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Category Archives: Post Human

Ageras nabs $73M at a $244M valuation for its accountancy marketplace and bookkeeping tech stack – TechCrunch

Posted: February 22, 2021 at 2:18 pm

Vertical marketplaces continue to be a key lynchpin in the digital economy, a centralized place where people providing certain goods or services can connect with those specifically looking to buy them, a position that has, it seems, become even more prominent and in-demand in our pandemic economy. In line with that trend, today a startup out of Denmark called Ageras Group, which has built a dual-purpose platform, providing both accountancy software and a marketplace for small and medium businesses to find accountants, is announcing a round of growth funding to expand its business.

The Copenhagen-based company has closed a round of $73 million from a single investor, Lugard Road Capital.

Ageras is not disclosing its valuation, but this report in Danish publication Borsen pegs it at 1.5 billion Danish krone, or around $244 million at todays rates. Weve asked an Ageras spokesperson to confirm the figure and will update this post as we learn more.

Were also asking how much it has raised in the past. Founded in 2012, the startup was bootstrapped for its first five years, and PitchBook discloses only around $220,000 before this round. Previous investors include Investcorp which took a majority stake in the company in 2017 and more recently Rabo Bank.

The new investment comes on the heels of good growth for the company, with plans to capitalize on that. Ageras has now passed 340,000 users across Denmark, the U.S., Sweden, Norway, Holland and Germany. It says that the plan will be to use the funding to expand into what it generally describes as growth markets new countries, new customer segments and also adding more services to its software stack both through organic growth and acquisitions.

Ageras has established a market leading and best-in-class product offering that is optimally positioned for international expansion and the rising demand for automated business tools, said Rico Andersen, Ageras CEO who co-founded the company with Martin Hegelund, himself a serial investor who has backed the likes of Slack. This latest financing round will support our ongoing commitment to scaling the Ageras brand and bringing our software offering to new customers across the globe. We look forward to continuing the Ageras story in the years to come.

Ageras today follows a fairly typical labor marketplace model: SMEs seeking accountancy services submit their requirements in three areas accounting, bookkeeping or auditing and in return they receive three leads to contact. That model is one that Andersen and Hegelund know well, having previously built an online marketplace for home service professionals called Fa det Gjort (which translates to Get it done!).

Alongside this and to further diversify the business model the company has expanded into building accounting software, starting first with its own in-house Meneto suite, and then adding to it with two acquisitions, Billy in Denmark and Tellow in The Netherlands.

The investment underscores the persistent popularity of the marketplace model for online business, made popular in e-commerce by the likes of Amazon and Alibaba but extended to a range of services as well.

The labor marketplace model has been a perennial one in the world of startups Uber helped pioneer it to connect those needing a ride with mobility options for getting somewhere, the likes of Deliveroo lets people sign up to deliver food and other goods to people, there are a number of platforms out there providing a way for tradespeople to connect with those needing a home or other job done, and so on.

And the evolution of that to expand to more knowledge worker jobs is not especially new, either. Upwork, Bark, Paro and others are among those offering a way for accountants to connect with would-be customers.

What is perhaps more notable is how the space seems to be growing right now: the pandemic has reduced a lot of foot traffic for business districts, changing what offices look like these days. That has opened the door to a wider range of people providing services to others, while at the same time possibly made it harder for them to be discoverable.

Marketplaces are one way to solve that challenge, and in that regard, its no surprise to see the reports that LinkedIn is eyeing up building its own marketplace for skilled workers.

That is not the only area where Ageras faces competition, though: in the area of online accounting services, meanwhile, there are a number of players, including established companies like Intuit as well as newer entrants like Pennylane, TaxScouts, Zeitgold and Stripe-backed Pilot.

Lugard appears to be a VC affiliated with U.S. hedge fund Luxor Capital Group and it has also backed the delivery platform Glovo, inRiver and others. Investcorp, meanwhile, continues to hold a significant stake in the startup as part of its bigger tech investment strategy, which has included acquiring and then selling security firm Avira, and recently taking a stake in Indias logistics startup Xpressbees.

The combination of Ageras mission critical software, backed by a reputation for dependability, insights into the professional service market, an outstanding management team, paired with its cutting-edge research & development has ensured it has continued to grow its market position and deliver an accountancy ecosystem based on high quality recurring revenue, said Gilbert Kamieniecky, MD and head of Investcorps technology vertical, in a statement. The additional financing secured by Ageras will help to drive international expansion and support the continued innovation of its customer offering.

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Ageras nabs $73M at a $244M valuation for its accountancy marketplace and bookkeeping tech stack - TechCrunch

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Who Will Be the Next F.D.A. Chief? – The New York Times

Posted: at 2:18 pm

Early in the coronavirus outbreak, Dr. Sharfstein urged public health officials to focus on protecting racial and ethnic minorities, poor people and others who face social inequities. He has called for expanding housing to hold people with mild symptoms in quarantine; protecting tenants from eviction and offering incentives to food providers to deliver food to low-income neighborhoods for free or at a discount. He also proposed a federal coronavirus insurance program.

The last time his name was seriously floated for the top post, back in 2008, Dr. Sharfstein drew opposition from the pharmaceutical industry, which protested his criticism of off-label drug marketing and gifts from pharmaceutical companies to physicians.

Since 2015, Dr. Sharfstein has worked at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, where he is vice dean for public health practice and community engagement. He was also a former health commissioner for Baltimore.

I think Josh would be a good choice, said David Nexon, a former executive at the Advanced Medical Technology Association, known as AdvaMed. Hes a very smart guy, very committed to public health and he has a broad public health background, which would be an asset because of F.D.A.s wide-ranging responsibilities.

Dr. Woodcock, 72, also commands deep support, especially within the vast network of cancer-related patient advocacy groups, researchers and the drug companies that help finance them. But Dr. Woodcock, who has spent over 36 years working for the agency, has also generated much stiffer opposition in this round than Dr. Sharfstein.

In the past, even when the F.D.A. review of the drug was scathing, quite often Janet Woodcock or another high level F.D.A. official would be at the meeting, clearly pushing the advisory committee to recommend approval, said Diana Zuckerman, president of the National Center for Health Research, a think tank and advocacy group. But by law, these advisory committees are supposed to make recommendations independent of any F.D.A. pressure.

But the loudest objections to Dr. Woodcock focus on the F.D.A.s role in the opioid epidemic during her two stints as chief of its drug division, from 1994 to 2004 and then again from 2007 until she moved to Operation Warp Speed last May. (Between those two postings, she held other roles at the agency.)

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3 things Android 12 can do that Android 11 can’t – CNET

Posted: at 2:18 pm

Andrew Hoyle/CNET

Google unveiled the latest version of its Android operating system this week, Android 12. Available now as a developer preview, Android 12 appears to be pretty similar to Android 11, with a few new features and some performance fixes aimed at helping your phone run more smoothly.

If you're eager to try out the new OS, you can download and install the Android 12 developer preview now. But be warned that as the first developer preview, it is likely full of bugs, and isn't meant for the average person to try out at this point -- especially not on your primary device. We expect Google to launch a public beta in May, and the final version around August or September.

Here are three of the biggest new features we've seen in Android 12 so far, compared to Android 11.

Now playing: Watch this: Our first look at Android 12

6:27

Google is adding several new privacy features to apps to give users more transparency and control, according to an Android Developers blog post. One update gives you more information about how cookies can be used across sites, while another changes how apps export information to prevent them from accidentally exporting activities, services and receivers.

It's worth noting that these policies are less strict than those in Apple's recent iOS software release, which includes new app "nutrition labels" that tell people what personal data their apps are collecting, and an upcoming change that requires developers to ask people for permission to gather data and track them across apps and websites.

Discover the latest news and best reviews in smartphones and carriers from CNET's mobile experts.

With Android 12, Google is changing up the design of notifications to make them more modern and functional. When you tap on a notification, it will take you directly to the app or action you want to take, instead of going through an intermediary service to start that action. This should make everything run faster, according to the blog post.

As noted by tech site XDA Developers, Android 12 also gets a new button that lets you snooze unimportant notifications, and choose how long to do so. You can also turn on adaptive notifications ranking to let Android rearrange your notifications based on how you work with different apps, and reset it the ranking if you don't like it.

Android 12 appears to include a few design changes that make it easier to operate Android phones with one hand and your thumb. XDA Developers noted that the updated settings UI moves the Search bar to the bottom of the display for easier one-handed access. It also uncovered a new feature called "silky home" that makes the entire interface more suitable for one-handed use.

For more, check out how to download the Android 12 developer preview, and the best Android phones to buy for 2021.

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Guns, mental health and composting human bodies: Colorados legislature will see some familiar proposals as they return to the Capitol – The Denver…

Posted: February 18, 2021 at 2:26 pm

Like pretty much anything else, the COVID-19 pandemic derailed numerous bills in the Colorado legislature last year. And while lawmakers say their priority for the 2021 legislative session, which resumes Tuesday, will be addressing the ongoing pandemic-related needs of Coloradans, they can expect to see several familiar pieces of possible policy.

Democratic Senate Majority Leader Steve Fenberg said this session wont just be about how do we stop the bleeding or how do we get back to normal, but how do we actually get back to a place or build back to a place where our state is strong, where our state is more equitable, more resilient for the next crisis thats potentially around the corner.

His party controls both chambers of the General Assembly, and The Post explained earlier this year what the main priorities will be. But its also time to highlight a few of the bills thatll be making a repeat appearance.

Washington state became the first in the nation to allow for natural organic reduction as an after-death option; that is, turning your remains into soil.

Sponsors of the returning bill say the method is considered more environmentally sustainable and is less costly and they want to make it a legal option in Colorado.

Arvada Democratic Rep. Brianna Titone is bringing back the bill with her fellow sponsors from last year, and said she has been getting emails from people who are interested in seeing this bill become law.

Had the pandemic been as bad as things were projected to be back in March and April, having an additional option for your loved ones would be beneficial, said Delta Republican Rep. Matt Soper, who is also sponsoring the bill.

Despite pushback from Gov. Jared Polis last year, a Democrat is insistent that mental health wellness exams should be covered by insurance just like physical exams.

Polis said last year he wouldnt sign any more new insurance mandates, but Commerce City Rep. Dafna Michaelson Jenet said covering mental health exams is not a new mandate, but rather another step toward parity.

My goal is to turn around the suicide rate. I want to see that number going down And the only way to do that is through regular mental health wellness and making sure that we start doing things to make mental health care not only accessible but stigma-free, said Michaelson Jenet, who is still negotiating with Polis office.

Last years attempts to pass gun control legislation were killed in committee because of COVID, and Democrats are bringing back two bills that would require people to report lost or stolen firearms, and safely store guns in homes.

Sponsors of the safe storage bill expect it to be almost identical to last years bill. Gun owners would have to secure their firearms and gun stores or dealers would be mandated to provide locking devices when they sell or transfer any guns. Individuals who violate the law, if passed, could face a misdemeanor charge, but Democratic sponsor Rep. Kyle Mullica of Thornton said the point of the bill is to change behavior, not necessarily punish people.

Both bills will likely be met with opposition from Republicans, which Rep. Tom Sullivan expects. Sullivan, a Democrat from Centennial whose son was killed in the Aurora theater shooting, believes these two bills are necessary in addition to one that would set up mandatory waiting periods.

Gun violence is one issue our communities talk about every single day, he said.

One of the most contentious bills of the 2020 session was the creation of a hybrid public health insurance option for people who buy their own insurance on the individual or small-group markets.

But as legislators began to wrap up a COVID-shortened session and dropped bills with high fiscal notes, the public option bill suffered the same fate. This year, sponsors plan to bring it back in a different form.

Democratic Rep. Dylan Roberts of Avon called it a new concept that he expects will get less pushback mostly because the proposal is coming from the health care industry itself. He doesnt necessarily anticipate the industry will be completely supportive, but the groups are having better dialogue than before, he said.

The bill, expected to be introduced next month, is two-pronged: In the first phase, the state would provide targets for reducing the cost of insurance premiums in 2023 and 2024. Insurance companies will be able to work with hospitals, pharmaceutical companies and others to negotiate premiums. If they dont meet those goals, then the state will create a government health insurance plan, the Colorado Health Insurance Option, that hospitals will be required to accept.

Protecting leaders from threats and intimidation will be a common theme this year. Lawmakers intend to bring back a bill that died last year because they needed to do more research about protecting political speech.

At issue is creating a potential felony if one makes a credible threat against a state or local elected official or his or her property. The controversial bill isnt meant to be partisan, according to Mullica, but instead make sure leaders wont be intimidated from doing their jobs.

Last years Republican sponsor, Soper, wont be signing onto the bill this year, but Mullica still hopes for bipartisan support.

Lawmakers previously passed legislation to protect social workers from threats and are supporting new legislation this year that would protect public health employees. However, the bill aimed at protecting lawmakers would add them to the protected class of judges, making offenses punishable by up to six years in prison or a fine as high as $500,000.

Hundreds of bills get introduced each year, and the abrupt end to the 2020 session means theres more than the ones detailed above. Look for the following bills (and more) to be revamped or similar to last year:

Of course, lawmakers also intend to introduce bills they didnt get to introduce last year because of the shortened session on things like: preventing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement from using state databases for civil immigration enforcement and regulating metro districts.

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NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover lands today. Here’s what to expect | NOVA – NOVA Next

Posted: at 2:26 pm

In March 2020, at an assembly held at the Lake Braddock Secondary School in Burke, Virginia, Alex Mathers classmates received big news from NASA.

Mather had submitted a possible name for the Administrations newest Mars rover, and this submissionamong 28,000 received by NASA from young space enthusiastswas Perseverance. The night before his school assembly, he learned his submission had been chosen.

Its a NASA tradition to have kids choose the names of Mars rovers, Washington Posts KidsPost reported in March. Kids have come up with the past four: Curiosity, which landed on the red planet in 2012; Spirit, which landed in 2004; Opportunity, which landed three weeks after Spirit; and Sojourner, which landed on the Fourth of July in 1997.

Now, at approximately 3:55 p.m. EDT on Thursday, Feb. 18, Perseverance will attempt the most challengingand preciseMars landing in NASA history. If all goes smoothly, the rover will study Mars habitability in an attempt to determine if life ever took root on Mars. Perseverance, nicknamed Percy (many a scientist and science journalist has mentioned having trouble spelling Perseverance) will also look for signs of past life and conduct experiments that investigate the possibility of human exploration.

Perseverance is NASAs most ambitious Mars rover mission yet, Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington, said in a Feb. 16 press release. ...the landing team will have its hands full getting us to Jezero Crater the most challenging Martian terrain ever targeted for a landing.

Jezero Crater is a 28-mile-wide hollow located on the western margin of the Isidis Planitia region in Mars northern hemisphere. About three billion years ago, Jezero hosted a nearly 820-foot-deep lake, fed by a nearby ancient river delta rich in mineral sediments. Its the kind of place scientists think might have supported life. I think that has to be the hands-down most exciting thing that this site has to offer, Tim Goudge, a planetary scientist and postdoctoral fellow at University of Texas at Austin, told NOVA in 2018.

Mars orbiters have already spent years collecting information and images from 200 miles above Jezero. Pinpointing signs of ancient life will require a closer look, however. Thats where Perseverance, equipped with instruments that can detect organic matter and measure the composition of rocks and soil, comes in.

But theres a hitch: The rover and its companion, the first-ever space helicopter, named Ingenuity, were built by humans on Earth, and humans are notoriously contaminated. Humans are the dirtiest thing in that clean room where spacecraft assembly happens, Moogega Cooper, astronomer and lead of planetary protection for the Mars 2020 Mission, told NOVA producer Terri Randall. We have all kinds of microorganisms in our body and on our skin. And so we have to make sure that, from head to toe, and including our eyes the spacecraft is protected from human contamination, which could falsely signify life on Mars.

But Cooper had a greater concern, brought on by the challenges of building a rover and conducting a NASA mission during a pandemic. What was most worrying, she says, was that off the clock, you might catch COVID. There is now a vector to wipe out an entire team that could completely derail the mission and throw us off of our scheduled goal.

Fortunately, Perseverance successfully launched on Jul. 30, 2020 from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Since then, it has flown more than 290 million miles, zooming through space at 49,290 mph relative to the sun.

Percys 17-minute-long entry, descent, and landing will be broadcast on NASA television, beginning with the separation of Perseverance and the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter from the spacecrafts entry capsule. Next, while traveling at roughly 12,100 mph, the spacecraft will hit the top of the Martian atmosphere; friction from the atmosphere will heat the bottom of the spacecraft to temperatures as high as 2,370 F. Moments later, it will deploy its parachute at supersonic speed, NASA writes in its Feb. 16 press release.

An aeroshell containing NASAs Perseverance rover guides itself toward the Martian surface as it descends through the atmosphere in this illustration. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

The Perseverance rover will use radar to detect how far it is from the surface of the red planet and a safe landing site. Once the entry capsule fully separates from the rover and its jetpack, which is equipped with retrorockets (small auxiliary rockets fired in the direction of travel to slow a craft down), Perseverance will touch down on Mars at 3:55 p.m. EDT.

First, itll pop up its head, take pictures, and transmit them back to Earth. Engineers will also check on the rovers health during its first few days on its new home planet, NASA writes in its press release. Then, the more difficult task of identifying signs of life and testing technology designed to produce oxygen from the Martian atmosphere (in hopes that the gas could be used for fuelor for humans to breatheon future missions) will begin.

If life has existed on Mars before, former astronaut Jeffrey Hoffman tells NOVA, it may be a sign that extraterrestrial life is more plentiful throughout our universe than previously thought. But theres also a chance that scientists dont find any signatures of life on the red planet. And that'll just tell us that our one planet is so unique and miraculous, geologist Tanja Bosak says.

Perseverance is playing a very critical role in our understanding of our place in the universe, Mars rover engineer Elio Morillo tells NOVA. And I think that's very noble.

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How Artist Lu Yang Teamed Up with BMW and Acute Art to Create a Futuristic Project About Robots and Technology – artnet News

Posted: at 2:26 pm

Inspired equally by centuries-old Chinese culture and forward-reaching technologies, artist Lu Yangs practice seeks common ground between vastly different ways of seeing the world.

The Shanghai-based artists fierce and confrontational multimedia work, which borrows from a variety of fields, including neuroscience, medicine, and religion. Collaboration is a key component of Lu Yangs practice, whooften looks to the likes of designers, composers, and performers to add their expertise toinstallation and video works. Trained in robotics, the artist is especially fascinated with contemporary gaming culture and is attuned to cutting-edge conversations having to do with the potential for post-gender and post-humansocieties.

A dancer working on Lu Yangs new work, Human Machine Reverse Motion Capture Project.

The artists latest endeavor came about after receiving the BMW Art Journey award,a joint initiative with Art Basel, in 2019. Lu Yang started the journey in early 2020, but the pandemic posed an obstacle. He decided to continue digitally. For the resulting project, which was done in collaboration with Acute Art, the leading producer of virtual and augmented-reality experiences, the artist created an augmented-reality artwork in which the artists own digital avatar takes on the role of a gigantic dancing superhero. The artwork explores the idea that, before too long, human bodies will be able to overcome physical limitations and enter strange and fascinating metaphysical realms.

Titled Human Machine Reverse Motion Capture Project, the project relied on motion-captured images of various dances, which the artist studied during the artists BMW Art Journey in January 2020, when he visited places such as Tokyo and Bali, where he put advanced motion-capture technology to work to record minute movements from dancers, which were then integrated into the final work.An anthropological approach to dance permeates the entirety of the project, which also reveals the extended artistic limits of contemporary technology.

We spoke with Lu Yang about the new work, what technology can teach us, and what he hopes to see happen in 2021.

BMW Art Journey winner Lu Yang, Gigant DOKU (2020), augmented reality. Courtesy of the artist and Acute Art in collaboration with BMW Group Culture.

The project is calledHuman Machine Reverse Motion Capture Project. How did you arrive at this title?

Artificial intelligence and humanoid robots are particularly popular topics at the moment. One can find many cases from different religions and cultures in which human beings attempted to train themselves to become robots.

Why do humans want to make humanoid robots? Robots dont necessarily need to have a human appearance. The emergence of robots adopting a humanoid appearance is more indicative of the human desire to surpass the flesh and pursue a perfect and immortal body, than any kind of technical imperative. As there are many things that the biological body cant realize, on the contrary, some missions can be easily done with a body that combines brand new material.

There are already many far-flung ideas in which humans seek to upload their consciousness to humanoid robots in pursuit of eternal life. History provides many examples. The strengthening and transcendence of the human beings physical body is not limited to our contemporary moment, but is rather an ongoing pursuit with a long history.

My research concerns how human beings physically train themselves to pursue super powerful bodies in traditional cultures, and the traces of human imitation of robots in history.

Lu Yang, Delusional Mandala (2015).

What was one important lesson you took away from the project?

The project is still ongoing, and it will be shown in phases. So there is still a large part that is not finished yet. I think the most important part of this work is the collaborations at all levelsI work with tech companies, and of course with BMW. It is only possible to complete this artwork with all these collaborations, and there will be more collaborators joining in the near future.

Dance is also a major component of this project. When did you first develop an interest in exploring dance in your work?

I have been extremely sensitive towards dance and music. My first use of dance was in my workLuYang delusional mandalain 2015. I used software like MikuMiku Dance to create some dance-related artwork, and did several real-time motion-capture performances. SinceLuYang delusional mandala, dance has existed through my artistic career.

BMW Art Journey winner Lu Yang, Gigant DOKU (2020), augmented reality. Courtesy of the artist and Acute Art in collaboration with BMW Group Culture.

This project involved in-person interactions, as well as virtual interactions. What interests you about working in both realms?

I have a huge interest in the extreme training of the human body. However, there arent many human beings that can train their bodies to extremity. With motion capture, we can collect movement data from masters who train their bodies into the extreme, and use this data in the digital world. So the skills that we cannot realize in reality [can] be done in the virtual world.

How did your collaboration with BMW evolve?

Being awarded the BMW Art Journey [award] at Art Basel 2019 was the beginning of my work with BMW. No matter before or during the pandemic, BMW has given the project generous support [by enabling the journey] and [supporting the] virtual development [of the work] after data gathering [was done]. BMW is a very serious listener to the artists idea, and they give artists completely free space, as well as help and support to the greatest extent.

What do you want to explore next in your practice?

I have been working with game engines throughout recent years, so the use of game engines and related technologies is the general direction of my future creations.

BMW Art Journey winner Lu Yang,Gigant DOKU (2020), augmented reality. Courtesy of the artist and Acute Art in collaboration with BMW Group Culture.

What about the intersection of art and technology is interesting to you?

The role of technology in my work is as a medium and a method. The meaning of technology is similar to that of a painter who created work with brushes hundreds of years ago. What technology wants to express is always the core content that I want to wrap in my practice, but these core contents are not separated from all the thoughts that human beings have been thinking about for a long time. Technology helps me express my works more conveniently and quickly.

What has 2020 taught you, both personally and professionally?

To live in the present.

What are you most looking forward to in the new year?

Im hoping that the COVID-19 vaccine will be universally effective, the virus and pandemic will dissipate, and that world peace will prevail.

The Augmented Reality Experience is available on Acute Art App. To experience the work:

The Acute Art app uses cutting-edge technology that works best onhigh-end phones with the latest software. The devices supported areiPhone X or above, and Samsung Galaxy S8 or equivalent. The apprequires a phone with a minimum of 4GB of memory and Apple iOS 11 orAndroid 8.0 Oreo (API 24) operating system.

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Splatoon 3 is coming to Nintendo Switch in 2022 with a wasteland, salmon pets, and more – Gamesradar

Posted: at 2:26 pm

Splatoon 3 is sending you back into the ink on Nintendo Switch, and it looks like it's finally going to let us see more of the series' strange world.

Nintendo gave Splatoon 3 a surprise reveal as the capstone to its long-awaited Nintendo Direct presentation. The trailer starts with a lone Inkling resting with her pet salmonid smallfry - you can customize both of them, by the way - before they set out on a journey past what very much looks like the Eiffel Tower, flipped over and lodged deep into the ground. It looks kinda rough out there in the country, but they're still able to catch a train into the big city just fine.

There were always some deep lore hints that Splatoon takes place in a post-human version of Earth, and it's cool to see Nintendo embracing more of the setting for this latest installment. On top of teasing more of the world, the trailer confirms that we'll once again face off with rival Inklings in level-painting turf wars - and we'll be able to use new weapons to do it, including an ink-flinging bow and arrow set.

The Splatoon 3 release date is currently set for some time in 2022, so we'll have a while to wait before we can start living our best lives as squid-people teens again. Will there be a new pair of idols to narrate our Splatfests? Will Salmon Run return too, ideally without the weird scheduling? Will there be an even lil'er Judd? Hopefully Nintendo shares more Splatoon 3 details soon.

See what else is on the way with our guide to upcoming Switch games.

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Divers find human remains in a vehicle in the Columbia River – CT Post

Posted: at 2:26 pm

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) A dive team found human remains inside a vehicle submerged in the Columbia River at the base of the Glenn Jackson Bridge, which runs between Oregon and Washington, police said Wednesday evening.

The body was recovered but the persons identity has not been released. The discovery comes days after a car reportedly went off the Glenn Jackson Bridge during a winter storm. There has been no confirmation that this is the same vehicle.

The break in the search came Wednesday afternoon by a private search crew that travels the country solving underwater mysteries, KOIN reported.

We found the car for the sheriff and were waiting for the sheriff to be able to pinpoint the location on their own, as well, said Jared Leisek of Adventures with Purpose. He traveled from Bend to search the waters around the bridge using sonar.

Reading sonar is an art, he said. If you dont read sonar everyday you can miss things.

Leisek said the crew did two passes and found the car practically underneath the bridge. The car was upside down in the river.

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Post-2020 global biodiversity framework must focus on sustainable use, strong indicators and the links with human health – Wildlife Trade News from…

Posted: at 2:26 pm

Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) will meet this week for an Informal Virtual Session of the CBDs 24th meeting of the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice (SBSTTA 24), with a key agenda item being the post-2020 global biodiversity framework including the targets that will replace the current Aichi Biodiversity targets set for the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020.

The updated zero draft of the post-2020 framework published in August 2020 currently features a target that directly addresses the issue of wildlife trade, and commits Parties to "ensure that the harvesting, trade and use of wild species of fauna and flora is legal, at sustainable levels and safe" by 2030.

This is the first time since the Conventions entry into force in 1993 that a target specifically addressing wildlife trade is being considered. The current draft also includes a target that recognises the importance of considering the benefits to conservation and humans of sustainable use, with a target urging that "By 2030, ensure benefits, including nutrition, food security, livelihoods, health and well-being, for people, especially for the most vulnerable through sustainable management of wild species of fauna and flora".

TRAFFIC Director of Policy Sabri Zain warmly welcomes the new targets being discussed that are giving increased attention to the issue of sustainable use of biodiversity.

Inclusion of these targets reflects the importance of sustainable use of the components of biodiversity as one of the three goals of the Convention. It also represents the important role that the post-2020 framework will play in addressing the second biggest driver of negative impacts on nature.

Sabri Zain,TRAFFIC Director of Policy

In May 2020, a landmark report from the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) provided overwhelming evidence that nature is declining globally at rates unprecedented in human history, eroding the very foundations of our economies, livelihoods, food security, health and quality of life worldwide. The report identified the direct exploitation of animal and plant species, including harvesting, hunting, fishing and logging as the second biggest driver of negative impacts on nature, after changes in land and sea use.

It is also important that, beyond these two Targets, Parties consider the other targets in the draft post-framework where it is important to recognise the contribution of sustainable wildlife use to halting the biodiversity loss, Zain added. These include targets related to access to and the fair and equitable sharing of benefits, ensuring that biodiversity values are mainstreamed across all sectors; and ensuring production practices and supply chains are sustainable.

We encourage continued attention being given to sustainable use in deliberations on these targets, given its role as a durable and powerful incentive for conservation of wildlife and recognising the crucial contribution that sustainable wildlife management and use makes to the food security, health, income, jobs and well-being of humans, particularly Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities.

While the attention being given to these targets is welcomed, TRAFFIC believes that the adoption of strong indicators for these targets is essential for measuring progress on the effectiveness of their implementation.

Without robust indicators measuring the progress of effective target implementation, we will be doomed to repeat the results of the Global Biodiversity Outlook (GBO-5) released last September, which suggests that none of the 20 Aichi biodiversity Targets will be fully met. An effective monitoring mechanism and robust indicators are absolutely essential if the post-2020 framework is to be implemented effectively and will indeed prompt the transformative changes needed to reverse the rapid decline in nature. TRAFFIC stands ready to assist Parties with the relevant research and information needed in order to develop and measure progress on these indicators, Zain added.

For example, conservation of flora species generally receives less attention compared to other areas of wild species use and trade. The FairWild Standard provides a valuable tool to measure progress towards the sustainable use of plant diversity, and is being used by a growing number of companies for products sourced in countries around the world.

TRAFFICs work implementing this standard can be a practical way which we can contribute data to measuring the progress on the conservation of worlds flora, Zain added. The FairWild Standard is recognized by the CBDs Global Strategy for Plant Conservation, which on the agenda for discussion at SBSTTA 24.

The current COVID-19 pandemic has also put the spotlight on wildlife and its potential role in the transmission of zoonotic disease, highlighting the intimate link between human, animal and environmental health. A special virtual session was held in December on Biodiversity, One Health and COVID-19 in preparation for SBSTTA 24.

We are happy that Parties are taking this issue seriously and hope discussions this week will consider a balanced approach that will provide a strong role for the post-2020 framework in contributing to global efforts to prevent future outbreaks of zoonotic disease, while strengthening the conservation of wildlife and respecting livelihoods, food security and the culture of diverse groups of people Zain noted.

In October 2020, the members of the Collaborative Partnership on Sustainable Wildlife Management (CPW) published a joint statement setting out guiding principles aimed at reducing the risk of future pandemics originating from wild animals. The CPW is a voluntary partnership of 14 international organisations with substantive mandates and programmes for the sustainable use and conservation of wildlife resources, including the Secretariats of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE), Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), as well as NGOs such as TRAFFIC.

The Informal Virtual Session in preparation for SBSTTA 24 will take place during 17 - 19 February 2021 and 24 - 26 February 2021.

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Post-2020 global biodiversity framework must focus on sustainable use, strong indicators and the links with human health - Wildlife Trade News from...

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Craig Newmark interview: Funding the disinformation fight – Press Gazette

Posted: at 2:25 pm

To his critics, Craig Newmark the Craig of Craigslist is one of the tech pioneers who contributed to the financial demise of journalism with the invention of his classified advertising website.

To his supporters, he is the entrepreneur who has shunned serious Silicon Valley wealth to focus his time and money on saving the news industry and fighting disinformation.

Newmark a self-confessed over-thinker (when I tell him I live in Vancouver, Canada, he says: Please watch out for tsunamis!) admits that, for a while at least, he was concerned about what effect Craigslist might have had on journalism finances.

However, in an email exchange and then via a Zoom interview (highlights below), Newmark reveals his conscience is clear and not just because Craig Newmark Philanthropies has donated millions to the journalism industry in recent years.

Im very concerned about jobs for journalists, and the future of local journalism, and had always guessed that Craigslist might have an effect, he says.

[But] in the last two or three years, industry analysts have pointed out that when you take a good look, newspaper revenue began to fall after the introduction of television news in the early fifties [he points to Thomas Baekdals The Updated (and scary) Circulation and Revenue Figures for Newspapers].

They tell me that if Craigslist had an effect, they cant find it. But, regardless of that, Ive chosen to spend lots of resources supporting journalism.

Although Craigslist still bears his name, Newmarks involvement in the website he founded in 1995 is pretty minimal nowadays.

He remained a customer service representative for many years after standing down as chief executive in 2000. But today the 68-year-old has little time for Craigslist in between his 40 hours a week or more of philanthropic work.

Newmark a 1950s nerd who gets his news online and via the radio, rather than in print or on TV has long had an interest in journalism.

He started investing large amounts in trustworthy journalism in 2016 through his foundation, Craig Newmark Philanthropies, which hands out grants to worthy news organisations.

Why start in 2016?

The trustworthy press is the immune system of democracy, he says. And even in my naivety, I could see that the immune system was failing pretty badly.

And instead of limiting or stopping this spread of disinformation, I could see that frequently the press was being gamed into spreading disinformation. And so intuitively I recognised that something was going very badly wrong.

One of the specific issues Newmark identified was the spread of Russian state disinformation. The Russians are not quite as good as they claim they might be, he says. But theyve been very, very busy in the US and Europe and elsewhere, and theyve successfully destabilised governments.

Since 2016, Craig Newmark Philanthropies has awarded grants to ProPublica (whose president, Richard Tofel, was recently interviewed by Press Gazette), City University of New Yorks graduate journalism school (which is now named after Newmark), PEN America, the Poynter Institute and Wikipedia.

Why does Newmark use his money to donate rather than invest in journalism like fellow tech entrepreneursJeff Bezos and Marc Benioff, who own the Washington Post and Time magazine respectively?

My philanthropic model is to find people who are good at their job, and give power to them, in the form of influence and money, he says. Thats better with respect to news ethics, and, they really dont need me to be a pain in the butt.

And which journalism models does he expect to succeed in the future? I think well see a mix of models, with a diminishing role for advertising. My favourite, personally, is membership and subscription models.

Through his Twitter account, Newmark has recently shared several news and opinion articles that are critical of Facebooks handling of disinformation and misinformation. But he is hesitant to share his own opinions or insights too strongly.

For example, asked for his opinion on how tech companies handled the spread of misinformation on social media in 2020, he says: Perhaps they could enforce their terms of service better, and better combat disinformation.

Has Mark Zuckerberg done a good job of managing Facebook through disinformation issues?

I dont really know. And I guess again, do no harm I want to focus on things getting better rather than blame. That seems to be working The only way I get results is by gently nudging and just doing so relentlessly over a long period.

My horizon when it comes to acting is only 20 or 30 years, because Im 68. Im planning for action beyond that timeframe, and Ive started planning the Craigbot.

Whats that?

Mostly a joke. But it does indicate my intention that the actions Im taking now Im considering for the next two centuries.

Im guessing that at the end of two centuries, well either be extinct or post-human, so I dont want to think that far ahead. Because I really cant empathise [with] the needs of a post-human with gills living in the ocean.

Newmark really does appear to be thinking that far ahead.

I dont want to take any special credit for that, he says. The literature of my people you know, the nerds is science fiction. And contemporary science fiction heavily explores issues relating to media.

Back to the present day, does Newmark think social media companies like Facebook can be trusted to tackle the infodemic plaguing their platforms, or is regulatory action required?

Im focusing on this being an all-hands-on-deck situation, he says. Were in this together. My strength is in working with those people, across the US primarily although somewhat in Europe as well, to work together to move things ahead.

That includes people at think tanks, universities, individual researchers, and quietly people at the social media companies, to pull together. My instincts tell me that thats the way to make things happen.

Ill chat with people in government. But my intent is that no matter what people are required to do, its still fighting back against those who wish us harm means that we are all in this together. We do need to work together much like people worked together in World War Two.

Photo credit: Stephanie Canciello, Unali Artists

This article is part of a series running across our sister titles in the Monitor Network and the New Statesman, looking at the backlash against the big tech companies. If you enjoyed this article, you might like:

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Craig Newmark interview: Funding the disinformation fight - Press Gazette

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