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Global Societal Surveillance Market Research Bundle 2020: A Collection of 9 Reports Detailing Technology, Solution, Applications, and Services -…

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct 9, 2020--

The "Global Societal Surveillance Market by Technology, Solution, Applications, and Services 2020-2025" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This research evaluates the companies, strategies, technologies and solutions involved in this emerging surveillance society market.

It provides analysis and forecasting for key technologies and solutions including digital identity, tracking, mobile payments, blockchain technology, social credit systems, digital twins, augmented and virtual reality.

Based on several key drivers, there is a major cultural shift underway towards a surveillance society, which entails primarily observation, tracking, and analysis of human behaviors. Rapidly becoming a social norm in some part of the world, surveillance gained substantial societal support due to the need to surveil certain individuals that may be foreign state-actor supported terrorists, or in some cases, domestic enemies of the state.

However, other factors, such as state control over civilian behavior have taken the fore with the rise of social credit monitoring and the advent of COVID-19, which have dramatically reinforced the notion that surveilling citizens provides a net benefit to society. Recent concerns and threats stemming from the pandemic have added a new dimension of safety and security to protect human lives. The new expectation will have a longer-term impact of routine behavior and processes. In addition to physical threats associated with pandemics, bad actors also seize the opportunity to engage in various threats against cyber infrastructure.

When viewed as a whole as positive, the notion is that societal surveillance provides greater benefits than losses in terms of overall personal privacy. These benefits may include the ability to mitigate the impact of pandemics. On the other hand, the downside of civil surveillance is considered trading safety for liberty. Especially in the United States, the freedom to act anonymously is considered by many to be a core right of democracy in terms of civil liberties identified in the Bill of Rights.

The ability to identify, track, and correlate digital and physical identity is of paramount importance to the societal surveillance market. By way of example, digital currencies such as Bitcoin provide for a certain level of anonymity in terms of financial transactions. However, the underlying technology in support of crypto-currencies, blockchain technology, is being adopted by China as it looks to unveil a digital-only version of its currency, which would provide unprecedented governmental oversight and control over transactions. This fits with their drive towards a social credit society in which every citizens' actions are observed and considered.

There is an emerging market for surveilling society, which includes observation, tracking, and data analytics to gather and analyze data. This market also involves the use of additional technologies such as the combination of digital twin technology, augmented and virtual reality to provide an improved means of observing and interacting with citizens. Additionally, governments may leverage the ability to observe citizen behaviors by tracking digital payments in an increasingly cashless global society.

This market also includes the ability to score citizens as part of an overall social credit system that goes beyond acceptable and unacceptable individual behaviors to focus on government mandates such as compliance with public safety rulings associated with virus outbreaks.

Select Research Findings

Target Audience

Key Topics Covered:

Asset Tracking Market by Technology, Infrastructure, Connection Type, Mobility, Location Determination, Solution Type, and Industry Verticals

1. Executive Summary

2. Asset Tracking Market Segmentation

3. Introduction

4. Asset Tracking Solutions

5. Asset Tracking in Industry Verticals

6. Company Analysis

7. Asset Tracking Market Forecasts 2020-2025

8. Conclusions and Recommendations

9. Appendix: Slap-and-Track Asset Tracking Solutions Market 2020-2025

Blockchain Technology Market by Service Type, Applications, Solutions, Industry Verticals

1. Executive Summary

2. Introduction

3. Blockchain Ecosystem and Marketplace

4. Blockchain Market Outlook and Forecasts 2020-2025

5. Blockchain Vendors

6 Conclusions and Recommendations

Human and Machine Trust/Threat Detection and Damage Mitigation Market by Technology, Solution, Deployment Model, Use Case, Application, Sector (Consumer, Enterprise, Industrial, Government), Industry Vertical, and Region

1. Executive Summary

2. Introduction

3. Technology and Application Analysis

4. Company Analysis

5. Market Analysis and Forecast 2020-2025

6. Conclusions and Recommendations

Social Credit Market by Physical and Cyber Infrastructure (Sensors, Cameras, Biometrics, Computer Vision), Software (Machine Learning, Data Analytics, APIs), Use Cases, Applications, Industry Verticals, and Regions

1. Executive Summary

2. Introduction

3. Social Credit System Technologies and Applications

4. Company Analysis

5. Social Credit Systems Market Analysis and Forecasts

6. Conclusions and Recommendations

7. Appendix: Social Credit Market Supporting Technologies

Digital Twins Market by Technology, Solution, Application, and Industry Vertical

1. Executive Summary

2. Introduction

3. Digital Twins Company Assessment

4. Digital Twins Market Analysis and Forecasts 2020 to 2027

5. Conclusions and Recommendations

Artificial Intelligence in Information and Communications Technology: AI and Cognitive Computing in Communications, Applications, Content, and Commerce

1. Executive Summary

2. Introduction

3. AI Intellectual Property Leadership by Country and Company

4. AI in ICT Market Analysis and Forecasts 2020-2025

5. AI in Select Industry Verticals

6. AI in Major Market Segments

7. Important Corporate AI M&A

8. AI in ICT Use Cases

9. AI in ICT Vendor Analysis

10. Summary and Recommendations

11. Appendix: Key AI in ICT Patents

Big Data Market by Leading Companies, Solutions, Use Cases, Business Cases, Infrastructure, Technology Integration, Industry Verticals, Region and Countries

1. Executive Summary

2. Introduction

3. Big Data Challenges and Opportunities

4. Big Data Technologies and Business Cases

5. Key Sectors for Big Data

6. Big Data Value Chain

7. Big Data Analytics

8. Standardization and Regulatory Issues

9. Key Big Data Companies and Solutions

10. Overall Big Data Market Analysis and Forecasts 2020-2025

11. Big Data Market Segment Analysis and Forecasts 2020-2025

12. Appendix: Big Data Support of Streaming IoT Data

Next Generation Mobile Payments by Implantable Technology

1. Executive Summary

2. Introduction

3. Mobile Payment Technologies and Solutions

4. Mobile Payments Ecosystem

5. Regional Mobile Payment Market Analysis and Forecasts 2020-2025

6. Conclusions and Recommendations

Augmented and Mixed Reality Market by Technology, Infrastructure, Devices, Solutions, Apps and Services in Industry Verticals

1. Executive Summary

2. Introduction

3. Augmented Reality Ecosystem

4. Augmented and Mixed Reality Market Drivers and Opportunities

5. Company Analysis

6. Market Analysis and Forecast

7. Conclusions and Recommendations

Virtual Reality Market by Segment (Consumer, Enterprise, Industrial, Government), Equipment (Hardware, Software, Components) Applications and Solutions

1. Executive Summary

2. Virtual Reality Market Segmentation

3. Introduction

4. Virtual Reality Ecosystem Analysis

5. VR Company Analysis

6. Virtual Reality Market Analysis and Forecasts 2020-2025

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/fe8b2r

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Global Societal Surveillance Market Research Bundle 2020: A Collection of 9 Reports Detailing Technology, Solution, Applications, and Services -...

Trump clings to bogus claim that he saved 2.2 million Americans from death by COVID-19 – Yahoo Sports

For months, President Trump has pushed the idea that he and his administration have saved the lives of potentially 2.2 million people during the pandemic, a claim based on an early estimate by British researchers on the deaths that could result if the U.S. government and its citizens did absolutely nothing to respond to COVID-19.

While the president regularly tosses out that claim in an effort to defend his administrations handling of the pandemic that has so far killed more than 212,000 Americans, on Thursday he found a way to turn it against former Vice President Joe Biden, who continues to build on his lead over the president in most polls.

Trump based his argument on a comparison to the epidemic of H1N1 swine flu in 2009, when Biden was vice president. Approximately 60 million Americans contracted the virus that year and around 12,500 died.

If he were in charge, perhaps 2.2 million people would have died from this much more lethal disease! Trump wrote.

The single biggest problem with Trump tossing out the grim 2.2 million estimate is the rather preposterous idea that Americans, or citizens of any other nation, would not seek to change their behavior at all even though hundreds of thousands of their fellow citizens were dying around them.

In fact, the Imperial College of London authors noted as much when they released their report on March 16.

In the (unlikely) absence of any control measures or spontaneous changes in individual behavior, we would expect a peak in mortality (death rates) to occur after approximately 3 months. In such scenarios, given an estimated R0 [reproduction number] of 2.4, we predict 81% of the [Great Britain] and U.S. populations would be infected over the course of the epidemic, the report stated, adding, In total, in an unmitigated epidemic, we would predict approximately 510,000 deaths in G.B., and 2.2 million in the U.S., not accounting for negative effects of health systems being overwhelmed by mortality.

President Trump arrives at the White House Monday after receiving treatment for COVID-19 coronavirus at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. (Photo by Jabin Botsford/Washington Post via Getty Images)

While the report and its staggering hypothetical death figures are reported to have helped convince Trump of the seriousness of the threat of the pandemic, the presidents misappropriation of its findings are telling.

In a piece posted to the Cato Institutes website, economist Alan Reynolds notes that in the model researchers used, the reproduction rate is not a constant, but a variable that depends on many other things. The biggest variable, as has been seen over the past nine months, is how human behavior can affect the spread of the virus.

The worst-case Imperial College estimate of 2.2 million deaths if everyone does nothing did not simply mean no government lockdowns, as a March 31 White House graph with two curves implied. It meant nobody avoids crowded elevators, or wears face masks, washes their hands more often, or buys gloves or hand sanitizer. Everyone does literally nothing to avoid danger, Reynolds wrote.

Trump, of course, left coronavirus restrictions up to state governors, and for months has pushed them to be lifted, so he is in a poor position to claim credit for deaths prevented by such measures. What the president most often takes credit for in terms of saving American lives, however, is his implementation of a partial travel ban that prevented most, but not all, travel from China to the U.S.

By closing up, we saved millions potentially millions of lives, Trump said in July. It could be 2 to 3 million lives.

As the Wall Street Journal noted on Thursday, by the time the ban went into effect, the virus had already begun spreading rapidly in the U.S., especially in California and New York.

Whether Trump could have stopped the spread of COVID-19 by acting quicker is debatable, but asserting that he somehow saved more than 2 million American lives is pure fiction. So far, the pandemic has so far claimed just over 1 million lives worldwide. Thats likely because people, and sometimes governments, actually take action when they suspect they are at risk of death.

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Trump clings to bogus claim that he saved 2.2 million Americans from death by COVID-19 - Yahoo Sports

Why its hard to put a price tag on plans like the Green New Deal – Marketplace

Climate change has fueled natural disasters around the country, with wildfires ravaging the West Coast and increasingly more powerful hurricanes touching down on the Gulf Coast. But how much are politicians willing to spend combating it?

One proposal in particular thats been the subject of scrutiny by Republicans is the Green New Deal. The ambitious plan aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, add millions of new jobs and provide universal health care, among other goals. It was put forth as a resolution in 2019 by Democratic House Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and Democratic Sen. Ed Markey of Massachusetts. In the past, Ocasio-Cortez has put the price tag for her proposal at $10 trillion.

But during the presidential debates last week, President Donald Trump claimed that the Green New Deal would cost $100 trillion a figure refuted by climate experts and think tanks. And during Wednesdays debates, Vice President Mike Pence criticized Bidens climate plans, stating that We dont need a $2 trillion Green New Deal. (Bidens climate proposal is, however, not the GND and is far less sweeping. It doesnt include, for example, universal health care.)

The amount Trump cited was generously rounded up from a calculation done by the American Action Forum, a conservative group that estimated the deals price tag could reach between $51 trillion and $93 trillion based on health care, food security and green housing costs.

Kira McDonald, a senior fellow at Data for Progress, said attaching any cost estimate to the Green New Deal should be taken with several grains of salt and in most cases add up to deliberate obfuscation.

James Goodwin, a senior policy analyst with the Center for Progressive Reform, said that one of the flaws with the American Action Forums estimate is that it didnt take into account the benefits. While theres a cost to spending more money on, say, clean energy, that also buys electricity, better public health outcomes and a sustainable climate.

A 2017 report from the Government Accountability Office found that climate change has already cost U.S. taxpayers $350 billion over the past decade, which includes disaster assistance from flooding and storms.

The fundamental tenet, you could say, of the Green New Deal is to challenge the common notion that theres this inherent tension between cleaning up the environment on one hand, and promoting a strong economy on the other, Goodwin said.

He said you cant put a clear price tag on the proposal because its more of a vision. Like Goodwin, McDonald said its more fair to think of the GND as a brand or strategy.

Amy Sinden, a professor at Temple Law School, said the cost of not doing the Green New Deal, or a similarly large-scale effort to combat the climate crisis, would be catastrophic.

Its like saying we shouldnt spend money to fend off an asteroid thats barreling toward earth threatening to destroy the planet because its too expensive, she said.

Since the original document for the GND came out, more detailed plans have been released. McDonald worked on estimates for a bill called the Green New Deal for Public Housing, which was introduced by Ocasio-Cortez and Democratic Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

Data for Progress found that spending up to $172 billion over 10 years would create roughly 241,000 jobs across the country, reduce annual carbon emissions and reduce public housing energy bills, among other benefits. That money is roughly the same amount the government spent to bail out American International Group, the finance and insurance corporation, during the Great Recession.

David Keiser, an associate professor of resource economics at the University of Massachusetts, has studied the cost and benefit estimates of federal environmental policies such as the Clean Water Act and the Clean Water Rule.

The Clean Water Act is aimed at improving surface waters, which Keiser said might lead to improved recreational opportunities and improved amenities. But he noted that oftentimes, benefits like these are difficult to measure because they might affect things that arent bought and sold in markets.

Youre not necessarily walking down the street and buying an opportunity to recreate in a clean lake or a river, he explained. So oftentimes economists use a variety of different methods to try to recover the implicit values of those things.

Those methods might include observations of actual human behavior, and what those actions reveal about how much people value something.

U.S. federal agencies, with some exceptions, have to calculate the cost and benefits of economically significant regulations they issue (those that have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more) under an executive order signed by President Bill Clinton.

Clintons order is built off a 1981 rule issued by President Ronald Reagan, who called for the benefits of a regulation to outweigh the potential costs to society. Opponents at the time viewed the requirement as an attempt to assign values to things that are unquantifiable and deregulate business and industry.

Although President Clintons rule had similar requirements, one difference is that it calls for the benefits of a regulation to justify the costs, not outweigh it.

Paula Worthington, a senior lecturer at the University of Chicago, said Clintons rule is when the U.S. started to develop a regular set of processes and protocols around cost-benefit analysis.

Worthington said that a cost-benefit analysis can provide a structured way of looking at the impacts of a proposal, although it doesnt give you the answer.

You dont say at the end, Well, clearly the benefits outweigh the costs, so lets do it, or the other way around, she said Well-done, high-quality cost benefit analyses are closer to science, than to magic and poetry. But they still contain a lot of elements, where the analyst makes choices about what to consider and what not to consider. The most important thing when youre producing a cost-benefit analysis is to be transparent and clear about your assumptions and your choices.

Goodwin, a critic of cost-benefit analysis, wrote that it ends up favoring industry interests to the exclusion of public protections. This methodology, he argues, is a major roadblock for programs like the Green New Deal.

In June, the Environmental Protection Agency released a proposal of how major clean air rules are written by changing the way costs and benefits are analyzed. The proposal would focus only on the economic impact of a rule without taking into account possible benefits like public health.

While a plan to combat climate change could end up costing trillions, climate change itself has and will end up costing lives. According to the World Health Organization, climate change is expected to cause an additional 250,000 deaths per year between 2030 and 2050.

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Why its hard to put a price tag on plans like the Green New Deal - Marketplace

How Jill Lepore Discovered the Early Days of Data Mining for Public Manipulation – Observer

In the final weeks leading up the presidential election, one tendency would be to avoid all media related to politics. While older generations enjoyed morning and evening papers or television network news, todays preferred information platforms such as Twitter and Facebook inherently overwhelm the user with an excess of content that drives one to addiction or retreat. Is it possible to develop an ability to digest the news with some distance?

Having found myself reaching news saturation recently, I picked up Jill Lepores National Book Award longlisted nonfiction bookIf Then to think around these issues without submitting myself to constant news alerts. The book concentrates on the origins and impact of Simulmatics Corporation, a long forgotten company. Founded in 1959, Simulmatics was the brainchild of a flimflam man named Ed Greenfield whose false academic pedigree would have been sniffed out in minutes today. A white liberal, Greenfield hoped to bring his dream of a people machine to aid presidential politics. This was the time of bigger and better computer engineering as well as emerging fields of behavioral science.

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Greenfield was an ideas man and needed others to execute his vision. He found a partner in a political scientist named Ithiel de Sola Pool. Together they embarked upon work that began with a successful involvement with John F. Kennedys 1960 presidential campaign and ended in Saigon with a doomed project aiding the American Department of Defense. Drawing from collected data, they utilized computer programming in order to predict outcomes based on if then questions. Take a look at social networking sites as well as Amazon, Google, or Cambridge Analytica and youll find their original blueprints in Simulmatics. For a company that only existed for just over a decade, what it set into motion by harnessing rapidly evolving technology and a commitment to nascent behavioral science was profound.

But it begs the question, how did Lepore connect the dots? In correspondence with the Observer via email, Lepore notes, Most of the books Ive written began in an archive. I find something, and then I get curious, so I look some more, and then I feel a strange compulsion to write about what Ive found. Her curiosity has led to books on the history of Wonder Woman, Benjamin Franklins sister Jane Franklin, as well as a study of slavery in 18th century Manhattan. This book began in the Ithiel de Sola Pool Papers at MIT. The collection is about two hundred boxes, mostly unprocessed, which is both a pain (because its hard to find things in an unprocessed collection) and fun (because when you find stuff you can be pretty sure no one else has found them before you).

This enthusiasm for detail and discovery is what transforms material that some would have considered dry fact into a vibrant narrative. Personal lives surface, certainly, but its more that Lepore has a steady sense of when to bring in cultural anchors such as Eugene Burdick, the political scientist who became a bestselling novelist, in addition to the domestic disputes such as the unstable marriages that plagued the company men.

And it was largely men who dominated this field. Over the course of reading the book, the lack of women in the proverbial room became uncomfortable and then claustrophobic. One could say this was another time, but it doesnt take away from the fact that behavioral science came into popularity during a time in which, culturally speaking, working women were discouraged to do more than execute programming tasks or serve as secretaries.

Lepore interestingly considers the wife of Bill McPhee, a mathematical sociologist recruited by Greenfield to work on a computer that would simulate voting behavior. Minnow Emery McPhee came from a family of accomplished women. Her mother attended Bryn Mawr College and her aunt was a professor of childhood development. Marriage to Bill derailed Minnows hopes of pursuing a career similar to her aunt. After mentioning another data collector, Betty Friedan, whose landmark book The Feminine Mystique originated in a set of interviews conducted with her Smith College classmates, Lepore notes that Minnow McPhee was all too aware of the crisis Friedan observed. However, Lepore goes further, stating in the book, There was a bigger problem, too. And it didnt have a name either. It had to do with knowledge itself. In the 1950s, when womens work was not work, womens knowledge was not knowledge. This had a disastrous effect on the two new fields of knowledge that this era produced: behavioral science and artificial intelligence.

Its unsurprising that these fields excluded women from the start, but it speaks to the ingrained arrogance that dominates the tech industry today. With great subtlety, Lepore raises these issues in the book with direct, but not incendiary, intention. Again, her commitment to archival work proves important. I was so grateful to have access to an incredibly rich archive of Minnow McPhees letters, which her granddaughter has lovingly collected and transcribed and annotated, she told Observer. It was just incredible. So often its so difficult to tell those domestic stories. It would be far too easy to let these histories slide into the melodrama of Mad Men. Lepores tight grip of pacing keeps these narratives tethered to the themes and actions at the center of the book.

She continues, I was also able to interview many of the children of the Simulmatics scientists, which was wonderful. [But it was] Minnow McPhees correspondence, in particular, that allowed me to help the reader gain a view of this world as it was lived by women and children, not as it was imagined by behavioral and computer scientists. The very sad and troubling irony [is that] these men were trying to build machines and create an artificial intelligence to understand and predict human behavior when they were ignoring and failing to understand their wives and children. When asked if she felt this exclusion continues today, Lepore affirms, Yes, its absolutely, entirely still with us.

Not only does Lepore touch upon the exclusion of women from workspaces, she also explores the ways in which this emerging technology crossed paths with the civil rights movement and anti-war movements of the moment. Desperate to keep his company afloat, Greenfield and Pool took Simulmatics to Vietnam in an equally doomed effort to read and then change the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese. This association with the American Department of Defense haunted Pool for the remainder of his career, despite his oracle work predicting the rise of social networks and the role of the Internet. These flawed men clung to emotional blind spots that prevented their operation from adapting in a way that would offer a more complete study of the subjects they hoped to fully understand.

At the close of the book, Lepore quotes the Google and Uber car designer Anthony Levandowski who in 2018 discredits the study of history. What already happened doesnt matter, he says dismissively. You dont need to know history to build on what they made. In technology, all that matters is tomorrow. Like any good historian, Lepore smells the lie in that statement and adds, The invention of the future has a history, decades old, dilapidated. Simulmatics is a cautionary tale, a timeworn fable, a story of yesterday. Because tomorrow is not all that matters.

Its reassuring to see Lepores context, but so is the manner in which she exposes the bloated words of snake oil salesmen such as this. When asked if Lepore felt that the industry would become subject to government regulation, she responded, Oh yes, regulation of this industry and even dismantlement of many of these companies is inevitable. Itll take time. But it will happen. If Then is an unnerving book that chronicles the birth of modern media and data manipulation. This prescient book is a warning for emerging behavioral studies and big technology. Lepore underscores the fact that history keeps the score.

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How Jill Lepore Discovered the Early Days of Data Mining for Public Manipulation - Observer

Gravyty Launches Gravyty Guard the First Data Security Solution Built to Protect Donor Data at Nonprofit Organizations – PRNewswire

BOSTON, Oct. 6, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Gravyty, the market-defining leader of artificial intelligence (AI) for Social Good, today announced Gravyty Guard, the first data security technology focused on the human layer of security and specifically designed to protect the most sensitive donor data at nonprofit organizations from intentional and unintentional data breaches. The announcement comes in direct response to the worst year for nonprofit data security, with thousands of nonprofit organizations announcing data breaches and millions of donor data records compromised. Gravyty Guard protects nonprofit organizations and their well-intentioned employees from unintentional and malicious data breaches and provides the first solution to secure organizations' most sensitive data.

Over the past six months, remote work has redefined how workforces' access and share donor data, creating new and alarming security vulnerabilities for nonprofit organizations, particularly through well-intentioned employees who have authorized access to their organization's data. In fact, 85%of data breaches occur as a result of inadvertent actions. As data sets grow exponentially and organizations become more data-driven, these vulnerabilities are only projected to get worse. The most prominent risks now become well-intentioned employees who make mistakes with their organizations' data.

"Nonprofit organizations find themselves in the crosshairs of being data-driven and needing to protect their most sensitive donor data. In the past, we've relied on policy to provide security assurances, but 2020 has proven that we need more, and it has to start at the most vulnerable level -- the human layer," explained Adam Martel, co-founder and CEO, Gravyty. "With Gravyty's deep understanding of the nonprofit sector and human behavior in advancement, we realized that we could expand our AI platform so nonprofits can address the security challenge that will define this decade, protecting against fraud and data breaches with world-class technology."

By understanding human behaviors unique to the nonprofit fundraising space, Gravyty uses advanced technologies to train models, deploy proactive alerts, and provide detailed, flexible reporting to protect employees from being the source -- maliciously or accidentally -- of the next donor data security breach. Known as human-layer security, the technologies behind Gravyty Guard proactively alert fundraisers to potential data breaches and provide steps to remediate data risks. These protections include threats such as:

Email InfiltrationPhishing, spear phishing, and other email infiltration attacks attempt to trick humans into scenarios that allow hackers to extract sensitive donor data through ransomware, trojan malware, and other methods. An estimated 135 million of these attacks are attempted every day. Historically focused on the for-profit sector, the nonprofit sector has only recently become a target for bad actors. Gravyty Guard is flexible, configuring to the specific needs of any organization to alert and protect fundraisers from these attacks.

Data ExfiltrationExfiltration happens when employees use email, text messages, messaging apps, thumb drives, cloud apps, and other vehicles to transfer data to places it should never be, without authorization. The most common data exfiltration occurs when an employee forwards a work email to their personal account. 75% of IT leaders say employees intentionally put an organization's data at risk through exfiltration methods. Gravyty Guard allows nonprofit organizations to select compliance frameworks that apply to their business -- GDPR, CCPA, HIPAA, or otherwise -- and alerts managers when a fundraiser is about to create a vulnerability.

Anomalous BehaviorIT security is often highly effective at monitoring networks for abnormal traffic. However, we can't say the same about tracking abnormalities in human behavior. More than 70% of people have mistakenly sent personally identifiable information (PII) or business-sensitive data to the wrong email recipient, creating a data breach. The source of these breaches could be as small as trusting auto-suggest to fill in an email address or a typo. Gravyty Guard uses AI to monitor security anomalies at the human-layer, alerting fundraisers when something doesn't line up about the data within their message and the recipients to whom it's being sent.

"The last 30 years in security have been defined by protecting networks and devices. Now, bad actors have turned their attention to new vulnerabilities -- an organization's employees," said Rich Palmer, co-founder and CTO, Gravyty. "As the leader in AI technology for the nonprofit sector, addressing human-layer security is a natural progression for Gravyty because frontline fundraisers access sensitive donor data every day. We'll empower nonprofit organizations to ensure their employees don't make mistakes that cause donor data breaches."

Gravyty Guard is available immediately in beta and will be released in full to the entire nonprofit community in early 2021. The three best ways to learn more about Gravyty Guard are to:

About GravytyGravyty is the market-defining leader of artificial intelligence (AI) for Social Good. We exist so the nonprofit sector can evolve to transform what's possible through philanthropy. Our AI platform focuses on fundraiser efficiency and donor data security. Gravyty automates the most time-consuming processes that get in the way of fundraisers doing the work they love -- developing and cultivating relationships with donors. By empowering fundraisers to efficiently personalize outreach, build new relationships faster, steward and deepen existing relationships, and keep donor data safe, our customers expand their workforces without making new hires and increase revenue from giving. Visit http://www.gravyty.com to learn more.

Media Contact:Kevin Leahy833.472.8989[emailprotected]

SOURCE Gravyty

Gravyty | Fundraising software | Community engagement software

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Gravyty Launches Gravyty Guard the First Data Security Solution Built to Protect Donor Data at Nonprofit Organizations - PRNewswire

SKYMINT BRANDS — Formerly Green Peak Innovations — Joins Forces With DNA Genetics To Bring The World’s Most Globally Awarded Flower Strains To…

"SKYMINT BRANDS and DNA Genetics share a similar brand ethos in that we are both on a mission to provide cannabis enthusiasts with the highest quality flower possible," says SKYMINT BRANDSCEO Jeff Radway. "All flower is not created equal, and DNA Genetics knows this better than anyone else, which is why our SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS collaboration truly sets a high bar in Michigan."

Launching tomorrow, October 9, at all seven recreational SKYMINT locations throughout the state of Michigan, as well as select retail partners, SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS features a premium collection of seven of the most globally awarded and sought-after flower strains, including Bakers Delight and Ztrawberriez, as well as:

Clementine Flower $701st Place, High Times Cannabis Cup 20191st Place, 710 Degree Cup

Kosher Kush Flower $701st Place, High Times Cannabis Cup 2010Top 10 Strain of the Year, High Times Cannabis Cup 20111st Place Milano Secret Cup 2018People's Choice, Cannabis Cup Brazil 2016

LA Confidential Flower $701st Place, High Times Cannabis Cup 2008

Chocolope Flower $70TEN 1st Place Awards, including 1st Place, High Times Cannabis Cup 2010

Strawberry Banana Flower $701st Judges Choice, Cannabis Cup Brazil 20161st Place, High Times Socal Cup 2016

Certified as to provenance by DNA GENETICS, each seed was hand-chosen by founders Don Morris and Aaron Yarkoni and farmed to perfection by SKYMINT cultivators. Two additional strains, Gelato Sorbet and Lemon Skunk, are still to be released by year's end, as are .7 gram pre-rolls.

"Each time we explore a potential collaboration, we look for the best possible partner in each market and SKYMINT BRANDS is that partner for Michigan," says Don Morris, Co-Founder of DNA Genetics. "The extreme level of care, commitment, and innovation that SKYMINT BRANDS infuses into its cultivation and product brands inspires great confidence."

The SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS collaboration marks a new moment in Michigan's progressive cannabis market. Recreational cannabis only came online last December, and Michigan's industry has scaled rapidly, with SKYMINT a leader in that growth, establishing 10 dispensaries in seven months with two more planned to open this year.

Since its inception in 2018, SKYMINT BRANDS has dedicated itself to creating and curating premium-crafted cannabis brands, hand-grown with expert care to power a portfolio of the finest cannabis brands available for daily wellness, healing, and recreational enjoyment. Joining SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS under the SKYMINT BRANDS umbrella are SKYMINT, North Cannabis, Jolly Edibles, and the Two Joints brand, which benefits the Last Prisoner Project.

"There's good cannabis, there's better cannabis, and then there's SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS," says Laurie Gregory, Chief Brand and Product Officer at SKYMINT BRANDS. "While all of our SKYMINT BRANDS are premium, the SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS collection delivers superior genetics, flavor, and effects for a consistent, elevated experience that's unparalleled. SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS is literally the best cannabis that our state has to offer, marking a high point for our brand and for Michigan."

Adds Radway, "SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS embodies the three pillars that inspire our work at SKYMINT BRANDS: to elevate cannabis in Michigan and beyond; to cultivate stellar, premium brands; and to leverage our resources and position within the industry to change the world and our communities for the better."

The SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS launch coincides with the company's recent transition from its founding name - Green Peak Innovations - to SKYMINT BRANDS.

"SKYMINT BRANDS reflects our belief in the exponential potential of cannabis to revolutionize lives and inspire people everywhere to feel better, live better, do better, and create better. This collaboration is a perfect example of that aim. With access to the world's best cannabis, the SKY's the limit," says Gregory.

PRESS KIT

About SKYMINT BRANDSBeginning operations in Fall 2018, Skymint (formerly known as Green Peak Innovations) is Michigan's leading vertically integrated cannabis company and the state's largest medical and recreational license holder. With two state-of-the-art indoor grow facilities, the company cultivates, processes, markets, distributes and sells a full range of branded cannabis products, including SKYMINT, North Cannabis, Jolly Edibles, the Two Joints brand, which benefits the Last Prisoner Project, and SKYMINT X DNA GENETICS. Just as SKYMINT treats its plants like people - tending to and caring for them by hand, and even playing them music - each and every product is handcrafted to ensure the safest, cleanest, highest quality products at the best value. SKYMINT products can be found at the company's SKYMINT provisioning centers and via retailers around Michigan through a robust wholesale network. As purveyors of premium-crafted cannabis, SKYMINT has developed a portfolio of the finest cannabis brands available for daily wellness, healing, or just getting high on life. SKYMINT inspires people everywhere to feel better, live better and do better. Learn more: http://www.skymint.com/dna-x-skymint/

Press Contact: Holly Aubry / HUMAN NATURE / [emailprotected] / 646.943.0541

About OG DNA Genetics Inc.DNA was rooted in Los Angeles and founded in Amsterdam in 2004 by Don Morris and Aaron Yarkoni. Over the last decade, the Company has built and curated a seasoned genetic library and developed proven standard operating procedures for genetic selection, breeding, and cultivation. In a world that is increasingly opening up to commercial cannabis activity, DNA is positioned to become the first, truly geographically-diversified company with multiple partnerships with top-licensed producers and brands that have built their companies and global presence utilizing the "Powered by DNA" model.

For more information, please visit http://www.dnagenetics.com

Press Contact: Rezwan Khan, President of DNA Genetics at [emailprotected]

SOURCE SKYMINT BRANDS

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SKYMINT BRANDS -- Formerly Green Peak Innovations -- Joins Forces With DNA Genetics To Bring The World's Most Globally Awarded Flower Strains To...

Excess genetic exchanges impede the segregation of chromosomes into eggs – News-Medical.net

Reviewed by Emily Henderson, B.Sc.Oct 8 2020

The exchange of DNA between chromosomes during the early formation of sperm and egg cells normally is limited to assure fertility.

But when there are too many of these genetic exchanges, called crossover events, the segregation of chromosomes into eggs is flawed, biologists have learned in a project done across three labs at the University of Oregon and Northwestern University.

In a paper published online Sept. 4 in the journal PLOS Genetics, researchers documented how the disruptions, as seen in basic research with microscopic roundworms (Caenorhabditis elegans), lead to a range of meiotic defects as the chromosomes are subjected to improper spindle forces.

Inaccurate chromosome segregation in humans is associated with Down syndrome and miscarriages. Such segregation defects as seen in the research can result in increased infertility, said UO biologist Diana E. Libuda, the study's principal investigator.

Over the past century, research has focused on making sure enough crossovers are made during sperm and egg development. It was known that developing sperm and eggs had ways to make sure that not too many crossovers are made, but it was unclear why."

Diana E. Libuda, Professor in the UO's Department of Biology and Institute of Molecular Biology

The research team identified two mechanisms that help counteract defects triggered by excess crossover activity in developing eggs and, thus, assist the coordination of the process that helps assure genomic integrity in new generations.

Libuda had reported in the Oct. 9, 2013, issue of Nature the discovery of a mechanism that inhibits the overproduction of crossovers in roundworms. However, Libuda said, it was not possible at that time to study the downstream effects in cases where too many crossovers did occur. Since then, her lab developed a way to generate extra crossovers on a single chromosome.

That ability led to a National Institutes of Health-funded collaboration with Sadie Wignall of Northwestern University, an expert on high-resolution imaging of structures involved in segregation of chromosomes into developing eggs. What Wignall found led Libuda back to Bruce Bowerman's UO lab to take a look at chromosome segregation in live developing eggs.

"Overall, it was a great joining of scientific strengths to take a multipronged approach to answer this important question," Libuda said.

The research provides fundamental insights that can guide research in other organisms to better understand the mechanisms and, eventually, lead to potential clinical applications.

"The same proteins that we are studying in C. elegans are also in humans," Libuda said. "In fact, most proteins required for fertility are used across organisms that include yeast, fruit flies, nematodes, zebrafish, mice and humans. Research using these microscopic worms has been shown in numerous contexts to have relevance in human health. "

Source:

Journal reference:

Hollis, J.A., et al. (2020) Excess crossovers impede faithful meiotic chromosome segregation in C. elegans. PLOS Genetics. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009001.

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Seattle Genetics? Not anymore. The biotech has shortened its name to Seagen to illustrate global expansion – Endpoints News

Would a Seattle Genetics by any other name smell as sweet? Were about to find out.

The biotech announced Thursday its changing its name to Seagen, capping off whats been a 12-month period in which it closed a $4.5 billion deal with Merck and saw two drugs get FDA approval. Seagen is also keeping the same Wall Street ticker $SGEN.

CEO Clay Siegall said the company made the change to represent its expanding global operations.

Our goal is to help cancer patients around the world, Siegall said. It is, to us, better to be reflected as a biotechnology company that makes cancer products for the globe, and as weve expanded it makes sense.

Cancer patients dont have boundaries or borders, he added.

On top of all that, Seagen presented positive Phase II data at ESMO just a few weeks ago. The companys experimental drug tisotumab vedotin, an antibody-drug conjugate, showed an average response lasting 8.3 months and an objective response rate of 24% in 101 patients with recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer.

Though it was a single-arm trial, Seagen compared the results to data suggesting existing therapies typically have a response rate of less than 15% and patients survive for 6 to 9.4 months.

So why change things up now? Siegall said that the company had already been calling itself Seagen internally and internationally, pointing to its seagen.com email addresses in use since inception and overseas affiliates such as Seagen France. By shortening the name, Siegall said, Seagen not only makes things less cumbersome but also lets the company stay attached to its Seattle roots.

We definitely are proud of our Pacific Northwest roots; Seattle is known as the Emerald City and thats why green is in our logo, Siegall said. While we are retaining our strong roots and the S-E-A in our name, this expansion really makes it, we feel, a more appropriate name for a global company.

Siegall likened it somewhat to the delivery service Federal Express shrinking its name to FedEx in the mid-1990s. Though the two companies have no semblance of comparison, Siegall said, Seagen is adopting a nickname thats been the unofficial moniker for years and keeping the same colors in its logo.

At the end of the day though, this rebranding wont change anything about Seagens business. Siegall talked at length about how the new name signifies Seagen is an international company, but emphasized that its cancer products remain its true brand.

This is not something where we are trying to overstate our name change as something more than what it is, Siegall said. This is a minor change, but something that we think is good going forward and very productive. I dont think anyone should view this as Seattle Genetics is doing something different.

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Seattle Genetics? Not anymore. The biotech has shortened its name to Seagen to illustrate global expansion - Endpoints News

Evenings with Genetics discusses connection between cancer and genetics – Baylor College of Medicine News

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Does cancer run in families? A genetic counselor from Baylor College of Medicine will answer that question and more about cancer genetics during the Evenings with Genetics virtual seminar on Tuesday, Oct. 13, at 7 p.m.

During the hourlong webinar, Tanya Eble, genetic counselor and assistant professor of molecular and human genetics at Baylor, will discuss cancer red flags to look for in your personal or family history, what to expect at a cancer genetics evaluation as well as gene tests for hereditary breast and colon cancer syndromes. Judy Karonika of Judy's Mission, a nonprofit aimed at increasing awareness, education and prevention of ovarian cancer, and patient advocate Nancy Khan will also speak.

Evenings with Genetics is a regular speaker series hosted by Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Childrens Hospital that offers the most current information on care and research advances for many genetic conditions. The seminars provide an opportunity for patients in the genetics community to interact with other families experiencing similar situations.

The program is free and open to the public, but registration is required. A Zoom link will be sent to all registered participants the day before the seminar. For more information, call 713-798-8407 or visit the event registration page.

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Coronavirus antibodies last at least three months after infection, U of T study finds – News@UofT

Coronavirus antibodies can last at least three months after a person becomes infected with the virus that causes COVID-19, according to a study published in Science Immunology.

Researchers from the University of Toronto and the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Instituteat Sinai Health used both saliva and blood samples from COVID-19 patients to measure and compare antibody levels for over three months post-symptom onset.

They found that antibodies of the IgG class that bind to the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein are detectable for at least 115 days, representing the longest time interval measured. The study is also the first to show these antibodies can also be detected in the saliva.

Our study shows that IgG antibodies against the spike protein of the virus are relatively durable in both blood and saliva, said Jennifer Gommerman, professor of immunology in U of Ts Temerty Faculty of Medicine and leader of the saliva testing effort.

Our study suggests saliva may serve as an alternative for antibody testing. While saliva is not as sensitive as serum, it is easy to collect.

The saliva assay was developed at U of Twhile a team at Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum, led by senior investigator Anne-Claude Gingras, who is also a professor of molecular genetics at U of T, executed the serum assay.

The LTRI platform for detection of antibodies in serum, or blood, is incredibly robust and well suited for assessing the prevalence of infection within the community, said Gingras. This is another tool that can help us better understand and even overcome this virus.

Anne-Claude Gingras, a professor of molecular genetics at U of T, led a team at theLunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute that executed the serum assay for the study (photo courtesy of Mount Sinai Hospital)

Most people who recover from COVID-19 develop immune agents in their blood called antibodies that are specific to the virus. These antibodies are useful in indicating who has been infected, regardless of whether they had symptoms or not.

A large team of scientists collaborated on the study, including Allison McGeer and Mario Ostrowski, who provided access to the paired saliva and serum samples from dozens of patients for the study.

McGeer is a professor of laboratory medicine and pathobiology at U of T, a senior clinician scientistat Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum and principal investigator of the Toronto Invasive Bacterial Diseases Network. Ostrowski is a professor of medicine, immunology, and laboratory medicine and pathobiology at U of Tand a scientist at St. Michaels Hospital, Unity Health Toronto.

The study was co-led by U of T graduate students Baweleta Isho, Kento Abe, Michelle Zuo and Alainna Jamal. James Rini, a professor of biochemistry and molecular genetics at U of T, and Yves Durocher from the National Research Council of Canada, provided key protein reagents for the saliva studies.

The durability of the antibody response to SARS-CoV-2 has been debated in recent months. An earlier study published in Nature Medicine suggested the antibodies can disappear after two months for some individuals who had the virus but did not experience symptoms.

This study led by the Toronto team is in agreement with findings from leading immunologists in the U.S. in describing the antibody response as longer lasting.

While the team admits there is a lot they still dont know about antibody responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection, including how long the antibodies last beyond this period or what protection they afford against re-infection, the research could have broader implications in the development of an effective vaccine.

This study suggests that if a vaccine is properly designed, it has the potential to induce a durable antibody response that can help protect the vaccinated person against the virus that causes COVID-19, Gommerman said.

The researchwas supported by an Ontario Together grant and funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Funding for the development of the assays in the Gingras lab was provided through donations bythe Royal Bank of Canada, Questcap and the Krembil Foundation.

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Coronavirus antibodies last at least three months after infection, U of T study finds - News@UofT