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NFTs, Cryptocurrency, Blockchain, And web3 Are Environmentally Harmful: The New Trend For Watches Is Hypocritical With Self-Professed ‘Green’…

Tell me with whom you associate, and I will tell you who you are. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

The luxury watch industry depends a great deal upon credibility. Arguably, belief in superior quality is the top reason people are willing to hand over four-, five-, or six-figure sums of money to buy a watch. If the watch-buying public starts to doubt a brands quality claims due to a loss of credibility, the brands future is in serious question.

For these reasons, Ive watched with some trepidation as various watch brands have started to enter the cryptocurrency / blockchain / non-fungible token (NFT) world. This space is highly specialized in skills that are not typically associated with traditional watchmaking. A lathe isnt much use when youre trying to evaluate a particular public key encryption standard, for example (and vice versa). For this reason, horologys entre to the crypto space almost always involves a partnership with another person or organization already active in that space.

And this is where the industry exposes itself to risk.

Bitcoin mining farm servers (photo courtesy Marko Ahtisaari/Wikipedia)

There is rampant fraud and scheming in the cryptocurrency and NFT community. In a recent interview with Bloomberg, a cryptocurrency entrepreneur with an estimated net worth of $24 billion explained an emerging cryptocurrency fad called yield farming. The interviewer concluded that this was nothing more than a Ponzi scheme.

We shouldnt equate financial success with value creation. After all, convicted Ponzi schemer Bernie Madoff had an estimated net worth of $17 billion at some point (he also had a fairly decent watch collection that was sold off by U.S. Marshalls back in 2009).

Software engineer Molly White runs web3isgoinggreat.com, a web page that compiles all of the unseemly activity taking place in the cryptocurrency world. The pages motto is, web3 is going just great and is definitely not an enormous grift thats pouring lighter fluid on our already-smoldering planet. To clarify: web3 is a new buzzword for the cryptocurrency realm and its adjacent activity.

Whites motto also points out that web3 consumes massive volumes of energy, a byproduct that is likely worsening climate change. As a side note, any watch brand touting their environmental initiatives while simultaneously entering web3 territory is arguably hypocritical.

Whites web page includes a running counter of reported funds lost to fraudulent web3 activity. As of today, it stands at $9.5 billion. That is a lot of grift. In May of 2021, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission reported a tenfold increase of losses from cryptocurrency investment scams. The list goes on.

The risk for a watch brand is that it will lash up with a cryptocurrency expert, there will be a scandal involving fraud, the brands reputation will irrevocably tarnish, collectors will doubt the brands claims regarding the quality of the product, and that will be the end for that brand. While this may seem a remote possibility, there is already one episode that illustrates a good portion of this disaster in waiting.

Jacob & Co. SF24 Tourbillon NFT

Approximately one year ago, Jacob & Co. announced that it would sell the worlds first NFT of a luxury watch: the SF24 Tourbillon piece unique. The plan involved auctioning the watch NFT on ArtGrails, a self-described standalone Blue Chip NFT platform. After the auction supposedly closed, the reported result was that the NFT sold for $100,000.

The problem is that the SF24 Tourbillon digital asset was never even minted on the blockchain, or at least I cannot find it. Back in November 2021, Twitter user @teeprofit described the many failures of ArtGrails, observing, @Jacobandco X @argrails [sic] drop, which they did not manage to sell to anyone but themselves lol was not even minted no proof on blockchain. I posted about these irregularities on my Instagram stories and asked if anyone could find the SF24 Tourbillon on the blockchain and to DM me its address.

I was met with silence. I invite readers to peruse ArtGrails 676 items that actually were minted on the blockchain to see if they can find the SF24 Tourbillon.

It is one thing to debate whether digital assets are really worth any money. If the digital asset itself doesnt even exist on the blockchain, though, there is absolutely no reasonable basis to argue that it is worth anything, never mind $100,000.

Indeed, when ArtGrails founder Avery Andon was questioned about these events, he replied on Twitter, These were done in the early days and never promised any utility outside of the art. While the definition of an NFT is, in some ways, surrounded by mystery, there is common understanding that it typically involves minting a token on a blockchain. Unless, apparently, the seller is not promising any utility, whatever that means.

At the end of the day, watch brands must ask themselves if the risk accompanying the web3 space, along with environmental harm, is worth any possible reward. Watch collectors should also ask themselves if a watch brands decision to take part in web3 signals a level of risk-taking they can live with.

As complicated in-house movements see wider adoption, buying a watch implies that a collector relies upon the long-term viability of a manufacturer. If a risk-taking manufacturer disappears, it may be prohibitively expensive, or perhaps impossible, to service a particular timepiece. For now, it might be reasonable to conclude that the best brand is one that decides NFT stands for not for this manufacturer.

Brendan M. Cunningham, PhD is a professor of economics at Eastern Connecticut State University and founder of http://www.horolonomics.com. He has a forthcoming book on the history of Rolex; you can learn more by visiting http://www.sellingthecrown.com and sign up for email updates on the project.

Real Or Illusory? A Watch Collectors Foray Into The World Of Digital Collectibles And NFTs

What Happens After A Watch Is Stolen? Chris Marinello Of Art Recovery Can Help

Watch Investment Funds: Show Me The Money!

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NFTs, Cryptocurrency, Blockchain, And web3 Are Environmentally Harmful: The New Trend For Watches Is Hypocritical With Self-Professed 'Green'...

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Could These Be 3 Simple Ways To Earn With Cryptocurrency? – Benzinga – Benzinga

This post contains sponsored advertising content. This content is for informational purposes only and is not intended to be investing advice.

The popularity of cryptocurrencies over the past few years has lured many people into what is being called a 21st-century gold rush.

The many success stories have arguably instilled a curiosity about the potential of the crypto industry.

Cryptocurrency, commonly known as crypto, is a virtual currency that uses cryptography to secure its transactions. Unlike fiat currencies, cryptos are not issued or controlled by any governing body; rather they use a decentralized system called blockchain to record transactions and issue new tokens.

Some of the trending cryptos are Bitcoin BTC/USD, Ethereum ETH/USD, Cardano ADA/USD and Dogecoin DOGE/USD.

When the first crypto, Bitcoin, was invented by Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008, the only way to earn money was by mining or receiving tokens from a colleague; however, now there are many more ways to make money with crypto, including staking, trading Application Programming Interface (API) and affiliate programs.

Staking is a way of validating crypto transactions by using tokens and coins locked in a crypto wallet. A proof-of-stake network uses the coins to validate transactions in the blockchain network, and there are rewards for doing so. In essence, staking is more like lending coins to the network and then being rewarded in return.

Staking allows the network to maintain its security and validate transactions. This process is considered to be significantly more energy-efficient than mining and does not require purchasing expensive hardware.

An API (application programming interface) is an interface between one computer and another that allows the computers to communicate with each other. A cryptocurrency exchange API acts as a bridge between the client and the broker so they can perform different functions, such as buying and selling crypto.

Trading APIs link the clients account to the brokers automated trading system so they can carry out trades quickly and effectively. They also allow the client to do algorithmic trading using a preconfigured set of rules (algorithms) to execute trades at high speeds.

Affiliate or referral programs are one of the popular ways to make money online. The idea behind them is simple: Promote offers and earn revenue. A personal referral link is shared, and when someone uses the link to join a website or buy a product, the owner of the link receives a commission. Crypto affiliate programs can help bring recurring revenue for months or even years.

CEX.IO is one of the companies in the crypto space that reports allowing its customers to use the three services to earn money.

CEX.IO is a regulated and licensed global cryptocurrency exchange headquartered in London. The company enables its customers to buy, sell, trade, exchange, store, borrow and earn crypto using a mobile app, website, WebSocket (WS) and REST API. CEX.IO claims to be one of the first companies to make fiat-to-crypto transactions accessible by offering card payments and bank transfers to its clients.

Staking can be a complex process that requires a certain level of technical knowledge, but CEX.IO says it has a uniquely designed staking platform that makes it easier for users without much experience with crypto and blockchain technology to participate.

CEX.IOs staking platform supports 14 cryptos, and the company says it is working on adding more. Payouts from staking are automatic so the user does not need to claim rewards. Rewards are calculated every hour and payouts are done every month. CEX.IO promises an annual percentage yield (APY) of up to 23% from its staking compared to other players in the field.

The company says its WS API allows users to perform multiple functions, including subscribing to order books, viewing open order requests and getting real-time market statistics and data. Using its REST API, users can get real-time price feeds, access multiple price charts and view trade history.

CEX.IOs affiliate program is also open to all partners to make passive income. A partner earns 30% of the trading transaction commission from each referral indefinitely. There is no cap on the amount of referral rewards that can be earned. The company boasts that becoming a partner comes at low or no cost and there are no financial risks involved in promoting its exchange.

This post contains sponsored advertising content. This content is for informational purposes only and is not intended to be investing advice.

Photo by Kanchanara on Unsplash

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Mothers of pandemic babies in Anchorage remember isolation, anxiety and deep resolve – Anchorage Daily News

Tiffany Hall speaks with her 2-year-old daughter Margaret in their Anchorage home on Thursday. (Bill Roth / ADN)

Part of a series. The Anchorage Daily News and the Anchorage Museum are collaborating on Neighbors: Stories from Anchorages pandemic years. Were collecting stories and making opportunities for residents to share experiences from the past two years. Wed love to hear from you. Email neighbors@adn.com.

It was five days before Anchorage shut down in March 2020, in a room at Providence Alaska Medical Center, when Tiffany Hall says she first understood what it meant to be a mother.

She was in labor, having a baby as a single person. Pain filled her with dread. Exhaustion scrambled her thoughts. Friends had tickets to fly to Anchorage to help out, but COVID grounded them and made the world feel upside-down and scary. Hall was allowed only two people in the room aside from hospital staff: a doula, and her sister Lisa. She told Lisa she couldnt keep going.

I know, her sister said. Then Hall looked around the room at the nurses and the doula. All of them had been through this before.

They were all just like, Yep, this is it, sister, Hall said.

Hall got a burst of motivation. The pandemic had filled everything with uncertainty, but baby Margaret made her entrance anyway.

Parts of motherhood are a sojourn, especially in the beginning, with pregnancy, birth, certain middle-ofthe-night scenes only a mother knows, like when shes beyond tired, nursing in the dark. You cant anticipate the grit thats required until you find yourself in the middle of it with no choice. Some women who gave birth to pandemic babies in Anchorage hospitals say their transitions to motherhood were quieter, harder, more anxious and lonelier. They also say dealing with all that uncertainty clarified priorities, strengthened bonds with family and showed them they were more capable than they imagined.

These women, they had to dig deep and continue to have to dig deep to get through something that is hard, said Natalie Ward, an obstetrician at Anchorage Womens Clinic. You know courage is not the absence of fear, right? Its being scared to death and doing it anyway. The pandemic has made us do that in multiple areas, but particularly in becoming mothers.

Ward said the biggest change the pandemic brought was isolation, especially during birth. The policy of limiting people who attended births reduced risk, but the isolation that came with that created other hardships. Lack of child care has also been a problem.

People who had toddlers at home, and especially ones who were here that dont have family in the area, its been a huge struggle for them to figure out what to do with their little kids when its time to have a baby, she said. So weve had moms come in where the dad actually didnt come for the birth but stayed home to take care of the other children. They may have come in to deliver alone, which is not that usual.

Alaskas seven-day new case rate per 100,000 is still high, but it fell from fifth highest in the nation to 10th highest over the last week. All three hospitals in Anchorage continue to limit the number of birth attendants to two, according to their websites. Earlier in the pandemic, when cases were surging, hospitals limited that number to one.

Before scientists understood the disease well, even Ward isolated herself, separate from her husband and four children. Decisions about vaccination and worry over getting sick stressed her patients in new ways. She found that women were more often coming to appointments alone. They were also more often alone in tragic situations, like when a baby didnt have a heartbeat on a scan. She called the pandemic a magnifying glass for all of the things that come with the transition to motherhood. It made the hard parts harder and also, when women came through, it heightened the joy.

This whole living through a pandemic has really sharpened our focus on so many things, she said.

Elana Habib had been a really social person ahead of the pandemic. She met her partner five months in and got pregnant unexpectedly, something they both welcomed. All of that made her turn inward, she said, which was rewarding and needed. The pregnancy and the pandemic connected and refocused them, she said. They both wanted a family.

Honestly, my experience with being pregnant during COVID was amazing because I didnt have to be around people who judged me. I mean, I dont know if youve been pregnant, but it is insane, she said.

It was also lonely. She missed spending Christmas with family. Her partner and her dad came to her birth, with a doula rotating in because of the two-person limit.

My mom was also in town, but we had to end up in the hospital for five days due to a C section, she said. I think that was hard on the family because, you know, we didnt know when I was actually going to have a baby and so my mom was basically in town for quite a while without seeing any of us.

Katie Cueva gave birth in August of 2021. She missed the community and ceremony of having an in-person baby shower, she said. But, she liked working remotely on Zoom because she could choose whether to tell co-workers about her pregnancy. Working remotely also made things easier postpartum. Cueva gave birth in the hospital with only a doula and hospital staff. The sense of accomplishment afterward was incredible.

The nurse was amazing. My midwives were amazing. My body, it turns out, is also amazing, she said.

COVID complicated the time directly after birth for many women as well. Doctor and lactation consultant visits often happened over Zoom.

My lactation consultant was on my phone while, like, I have Margaret in one hand, my phone kind of nestled somewhere, my boob in another hand, Hall said.

Halls parents moved in with her for a while after she gave birth. Her own mom helped her hold the phone during that appointment with the lactation consultant. Many of the women said they relied heavily on their parents, in particular their mothers.

Tiffany Hall and her 2-year-old daughter Margaret play basketball in the living room of their Anchorage home. (Bill Roth / ADN)

Tiffany Hall reads a book to her daughter Margaret on Thursday. (Bill Roth / ADN)

Ty Roberts, a longtime doula, said the pandemic put a dent in important support for women before, during and after birth. Many women couldnt use doulas during their pandemic pregnancy and birth due to the attendant limits. Because they didnt have that relationship in place, they didnt use them postpartum. Many also didnt feel comfortable gathering with other mothers because of virus concerns.

Moms, they want to go meet the other moms for lunch. You know, they want to do these things and just talk about life and what theyre experiencing, which is a good outlet for their emotional needs, and their mental capacity, she said.

Thats only now easing back, she said. Doula work in hospitals is also getting easier.

Sarah Wilcox, who had her baby in March 2021, said she missed just being around other mothers parenting their kids. Wilcox spent a lot of time researching conflicting advice online for things like feeding and sleeping and then gave up.

I was like, OK, never mind. I think I can just figure this out. Shes a human. Im a human. We can connect and figure out what she needs and how I can be her mom, she said.

Robin Echols had her first child in February of 2020 and soon became pregnant again. Her second pregnancy was complicated, and she was put on bed rest. Doctors urged her to move to the hospital and finish her pregnancy there. She would have been unable to have visitors for weeks.

I have a son. I have a husband, she said. I was like, theres no way I will survive living in a hospital isolated.

She gave birth to her daughter, Saoirse, in February. Saoirse was born without kidneys or a bladder. Doctors told her the newborn wouldnt survive. The hospital can make exceptions to the visitor policy in certain circumstances, like end-of-life visits. It allowed her pastors, Saoirses grandparents and her son in to see the tiny girl. After that, doctors told her that theyd need to take her daughter off life support. Echols was grateful she and her husband were alone.

The doctor said, OK, its time. You have to make that decision now. I said, I just want to hold her, she said. It was the toughest mother decision Ive had to make.

The pandemic became irrelevant at that point, she said, but the experience cemented her belief that time with her children is precious. She vowed to make time with her son a priority.

[Parents of Anchorage 6-year-old with leukemia seek help finding a potentially life-saving stem cell donation]

Savanah Bonfield plays with her twin boys Francis, left, and Simon on Friday at their home in Campbell Park. (Loren Holmes / ADN)

Savanah Bonfield was pregnant with twins over the winter and spring of 2020 and 2021. Her husband, Colin, was away in Seward in July 2021 when she started having signs of labor early. She ended up needing an emergency C-section. A friend accompanied her while Colin raced home.

In the operating room, she was the only one that could be in there. Colin was driving back from Seward, and he got to the hospital in time, but he couldnt go in to the operating room, she said.

That was hard on both of them, but Savanah also said she was glad to have her friends support. What came next was a month-and-a-half stay for the babies in the neonatal intensive care unit, with limited visitors. The Bonfields also have an older son who needed care and had to wait to meet his siblings. They took all kinds of precautions to keep everyone healthy, but Savanah ended up getting infected with COVID-19, as did Colin, and shes fairly certain the babies did as well. She also lost two relatives to COVID. The whole experience was hard and frustrating beyond measure, she said. She learned to make peace with what she couldnt control.

I think that I found a lot of joy and just feeling thankful that the twins were here and well and getting better all the time, she said. It was a rough few years. You know, I think, though, that now I feel like, Life: Try it, try me. I can take it.

Savanah and Colin Bonfield play with their twin boys Simon, left, and Francis on Friday at their home in Campbell Park. (Loren Holmes / ADN)

Savanah Bonfield plays with her boys Otto, 7, left, and twins Simon and Francis. (Loren Holmes / ADN)

Savanah Bonfield plays with her twin boys Francis, left, and Simon on Friday. (Loren Holmes / ADN)

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The secret world beneath our feet is mind-blowing and the key to our planet’s future – The Guardian

Beneath our feet is an ecosystem so astonishing that it tests the limits of our imagination. Its as diverse as a rainforest or a coral reef. We depend on it for 99% of our food, yet we scarcely know it. Soil.

Under one square metre of undisturbed ground in the Earths mid-latitudes (which include the UK) there might live several hundred thousand small animals. Roughly 90% of the species to which they belong have yet to be named. One gram of this soil less than a teaspoonful contains around a kilometre of fungal filaments.

When I first examined a lump of soil with a powerful lens, I could scarcely believe what I was seeing. As soon as I found the focal length, it burst into life. I immediately saw springtails tiny animals similar to insects in dozens of shapes and sizes. Round, crabby mites were everywhere: in some soils there are half a million in every square metre.

Then I began to see creatures I had never encountered before. What I took to be a tiny white centipede turned out, when I looked it up, to be a different life form altogether, called a symphylid. I spotted something that might have stepped out of a Japanese anime: long and low, with two fine antennae at the front and two at the back, poised and sprung like a virile dragon or a flying horse. It was a bristletail, or dipluran.

As I worked my way through the lump, again and again I found animals whose existence, despite my degree in zoology and a lifetime immersed in natural history, had been unknown to me. After two hours examining a kilogram of soil, I realised I had seen more of the major branches of the animal kingdom than I would on a weeks safari in the Serengeti.

But even more arresting than soils diversity and abundance is the question of what it actually is. Most people see it as a dull mass of ground-up rock and dead plants. But it turns out to be a biological structure, built by living creatures to secure their survival, like a wasps nest or a beaver dam. Microbes make cements out of carbon, with which they stick mineral particles together, creating pores and passages through which water, oxygen and nutrients pass. The tiny clumps they build become the blocks the animals in the soil use to construct bigger labyrinths.

Soil is fractally scaled, which means its structure is consistent, regardless of magnification. Bacteria, fungi, plants and soil animals, working unconsciously together, build an immeasurably intricate, endlessly ramifying architecture that, like Dust in a Philip Pullman novel, organises itself spontaneously into coherent worlds. This biological structure helps to explain soils resistance to droughts and floods: if it were just a heap of matter, it would be swept away.

It also reveals why soil can break down so quickly when its farmed. Under certain conditions, when farmers apply nitrogen fertiliser, the microbes respond by burning through the carbon: in other words, the cement that holds their catacombs together. The pores cave in. The passages collapse. The soil becomes sodden, airless and compacted.

But none of the above captures the true wonder of soil. Lets start with something that flips our understanding of how we survive. Plants release into the soil between 11% and 40% of all the sugars they make through photosynthesis. They dont leak them accidentally. They deliberately pump them into the ground. Stranger still, before releasing them, they turn some of these sugars into compounds of tremendous complexity.

Making such chemicals requires energy and resources, so this looks like pouring money down the drain. Why do they do it? The answer unlocks the gate to a secret garden.

These complex chemicals are pumped into the zone immediately surrounding the plants roots, which is called the rhizosphere. They are released to create and manage its relationships.

Soil is full of bacteria. Its earthy scent is the smell of the compounds they produce. In most corners, most of the time, they wait, in suspended animation, for the messages that will wake them. These messages are the chemicals the plant releases. They are so complex because the plant seeks not to alert bacteria in general, but the particular bacteria that promote its growth. Plants use a sophisticated chemical language that only the microbes to whom they wish to speak can understand.

When a plant root pushes into a lump of soil and starts releasing its messages, it triggers an explosion of activity. The bacteria responding to its call consume the sugars the plant feeds them and proliferate to form some of the densest microbial communities on Earth. There can be a billion bacteria in a single gram of the rhizosphere; they unlock the nutrients on which the plant depends and produce growth hormones and other chemicals that help it grow. The plants vocabulary changes from place to place and time to time, depending on what it needs. If its starved of certain nutrients, or the soil is too dry or salty, it calls out to the bacteria species that can help.

Take a step back and you will see something that transforms our understanding of life on Earth. The rhizosphere lies outside the plant, but it functions as if it were part of the whole. It could be seen as the plants external gut. The similarities between the rhizosphere and the human gut, where bacteria also live in astonishing numbers, are uncanny. In both systems, microbes break down organic material into the simpler compounds the plant or person can absorb. Though there are more than 1,000 phyla (major groups) of bacteria, the same four dominate both the rhizosphere and the guts of mammals.

Just as human breast milk contains sugars called oligosaccharides, whose purpose is to feed not the baby but the bacteria in the babys gut, young plants release large quantities of sucrose into the soil, to feed and develop their new microbiomes. Just as the bacteria that live in our guts outcompete and attack invading pathogens, the friendly microbes in the rhizosphere create a defensive ring around the root. Just as bacteria in the colon educate our immune cells and send chemical messages that trigger our bodys defensive systems, the plants immune system is trained and primed by bacteria in the rhizosphere.

Soil might not be as beautiful to the eye as a rainforest or a coral reef, but once you begin to understand it, it is as beautiful to the mind. Upon this understanding our survival might hang.

We face what could be the greatest predicament humankind has ever encountered: feeding the world without devouring the planet. Already, farming is the worlds greatest cause of habitat destruction, the greatest cause of the global loss of wildlife and the greatest cause of the global extinction crisis. Its responsible for about 80% of the deforestation thats happened this century. Of 28,000 species known to be at imminent risk of extinction, 24,000 are threatened by farming. Only 29% of the weight of birds on Earth consists of wild species: the rest is poultry. Just 4% of the worlds mammals, by weight, are wild; humans account for 36%, and livestock for the remaining 60%.

Unless something changes, all this is likely to get worse much worse. In principle, there is plenty of food, even for a rising population. But roughly half the calories farmers grow are now fed to livestock, and the demand for animal products is rising fast. Without a radical change in the way we eat, by 2050 the world will need to grow around 50% more grain. How could we do it without wiping out much of the rest of life on Earth?

Just as farming is trashing crucial Earth systems, their destruction threatens our food supply. Sustaining even current levels of production might prove impossible. Climate breakdown is likely, on the whole, to make wet places wetter and dry places drier. One more degree of heating, one estimate suggests, would parch 32% of the worlds land surface. By the middle of this century, severe droughts could simultaneously affect an arc from Portugal to Pakistan. And this is before we consider the rising economic fragility of the global food system, or geopolitical pressures, such as the current war in Ukraine, that might threaten 30% of the worlds wheat exports.

Its not just the quantity of production thats at risk, but also its quality. A combination of higher temperatures and higher concentrations of CO2 reduces the level of minerals, protein and B vitamins that crops contain. Already, zinc deficiency alone afflicts more than a billion people. Though we seldom discuss it, one paper describes the falling concentrations of nutrients as existential threats.

Some crop scientists believe we can counter these trends by raising yields in places that remain productive. But their hopes rely on unrealistic assumptions. The most important of these is sufficient water. The anticipated growth in crop yields would require 146% more fresh water than is used today. Just one problem: that water doesnt exist.

Over the past 100 years, our use of water has increased six-fold. Irrigating crops consumes 70% of the water we withdraw from rivers, lakes and aquifers. Already, 4 billion people suffer from water scarcity for at least one month a year and 33 major cities, including So Paulo, Cape Town, Los Angeles and Chennai, are threatened by extreme water stress. As groundwater is depleted, farmers have begun to rely more heavily on meltwater from glaciers and snowpacks. But these, too, are shrinking.

A likely flashpoint is the valley of the Indus, whose water is used by three nuclear powers (India, Pakistan and China) and several unstable regions. Already, 95% of the rivers flow is extracted. As the economy and the population grow, by 2025 demand for water in the catchment is expected to be 44% greater than supply. But one of the reasons why farming there has been able to intensify and cities to grow is that, as a result of global heating, glaciers in the Hindu Kush and the Himalayas have been melting faster than theyve been accumulating, so more water has been flowing down the rivers. This cant last. By the end of the century, between one- and two-thirds of the ice mass is likely to have disappeared. It is hard to see this ending well.

And all this is before we come to the soil, the thin cushion between rock and air on which human life depends, which we treat like dirt. While there are international treaties on telecommunication, civil aviation, investment guarantees, intellectual property, psychotropic substances and doping in sport, there is no global treaty on soil. The notion that this complex and scarcely understood system can withstand all we throw at it and continue to support us could be the most dangerous of all our beliefs.

Soil degradation is bad enough in rich nations, where the ground is often left bare and exposed to winter rain, compacted and wrecked by overfertilisation and pesticides that rip through its foodwebs. But it tends to be even worse in poorer nations, partly because extreme rainfall, cyclones and hurricanes can tear bare earth from the land, and partly because hungry people are often driven to cultivate steep slopes. In some countries, mostly in Central America, tropical Africa and south-east Asia, more than 70% of the arable land is now suffering severe erosion, gravely threatening future production.

Climate breakdown, which will cause more intense droughts and storms, exacerbates the threat. The loss of a soils resilience can happen incrementally and subtly. We might scarcely detect it until a shock pushes the complex underground system past its tipping point. When severe drought strikes, the erosion rate of degraded soil can rise 6,000-fold. In other words, the soil collapses. Fertile lands turn to dustbowls.

Some people have responded to these threats by calling for the relocalisation and de-intensification of farming. I understand their concerns. But their vision is mathematically impossible.

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A study in the journal Nature Food found the average minimum distance at which the worlds people can be fed is 2,200km. In other words, this is the shortest possible average journey that our food must travel if we are not to starve. For those who depend on wheat and similar cereals, its 3,800km. A quarter of the global population that consumes these crops needs food grown at least 5,200km away.

Why? Because most of the worlds people live in big cities or populous valleys, whose hinterland is too small (and often too dry, hot or cold) to feed them. Much of the worlds food has to be grown in vast, lightly habited lands the Canadian prairies, the US plains, wide tracts in Russia and Ukraine, the Brazilian interior and shipped to tight, densely populated places.

As for reducing the intensity of farming, what this means is using more land to produce the same amount of food. Land use is arguably the most important of all environmental issues. The more land farming occupies, the less is available for forests and wetlands, savannahs and wild grasslands, and the greater is the loss of wildlife and the rate of extinction. All farming, however kind and careful, involves a radical simplification of natural ecosystems.

Environmental campaigners rail against urban sprawl: the profligate use of land for housing and infrastructure. But agricultural sprawl using large amounts of land to produce small amounts of food has transformed much greater areas. While 1% of the worlds land is used for buildings and infrastructure, crops occupy 12% and grazing, the most extensive kind of farming, uses 28%. Only 15% of land, by contrast, is protected for nature. Yet the meat and milk from animals that rely solely on grazing provide just 1% of the worlds protein.

One paper looked at what would happen if everyone in the US followed the advice of celebrity chefs and switched from grain-fed to pasture-fed beef. It found that, because they grow more slowly on grass, the number of cattle would have to rise by 30%, while the land area used to feed them would rise by 270%. Even if the US felled all its forests, drained its wetlands, watered its deserts and annulled its national parks, it would still need to import most of its beef.

Already, much of the beef the US buys comes from Brazil, which in 2018 became the worlds largest exporter. This meat is often promoted as pasture-fed. Many of the pastures were created by illegally clearing the rainforest. Worldwide, meat production could destroy 3m sq km of highly biodiverse places in 35 years. Thats almost the size of India.

Only when livestock are extremely sparse is animal farming compatible with rich, functional ecosystems. For example, the Knepp Wildland project in West Sussex, where small herds of cattle and pigs roam freely across a large estate, is often cited as a way to reconcile meat and wildlife. But while its an excellent example of rewilding, its a terrible example of food production.

If this system were to be rolled out across 10% of the UKs farmland and if, as its champions propose, we obtained our meat this way, it would furnish each person here with 420 grams of meat a year, enough for around three meals. We could eat a prime steak roughly once every three years. If all the farmland in the UK were to be managed this way, it would provide us with 75kcal a day (one 30th of our requirement) in meat, and nothing else.

Of course, this is not how it would be distributed. The very rich would eat meat every week, other people not at all. Those who say we should buy only meat like this, who often use the slogan less and better, present an exclusive product as if it were available to everyone.

Campaigners, chefs and food writers rail against intensive farming and the harm it does to us and the world. But the problem is not the adjective: its the noun. The destruction of Earth systems is caused not by intensive farming or extensive farming, but a disastrous combination of the two.

So what can we do? Part of the answer is to take as much food production out of farming as we can. As luck would have it, the enabling technology has arrived just as we need it. Precision fermentation, producing protein and fat in breweries from soil bacteria, fed on water, hydrogen, CO2 and minerals, has the potential to replace all livestock farming, all soya farming and plenty of vegetable oil production, while massively reducing land use and other environmental impacts.

But this remarkable good fortune is threatened by intellectual property rights: it could easily be captured by the same corporations that now monopolise the global grain and meat trade. We should fiercely resist this: patents should be weak and anti-trust laws strong. Ideally, this farm-free food should be open source.

Then we could relocalise production: the new fermentation technologies could be used by local businesses to serve local markets. As some of the worlds poorest nations are rich in sunlight, they could make good use of a technology that relies on green hydrogen. Microbial production horrifies some of those who demand food sovereignty and food justice. But it could deliver both more effectively than farming does.

Such technologies grant us, for the first time since the Neolithic period, the opportunity to transform not only our food system but our entire relationship with the living world. Vast tracts of land can be released from both intensive and extensive farming. The age of extinction could be replaced by an age of regenesis.

Of course, we would still need to produce cereals, roots, fruit and vegetables. So how do we do it safely and productively? The answer might lie in our new understanding of the soil.

On a farm in south Oxfordshire, techniques developed by a vegetable grower called Iain Tolhurst Tolly seem to have anticipated recent discoveries by soil scientists.

Tolly is a big, tough-looking man in his late 60s, with etched and weathered skin, a broad, heavy jaw, long blond hair, one gold earring, hands grained with earth and oil. He started farming without training or instruction, without land or any means to buy it. After a string of misadventures, he managed to lease seven hectares (17.3 acres) of very poor land at a reduced rent, 34 years ago.

No conventional grower would even look at this ground, he told me. Its 40% stone. Theyd call it building rubble. It isnt even classed as arable: an agronomist would say its only good for grass or trees. But over the past 12 months, we harvested 120 tonnes of vegetables and fruit.

Astonishingly, for these 34 years Tolly has been farming this rubble without pesticides, herbicides, mineral treatments, animal manure or any other kind of fertiliser. He has pioneered a way of growing that he calls stockfree organic. This means he uses no livestock or livestock products at any point in the farming cycle, yet he also uses no artificial inputs.

Until he proved the model, this was thought to be a formula for sucking the fertility out of the land. Vegetables in particular are considered hungry crops, which require plenty of extra nutrients to grow. Yet Tolly, while adding none, has raised his yields until theyve hit the lower bound of what intensive growers achieve with artificial fertilisers on good land: a feat widely considered impossible. Remarkably, the fertility of his soil has climbed steadily.

On my first visit, one June, I was struck by the great range and health of Tollys crops. One plot was a blue haze of onion plants, another a patchwork of sea greens: young cauliflower plants, several kinds of cabbage and kale. There were rows of rainbow chard with gold, green, white and crimson stems. Broad bean pods had begun to sprout from tight pillars of flower. His potatoes were in full bloom, nightshade sinister, stamens like yellow stings. Courgettes extruded rudely behind their trumpet flowers. There were carrots, tomatoes, peppers, beans of all kinds, herbs, parsnips, celeriac, cucumbers, lettuces. He raises 100 varieties of vegetables, which he sells in his farm shop and to subscribers to his veg box.

Separating the plots were untended banks, in which scientists studying his farm have found 75 species of wildflowers. These banks are an essential component of his system, harbouring the insect predators that control crop pests. Though he uses no pesticides, none of the vegetable plants I saw showed signs of significant insect damage: the leaves were dark and wide, with scarcely a hole or a spot.

Almost single-handedly, through trial and error, Tolly has developed a new and revolutionary model of horticulture. At first it looks like magic. In reality, its the result of many years of meticulous experiments.

Two of his innovations appear to be crucial. The first, as he puts it, is to make the system watertight: preventing rain from washing through the soil, taking the nutrients with it. What this means is ensuring the land is almost never left bare. Beneath his vegetables grows an understorey of green manure, plants that cover the soil. Under the leaves of his pumpkins, I could see thousands of tiny seedlings: the weeds he had deliberately sown. When the crops are harvested, the green manure fills the gap and soon becomes a thicket of colour: blue chicory flowers, crimson clover, yellow melilot and trefoil, mauve Phacelia, pink sainfoin.

Theres green manure under the green manure, Tolly told me. As soon as we cut the bigger plants, it comes into flower, and the bees go crazy.

Some of the plants in his mix put down deep roots that draw nutrients from the subsoil. Every so often, Tolly runs a mower over them, chopping them into a coarse straw. Earthworms pull this down and incorporate it into the ground. The idea is to let the plants put back at least as much carbon and minerals as we take out.

Tolly tells me that the green manure ties up nutrients, fixes nitrogen, adds carbon and enhances the diversity of the soil. The more plant species you sow, the more bacteria and fungi you encourage. Every plant has its own associations. Roots are the glue that holds and builds the soil biology.

The other crucial innovation is to scatter over the green manure an average of one millimetre a year of chipped and composted wood, produced from his own trees or delivered by a local tree surgeon. This tiny amendment appears to make a massive difference. In the five years after he started adding woodchip, his yields roughly doubled. As Tolly explains: It isnt fertiliser; its an inoculant that stimulates microbes. The carbon in the wood encourages the bacteria and fungi that bring the soil back to life. Tolly believes hes adding enough carbon to help the microbes build the soil, but not so much that they lock up nitrogen, which is what happens if you give them more than they need.

What Tolly appears to be doing is strengthening and diversifying the relationships in the rhizosphere the plants external gut. By keeping roots in the soil, raising the number of plant species and adding just the right amount of carbon, he seems to have encouraged bacteria to build their catacombs in his stony ground, improving the soils structure and helping his plants to grow.

Tollys success forces us to consider what fertility means. Its not just about the amount of nutrients the soil contains. Its also a function of whether theyre available to plants at the right moments, and safely immobilised when plants dont need them. In a healthy soil, crops can regulate their relationships with bacteria in the rhizosphere, ensuring that nutrients are unlocked only when theyre required. In other words, fertility is a property of a functioning ecosystem. Farm science has devoted plenty of attention to soil chemistry. But the more we understand, the more important the biology appears to be.

Can Tollys system be replicated? So far the results are inconclusive. But if we can discover how to mediate and enhance the relationship between crop plants and bacteria and fungi in a wide range of soils and climates, it should be possible to raise yields while reducing inputs. Our growing understanding of soil ecology could catalyse a greener revolution.

I believe we could combine this approach with another suite of innovations, by a non-profit organisation in Salina, Kansas, called the Land Institute. Its seeking to develop perennial grain crops to replace the annual plants from which we obtain the great majority of our food. Annuals are plants that die after a single growing season. Perennials survive from one year to the next.

Large areas dominated by annuals are rare in nature. They tend to colonise ground in the wake of catastrophe: a fire, flood, landslide or volcanic eruption that exposes bare rock or soil. In cultivating annuals, we must keep the land in a catastrophic state. If we grew perennial grain crops, we would be less reliant on smashing living systems apart to produce our food.

For 40 years, the Land Institute has been scouring the world for perennial species that could replace the annuals we grow. Already, working with Fengyi Hu and his team at Yunnan University in China, it has developed a perennial rice with yields that match, and in some cases exceed, those of modern annual breeds. Farmers are queueing up for seed. While annual rice farming can cause devastating erosion, the long roots of the perennial varieties bind and protect the soil. Some perennial rice crops have now been harvested six times without replanting.

Perennials are their own green manures. The longer they grow, the stronger their relationships with microbes that fix nitrogen from the air and release other minerals. One estimate suggests that perennial systems hold five times as much of the water that falls on the ground as annual crops do.

The Land Institute is developing promising lines of perennial wheat, oil crops and other grains. The deep roots and tough structures of perennial plants could help them to withstand climate chaos. The perennial sunflowers the institute is breeding have sailed through two severe droughts, one of which entirely destroyed the annual sunflowers grown alongside them.

While no solution is a panacea, I believe that some of the components of a new global food system one that is more resilient, more distributed, more diverse and more sustainable are falling into place. If it happens, it will be built on our new knowledge of the most neglected of major ecosystems: the soil. It could resolve the greatest of all dilemmas: how to feed ourselves without destroying the living systems on which we depend. The future is underground.

George Monbiot will discuss Regenesis at a Guardian Live event in London on Monday 30 May. Book tickets to join the event in person, or via the livestream here.

Regenesis: Feeding the World Without Devouring the Planet by George Monbiot is published by Penguin Books at 20 on 26 May. To support the Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

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‘Sanditon’ deep dive: the history of yellow fever – GBH News

In honor of the triumphant return of Sanditon this spring, GBH Drama put together an email series to accompany each episode. For those who missed the emails, we now present them here (lightly edited for formatting).

Given what we knew about the returning cast for this season, I cant say Im totally surprised that Sidney has died off screen, but still, ouch: I know a lot of people (IRL and in Sanditon) are very upset. While we wait to unpack the mystery of why he took his fateful trip to Antigua in the first place, you may be wondering: whats the deal with yellow fever anyway? Glad you asked! Here's the story:

The virus that causes yellow fever is transmitted by mosquitoes, and mostly causes fever, chills, and aches, and in some cases severe liver disease (thats where the name comes from: liver disease often results in jaundice). Nowadays its very preventable (vaccines to the rescue!) but in the early 1800s, yellow fever epidemics were a huge problem. Unfortunately for Sidney, hes exactly the kind of person whod be more likely to get sick in this era: a traveler with no built up immunity.

Even worse, at the time, doctors and scientists had a very different idea of how diseases spread: some thought outbreaks were caused by astrological forces, some thought they were caused by bad air. With that in mind, Lady Denhams mistrust of Dr. Fuchs doesnt seem so weird: nobody really knew what they were doing! It wasnt until the late 1800s that Cuban doctor Carlos Finlay proposed the idea that mosquitos were to blame for yellow fever. American history nerds may know the next part: Walter Reed (he of the Army Medical Center), concerned with the impact yellow fever had on troops during the Spanish American war, set out to prove Dr. Finlays hypothesis. While Dr. Reed often gets the credit, he made it clear that he got the idea from Finlay, so we have to give props to both. Having figured out the disease vector (how it spreads) it was then possible to eradicate yellow fever in Cuba and Panama. But unfortunately, that wouldnt be for about another hundred years after Sanditon is set.

Looking for more of the history behind Sanditon season 2? Check out our other coverage on our Sanditon hub here.

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Cryptocurrency Wrapped Bitcoin Down More Than 5% Within 24 hours – Benzinga – Benzinga

Wrapped Bitcoin's WBTC/USD price has decreased 5.24% over the past 24 hours to $36,982.00, continuing its downward trend over the past week of -8.0%, moving from $40,111.75 to its current price.

The chart below compares the price movement and volatility for Wrapped Bitcoin over the past 24 hours (left) to its price movement over the past week (right). The gray bands are Bollinger Bands, measuring the volatility for both the daily and weekly price movements. The wider the bands are, or the larger the gray area is at any given moment, the larger the volatility.

The trading volume for the coin has increased 55.0% over the past week while the overall circulating supply of the coin has increased 0.49% to over 283.01 thousand which makes up an estimated 100.0% of its max supply, which is 283.01 thousand. The current market cap ranking for WBTC is #17 at $10.47 billion.

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This article was generated by Benzinga's automated content engine and reviewed by an editor.

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One Year of Worlds First regulated Cryptocurrency – Business Standard

One of the imminent approaches of getting rich and accomplishing economic freedom in 2022 is with the aid of using making an investment in cryptocurrency- the World's First Regulated Cryptocurrency with inside the crypto enterprise has proved it correct. Investing in crypto belongings has a sizeable stage of risk, however it's also pretty profitable, if carried out with studies and right utility of mind. Cryptocurrency is a high-quality extra manner to boom your long-time period earnings.

What if the acquisition of bitcoin and altcoins is made unlawful in each of us of a at the planet? Both massive and minor traders will move for regulated cryptocurrencies. Then there is the PNP coin, World's First Regulated Cryptocurrency developed withinside the crypto sector. Helios released the PNP coin in Hong Kong in 2021, making it the first-ever regulated and stable cryptocurrency withinside the World's virtual foreign money market. PNP Coin is celebrating its anniversary this year, giving us the best information of list PNP Coin in its regulated exchange.

The pinnacle precedence of the Helios Wealth Management has remained the identical ever due to the fact its inception and is proud to be on the front of this monetary revolution.

For non-stop expansion, clean regulations are essential. The crew of Helios are extending their worldwide compliance partnerships, increasing their present robust compliance relationships, and localizing their operations and enterprise to conform with neighborhood requirements of all international locations assisting cryptocurrency and blockchain to be secure and sustainable.

They've long gone a step-in addition through regulating all the cryptocurrencies at the Helios DAX marketplace and turning into a regulated trade. The Helios DAX (Digital Asset Exchange), a brand-new crypto trade based through the Helios Group, will listing PNP Coin. The trade will verify all critical regulatory norms and supply a user-pleasant enjoy with low slippage on the grounds that they use the company's very own proprietary AI technology.

While the traders of PNP are searching ahead to the organisations subsequent move, Helios would really like to take a second right here to truly thank all of the traders, PR agencies, YouTubers, country wide media, and crew participants at PNP Coin. All of youve got got made great contributions to their growth. Your willpower and tough paintings have formed PNP Coin right into a centred and worthwhile organisation today.

Although cryptocurrencies had been round for a decade, the concern component index of crypto is the number one component that also impacts the boom of this high-quality technology. The innovation of guidelines in cryptocurrency and the principal government's mind-set in the direction of cryptocurrency has improved the hobby in PNP Coin amongst crypto freaks. Get yourself with the PNP Coin and input into the network of regulated cryptocurrency to flavour the fruit of behoof.

This industry does now no longer appreciate tradition it best respects innovation.

For More Details, Visit :https://www.pnpcoin.com/

Business Standard has always strived hard to provide up-to-date information and commentary on developments that are of interest to you and have wider political and economic implications for the country and the world. Your encouragement and constant feedback on how to improve our offering have only made our resolve and commitment to these ideals stronger. Even during these difficult times arising out of Covid-19, we continue to remain committed to keeping you informed and updated with credible news, authoritative views and incisive commentary on topical issues of relevance.We, however, have a request.

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Why Do The SEC And FINRA Need To Be Involved With Cryptocurrency? – Benzinga – Benzinga

Cryptocurrency was created to be larger than one government. The concept of the currency extends borders and was designed to address issues such as inflation that are often found in traditional currencies such as the dollar. In addition, cryptocurrency was designed with various protections in place to make it more difficult to manipulate or hack.

For new and curious investors, the concept of cryptocurrency and regulation might seem abstract. Cryptocurrency regulations and rules are still being formed because of the relative youth of cryptocurrency. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), as well as the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), have been grappling with how to oversee certain aspects of virtual currency. Cryptocurrency to some degree is already facing regulation under both the SEC and FINRA with potential for more regulation down the line.

The Securities and Exchange Commission typically works to safeguard investors and the market. Its goal is to create a greater sense of market transparency by enforcing security laws and penalizing dishonest behavior in the market and financial sector. Cryptocurrencies are currently not fully registered with the SEC. However, pioneers of digital securities such as INX have quickly adopted regulations.

FINRA works to protect investors by promoting clarity in terms of brokers and investment firms. Although not a government entity, FINRA holds a notable amount of power in having members remain true to defined rules. FINRA oversees the licensing of financial professionals such as stockbrokers that potentially sell cryptocurrency to the public. FINRA can be considered as indirectly overseeing cryptocurrency because it oversees brokers and investment firms.

Cryptocurrency is a digital currency that is relatively new in terms of public comprehension and government regulation. Each unit of cryptocurrency is commonly called a coin or token.

The currency works in tandem with a technology called blockchain to function. Blockchain holds a record of transactions that occur on the cryptocurrency and is designed to withstand tampering because of complex checking methods.

A hacker, for example, would struggle to corrupt cryptocurrency in a way that a forger of traditional currency would not. A hacker attempting to steal or corrupt cryptocurrency would find it difficult to complete a theft because of the currencys inherent design. Cryptocurrencies prove difficult to hack because they receive a constantly updated version of the blockchain that functions similarly to a massive receipt. Unlike traditional currency, the system has a way to check itself against theft thanks to a largely decentralized system.

The SEC and FINRA are interested in regulating cryptocurrency and claim that such action can help boost investor confidence in the currency. In addition, the SEC and FINRA claim that regulation would require cryptocurrencies to make trades public so that the groups could better monitor them. Regulation with the SEC and FINRA would also help prevent illegal activity paid or funded with cryptocurrency. Regulation could offer the added benefit of investor protection seeing as there would be rules and regulations in place to help safeguard the typical investor. As the vast complexities of the digital currency market are often decentralized, the SEC and FINRA are still in the process of developing a more designated path.

INX is the first SEC-regulated digital security on the blockchain that is registered for the general public. Currently, only a select few cryptocurrencies and platforms such as INX have aligned with the SEC and FINRA. It is a cryptocurrency platform that is fully regulated and offers its own token.

Digital currency pioneers such as INX have already entered into regulation to offer additional benefits such as safeguards for investors. Cryptocurrency is still relatively new, but when properly managed it has the potential to provide previously unknown freedom as a currency that extends beyond borders.

Benzinga offers helpful insight and information about cryptocurrency platforms and blockchain securities. However, it is important to research and consult with a financial advisor before investing in cryptocurrency. Cryptocurrency has a volatile nature and like most investments, offers no guarantee that you will retain your initial investment. Before investing, consider your level of risk tolerance.

This post contains sponsored advertising content. This content is for informational purposes only and is not intended to be investing advice

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Paul Tudor Jones expects cryptocurrency to have a bright future – Moneycontrol

The billionaire hedge fund manager spoke of crypto being a borderless internet where one has a blockchain as the verification code that allows any individual on the web an instant access to connectivity, which "opens up just huge possibilities

May 05, 2022 / 07:30 PM IST

Paul Todor Jones, billionaire hedge fund manager and founder of asset management firm Tudor Investment Corp, interviewed with CNBC on May 3, saying that he sees a bright future for cryptocurrency at a time whenthe US Federal Reserve is hiking interest rates to fight inflation.

The Fed on May 4 raised the benchmark lending rate by 50 basis points, in what is being viewed as the sharpest increase in over two decades.

Amidst this, the billionaire-cum-hedge-fund-manager has hopes about finding success in the cryptocurrency market, emphasizing, Its hard to not to want to be long crypto because of the intellectual capital, just the sheer amount of intellectual capital thats going into tat space.

Tudor-Jones acknowledges the digital divide caused due to generation gap. If you look at the smartest and the brightest minds that are coming out of colleges today, so many of them are going into crypto, so many of them are going into the internet 3.0.

He spoke of crypto being a borderless internet where one has a blockchain as the verification code that allows any individual on the web an instant access to connectivity. The blockchain verifies who they are and then that opens up just huge possibilities, he added.

Tudor-Jones also warned that central banks and central governments would not appreciate if at all cryptocurrency becomes a medium of exchange. Thats the number one thing holding it backthe fact that you are not going to get buy-ins from the governments because they lose the ability to control the creation and supply of money, he states.

Jones also speaks about his modest allocation to crypto. He says that he has a trading position within the currency which goes from fully invested to zero; but as of now, he is modestly invested.

Download your money calendar for 2022-23 here and keep your dates with your moneybox, investments, taxes

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Welcome to IJCAI | IJCAI

International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence is a non-profit corporation founded in California, in 1969 for scientific and educational purposes, including dissemination of information on Artificial Intelligence at conferences in which cutting-edge scientific results are presented and through dissemination of materials presented at these meetings in form of Proceedings, books, video recordings, and other educational materials. IJCAI consists of two divisions: the Conference Division and the AI Journal Division. IJCAI conferences present premier international gatherings of AI researchers and practitioners and they were held biennially in odd-numbered years since 1969.

Starting with 2016, IJCAI conferences are held annually.IJCAI-ECAI-22will be held in Vienna, Austria from July 23rd until July 29th, IJCAI-23 in Cape Town, South Africa, and IJCAI-PRICAI-24 in Shanghai, P.R. China.

IJCAI is governed by the Board of Trustees, with IJCAI Secretariat in charge of its operations.

IJCAI-21was held from August 19th until August 26th, 2021 in a virtual Montreal-themed reality. The Conference Committee thanks you all for participating.

Call for Proposals to Host IJCAI-ECAI-2026Call for IJCAI-22 Awards NominationsAI Hub launchedFunding Opportunities for Promoting AI Research Free Access to the AI journal

IJCAI Anti-Discrimination Policy (pdf)IJCAI Privacy Policy (pdf)

IJCAI Organization would like to acknowledge and thank the following platinum level sponsors of its past three conferences in a row:

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