizabeth City County than in places such as New Orleans.

The farms were smaller than the massive sugar and cotton plantations of the deep South. Overseers werent necessary because the enslaved workers had a considerable understanding of their animals and crops, Shaver Hughes wrote.

Free Blacks also had more privileges than in the rest of the antebellum South thanks to their skilled labor, the demise of tobacco farming and intermixing with white families.

But when it came to basic necessities, enslaved people most often had to fend for themselves. This would include clothing made from fabric scraps, furniture built from leftover materials, improvised medical care and diets centered on food that whites didnt want.

This June 29, 1861, Harper's Weekly illustration shows the 5th New York Infantry, also known as Duryee's Zouaves, during an assault on the Confederate position at Big Bethel. (Courtesy of the Casemate Museum)

In June 1861, Union Gen. Benjamin Butler and Maj. Theodore Winthrop led two columns of some 3,500 Union soldiers toward the slave-built Confederate earthworks at Big Bethel which today is the site of a recreational park and some off-base housing owned by Langley.

The troops coming from Hampton and Newport News were to converge and launch a surprise attack at dawn.

But the Hampton force mistook their Newport News counterparts for rebel troops. A skirmish ensued. The gunfire signaled to Confederate Cols. D.H. Hill and John B. Magruder that an attack was imminent, allowing them to rally their troops. And after a three-hour battle, the Southern forces repelled the Yankees, allowing the Confederates to retain control of much of the Peninsula.

But the Union troops maintained their stronghold at Fort Monroe, and by August, Magruder ordered the town of Hampton burned to keep it from falling into enemy hands.

Robert S. Hudgins II grew up on the Lamington (or Lambington) plantation, which bordered Sherwood, and later witnessed the establishment of Langley Field on his land. He served as a sergeant in the 3rd Virginia Cavalry for the Confederate army, fought in the Battle of Big Bethel and saw the burning of Hampton from an area called Sinclairs Corner near the southwest end of what is now Fox Hill Road.

Hudgins later recounted his experiences at Kellys Ford, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Yellow Tavern and Appomattox in the book Recollections of an Old Dominion Dragoon.

More destruction followed when Union Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan landed his army at Fort Monroe and embarked northwest on the Peninsula campaign.

George Booker of Sherwood served as a major in the Confederate army under Magruder. He fell ill and resigned his commission. As Union troops ransacked the Peninsula, Booker and his family fled to Petersburg.

Thomas Whiting Lowry, at age 68, remained on Shellbanks. His granddaughter, Eliza C. Fletcher, described a night in 1861 when Union troops took him from his home without time to put on shoes then carried him by boat across the Back River. They forced him to walk 5 miles to Old Point Comfort to take an oath of loyalty to the Union.

They had ransacked the place after he left, Fletcher recounted in a family newsletter. There were several ladies in the family and one boy whose sister put him under her bolster so they wouldnt find him when they searched the room.

(Courtesy of the Air Combat Command History Office)

When Robert Hudgins returned from the war, the Lamington farm was a wreck.

Fences were down and four years growth of weeds and saplings had nearly reclaimed what was once some of the most fertile farmland in the region, he recounted. The house had fallen into disrepair. ... Only a few of the slaves had remained; the rest, having been freed by the Emancipation Proclamation, had scattered to the four winds.

Hudgins made an agreement with the remaining freed slaves to stay and help salvage the farm in exchange for housing and food until some money could be made.

One of George Bookers daughters, Mollie, remained at Sherwood with her husband, a German named Franz Wilhelm von Schilling. They tried farming again, but the fields had been neglected and livestock depleted. They moved to the Washington, D.C., area.

Meanwhile, Franzs brother Louis von Schilling stayed on the Shellbanks plantation and attempted to plant white Dinkel wheat and fruit trees sent from Germany. The crops failed, and Louis was evicted in 1872. But descendants of the von Schillings remained in Hampton. They included Ilma von Schilling, who was a principal of the Syms-Eaton Academy, and U.S. Army Col. Leopold Marshall Winks von Schilling. A road in Hamptons Coliseum Central district bears the familys name.

In 1875, Thomas Tabb a lawyer who was one of the largest landowners in Elizabeth City County bought the Shellbanks tract and three years later sold it to Boston philanthropist Mary Tileston Hemenway.

She in turn donated the land to the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute, which was founded in 1868 with the mission to educate Blacks whose population in Hampton had boomed after the Civil War and later Native Americans.

The school used Shellbanks for hands-on and experimental agricultural education. The Shellbanks farmhouse served as a dormitory and classroom until it burned down in 1902. Hampton Institute built a new farmhouse that has since been preserved as Air Force Building 90.

The same year as Hemenways donation of Shellbanks, a couple named Junius and Lucy Jones bought the Sherwood tract. They sold it in 1881 to James Sands Darling, a prominent oysterman and entrepreneur.

By that time, oyster farming and aquaculture were playing a vital role in the rebuilding of Hampton.

Local historian, preservationist and author John Quarstein called Darling, who was born in New York and moved to Elizabeth City County after the Civil War, a visionary industrialist and one of the largest oyster producers in the world. Darling also invested heavily in the menhaden and lumber industries, along with trolleys and a hotel.

He had to own everything he could that made his industry successful, Quarstein said in an interview. Hes one of those carpetbaggers that then became the gentry.

Darlings son, Frank, inherited the farm before the U.S. government took interest in the land in 1916.

This aerial photo of Langley Field is dated March 10, 1920. Construction of the base had begun in earnest just three years earlier. At the lower right is the King Street Bridge. (Courtesy of Hampton History Museum)

The military was looking for land near Fort Monroe that was convenient for over-water flying with a proximity to industry, as well as a temperate climate.

So a group of federal investigators dressed themselves as hunters and fishermen to prowl and survey the Sherwood tract without revealing the governments interest in purchasing it.

The ruse didnt work.

Three men with political ties Harry H. Holt, H.R. Booker and Nelson S. Groome learned of the governments interest and bought options on the land encompassing Sherwood, Lamington, Tide Mill, Downing Farm and portions of others.

The men then lobbied the government to build its airfield there and sold it to the Army in 1916 for $290,000 (about $8.1 million in todays dollars).

They did it quietly and they did it essentially, surreptitiously. They made no noise about it, said Wythe Holt, a local historian and the grandson of Harry H. Holt. And it was a bonanza for them.

By 1917, Hamptons Gannaway-Hudgins Co. began flattening the landscape to accommodate a pair of runways for the flying machines.

A large portion of that land which hadnt been farmed was still thickly wooded marsh.

One of the first arrivals at the airfield described the grounds:

Natures greatest ambition was to produce in this, her cesspool, the muddiest mud, the weediest weeds, the dustiest dust and the most ferocious mosquitoes the world has ever seen. Her plans were so well formulated and adhered to that she far surpassed her wildest hopes and desires.

The Sherwood plantation house served as a barracks and then a guard house before being razed in the 1920s to make way for the Officers Club.

The Shellbanks farm remained the property of Hampton Institute until 1941. The feds had paid for portions of the land to accommodate a road and a large ditch, but bought the remaining 770-acre tract consisting of Shellbanks, Canebrake and Elmwood on Feb. 26 of that year for $155,000 ($3.2 million today).

Meanwhile, Langleys influence on the region was well underway.

Mike Cobb, who retired as the Hampton History Museums founding curator, described the sweep of history during an interview.

The Hampton that had existed for so long is forever changed by the advent of technology, the modern age, he said. And in no other place in Elizabeth City County is that more striking than what is Langley today.

Some of the volumes consulted for this story. (Matt Cahill)

The son of two Air Force veterans, Matt Cahill researches genealogy and for several years has worked maintaining the grounds at Langley Air Force Base.

Matt Cahill, matthew.cahill@pilotonline.com

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Before Langley Air Force Base: The muddy history of Shellbanks, Sherwood and other plantations of Elizabeth City County - Daily Press

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Open call: 2022 International Residency – Announcements – e-flux

Posted: June 29, 2022 at 1:29 am

Asia Culture Center (ACC) is pleased to announce the international open call for ACC Residency 2022. Applications are currently being accepted online with a submission deadline of June 13, 2022.

Under the theme of Post-COVID-19 Era, Posthumanism, ACC Residency 2022 seeks to interrogate issues such as the fourth industrial revolution in the contactless era, the changes in the notion of labor brought about by the digital transformation and the new relationship between humans and things (the post-human).

The Residency consists of five categories: Art & Technology, Visual Arts, Design, Theater, and Dialogue and is opened to all creators and researchers who have experience and capability to propose and implement a project exploring the theme.

ACC will support selected participants with workspaces, accommodation, a grant of 2,000,000KRW per month, and research/project funding up to 10,000,000KRW for Researchers and up to 50,000,000KRW for Creators. In addition, ACC will offer various resources from seminars, workshops to consulting sessions with experts as well as production facilities and audio-visual equipment in ACT Studio. ACC will work closely with the each participant and projects developed throughout the 5-month residency will be presented through showcase, exhibition and performance in December.

For more information and to apply, please visit ACCs website. The selection process will consist of two steps, application document review and interview through which around 27 individuals/teams are expected to be selected. The announcement will be made in July through ACC website.

Practical informationApplication period: May 23June 13,2022 (6:00pm KST)Apply onlineTheme: Post-COVID-19 Era, PosthumanismResidency period: August 2022December 2022 (5 months)Categories: Art & Technology, Visual Arts, Design, Theater, DialogueEligible applicants: Individuals/groups who have experience and potential and are actively involved in the relative fieldsSupportsGrant, project/research fund, and supporting programs.Presentation at group exhibition/showcase/academic event.Workspace, accommodation, and ACT centerAirfares for international participants

Materials to submitApplication form (including Personal Information Collection and Usage Agreement) in a provided form (.pdf)A project (or research) proposal in a provided form (.pdf)A portfolio in a provided form (.pdf, maximum 30 pages including the cover, not exceeding 50MB)A letter of recommendation (only for international applicants)

About Asia Culture Center and ACC ResidencyAsia Culture Center (ACC) located in Gwangju, South Korea, is an international arts and culture organization committed to bringing together and fostering exchange among different regions and disciplines. As one of its year-round programs, ACC Residency is a platform for research, creation and production that brings together creative talents from around the world to share their knowledge, technological insight and experience. Since 2015, it has supported the cross-disciplinary, inventive, and bold projects of more than 740 creators, designers, artists and researchers.

For more information, please visit acc.go.kr.

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More than just mushrooms: fungi class expands students worldview | The …

Posted: at 1:29 am

Fungi could perhaps be considered immortal because of the way they absorb nutrients from the living flora and fauna around them. Yet, we know so little about these organisms living among us.

In a quest to be more attuned to these natural phenomena, comparative literature instructor Laura Hunt ventures deep into mycology, literature and environmental science with her interdisciplinary class, Thinking with Fungi: Literature and Ecomedia in Conversation (CPLT 202W).

The class integrates science with literature, hoping to explore fungi and its uniqueness as a fully co-dependent species. Its less about learning how to identify various mushrooms or forage for fungi and more about shifting perspectives and to actually think and observe the natural world, Hunt said.

I hope this class will help inspire a worldview that would privilege the care for other beings, other life than just ourselves, she said.

Lullwater Park. (The Emory Wheel.)

Specifically, the impending and ongoing environmental crisis forces humans to challenge the narrowmindedness of the human worldview. Hunt uses fungi to question what it means to be an individual, or how an individual is defined. Mushrooms operate in a mycelial network, dependent on trees and plants that all communicate together to grow.

People often overlook fungi as part of the ecosystem, not understanding or even seeing the role they play, Hunt said. Much of our anthropocentric understanding of the world is based on power structures and dynamics, with a strong notion of independence and individualism, whereas fungi enter a symbiotic relationship with forests.

Aliyah Cook (23C) took Hunts inaugural class last year. Cook said her obsession with mushrooms from painting, drawing, photographing and collecting them was magnified after this course.

Life is so much more connected to itself than we understand, Cook said. Posthumanism makes us consider that we are not as special as we think; other beings exist in this world as well.

Posthumanism is complicated, but the general idea is that human agency goes beyond the individual, and many aspects of the world are not necessarily under human control.

Anna Bayuk (24C), another avid fungi enthusiast who took the class, asked that if humans survival is dependent on other species, like gut bacteria, are we really individuals?

Something fungi enthusiasts call the wood-wide web, a play on world-wide web, aptly describes the intertwined life of mushrooms and the environment around them. Understanding mycelial networks and the collaborative, facilitatory nature in which they flourish is crucial to reevaluating our social structures and determination to reach the top.

Not viewing natural resources as commodities requires a lot more focus and intentional observation. Thus, when the pandemic put a pause on our lives, Hunt decided to learn to forage and fuel her passion for fungi.

Mycelia infected my brain, and I was roped into the web, Hunt said. Its magical.

For her, discovering fungal networks and picking mushrooms to cook and eat was a re-enchantment of the world, and she said that she learned to be amazed by so many things she had previously taken for granted.

Unlike industrialized agriculture that allows us to eat whatever we want whenever we want, mushrooms cant be purposefully grown in a greenhouse or in our backyard like tomatoes or oranges.

If I want strawberries in December, they are in the store, Hunt said. But, with the mushrooms, they dont work that way.

Fungi are codependent on trees, the weather, the seasons and the functioning of the ecosystems around them.

Unfortunately, failing to see the natural world as consisting of reciprocal relationships, we manipulate nature to best aid our survival rather than accepting our lack of knowledge to recognize the way nature has survived and thrived without us for hundreds of years.

Fungi are completely the opposite of our go big and grow fast mentality; instead, they are small, slow and patient. Instead of racing through life as fast as we can, accumulating as much as we can, Hunt said, we should know who we are as something small, one of the many beings in the universe. To understand and be willing to embrace how small and insignificant we are in the grand scheme of things is a frightening feeling, but perhaps necessary.

Hunt referenced the story of matsutake mushrooms in author Anna Tsings book, The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins to explain the intertwining of mushrooms with nature. After the bombing of Hiroshima, forests were desecrated and destroyed. In an effort to repair the forest, people replanted a species of lodgepole pine that allowed matsutake mushrooms to flourish. Today, they are a highly sought after ingredient in Japan, further emphasizing the persistence and beauty of unity within the environment.

Kate Stevens (24B), who took Hunts class last year, said the course changed her world outlook.

After learning about how networks of underground fungi called mycelium provide channels between every plant for miles, you really will believe everything is connected, Stevens said.

Bayuk used mushrooms as a segue into a broader conversation about interdependence and the lack of empathy for difference. She gave the example of womens rights to illustrate her point.

The suffragette movement was accomplished through proving women could be like men, Bayuk said. Empathy came from proving similarity and not through embracing difference.

Bayuk also mentioned the South River Forest in Atlanta, which is being destroyed to create Cop City, a police compound for training officers.

We dont place enough value on the natural world, and we dont see the woods as having something valuable in them, Bayuk said. Were just running around looking for meaning and disconnected from all of it.

Hunt hopes her students will come away with more curiosity, questions and ideas and a greater sensory awareness of the world.

I never used to notice mushrooms very much, but since taking the class, I see them everywhere, Stevens said.

She also mentions @mushroomsofemory, an Instagram account dedicated to discovering mushrooms on campus grounds. While the owner has elected to remain anonymous, the account has drawn a large fanbase across the University. Many people share mushrooms from their hometown or places theyve visited, which also get posted regularly.

In a post-globalized world, we tend to forget about everything not immediately in our reach. But, the implications of our actions stretch beyond what we know, and the consequences ripple further than we can see or understand.

When asked why we should ultimately care about mushrooms, Hunt said we have to.

We should care in a way that doesnt involve terror and dread, but the celebration of life that makes you want to do better for the earth, Hunt said.

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Bitcoin and Ethereum Prices Rallied This Week. It Wont Last, According to These Experts – NextAdvisor

Posted: at 1:27 am

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Cryptocurrency prices have been on the rise in recent days, but some experts dont expect it to last.

Bitcoin rose 5% and topped nearly $22,000 over the weekend a big leap from when it fell to nearly $17,500 earlier this month. Ethereum saw a big jump too, rising to above $1,200. For investors, a big question still lingers: Is the crypto market truly recovering or is it just another false alarm, also known as a bull trap?

Some experts say signs point to a bull trap and investors should be wary, warning the worst may be yet to come amid ongoing macroeconomic uncertainty and bitcoins price, as well as other cryptocurrencies, could drop even further.

While we have seen bitcoin and ethereum rally recently after creating lows around $17,500 and $880 respectively, we are unconvinced about calling a low in place yet, says Richard Usher, head of over-the-counter trading at BCB Group, a crypto financial firm. The general risk environment remains on a knife edge, and while we think risk assets will rally significantly toward the end of the year, we see risks skewed to one more sell-off first.

Its easy for investors to hope the worst is in the past for the crypto market. Bitcoins price stayed above $20,000 and ethereum held above $1,100 on Tuesday, a significant jump from their 15-month lows just two weeks ago.

But with war raging in Ukraine, rising interest rates, inflation soaring, and talks of an impending recession, the coast is far from clear, experts say. Many are calling what were seeing with crypto prices this week a bull trap.

Thats when a stock or cryptocurrency reverses back down after a convincing rally and breaks below a prior support level. Basically, its a false signal, fooling investors into thinking the market is done falling and that its a good time to buy.

Experts say there will likely be another sell-off in the crypto market over the next few weeks or months. Wendy O, a crypto expert and educator, expects ethereum could fall as low as $750 and bitcoin could fall to $10,000. Kiana Danial, entrepreneur and author of Cryptocurrency Investing for Dummies, predicts bitcoin will fall to $11,000, while venture capitalist Kavita Gupta is calling for a bottom of $14,000 for bitcoin and $500 for ethereum.

Martin Hiesboeck, head of blockchain and crypto research at Uphold, says whether bitcoin holds above $20,000 has little to do with crypto itself and more with the overall geopolitical and macroeconomic situation, which he does not believe will improve significantly in the short term. The crypto market, which has been tracking with the stock markets lately, has been a casualty of the broader market sell-off of risky assets.

The war in Ukraine, supply chain gluts, and inflation are by far the biggest worries, Hiesboeck says. So far bitcoin hasnt exactly proven to be the inflation-proof safe haven its biggest fans believed it to be.

The crypto market is volatile and highly unpredictable, so buying cryptocurrencies at any price is risky let alone during a market dip that might not go away anytime soon.

However, if youve assessed your tolerance and can accept the risk, experts say now could be a good time to get in the crypto market since prices are lower than theyve been in years. Theres no such thing as a perfect time to enter the market, so keep in mind that price fluctuations are par for the course and be prepared for crypto prices to fall even more. Dont invest in crypto if you cant stomach sharp market swings, which can sometimes be as much as 15% in a 24-hour period.

Additionally, you should invest only what youre OK with losing and after youve prioritized other aspects of your finances, such as building an emergency fund, paying off high-interest debt, and investing in a traditional retirement account like a 401(k).

Financial advisors recommend investing no more than 5% of your portfolio in crypto, and sticking to the two most well-established cryptocurrencies: bitcoin and ethereum. According to the NextAdvisor Investability Score, bitcoin and ethereum are considered to be better investments thanks to their longer track records and long-term value growth, among other key factors. Heres how our score shakes out for 10 cryptocurrencies that are consistently among the top by market cap, excluding stablecoins, for reference:

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Investment: How To Calculate The Attractiveness of a Cryptocurrency – BeInCrypto

Posted: at 1:27 am

Investment: Asset manager, financier, and cryptocurrency teacher Alexander Alexandrovich Ryabinin says the investment attractiveness of digital assets can be determined by analyzing inflationary and deflationary processes.

The expert shared his method with the editors of BeInCrypto. If you arent a math head, this might melt your brain. But try to hang in there.

This study shows how the attractiveness of a cryptocurrency can be calculated, thanks to inflationary and deflationary processes.

For this, a coefficient was developed. It is necessary to substitute all the project data into it in order to get the most valid value.

Coefficient:

A+B/(C+D)*(E*F)

Where

A current supply of tokens

B inflation

C current supply of tokens

D staking

E trading volumes within the platform subject to commission

F commission

Perfectly reflects this Biswap idea:

220.490.000+10%/60.000.000+35%*0.005=242,539,000/405.000=598.9

We took the current capitalization of 220,490,000

Added an estimated 10% additional issue

60,000,000 volume of tokens per day

Under 35% you can stake

0.5% of transactions are burned

In the case of the BSV, there are also deflationary measures that can be taken into account in the formula

Sometimes the staking offer is too small to be considered or not at all. Then we use the formula, removing staking.

An example is LRC:

10% apy

70% fee all trade for srakers

10% burn

0.5% fee trade buy and sell

1,374,513,896 circulation supply

240,000,000 volume trade per day

1,200,000 fee a day

840,000 fee for staker a day, 25,200,000 a mouth, 302,400,000 a year

120,000 burn a day, 3,600,000 a mouth, 72,000,000 a year

1,374,513,896/72,000,000 = 19

1,374,513,896/72,000,000+302,400,000=3.6

You can substitute different data. The main thing that must be observed is that inflationary factors are in the first part of the coefficient, and deflationary factors in the second.

Thus, we get a coefficient that reflects the advantage of deflation over inflation. After analyzing the sector (each asset), we can get the average ratio. And due to this, to understand what assets stand out from the sector.

For example, after analyzing the sector of centralized exchanges from the TOP 100, it became clear that the average value is 20.

Here are the rates for the projects:

BNB 20

OKB-15

FTT-17

KCS-20

HT-25

LEO-105

We can conclude that attractive coins for investment will be OKB and FTT, as their ratios are below average. LEO is not an attractive investment. The rest are neutral.

This does not mean that these projects will benefit in the short term. Rather, on the contrary, these coins will quickly give a small profit. So, the LEO coin is growing faster than the rest in the moment. But if you look after a long period of time, then it will lose to investments with a lower coefficient.

This is due to the fact that this coefficient shows how quickly the supply of coins will decrease. Deflation largely reflects supply constraints. But it is worth noting that you cannot rely solely on this coefficient. Since it reflects only the growth / reduction of supply. The demand factor must also be taken into account.

The previous coefficient reflects the internal economics of the project. How will the supply of coins be reflected in a year, for example.

Now, we need to consider the external demand for the coin itself. After all, by combining these 2 indicators, we can understand how attractive the project is for investors and future profitability (at least through a reduction in supply in a year there are 10% fewer coins, demand is good, which means that at least 10% growth can be predicted fundamentally).

So, how do we calculate the second coefficient:

A/B

Where:

A current market supply

B trading volume

For example, lets analyze BSW volume a day:

220.490.000/60.000.000 = 3.5

We do the same with other coins.

GNO

2.579.588/4.535.631 = 0.5

XLM

25,000,000,000/161,474,917 = 1548

RUNE

330.668.061/92.843.985 = 3.5

LRC

1.374.513.896/70.493.337= 194

Based on the analysis, we can conclude that the most interesting coins for investors are GNO, BSW and RUNE.

Now lets analyze for centralized exchanges.

BNB

163.276.974/1.030.589.981 = 0.6

LEO

953.954.130/7.004.759 = 130

FTT

135.473.350/62.725.740 = 2

KCS

98.379.860/4.197.593 = 22

HB

154.409.022/24.103.685 = 7

OKB

60,000,000/9,630,463 = 6

Here we already have 2 FTT and BNB leaders, 2 good indicators from HB and OKB, the rest are outsiders.

As a result, we got 2 good ideas. FTT is low in both ratios and OKB with excellent deflation and strong demand.

You can add a coefficient for summing up the results:

A*B

Where:

A offer coefficient

B demand factor

Then we get:

BNB 20*0.5 = 10

FTT-17*2=34

OKB 15*6 = 90

Due to the large demand, BNB wins. But it is worth noting that the demand is floating, today there is, but not tomorrow. That is, in the short term, this calculation takes place. But in the long run, things can change.

As an example of historical confirmation, we can take the 2021 cycle and CAKE with its excellent deflationary measures. From February to high.

CAKE has more than quadrupled.

The rest of the decentralized exchange market grew by an average of 150%.

The exceptions are LRC and RUNE, which grew about the same. But if you look, their deflationary measures are just as good. LRC 3.9. RUNE 11. And the demand for these coins (volumes) was excellent.

Got something to say about investment in cryptocurrencies or anything else? Write to usor join the discussion in our Telegram channel. You can also catch us on Tik Tok, Facebook, or Twitter.

DisclaimerAll the information contained on our website is published in good faith and for general information purposes only. Any action the reader takes upon the information found on our website is strictly at their own risk.

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