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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Meryl Streep slams Donald Trump in another emotional speech – Washington Post

Posted: February 13, 2017 at 8:41 am

When Meryl Streep delivered a blistering critique of then-President-elect Donald Trump at the Golden Globes in January, the actress did so without mentioning his name.

On Saturday night, Streep again denounced Trump in similar fashion, this time at a Manhattangala for the Human Rights Campaign, a nonprofit that advocates for LGBT equality.

And just as in January, there was no questionto whom she was referring in herspeech, which was at times self-deprecating, poignant and politically provocative.

The actress's fiery speech directed at President-elect Donald Trump wasn't a completely new act. (Nicki DeMarco/The Washington Post)

If we live through this precarious moment, if his catastrophic instinct to retaliate doesnt lead us to nuclear winter, we will have much to thank our current leader for, Streep said, according to the Hollywood Reporter. He will have woken us up to how fragile freedom is. The whip of the executive, through a Twitter feed, can lash and intimidate, punish and humiliate, delegitimize the press and imagined enemies with spasmodic regularity and easily provoked predictability.

It was the first time the acclaimed actress had spoken so publicly about Trump since the Golden Globes. Her remarks last month triggered angry tweets the following morning from Trump, who called Streep one of the most over-rated actresses in Hollywood and a Hillary flunky who lost big.

On Saturday night, Streep addressed Trumps critical tweets about her.

Yes, I am the most overrated, overdecorated and, currently, I am the most over-berated actress of my generation, she told the gala audience to laughter, according to the Associated Press.

Streep added that she had become a target of attacks since her Golden Globes speech,including from brownshirts, a reference to the Nazi militia. Her publicist did not immediately respond to the AP to elaborate on the attacks Streep cited.

Its terrifying to put the target on your forehead, Streep said. And it sets you up for all sorts of attacks and armies of brownshirts and bots and worse, and the only way you can do it is if you feel you have to. You have to! You dont have an option. You have to.

She said that her usual instinct was to stay at home and read, garden and load the dishwasher but that the weight of all these honors drove her to continue to speak out.

[The dramatic rise in state efforts to limit LGBT rights]

In her nearly four-decade-long career, Streep has been nominated for 30 Golden Globe awards and 20 Academy Awards,more than any other actor for either honor. She has won both awards multiple times, along with numerousEmmys and Screen Actors Guild awards.

When Streep was named as a Kennedy Center Honors recipient, the performing arts center noted that the sheer breadth and joy of her artistry counts as one of the most exhilarating cultural spectacles of our time.

The American Film Institute presented her with its Life Achievement Award in 2004, citing her unparalleled talent and integrity. A decade later, Streep receivedthe Presidential Medal of Freedom, with the White House calling her one of our nations greatest actors.

On Saturday night, Streep received the Human Rights Campaigns National Ally for Equality Award.She dedicated the honor to her gay and transgender teachers, colleagues and friends. In particular, Streep remembered two teachers from her childhood in New Jersey: a middle-school music teacher who became one of the first transgender women in the country, and her piano teacher, who lived with his partner for more than 50 years.

I am not going to introduce you to all my gay teachers, just some of the most influential personalities in my past, the memorable people who made me an artist and who lived, unnecessarily, under duress, Streep said.

She then spoke about the progress that had been made in recent decades on human rights and equality.

[Trump administration signals change in policy for transgender students]

Amazingly, and, in terms of human history, blazingly fast, culture seemed to have shifted; the old hierarchies and entitlements seemed to have been upended, Streep said. Which brings us to now. We should not be surprised that fundamentalists, of every stripe, are exercised and fuming. We should not be surprised that these profound changes come at a steeper cost than we originally thought. We should not be surprised that not everyone is actually cool with it.

Streep ended with a call to live our lives with God or without Her, according to the AP.

All of us have the human right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, she said. If you think people were mad when they thought the government was coming after their guns, wait until you see when they try to take away our happiness.

Read a transcript of Meryl Streeps speech via the Hollywood Reporter.

Read more:

Meryl Streep called out Donald Trump at the Golden Globes. He responded by calling her over-rated.

The Golden Globes wasnt the first time Meryl Streep got political at an award show

The single most important line in Meryl Streeps Golden Globe speech

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Futurism Needs More Women – The Atlantic

Posted: at 8:41 am

In the future, everyones going to have a robot assistant. Thats the story, at least. And as part of that long-running narrative, Facebook just launched its virtual assistant. Theyre calling it Moneypennythe secretary from the James Bond Films. Which means the symbol of our march forward, once again, ends up being a nod back. In this case, Moneypenny is a send-up to an age when Bonds womanizing was a symbol of manliness and many women were, no matter what they wanted to be doing, secretaries.

Why cant people imagine a future without falling into the sexist past? Why does the road ahead keep leading us back to a place that looks like the Tomorrowland of the 1950s? Well, when it comes to Moneypenny, heres a relevant datapoint: More than two thirds of Facebook employees are men. Thats a ratio reflected among another key group: futurists.

Both the World Future Society and the Association of Professional Futurists are headed by women right now. And both of those women talked to me about their desire to bring more women to the field. Cindy Frewen, the head of the Association of Professional Futurists, estimates that about a third of their members are women. Amy Zalman, the CEO of the World Future Society, says that 23 percent of her groups members identify as female. But most lists of top futurists perhaps include one female name. Often, that woman is no longer working in the field.

Somehow, Ive become a person who reports on futurists. I produce and host a podcast about what might happen in the future called Meanwhile in the Future. I write a column about people living cutting-edge lives for BBC Future. And one thing Ive noticed is how overwhelmingly male and white they are.

It turns out that what makes someone a futurist, and what makes something futurism, isnt well defined. When you ask those who are part of official futurist societies, like the APF and the WFS, they often struggle to answer. There are some possible credentialsnamely: a degree in foresight, an emerging specialty that often intersects with studies of technology and business. But the discipline isnt well establishedtheres no foresight degree at Yale, or Harvard. And there are plenty of people who practice futurology who dont have one.

Zalman defines a futurist as a person who embraces a certain way of thinking. Being a futurist these days means that you take seriously a worldview and a set of activities and the recognition that foresight, with a capital F, isnt just thinking about what are the top 10 things this year, what are the trends unfolding.

Frewen says that futurism wont ever be like architecture or medicine, in that its never going to be a licensed field. But there are still things that many futurists agree people in their field shouldnt do. We think of things now as more systems-based and more uncertain, you dont know what the future is, and thats a basic concept, so we try to avoid the people who think they can always know this is going to get better.

Some people think of science fiction authors as futurists, while others dont. Some members of the APF include singularity researchers, others dont want to. Some people lump transhumanists into a broader category of futurists. Others dont. Here are some of the people popularly known as futurists: Aubrey de Gray, the chief researcher at the Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence Research Foundation; Elon Musk, the head of SpaceX; Sergey Brin, the co-founder of Google; Ray Kurzweil, the director of engineering at Google. They dont necessarily belong to a particular societythey might not even self-identify as futurists!but they are driving the conversation about the futurevery often on stages, in public, backed by profitable corporations or well-heeled investors.

Which means the media ends up turning to Brin and Musk and de Gray and Kurzweil to explain what is going to happen, why it matters, and ultimately whether its all going to be okay. The thing is: The futures that get imagined depend largely on the person or people doing the imagining.

* * *

Why are there so few women? Much of it comes down to the same reasons there are so few women in science and technology, fields with direct links to futurism (which has a better ring to it than strategic foresight, the term some futurists prefer).

Zalman says futurism has actually fought to present itself in a certain way. When the field was founded in the 1960s, it came with a reputation that still lingers a bit today, she says. Like magicians, crystal ball gazers, sort of flakey, thats the reputation that followed the WFS for awhile. Because the field itself had to struggle to be taken seriously, that put more pressure on folks to demonstrate that they were scientific. And it was coded masculine. While futurism includes not simply the future of gadgets, the field found itself pushing away some of the perceived softer elements of foresight: social change, family structures, cultural impactsin favor of mathematical modeling and technology.

Madeline Ashby, a futurist with a degree in strategic foresight who has worked for organizations like Intel Labs, the Institute for the Future, SciFutures, and Nesta, says that another big part of the gender imbalance has to do with optimism. If you ask me, the one reason why futurism as a discipline is so white and male, is because white males have the ability to offer the most optimistic vision, she says. They can get up on stage and tell us that the world will be okay, that technology will fix all our problems, that well live forever. Mark Stevenson wrote a book called An Optimists Tour of the Future. TED speakers always seem to end their talk, no matter how dire, on an upward-facing note.

Ashby says that any time she speaks in front of a crowd, and offers a grim view of the future, someone (almost always a man) invariably asks why she cant be more positive. Why is this so depressing, why is this so dystopian, they ask. Because when you talk about the future you dont get rape threats, thats why, she says. For a long time the future has belonged to people who have not had to struggle, and I think that will still be true. But as more and more systems collapse, currency, energy, the ability to get water, the ability to work, the future will increasingly belong to those who know how to hustle, and those people are not the people who are producing those purely optimistic futures.

I dont know if I kind of pick up on the optimism as I pick up on the utter absurdity, said Sarah Kember, a professor of technology at the University of London whos applied feminist theory to futurism for years. And thats great for me in some ways, its been a traditional feminist strategy to expose absurdity. Its a key critique. She points out that as someone whose job it is to take a step back and analyze things like futurism from an outside view, a lot of the mainstream futurism starts to look pretty silly. Youve got smart bras and vibrating pants and talking kitchen worktops and augmented-reality bedroom mirrors that read the tags on your clothing and tell you what not to wear, and theres no reflection on any of this at all, she says.

Both Frewen of the APF and Zalman of the WFS told me that they were concerned about the gender imbalance in their field, and that they are hoping to help change it. But they also both reminded me that, compared to a lot of fields, futurism is a tiny speciality. And its homogeneous in other ways, too. The majority of the WFS members are white, and most of them are 55 to 65 years old. It is not okay for the WFS, although we care about them, to have only men from North America between the ages of 55 and 65, Zalman says. We need all those other voices because they represent an experience.

* * *

Any time someone points out a gender or racial imbalance in a field (or, most often, the combination of the two) a certain set of people ask: Who cares? The future belongs to all of usor, ultimately, none of uswhy does it matter if the vast majority of futurists are white men? It matters for the same reasons diversity drives market growth: because when only one type of person is engaged in asking key questions about a specialtyenvisioning the future or otherwisethey miss a entire frameworks for identifying and solving problems. The relative absence of women at Apple is why the Apple Health kit didnt have period tracking until a few months ago, and why a revolutionary artificial heart can be deemed a success even when it doesnt fit 80 percent of women.

Which brings us back to Moneypenny, and all the other virtual assistants of the future. There are all sorts of firms and companies working to build robotic servants. Chrome butlers, chefs, and housekeepers. But the fantasy of having an indentured servant is a peculiar one to some. That whole idea of creating robots that are in service to us has always bothered me, says Nnedi Okorafor, a science fiction author. Ive always sided with the robots. That whole idea of creating these creatures that are human-like and then have them be in servitude to us, that is not my fantasy and I find it highly problematic that it would be anyones.

Or take longevity, for example. The idea that people could, or even should, push to lengthen lifespans as far as possible is popular. The life-extension movement, with Aubrey de Gray as one (very bearded) spokesman, has raised millions of dollars to investigate how to extend the lifespan of humans. But this is arguably only an ideal future if youre in as a comfortable position as his. Living forever only works if youre a rich vampire from an Anne Rice novel, which is to say that you have compound interest, jokes Ashby. It really only works if you have significant real-estate investments and fast money and slow money. (Time travel, as the comedian Louis C.K. has pointed out, is another thing that is a distinctly white male preoccupationgoing back in time, for marginalized groups, means giving up more of their rights.)

Beyond the particular futures that get funded and developed, theres also a broader issue with the ways in which people think about what forces actually shape the future. We get some really ready-made easy ways of thinking about the future by thinking that the future is shapeable by tech development, said Kember, the professor of technology at University of London.

In the 1980s, two futurists (a man and a woman) wrote a book that invited key members of the futurist community to write essays on what they saw coming. The book was called What Futurists Believe, and it included profiles of 17 futurists, including Arthur C. Clarke and Peter Schwartz. All seventeen people profiled were men. And in some ways, they were very close to predicting the future. They seemed to grasp the importance of the cell phone and the trajectory of the personal computer. But they completely missed a huge set of other things. What they never got right was the social side, they never saw flattened organizations, social media, the uprisings in the Middle East, ISIS using Twitter, says Frewen.

Terry Grim, a professor in the Studies of the Future program at the University of Houston, recalls a video she saw from the 1960s depicting the office of the future. It had everything pretty much right, they had envisioned the computer and fax machine and forward-looking technology products. But there was something missing: There were no women in the office, she said.

Okorafor says that shes gotten so used to not seeing anybody like herself in visions of the future that its not really surprising to her when it happens. I feel like more of a tourist when I experience these imaginings, this isnt even a place where I would exist in the first place, she says. In the type of setting, the environment, and the way everything is set up just doesnt feel like it would be my future at all, and this is something that I experience regularly when I read or watch imagined futures, and this is part of what made me start writing my own.

This is also perhaps why futurists often dont talk about some of the issues and problems that many people face every dayharassment, child care, work-life balance, water rights, immigration, police brutality. When you lose out on womens voices you lose out on the issues that they have to deal with, Ashby says. She was recently at a futures event where people presented on a global trends report, and there was nothing in the slides on the future of law enforcement. The questions that many people face about their futures are lost in the futures being imagined.

* * *

In the 1970s, Alvin Tofflers book Future Shock argued that there are three types of futurism the world needed: a science of futurism that could talk about the probability of things happening, an art of futurism that could explore what is possible, and a politics of futurism that could investigate what is preferable. Futurism has done well to develop the first side, building devices and technologies and frameworks through which to see technical advances. But Zalman says that its fallen down a bit on the other two. Arts and humanities are given short shrift.

In some ways, the art and politics of futurism are the harder pieces of the pie. Technology is often predictable. Humans, less so. The solution to make things better is a really messy policy solution that has to be negotiated, its not pulling the sword from the stone or implanting the alien saucers with your stupid Mac virus or killing the shark, its getting people in a room with free coffee and doughnuts and getting them to talk, said Ashby.

In order to understand what those who have never really felt welcome in the field of futurism think, I called someone who writes and talks about the future, but who doesnt call themselves a futurist: Monica Byrne. Byrne is a science-fiction author and opinion writer who often tackles questions of how we see the future, and what kinds of futures we deem preferable. But when she thinks about futurism as a field, she doesnt see herself. I think the term futurist is itself is something I see white men claiming for themselves, and isnt something that would occur to me to call myself even though I functionally am one, she says.

Okorafor says that she too has never really called herself a futurist, even though much of what she does is use her writing to explore whats possible. When you sent me your email and you mentioned futurism I think thats really the first time I started thinking about that label for myself. And it fits. It feels comfortable.

When Byrne thinks about the term futurists, she thinks about a power struggle. What I see is a bid for control over what the future will look like. And it is a future that is, that to me doesnt look much different from Asimov science fiction covers. Which is not a future Im interested in.

The futurism that involves glass houses and 400-year-old men doesnt interest her. When I think about the kind of future I want to build, its very soft and human, its very erotic, and I feel like so much of what I identify as futurism is very glossy, chrome painted science fiction covers, theyre sterile. She laughs. Who cares about your jetpack? How does technology enable us to keep loving each other?

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NASA Discovers an Organism That Can Survive 16 Months in Outer Space – Futurism

Posted: at 8:40 am

In Brief

Scientists aboard the International Space Station (ISS) recently ran an experiment where they let algae loose into the vacuum of space for a full 16 months. And, surprisingly enough, the simple plants survived the harrowing journey. Despite extreme temperature variations, UV radiation, cosmic radiation, and incredible length of time, the algae were brought back aboard still alive.

The researchers aboard the ISS are currently running experiments as part of the Biology and Mars Experiment (BIOMEX) project. Within this experimental algae portion of the project, they tested the durability of algae species that are known to love freezing temperatures. Since the mixture of extreme conditions found in space is impossible to replicate in a laboratory environment exactly, the crew on the ISS used their location to put these cold-loving species to the test. However, despite knowing what these plants will endure on Earth, the scientists were astonished at how much they can really take.

Post-experiment, the researchers aboard the ISS will send these algae samples back to Earth. There, they will be rigorously tested to see the actual extent that the temperatures and combined radiation impacted them. This information could be crucial to future human missions to Mars. It could help to ensure the safety of humans and any plant-based food to be consumed.

However, beyond the positive benefits that this research could have on future missions of humans in space, it could also potentially tell us a little bit more about alien life. According to many, including famed astrophysicist Neil Degrasse Tyson, thinking that we are somehow the only living creatures in the universe would be inexcusably egocentric. And, while previously, few would have thought that any plants could survive such an extended stay in space, we now know better. And so, while certain environments in space may seem inhospitable, we now know that life could exist in places we never before would have suspected.

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Elon Musk’s SpaceX is Launching a Superbug Into Space – Futurism

Posted: at 8:40 am

In Brief

In a rather unromantic gesture, on February 14, SpaceX will be launching an antibiotic-resistant superbug into space. The bug will be living in microgravity aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The bacterium that will be shot into space will be the, often feared, MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus).

Even so much as the mention or MRSA send shivers down the spines of many. MRSA is an antibiotic-resistant staph infection that can represent itself in the human body in the skin as painful, swollen, red bumps; but the infection can also travel further into the body, wreaking havoc on bones, joints, even the blood. This potentially life-threatening infection kills more Americans than HIV/AIDS, Parkinsons disease, emphysema, and violence combinedevery year.

So, why would scientists launch this dangerous bacterium into space and bring it aboard the ISS? Well, not for any nefarious or dastardly reason. The purpose of this project is toaccelerate the mutations of the bacterium, allowing the scientists to watch the progression of the bug quicker than its progression on Earth, getting information ahead of those of us back home.

According to lead researcher Anita Goel, CEO of biotech company Nanobiosym, We will leverage the microgravity environment on the ISS to accelerate the Precision Medicine revolution here on Earth. In other words, using information from this study of the sped up life cycle of a MRSA bacterium, these scientists will be able to understand how bacteria change and mutate at a much faster rate than we would on Earth.

This information could be extrapolated to bacteria besides MRSA, and allow scientists to better understand how MRSA (and, in the future, other infections) travel through the body and mutate throughout their lives. This objective could lead to a medical future where even the most formidable antibiotic-resistant bacteria are no longer a fatal threat.

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Valentine’s Space Station – Astronomy – Santa Barbara Edhat – Santa Barbara Edhat

Posted: February 12, 2017 at 6:52 am

more articles like this

Valentine's Space Station updated: Feb 11, 2017, 3:00 PM

By Chuck McPartlin

The International Space Station is back. This list just includes the best Santa Barbara evening passes, which are subject to changes in the orbit of the ISS. To get the latest predictions, visit Heavens Above.

The first two appearances are brief. On Saturday, February 11, the ISS will rise at 6:48 PM in the NNW, and skim very low over our mountain horizon, below the bowl of the Little Dipper, and enter the Earths shadow just before reaching the handle of the Big Dipper in the NNE at 6:48 PM.

On Sunday, it will rise in the NW at 7:30 PM and quickly vanish at 7:31 as it reaches Cepheus.

On Monday at 6:38 PM, the station will rise in the NNW, pass over our mountain horizon through the bowl of the Little Dipper and the Big Dipper, and fade out in the NE at 6:41 PM.

For Valentines Day, the ISS appears in the NW at 7:21 PM, cruises up toward the zenith, and disappears at 7:24 PM before reaching the Pleiades. How many of the sisters can you see?

The best showing of this sequence occurs on Wednesday, when it rises in the NW at 6:29 PM, passes high over our mountain horizon, just missing the heads of Gemini, Castor and Pollux, and then visits bright Procyon before setting in the ESE at 6:35 PM.

On Thursday, the space station will rise at 7:13 PM in the WNW, and sail low over our ocean horizon under Venus and Mars to fade away well below Orion in the S at 7:18 PM. Near where the ISS disappeared, can you spot the second brightest star in the sky, Canopus, just barely peeking over the islands?

On Friday, February 17, the ISS will pop up in the WNW at 6:20 PM, and fly over Venus and Mars, below Orion and Canis Major, to set in the SE at 6:28 PM.

We wont see it on Saturday, but it will start a dim finale on Sunday at 6:12 PM in the W, passing low below Venus and Mars to set below Orion in the S at 6:17 PM. It will then transition to our early morning sky before returning to more civilized timing, at least for night owls, near the end of March.

Hasta nebula - Chuck

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More science heading to the International Space Station – Daily Press

Posted: at 6:52 am

SpaceX's upcoming Falcon 9 rocket launch from Kennedy Space Center will carry a host of science experiments to the International Space Station, aside from the SAGE III instrument to study Earth's atmosphere.

They include:

The Lightning Imagining Sensor, or LIS, will sample lightning over a wider geographic area than any previous instrument. Lightning strikes occur around the globe at a rate of 45 per second, said Michael Freilich, director of NASA's Earth Science Division in a media call Wednesday afternoon. LIS will help measure the amount, rate and energy of those strikes, improve our understanding of their weather effects and offer insight into weather forecasting, climate change, atmospheric chemistry and physics and aircraft and spacecraft safety. LIS was developed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and the University of Alabama.

The "Nanobiosym" experiment will try to learn how microgravity affects the growth and mutation of a superbug. Superbugs are germs or bacteria that can rapidly mutate and become resistant to antibiotics, said Anita Goel, scientific director of the project. "By using microgravity in space as an incubator," she said, "we can better predict what these mutations might look like. ... Do these bacteria grow faster and mutate faster in a microgravity environment? And, if so, why?" What they learn could help to develop better drug treatment. Space station crew isn't at risk of exposure, she said, because the entire system will be contained.

"Raven" is a step toward robotic missions far from Earth developing a navigation and rendezvous technology to get humans out of the loop, said Ben Reed, a deputy division director at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. Once installed on the ISS, the Raven module will observe the range, bearing and pose of every visiting vehicle as it approaches, then gimbal or pivot autonomously for rendezvous.

"The next era that we are bridging toward now," Reed said, "is going to be, in our view, dominated by missions where you have satellites being upgraded, being serviced, being refueled, being relocated, being assembled in orbit." Autonomous systems will benefit not only NASA's ambitions for deep-space missions to Mars or an asteroid, he said, but commercial missions, too.

Growing better crystals in space could help develop better treatments for a wide range of ills on Earth, from cancer to asthma, infections to high cholesterol. To that end, Merck Research Laboratories will be growing crystalline monoclonal antibodies on the space station or molecules designed to attach to other molecules in the body to help fight various diseases. Microgravity is an ideal environment for growing crystals that are "larger, more uniform and higher purity than Earth-grown crystals," said Paul Reichart, an associate principal scientist at Merck. Depending on their success, he said, such antibodies might one day be manufactured in space.

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Astrobee: NASA’s Newest Robot for the International Space Station – IEEE Spectrum

Posted: at 6:52 am

The International Space Station will soon be getting some new robot occupants. Astrobee is a robotic cube packed with sensors, cameras, computers, and apropulsion system. Its designed tohelp astronauts around the ISS with a variety of tasks.

While the robot is designed to fly freely on board the ISS, for testing on the ground, Astrobee is mounted on top of a sled that uses a jet of CO2 to create a low-friction air bearing above a perfectly flat (and very enormous) block of granite. This allows the researchers to simulate microgravity in two dimensions to test the robots propulsion and navigation systems, but once its up in space, the entire robot will consist of just the cube thats defined by the blue bumpers, without all of the stuff underneath it.

Last fall, IEEE Spectrum visited NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif., to have a look at the latest Astrobee prototype and meet the team behind the robot.

NASA expects to have Astrobee on orbit at some point between July 2017 and June 2018. Theyll be sending three of them to the ISS, although they only expect two robots to be active at once: The third will be packed away in a space closet somewhere.

Read More: How NASA's Astrobee Robot Is Bringing Useful Autonomy to the ISS

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Thousands of convicts told that cops mishandled DNA evidence … – New York Post

Posted: at 6:49 am

More than 2,000 people convicted of crimes, including those imprisoned for murder and rape, will be notified by Texas prosecutors about the possibility of defective forensic evidence in their cases because of faulty DNA testing by Austin cops.

Letters from Travis County prosecutors will be sent to 642 people with recently verified addresses, while another 1,559 defendants will be notified as soon as they are located and the letters will notify them that they may be entitled to an appeal, the Austin American-Statesman reports.

This process is specifically intended to identify a situation where an innocent person was wrongly convicted because of DNA evidence, Travis County District Attorney Margaret Moore said Thursday. We are looking at a very small population, if any, but that is the point of this process.

The 2,201 cases which date back to 2004 and include convictions as recent as last year are significantly fewer than the initial estimate of about 3,600 cases that may have required an additional review of DNA evidence. The Austin Police Departments DNA lab was closed in June after a state audit found staffers there were using outdated and incorrect procedures while processing DNA evidence.

If we have someone who is convicted on DNA evidence that isnt reliable, and it played a material role in their conviction, our duty is to see that justice is done to correct that, said Assistant District Attorney Dexter Gilford, who supervises the agencys conviction integrity unit.

The Travis County District Attorneys Office announced in late 2015 that it found concerns involving the historical interpretation of DNA results. Then-District Attorney Rosemary Lehberg said in a statement at the time that the potential impact of the issues was still unknown, but acknowledged it could have a material impact on some criminal cases.

The step of notifying defendants in writing marks the biggest development in the larger effort to locate and identify anyone wrongfully convicted as a result of faulty work at the DNA lab, which remains closed and could ultimately become privatized, the Austin American-Statesman reports.

Using information from Austin police, prosecutors had been working for weeks to identify defendants whose cases included DNA evidence.

We are trying to identify anyone who suffered an adverse consequence, and DNA was material to that consequence, Gilford said.

The letters will include information for defendants on what they can do if they want their cases reviewing, including the hiring of private defense attorneys or lawyers from the Capital Area Private Defender Service.

The notices are just the first step, Gilford said.

Meanwhile, a police officer in Temple about 70 miles north of Austin was fired earlier this week after investigators determined he improperly stored some DNA samples and other evidence for years, the Associated Press reported.

Officer Jayson Jordan was indefinitely suspended from the Temple Police Department for violating procedures from 2012 through last year, including failure to properly recover, document and store items like DNA evidence, drugs and a gun. Prosecutors are now working with the department to determine how the issues could affect cases.

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DNA technology has changed genealogy a lot but also not much – Concord Monitor

Posted: at 6:49 am

People have been studying genealogy for about as long as there have been people remember all those begats in the Bible? but these days something has been added: Genetics.

The sharp fall in cost and rise in effectiveness of genetic testing, an increase in our understanding of humanitys genetic history, and the spread of online databases and commercial sites allowing easy comparison has expanded the search for ancestors way beyond dusty books and records. So we wondered: How has this affected what sometimes is called Americas most popular hobby?

The answer: A lot, but also a lot less than youd think.

It has had a huge effect, particularly on forensic work, said Diane Florence Gravel, a genealogist who is president of the New Hampshire Genealogical Society. I think it really started being accepted as a supportive aspect of genealogy maybe 3 to 4 years ago. It was kind of slow to really take off, but now its routinely used in a lot of the articles the National Genealogical Society publishes.

Gravel just got back from a class about what genealogical research can and cannot do with various types of material, such as Y-chromosome (men only), mitochondrial DNA (women only) and autosomal DNA (both sexes, but tricky to interpret).

At the amateur level, the appeal of genetic genealogy is the same as the appeal of most new technology: It promises to do things more quickly and more exactly, drawing in folks who wouldnt otherwise be interested.

It even got my husband interested in it. He just glazes over when I talk about it, until he got his own DNA results; now hes interested, Gravel said.

Uploading results to online databases is particularly exciting because it lets people find connections they didnt know existed, perhaps to a second cousin nearby. And sometimes it debunks connections.

My grandmother always said that we had Indian blood, but every time you asked her it was a different tribe were Seminole, Creek, Cherokee so I wondered about it, Gravel said. The result from her own genetic testing? There is not a single drop of it in me.

Genetics, as Im sure you know, is the biochemical mechanism that provides the blueprint for who we are. (Only a general blueprint, however. Other biochemical processes, notably the complex way that genes turn on and off and produce the proteins which do the work, as well as a myriad of environmental factors, make at least as much of a difference.)

The components of the genome are shuffled between parents during sex, and a mixture is passed down to children. The promise of DNA testing is that it can pinpoint specific bits of the genome that get passed down from parent to child unchanged, and use them to backtrack through history, making a connection to past generations.

Improvements in genetic testing have spawned several companies. Their claims for individuals may be overblown at times I saw them described on one medical website as genetic astrology but they can provide valuable information for more recent family connections, as well as spur interest.

Not that New Hampshire needs much spurring of genealogical interest. We already have a lot here, both inside and outside our borders. Thats partly because were wonderful people, of course, but mostly its because of history. Many, if not most, Americans with any ancestors from Britain or some northern European countries can trace their family tree back hereabouts.

We have about 400 members, and theyre from all over the country; so many people have New England roots, Gravel said.

In Concord, you can see that interest at 71 S. Fruit St., in the nondescript building that houses the New Hampshire Department of Archives. Inside, the surprisingly handsome research room is often bustling with people hunting down connections with people long gone.

We get very sophisticated amateur genealogists here. This is a Mecca for them, because lots of people whose families are now in Omaha, or Sacramento, or Portland, Ore., started here, said Michael York, the state librarian and acting commissioner of the New Hampshire Department of Cultural Resources.

Theres a lot of material here, York said. Weve got a very solid collection, good collection, of family histories, town histories, a lot of tools for checking ones history.

Which means that theyve seen a big uptick in interest since Ancestry.com and the like started blitzing us with advertisements and shows like Finding Your Roots and History Detectives filled the airwaves. Right?

Not really.

I anticipated the question and asked the staff, and they dont see any difference, York said. They say we get a few people who say, I just went onto Ancestry.com and did their DNA test and I found X but thats rare.

The reading room with its extensive computer-supported data (the state library and archives have been going digital for more than 30 years) are no more crowded these days than theyve always been.

This answer surprised me, I admit. So far as I can figure, it may indicate that people who take the effort to come to the archives building are so far along in their research that theyre beyond the effect TV shows and print-outs produced by cheek swabs.

And it may say something about this new fad. If more folks brought into genealogy by new-fangled advances arent graduating to archives-level research, then maybe technology can only take you so far.

In other words, genetics is an aid to genealogical research, not a replacement for it.

Its used as a validation tool. You still have to have the paperwork, the actual in-the-trenches research, Gravel said. If somebody came in with (genetic tests) saying Im related to George Washington! I would want more than just that.

So before you mail off a cheek swab and a check to determine whether youre a descendant of Charlemagne (dont get excited its amazing how many people are told they are a descendant of Charlemagne) talk to your parents, your cousins, uncles and aunts, record their stories and their memories, find out what they know about earlier generations. Head to town halls or the county courthouses, try online searches through newspapers archives and cemetery databases, and generally poke around.

You may find new connections or you may not, but youll almost certainly be surprised by something. And thats better than a high-tech printout any day.

(David Brooks can be reached at 369-3313 or dbrooks@cmonitor.com or on Twitter @GraniteGeek.)

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DNA technology has changed genealogy a lot but also not much - Concord Monitor

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Stephanie Davis deletes her emotional Jeremy McConnell statement slamming him for taking DNA test on live TV – The Sun

Posted: at 6:49 am

STEPHANIE Davis appears to have deleted the statement she released on Twitter slamming her ex Jeremy McConnell for taking a DNA test on live TV.

Irish model Jeremy, 26, appeared on This Morning Thursday, where heprovided a swab to find out if hes the father of Stephs newborn baby, Caben-Albi.

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Ruckas

Shortly after the segment, ex-Hollyoaks star Steph posted a lengthy response, beginning: Stephanie has felt humiliated by Jeremy denying his own son and foolishly announcing publicly his request for a DNA test.

Jeremy has caused Stephanie massive amount of stress, pressure and upset throughout her pregnancy, ruining what for most women is one of the most special times of their lives.

Now the tweet containing the statement has vanished from Stephanies timeline, as well as screen grabs shed posted of tweets by Jeremy denying he was the babys father.

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Stephanie has felt humiliated by Jeremy denying his own son and foolishly announcing publicly his request for a DNA test.

Jeremy has caused Stephanie massive amount of stress, pressure and upset throughout her pregnancy, ruining what for most women is one of the most special times of their lives.

Jeremy has at no point throughout the pregnancy or after the birth been in contact directly with Stephanie. Jeremy was categorically not banned from the birth, nor did he ever ask to attend.

Stephanie confirmed to Jeremy that she was pregnant 10 days after they split, any suggestion that she was unfaithful to him is to detract away from his numerous infidelities whilst in the relationship.

Jeremy has been given the option at all times to take part in a DNA test, because of past behaviour Stephanie has requested that this is handled via the correct channels and managed by her solicitor.

Jeremy to date has continually refused the terms of the agreement that Stephanie has proposed, which he was given the right to make his own amendments to suit him.

This confidentiality agreement was made to ensure privacy and protect Caben-Albi.

Stephanie as a single mother reserves the right to undertake any work she sees fit to provide for their son, her priority.

It is upsetting to think that Jeremy would stoop so low to challenge the mother of his child to a DNA test live on TV when it was already in hand.This shows how little concern he has for Caben and this is already being dealt with privately.

Caben and Stephanie have only been out of hospital for a few weeks, however after spending 9 months denying that he is the babies father, we cannot believe that Jeremy has the audacity to turn the situation around and bring all of this very much into a media circus, on his terms only.

Twitter

Fans who have been following the saga of Steph and Jeremy who embarked on a tumultuous on-off romance after meeting in the Celebrity Big Brother house last year were quick to notice the statement had been taken down.

A rep for Stephanietold The Sun Online she had no comment regarding the removal of the statement.

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Meanwhile the new mumappears to be focusing on the positive, tweeting messages of thanks to those who have offered gifts and well wishes forher month-old tot.

A tweet pinned to the top of her timeline reads simply: So very thankful, while her latest Instagram snapshowsa pile of childrens booksnext to Cabens feet,captioned: Ending the day with hugs from this little one. The best feeling in the world.

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