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Rick Howard, N2K CyberWire's Chief Analyst and Senior Fellow, discusses personal defensive measures that an average citizen, regardless of political philosophy, can take in order to not succumb to propaganda. References: David Ehl, 2024. Why Meta is now banning Russian propaganda [News]. Deutsche Welle. Jeff Berman, Renée DiResta, 2023. Disinformation & How To Combat It [Interview]. Youtube. Niha Masih, 2024. Meta bans Russian state media outlet RT for acts of ‘foreign interference' [News]. The Washington Post. Quentin Hardy, Renée DiResta, 2024. The Invisible Rulers Turning Lies Into Reality [Interview]. YouTube. Rob Tracinski, Renée DiResta, 2024. The Internet Rumor Mill [Interview]. YouTube. Robin Stern, Marc Brackett, 2024. 5 Ways to Recognize and Avoid Political Gaslighting [Explainer]. The Washington Post. Sarah Ellison, Amy Gardner, Clara Ence Morse, 2024. Elon Musk's misleading election claims reach millions and alarm election officials [News]. The Washington Post. Scott Small, 2024. Election Cyber Interference Threats & Defenses: A Data-Driven Study [White Paper]. Tidal Cyber. Staff, 2021. Foreign Threats to the 2020 US Federal Elections [Intelligence Community Assessment]. DNI. Staff, 2024. Election Cyber Interference Threats & Defenses: A Data-Driven Study [White Paper]. Tidal. Stuart A. Thompson, Tiffany Hsu, 2024. Left-Wing Misinformation Is Having a Moment [Analysis. The New York Times. Stuart A. Thompson, 2024. Elon Musk's Week on X: Deepfakes, Falsehoods and Lots of Memes [News]. The New York Times. Will Oremus, 2024. Zuckerberg expresses regrets over covid misinformation crackdown [News]. The Washington Post. Yascha Mounk, Renée DiResta, 2022. How (Not) to Fix Social Media [Interview]. YouTube. Renee DiResta, 2024. Invisible Rulers: The People Who Turn Lies into Reality [Book]. Goodreads. Nina Jankowicz, 2020. How to Lose the Information War: Russia, Fake News and the Future of Conflict [Book]. Goodreads.
Rick Howard, N2K CyberWire's Chief Analyst and Senior Fellow, discusses personal defensive measures that an average citizen, regardless of political philosophy, can take in order to not succumb to propaganda. References: David Ehl, 2024. Why Meta is now banning Russian propaganda [News]. Deutsche Welle. Jeff Berman, Renée DiResta, 2023. Disinformation & How To Combat It [Interview]. Youtube. Niha Masih, 2024. Meta bans Russian state media outlet RT for acts of ‘foreign interference' [News]. The Washington Post. Quentin Hardy, Renée DiResta, 2024. The Invisible Rulers Turning Lies Into Reality [Interview]. YouTube. Rob Tracinski, Renée DiResta, 2024. The Internet Rumor Mill [Interview]. YouTube. Robin Stern, Marc Brackett, 2024. 5 Ways to Recognize and Avoid Political Gaslighting [Explainer]. The Washington Post. Sarah Ellison, Amy Gardner, Clara Ence Morse, 2024. Elon Musk's misleading election claims reach millions and alarm election officials [News]. The Washington Post. Scott Small, 2024. Election Cyber Interference Threats & Defenses: A Data-Driven Study [White Paper]. Tidal Cyber. Staff, 2021. Foreign Threats to the 2020 US Federal Elections [Intelligence Community Assessment]. DNI. Staff, 2024. Election Cyber Interference Threats & Defenses: A Data-Driven Study [White Paper]. Tidal. Stuart A. Thompson, Tiffany Hsu, 2024. Left-Wing Misinformation Is Having a Moment [Analysis. The New York Times. Stuart A. Thompson, 2024. Elon Musk's Week on X: Deepfakes, Falsehoods and Lots of Memes [News]. The New York Times. Will Oremus, 2024. Zuckerberg expresses regrets over covid misinformation crackdown [News]. The Washington Post. Yascha Mounk, Renée DiResta, 2022. How (Not) to Fix Social Media [Interview]. YouTube. Renee DiResta, 2024. Invisible Rulers: The People Who Turn Lies into Reality [Book]. Goodreads. Nina Jankowicz, 2020. How to Lose the Information War: Russia, Fake News and the Future of Conflict [Book]. Goodreads. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
For generations, a nuclear war has been assumed to be so horrible that no one has used these weapons since 1945. But what have we done in the last 80 years to pull ourselves back from the edge of nuclear destruction? In her new book “Nuclear War: A Scenario”, pulitzer-prize finalist Annie Jacobsen explores a ticking-clock scenario. Based on dozens of exclusive interviews with military and civilian experts who have built the weapons, she pieced together what a response to nuclear war might look like. She's in conversation with independent tech journalist, Quentin Hardy. Guest: Annie Jacobsen, Journalist; Author, Nuclear War: A Scenario Guest Host: Quentin Hardy, former Head of Editorial, Google Cloud Come check out Ray's live conversation on US immigration next Tuesday, July 9th at 6 pm PT! Tickets for in-person and online program are here: https://bit.ly/RaySuarezLive
Benny Speaks with Air Force Veteran Quentin Hardy about his pursuit of stand up comedy. They talk about his career and his journey to stand up. Share some laughs with 2 Veterans as they talk about how to make people laugh and the story that led him there. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sempersometimes/support
Hot new pod fresh from the factory floor! We're joined by DC's own Quentin Hardy. Quentin has been working the stand-up comedy festival circuit for a while now and it was great to talk with him today. He's a very funny dude, be sure to keep an eye out for him anywhere jokes are told.
Quentin Hardy is Silicon Valley’s favorite tech journalist. Known for his work at the NY Times, WSJ, and Forbes, Quentin was hand-picked by Google to lead their editorial efforts and wax poetic on all things cloud computing.Kimberly Zenz is one of the world’s most sought after cyber security strategists. Currently she is Director of the German Cyber Security Organisation, DCSO, in Berlin, but has worked globally helping national governments stay one step ahead of international hackers and cyber-spies.SSBT is hosted by Mauhan M Zonoozy, founder of Bubbl (acquired by Cricket Media), NYC-based angel investor, and Venture Architect Director at BCG Digital Ventures.
On this episode, Petey and Elena get together with Quentin Hardy to talk about his meteoric ascension in 2 short years from the horse farms of rural N.C. to the horse manure of the comedy scene of D.C., along some stops at NBC along way. The tubular two plus a king to be crowned, enjoy!!!!
Kubernetes 1.16 is out, and our guest this week is its release manager, Lachlan Evenson. Lachie is a Principal Program Manager at Microsoft and an Australian living in the US; Craig and Adam are therefore method-interviewing, being this week in those two countries respectively. Do you have something cool to share? Some questions? Let us know: web: kubernetespodcast.com mail: kubernetespodcast@google.com twitter: @kubernetespod Chatter of the week New Zealand: man brings clown to redundancy meeting Cloud Summit Sydney and APIdays Melbourne News of the week Kubernetes 1.16 is released Traefik 2.0 Announcing .NET Core 3.0 gRPC on .NET Core GKE Container Native Load Balancing now GA Google makes €3 billion of data center investment CloudARK’s 5 takeaways from the Helm Summit Crossplane 0.3 Agones 1.0.0 Episode 26 with Cyril Tovena and Mark Mandel Spire TPM plugin from Bloomberg Episode 45 with Andrew Jessup Azure: EKS now GA in Government regions Egress lockdown now GA AKS Periscope open source released Monitor your Google Anthos clusters with the Sumo Logic Istio app Google Cloud Build named a Leader for Continuous Integration in the Forrester Wave Banzai Cloud updates Logging Operator and Istio Operator The problem with Cloud Native by Quentin Hardy of Google Cloud Citrix integrates its ADC portfolio with Istio ContainerShip shuts down Links from the interview Prison England Lithium Technologies Kubernetes 1.0 launch roster CrashLoopBackOff Helm Classic Deis acquired by Microsoft Deis Labs Episode 61, with Jeremy Rickard and Ralph Squillace Phippy and Captain Kube Childrens Illustrated Guide to Kubernetes 1.16 release blog What Lachie is excited about: Dual stack IPv4/IPv6 Endpoint slices What he’s looking at in Alpha: Ephemeral containers Distroless What slipped: Sidecar containers Breaking old APIs in Kubernetes 1.16 Deprecation policy 1.16 release team Emeritus Advisors KubeCon San Diego session on shadowing in releases Kubernetes 1.17: run by women Removing the Test-Infra release role Release notes from annotated PRs Community retrospective Release mascots: 1.16 Release patch 1.11 1.14 Olive Garden When you’re here, you’re family History of the breadstick Cutting people off from unlimited breadsticks 2019 Steering Committee elections are happening Lachlan Evenson on Twitter
Mark Schreier Licensed Sales Associate with Century 21 American Homes Real Estate interviews Quentin Hardy of Movement Mortgage who explains what you need when applying for a mortgage to make sure all your Ducks are lined up in a row in this competitive seller's market.
How much of a mortgage can you afford? Is the bank speaking gross or net income when they give you a percent. Mark Schreier Licensed Sales Associate with Century 21 American Homes Real Estate and Quentin Hardy a Mortgage Banker with Movement Mortgage discuss this important topic. www.markschreier.com
Mark Schreier a Realtor with Century 21 American Homes Real Estate and Quentin Hardy a Mortgage Banker with Movement Mortgage discuss how to make your offer shine during a bidding war. www.markschreier.com
Mark Schreier Realtor with Century 21 American Homes Real Estate with special guest Quentin Hardy the branch manager of Movement Mortgage discusses everything you need to know about the mortgage pre-approval process. https:// www.markschreier.com . https://movement.com/lo/quentin-hardy/
Our lives in 2050 will be vastly different than today. Rapidly advancing technology is changing everything from food production to health care, energy output, manufacturing and the military balance. Innovations already in development include brain-computer interfaces, vat-grown cruelty-free meat, knitted cars and guided bullets among many others. Technology which once seemed like science fiction is now reality - and even old news - where can we possibly go from here? The Executive Editor of The Economist, Daniel Franklin, explores how technology will shape the future in his recent book, Megatech: Technology in 2050. His insights are based on extensive interviews with distinguished scientists, industry leaders, academics and acclaimed science-fiction authors who are at the forefront of the most exceptional inventions and sinister trends. Where will technology be in 2050, and how will it affect the way we live? What does this mean for the job market and how we perform our work? In what ways can we prepare for the opportunities — as well as the dangers — that await? Speaker Daniel Franklin is Executive Editor at The Economist. He is in conversation with Quentin Hardy, Head of Editorial at Google Cloud. For more information about this event please visit: http://www.worldaffairs.org/event-calendar/event/1699
From WikiLeaks and Edward Snowden to Bitcoin and the Arab Spring, digital technologies have taken on a powerful role in global politics. These technologies are disrupting the power of traditional institutions – governments, businesses, international organizations – and giving new actors the ability to shape international affairs. Who are these non-state actors and how do they influence politics and events around the world, for good and for ill? How does digital technology challenge our existing institutions and norms, and what can governments and businesses do to maintain security and rule of law? Dr. Owen will consider these questions and discuss the new frontier of international affairs in the digital age. Speaker Taylor Owen is Assistant Professor of Digital Media and Global Affairs, University of British Columbia, and a Senior Fellow at the Columbia Journalism School. Quentin Hardy, Deputy Technology Editor of The New York Times, moderates the discussion. For more information about this event please visit: http://www.worldaffairs.org/event-calendar/event/1500
Vivienne Ming is a theoretical neuroscientist, a technologist, and an entrepreneur, and the scope of her work is more than impressive. In October 2015, she sat down with Quentin Hardy, the deputy technology editor of the New York Times at the Uncharted Ideas Festival. Whether talking about research on lie-detection or face recognition to help refugee children, Ming’s studies of the brain are eye-opening.
People around the world will interact with Africa very differently over the coming decades. They will be more likely to trade stocks in Ghana, work for companies doing business on the continent and learn the names of African tech moguls and billionaires. The old narrative of an Africa disconnected from the global economy and mired in conflict is rapidly fading as the continent transforms itself into a global powerhouse. Pushing this transformation is a wave of modernization, technological innovations and a growing pool of talented Africans changing their countries not only from within but also from abroad. What impact will Silicon Valley have on the tech boom in Africa? How should policy makers and business leaders view these changes throughout the continent? This panel discussion will feature expert researchers and entrepreneurs with deep connections to Africa and its business community. Jake Bright and Aubrey Hruby will offer a nuanced and data-rich analysis to a complex continent while reconciling its challenges with rapid progress. Entrepreneur Chris Folayan will discuss his work developing new platforms to bring e-commerce to Nigeria and other nations.The conversation is moderated by Quentin Hardy, Deputy Technology Editor at The New York Times.For more information about this event please visit: http://www.worldaffairs.org/events/event/1488
Geoff Currier speaks with Quentin Hardy on the future of Kodak. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Access to online education has the potential to democratize education and skill advancement around the world. In what ways and for whom has online education been most successful so far? What are the platform's limitations and where are the gaps? Please join us for a discussion of online education’s potential role in preparing a global labor force for the knowledge economy of the 21st century.The discussion features Nicholas B. Dirks, Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, and Sebastian Thrun, Co-Founder and CEO of Udacity.Quentin Hardy, Deputy Technology Editor of The New York Times, moderates the conversation. For more information please visit: http://www.worldaffairs.org/event-calendar/event/1328
The author and creative team discuss the new app version of “1,000 Places to See Before You Die,” and Quentin Hardy finds new uses for cloud computing.
Doug Andrea, the chief executive of Andrea Electronics, discusses his company's 75-year history in the audio industry. Quentin Hardy, the deputy technology editor of The Times, explains what “Big Data” is and how it's being used to put online advertisements in front of people. The weekly news roundup includes Nokia and Microsoft's new mobile phone venture, Netflix's continued woes, a new round of “Grand Theft Auto,” and computer scientists cracking the cipher of an 18th-century manuscript. The Tip of the Week offers a quick way to clean up old bookmarks in Firefox.
Media have changed ideas about the self and society for centuries, from vernacular print in the Reformation to the 20th Century’s reference to life’s intense moments as being “like a movie.” What might happen as today’s media blur accelerates? It is not just that news, information and entertainment are in continual overlap, with print, audio and visual streams interchanging. The ideal is that no information is lost, and we are “always on,” in perpetual connection with continual feeds. In this talk I will discuss some of the major trends in their historic context, and sketch out the likely consequences.