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Hardware Encryption Market Set To Register A CAGR Growth Of XX% Over The Forecast Period 2017 2025 – Fusion Science Academy

Study on the Global Hardware Encryption Market

A recent market study published by TMRR provides resourceful business insights pertaining to the growth prospects of the Hardware Encryption market during the considered forecast period, 2019-2029. According to the report, owing to the growing demand for product 1 and product 2 from region 1 and region 2, significant advances in Hardware Encryption technology, and growing investment for research and development activities, the Hardware Encryption market is projected to grow at CAGR of XX% through the forecast period.

The data collected by our analysts from credible primary and secondary sources provides answers to some top queries related to the global Hardware Encryption market.

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Some of the questions related to the Hardware Encryption market addressed in the report are:

in the current Hardware Encryption market?

The market study bifurcates the global Hardware Encryption market on the basis of product type, regions, application, and end use industry. The insights are backed by accurate and easy to understand graphs, tables, and figures.

segmentation, applications, technological advancements, and the regional segments of the global hardware encryption market. In addition, the limitations and challenges that are being faced by the prominent players in the overall market have been discussed in the research study.

Global Hardware Encryption Market: Drivers and Restraints

The rising concerns related to the privacy of data and data security and tremendous expansion of the digital content are anticipated to encourage the growth of the global hardware encryption market throughout the forecast period. In addition, several advantages offered by hardware encryption in comparison with software encryption technology and the rising need of regulatory framework are some of the other factors estimated to accelerate the growth of the overall market in the near future.

On the contrary, the need for high capital investment and the lack of awareness among consumers reading the benefits of hardware encryption technology are projected to restrict the growth of the global hardware encryption market in the next few years. Nevertheless, the emergence of economical and compact hardware encryption technique and the rising adoption of cloud computing are expected to offer promising opportunities for market players in the coming years.

Global Hardware Encryption Market: Region-wise Outlook

The global market for hardware encryption has been divided on the basis of geography into Europe, the Middle East and Africa, North America, Latin America, and Asia Pacific. The research study has provided a detailed analysis of the leading regional segment, highlighting the market share and anticipated growth rate. In addition, the key factors that are encouraging the growth of these segments have been discussed in the scope of the research study.

According to the research study, Asia Pacific is anticipated to witness strong growth throughout the forecast period, owing to the robust development of the IT industry. In addition, a substantial contribution from China, India, Malaysia, and South Korea is expected to accelerate the growth of the hardware encryption market in Asia Pacific throughout the forecast period. Furthermore, with the presence of a large number of established hardware encryption manufacturing companies, North America is anticipated to witness healthy growth in the next few years.

Key Players Mentioned in the Research Report are:

The global hardware encryption market is projected to witness a high level of competition in the coming few years. The leading players in the market are focusing on offering new products to consumers in order to enhance their market penetration and maintain their dominant position throughout the forecast period. Some of the prominent players operating in the hardware encryption market across the market are Netapp, Maxim Integrated Products, Inc., Toshiba Corp., Gemalto NV., Micron Technology, Inc., Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., Kanguru Solutions, Thales (E-Security), Winmagic Inc., Kingston Technology Corp., Western Digital Corp., and Seagate Technology PLC.

Furthermore, the research study has provided a detailed analysis of the competitive landscape of the global hardware encryption market. An in-depth overview of company profiles and their financial overview have been discussed at length in the scope of the research study. Additionally, the business strategies, SWOT analysis, and the recent developments have been included to offer a clear understanding of the overall market.

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Competitive Outlook

The competitive outlook segment tracks the activities of the leading market players operating in the global Hardware Encryption market. In addition, the report provides an extensive analysis of the product portfolio and marketing strategies adopted by each market players in the Hardware Encryption market.

Key findings included in the report:

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Hardware Encryption Market Set To Register A CAGR Growth Of XX% Over The Forecast Period 2017 2025 - Fusion Science Academy

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Iranian chess ref in trouble over attire – Bangkok Post

Woman afraid to return home after images showing her without hijab draw negative comments

VLADIVOSTOK, Russia: An Iranian chess referee who has been accused of violating her countrys Islamic dress code while adjudicating a womens tournament says she does not want to return home from Russia out of fear for her safety.

Shohreh Bayat, 32, told Reuters she would not travel back to Iran unless she was given security guarantees in writing from the countrys chess federation.

I really hope they will provide me something to ensure I will be safe if I come back to Iran, said Bayat, who is in Vladivostok as chief referee at the Womens World Chess Championship.

But if that doesnt happen, Im just examining my options and considering anything.

The Iran Chess Federation could not immediately be reached for comment.

Bayat got into trouble during the first stage of the championship in Shanghai last week when Iranian state media criticised her for photographs in which she appeared not to be wearing a hijab.

Ever since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, all women have been required to wear the headscarf in public and sportswomen are also required to wear it abroad. Women who break the dress code can be publicly berated, fined or arrested.

Bayat says she does not agree with the hijab, but that she had been wearing a headscarf during the championships first matches, although it had been loose and was not visible from some angles in photographs of her.

Apparently it was not enough for the Iranians, she said.

Bayat also said that the Iran Chess Federation had asked her to write an apology and to post it online, something she said she had refused to do because she did not want to support the hijab publicly.

I just did not want to do that, she said.

Bayat then stopped wearing a headscarf altogether while presiding over subsequent matches.

I noticed that they have already condemned me, she said. I decided not to wear hijab because it wont change anything.

Nigel Short, the International Chess Federation vice-president, spoke out in support of Bayat on Twitter, calling her a great ambassador for her country.

Bayat is one of many Iranian sportspeople to come to blows with the authorities over the hijab and other policies.

Earlier this month, Iranian chess grandmaster Mitra Hejaziour was expelled from the national team for not wearing the hijab at the World Rapid and Blitz Championship in Moscow.

Bayats decision came days after Irans only female Olympic medalist, Taekwondo champion Kimia Alizadeh, announced she had left her homeland because she had had enough of being used by its authorities as a propaganda tool.

In December, Irans Chess Federation said top rated chess champion Alireza Firouzja had decided not to play for Iran because of an informal ban on competing against Israeli players.

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Iranian chess ref in trouble over attire - Bangkok Post

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Watch Ramin Karimloo and Samantha Barks Belt Out Chess Tunes in Rehearsal for Japan Production – Playbill.com

Tony nominee Ramin Karimloo (Les Misrables, Anastasia) and Samantha Barks (Pretty Woman, Les Misrables) will co-star in the Benny Andersson-Bjrn Ulvaeus musical Chess at the Umeda Arts Theater Main Hall in Osaka, Japan (January 2528) and at the Tokyo International Forum Hall C in Tokyo (February 19).

Karimloo will play Anatoly with Barks as Florence, Luke Walsh (Rock of Ages) as Freddie, Takanori Sato as the Arbiter, Eliana as Svetlana, and Hideya Masuhara as Molokov. In the video above Karimloo, Barks, Walsh, and the rest of the company rehearse for the upcoming production; watch portions of The Story of Chess, Nobody's Side, Pity the Child, and Anthem.

The ensemble includes Megumi Iino, Hiroaki Ito, Takashi Otsuka, Kana Okamoto, Yousuke Kawano, Naoki Shibahara, Tatsunori Senna, Kota Someya, Nanaka, Ai Ninomiya, Ami Norimatsu, Maya Harada, Kan Muto, Daisuke Moriyama, Sayaka Watabiki, and Kiyoka Wada.

Nick Winston directs and choreographs.

Chess tells a story of love and political intrigue, set against the background of the Cold War in the late 1970s-early 1980s, in which superpowers attempt to manipulate an international chess championship for political ends. The 1984 musical features music by ABBA songwriters Andersson and Ulvaeus and lyrics by Tim Rice.

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Michael Mayer directs the semi-staged concert presentation of the operatic pop-rock musical that features a revised book by Danny Strong.

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Watch Ramin Karimloo and Samantha Barks Belt Out Chess Tunes in Rehearsal for Japan Production - Playbill.com

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Iranian chess referee afraid to return home after being accused of violating dress code – Haaretz

An Iranian chess referee who has been accused of violating her country's Islamic dress code while adjudicating a women's tournament said that she does not want to return home from Russia out of fear for her safety.

Shohreh Bayat, 32, told Reuters she would not travel back to her homeland unless she was given security guarantees in writing from Iran's chess federation.

"I really hope they will provide me something to ensure I will be safe if I come back to Iran," said Bayat, who is in Russia's far eastern city of Vladivostok as chief referee at the Women's World Chess Championship.

"But if that doesn't happen, I'm just examining my options and considering anything."

The Iran Chess Federation could not immediately be reached for comment.

Bayat got into trouble during the first stage of the championship in Shanghai last week when Iran state media criticised her for photographs in which she appeared not to be wearing the headscarf.

Since Iran's Islamic Revolution, all women are required to wear the headscarf, known as the hijab, in public and sportswomen are also required to wear it abroad. Women who break the dress code can be publicly berated, fined or arrested.

Bayat says she does not agree with the hijab, but that she had been wearing a headscarf during the championship's first matches, although it had been loose and was not visible from some angles in photographs of her.

"Apparently it was not enough for the Iranians," she said.

Bayat also said that the Iran Chess Federation had asked her to write an apology and to post it online, something she said she had refused to do because she did not want to support the hijab publicly.

"I just did not want to do that," she said.

Bayat then stopped wearing a headscarf altogether while presiding over subsequent matches.

"I noticed that they have already condemned me," she said. "I decided not to wear hijab because it won't change anything."

Nigel Short, the International Chess Federation's (FIDE) vice president, spoke out in support of Bayat on Twitter, calling her "a great ambassador for her country".

Bayat is one of many Iranian sportspeople to come to blows with the authorities over the hijab and other policies.

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Earlier this month, Iranian chess grandmaster Mitra Hejaziour was expelled from the national team for not wearing the hijab at the World Rapid and Blitz Championship in Moscow.

Bayat's decision came days after Iran's only female Olympic medalist, Taekwondo champion Kimia Alizadeh, announced she had left her homeland because she had had enough of being used by its authorities as a propaganda tool.

In December, Iran's Chess Federation said top rated chess champion Alireza Firouzja had decided not to play for Iran because of an informal ban on competing against Israeli players.

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Iranian chess referee afraid to return home after being accused of violating dress code - Haaretz

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Putin moves the first chess piece in what many see as a grand power-grab strategy – 41 NBC News

President Vladimir Putins latest move promises to be one of the biggest shake-ups of Russian politics since his predecessor Boris Yeltsin sent tanks to shell Parliament in 1993 while his opponents were barricaded inside.

The revolution proposed by Putin may not be a bloody one, but it does suggest an overhaul of Russias Constitution with far-reaching consequences.

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Though this grand plan is still playing out, many observers say Putin appears to be attempting to use this makeover to dramatically prolong his political lifespan and grip on power.

During a speech in Moscow, the former KGB officer proposed plans to weaken his presidential successor and transfer that power elsewhere in the government. It would carve out a new role outside the presidency, perhaps ready for Putin, 67, to step into once his fourth term ends in 2024.

For the West, it raises the prospect that his influence will continue meddling in elections around the world, annexing neighbors land, and brutally cracking down on democratic opposition at home potentially for decades to come.

It is hard to see this as anything other than a ploy to remain in control beyond 2024, said Valeriy Akimenko, a senior research associate at the Conflict Studies Research Centre, a research and consultancy group in England. We simply dont know the whole story or the whole plan. Possibilities range from the tried and tested to the relatively novel.

Putin delivers his annual state of the nation address in Moscow on Wednesday.Maxim Shemetov / Reuters

Many had predicted Putin would try to extend his power beyond its constitutional limits. His 20 years in power, switching between the presidency and prime ministership, already constitute the longest reign since that of Joseph Stalin, who died in 1953.

This week Putin made his opening chess move, announcing what his opponents and many independent experts characterized as the first stages of a power grab. Leonid Volkov, an opposition politician and a close ally of arch Putin critic Alexei Navalny, went so far as to call it a constitutional coup.

Putin proposed giving far more power to the countrys parliament and the State Council, stripping the presidency of the power that he has wielded with such singular might.

Meanwhile, his loyal prime minister, Dmitry Medvedev, announced he was resigning along with the rest of the government. He was replaced Thursday by a relatively unknown technocrat, Mikhail Mishustin, lauded for his work modernizing Russias tax office but not seen as a serious political contender in the long run.

Although appearing to strengthen the separation of powers to a level not recently seen in Russia, there are several ways these maneuvers might benefit Putins long-term plans.

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Some experts have predicted he may leave behind the weakened presidential office and shift to a role leading a newly emboldened State Council, an advisory body that would enjoy enlarged powers under Putins proposals.

This would mirror the path of Nursultan Nazarbayev, Kazakhstans former president who last year stepped down after more than 30 years but remained leader of the nation and chairman of its powerful security council.

Others predicted Putin might seek an umbrella role governing a new union between Russia and its former Soviet neighbor of Belarus, although this has so far been resisted by that countrys leader, Alexander Lukashenko.

I would say foreign policy is the one thing where we will keep seeing Putin in the future, said Kadri Liik, a senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, adding that it interested the Russian leader a lot more than the nitty-gritty of his homelands economics.

Born in 1952 in Leningrad, now called St. Petersburg, Putin grew up in the former Soviet Union, a superpower that occupied nearly one sixth of the worlds landmass.

He was an officer in the secret police and intelligence agency KGB, posted to then- East Germany in the 1980s, later recalling the deep, personal anguish at seeing firsthand his homeland breaking apart. Once in office, he made restoring this perceived former greatness a cornerstone message.

Putin, center, and Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, center left, attend a cabinet meeting in Moscow on Wednesday.Dmitry Astakhov / AP

Russia has been a great power for centuries, he told lawmakers at his confirmation as prime minister in 1999. We should not drop our guard in this respect, neither should we allow our opinion to be ignored.

But over his political reign, thats meant Russia increasing its anti-Western propaganda and aggressive international behavior, Akimenko at the Conflict Studies Research Centre said. If Putin were to step into a new role, it is hard to imagine that after more than a decade in progress, this trend would suddenly be reversed, Akimenko added.

Despite his global influence, Putin is having to tread carefully. His popularity skyrocketed in 2014 after Russia annexed Ukraines Crimea, but has since dipped after a change to the retirement -age sparked mass protests.

Meanwhile, the economy struggled in part due to foreign sanctions imposed after the Crimea annexation, U.S. election meddling, and the shooting down of a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet by a Russian missile system.

Under Putin, Russia has become less democratic and more authoritarian, now ranked among the most repressive countries in the world according to an annual report by the Economist Intelligence Unit, a research group, which has offices based around the world.

Russians have increasingly taken to the streets over a host of social issues this year, prompting harsh crackdowns by the Kremlin.

Nevertheless, Putin appears eager to give his plans the air of legitimacy by suggesting they should be approved by a popular vote, according to Nikolai Petrov, a senior research fellow at the London think tank Chatham House.

Legitimacy issue is very important in this regard, Petrov said. It looks like Putin has been unable to fix this by using foreign policy and military successes and is switching back to electoral legitimacy.

The current rules mean he would have to take a break until 2030 before running for president again, something he ruled out last year: Will I be doing this until I am 100 years old? No.

At least on the surface, Putins gambit has been welcomed by Russias political elites over whom the president continues to exert tremendous influence. It was deemed a necessary change of course and long overdue by several political parties that technically represent the opposition but in reality often side with the Kremlin.

Whatever his future role, Putins plans would mean his successor will not have nearly the same clout. Future presidents would only be able to serve two terms total (Putin is in his fourth), they must have lived in Russia for 25 consecutive years, up from the current 10, and they cannot have ever had foreign citizenship or even a residence permit in another country.

And its possible that these greater checks on the presidency will have the byproduct of strengthening institutions and creating a system of quasi checks and balances, according to Petrov.

But it would also rule out opponents such as Navalny, perhaps Putins most prominent critic who left Russia to study at Yale University in 2010, and Mikhail Khodorkovsky, an exiled former oligarch who had in the past been granted temporary Swiss residency.

In all, the proposals would mean that there can be no second Putin, Alexander Baunov, an analyst at the Carnegie Moscow Center, tweeted.

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Putin moves the first chess piece in what many see as a grand power-grab strategy - 41 NBC News

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The Hindu in School Chess contest tomorrow – The Hindu

Spot registration is allowed for the fourth Edition of The Hindu In School Chess Tournament on Sunday at the Centre for Advanced Learning (CFAL), Bejai.

The tournament is open to students from Dakshina Kannada, Udupi, Shivamogga, Chikkamagaluru, and Kodagu districts.

The tournament starts at 9.30 a.m. and will be conducted for boys and girls separately under three categories under 11, under 13 and under 15 on a Swiss league basis. Entry fee is 150 per participant.

Spot entries will be accepted till 9 a.m. Participants should bring their own boards and clocks. They have to produce the printout of the payment acknowledgement for online registration along with the school identity card at the venue.

The top three winners of each category in boys and girls will get tropies, cash prizes, and a certificate. Those getting the next seven places will receive medals and certificates while all participants would get participation certificates.

SyndicateBank is the associate partner of the event and Corporation Bank, CFAL, Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. are the regional partners.

For registration please call, Surendra Shetty-9448279124, M.S. Madhava-9035566695 or The Hindu office -0824-2417575 or email us at mlrcir@thehindu.co.in.

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The Hindu in School Chess contest tomorrow - The Hindu

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Whoever leads in artificial intelligence in 2030 will rule the world until 2100 – Brookings Institution

A couple of years ago, Vladimir Putin warned Russians that the country that led in technologies using artificial intelligence will dominate the globe. He was right to be worried. Russia is now a minor player, and the race seems now to be mainly between the United States and China. But dont count out the European Union just yet; the EU is still a fifth of the world economy, and it has underappreciated strengths. Technological leadership will require big digital investments, rapid business process innovation, and efficient tax and transfer systems. China appears to have the edge in the first, the U.S. in the second, and Western Europe in the third. One out of three wont do, and even two out three will not be enough; whoever does all three best will dominate the rest.

We are on the cusp of colossal changes. But you dont have to take Mr. Putins word for it, nor mine. This is what Erik Brynjolfsson, director of the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy and a serious student of the effects of digital technologies, says:

This is a moment of choice and opportunity. It could be the best 10 years ahead of us that we have ever had in human history or one of the worst, because we have more power than we have ever had before.

To understand why this is a special time, we need to know how this wave of technologies is different from the ones that came before and how it is the same. We need to know what these technologies mean for people and businesses. And we need to know what governments can do and what theyve been doing. With my colleagues Wolfgang Fengler, Kenan Karaklah, and Ravtosh Bal, I have been trying to whittle the research of scholars such as David Autor, Erik Brynjolfsson, and Diego Comin down to its lessons for laymen. This blog utilizes the work to forecast trends during the next decade.

It is useful to think of technical change as having come in four waves since the 1800s, brought about by a sequence of general purpose technologies (GPTs). GPTs are best described by economists as changes that transform both household life and the ways in which firms conduct business. The four most important GPTs of the last two centuries were the steam engine, electric power, information technology (IT), and artificial intelligence (AI).

All these GPTs inspired complementary innovations and changes in business processes. The robust and most relevant facts about technological progress have to do with its pace, prerequisites, and problems:

Source: Comin and Mestieri (2017).

Putin is not the first Russian leader to understand the importance of breakthrough general purpose technologies. A hundred years ago, Vladimir Lenins Communist Party invented the Five-Year Plan to exploit electric power. Indeed, it wouldnt be an exaggeration to say that modern planning practices originated with Lenins plan for the electrification of the Soviet Union. To appreciate the importance of electrification, it is worth reading Lenins short Report on the Work of the Council of Peoples Commissars. Here are extracts from that speech, delivered in 1920 to stormy and prolonged applause:

You will hear the report of the State Electrification Commission, which was set up by the All-Russia Central Executive Committee of February 7, 1920.Communism is Soviet power plus the electrification of the whole country. We are weaker than capitalism, not only on the world scale, but also within the country. Only when the country has been electrified, and industry, agriculture and transport have been placed on the technical basis of modern large-scale industry, only then shall we be fully victorious. We have a plan which gives us estimates of materials and finances covering a long period, not less than a decade. We must fulfill this plan at all costs, and the period of its fulfillment must be reduced.

Today, the most serious practitioner of Soviet-style planning is the Chinese Communist Party. In 2015, it announced the $1.68 trillion Made in China 2025 plan, to do with artificial intelligence. The plan is to transform the Chinese economy and dominate global manufacturing by 2030. China has neither the entrepreneurial nimbleness of America nor the capable public finance systems of Western Europe, but it is putting a lot of money into digital dominance. The question is whether this will be enough.

The last two decades witnessed the rise of China as an economic power; the next 10 years will decide whether it will eventually become a superpower. For now, President Xis approach could be summed up much as Lenins strategy was in 1920: State capitalism is the Peoples Party plus artificial intelligence.

The story goes that in 2018, President Donald Trump complained to President Xi Jinping that Made in China 2025 was insulting to the U.S. because it aimed to make China the global leader in technology. Since then, there are no official references to it. No point taunting the worlds technology leader into doing more, the Chinese government reckons.

But the real advantage of the U.S. is that government exercises a lighter touch than in China or Europe, leading to shorter lags from invention to market and quicker adaptation by businesses so that productivity gains are realized more quickly than in competing countries. Notice the relatively rapid diffusion of computersavailable for use simultaneously in all rich economiesin the U.S., as compared with Canada, Japan, Germany, and France (Figure 3).

Sources: Historical Cross-Country Technology Adoption Dataset by Comin and Hobijn (2004) and the Maddison Project Database.

The regulatory, infrastructural, and cultural conditions that lead to quicker business process innovation require tight industry-academic linkages, a welcoming environment for high-skilled immigrants, sound product-market regulations, and sensible hiring and firing rules. These will be not easy for either China or Europe to institute, and the U.S. will have this edge for a while.

While the United States is quick to innovate, Western Europe is intrinsically more equal. Take a look at both the diffusion and penetration of internet use plotted in Figure 4. Europe played catch-up between 1990 and 2010, but internet usage has been more widespread in every European country since then. Greater income inequality in the U.S. surely has something to do with this, but it would be even more worrying if it were also due to more unequal opportunity. There is growing evidence that this is the case, and growing concerns that these gaps will quickly widen as AI-based technologies spread across the economy.

Source: World Banks World Development Indicators and the Maddison Project Database.

Since technological change will exacerbate inequality both of opportunities and outcomes, efficient redistribution will become more necessary during the next decade than it has been in the past. Europe would then have a big advantage: Market income inequality in all but five European countries is lower than the U.S. (Figure 5). After taxes and transfers, every European economy has a lower Gini coefficient than Americas.

Source: Causa and Hermansen (2018).

People who make long-term economic forecasts have a tendency to focus on strengths: China can mobilize a lot of money so it will become a superpower, the U.S. has a good climate for business so it will continue to dominate the world economy, and Europe is more egalitarian so itll get more bang for the buck. But perhaps we should look instead at the willingness of economies to remedy their shortcomings. China has to find ways to encourage entrepreneurship and address the massive disparities in education and wealth. Europe has to mobilize large amounts of money and make it easier for investors anywhere to bring inventions to the Single Market. The United States just has to quickly figure out ways to restore competition in tech, finance, health, and public education, so its redistribution systems are not strained.

So, whos most likely to succeed during the next decade? My money is on the United States. Productivity growth will pick up again as businesses take advantage of new technologies, consumers will take home big price and quality gains, and policy types will stop fretting about fears of secular stagnation. If enough of the tax burden is shifted from labor to capital, the incomes of middle-income households will keep pace. Expect the United States to call the shots for the rest of the century.

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Whoever leads in artificial intelligence in 2030 will rule the world until 2100 - Brookings Institution

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Dangers of artificial intelligence in medicine | TheHill – The Hill

Two of the most significant predictions for the new decade are that AI will become more pervasive, and the U.S. health-care system will need to evolve. AI can augment and improve the health-care system to serve more patients with fewer doctors.

However, health innovators need to be careful to design a system that enhances doctors capabilities, rather than replace them with technology and also to avoid reproducing human biases.

A recent study published in Nature (in collaboration with Google) reports that Google AI detects breast cancer better than human doctors. Babylon Health, the AI-based mobile primary care system implemented in the United Kingdom in 2013, is coming to the U.S.

Health-care is an industry in need of AI assistance due to a shortage of doctors and physician burnout.

Doctors in the U.S. are experiencing a burnout crisis. Nearly 45 percent of physicians report burnout, and the physician suicide rate is twice that of the general population. Research shows physicians experience burnout because of a poorly designed health care system that isnt intended to protect them or their patients.

Physician burnout has been linked to increased medical errors, unprofessional behavior, early retirement, depression, and racial bias.

In 2019 the Journal of the American Medical Association published a study of 3,392 second-year resident physicians who self-identified as non-Black and found that symptoms of burnout were associated with explicit and implicit racial biases.

A study from the Mayo clinic reported poorly designed electronic health records as a contributor to physician burnout.

Another major contributor to burnout is a shortage of physicians compared to the increased number and needs of patients that require care. The Association of American Medical Collegespredicts a shortageof 21,100 and 55,200 primary care physicians by 2032.

While a possible solution, AI systems can also cause problems. Increased medical error is a real potential consequence of poorly designed AI in medicine.

Medical error is the third leading cause of death in the U.S., attesting to both the need for improving the system but also the fragility of the system and consequences of poor design.

Eliminating the empathetic relationship is another potential consequence of poorly designed and integrated AI. Health care is built on a human-human link.

Humans desire and benefit from the problem-solving that comes from conversations. In clinics with electronic health records, physicians spend about 27 percent of their time on patient care and 52 percent time in the exam room interacting with the patient.

Replacing humans with technology inappropriately could lead to complacency from physicians and reduced engagement from patients.

AI could lead to new inequities and biases. Recent studies have shown that Black people are less likely to get proper treatment for lung cancer and adequate treatment for pain because of false beliefs about differences between Blacks and whites.

While some may conclude that AI would remove the biases that minorities receive by focusing on objective data, new research identifies inequities in AI systems.

A study published in Science in 2019 found that an algorithm used in U.S. hospitals systematically discriminated against Black patients by allocating less care to them.

Babylons AI-based chatbot sparked concerns as the chatbots safety has been reported; Babylon refutes these claims.

Many of the disruptive aspects of the AI system are unique to the National Health Service, which assigns patients to practitioners. With new funding and support, Babylon will enter the U.S. market. Health safety advocates need to be available to advocate for the unique needs of patients in the American health-care system.

For AI systems to work without harm, a greater understanding of what clinicians do and their current biases is needed. The goal of designing systems that preserves what clinicians do best without the risk of complacency is critical.

Both tech companies and health leadership are primarily comprised of white male staff that may not be trained to think about bias comprehensively. Diversifying the workforce of companies building AI systems and those innovating the health-care system is needed.

A recent report found that people of color and women are underrepresented in the AI field, as about 80 percent of AI professors are men, and people of color are only a fraction of staff at major tech companies.

Diversifying the pipeline of researchers is essential; equally important is building inclusive workplaces and communities that allow under-represented minority researchers to thrive.

Yes, well-designed AI in health-care systems can transform the health and well-being of members of society by allowing healthcare professionals to provide better quality care to more people and restoring balance to the people who dedicate their lives to providing care.

But the danger is that AI systems that pit humans against algorithms will likely introduce new biases and errors into the U.S. health-care system that will not only exacerbate health disparities but also make health care more dangerous for everyone.

Enid Montague, Ph.D. is an expert on human-centered automation in medicine, Associate Professor of Computing at DePaul University, Adjunct Associate Professor of General Internal Medicine at Northwestern University, and a Public Voices Fellow through The OpEd Project.

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Dangers of artificial intelligence in medicine | TheHill - The Hill

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What Do You Think About Artificial Intelligence? The Pentagon’s AI Center Wants to Know. – Nextgov

The Pentagons nascent center devoted to artificial intelligence research and development wants to learn more about peoples perceptions of the budding technology.

According to a proposed information collection notice published in the Federal Register Thursday, the Defense Departments Joint Artificial Intelligence Center is funding a RAND Corporation-led study exploring civil-military views regarding AI and related technologies.

This data collection will help ensure [Defenses] ability to engage with leading private sector technology corporations and their employees, officials said in the notice.

As is standard with federal information collections, the Pentagon must engage public feedback on whether it is necessary before the study is conducted. Defense will accept comments until March 16 on that specific matter.

While details regarding the direct questions thatll be asked and how the study will inform future Defense efforts are largely absent from the notice, officials make it clear that they hope to hear from members of the software engineering, defense and aerospace communitiesas well as the general public. The notice forecasts that around 5,210 individuals are expected to respond.

The study will also conduct focus groups with members of the software engineering community and students from computer science programs, it said.

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What Do You Think About Artificial Intelligence? The Pentagon's AI Center Wants to Know. - Nextgov

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Artificial intelligence firm TheIncLab expands to Tampa – Tampa Bay Times

TAMPA A tech company that works to develop artificial intelligence-enabled systems that learn and collaborate with humans is expanding to Tampa.

TheIncLab, based near Washington D.C., has opened an AI+X lab that is, artificial intelligence plus experience at the Undercroft, a tech development center and membership guild for companies focused on cybersecurity. Along with TheIncLab, the Undercroft provides work space for local offices of BlackHorse Solutions, Sharp Decisions, @Risk Technologies and Bull Horn Communications.

The Undercroft has offices in one of Ybor Citys most historic structures, the El Pasaje building on E Ninth Avenue. Built in 1886, it originally housed the Cherokee Club, a private retreat for for wealthy cigar-makers. The building, with arched porticos reminiscent of Centro Habana in Cuba, also hosted Jos Mart, Theodore Roosevelt and Winston Churchill before going on to become known variously as a bordello, a speak-easy, a casino, a jazzy nightclub and a low-rent hotel.

But when TheIncLab founder and chief executive officer Adriana Avakian describes what made Tampa an attractive place to expand, she talks less about its local color and more about its "burgeoning technology and cybersecurity industry and abundance of highly qualified talent.

"We spent a fair amount of time in the Tampa-St. Petersburg area in the past six months establishing key relationships and meeting with strategic partners to ensure the success of our expansion, she said in an announcement released through the Tampa Bay Economic Development Council.

Since its founding in 2015, TheIncLab has signed up clients from several branches of the U.S. Department of Defense as well as from Fortune 500 companies in the health care, aerospace, manufacturing, consumer electronics and technology spaces. Its services are tailored to help clients accelerate innovation, launch new products and services, open new markets and redefine customer relationships. The firm also has a lab in Nashville.

TheIncLab anticipates hiring 15 developers and engineers in the next 12 months and partnering with bay area universities to augment its staff with student interns. Before it decided on Tampa, it talked with University of South Florida administrators about the availability of talent and research expertise.

Artificial intelligence is one of the great frontiers in the innovation economy," USF College of Engineering professor Sudeep Sarkar, who chairs USFs department of computer science and is co-chair of the USF Institute for AI+X, said in a statement released through the Economic Development Council. With young companies, our students and our faculty working together, Tampa is growing to become a promising center of diverse skills and new perspectives that will shape AIs future.

TheIncLab was one of 10 tech companies selected out of 432 applications from across the U.S. to participate in Tampa Bay Waves TechDiversity program last summer, and is the second of the 10 to expand or move to the Tampa Bay area.

Like Drift, a business-to-business marketing tech company that last month opened a Tampa office with plans to hire up to 100 employees by 2021, TheIncLab is not receiving any state or local incentives to expand here, according to Economic Development Council spokeswoman Laura Fontanills.

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Artificial intelligence firm TheIncLab expands to Tampa - Tampa Bay Times

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