Archive for August, 2017

Cash-Flow Software Now Free to Small Businesses – CSPDailyNews.com

RALEIGH, N.C. -- Sageworks, a financial information company that specializes in the financial analysis of privately held companies, will make CashSage, its cash-flow solution for business owners, available for free to all U.S. small businesses, including convenience stores, bars and restaurants.

CashSage provides a dashboard in which business owners use sliders to immediately discern how changes in performance indicators can increase or decrease cash. These indicators include sales growth, overhead growth, net profit margin, accounts receivable days, accounts payable days and inventory days. CashSage also provides automated reports with industry-specific recommendations for improving each, including for c-stores.

From the beginning, Sageworks mission has been to help businesses succeed by giving them information they can use and understand, said Alex Pan, product manager for Sageworks. For years, we have been achieving this goal through our relationships with accounting firms, who rely heavily on Sageworks ProfitCents solution to consult small businesses on their financial performance. Now, with the free release of CashSage for business owners, were fulfilling this mission directly by providing small businesses a solution that shows them how much additional cash they could generate by making small changes in their financial metrics and how to go about doing that in their specific industries.

With CashSage, business owners can:

Raleigh, N.C.-based Sageworks is a financial information company that provides risk management, financial analysis and business valuation solutions to accounting firms, financial institutions and privately held companies.

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Cash-Flow Software Now Free to Small Businesses - CSPDailyNews.com

Jax-based company among 100 fastest-growing in America – Jacksonville Business Journal


Jacksonville Business Journal
Jax-based company among 100 fastest-growing in America
Jacksonville Business Journal
E-file.com offers low-cost income tax preparation software along with free software to all filers who qualify to file with a federal 1040ez form. E-file.com was one of two companies from the Jacksonville area to land in Inc. Magazine's top 500, along ...

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Jax-based company among 100 fastest-growing in America - Jacksonville Business Journal

When Government Rules by Software, Citizens Are Left in the Dark – WIRED

In July, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Sharon Reardon considered whether to hold Lamonte Mims, a 19-year-old accused of violating his parole, in jail. One piece of evidence before her: the output of algorithms known as PSA that scored the risk that Mims, who had previously been convicted of burglary, would commit a violent crime or skip court. Based on that result, another algorithm recommended that Mims could safely be released, and Reardon let him go. Five days later, police say, he robbed and murdered a 71-year old man.

On Monday, the San Francisco District Attorneys Office said staffers using the tool had erroneously failed to enter Mims prior jail term. Had they done so, PSA would have recommended he be held, not released.

Mims case highlights how governments increasingly rely on mathematical formulas to inform decisions about criminal justice, child welfare, education and other arenas. Yet its often hard or impossible for citizens to see how these algorithms work and are being used.

San Francisco Superior Court began using PSA in 2016, after getting the tool for free from the John and Laura Arnold Foundation, a Texas nonprofit that works on criminal-justice reform. The initiative was intended to prevent poor people unable to afford bail from needlessly lingering in jail. But a memorandum of understanding with the foundation bars the court from disclosing any information about the Tool, including any information about the development, operation and presentation of the Tool.

The agreement was unearthed in December by two law professors, who in a paper released this month document a widespread transparency problem with state and municipal use of predictive algorithms. Robert Brauneis, of George Washington University, and Ellen Goodman, of Rutgers University, filed 42 open-records requests in 23 states seeking information about PSA and five other tools used by governments. They didnt get much of what they asked for.

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Many governments said they had no relevant records about the programs. Taken at face value, that would mean those agencies did not document how they chose, or how they use, the tools. Others said contracts prevented them from releasing some or all information. Goodman says this shows governments are neglecting to stand up for their own, and citizens, interests. You can really see who held the pen in the contracting process, she says.

The Arnold Foundation says it no longer requires confidentiality from municipal officials, and is happy to amend existing agreements, to allow officials to disclose information about PSA and how they use it. But a representative of San Francisco Superior Court said its contract with the foundation has not been updated to remove the gag clause.

Goodman and Brauneis ran their records-request marathon to add empirical fuel to a debate about widening use of predictive algorithms in government decision-making. In 2016, an investigation by ProPublica found that a system used in sentencing and bail decisions was biased against black people . Scholars have warned for years public policy could become hidden under the shroud of trade secrets, or technical processes divorced from the usual policy-making process.

The scant results from nearly a year of filing and following up on requests suggests those fears are well-grounded. But Goodman says the study has also helped convince her that governments could be more open about their use of algorithms, which she says have clear potential to make government more efficient and equitable.

Some scholars and activists want governments to reveal the code behind their algorithms, a tough ask because they are often commercial products. Goodman thinks its more urgent that the public knows how an algorithm was chosen, developed, and testedfor example how sensitive it is to false positives and negatives. Thats no break from the past, she argues, because citizens have always been able to ask for information about how new policy was devised and implemented. Governments have not made the shift to understanding this is policy making, she says. The concern is that public policy is being pushed into a realm where its not accessible.

For Goodmans hopes to be met, governments will have to stand up to the developers of predictive algorithms and software. Goodman and Brauneis sought information from 16 local courts that use PSA. They received at least some documents from five; four of those, including San Francisco, said their agreement with the Arnold Foundation prevented them from discussing the tool and its use.

Some things are known about PSA. The Arnold Foundation has made public the formulas at the heart of its tool, and the factors it considers, including a persons age, criminal history and whether they have failed to appear for prior court hearings. It says researchers used data from nearly 750,000 cases to design the tool. After PSA was adopted in Lucas County, Ohio, the Arnold Foundation says, crimes committed by people awaiting trial fell, even as more defendants were released without having to post bail.

Goodman argues the foundation should disclose more information about its dataset and how it was analyzed to design PSA, as well as the results of any validation tests performed to tune the risk scores it assigns people. That information would help governments and citizens understand PSAs strengths and weaknesses, and compare it with competing pretrial risk-assessment software. The foundation didnt answer a direct request for that information from the researchers this March. Moreover, some governments now using PSA have agreed not to disclose details about how they use it.

An Arnold Foundation spokeswoman says it is assembling a dataset for release that will allow outside researchers to evaluate its tool. She says the foundation initially required confidentiality from jurisdictions to inhibit governments or rivals from using or copying the tool without permission.

Goodman and Brauneis also queried 11 police departments that use PredPol, commercial software that predicts where crime is likely to occur and can be used to plan patrols. Only three responded. None revealed the algorithm PredPol uses to make predictions, or anything about the process used to create and validate it. PredPol is marketed by a company of the same name, and originated in a collaboration between Los Angeles Police Department and University of California Los Angeles. It did not respond to a request for comment.

Some municipalities were more forthcoming. Allegheny County in Pennsylvania produced a report describing the development and testing of an algorithm that helps child-welfare workers decide whether to formally investigate new reports of child maltreatment, for example. The countys Department of Human Services had commissioned the tool from Auckland University of Technology, in New Zealand. Illinois specifies that information about its contracts for a tool that tries to predict when children may be injured or killed will be public unless prohibited by law.

Most governments the professors queried didnt appear to have the expertise to properly consider or answer questions about the predictive algorithms they use. I was left feeling quite sympathetic to municipalities, Goodman says. Were expecting them to do a whole lot they dont have the wherewithal to do.

Danielle Citron, a law professor at the University of Maryland, says that pressure from state attorneys general, court cases, and even legislation will be necessary to change how local governments think about, and use, such algorithms. Part of it has to come from law, she says. Ethics and best practices never gets us over the line because the incentives just arent there.

Researchers believe predictive algorithms are growing more prevalent and more complex. I think that probably makes things harder, says Goodman.

UPDATE 07:34 am ET 08/17/17: An earlier version of this story incorrectly described the Arnold Foundation's PSA tool.

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When Government Rules by Software, Citizens Are Left in the Dark - WIRED

Is There a Way to Prevent the Next Charlottesville? – Slate Magazine (blog)

These guys aren't law enforcement. Is this about to become normal?

Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

With more white nationalist rallies planned in the coming weeks, including one this upcoming Saturday in Boston, cities across the country may soon be looking for ways to try to prevent the sort of violence that took place last weekend in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Bostons Mayor Martin Walsh is reportedly looking into legal grounds to stop the next alt-right rally from happening in his city. Those rallygoers are permitted, though, and have a First Amendment right to peaceably assemble.

Peaceablyis the key word there, however. The white supremacists who showed up in Charlottesville were reportedly armed to the teeth. Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe claimed his state police were outgunned on Saturday, while one white nationalist leader showed off his firepower in a popular Vice News documentary about the weekends events. Another rallygoer in that videoclad in camouflageseemed to be warning police that he planned to send at least 200 people with guns to gather equipment that was at the site of the rally. Heavily armed paramilitary groups barely distinguishable in appearance from law enforcement officials, meanwhile, made their own show of force in Charlottesville, saying they were there to keep the peace between white nationalist rallygoers and counter-protesters.

As my Slate colleagues Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern reported on Monday, those trying to exercise First Amendment rights clashed with those claiming to exercise Second Amendment rightsincluding Virginias open-carry lawsin Charlottesville, and the guns won. Current constitutional doctrine, they argued, is poorly equipped to handle a situation where one heavily armed group of assemblers is able to silence with their weaponry the free speech rights of a different group of would-be assemblers.

But University of Virginia professor Philip Zelikow argues that the Constitution does allow for restricting armed rallies. Writing in Lawfare, Zelikow notes that there is precedent for preventing groups of heavily armed white supremacists from gathering in intimidating mass assemblies:

The judge granted their request, the order worked, and the group was enjoined from displays of intimidation.

Reading a description of one white supremacist group in Charlottesville by BuzzFeed News reporter Blake Montgomery, its hard not to think of that standard for an illegal paramilitary gathering:

In his article, Zelikow went onto write that, while the Second Amendment guarantees a right to a well-regulated militia, federal courts have held that private militias do not have the right to free reign.

When private self-styled militias get organized, equipped to fight, and travel to my town for a confrontation, this is not a Second Amendment story, Zelikow told me over email. They are organized to violate civil rights and intimidate my townspeople, to show their strength not with their speech, but with their firepower.

Zelikow argues that towns and citizens have the right to sue and enjoin such heavily armed organized groups from staging such rallies. He also suggests that rallygoers like the ones in Charlottesvilleas well as some of the counter-protestersmight have fit the standard for such an injunction. [T]here were a number of clusters that deployed together with standardized dress (to recognize each other), standardized insignia, similar combat/riot gear, and similar classes of weapons, Zelikow, who worked in multiple prior presidential administrations, said over email. Not incidentally, the Antifa [anti-fascist] group also has some standardized identifiers (red neckerchiefs, for example), deploys together in an obviously coordinated way, and carried assault weapons.

(At least one leftist group was reported to have showed up armed with guns.)

Ultimately, Zelikow compares the appearance of these sorts of heavily armed groups asserting the right to mass public assembly to darker periods in world and U.S. history:

The coming weeks seem likely to continue to test that line between protected assembly and unprotected civil violence. The ability of civil authorities to respond when that line is crossed also seems likely to face some very serious challenges.

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Is There a Way to Prevent the Next Charlottesville? - Slate Magazine (blog)

‘We can’t cope alone!’ Italy says its been abandoned by Europe over migrant crisis – Express.co.uk

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The nation is crumbling under the strain of the migrant crisis, and was having to handle it alone as EU member states were too busy bickering to come up with a burden sharing programme, proposed by the European Commission last year.

He told German newspaper Bild: Italy is contributing, but we cannot cope with this burden alone.

Asked if Italy had been abandoned by other European nations, Mr Alfano said: A very clear yes.

The European Commissions proposal would see member states contributing to a refugee resettlement plan and asylum fund.

But governments should be looking to Libya as the only solution to decrease the number of migrants reaching Italy, he said.

The Italian MP did not slam Angela Merkels open door refugee policy, even though it lead to a sharp increase in asylum seekers heading to Europe, saying she "was on the right side of the story in 2015".

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Italy is contributing, but we cannot cope with this burden alone

Angelino Alfano

He said the German Chancellor showed leadership, with strength and courage, and noted now most migrants are coming from African countries rather than the Middle East.

Alfano dismissed Austrias threats of sending troops to the border with Italy to stop migrants crossing the border.

He said: This is pure election campaigning, which we do not take seriously.

Our borders are clearly sealed. It is impossible for the migrants to travel to other countries.

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In recent days, Libya banned foreign ships from a stretch of water off its coast, prompting many NGOs to halt their search and rescue missions.

The move was welcomed by the Italian government.

Libya alleged some charities were facilitating illegal migration and working with traffickers to pick up migrants.

One charity, Sea Eye, branded the ban an explicit threat against the private NGOs and the ban would put many lives at risk.

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'We can't cope alone!' Italy says its been abandoned by Europe over migrant crisis - Express.co.uk