Archive for November, 2019

Madonna accused of failing to credit songwriter on Madame X album – The Guardian

Madonna has been accused of failing to credit and pay a songwriter on her 2019 album Madame X.

Casey Spooner, a member of the recently disbanded electronic pop group Fischerspooner, wrote on Instagram that he was co-writer of the track God Control. I have had enough Ive gotten no credit and no compensation while youre galavanting around on stage Im completely broke in Berlin. Robbed, ignored and delayed.

Spooner said he had been offered first $10,000, then $25,000 as an advance against future publishing royalties, but argued he should instead be paid 1% of touring profits There is no money in record sales. Period. Not even for Madonna. In a later Instagram post, he said: They are trying to intimidate me its not easy fighting giants.

Spooner says he worked with God Control producer Mirwais in 2017, for the latters solo album, which was later shelved. Elements of their work together later appeared in the Madonna track without his knowledge. He posted a demo version of God Control that he worked on, which features the same lyrics and melody as the Madonna track.

Madonna has not commented on the accusations. The Guardian has requested comment via her UK representatives.

God Control, a dance-pop track that confronts gun control in the US, has already provoked controversy. Its violent music video depicted an attack similar to the one on Orlandos Pulse nightclub in June 2016 that left 49 people dead, and was criticised as horrible by Parkland shooting survivor Emma Gonzalez.

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Madonna accused of failing to credit songwriter on Madame X album - The Guardian

Firefox browser will block the IABs DigiTrust universal ID – Digiday

Mozilla intends to block the DigiTrust consortium from tracking users in its Firefox browser, a blow for the IAB-led effort to create a standardized online user ID thats designed to reduce the online ad industrys reliance on third-party cookies.

DigiTrust, a non-profit acquired by the IAB Tech Lab last year, is working to create a universal, persistent and anonymized user ID. Member companiesinclude prominent ad tech players MediaMath, OpenX, LiveRamp and others. Buy-side DigiTrust members pay a monthly fee to participate, while publisher participants access the service for free.

Similar to other shared identity solutions, DigiTrust offers a pseudonymous and encrypted identifier that can be stored in a first-party cookie provided by the publisher. Other participants can utilize the same identifier on subsequent bid requests and user visits to that publishers site via the browser, instead of needing to submit third-party network requests each time a person loads a publishers webpage.

Theoretically, shared IDs using first-party cookies offer multiple benefits, such as quicker page-load times due to less third-party cookie-syncing behind the scenes. They can also mitigate the risk of data leaks in the bid-stream (a big concern as it relates to Europes General Data Protection Regulation.) Meanwhile, third-party cookies are increasingly being throttled by browsers.

The immediate impact of Firefoxs move to block DigiTrust isnt clear. Firefox only has a 4% share of the global browser market, according to Statcounter. Thats behind leading browsers, Googles Chrome (65%) and Apples Safari (16%), latter of which has sophisticated tracker prevention features. Still, its a setback on the quest toward a common ID solution.

IAB Tech LAB svp of Membership and Operations Jordan Mitchell said in an emailed statement that Firefoxs decision did not come as a surprise.

We know certain companies take the position that there is no sufficient consumer value to justify tracking anonymous audience recognition of any kind, not even for use in communicating privacy choices, Mitchell said. They believe no third party can be trusted. We take a different position: that trust should be established directly between consumers and the brands, and publishers they trust, and with the third parties that those brands and publishers trust.

He added, IAB Tech Lab will continue to work on improving mechanics for privacy and trust, through consumer privacy choices and system-level, industrywide accountability and we think theres value for DigiTrust as a shared resource and utility in this context.

An exclusive, inside look at whats actually happening in the video industry, including original reporting, analysis of important stories and interviews with interesting executives and other newsmakers.

Mozilla leans on an open-source list of trackers compiled by privacy software company Disconnect to inform its Enhanced Tracking Prevention feature, which was introduced in September.

On Nov. 11, John Wilander, an Apple WebKit engineer who works on Safaris ITP, filed an issue on Mozillas Bugzilla forum asking why Firefox did not treat the Digitru.st domain as a tracker. (Apple, which relies on machine learning rather than block lists, already prevents DigiTrust cross-site tracking on Safari.) The same day, Mozilla privacy engineer Steven Englehardtraised an issue on Disconnects developer forumasking whether DigiTrust should be added to the list.

We reviewed this issue in the normal course of business beginning that week and determined that although DigiTrusts service may not track users directly, which is why they were not previously blocked, they clearly enable other services to track, and therefore we updated our definition of tracking to encompass this type of behavior, which we see as a growing threat to consumer privacy, said Casey Oppenheim, Disconnect co-founder.

A Mozilla spokeswoman confirmed that cookie-based tracking for DigiTrust will be blocked in a future version of Firefox.

DigiTrust isnt the only player pushing for the adoption of a universal ID. LiveRamp and The Trade Desk are among the other organizations offering ID solutions. The Trade Desk and LiveRamp domains are also on Disconnects blocklist although LiveRamps ID solution doesnt rely on cookies.

Regulation could prove the bigger roadblock to universal ID solutions. The California Consumer Privacy Act takes effect in January and there is still a level of uncertainty in the ad tech industry as to exactly how the privacy law will apply to third-party cookies used for advertising. The U.K. data regulator has warned that the current real-time-bidding ad tech landscape is not compliant with the European Unions General Data Protection Regulation.

The industry seems to think there is a basic industry right for tracking and targeting of users for advertising purposes, but I dont see the regulators following this logic at all, said Ruben Schreurs, CEO of consulting firm Digital Decisions.

Meanwhile, Google is set to make an announcement in February about how it will treat third-party cookies in Chrome.

David Kohl, CEO of ad tech company TrustX, a member of DigiTrust, said the entire cookie-based advertising infrastructure needs a rethink that involves prioritizing consumer interests, rather than ad techs commercial interests.

We need to start again with a clean sheet and say, how do we create a capability for consumers to understand what identity means on the internet, how its used, and how to control it, Kohl said.

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Firefox browser will block the IABs DigiTrust universal ID - Digiday

SEA Games: Vietnam U22s convene first training session in the Philippines – Nhan Dan Online

Vietnam U22s players commence their first training session at Rizal Memorial Stadium in the cool weather with a temperature of about 28 degrees Celsius.

Arriving at the stadium quite early, the Vietnamese team had to wait for about 30 minutes until the SEA Games 2019 referee completed their pitch assessment, before starting their training.

In the first training session, Park instructed the players to warm up before entering into tactical exercises. In particular, the Republic of Korea tactician had personal expertise exchanges with goalkeeper Bui Tien Dung.

The players worked hard aiming to impress head coach Park to increase their chances of playing in the opening match.

In the Vietnam U22s squad to the Philippines, Park has summoned six players from the national team, including two aged over 22, Do Hung Dung and Nguyen Trong Hoang.

Fans are expecting that Park and his troops will achieve their SEA Games gold medal target following the positive results of Vietnamese football over recent times.

As scheduled, Vietnam U22s will play Brunei U22s in their Group B opener on November 25 before taking on Laos, Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand in the following days.

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SEA Games: Vietnam U22s convene first training session in the Philippines - Nhan Dan Online

JK Consulting Group Officially Launches, Unveils Innovative and Proven Consulting Services – PR Web

Jeff Kovatch, Founder and CEO of JK Consulting Group

WAYNE, N.J. (PRWEB) November 26, 2019

Merging innovation and integrity, founder and CEO Jeff Kovatch, launches JK Consulting Group. Based out of Wayne, NJ, JK Consulting Group offers capital and operational resources to middle-market companies through a team of seasoned private equity professionals and experienced Industry Operating Advisors. This progressive team also inspires business growth through coaching, training, increasing web presence, and overall marketing and sales tactics.

Jeff Kovatch brings over 35 years of experience in the healthcare, hospitality, and dental industries. With a proven track record of managing and developing high-performing teams and growing multimillion-dollar dental practices, he also has expertise in establishing high-profile partnerships, driving revenue for long-term growth, and leveraging a wide range of marketing tactics. Crafting customized marketing campaigns using search engine optimization (SEO), strategic website design, pay-per-click (PPC) advertising, and ground-breaking OTT media services, among other tactics, Kovatch has a talent for piercing through already saturated markets and tapping into untouched ones.

A forward-thinker, Jeff does not consider the tried-and-true solution an option; he believes the only way to stay ahead of the competition is to lead it. Applying this mindset to JK Consulting Group, he offers the truly progressive approaches to marketing, business planning, and sales necessary to reach and surpass each companys specific goals.

Understanding how hard it can be for companies to choose a consultant they can trust, Jeff also brings a level of honest transparency and integrity to everything he does. Whether a merger or acquisition, the development of a start-ups business plan, or the facilitation of expansions and investments, he offers straight-forward and open communication so partners can make the most informed and effective decisions for their future.

Combining progressive techniques with a business model that exudes trust and confidence, JK Consulting Group offers a partnership like no other. Among numerous services, the experienced team at JK Consulting Group delivers expertise in facilitating profitable investments, developing strategic marketing campaigns, and growing sales and revenue to previously unseen returns. Some of the leading marketing services they offer include TV commercials, custom videography, Google Ad Words/PPC funnel campaigns, SEO, OTT media services, and custom content.

To learn more about JK Consulting Group, their recognized results, or the services they offer, visit http://www.jkconsultinggroup.com. To schedule a complimentary business growth consultation with Kovatch himself, call 973-809-5466.

About JK Consulting Group

JK Consulting Group brings over three decades of experience partnering with small, mid-sized, and large companies across the country. Jeff Kovatch, founder and CEO, has proven experience in the healthcare, hospitality, and dental fields and leverages his expertise as a multi-talented business growth visionary with each new partnership. JK Consulting Group takes a hands-on approach to consulting whether through mergers and acquisitions, marketing and sales, facilitation of investments, or tailored coaching and training regimens. Those interested in partnering with an innovative and experienced consultant can call 973-809-5466 or visit http://www.jkconsultinggroup.com to learn more.

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JK Consulting Group Officially Launches, Unveils Innovative and Proven Consulting Services - PR Web

The Ten Best History Books of 2019 | History – Smithsonian.com

The history books we loved most in 2019 span centuries, nations and wars. From womanhood to nationhood, they challenge the construction of identity and mythology. They tell the stories of celebrity weddings, bootlegging trials, and people, places and things we thought we knew but prove, upon closer inspection, to be far more complex.

When Consuelo Vanderbilt of the wealthy American Vanderbilt family married the Duke of Marlborough in 1895, she was one of the most famous debutantes in the world, at a time when interest in the doings of the rich had never been more scrutinized. Consuelo had spent her whole life training to marry a royal, and the event itself was covered in major newspapers across the globe. In The Season: A Social History of the Debutante, author Kristen Richardson contextualizes Consuelo and her weddingand those of other famous debutantes, or young women making their societal debut, from the 1600s to today. The book is a centuries-spanning look at how debutantes and their rituals, from the antebellum South to modern-day Russia, have shaped marriage and womanhood in America and abroad.

For a time, George Remus had it all. The most successful bootlegger in America, Cincinnatis Remus controlled nearly 30 percent of illegal liquor in the United States in the early 1920s. Historian and bestselling author Karen Abbott traces the rise of Remushe was a pharmacist and a defense attorneyand the inevitable fall as he found himself on trial not just for bootlegging, but for the murder of his own wife. In an interview with Smithsonian, Abbott talked about the connection between Remus and F. Scott Fitzgeralds Jay Gatsby: I think Gatsby and Remus both had these longings of belonging to a world that didn't wholly accept them or fully understand them. Even if Fitzgerald never met Remus, everybody knew who George Remus was by the time Fitzgerald started to draft The Great Gatsby.

Many Americans know the names of Red Cloud, Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, key figures in North American Indigenous history. In his new book, Oxford history professor Pekka Hmlinen (his previous book, The Comanche Empire, won the prestigious Bancroft Prize in 2009) looks at the history of the Lakota Nation as other historians have looked at ancient Romea massive (and massively adaptive) empire that shaped the literal landscape of the Western United States as well as the fates of Indigenous groups for centuries.

Civil Rights, free love and anti-war protests have become synonymous with the 1960s, but in American Radicals, Holly Jackson, an associate professor of English at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, traces these movements back a century in a reconsideration of radical protest and social upheaval in the mid-19th century. While some of the names that appear in Jacksons story, like famed abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison, will be familiar to American history buffs, she also revives forgotten figures like Frances Wright, an heiress whose protests against the institution of marriage inspired Walt Whitman to call her one of the best [characters] in history, though also one of the least understood.

Only six people attended Thomas Paines funeral. Once the most famous writer in the American colonies (and, later, the United States of America), the corsetmaker-turned-pamphleteer had been virtually expelled from public life for his radical beliefs and writings, like the ones that suggested a tax on landowners could be used to fund basic income for everyone else. Harlow Giles Unger, a renowned biographer of the Founding Fathers, looks at the Paine we know and the one we dont, in his telling of the story of a man who pursued Enlightenment ideals even when those ideals ran afoul of what was socially acceptable.

As every day a new story about the dangers of vapingor the fervent support of vape fansappears, historian Sarah Milovs The Cigarette looks at the history of smoking in the United States and reminds us that once upon a time, the government was more concerned with the rights of tobacco companies than the rights of non-smokers. The book deftly connects the rise in organized opponents to smoking to food safety, car safety and other consumer rights movements of the 20th century. Kirkus says Milov mixes big-picture academic theory with fascinating, specific details to illuminate the rise and fall of tobacco production.

In Policing the Open Road, legal historian Sarah A. Seo argues that while cars (and highways, for that matter) have long been associated with freedom in the eyes of American drivers, their advent and rapid domination of travel is the basis for a radical increase in policing and criminalization. From traffic stops to parking tickets, Seo traces the history of cars alongside the history of crime and discovers that the two are inextricably linked. At times, says Hua Hsu in The New Yorker, Seos work feels like an underground historyof closeted gay men testing the limits of privacy; of African-Americans, like Jack Johnson or Martin Luther King, Jr., simply trying to get from one place to another.

Using the oral histories of formerly enslaved people, financial records and property history, Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers, associate professor of history at the University of California, Berkeley, makes a clear case that in the American South, many white women werent just complicit in the system of chattel slaverythey actively encouraged and benefited from it. Jones-Rogerss work dismantles the notion that white women in slaveholding families were silent actorsinstead, she argues, they used the institution of slavery to build a specific concept of womanhood that shaped the history of the nation before and after the Civil War.

In 1856, the United States passed a law that entitled citizens to take possession of any unclaimed island containing guano depositsguano, of course, being the excrement of bats. Guano is an excellent fertilizer, and over the course of the 20th century, the U.S. claimed dozens of small islands in remote parts of the world, turning them into territories with few rights of their own. The story of guano is one of many that touch upon the empire forged by the U.S. from Puerto Rico to the Philippines. Daniel Immerwahr, an associate professor of history at Northwestern University, tells the often brutal, often tragic stories of these territories in an attempt to make the Greater United States truly part of U.S. history.

In 1998, Tony Horwitzs Confederates in the Attic changed the way we talk about the Civil War and the American South by making the point that for many, even 150 years after the wars end, the conflict continued. In Spying on the South, published after Horwitzs death this year, the author returned to the Southern states, this time following the trail of the young Frederick Law Olmsted, the landscape architect whose work defined northern cities like New York and Boston. Jill Lepore, writing in the New Yorker, called Horwitz the rare historianthe only historian I can think ofequally at home in the archive and in an interview, a dedicated scholar, a devoted journalist."

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The Ten Best History Books of 2019 | History - Smithsonian.com