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Bell to work with Vector Institute on artificial intelligence research – MobileSyrup

Telecommunications giant Bell is entering a partnership with Vector Institute to advance research and applications relating to artificial intelligence.

The institute is dedicated to studying AI and works with various companies and organizations to drive research and development.

Bell notes this partnership will help the company continue innovating in the telecom sector and be a part of emerging AI technologies in Canada and across Bell.

Bell is thrilled to collaborate with Vector and the work theyre doing in developing new research and expertise in artificial intelligence inCanada, John Watson, group president of customer experience, said in a statement.

Fostering the development of new technologies within our borders helps Canadian industry, and in turn, benefits Canadians. We are proud to help accelerate innovation in this field so that we can harness AI for applications at Bell.

The company says its currently using AI in all lines of business and will continue to do so to identify areas to improve its operations and customer experience.

Source: Bell

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Bell to work with Vector Institute on artificial intelligence research - MobileSyrup

HaystackID Expands Artificial Intelligence Capabilities with Reveal – PR Newswire

WASHINGTON, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --HaystackID,a specialized eDiscovery services firm supporting law firms and corporate legal departments,announced today that the company has deepened its partnership with Reveal, a leading provider of AI-powered eDiscovery software. A long-time Brainspace provider, HaystackID can now leverage Reveal's entire end-to-end, cloud-based AI platform, which includes industry-leading processing, early case assessment, document review, investigations, production functionality, and a customizable API-enabled back-end, all packaged with superior visual analytics.

"When our clients are hit with litigation or an investigation, they need to find, understand, and learn from data quickly," HaystackID CEO Hal Brooks said. "We call that 'Discovery Intelligence.' Reveal's platform will help us to enhance this offering."

HaystackID's Discovery Intelligence approach ties together AI, data science, machine learning, and the human touch to gain early insight into information and to drive intelligent decisions in audits, investigations, and litigation. Reveal's out-of-the-box, pre-trained AI models can be added to HaystackID's workflows, making it easier for its clients to harness the power of AI throughout the discovery and/or investigation process.

Reveal's platform also enables HaystackID to continue delivering on its ReviewRight Protect powered by the Protect Analytics tool for the detection, identification, review, and notification of sensitive privacy or data-related breaches and disclosures. Enabled by a collection of proprietary workflows, which now also includes Reveal, Protect Analytics can proactively or reactively help find sensitive data concentrations, locations, and relationships to inform transfer impact assessments, privacy assessments, notification lists, exposure assessments, and discovery targeting.

"As we continue to expand the depth and breadth of Reveal's marketplace offerings, we are especially excited to partner with HaystackID, a demonstrated leader in areas ranging from AI to cyber discovery," said Wendell Jisa, Reveal's founder & CEO. "By taking full advantage of Reveal's platform, the company now has access to the industry's leading SaaS-based AI platform with full integration into its already robust technology stack."

The combination of Reveal's platform and HaystackID's current offerings allows legal professionals to immediately learn more from their data, while also enjoying the flexibility and scalability needed in today's data-centric world.

"We believe that a better understanding of data allows our clients to improve their practice of law, without having to focus too much on processes or data decisions," added HaystackID's Brooks. "We are thrilled to deepen our partnership to help us deliver that for our global clients."

About HaystackIDHaystackID is a specialized eDiscovery services firm that helps corporations and law firms securely find, understand, and learn from data when facing complex, data-intensive investigations and litigation. HaystackID mobilizes industry-leading cyber discovery services, enterprise solutions, and legal discovery offerings to serve more than 500 of the world's leading corporations and law firms in North America and Europe. Serving nearly half of the Fortune 100, HaystackID is an alternative cyber and legal services provider that combines expertise and technical excellence with a culture of white-glove customer service. In addition to consistently being ranked by Chambers USA, the company was recently named a worldwide leader in eDiscovery services byIDC MarketScape and a representative vendor in the 2021 Gartner Market Guide for E-Discovery Solutions. Further, HaystackID has achieved SOC 2 Type II attestation in the five trust service areas of security, availability, processing integrity, confidentiality, and privacy. For more information about its suite of services, including programs and solutions for unique legal enterprise needs, go toHaystackID.com.

About RevealReveal, with Brainspace technology, is a global provider of the leading AI-powered eDiscovery platform. Fueled by powerful AI technology and backed by the most experienced team of datascientists in the industry, Reveal's software offers a full suite of eDiscovery solutions allon one seamless platform. Users of Reveal include law firms, Fortune 500 corporations, legal serviceproviders, government agencies and financial institutions in more than 40 countries across fivecontinents. Featuring deployment options in the cloud or on-premise, an intuitive user design andmultilingual user interfaces, Reveal is modernizing the practice of law, saving users time, money andoffering them a competitive advantage. For more information, visithttp://www.revealdata.comor followus onTwitter,FacebookandLinkedIn.

HaystackID Media Contact:Leora Goldfarb [emailprotected]858-603-5123

Rob Robinson[emailprotected]512-934-7531

HaystackID on Social Media+ Twitter (@HaystackID)+ LinkedIn

Reveal Media Contact:Liz Whelan[emailprotected]

SOURCE HaystackID

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HaystackID Expands Artificial Intelligence Capabilities with Reveal - PR Newswire

Mathematicians to Build New Connections With Machine Learning: Know-How – Analytics Insight

Machine learning makes it possible to generate more data than mathematician can in a lifetime

For the first time, mathematicians have partnered with artificial intelligence to suggest and prove new mathematical theorems. While computers have long been used to generate data for mathematicians, the task of identifying interesting patterns has relied mainly on the intuition of the mathematicians themselves. However, its now possible to generate more data than any mathematician can reasonably expect to study in a lifetime. Which is where machine learning comes in.

Two separate groups of mathematicians worked alongside DeepMind, a branch of Alphabet, Googles parent company, dedicated to the development of advanced artificial intelligence systems. Andrs Juhsz and Marc Lackenby of the University of Oxford taught DeepMinds machine learning models to look for patterns in geometric objects called knots. The models detected connections that Juhsz and Lackenby elaborated to bridge two areas of knot theory that mathematicians had long speculated should be related. In separate work, Williamson used machine learning to refine an old conjecture that connects graphs and polynomials.

Andrs Juhsz and Marc Lackenby of the University of Oxford taught DeepMinds machine learning models to look for patterns in geometric objects called knots. The models detected connections that Juhsz and Lackenby elaborated to bridge two areas of knot theory that mathematicians had long speculated should be related. In separate work, Williamson used machine learning to refine an old conjecture that connects graphs and polynomials.

The most amazing thing about this work and it really is a big breakthrough is the fact that all the pieces came together and that these people worked as a team, said Radmila Sazdanovic of North Carolina State University.

Some observers, however, view the collaboration as less of a sea change in the way mathematical research is conducted. While the computers pointed the mathematicians toward a range of possible relationships, the mathematicians themselves needed to identify the ones worth exploring.

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‘Stand your ground’ laws proliferate after Trayvon spotlight – ABC News

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- The stand your ground self-defense law had been in effect in Florida for more than six years when it became part of the national vocabulary with the death of Trayvon Martin in 2012. When the 17-year-old was fatally shot, Florida was still one of the few states with the law that removes the duty to retreat before using deadly force in the face of danger.

Now, upward of 30 states have some form of the law and recent research indicates they are associated with more deaths as many as 700 additional firearm killings each year, according to a study published this week in the journal JAMA Network Open.

The study found that stand your ground laws in those states could be associated with a national increase of up to 11% in homicide rates per month between 1999 and 2017. The largest increases, between 16% and 33%, were in Southern states including Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Louisiana, the study found.

These findings suggest that adoption of ('stand your ground') laws across the U.S. was associated with increases in violent deaths, deaths that could potentially have been avoided, the study's authors concluded.

Advocates for the laws, especially the National Rifle Association, have argued they act as a crime deterrent by ensuring a person can protect themselves and others against a would-be assailant.

Florida was first in the nation in 2005 to adopt such a law. It was in force when Martin was fatally shot by self-appointed neighborhood watchman George Zimmerman on Feb. 26, 2012. Martin was Black; Zimmerman had a white father and Hispanic mother.

The initial police report said Zimmerman called authorities to report a suspicious person, a guy who, he said, looks like hes up to no good. He followed Martin despite instructions not to do so. In the confrontation that followed, Zimmerman would tell authorities, Martin attacked him, forcing him to use his gun to save himself. Zimmerman was allowed to go free.

Martin's parents questioned Zimmerman's version of events and eventually the news media and others picked up on the case. Zimmerman was arrested six weeks later after then-Florida Gov. Rick Scott appointed a special prosecutor to the case.

Zimmerman's lawyers opted not to pursue a stand your ground claim before trial, which could have resulted in dismissal of murder charges against him and immunity from prosecution. But the law was essentially used as his self-defense argument during the trial, which resulted in his acquittal.

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who was involved in the Martin case, called the Florida law a virtual get-out-of-jail-free card that is essentially a license to kill.

Today the battle rages. Gun-rights supporters argue people should not have to try to retreat before defending themselves, said Alan Gottlieb, founder of the Second Amendment Foundation. He pointed to a Florida homeowner who recently shot and killed a man suspected of shooting a police officer as the man tried to break into his house. While that case could have been covered by other self-defense laws, Gottlieb said stand your ground laws offer reassurance.

Its made a very big difference in self-defense situations, he said.

Three new states passed laws last year removing the duty to retreat: Ohio, Arkansas and North Dakota, where its sponsor said the legislation ensures someone will not have to run away prior to protecting themselves or their family.

Six more loosened requirements to carry guns in public by removing the requirement to get a permit, the largest number of any single year. More than 20 states now allow permitless carry.

The U.S. Supreme Court also is expected to issue a ruling this session on whether New York's restrictive gun permitting law violates the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms. The laws defenders have said striking it down would lead to more guns on the streets of cities including New York and Los Angeles.

Gun control activists say the increasing presence of guns and laws like stand your ground are a deadly combination.

Laws like stand your ground, or shoot first laws, give people like Jordans killer, my sons killer, the idea that you can shoot first and ask questions later, said Rep. Lucy McBath, who entered politics after her son Jordan Davis was slain at a Florida gas station in 2012 by a white man who was angry over the loud music the Black teenager and his friends had been playing in their car. Michael Dunn used the stand your ground law in his defense, but was convicted and is serving a life sentence.

Likewise, Rovina Billingsleas family has never been the same. Her cousin Jasmine McAfee, a mother of two, was killed at the hands of an intimate partner near Orlando about four years ago. The shooter was later acquitted under stand your ground law, leaving her family reeling.

There was no justice, no closure, just pain, Billingslea said.

There are new efforts to push back against the measures against a backdrop of rising gun violence: Lawmakers from 19 states have signed on to a new task force aimed at amending or repealing the laws, especially in Georgia, Kansas and Pennsylvania, as well as Florida. The push is backed by Everytown for Gun Safety and Moms Demand Action, whose founder Shannon Watts said they should be called shoot first laws since they differ significantly from other self-defense laws already on the books.

Since the Martin slaying, Florida has amended its stand your ground law to shift the burden of proof from the person claiming self-defense to the prosecutor handling the case.

Prosecutors and many police organizations have opposed the laws, contending they can protect criminals and hinder the ability to bring justice to fatal shootings.

'Stand your ground' laws provide safe harbors for criminals and prevent prosecutors from bringing cases against those who claim self-defense after unnecessarily killing or injuring others, said David LaBahn, president and CEO of the Association of Prosecuting Attorneys, in testimony to Congress.

In Florida, an ongoing trial in which a retired police captain is accused of murder in the 2014 shooting of a man inside a movie theater hinged initially on a stand your ground claim. A judge denied that claim for the former captain, Curtis Reeves, and that was upheld on appeal.

Reeves, however, is still claiming self-defense in the killing of Chad Oulson following a dispute over Oulson's use of a cellphone during movie previews. The shooting happened after Oulson tossed a bag of popcorn at Reeves.

So far, that has not qualified as a stand your ground defense.

The evidence will show that's no reason to kill another person, said Assistant State Attorney Scott Rosenwasser in an opening statement this week. This was an intentional and purposeful shooting.

Whitehurst reported from Salt Lake City.

This story corrects the name of the journal. It is JAMA Network Open, not the Journal of the American Medical Association.

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'Stand your ground' laws proliferate after Trayvon spotlight - ABC News

Culture Wars: Morrison hides big spend on Australia Day …

Photograph: Glenn Hunt/AAP

Scott Morrisons government has cranked up Australia Day funding tenfold in two years to promote a celebration of which we can be proud, sorry, suspicious. Callum Foote investigates the mysterious National Australia Day Council, and busts them for dodgy accounting.

The National Australia Day Council (NADC), the body in charge of promoting Australia Day and choosing the Australian of the Year, has seen a tenfold increase in its funding since inception in 2014. Its funding has shot up from $4m a year when Tony Abbott was PM to $34m last year, the vast majority coming in the last 2 years under Scott Morrison.

An investigation of the Councils financial disclosures shows, ironically, that the people in charge of promoting Australia Day have been in breach of Australian Accounting Standards. Its accounts have been qualified by the Auditor-General; in other words they have been busted for fudging their income.

With roughly $30 million in government grants to spend in 2021, the NADC launched a multimedia campaign The Story of Australia, spanning television, radio, digital, social media and outdoor ads. There was also a series of multimedia partnerships, including a thank you postcard for first responders delivered to more than 300,000 households.

Who got it, where was it targeted, how did the costs break down, who were the service providers who got some of this $30m, are they Liberal Party donors and associates? We know none of this because, typical of this government and its secrecy, nobody at the National Australia Day Council bothered to return emails or pick up the phone; for days.

It is unclear how much of its large budget was spent on this multimedia advertising campaign, although, if its 2021 financial report is any guide, the amount may be up to $1.6 million as covered in the NADCs other expenses from ordinary activities segment.

Moreover, $7.2 million was spent to host covid safe events on Australia Day, of which the flagship was the Australia Day Live Concert, delivered by the NSW Government in partnership with the NADC. Australia Day Live featured Australian acts performing on Sydney Harbour. It incorporated the Reflect. Respect. Celebrate. theme and branding for the first time.

An additional $6.8 million was spent on local government councils and non-for-profits to host Australia Day events.

The NADC then also spent $352,000 for Australia Day-branded Reflect. Respect. Celebrate. collateral and grants for production of branded materials.

The remaining $15m or so was given out in grants to non-for-profits and related organisations. The recipients are not public.

This year, the NADC is offering $7.5 million worth of grants to help Councils and not-for profit organisations host Australia Day events and activities that bring their community together to reflect respect and celebrate, wrote NADC chief executive Karlie Brand.

The 2021-22 Federal Budget allocated $33 million in funding for the NADC this year.

The National Australia Day Councils claim that their core mission is to actively promote our national day to all Australians to inspire national pride and increase participation and engagement across all sectors of the community.

The organisation was launched back in the 2010s with cricket star Adam Gilchrist as its chair. Now that post is filled by Danielle Roche, former Olympic Hockey star and finance executive.

There are 11 full time equivalent employees employed by NADC, at a cost of $1.6 million, plus an additional half a million to employ the councils CEO Karlie Bran and COO Karen Wilson.

Bran and Wilson gave themselves a $40,000 pay bump between them from 2020 and 2021.

The explosion in public funding which the Council has enjoyed over the past three years has been explained by the need to fund Covid-safe events on Australia day. Though, it is not obvious why these events, if they were held pre-pandemic, now cost ten times the amount that they were previously.

The earliest available financial documents provided by NADC are from 2013, where the organisation was awarded $3.3 million in government grants. Government grants steadily increased by a few hundred thousand, if that, each year until 2020 where they skyrocketed.

Meanwhile the Culture Wars rage on, the corporate media today, on Australia Day, largely muted on the matters of Australia Day dissent and the offense taken by many in First Nations communities.

Perhaps, the rising popularity of anti-Australia Day marches dubbed Invasion Day or Mourning Day marches by their organisers. Last year, up to 4,000 people attended marches in Sydney and Melbourne despite restrictions on gatherings due to covid regulations.

Clearly, these marches are antithetical to the mission statement of the NADC, as they actively promote the idea of changing the date and discourage participation in Australia Day festivities.

The government has encouraged nationalism meanwhile.

Federal Education Minister Alan Tudge campaigned against a new draft education curriculum in September last year, insisting that students should not leave school with a hatred of Australia. Tudge told Triple J that if students did not learn about Australias great successes they were not going to protect it as a million Australians have through their military service.

Instead of Anzac Day being presented as the most sacred of all days in Australia, where we stop, we reflect, we commemorate the hundred thousand people who have died for our freedoms its presented as a contested idea, Tudge said.

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