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Friday, September 25, 2020

Highlights From the Black Enterprise Women of Power Tech Summit

Hundreds of women were empowered with the tools, insight, and knowledge needed to thrive in various tech-driven industries at the BLACK ENTERPRISE inaugural Women of Power Tech virtual summit this week.

The two-day digital conference included an all-star lineup of dynamic speakers, executives, and Silicon Valley leaders who opened up about their climb to the top of the industry during a variety of sessions, panels, and workshops. Hosted by Ally, Women of Power Tech also included professional coaching to help Black women identify new trends and opportunities and gain new skills.

Here are some of the highlights.

Netflix CMO Bozoma Saint John on Career Transitions

Netflix Global Chief Marketing Officer Bozoma Saint John offered a masterclass of information for women looking to power through or to pivot in tech. During a keynote conversation hosted by Ally with Women of Power Chief Brand Officer Caroline V. Clarke, the marketing superstar shared her story about navigating in Silicon Valley, salary negotiation tips, and turning unique experiences into a story of success.

“Advice that I have for us, and for Black women, in particular, is that we actually have to own our unique ability and our unique experiences–and tout them,” said the marketing executive extraordinaire.

Saint John also talked about the various transitions she’s made throughout her 20-year marketing career, which includes serving in C-suite positions at Endeavor, Uber, Apple Music, and Pepsi-Cola North America.

“I would not say that transitions are ever easy,” she said. “I had to be able to figure out what was going to work for me, what I needed to do in order to advance and to grow because sometimes I couldn’t find those opportunities in the jobs that I was in or at the companies I was in.”

 

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Apple VP of Social Initiatives Lisa Jackson on Knowing When to Exit 

During another keynote session, Lisa Jackson, the vice president of environment, policy, and social Initiatives at Apple, talked about the importance of knowing your worth in the workplace. The tech veteran also shared insights on when and how to pivot in your career.

“You can do a lot of things on your own, you can put up with a lot…But if your evaluation leads you to believe that you do not have a supportive management structure, you are probably in the wrong place,” said Jackson. She also advised viewers to trust their gut when decided when to make a new career move.

“Ask yourself, ‘is it worth it?’ because walking away feels good and it may be the right decision, but you have to think deeply about that.”

Verizon Director Shellye Archambeau on Owning Your Career

Silicon Valley leader and Verizon Director Shellye Archambeau stressed the importance of owning your career and being intentional about your journey.

“It’s really important as you’re building your career to realize that you own your career. You do, not anybody else. Not your boss, not your manager, not your employees, not your spouse, not your mentors. You own it,” she said during a session hosted by Verizon. “It’s important to take charge of what you own.”

 

 

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Entrepreneur Dawn Dickson on Using Tech as Solution

Serial tech entrepreneur Dawn Dickson discussed how she conceptualized and then actualized the development of her two most recent ventures Flat Out of Heels, rollable flat slippers for women, and PopCom, revolutionary software for automated vending machines. She revealed that she came up with Popcom after identifying a problem and then using technology to find a solution.

“I decided to solve my own problem and start PopCom,” she said during the “SistersInc.: Founders Real Talk Roundtable.”

“I had been itching for a big problem to solve.”

 

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MIT and Indigenous Peoples Day

The following letter was sent to the MIT community today by President L. Rafael Reif.

To the members of the MIT community,

I write to announce three encouraging and related steps in our ongoing efforts to make MIT more welcoming and inclusive.

First, this summer, I asked Institute Community and Equity Officer John Dozier and Vice President for Human Resources Ramona Allen to reexamine our roster of Institute holidays. After outreach that included students, staff and faculty – and building on extensive work by then-interim ICEO Alyce Johnson – they concluded that while the overall reconsideration of holidays can and should continue, we should move swiftly now to consider renaming the holiday we recognize each year on the second Monday in October.

With the endorsement of Academic Council, beginning this year MIT will change the name of this holiday from Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day, in recognition and celebration of the Native presence and voices in our community. You can learn more about the holiday’s significance through an October 14 lecture by MLK Visiting Scholar Patricia Saulis.

I offer my thanks to John, Ramona, Alyce, Chair of the Faculty Rick Danheiser and ICEO Program Director Beatriz Cantada for their care in advancing this recommendation.

And we owe a special debt of gratitude to two student groups – the American Indian Science and Engineering Society (AISES) and the Native American Students Association (NASA) – for their dedication to promoting equity and visibility on behalf of our Indigenous community.

Second, in the spring, Professor Craig Wilder, a former faculty advisor to AISES and the current advisor to NASA, will lead a class that will research and document MIT’s Native American history. The class will anchor a collaborative project that invites students, staff, alumni, community members and faculty from diverse fields to study and research MIT’s connections to Native nations and tribal lands, the histories of Native communities in the New England region, and the history of Indigenous students, faculty and staff at the Institute.

Third, before the pandemic, the Office of the Provost was in conversation with students and other MIT community members about designating a campus space for members of our Indigenous community to gather and share traditions and experiences. I am glad to report that we have identified options for such a space and are committed to act, once in-person indoor gatherings on campus are again permitted.

*   *   *

I would like to pause and recognize that, for many in our community, Columbus Day is an important and meaningful tradition, independent of its namesake. For many Italian Americans, Columbus Day presents an opportunity to celebrate their history, heritage and contributions to this nation, and to honor the struggle of immigrants from Italy who faced many decades of violence, exclusion and discrimination in the United States. We move forward with deep respect for every member of our community as we work to acknowledge the complex and evolving story of our nation.

It is natural to cherish our roots. They nourish the spirit and they keep us grounded. Yet they also enable us to grow new branches of understanding that rise upward to the light – and toward each other.

I am grateful for the partnership of our entire community as we aspire and work toward a better and stronger MIT.

Sincerely,

L. Rafael Reif



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Samuel L. Jackson to reprise Nick Fury role in Disney+ series

This will mark the actor’s 13th appearance as the iconic comic book character in the MCU.

Samuel L. Jackson will reprise the role of Nick Fury in a new Marvel series for Disney Plus. 

Jackson has portrayed Fury since being introduced in a post-credits scene of the first Iron Man film in 2008. He most recently portrayed Fury in Spider-Man: Far from Home, Avengers: Endgame, and Captain Marvel. He also played the iconic comic book character in two episodes of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. on ABC.

The exact plot details of the Disney Plus show are being kept on the low. Variety reports that “multiple sources say Jackson is attached to star with Kyle Bradstreet attached to write and executive produce.” 

Read More: Samuel L. Jackson promises to teach swearing in exchange for voter registration

Jackson’s upcoming series will reportedly mark his 13th appearance as Nick Fury in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). 

News of the actor starring as Fury in his own series follows the announcement that Jackson joined forces with comedian Chris Rock for the upcoming Saw reboot, theGRIO previously reported.

Rock created the treatment for the reboot after being inspired by his love of the original franchise. He will star as a police detective investigating a series of grisly crimes and Jackson will play his father.

The Handmaid’s Tale star, Max Minghella will play Rock’s brother and Riverdale actress Marisol Nichols will play a police captain. 

Read More: Samuel L. Jackson reads his new book ‘Stay the F**k at Home’

“We think Samuel L. Jackson and Chris Rock along with Max Minghella and Marisol Nichols make this film completely special in the ‘Saw’ canon and we can’t wait to unleash this unexpected and sinister new story on fans of this franchise. This is the next level of ‘Saw’ on full tilt,” said Joe Drake, chairman of the Lionsgate Motion Picture Group.

The eight-film franchise centers on the fictional character John Kramer, also called the Jigsaw Killer, who traps victims in situations that test their will to live. Tobin Bell has played the Jigsaw Killer in all previous installments.

Chris Rock’s Saw is set to debut October 23, 2020.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

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Trump tries to win over Black voters with $500B ‘platinum plan’

The president calls for Congress to make ‘Juneteenth’ a holiday, and prioritize criminal justice reform. 

President Donald Trump rolled out his “Platinum Plan” for Black Americans during a summit in Atlanta, Georgia on Friday. 

The plan aims to invest $500 billion in Black communities. Trump did not disclose how the plan will be funded but he vows to create 500,000 new Black-owned businesses, 3 million new jobs for the Black community, and designate the KKK and Antifa as terrorist organizations, NPR reports. 

The “Platinum Plan” states that it will “prosecute the KKK and ANTIFA as terrorist organizations and make lynching a national hate crime.” 

The plan also calls for Congress to make “Juneteenth” a holiday, and prioritize criminal justice reform. 

Read More: Trump to choose Amy Coney Barrett for SCOTUS, sources say

Critics have noted that lawmakers have already introduced much of Trump’s plan or it has been opposed by his own officials.

Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif. introduced legislation over the summer to make Juneteenth a national holiday, theGRIO previously reported. 

“Together with my colleagues Cory Booker, Tina Smith, and Ed Market, we are proposing that Juneteenth be a national holiday,” Harris said in June. “And we are dropping that bill saying that Juneteenth should be a national holiday.”

Her announcement, delivered on MSNBC’s AM Joy, was made on the same day that Republican Senator John Cronyn released a statement also supporting the creation of a national holiday marking the end of the enslavement of Africans in America.

Harris’ lynching legislation has been repeatedly stalled by Trump loyalist Sen. Rand Paul

Trump, who won 8% of the Black vote in 2016, aims to woo Black voters ahead of the election with his “Platinum Plan.”

Read More: Trump questions ‘why the hell’ he passed reform after failing to energize Black voters

“When I ran for president four years ago, I looked at the shameful record of the Democrat party, and asked black Americans, ‘What the hell do you have to lose?’” Trump told the crowd in Atlanta on Friday. “I want to share what you have to gain from voting Republican on November 3rd – the biggest election of our lives. For decades, Democrat politicians like Joe Biden have taken Black voters for granted.”

Meanwhile, news of Trump’s “Platinum Plan” is being met with the side eye among activists and media influencers. 

Popular YouTuber Professor Black Truth noted, “Trump’s “Plan” for black America is mostly hot air,” he wrote on Twitter. “The KKK is largely a relic, with the WS having moved onto other groups, whom Trump makes no promises to prosecute! But it’s worth mentioning that someone is now mentioning black people specifically. A shame he’s not serious,” he added.

Filmmaker Tariq Nasheed also pointed out that the “Trump Platinum Plan for Black America, where he wants to designate the “KKK and Antifa” as “terrorist groups”, is filled with bait & switch trick bag language. It starts off using the word Black…And when you get to the fine print, it switches to “minority” (ie white women),” he wrote on Twitter

In a separate tweet he wrote, “Unfortunately Trump’s Platinum Plan for Black people has the same trick bag “minority” language when you start reading the fine print. So this is yet another nothing burger.”

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GPT3 and AGI: Beyond the dichotomy – part two

This blog continues from GPT3 and AGI: Beyond the dichotomy – part one

GPT3 and AGI

Let’s first clarify what AGI should look like

Consider the movie ‘Terminator’

When the Arnold Schwarzenegger character comes to earth – he is fully functional. To do so, he must be aware of the context. In other words, AGI should be able to operate in any context

Such an entity does not exist

And nor is GPT3 such an entity

But GPT3 however has the capacity to respond ‘AGI-like’ to an expanded set of contexts much more than traditional AI systems.

GPT 3 has got many things going for it

  • Unsupervised learning is the future
  • Linguistic capabilities distinguish humans
  • But Language is much more than encoding information. At a social level, language involves joint attention to environment, expectations and patterns.
  • Attention serves as a foundation for social trust
  • Hence, AGI needs a linguistic basis – but that needs attention and attention needs context. So, GPT-3 – linguistic – attention – context could lead to AGI-like behaviour

Does AGI need to be conscious as we know it or would access consciousness suffice?

In this context, a recent paper

A Roadmap for Artificial General Intelligence: Intelligence, Knowledge, and Consciousness: Garrett Mindt and Carlos Montemayor

https://www.academia.edu/43620181/A_Roadmap_for_Artificial_General_Intelligence_Intelligence_Knowledge_and_Consciousness makes an argument is that

  • integrated information in the form of attention suffices for AGI
  • AGI must be understood in terms of epistemic agency, (epistemic = relating to knowledge or the study of knowledge) and
  • Eepistemic agency necessitates access consciousness.
  • access consciousness: acquiring knowledge for action, decision-making,  and  thought,  without  necessarily  being  conscious

 

Therefore, the proposal goes that AGI necessitates 

  • selective attention for accessing information relevant to action,  decision-making,  memory  and    
  • But not necessarily consciousness as we know it

 

This line of thinking leads to many questions

  • Is consciousness necessary for AGI?
  • If so, should that consciousness be the same as human consciousness
  • Intelligence is typically understood in terms of problem-solving. Problem solving by definition leads to specialized mode of evaluation. Such tests are easy to formulate but check for compartmentalized competency (which cannot be called intelligence). They also do not allow intelligence to ‘spill over’ from one domain to another – as it does in human intelligence. 
  • Intelligence needs information to be processed in a contextually relevant way.
  • Can we use epistemic  agency  through  attention as the distinctive mark of general intelligence even without consciousness? (as per Garrett Mindt and Carlos Montemayor)
  • In this model, AGI is based on joint attention to preferences in a context sensitive way.
  • Would AI be a peer or subservient in the joint attention model?

Finally, let us consider the question of spillover of intelligence. In my view, that is another characteristic of AGI. Its not easy to quantify because tests are specific to problem types currently. A recent example of spillover of intelligence is from facebook AI supposedly inventing it’s own secret language. The media would have you believe that groups of AGI are secretly plotting to take over humanity. But the reality is a bit mundane as explained. The truth behind facebook AI inventing a new language

In a nutshell, the system was using Reinforcement learning. Facebook was trying to create a robot that could negotiate. To do this, facebook let two instances of the robot negotiate with each other – and learn from each other. The only measure of their success was how well they transacted objects. The only rule to follow was to put words on the screen. As long as they were optimizing the goal(negotiating) and understood each other it did not matter that the language was accurate (or indeed was English). Hence, the news about ‘inventing a new language’. But to me, the real question is: does it represent intelligence spillover?

Much of future AI could be in that direction.

To Conclude

We are left with some key questions:  

  • Does AGI need consciousness or access consciousness?
  • What is role of language in intelligence?
  • GPT3 has reopened the discussion but still hype and dichotomy (both don’t help because hype misdirects discussion and dichotomy shuts down discussion)
  • Does the ‘Bitter lesson’ apply? If so, what are its implications?
  • Will AGI see a take-off point like Google translate did?
  • What is the future of bias reduction other than what we see today?
  • Can bias reduction improve human insight and hence improve Joint attention?
  • GPT-3 – linguistic – attention – context
  • If context is the key, what other ways can be to include context?
  • Does problem solving compartmentalize intelligence?
  • Are we comfortable with the ‘spillover’ of intelligence in AI? – like in the facebook experiment

 

References

https://towardsdatascience.com/gpt-3-the-first-artificial-general-intelligence-b8d9b38557a1

https://www.gwern.net/GPT-3

http://haggstrom.blogspot.com/2020/06/is-gpt-3-one-more-step-towards.html

https://nordicapis.com/on-gpt-3-openai-and-apis/

https://www.datasciencecentral.com/profiles/blogs/what-is-s-driving-the-innovation-in-nlp-and-gpt-3

https://bdtechtalks.com/2020/08/17/openai-gpt-3-commercial-ai/

https://aidevelopmenthub.com/joscha-bach-on-gpt-3-achieving-agi-machine-understanding-and-lots-more-artificial/

https://medium.com/@ztalib/gpt-3-and-the-future-of-agi-8cef8dc1e0a1

https://www.everestgrp.com/2020-08-gpt-3-accelerates-ai-progress-but-the-path-to-agi-is-going-to-be-bumpy-blog-.html

https://www.theverge.com/21346343/gpt-3-explainer-openai-examples-errors-agi-potential

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/aug/01/gpt-3-an-ai-game-changer-or-an-environmental-disaster

http://dailynous.com/2020/07/30/philosophers-gpt-3/

https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2020/07/gpt-3-etc.html

https://artificialintelligence-news.com/2020/09/10/experts-misleading-claim-openai-gpt3-article/

https://analyticsindiamag.com/gpt-3-is-great-but-not-without-shortcomings/

https://www.3mhisinsideangle.com/blog-post/ai-talk-gpt-3-mega-language-model/

https://venturebeat.com/2020/06/01/ai-machine-learning-openai-gpt-3-size-isnt-everything/

https://discourse.numenta.org/t/gpt3-or-agi/7805

https://futureofintelligence.com/2020/06/30/is-this-agi/

https://www.quora.com/Can-we-achieve-AGI-by-improving-GPT-3

https://bmk.sh/2020/08/17/Building-AGI-Using-Language-Models/

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23891226

 

image source: Learn English Words: DICHOTOMY



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Yara Shahidi to play Tinker Bell in live-action ‘Peter Pan’

Shahidi will be the first Black woman to play Tinker Bell in the classic Disney story

Grown-ish star Yara Shahidi is set to dazzle in Peter Pan and Wendy, the live-action version of Peter Pan.

The young actress will star alongside Jude Law who will play Captain Hook, Alexander Molony and Ever Anderson who are playing Peter Pan and Wendy, according to Deadline. David Lowery of Disney’s Pete’s Dragon will direct.

Read More: Yara Shahidi inks major deal with ABC Studios to develop her own projects

Disney’s Peter Pan follows the story of a young vivacious boy named Peter that can fly but never grows up. He is the leader of a group of characters called the Lost Boys who find themselves navigating adventures with Tinker Bell in a fictional realm called Neverland.

The young star is the first Black woman to ever play the role, typically reserved for a white actress. Prior to the announcement that Shahidi would play Tinker Bell, the company named singer and actor Halle Bailey as the new Ariel in Little Mermaid. Bailey also appears with Shahidi in Grown-nish.

Back in July theGrio reported that Shahidi signed her very own deal with Disney that will allow her to create her own content. At the time she gushed about the opportunity in a prepared statement per Shadow and Act,

“I’m thrilled to be partnering with my home family, ABC Studios, in this exciting next chapter, alongside my family,” Shahidi said. “It’s exciting to add our production company to the roster of my peers and mentors who are also actively committed to sharing meaningful stories.”

Shahidi wasn’t the only one elated about the partnership. ABC Studios President Jonnie Davis, also released a statement saying,

“We can’t wait to extend and expand our relationship with the incredibly talented Yara Shahidi, who has been a member of the family since Black-ish,” said ABC Studios”. She continues, “When she’s not studying at Harvard and starring in our series ‘Grown-ish,’ she’s mentoring and inspiring other young people, which makes us all feel like underachievers but also very proud that she’s part of our Studio.”

Read More: Yara Shahidi opens up about growing up with Prince during BETX

The film is slated to debut in theaters, not on the streaming platform Disney +.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

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Childhood vaccinations, preventative care sharply decline during pandemic: study

New data uncovered the sharp decline in childhood vaccinations and preventative care amid the coronavirus pandemic.

New data shared by Trump Administration reveals a drop in childhood vaccination rates and doctors’ visits for preventive care as the coronavirus pandemic continues.

Read More: Black doctors’ group forms task force to review virus vaccine

A new release from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) found that beneficiaries age 18 and under that are enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP had relatively low treatment rates due to COVID-19. Although over 250,000 youth enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP were tested for COVID-19 through June, only 32,000 received treatment and less than 1,000 were hospitalized through the end of May.

Data also revealed that while enrollment numbers were up during the pandemic, a decline in service maintained. According to CMS, compared to data from the same time period last year, 2020 records show that 1.7 million or 22% fewer vaccinations were given to beneficiaries up to age two. 3.2 million or 44% fewer child screening services were issued, while 6.9 million or 44% fewer outpatient mental health services after accounting for increased telehealth services were used. There was also a 7.6 million or 69% decrease in dental visits.

The vaccines included were DTaP, Polio, MMR, Hepatitis B, Hib, Pneumococcal conjugate, Chickenpox, Hepatitis A, and Rotavirus. CMS issued a response to the decrease hoping to bring the numbers back up.

“CMS is committed to working with our state partners to help close these gaps in Medicaid and CHIP children’s healthcare, and we will continue to monitor both the direct and indirect impacts of COVID-19 on the Medicaid and CHIP populations using TAF data,” the release said.

Read More: US should have enough virus vaccines to return to ‘regular life’ by end of 2021: CDC

A CMS official stressed the importance of the vaccinations and preventative care to The Hill.

“As a mother, I have witnessed firsthand how important early and regular access to screening and medical care is for children’s development,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma said in a statement to the outlet.

“The absence of these vital health care services may have lifelong consequences for these vulnerable children, and I call on states, pediatric providers, families, and schools to ensure children catch up on overdue medical, behavioral health and dental appointments as well as childhood immunizations,” she added.

Dr. Anthony Fauci Testifies Before Senate On Federal Response To Pandemic
WASHINGTON, DC – SEPTEMBER 23: Anthony Fauci, director of National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at NIH, looks on before testifying at a Senate Health, Education, and Labor and Pensions Committee on Capitol Hill, on September 23, 2020 in Washington, DC. Dr. Fauci addressed the testing of vaccines and if they will be ready by the end of the year or early 2021. (Photo by Graeme Jennings- Pool/Getty Images)

It is required by all 50 states, and the District Of Columbia, for minors to receive certain vaccinations before attending school, however, there are exceptions. Pew Research Center reports every state, and Washington DC, allows children to forego vaccinations for medical reasons.

As of 2016, 46 states allow religious exemptions and 17 states allow parents to claim personal or moral grounds. According to The Hill, the United States experienced one of the largest measles outbreaks in decades last year. The illness was caught and spread by adults and children who had not been vaccinated.

The decline in childhood vaccinations could signify an apprehensive approach to a potential vaccine for COVID-19. Science Magazine found as few as 50% of people in the United States overall are committed to receiving a vaccine. Although the coronavirus pandemic is hitting Black communities harder, 40% of African-Americans said they wouldn’t get a vaccine in a mid-May poll.

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The Business of the Internet Is Stuck in Trump's Swamp

Plus: Silicon Valley’s reaction to Snowden, journalists’ relationships with their subjects, and an unpleasant surprise for hikers.

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Twitter’s Sexual Fascination With a Not-Sexual Octopus Movie

This week, Netflix's My Octopus Teacher got a reputation for being a very different movie than it is. Here's why.

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Sony A8H 4K OLED Review: A Love Letter to the Home Theater

The company's latest TV is a love letter to the home theater, a display defined by its otherworldly vibrance.

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'I want to teach Congolese people what art is'

Dina Ekanga is a Congolese 'nail' artist who was inspired by the Nkisi Nkondi sculptures of the Kongo people.

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These Black Women Are Joining The Board of Directors For Sports Betting Platform DraftKings

This week, sports betting operator DraftKings announced the appointment of Jocelyn Moore and Valerie Mosley to its board of directors in addition to making NBA legend Michael Jordan the new Special Advisor to the board.

“I am very much looking forward to working closely with both Valerie and Jocelyn as we continue to grow DraftKings,” said Jason Robins, DraftKings co-founder, CEO, and chairman of the Board, in a press statement. “They each bring a unique skill set that will complement those of our existing members while simultaneously bringing new perspectives and ideas to the table.”

Before joining DraftKings, Moore served as executive vice president of Communications and Public Affairs for the National Football League and currently serves as the Executive-in-Residence at The Gathering Spot in Atlanta. “I am thrilled to serve on the DraftKings’ Board of Directors. With its innovative and engaging product offerings, DraftKings has revolutionized the way sports fans consume content,” said Moore in a press statement.

“As a responsible corporate citizen, DraftKings is also doing authentic, intentional work to support racial equality and social justice—as demonstrated by today’s Board announcement as well as the company’s $1 million annual commitment to its Inclusion, Equity, and Belonging initiative. I look forward to helping DraftKings continue to innovate for consumers and deliver value for shareholders.”

Mosley comes with years of leadership experience, founding a company called Upward Wealth, a tech platform that helps customers grow their net worth. She has also worked at global management firm Wellington Management Company L.L.P., managing numerous big clients.

“DraftKings is a fast-growing, powerhouse of a company with a strong, competitive, and compassionate management team. I look forward to helping DraftKings continue to add value to their shareholders and stakeholders,” said Mosley in a press statement.

“I have invested in and advised small private companies and large public ones, and I’m excited to help DraftKings continue its already impressive transition into a smart, strategic, and well-managed public company.”



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Black Lives Matter Activist Exposed As White Woman Pretending to be Black

A white Black Lives Matter activist in Indiana was exposed for posing as a Black woman, according to the IndyStar.

After making a proclamation stating, “I have taken up space as a Black person while knowing I am white,” said Satchuel Cole, a highly visible community leader who advocates for racial and social justice in Indiana. She also apologized for deceiving people about her actual race.

After having her true identity revealed with an expose on BlackIndyLIVE, Cole posted a statement on her Facebook page acknowledging the deception.

“Friends, I need to take accountability for my actions and the harm that I have done. My deception and lies have hurt those I care most about. I have taken up space as a Black person while knowing I am white. I have used Blackness when it was not mine to use. I have asked for support and energy as a Black person. I have caused harm to the city, friends and the work that I held so dear. I will do the work to take responsibility for my actions and try to reduce the harm that I have already caused. If there are ways to repair the harm, I will do the work that is required to do so. I will continue to seek the help necessary to heal myself. I am sorry for the harm I have caused. I am sorry for the hurt and betrayal. I will do what I can to show that I want to be a better person.”

Cole has worked with Indy10 Black Lives Matter and Indy SURJ, and was also active in the LGBTQ community.

She was born Jennifer Lynn Benton to two white parents and had her name legally changed to Satchuel Paigelyn Cole in 2010 in Hamilton Circuit Court, according to the online court docket.

Being a member of the Indy10 Black Lives Matter group, she became the spokesperson for the family of Aaron Bailey, who was shot and killed by IMPD following a traffic stop in June 2017. Cole was also one of Indy Pride Parade 2020 Grand Marshals. 

Cole is just the latest in a string of non-Black women claiming to be of African descent.

Rachel Dolezal was a white race activist who claimed to be a Black woman. She was outed by her parents back in 2015. Former George Washington University professor Jessica Krug was recently exposed for lying about being Black last week, while former University of Wisconsin Madison professor CV Vitolo-Haddad confessed to pretending to be Black and/or Latinx.



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Tory Lanez addresses Megan Thee Stallion shooting on new diss track

Tory Lanez breaks silence on the controversy with new diss track, album.

Weeks after he was named as Meghan Thee Stallion’s shooter, rapper Tory Lanez has broken his silence. 

The Canadian artist was arrested in July for carrying a concealed weapon following a shooting incident with Megan. The “Wap” rapper said she was shot in the feet during an argument with Lanez, but she didn’t initially identify him as the person who pulled the trigger.

On Thursday (Sept. 24), Lanez, whose real name is Daystar Peterson, apologized to fans for not speaking up sooner about the controversy. Earlier this month, he allegedly sent a text to Megan, apologizing to her and admitted he was “too drunk” during their wild night out on July 12.

 “To my fans … I’m sorry for my silence …. but respectfully .. I got time today …… 9 PM PST .,” he posted on Twitter Thursday. It marked his first social media post since the shooting. 

Read More: Tory Lanez apologized to Megan Thee Stallion after shooting: ‘I was too drunk’

He then hit up Instagram early Friday morning to promote a new 17-song album to his 10 million followers.

“There is a time to stay silent. And a time to speak,” he captioned a photo of the album’s cover. “I said all I could say on this.”

The album opens with the diss track “Money Over Fallouts,” where he addresses the shooting allegations and claims “Megan people trying to frame me for a shooting.”

He raps: 

“Girl, you had the nerve to write that statement on an affidavit

Knowing I ain’t do it but I’m coming at my truest

Trying to keep this (expletive) 200 with you, shorty, I can prove it.”

The track goes on with him accusing Megan’s people of trying to ruin him. (“Look at how you doing me, people trying to ruin me. And what’s even worse is I’m still thinking about you and me”).

He also claims to still have love for Thee Stallion and hints at a possible reunion (“I love you hard. … I’m still down to renegotiate the unity. My heart is some foolery”). On his ballad “Solar Drive @ Night,” Lanez details a relationship that caused him to fall “in love too fast,” seemingly referring to Megan.

Fans have responded to the album by slamming Lanez for attempting to capitalize on the assault of a Black woman. Many called the diss track “tone deaf” and criticized him for being insensitive.

Read More: Megan Thee Stallion confirms Tory Lanez shot her: ‘Stop lying’

Last month on Instagram live, Megan confirmed that Lanez was the person who shot her and then had his team lie about it. 

“Since y’all hoes so worried ’bout it,” Meg said on the livestream. “Yes, this n***a Tory shot me. You shot me. And you got your publicist and your people going to these blogs lying and sh*t. Stop lying. Why lie? I don’t understand. I tried to keep the situation off the internet, but you dragging it. You really f*ckin’ dragging it. Muthaf*ckas talkin’ ’bout I hit this n***a. I never hit you. Muthaf*ckas was like, ‘Oh, she mad ’cause he was tryna f*ck with Kylie.’ No, I wasn’t. You dry shot me.”

Meanwhile, T.I. has revealed that he talked to Lanez about what went down that night with Megan and encouraged him to publicly speak his truth. 

“Listen, I don’t know, man. But, I spoke to him and he said the sh*t didn’t happen like that,” said Tip. “I said, ‘Well, you need to be saying something, bruh. How did it happen?’ And he said he couldn’t say nothing about how it did actually happen. I told him I understood that.”

The hip-hop star added, “I said, ‘Man, you can’t expect nobody to ignore the facts that are being presented if you don’t have any other conclusive facts that can overturn these. You got to say something, bruh.’ If you ain’t going to say nothing, you can’t expect nobody else to. I ain’t about to just shut up when you got facts out here that say it’s a woman been shot at the hands of another Black man within the culture. We’ve got to speak out on that. We’re the f*ck n***as if we don’t.”

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The Messy Feud Over Who Controls TikTok

This week, we discuss how the fight over the app might shape US tech policy and US-China relations for years to come.

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Haile Gebrselassie: ‘It was the ‘Leg of God''

Athletics legend Haile Gebrselassie explains how he was assisted by the ‘Leg of God’.

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How Teachers Can Foster Community in Online Classrooms

Remote learning doesn't have to mean distracted, disconnected students. Here's what you can do to build calm and trust.

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Why Is It So Hard to Study Covid-Related Smell Loss?

Patients have long reported the sudden inability to smell. But restrictions on in-person exams are complicating efforts to figure out what's going on.

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Bah Ndaw: Mali to swear in civilian interim leader after coup

The ex-defence minister was picked by the coup leader to head a transitional government until elections.

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Netflix on YouTube

Lupin | Official Teaser | Netflix
Some books go way beyond a story. Omar Sy is Assane Diop gentleman-thief, in Lupin. Coming in January on Netflix. SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/29qBUt7 About Netflix: Netflix is the world's leading streaming entertainment service with 193 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, documentaries and feature films across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments. Lupin | Official Teaser | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix


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Thursday, September 24, 2020

7 Amazing Linux Distributions For Kids

Linux and open source is the future and there is no doubt about that, and to see this come to a reality, a strong foundation has to be lied, by starting from the lowest

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Saving Iñupiaq

MIT graduate student Annauk Denise Olin didn’t grow up speaking Iñupiaq, the language of her Alaska Native community. Nevertheless, she’s raising her son in the language — thanks in part to the grounding in linguistics she is gaining through the MIT Indigenous Language Initiative (MITILI), a master’s program for members of communities whose languages are threatened.

“The beauty of the Iñupiaq language is that the perspective and the wisdom of my ancestors has been preserved in the language,” says Olin, who is developing a curriculum for teaching Iñupiaq through MITILI. “If we lose our language, we lose our ability to see into the minds of the people who were able to thrive — for millennia — in one of the harshest climates in the world.”

That climate has been rapidly changing in the last two decades, with disastrous consequences for Olin’s family’s village, Shishmaref. A small community of about 600 people, Shishmaref is perched on tiny Sarichef Island just south of the Arctic Circle — a place where reduced sea ice, melting permafrost, and other impacts of climate change have come to threaten the community’s very existence. The effect of global climate change on Shishmaref is seen as among “the most dramatic in the world.”

“We’ve had several homes fall into the ocean. We’ve lost hundreds and hundreds of feet of land on our island. Historically, we would expect sea ice to form around our island in September or October. In the last few years, we had winters where sea ice would not form until January. This should serve as a warning to the rest of the world,” says Annauk, noting that the village has sought federal help to move to a new location — so far in vain.

Navigating climate change in Shishmaref

Helping her community to navigate the huge challenges presented by climate change is a key motivator for Olin, who started learning the Iñupiaq language intensively in 2016. At the time, she was working full time at the Alaska Institute for Justice (AIJ), a nonprofit dedicated to protecting the human rights of all Alaskans. As the research director of the AIJ’s climate change research and policy center, she worked with 15 Alaska Native villages (including Shishmaref) to begin developing a community-led relocation governance framework.

She says that language issues can present a barrier to such projects because elders in Alaska Native communities are not always fluent and literate in English, and the government rarely communicates in Iñupiaq. In fact, just this past January, Olin and members of the native village of Shishmaref partnered with the Alaska Public Research Interest Group to help produce census materials in Iñupiaq to fill this gap.

“Alaska has been historically underrepresented in the census,” she says. “We created public service announcements with speakers of Alaska Native languages to get more Alaska Native people to participate in the census so we can get adequate funding for our communities.”
 
A language shaped by the Arctic

Olin began teaching Iñupiaq after just one year of study at the Alaska Native Heritage Center in Anchorage. “Teaching and learning a language at the same time is very challenging and time-consuming, but it's common for second-language learners of endangered languages,” she says. One thing she’s learned so far is that Iñupiaq has almost 100 different terms for ice, but not for all of the conditions that people see today in Alaska; essentially, words fail to convey the devastation that climate change has wrought on the Arctic landscape.

“The Iñupiaq language has a complex and robust lexicon related to ice conditions in part because it is linked to our survival. If you’re out hunting and you aren’t able to describe to your hunting partner whether the ice is stable enough, it could cost your lives,” she says. “With climate change, some elders don’t have in their vocabulary words to describe how the ice is changing, so I think what’s important in the future is for us to be able to adapt the language to be able to describe these changing conditions exactly.”

For Olin, that means there need to be more young Iñupiaq speakers. “We need resources to teach in the language so that we have an upcoming generation of speakers even after our beloved elders pass on,” she said, noting that she is hoping her efforts will help undo the damage done by missionaries and the U.S. government, which for more than 100 years forced Iñupiat children to speak English in school.

A foundation in linguistics

Olin is beginning this work at home by speaking Iñupiaq to her son. “When I speak English to my son, it feels like a watered-down version of love, but when I speak Iñupiaq to him, the connection I feel with him is much stronger and intimate.”

To ensure that she is using the language properly, she is working with a mentor, native speaker Edna Ahgeak MacLean, a former faculty member at the University of Alaska Fairbanks and former president of Iḷisaġvik College. MacLean, who has produced both an Iñupiaq dictionary and a grammar, has helped Olin to script conversations so that she and her husband (a tribal member from another Alaska Native group, the Koyukon Athabascan, who speak Denaa’kke) can engage in simple activities — such as making pancakes — while conversing entirely in Iñupiaq.

At the same time, Olin is developing a curriculum for teaching Iñupiaq through her work at MITILI. Inspired by the work of the late MIT Professor Ken Hale, who dedicated his career to the study and support of indigenous languages of the Americas and of Australia, MITILI is a two-year program that provides a full scholarship that covers tuition, fees and health insurance, plus a stipend.

Olin is taking linguistics classes and working with her MIT advisor, Professor Norvin Richards, to gain an understanding of phonology, syntax, and language acquisition. “Some of the critical materials my mentor has written use many linguistic terms and concepts,” she says. “It has made a huge difference to be able to understand what tools are available to break down a lot of these linguistics-heavy resources.”

For example, Richards has helped Olin better understand how to combine morphemes, the smallest units of meaning in a language, to create words. “There are complicated rules that must be followed and practiced to correctly string morphemes together in Iñupiaq,” she says. For instance, in Iñupiaq it’s common for a morpheme to be attached to a word stem to indicate an action or state of being, a function usually performed in English by a verb.
 
Long-term survival of indigenous languages

“One of the things I appreciate about Annauk's work on Iñupiaq is how intellectually omnivorous she is,” says Richards, who has for decades worked to help revive endangered languages, including Wampanoag, a native language of Eastern Massachusetts, and Lardil, an Aboriginal language of Australia. “She's able to build on very careful work by the great Iñupiaq scholar Edna Ahgeak MacLean, but she's clearly determined to develop a language program that incorporates every technique that she thinks will work.”

Noting that the indigenous languages of the United States are all threatened, Richards says Olin is doing work that is critical to maintaining the world's linguistic diversity — learning Iñupiaq “through sheer force of will.” “She's tireless and dedicated, and very smart,” he says. “It's a real privilege to get to work with her.”

Supporting students like Olin has been the central mission of the MITILI since its founding in 2004. “The goals of the MITILI are ones that Ken Hale spoke and wrote about, eloquently and often,” Richards says. “One is to improve our understanding of the languages of the world, not by subjecting indigenous languages to study by outsiders, but by offering indigenous scholars ways to study their own languages with the tools that academic linguists have developed. And another, at least as important, is to try to help indigenous communities give their traditional languages their best chance of long-term survival.”

Olin’s ultimate goal is to fulfill this mission for her community, and her initial plan is to create an Iñupiaq mentor-apprenticeship program. “I’m also very interested in creating a school where the mission, leadership, and content is driven by Iñupiaq people and community — where we learn the language but also how to harvest and process traditional foods, sew traditional clothing, and most importantly, how to treat one another as human beings,” she says.

“As an Iñupiat, it is my responsibility to help provide a place where young people can have access to their identity and culture,” Olin says. “Many of our Iñupiat people are working to overcome historical trauma. Language is a powerful medicine that will help heal our communities.”



Story prepared by MIT SHASS Communications
Editorial and design director: Emily Hiestand
Senior writer: Kathryn O'Neil



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Ex-Florida AG calls Rittenhouse ‘a little boy trying to protect his community’

The 17-year old was arrested last month for the shooting death of two Wisconsin protesters.

Kyle Rittenhouse, the Illinois teenager accused of fatally shooting protesters in Kenosha, Wis. last month, is just “a little boy” who was “trying to protect his community,” so says former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi (R).

The 17-year old was arrested in late August for the shooting death of two Wisconsin protesters. Rittenhouse, who used a semi-automatic rifle in the attack, has been charged with first-degree murder, theGRIO previously reported. 

His case has drawn support from a number of conservative influencers and lawmakers, who have defended the teenager, dubbing him a “patriot.” Political commentator Ann Coulter tweeted that she wanted Rittenhouse as “her president.” 

Read More: Dallas school district apologizes for assignment referencing Kyle Rittenhouse as ‘hero’

When Bondi appeared on Sean Hannity’s Fox News program on Tuesday to discuss the case, she noted that “People have to understand out there, that was a war zone. You have got a 17-year-old out there trying to protect his state,” Bondi said, The Hill reports. 

Rittenhouse is from Antioch, Illinois. His mother reportedly drove him to the anti-police brutality demonstrations in Kenosha, where he decided that it was his duty to protect public property by any means necessary. 

He was arrested in his home state a day after he allegedly shot three people — two fatally. Kenosha County Sheriff David Beth said one victim was shot in the head and another was shot in the chest, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported.

Read More: Kyle Rittenhouse attorney resigns from defense fund due to legal issues

“He is helping people who have been injured. He has paramedic training from being a lifeguard. He is taking graffiti off walls. He is trying to mitigate the chaos out there,” added Bondi, a former special adviser to President Trump

“There were bullets flying everywhere. Other people were firing, This kid was trying to help people. Were there people killed? Absolutely,” she continued. “You’ve got a little boy out there trying to protect his community.”

Bondi went on to say… “Should he have been out there with a gun? No. But should he have been charged with murder? We just don’t know yet,” she added.

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Safaris are back, and luxury lodges are enlisting guests to help save animals

When South Africa reopens on Oct. 1, travelers can visit private game reserves in KwaZulu-Natal that let tourists help protect the country's rhinos and elephants.

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