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Orbit launches the advanced NetShroud+ solution SatNews – SatNews

Orbit Communications Systems Inc. has introduced NetShroud+ for their Gaia100 Earth Observation (EO) systems.

The Gaia100, an advanced, tri-band, EO antenna system, already tracks EO satellites at S-, X- and Ka-band frequencies. With the addition of NetShroud+, a comprehensive array of advanced cybersecurity features, the Gaia100 makes significant progress in ensuring the utmost safety and integrity of the EO ground station infrastructure.

The NetShroud+ solution protects the remotely located ground stations from potential local or remote cyber-attacks in order to guarantee that the antenna will point to the LEO satellite under all possible conditions. NetShroud+ shields the systems invisibly to attacks, providing an impregnable shield against identity theft and unauthorized access attempts to the antenna control unit.

The robust implementation of White-Box Cryptography guarantees superior encryption, even in the face of adversaries with complete knowledge and control over the system. With a latency of fewer than four nanoseconds, NetShroud+ ensures ultra-low latency encryption with throughput ranging from 1Gbit to 100Gbit per second, safeguarding the data in transit efficiently.

The integration of White/Black List Filtering, Zero Trust Micro-segmentation, and deep packet inspection (DPI) and prevention (DPP) capabilities grants granular control over network traffic and deep visibility into data packets. At the same time, DPP actively identifies and thwarts potential threats, safeguarding EO ground station and access to the Gaia100 antenna control unit management.

Leveraging the power of Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) and Artificial Intelligence (AI), NetShroud+ detects anomalies and zero-day attacks in real-time, providing advanced protection against a wide range of cyber threats. Additionally, NetShroud+ offers robust protection against ransomware, safeguarding your systems from previously unknown vulnerabilities and malicious data encryption.

The NetShroud+ can be added as an option to the Gaia100 Earth Observation ground station, introducing a combined solution under the brand name of Gaia100+.

The cybersecurity threats are becoming more and more common, and we are already responding to the future market needs. With this groundbreaking addition, the Gaia100 system now provides a comprehensive and secure solution guaranteeing the ground station durability to cyber threats, catering to the growing demands of EO and Ground Station Antenna as a Service (GSaaS) operators. Daniel Eshchar, CEO, Orbit

Gaia100 is a series of terrestrial tracking systems for LEO (Low Earth Orbit) and MEO (Medium Earth Orbit) satellites, with antenna sizes of 2.4 5.5 meters. The series is part of the Gaia product line including Earth observation tracking solutions with antenna diameters of up to 11 meters. The Gaia100 tracking systems operate under a radome. They are characterized by high RF and accurate tracking performance, with the ability to operate in changing weather conditions, anywhere and at any time, with efficient power consumption and minimal maintenance. These features provide advantages in operation at non-residential sites.

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Philips Hue rumor suggests four smart home cameras on the way – The Verge

Philips Hue is making a move on the smart home security world with plans to debut four cameras in the near future, according to Hueblog.com, which has reported reliable smart home leaks in the past (via SmartApfel.com). The Hue line will also introduce a new door and window contact sensor, according to the report.

The article, which was written in German and translated by Google Translate, named the four cameras in English:

Yesterday, the same blog reported that Eric Rondolat, CEO of Philips Hue parent company Signify, said on an investor call that at least one new camera is coming and that Hues cameras will be end-to-end encrypted. Thats significant, as end-to-end encryption is all too rare in smart home cameras. Signify also owns Wiz, which has its own camera with that type of encryption, so its inclusion in Hue cameras isnt surprising.

In addition to the cameras, Hueblog reports that the company will release door and window sensors, called the Hue contact sensor, also in black and white. The rumor claims the company will release them in single and double packs, for 39.95 (about $43.71 USD) and 69.95 (about $76.54 USD), respectively.

Finally, Hueblog wrote that the company is releasing new 12-volt spotlight bulbs with GU5.3 sockets, both in Hue white ambiance and Hue white and color ambiance variants and a twice as long as before 500-bulb version of the Hue Festavia string lights our own Jennifer Pattison Tuohy thought were great but a little pricey (bad news there Hueblog also says the 250-bulb model will cost even more this time around).

And of course, these are all rumors, and Hue hasnt announced any of these products or their prices yet, so take this with a healthy grain of salt.

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What to know about police and your security camera footage – Reviewed

Security cameras help give us peace of mind, allowing us to know more about what goes on around our home, ensuring that if something does happen, we have useful evidence and footage at the ready. These can also be extremely convenientespecially when integrating with other smart home devices.

But sometimes, its not just us looking at the security camera footage. The companies that make the cameras often have access to recorded footage, and, in some cases, that means that police have access to it, too.

If that sounds a little unsettling, thats because it isespecially because you may not know if police have access to your security footage.

Heres what you need to know about the situations in which police can get access to your security footage and what you can do to stop it if you want to.

Credit: Reviewed / Rachel Murphy

When it comes to security cameras, like video doorbells, make sure to read the fine print on how your videos may or may not be shared.

Whether or not companies need permission to share recordings depends on your setup and the access that the companies themselves have. In short, however, its unlikely that a company needs your permission to share data, if that data is stored on the companys servers.

In other words, if you make use of cloud storage for videos, which is offered by most major security brands like Ring, Eufy, and Arlo, and that data is not end-to-end encrypted, then they do not need your permission to share your data. That doesnt mean theyll share it freely, but it does mean that they could if they wanted.

Credit: Reviewed / Getty Images / iStockphoto / LightFieldStudios

There are times when someone other than you, such as a security company or law enforcement, may access your private footage.

Police dont necessarily simply have direct access to your datathey have to go through either you or the company that makes your security camera first.

In the case of Ring, which operates the Neighbors community service, police can directly ask users if they can access footage, through the Request for Assistance feature. Usually, this will involve users within a certain distance of an incident receiving that request.

Users can then supply all security camera footage from a certain period, share only certain footage from that period, or ignore the request. If you do end up sharing footage, youll also be sharing your email address and physical address with law enforcement, and that data will be available for law enforcement for up to 30 daysthough they can download it and store it for longer.

Importantly, Ring says that law enforcement never has access to live feeds of footage.

Police dont have to ask for individuals to help though. Instead, they can request data directly from Ring, and Amazon (which owns Ring) has confirmed that it shares camera and doorbell footage with police in emergencies.

That, however, is just Ring. Most security camera companies dont run services like Neighbors, and their rules are likely much more relaxed.

Most of the time, law enforcement can request access to your footage from companies. Some companies may only supply that data if theres a warrant, but others are a little more relaxed with their customers data.

Not necessarilyand in fact, its unlikely that they will. Companies want to ensure that you feel safe with the services so that you keep using the products.

Credit: Reviewed / Nick Woodard

In most circumstances, law enforcement will make a formal request to access your security video footage.

There are a few things you can do to prevent companies from making decisions for you about whether or not to share the footage with the policeand most of those options involve ensuring that companies dont have access to the footage in the first place.

In these situations, police have to come to you directly to access footage if they want it.

For starters, you can choose cameras and doorbells that store footage locally instead of in the cloud.

Security brands Eufy and Wyze offer options with local video storage, meaning that footage isn't stored in a company-owned server. Some options from D-Link and TPLink also have local storage.

Thankfully, you can use cloud storage and still retain complete controlif you use a cloud storage service offering end-to-end encryption. A good example of this is Apples HomeKit Secure Video, which stores footage in your iCloud account.

Only the user can access this footage since it is end-to-end encrypted, and Apple can't access the data even if it wants to. The list of devices that support HomeKit Secure Video is small, but it is growing.

Ring also offers some end-to-end encryption options. Users have to opt in to end-to-end encryption with Ring, but if they do, Ring wont be able to access or share it with law enforcement.

End-to-end encryption is available as an option on all of the products Ring currently sellsbut may not be an option on its older devices.

Unfortunately, however, Ring users that opt in to end-to-end encryption can't preview videos on the Ring Event Timeline or view footage on shared devices, like an Amazon Echo Show.

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Apps Are Rushing to Add AI. Is Any of It Useful? – WIRED

Ever since the ChatGPT API opened up, all sorts of apps have been strapping on AI functionality. I've personally noticed this a lot in email clients: Apps like Spark and Canary are prominently bragging about their built-in AI functionality.

The most common features will write replies for you, or even generate an entire email using only a prompt. Some will summarize a long email in your inbox or even a thread. It's a great idea in the abstract, but I think integrations like these conspire to make communication less efficient instead of more efficient. You should feel free to try such featurestheyre fun!but dont expect them to change your life. Here's why.

The Ouroboros of Communication

We are all overwhelmed with email and communication in general. It's easy to look at this as a tech problem because it's happening on screens. It's not a tech problem, thoughat least, it's not only a tech problem. It's a social problem.

You could say that you get too many emails, and that might be accurate. Another way of saying the same thing is that more people are trying to contact you than you feel mentally capable of responding to. Trying to solve a social problem with tech often only creates new social problems.

For example, instead of writing an email myself inviting you to come over and have some beers, suppose I asked ChatGPT to write that email. The result is 220 words long, including an introduction (I hope this email finds you well!), an explanation of the reasons people might want to have beers together (It's the perfect opportunity to catch up, share stories, and simply have a good time), and a few oddly-worded details made up out of thin air (I'll make sure to create a comfortable and welcoming atmosphere, complete with some snacks to complement our beer tasting experience.)

Most people, seeing an email this long, are going to feel too overwhelmed to read it. Maybe they'll use AI on their end to summarize the message. I asked ChatGPT to summarize the long email into a single sentence, and it essentially gave me back my initial prompt: Would you like to come over for beers?

The American philosopher Homer Simpson once called alcohol the cause of, and solution to, all life's problems. AI, in this context, serves a similar function: It creates a problem (the emails are too long) and then solves them (summarizing the emails). It's an ouroboros, a snake eating its own tail, a technology that exists in part to solve the problems it is creating.

It's better, in my opinion, to look at the cultural assumptions instead of reaching for unnecessarily complicated technological ones. What cultural forces are making me think I can't just write a one-sentence email? Can I ignore that, if it makes communication better?

I asked ChatGPT to summarize the long email into a single sentence, and it essentially gave me back my initial prompt: Would you like to come over for beers?

Cultural problems, of course, are harder to grasp than technological ones. You could start sending one-sentence emails right now, but some people might interpret that as rude, or at the very least odd. But any individualor organizationlooking to become more efficient should think about these things. Unless, of course, you want a bot pretending to know that you have beers ranging from local brews to classic favorites in your fridge right now.

We Dont Know The Contexts in Which AI Will Work Best

My friend Kay-Kay and I, for months, had an in-joke that became a ritual: tapping LinkedIn's conversational auto-recommendations. This social network, for some reason, offers suggested replies to messages. It was never not hilarious.

Courtesy of Justin Pot

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UW researchers develop AI tool for therapy: HealthLink – KING5.com

SEATTLE From ChatGPT to AI-generated images, artificial intelligence is in the limelight.

But what about using AI as a therapist?

Tim Althoff, an associate professor of computer science at the University of Washington, believes the technology is there to get things started.

"I believe that that technology is now at a point where it can start to actually be useful to people in a mental health context, especially focused on a kind of collaboration between people and AI," Althoff said.

Althoff and a team of researchers have been developing AI programs as a form of behavioral health therapy, but they are by no means the typical chatbots.

One of Althoff's projectsuses AI to help professional, human therapists be more empathetic in their interactions with clients.

"Essentially what we called empathic rewriting," said Dr. Dave Atkins, a research professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine's Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. Atkins has also worked with the Behavioral Research in Technology and Engineering (BRiTE) Center at the University of Washington and is CEO of Lyssn.

Atkins worked with Althoff on how AI can be used in behavioral health conversations. Using language models, the AI provides suggestions for human-to-human chat interactions to be more empathetic.

"So that when someone is ready to send a message, you can get feedback from the AI and how to update, edit that message so that it's more empathic," Atkins said.

But one of Althoff's recent projectsis an AI platform that interacts directly with the user to reframe negative thinking.

"We co-developed this tool that essentially walks you through a process where you learn how to challenge negative thoughts," Althoff said.

Theresa Nguyen is chief research officer at Mental Health America, the nonprofit advocacy group that collaborated with Althoff's research project. She considers it as another self-help tool.

"The idea is we can change our feelings, or we can change our behaviors by first focusing on our thoughts. And so once you start with that negative thought, you learn your patterns of how your thinking causes trouble for you," Nguyen said.

Althoff points out the technology is not intended to replace professional therapists.

"I think one important point is that it actually does not try to do that," Althoff said.

Althoff emphasized it is an online tool that gives the user suggestions to get away from negative thinking. The toolis currently available for anyone to try out.

The interaction is similar to a Q&A that provides guidance for ways to get out of negative thinking.

Althoff said such tools could be helpful in filling a gap.

"Even if an AI system could replace a therapist, that therapist most of the time doesn't even exist because that person didn't have access to somebody in the first place," Althoff said.

Nguyen added tools like these can provide a mental health resource for those who lack access or money to receive professional mental health treatment.

"It's dearly needed with kind of AI technology being one part, kind of piece, of that puzzle," Nguyen said.

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Apple seeks to bolster expertise in generative AI on mobile devices – Financial Times

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Mommy Musings: The who part is the hard part of AI considerations – Longmont Times-Call

During a weeklong mini family reunion with my husbands kin, my father-in-law reached out to my youngest son, Ray, 13, who needed a nap after days of playing with his brothers and cousins in Diamond Lake in Tustin, Mich., on Tuesday. (Photo by Pam Mellskog)

This summer, I paid more attention to the prospect of artificial intelligence when it learned yet another new and wonderful thing how to lift John Lennons voice from a demo song he recorded on a cassette shortly before his death in 1980 for former fellow Beatle, Paul McCartney.

Gone was the inexplicable electrical buzzing in Lennons New York City apartment the day he pushed record on his boombox. Gone was his piano accompaniment, too.

AIs ability to recognize the distinctive human voice Lennons, yours or mine allowed it to work like invisible magical tweezers. It pulled the voice from the static and piano instrumental to mix Lennons pure voice into a final McCartney-led classic Beatles project.

Anyone could appreciate AIs handiwork in retrieving the famous voice from the aging cassette time capsule.

But the news gave me another pause to consider this powerful tool.

Like all tools, this ones impact depends on who uses it from scientists to scammers and for what purpose.

But that who part is the hard part of considering AI. It is not just another object like a shovel or a gun in total service to its handler.

It is technology designed to learn in increasingly sophisticated ways that benefit many of us in our daily lives from the grammar autocorrect feature in word processing to smart phone navigational maps that can report traffic jams and give us estimated delay times and alternate routes in real time.

Eventually, AI might learn enough to develop into some semblance of a who a sentient entity. That is, a technological creation with self-awareness.

We already see it learning like a genius genius to synthesize information with predictive abilities that can be used on the dark side to create imposters to terrify and extort.

When an Arizona mom, Jennifer DeStafano, answered her cell phone from an unknown number earlier this year, she listened to a convincing suspected AI-engineered recording of her 15-year-old daughter screaming that she had been kidnapped.

A gruff man on the line told DeStafano through his profanities that he would drug, rape and kill the girl if the family didnt pay a $1 million ransom.

The police got involved in the hoax, and the girl was confirmed to be safe at a skiing competition upstate.

After the incident, experts said sophisticated AI ventriloquy likely created the girls voice well enough to fool the girls mother with maybe just a minute-long audio clip lifted from the girls social media presence.

Both of these AI application stories one wonderful, the other wicked explain why international gatekeepers of this technology continue scrambling to encourage its responsible uses and police its abuses.

But since most of us are not keeping a close eye on this genie coming out of her bottle, we can use the time between now and when we discover AIs future roles to use old-fashioned ways to understand the who in ourselves and others.

Sometimes, we only get a glimpse of who someone may be.

This was the case for us last week. During our annual mini family reunion with my husbands side of the family at a cottage on Diamond Lake in Tustin, Mich., we heard the clippety-clop of a horse and black buggy coming around the bend.

Our youngest son, Ray, 13, loves horses.

So, my mother-in-law snatched his hand and they ran past our parked cars to the road.

Ray also noticed the Amish people inside the buggy. One woman held the reins and slowed the horse from a trot to a walk as they passed by. The other woman held a baby.

Both of them peeked out from under their wide bonnet brims to smile and wave something Ray and Grandma Vanden Berg returned.

And just like that strangers living in very different worlds at the same time and place in America connected.

Other times, we may get lots of time to get to know someone not easily reached. For instance, Rays special needs related to Down syndrome make it tough for him to speak clearly, although he understands us well.

So, our family has learned to support his speech therapy goals and pay much closer attention to his nonverbal communication.

Grandpa Vanden Berg noticed on Tuesday that Ray, after days of playing in the lake with his older brothers and his cousins, had cuddled up on the outdoor sofa with Woody his favorite action figure from Disneys Toy Story movie series.

Anyone could see that all the fresh air and exercise had tired out Ray. But understanding someone is not the same as responding to someone from that understanding.

Grandpa Vanden Berg did both. He touched Rays shoulder and asked him how he felt. He comforted our boy by offering to drape a beach towel over him.

Then, he encouraged Ray to rest.

Whenever I manage to do a 2023 family photo album, a photo of those two in that moment will make the cut with the help of AI face recognition. In a snap, AI can do the otherwise tedious and time-consuming work of finding photos of just Ray and this grandpa in our huge archive.

But there will always be a world of difference between recognizing someones face and cherishing it.

Pam Mellskog can be reached at p.mellskog@gmail.com or 303-746-0942. For more stories and photos, please visit timescall.com/tag/mommy-musings.

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AI is going 4-dimensional – TechCrunch

Image Credits: nadia_bormotova / Getty Images

Welcome to Startups Weekly. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Friday morning.

State-sponsored bad actors have long been able to make deepfake videos that are good enough to trick unsophisticated viewers and probably some more clued-in folks, too. That sort of work takes significant processing power and technical know-how to pull off. Now AI is stepping in, handing over an unlabeled glass bottle, muttering, Hold my beer, and cracking its proverbial knuckles. Things that we could barely dream of at the beginning of 2023 are beginning to be possible when it comes to generated video AI.

Of course, with great power comes great responsibility, but tell that to the memelords doin it for the lolz. Personally (and, perhaps, perversely), I think its a great thing that these technologies are making their way into everyones hands. Special effects have been a strange, mythical other that Hollywood does. Generated AI selfies were a rage for a hot minute (is anyone still using Lensa?) and did wonders in educating people on what is possible. Its not that Im excited about this tech being universally available, but (contrary to what these curmudgeonly pieces would indicate), Im an optimist at heart. Perhaps exposing people to whats possible will help give even non-tech-savvy folks a fighting chance at spotting fake videos.

I suppose it is only optimism if its from the optimisme region of France. Maybe what Im experiencing is lightly sparking hope.

Over the past few weeks, Ive done a lot of writing about fundraising for startup founders. In a conversation with a VC this week, I told them that I had a flags-based checklist for evaluating pitch decks (e.g., red flag means that you havent a whelks chance in a supernova to raise funding. I havent figured out if there should be a mauve flag, nor what it would mean). It inspired me to share where founders go wrong when fundraising (TC+). Yes, it means Im showing the world everything I care about in a pitch deck, but, I mean, 100+ articles about pitching and fundraising later, I think that cat was well and truly out of the bag anyway.

You know what early-stage founders really hate? Putting together their traction slide. What do you put when youre straddling that pre-product/pre-revenue line? I had a bit of an epiphany when I was working with one of my pitch clients: Your traction slide, abstractly, is how much risk you have designed out of the business. Tell that story, and you end up with a reasonable traction narrative, even if it isnt directly tied to revenue.

Apropos fundraising, theres been a fair bit of activity on that front:

Its a nice Jobs if you can get it: Apple founder Steve Jobs met his demise from cancer. Now his son, Reed Jobs, takes the wraps off a $200 million venture fund that will back new cancer treatments.

iForgot: Backed by a16z, Rewind launches an iPhone app to help you remember everything.

Dude, wheres my cell tower?: eSIMs are great and all, but you know whats really cool? Being able to pop a local SIM card into your phone and be chillin like a villain, local style. Airalo just raised $60 million to make that a tiny bit easier, even with eSIMs.

This week, the federal government isnt just laying down the law about certain ex-commanders-in-chief. I spent an hour reading the most recent indictment its surprisingly readable, and fascinating AF. The NYT has a great annotated edition. Also, if thats a thing youre interested in, I definitely recommend the Prosecuting Donald Trump podcast. Two extremely experienced lawyers talk about the cavalcade of cluster-copulation thats happening in the legal system. Rather compelling.

Closer to home, in startup land, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has been accused of being toothless, but it truly has had enough of one companys BS, fining a robocaller a record $300 million after blocking billions of their scam calls.

Insert inappropriate how long can you go? joke here: It turns out that Tesla has allegedly been a little floppy with the truth about the range estimates for its cars for a hot minute. Suing Tesla is practically a national sport at this time, and, indeed, the first Tesla range inflation lawsuit has been filed.

Lets get to the meat of things: YouTube star MrBeast has a charming, likable, aw-shucks persona, but it turns out he does have finite patience, suing the ghost kitchen behind the MrBeast Burger. Amandas report doesnt include whether you should like and subscribe to the court case.

A HIPPO-sized HIPAA breach: Close to 2.5% of the U.S. population had their health data accessed by MOVEit hackers, a government contractor says.

The social media world continues to be a Muppet wrapped in googly-eye duct tape, or some similarly confusing simile. People truly hate the Twitter-to-X rebrand. How much? Well, Amandas guide for how to make the blue bird come back as your app icon on iOS is right up there with our most-read stories. On top of that, App Store users are decimating Twitters review rating with one-star reviews after the rebrand. Thats ... a lot of steps to not have to stare at an X. Pretty wild: Apple doesnt usually allow one-letter app names, but it made an exception for Tw . . . I mean...X. I avoided throwing myself into the chaos mid-pandemic by deleting the Twitter app off my phone altogether, which is faster and better for your mental health, but Ill leave you to make the best choices for you.

Mammoth > Bird: Famous for its nature programming, U.K. broadcaster BBC is taking a stroll through the digital ecosystem, and it seems it has had enough of Musks shenanigans. Natasha L reports that BBC is testing being on Mastodon, saying that the fediverse is a better fit for public purposes than Twitter or Instagrams Threads.

Robot says youre looking fiiiiine, 0x58 / 0x59: AI really gets its grubby little mitts everywhere, and it seems that Tinder is joining the fray as it tests an AI photo selection feature to help users build profiles. But, as a non-AI, lemme just say: You look great, fam. Id swipe on you. Raaawr.

Uncrop! Enhance: It was a CSI meme, but we are one step closer to being able to uncrop images, revealing whats beyond the edges. Not for real, but based on Photoshops new generative AI feature taking its best guess. And you know what? Its really, really, really good. No wonder every other TikTok video I get served these days seems to feature uncrop shenanigans.

Are you still reading? Your tenacity and persistence are heartwarming. Now, make yourself a cup of tea and pat yourself on the back youve truly mastered the art of the no, this is work, honestly! type of procrastination. I see you. Im proud of you. Youre doing great.

Heres what everyone else has been ogling this past week:

Hacking your way to horsepower: You know what the problem is with selling people $10,000 software upgrades to their cars? At some point, someone is going to change the $GOFAST =0 flag to $GOFAST =1 and get free heated rear seats. Personally, I think its truly ridiculous to turn off the ability to heat rear seats if youve gone through all the trouble of, I dunno, adding the hardware to heat the rear seats, but thats why Im a lowly TechCrunch hack and not the CEO of a car company, a tunnel company, a space company, and whatever X is.

Rolling electric: Fun fact: volvo means to roll. Presumably they mean the wheels and not some sort of sordid MDMA binge, but in any case, the all-electric Volvo EX30 is a huge deal.

Conducting, in your office: What if room-temperature superconductors were real? Tim wondered, and got (1) a really interesting article and (2) a buttload of traffic for his efforts. Well done, Tim. Keep it up, I love reading your stuff.

Get your TechCrunch fix IRL. Join us at Disrupt 2023 in San Francisco this September to immerse yourself in all things startup. From headline interviews to intimate roundtables to a jam-packed startup expo floor, theres something for everyone at Disrupt. Save up to $600 when you buy your pass now through August 11, and save 15% on top of that with promo code STARTUPS. Learn more.

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1 Highly Profitable Cloud AI Stock Investors Need to Know About Now – The Motley Fool

2023 has been a big year for many tech stocks as they have rallied back toward their previous highs. Cloud and AI-powered software company Dynatrace (DT -1.00%) was no exception -- at least, not until after its latest earnings update. The company just started a new fiscal year, and its Q1 financial results were impressive. Yet the stock plunged after the report was published. Is now a buying opportunity?

Dynatrace is an infrastructure software provider, specifically geared toward large multinational companies that are migrating to and using complex cloud-based applications. Basically, Dynatrace helps these organizations monitor their apps and data, and uses AI to find performance issues, and recommend and automate fixes.

Sound familiar? This branch of the infrastructure software industry includes top names like Datadogand Splunk. It's notable, though, that market research firm Gartner recently named Dynatrace as the leader among its peer group for application performance monitoring and observability.

I've whittled my investments in this realm of cloud software down to just Dynatrace over the years because of its balance between generating growth and profitability -- in contrast to many other smaller software outfits in this space that have struggled to operate in the black.

DT Revenue (TTM) data by YCharts.

Dynatrace just got its fiscal 2024 off on the right foot, too. For its fiscal Q1, which ended June 30, revenue increased 25% year over year to $333 million. Its GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) operating profit margin increased to 10% versus 7% in the prior-year period, resulting in earnings per share going from $0.01 in Q1 fiscal 2023 to $0.13 this last quarter. Free cash flow was down 9% to $124 million, but was still a healthy 37% of revenue. https://ir.dynatrace.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/304/dynatrace-reports-first-quarter-of-fiscal-year-2024

Shares of Dynatrace fell despite the solid quarter due to management's outlook -- specifically, that the outlook remained (mostly) unchanged from three months ago in spite of the surge in cloud-based AI activity this year. Management said revenue should increase by 21% to 22% in fiscal 2024 (versus guidance for growth of 20% to 21% before), and reiterated its forecast for the full-year free-cash-flow margin to be about 22%.

CFO James Benson said Dynatrace's customers have been cutting costs due to the recession they expected in 2023, and remain a bit cautious on the economy. Benson struck a balanced tone on the earnings call and said Dynatrace "had a solid start to the year, but it is still early in our fiscal year, and we do not want to get ahead of ourselves." Prudence is OK by me.

The market likely wasn't happy with that view, given Dynatrace's rich valuation. Shares trade for about 45 times expected fiscal 2024 free cash flow. A more dramatic upgrade to the outlook seems to have been the consensus expectation.

Dynatrace did announce new AI tools to help automate cloud monitoring in the last quarter, as well as application development debugging. And though macro conditions may be weighing on cash flows a bit in the near term, the company's earnings are ramping up quickly as revenue continues to grow at a fairly consistent pace. The stock certainly isn't "cheap," but its valuation most certainly isn't unreasonable either if Dynatrace can keep going like it has been in recent years.

In the wake of the market's post-earnings selloff of Dynatrace, I'm a buyer of this top dog in the cloud app monitoring and cloud observability space, which keeps profitably capitalizing on computing secular growth trends.

Nicholas Rossolillo has positions in Dynatrace. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Datadog and Splunk. The Motley Fool recommends Gartner. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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AI May Be Able to Warn Us Before The Next Pandemic Strikes – ScienceAlert

The global COVID-19 pandemic has shown us just how devastating these outbreaks can be and it could have been much worse. Now, scientists have developed an AI application that promises to warn us about dangerous variants in future pandemics.

It's called the early warning anomaly detection (EWAD) system, and when tested against actual data from the spread of SARS-CoV-2, it was accurate in predicting which new variants of concern (VOCs) would emerge as the virus mutated.

Scientists from Scripps Research and Northwestern University in the US used a machine learning method to produce EWAD. In machine learning, vast amounts of training data are analyzed by computers to spot patterns, develop algorithms, and then make predictions about how those patterns may play out in future, unknown scenarios.

In this case, the AI was fed information about the genetic sequences of SARS-CoV-2 variants as infections spread, how frequent those variants were, and the reported global mortality rate from COVID-19. The software could then spot genetic shifts as the virus adapted, usually shown in increasing infection rates and falling mortality rates.

"We could see key gene variants appearing and becoming more prevalent, as the mortality rate also changed, and all this was happening weeks before the VOCs containing these variants were officially designated by the WHO," says William Balch, a microbiologist at Scripps Research.

The specific technique used here by the team is called Gaussian process-based spatial covariance, which essentially crunches the numbers on a set of existing data to predict new data using not just the averages of the data points but also the relationships between them.

By testing their model on something that's already happened and finding close matches between the real and the predicted data, the scientists could prove EWAD's effectiveness at predicting how measures such as vaccines and mask-wearing could cause a virus to continue evolving.

"One of the big lessons of this work is that it is important to take into account not just a few prominent variants, but also the tens of thousands of other undesignated variants, which we call the 'variant dark matter,'" says Balch.

The researchers say their AI algorithms were able to spot "rules" of virus evolution that would otherwise have gone undetected, and that could prove vital in combating future pandemics as they emerge.

Not only that, but the system developed here could also enable scientists to understand more about the very basics of virus biology. That could then be used to improve treatments and other public health measures.

"This system and its underlying technical methods have many possible future applications," says mathemologist Ben Calverley from Scripps Research.

The research has been published in Cell Patterns.

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