Viasat's KA-SAT provides satellite communications services in Europe. Credit: Eutelsat
"As space becomes increasingly important to
terrestrial activities, the tools and weapons available to disrupt and
damage satellites are proliferating around the world
COLORADO SPRINGS – It’s hard to
imagine how the world’s economies and military forces would operate
without unfettered access to services provided by satellites in space.
But as space becomes increasingly important to terrestrial activities,
the tools and weapons available to disrupt and damage satellites are
proliferating around the world, according to two reports released April
4.
“Today there are increased incentives
for development, and potential use, of offensive counterspace
capabilities. There are also greater potential consequences from their
widespread use that could have global repercussions well beyond the
military, as huge parts of the global economy and society are
increasingly reliant on space applications,” the report says.
Brian Weeden, director of program
planning at the Secure World Foundation and one of the editors of the
report, said the broad theme this year is “proliferation.” Previously
only a handful of nations had space weapons. “We just keep adding more
countries every year,” he said. Based on open-source information, this
year’s report details the counterspace capabilities of the United
States, Russia, China, India, Australia, France, Iran, Japan, North
Korea, South Korea and the United Kingdom.
A separate report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the Space Threat Assessment 2022,
also uses open-source information to track the developments of
counterspace weapons that threaten U.S. national security interests in
space.
It wasn’t long ago that there was a
duopoly in space: the United States and Russia, Susan Gordon, former
principal deputy director of national intelligence, wrote in the
introduction to the CSIS report.
This is a new era where space has
become the “domain in which every interest of an adversary or competitor
is affected,” Gordon noted.
China was once an afterthought in the
space race, she added. This past year China launched the most
satellites of any nation, “demonstrated its intention to project hard
and soft power through the growth in on-orbit military support
capabilities, and grabbed our attention and imagination with its
counterspace demonstrations ranging from hypersonic missile launches to
co-orbital rendezvous with other satellites.”
Russia, the earliest innovator in
space, “re-grabbed our attention with its direct-ascent anti-satellite
test that created a threatening debris field as well as apparent GPS
jamming in Ukraine that showed how counterspace is being integrated into
combined operations,” Gordon said.
“The proliferation of international
and commercial vehicles on orbit, while presaging a new era of space use
for every aspect of governmental, business, and societal advance, will
demand attention on the responsible use of space as a shared
environment.”
Weeden said that of all the weapons
that could be used to take down satellites, the most concerning today
are cyberattacks because they are relatively easy to pull off, as seen
in the February 24 attack against Viasat’s KA-SAT network that interrupted satellite broadband service in Ukraine just as Russian forces began invading the country.
“The Viasat attack is a very
interesting event,” Weeden told reporters. “It shows that attacks often
are not against the satellites but the ground system, in this case the
modems used to send and receive data.”
Todd Harrison, CSIS senior fellow and
co-author of the threat assessment report, noted that such cyberattacks
“are not physically destructive, nobody’s life is at risk so they are
viewed as the type of attack anybody can do with impunity.”
The company's new subsidiary is called Rocket Lab National Security
WASHINGTON — Rocket Lab, a launch services company and space hardware manufacturer, announced Dec. 1 it is creating a separate entity to focus on U.S. defense and intelligence agency customers.
The new business sector, called Rocket Lab National Security, also will work with U.S. allies, the company said.
Rocket Lab, which went public in August 2021
via a merger with a special purpose acquisition company, is looking to
sign more defense and intelligence customers for its small launch
vehicle Electron and its future medium-lift rocket Neutron — expected to
debut in 2024. The company decided it needs a separate business
dedicated to this market, a spokesperson said in a statement to SpaceNews.
“National security missions and
payloads on Electron and Neutron, which can have different bureaucratic
requirements to commercial launches, will be contracted through the RLNS
subsidiary,” the spokesperson said.
Having a dedicated national security
subsidiary will help understand these customers’ requirements, “which
may be dedicated rapid call-up launch, satellite design, build and
integration, spacecraft operations, or all of the above.”
The establishment of a national security business follows Rocket Lab’s recent introduction of a “responsive space” program aimed at government customers.
Rocket Lab USA is based in Long
Beach, California. The company operates a launch site in New Zealand and
will soon start flying from Wallops, Virginia.
Since Electron’s first launch in
2017, Rocket Lab has secured multiple deals with national security
agencies, including the National Reconnaissance Office, the U.S. Space
Force and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
Rocket Lab’s solar power business supplies solar cells for U.S. Space Force missile-warning satellites. Another sector of the company recently won contracts to provide separation systems for the U.S. Space Force’s Space Development Agency satellites.
Rocket Lab also signed a research agreement with the United States Transportation Command to explore the use of rockets for point to point cargo delivery.
“Top of the list for national
security is reliability and responsiveness,” said Brian Rogers, senior
director of Rocket Lab’s global government launch services.
Eric Berger /
Eric Berger is the senior space editor at Ars Technica, covering
everything from astronomy to private space to NASA, and author of the
book Liftoff, about the rise of SpaceX. A certified meteorologist, Eric lives in Houston.
"Due to current market conditions, the company has elected not to proceed."
The Terran 1 rocket is shown in Relativity Space's hangar in Florida.
Trevor Mahlmann
Welcome to Edition 5.19 of the Rocket Report! Back from the
Thanksgiving holiday, there is a lot of news to get to this week,
including a report card on the SLS rocket's performance (excellent) and
some wild and woolly news from north of the US border. Read on for more.
As always, we welcome reader submissions,
and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box
below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site).
Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift
rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the
calendar.
Virgin Orbit ends security offering. The US-based
launch company announced on the evening before Thanksgiving a
"cessation" of a securities offering. "Due to current market conditions,
the company has elected not to proceed with an offering," Virgin Orbit said in a statement.
"Any future capital raising transactions will depend upon future market
conditions." Previously, in October, Virgin Orbit CEO Dan Hart said the
company was seeking to raise additional capital after going public as a
special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC.
That's not great, but ... As part of the SPAC process, the
company set a target to raise $483 million. However, the company only
raised $228 million a year ago. Virgin Orbit has an excellent record of
technical achievement, with four consecutive successes of its
LauncherOne system. But there have long been questions about its financial viability,
given the limited potential for growth with an air-launched rocket.
This is certainly not the end of the road for Virgin Orbit, which is
nearing a historic launch from Cornwall in the United Kingdom.
Financially, it also has a hedge fund commitment to fall back on that is
valued at $250 million.
ABL debut launch attempt is scrubbed. The first test
flight of ABL Space Systems’ new small satellite launcher from Alaska
has been delayed until no earlier than December after technical issues
cut short a series of launch attempts in mid-November, Spaceflight Now reports.
ABL conducted three countdowns during a week-long launch period at the
Pacific Spaceport Complex on Kodiak Island, Alaska, to try to send aloft
the company’s first RS1 rocket, which is capable of lifting 1 metric
ton to low-Earth orbit.
Try again before Christmas ... A November 14 launch attempt
was scrubbed about 30 minutes before liftoff due to unexpected data
during propellant loading on the RS1’s first stage, later found to be
caused by a leaking valve in the pressurization system. A second launch
attempt on November 17 was aborted at T-minus 1.8 seconds during
ignition of its nine kerosene-fueled E2 first-stage engines. Another
countdown on November 21 was also aborted during the engine startup
sequence. That was the final launch attempt available to ABL until the
company’s next series of launch dates begins on December 7. (submitted
by EllPeaTea)
The easiest way to keep up with Eric Berger's space
reporting is to sign up for his newsletter, we'll collect his stories in
your inbox.
Electron picks up TROPICS launch contract. NASA said
it selected Rocket Lab to provide the launch service for the agency’s
Time-Resolved Observations of Precipitation Structure and Storm
Intensity with a Constellation of Smallsats, or TROPICS, mission. Rocket
Lab will launch four CubeSats for NASA on two Electron rockets,
targeted for no earlier than May 1.
Ready to go for next year ... This timeframe will enable
NASA to provide observations during the 2023 Atlantic hurricane season,
which begins June 1. The TROPICS constellation targets the formation and
evolution of tropical cyclones, including hurricanes, and will provide
rapidly updating observations of storm intensity. The launch of the
first two TROPICS satellites, earlier this year on an Astra rocket,
failed. (submitted by EllPeaTea and Ken the Bin)
Skyroot makes successful suborbital debut. Skyroot Aerospace successfully launched its small suborbital Vikram-S rocket on November 18, TechCrunch reports.
The 6-meter-tall rocket reached an altitude of 89.5 km, as planned by
the company, officials with the Indian startup said. The company is part
of India's nascent commercial space sector.
Orbit up next ... Founded in 2018 by former ISRO scientists
Pawan Kumar Chandana and Naga Bharath Daka, Skyroot has raised $68
million in total, including $51 million in a Series B round led by
Singapore-based GIC in September. It has plans to develop a series of
increasingly capable orbital "Vikram" rockets in the coming years.
(submitted by Ken the Bin)
Relativity completes Terran 1 stacking. The company
said it has successfully mated the first and second stages of the Terran
1 rocket ahead of a debut launch. "The next time Terran 1 is out on the
pad, it will be stacked and vertical. Upcoming milestones to track:
rollout, static fire, and launch," the company said in its newsletter. The company also said it completed thrust vector control testing.
Slipping into the new year ... Given that Relativity has yet
to roll the Terran 1 out to the pad for its static fire test, it looks
increasingly unlikely that the rocket will make its debut in 2022.
However, the company is in good position to test its additively
manufactured rocket early in 2023, perhaps even in January.
Phantom Space gets a NASA launch contract. Phantom
Space—yes, the Phantom Space co-founded by Jim Cantrell—has received a
"task order" from NASA to launch four CubeSats on the company's Daytona
rocket. The CubeSats will launch no earlier than 2024, NASA said,
as part of the agency’s Venture-class Acquisition of Dedicated and
Rideshare (VADR) program. This is NASA's program to on-ramp a greater
diversity of US rockets for government launch contracts.
Tolerating some higher risks ... NASA will not launch any
high-value satellites through VADR, which the agency says allows it to
procure "commercial launch services for payloads that can tolerate
higher risk." There are currently 13 companies eligible
to bid on VADR launch contracts, including established firms such as
SpaceX and ULA, and less-established firms such as L2 Solutions in
Houston. It will be interesting to see if Phantom Space can succeed in
lofting the CubeSats for NASA. (submitted by Ken the Bin)
Australian launch facility raises environmental concerns.
Conservationists say planned rocket launches on the Eyre Peninsula in
South Australia pose an extinction-level threat to the wren, one of
Australia’s smallest birds, The Guardian reports.
The subspecies of southern emu-wren at the site is listed as endangered
under existing law but as vulnerable nationally. Australia’s
environment minister, Tanya Plibersek, is considering lifting the
national status to endangered. That change would matter for project
approvals and funding decisions for the Southern Launch spaceport.
Regulatory approval is pending ... The Nature Conservation
Society of SA says land clearance, disturbance by humans, including
noise, vibrations and cars, as well as an increased risk of bushfire,
put the bird at extreme risk. The Southern Launch chief executive, Lloyd
Damp, said the company had engaged “pre-eminent independent experts” as
part of its environmental impact statement. “The outcomes show we will
have a very positive effect on their habitat through environmental
management such as feral animal eradication programs,” he said.
(submitted by Onychomys)
This Canadian company has ambitions, baby! I confess to not having heard of Edmonton-based Space Engine Systems until a spaceQ story
crossed my desk this week. There's a lot going on here, but if I may
try to summarize, the company is working on a) a single-stage-to-orbit
space plane, b) a hypersonic vehicle for point-to-point transport of
body organs for medical transplants, c) a Moon-capable spacecraft, and
d) a hypersonic drone named "Sexbomb" for defense applications.
That's a full plate ... Like I said, a lot is happening
here. And it's difficult to divine whether any of this is real. I
suspect the answer is no, it's not. But it makes for fun reading. Make
sure you check out the image at the top of the article, which appears to
be a comically low-fidelity rendering of a "high temperature wing
bending test facility." Something is bent, that's for sure.
Apr 7, 2021 · Cannon Beach, a 37-acre surf, shop, gym and multi-use development project, has broken ground in Mesa. The first attractions of the fun-time ...
Surf Lagoon and Entertainment District to Bring Impressive Attraction to Mesa
March 23, 2021 Mesa, Ariz. – Surf’s up Mesa!
A 37-acre surf, shop, gym and multi-use development project is set to
break ground on Tuesday, March 30 at 11 a.m. The oasis is being made
possible by Cannon Beach Developers and is located at the cross streets
of Power and Warner roads in Mesa. The project, two and a half years in
design and development, will bring the ocean to Arizona in a place
unlike any other in the state.
"We hope Cannon Beach will bring
out the best in its patrons by challenging them to join, or at least be
inspired by, new activities,” said Cole Cannon, lead developer at Cannon
Beach.
Revel Surf will anchor the development with a 3.3-acre
surf lagoon that features the world’s first Swell MFG’s Traveling Surf
Technology and UNIT Surf Pool’s Stationary Rapid Surf Technology, in one
location. This unique combination will create a more natural surfing
lineup with a peak wave rather than a right-session-only or
left-session-only option as found in many of today’s wave pools.
“The
Swell MFG will create peak waves and provide some of the most epic and
diverse wave sets for every level of surfer,” said Matt Gunn, co-founder
of Swell MFG. “We look forward to welcoming every level of surfer to
enjoy this surf lagoon.”
This new technology and layout has
gained the attention of the professional surf community due to its
ability to cater to all skill levels.
“Our wave
technology and vision for this project will be like nothing you have
seen in the market to date and I’m so grateful to be a part of this
incredible project and team,” said Shane Beschen, former pro surfer and X
Games gold medalist.
“Combining Swell MFG’s state-of-the-art
traveling waves with the best stationary rapid surfing wave on the
market by UNIT Surf Pool is going to make this surf park the most highly
sought-after surf destination in the U.S.,” said Tony Finn of UNIT Surf
Pool and wakeboard creator. “Together you have the perfect surfing
experience for people of all ages, abilities, and skill levels. There
has never been a better opportunity for surf lessons and technical
progression than there will be here.”
The development
is geared toward the growing population settling in the east Valley.
With a burgeoning influx of California surfers, young and old that have
relocated to Arizona and yearn for the beach, as well first timers who
want to venture into the world of surfing. Whether you are a spectator
or participant there is something for everyone at Cannon Beach —
specialty dining, fish tacos on the beach, day spa, gym, splash pad for
kids, and overall good vibes.
The Cannon Beach development design
team includes talent from Hawaii to Germany. The land planning project
was developed in consultation with Arizona locals EPS Engineering, H20
Design, and Adaptive Architects.
Revel Surf plans to open May
2022, with the surrounding amenities to follow including an on-sight
hotel, retail, office, dining and more. The Cannon Beach development
ground is currently entertaining proposals from potential tenants for
its various pad locations.
MEDIA CONTACT
Claire Natale, Evolve Public Relations and Marketing 202-294-5999 claire@evolveprandmarketing.com
Mar 30, 2021 · A beach oasis is in the works to "bring the ocean to Arizona." Cannon Beach Developers is set to break ground on a 37-acre water park and ...
"Cannon Beach, the 37-acre surf, shop, gym and multi-use development project has announced a new anchor tenant, KTR. Located at the cross streetsof Power and Warner roads in Mesa, Cannon Beach is expected to open in 2023.
The project broke ground in June 2021 and will bring the ocean to
Arizona in a place unlike any other across the state. It has 500,000
square feet of retail, restaurant and hotel space centered around the
focal point, a state-of-the art surf lagoon, and now KTR, an indoor
action sports center.
KTR is the power-packed thrill-infused fun zone for families with
children of all ages offering skateboarding, scooters, a parkour/ninja
warrior course, trampoline, BMX, and other high-flying aerialist
attractions. This will be the seventh KTR location in the Valley and is
set to become the corporate franchise headquarters. Located on the
mezzanine level overlooking the lagoon, the new, 30,000 square foot
space will include special attractions for guests of all ages and will
also be another option for onsite private events.
“Cannon Beach and KTR is a match made in heaven for families looking
for a healthy alternative to getting kids off their digital devices
while having the freedom to play,” said Cole Cannon, founder of the
Cannon Beach project. “There isn’t a better anchor to compliment the
surf and lifestyle amenities of the development. Whether you need your
family to burn some energy on one of the attractions or to put your feet
in the sand and watch surfers ride the waves, this is the place to be.”
KTR will compliment Cannon Beach’s line up of attractions and
restaurants with its flare for the extreme fun and adventure. Kids can
learn how to surf before they try out the actual lagoon. It will also
offer its hallmark programming that has facilitated countless birthday
parties, group/corporate events, and training, including at the Olympic
level.
“We are thrilled to join Cannon Beach and be another opportunity for
fun and adventure,” said Ron Sciarro, co-founder of the KTR franchise.
“Cole’s team and ours share the value of using our resources to better
the community and we look forward to hosting a variety of groups. We’re
especially excited to invite non-profit entities and church groups to
our facility at no cost throughout the operating season in hopes of
giving a little something back to the communities we love and serve.”
Photos from Cannon Beach’s official groundbreaking on March 30th, 2021.
The Cannon Beach and Revel Surf team kicking off the construction of the soon-to-be resort.
(Pictured from left to right, Tony Finn– inventor of sport of wakeboarding and UNIT Surf Pool Distributor, Cole Cannon– lead developer of Cannon Beach, Eric Di Bella- Adaptive Architects, Matt Gunn– Executive Director of Swell MFG , Shane Beschen–
Pro Surfer and Gold Medalist and Creative Director of Swell MFG, not
pictured is John Bushey- Chief Engineer of Swell MFG and Jessica
O’Leary- UNIT Surf Pool Distributor.)
To keep pace with startups’ agility and speed, many large
corporations have created functions and investment strategies to engage
external innovators—with more than 750 corporations making venture
investments in 2018.6
The primary motivation for many of these investments is less financial
than strategic, gaining insight into new products, the competitive
environment, and partnership opportunities.7 (See the sidebar “What’s driving spin-ins?”)
Government can adapt this model to realize similar benefit—an
approach the CIA pioneered in 1999 when it established its
not-for-profit venture arm, In-Q-Tel, to invest in ventures with
strategic relevance to the defense and intelligence communities.
CIA Venture Capital Arm Partners With Ex-Googler’s Startup to “Safeguard the Internet”
Sam Biddle
6 - 8 minutes
Trust Lab was
founded by a team of well-credentialed Big Tech alumni who came
together in 2021 with a mission: Make online content moderation more
transparent, accountable, and trustworthy. A year later, the company announced a “strategic partnership” with the CIA’s venture capital firm.
Trust Lab’s basic pitch is simple:
Globe-spanning internet platforms like Facebook and YouTube so
thoroughly and consistently botch their content moderation efforts that
decisions about what speech to delete ought to be turned over to
completely independent outside firms — firms like Trust Lab. In a June
2021 blog post, Trust Lab co-founder Tom Siegel described content
moderation as “the Big Problem that Big Tech cannot solve.” The
contention that Trust Lab can solve the unsolvable appears to have
caught the attention of In-Q-Tel, a venture capital firm tasked with
securing technology for the CIA’s thorniest challenges, not those of the
global internet.
“I’m suspicious of startups pitching the status quo as innovation.”
The
quiet October 29 announcement of the partnership is light on details,
stating that Trust Lab and In-Q-Tel — which invests in and collaborates
with firms it believes will advance the mission of the CIA — will work
on “a long-term project that will help identify harmful content and
actors in order to safeguard the internet.” Key terms like “harmful” and
“safeguard” are unexplained, but the press release goes on to say that
the company will work toward “pinpointing many types of online harmful
content, including toxicity and misinformation.”
Though Trust Lab’s stated mission is sympathetic and grounded in
reality — online content moderation is genuinely broken — it’s difficult
to imagine how aligning the startup with the CIA is compatible with
Siegel’s goal of bringing greater transparency and integrity to internet
governance. What would it mean, for instance, to incubate
counter-misinformation technology for an agency with a vast history of
perpetuating misinformation? Placing the company within the CIA’s tech
pipeline also raises questions about Trust Lab’s view of who or what
might be a “harmful” online, a nebulous concept that will no doubt mean
something very different to the U.S. intelligence community than it
means elsewhere in the internet-using world.
No
matter how provocative an In-Q-Tel deal may be, much of what Trust Lab
is peddling sounds similar to what the likes of Facebook and YouTube
already attempt in-house: deploying a mix of human and unspecified
“machine learning” capabilities to detect and counter whatever is
determined to be “harmful” content.
“I’m suspicious of startups pitching the status quo as innovation,”
Ángel Díaz, a law professor at the University of Southern California and
scholar of content moderation, wrote in a message to The Intercept.
“There is little separating Trust Lab’s vision of content moderation
from the tech giants’. They both want to expand use of automation,
better transparency reports, and expanded partnerships with the
government.”
How precisely Trust Lab will address the CIA’s needs is unclear.
Neither In-Q-Tel nor the company responded to multiple requests for
comment. They have not explained what sort of “harmful actors” Trust Lab
might help the intelligence community “prevent” from spreading online
content, as the October press release said.
Though
details about what exactly Trust Lab sells or how its software product
works are scant, the company appears to be in the business of social
media analytics, algorithmically monitoring social media platforms on
behalf of clients and alerting them to the proliferation of hot-button
buzzwords. In a Bloomberg profile
of Trust Lab, Siegel, who previously ran content moderation policy at
Google, suggested that a federal internet safety agency would be
preferable to Big Tech’s current approach to moderation, which consists
mostly of opaque algorithms and thousands of outsourced contractors
poring over posts and timelines. In his blog post, Siegel urges greater
democratic oversight of online content: “Governments in the free world
have side-stepped their responsibility to keep their citizens safe
online.”
Even if Siegel’s vision of something like an Environmental
Protection Agency for the web remains a pipe dream, Trust Lab’s murky
partnership with In-Q-Tel suggests a step toward greater governmental
oversight of online speech, albeit very much not in the democratic vein
outlined in his blog post. “Our technology platform will allow IQT’s
partners to see, on a single dashboard, malicious content that might go
viral and gain prominence around the world,” Siegel is quoted as stating
in the October press release, which omitted any information about the
financial terms of the partnership.
Unlike typical venture capital firms, In-Q-Tel’s “partners” are the
CIA and the broader U.S. intelligence community — entities not
historically known for exemplifying Trust Lab’s corporate tenets of
transparency, democratization, and truthfulness. Although In-Q-Tel is
structured as an independent 501(c)3 nonprofit, its sole, explicit
mission is to advance the interests and increase the capabilities of the
CIA and fellow spy agencies.
Former
CIA Director George Tenet, who spearheaded the creation of In-Q-Tel in
1999, described the CIA’s direct relationship with In-Q-Tel in plain
terms: “CIA identifies pressing problems, and In-Q-Tel provides the
technology to address them.” An official history of In-Q-Tel published
on the CIA website says, “In-Q-Tel’s mission is to foster the
development of new and emerging information technologies and pursue
research and development (R&D) that produce solutions to some of the
most difficult IT problems facing the CIA.”
Siegel has previously written that internet speech policy must be a
“global priority,” but an In-Q-Tel partnership suggests some fealty to
Western priorities, said Díaz — a fealty that could fail to take account
of how these moderation policies affect billions of people in the
non-Western world.
“Partnerships with Western governments perpetuate a racialized vision
of which communities pose a threat and which are simply exercising
their freedom of speech,” said Díaz. “Trust Lab’s mission statement,
which purports to differentiate between ‘free world governments’ and
‘oppressive’ ones, is a worrying preview of what we can expect. What
happens when a ‘free’ government treats discussion of anti-Black racism
as foreign misinformation, or when social justice activists are labeled
as ‘racially motived violent extremists’?”
Trust Lab to Help Federal Market Safeguard the Web from Misinformation and Harmful Actors
Trust Lab
2 - 3 minutes
Trust Lab enters strategic partnership with In-Q-Tel
, /PRNewswire/ -- Trust Lab, the company dedicated to creating a
safer internet using ML-powered Trust & Safety, today announced its
strategic partnership with In-Q-Tel (IQT) for a long-term project that
will help identify harmful content and actors in order to safeguard the
internet.
Trust Lab's category-defining technology uses ML-based classifiers
and rules engines to identify high-risk and harmful content, accounts,
and transactions at scale. In addition to pinpointing many types of
online harmful content, including toxicity and misinformation, Trust
Lab's technology can be used to understand critical trends and
narratives relevant to national security.
"Our technology platform will allow IQT's partners to see, on a
single dashboard, malicious content that might go viral and gain
prominence around the world," said Tom Siegel, Co-Founder
and CEO of Trust Lab. "It's a positive step forward in helping safeguard
the internet and prevent harmful misinformation from spreading that
could influence elections or cause other negative outcomes."
About Trust Lab
Trust Lab, the company dedicated to creating a safer internet, uses
ML-based classifiers and rules engines built by Trust & Safety
experts from Google, YouTube, Reddit and TikTok to identify and measure
high-risk and harmful content, accounts, and transactions at scale. The
majority of the leading social media companies use Trust Lab's
innovative tools and services, as do leading marketplaces, messaging
companies, as well as content hosting services of different sites. Trust
Lab also works with both the U.S. Government and the European Union to
protect free speech online while identifying harmful content.
SOURCE Trust Lab
www.nytimes.com
Opinion | The C.I.A.’s Top Technologist Is Uncomfortable With Facebook
Mesa International Film Festival Returns to Downtown Mesa
1 - 2 minutes
This weekend the Mesa International Film Festival returns to downtown
Mesa. Activities kick off on Thursday, Dec. 1st from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at
Benedictine University with speakers Joanne Williams and Matthew Earl
Jones discussing the advantages of filming in Arizona and concluding
with Oscar winner (and Mesa native) Troy Kostur giving a keynote address
moderated by Hitesh Patel of Voyager Entertainment.
Over 200
films from around the globe will screen over the weekend culminating in
an awards brunch on Sunday, Dec. 4.
All screenings will take place at
ASU's MIX Center while filmmaker networking events will be held at local
businesses in downtown Mesa including Chupacabra Taproom, Oro Brewing
and Jarrod's Coffee, Tea and Gallery.
Tickets and/or badges are required
to attend screenings/events and can be purchased online or at the event
Box Office.
Mesa Film Festival participants are given the opportunity to
learn about various aspects of filmmaking and network with industry
professionals. Topics may include but are not limited to writing,
cinematography, casting, entertainment law and marketing.
The Mesa
Film Festival offers mentoring sessions that provide participants with
the opportunity to sit down one-on-one with industry professionals.