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Booktrib's Bites: From Dark Romance to Political Commentary

(NewsUSA) -  

CaptivatedCaptivated by Jessica Rooker

Quinton Starks is a vain, self-absorbed, philandering playboy and company president whose life is work, partying, and one-night stands. He treats women as sexual objects rather than equals until he finds himself enthralled with a sweet and humble innkeeper, Amelia Johansson. Only there's one small problem—she’s married!

Once Quinton realizes Amelia isn't unattainable, he executes a plan to ensure their paths will cross again. Fate gives Quinton the opportunity to make Amelia his. He decides to sweep her away on a platonic trip with his gang in tow. After the trip turns steamy, Amelia realizes she cannot return to her normal life. Quinton’s full-service, fast-pace, and fun-loving lifestyle brings Amelia back to life—both mentally and physically. Read this hot romance that captures what the heart desires in a new relationship fueled with lust and love! Purchase at https://bit.ly/45vmLSy.

 

Dead to RightsDead to Rights by Bailey Herrington

For readers who enjoy mystery novels sprinkled with political and social commentary. David Elliott from What the Barber Knew returns in a new, action-packed thriller.

 1953. David is a college sophomore American Literature major who also plays baseball and has a propensity to jump into things without looking. When his revered professor Steven Jeffrey ostensibly commits suicide, David receives a coded letter from him a day later. With the help of his cousin Judy, David is determined to decipher the message and make it public.

However, they quickly become entangled in intrigue, murder, and peril masterminded by a cadre of CIA operatives. Only their courage and ingenuity can save them from also falling victims to staged murders. During their fight, David and Judy face personal and political revelations that will upend their lives. Purchase at https://amzn.to/42A2Oai.

 

What happens nextWhat Happens Next by Christina Suzann Nelson

"Everyone has a story, and maybe everyone needs a little help toward healing."

Popular podcaster and ex-reporter Faith Byrne made a name for herself telling stories of greatness after tragedy--but her real life does not mirror the stories she tells. While her daughters spend the summer in Hawaii with her ex-husband, she must manage on her own. That changes when she's asked to spotlight her childhood best friend's missing person case on her podcast.

Dora Crane never accepted that her younger daughter could be dead. But when her husband leaves her and her older daughter intervenes, she agrees to counseling if Faith comes to Deep Valley and sheds light on the cold case. Will these two women finally get the answers they need to reconcile the past and the future? Purchase at https://bit.ly/3rDfH6Y.

 

Wrongful ActsWrongful Acts by Tony Sclama

Two years ago, Nobel laureate Dr. Allisyn McLoren unexpectedly left her prestigious research position. Since then, as FDA commissioner she has restored the legitimacy and reputation of the troubled agency plagued by prior mismanagement and numerous deficiencies. But now she finds herself under pressure from government sources and a prior colleague to circumvent protocol and personally expedite approval of a bio-tech firm’s new form of gene therapy, and she’s at a loss to explain their motive.

When a homicide detective’s investigation of a deadly altercation between two friends leads him to Allisyn, they uncover a conspiracy to defraud the government that has deadly consequences. In her pursuit of the evidence to expose the deception, she must overcome a response that threatens her reputation, career, and even her life. Purchase at https://bit.ly/3MZaeON.

 

China Challenges the World in Electric Vehicle Arena

(NewsUSA) - Electricity was in the air at China’s signature annual auto show in Shanghai, according to experts at the Special Competitive Studies Project (SCSP), a bipartisan nonprofit organization.

At AutoShanghai 2023, foreign and domestic auto makers rolled out their best to the People’s Republic of China (PRC) market, and the takeaway was clear: the future of the automotive industry in China is electric.

Notably, the PRC’s rise to prominence in the global EV industry follows many of the same industrial strategies that has propelled its rise in other technology sectors, such as fifth-generation (5G) telecommunications infrastructure. Some of these strategies include:

Deep Government Support. China’s EV milestones date back to Beijing’s 2006 The National Medium- and Long-Term Plan for the Development of Science and Technology (2006-2020). Since then, EVs have been featured in each major succeeding industrial plan.

Outbound and Inbound EV Investments. China has benefitted from access to foreign technology and expertise, which helped accelerate its indigenous EV production. Foreign automakers continue to pour investments into China, the largest auto market in the world, amid stiffening competition from their domestic rivals and despite risks to their intellectual property.

Dominance in Critical Minerals and Battery Production. China’s dominance in the critical materials that feed into the most expensive part of any electric vehicle – the battery– is a major competitive advantage to the country’s EV development.

Of course, the EV revolution goes beyond making and selling cars.  EVs represent a convergence of most of the technologies SCSP has identified that will shape the future of innovation: artificial intelligence, microelectronics, advanced networks, new energy storage and production, and smart manufacturing. Economic leadership in EVs will be a springboard for new jobs, a new and transformed industrial base, and new forms of prosperity. Geopolitically, leadership in EVs will forge new pathways toward energy transition and energy security.

Fortunately, the United States and its allies are organizing to compete in the EV sector on a global scale.

The United States and the European Union are mending their differences over the Inflation Reduction Act, which has breathed new life into the U.S. EV industry. Washington and Tokyo are also finding ways to cooperate more closely on EV supply chains. Looking ahead, the United States and its allies and partners should increase political support to better position their respective EV industries to compete with the PRC on a global scale. The U.S. also can jumpstart the EV innovation ecosystem by supporting research and development for new battery technologies. These actions will help the U.S. into the driver’s seat for the future of EVs and their economic and political impacts.

Visit scsp.ai for more information.

 

Booktrib's Bites: Murder, Treasure and Beekeeping

(NewsUSA) - echo from a bayouEcho From a Bayou by J. Luke Bennecke

Murder. Treasure. A supernatural twist. In this latest work from a multi-award-winning author, John Bastian is plunged into a dangerous journey to uncover the truth about his past life as Jack Bachman after a skiing accident unlocks hidden memories. With unshakable visions of a bloody ax, a treasure of gold coins, and a redheaded woman, John sets out on a journey to find answers and confront the man who murdered him in his past life.

Faced with danger at every turn and with a hurricane fast approaching, John must fight for his survival and the safety of those he loves. Full of twists and turns, this gripping novel will keep readers on the edge of their seats until the very end. Don't miss out on this unforgettable ride. Purchase at https://bit.ly/3M1PR40.

 

honey drop deadHoney Drop Dead by Laura Childs

Theodosia’s Honey Bee Tea is an elegant affair set in Charleston’s Petigru Park amidst native grasses and a beekeeping project. But when a phony beekeeper sprays toxic smoke at the guests, the party erupts in chaos. Then a shot rings out and politician Osgood Claxton III falls to the ground – dead.

Holly Burns, the gallery owner who commissioned the tea, is in shock. A man is dead, guests injured, her paintings left in tatters. When the police don’t have a clue, when old-line politicos don’t want questions asked, Holly begs Theodosia to run a shadow investigation and help restore her gallery’s good name. This is book #26 in the Tea Shop Mystery series – a series that was pronounced “one of the absolute best cozy mystery series” by Book Riot and recently featured as a question on Jeopardy! Purchase at https://bit.ly/3IcnE8u.

 

boundariesBoundaries by Millie by Jo Smoak

What can young children learn from a donkey? Boundaries are limits that we each possess. They can be expressed in different ways. Children author Jo Smoak thinks that having and establishing boundaries with others is important and shares how boundaries are created in this delightful book.

Boundaries by Millie takes you through the day-to-day life of a real donkey with some funny twists. How do you think that a donkey would communicate boundaries? Certainly, it’s important that children understand that no means no, and it’s important to understand when it is okay -- and sometimes even very necessary – to say no. And “no” is not to imply that you are not loved. Find out other valuable lessons in this fun, yet meaningful, story about setting healthy boundaries. https://bit.ly/3Q2V5iv

 

tough and competentTough and Competent by Eugene F. Kranz

 From Gemini to Apollo launches, the Skylab program, and the stunning loss of the Challenger crew, author Eugene Kranz was the face of NASA leadership. Now he documents the leadership and teamwork principles that emerged from an organization of novice, part-time engineers in NASA Mercury Control. By July 1969, when faced with the stress of the Apollo 11 mission to land Americans on the moon, they had matured into a group of hardened individuals empowered to make the split-second decisions to land with only 17seconds of fuel remaining.

What had changed? Team chemistry, says Kranz. IT! elevates performance to where the impossible becomes commonplace. IT! was born in a bare-bones warehouse floor work environment, where learning by doing developed the materials for flight. Moving innovation forward, as you’ll see, is never simple. https://bit.ly/44sm0sz

 

Data access is missing or delayed, and 81% want synthetic data now

(NewsUSA) - Companies are looking to jump on the AI hype to build their own ChatGPTs and improve processes with artificial intelligence. Yet, a recent internal survey by a global telecommunications company found that accessing relevant data that would serve as the backbone of any AI engine is a top challenge. 80% say they don't have fast enough access to data, with typical lead times ranging from one to six months. 

In another public survey conducted by synthetic data company MOSTLY AI, 28% of AI and machine learning developers cited a lack of data access as the reason for failed AI projects. Privacy and governance issues were cited in 35% of the cases. Some companies are reluctant to embrace generative AI because of data privacy issues, and understandably so. It's a bit of a catch-22 situation. Companies can't use AI models developed by others because they want to protect their data. They can't develop their own AI models either due to data privacy concerns and possible future regulatory issues. Does that mean the AI revolution is over before it even started? 

Far from it. While some of the most aggressive players, like OpenAI and Microsoft, forge ahead despite the data privacy and intellectual property issues flagged by regulators, artists, and consumers alike, others look for tools that enable them to develop AI engines with privacy and fairness in mind. A new generation of so-called privacy-enhancing technologies, or PETs are offering new ways to get data.

PETs could save the day 

Synthetic data generation stands out as one of the most advanced and innovative privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) available today. By harnessing the power of synthetic data, businesses can overcome the hurdles posed by privacy concerns and data protection regulations. Artificially generated with intelligence gleaned from sample datasets, synthetic data provides a valuable resource for companies seeking to optimize their AI engines and improve processes through artificial intelligence.

With the aid of synthetic data, companies can gain unprecedented insights into the correlations, trends, and patterns present in their customers' data without risking their privacy. Synthetic generators create proxies that faithfully mimic real data, allowing for in-depth analysis and experimentation without compromising the privacy of individual users. This unique capability empowers businesses to explore novel solutions and even use data to fine-tune their AI models, enhancing the accuracy and reliability of their predictions and decision-making processes.

Synthetic data also serves as a powerful tool for data augmentation, effectively addressing imbalances found in real-world datasets, such as those related to gender or race. By employing synthetic data in tandem with genuine data, companies can rectify biases and promote fairness in their AI applications, paving the way for more equitable outcomes.

Over 80% of those working with data report wanting to work with synthetic data that is matching the patterns of real data without the privacy-sensitive data points. Similarly, 71% of respondents in the State of Synthetic Data Survey agreed that synthetic data is the missing piece of the puzzle required for AI/ML projects to succeed. 

Seventy-two percent of respondents plan to use an AI-powered synthetic data generator within the next few years, and almost 40% plan to use one in the next three months. And 46% of practitioners cite data augmentation - a process capable of fixing imbalances of real data, such as gender or race imbalances - as their main use case. Although excitement is high, the survey also highlighted a heightened need for educating the data community about the benefits, limitations, and use cases of synthetic data. 

Misconceptions about synthetic data are widespread, even among AI/ML experts 

There is still a lot of confusion around the term "synthetic data"; 59% of respondents didn't know the difference between dummy mock data and intelligent synthetic data. This suggests that synthetic data companies have a huge responsibility to educate data consumers and learn firsthand what it's like to work with synthetic versions of real datasets.

Tobi Hann, MOSTLY AI's CEO, said, "We have to educate people big time. Since we work with synthetic data day in and day out, we take a lot of related knowledge for granted, and only when conversations get to a deeper level do we realize that sometimes even engineers have fundamental misunderstandings about the way synthetic data generation works and the use cases it is capable of solving. Our number one priority is to get people hands-on with synthetic data technology, so they really learn the capabilities in their day-to-day tasks and might even discover new ways of working with synthetic data that we didn't think about." 

The synthetic data potential 

When asked about the most frequently used data anonymization tools and techniques, 49% of respondents said that they use data masking to anonymize data. Twenty percent said they simply remove personal information from datasets – an approach that is not only unsafe from a privacy perspective, but can also destroy data utility needed for high-quality training data. Privacy-enhancing technologies, like homomorphic encryption, AI-generated synthetic data, and others, account for 31%. 

Without a doubt, the AI revolution is underway, and it is in all of our interests to make sure that companies develop these data-hungry beasts in privacy-respecting ways. Synthetic data - due to its malleable and shareable nature - is also the key to AI explainability. When AI creates or predicts something, it has no insight into why it decided to do what it did. The concept of explainable AI tries to solve this black box by giving access not only to the model but also to the data that was used to train the system. Synthetic training data functions as the window into the souls of algorithms, allowing developers, regulators, and even consumers to understand how the model came to the conclusion it did. 

Algorithmic decisions have been impacting our lives before, but with the recent AI breakthroughs, cases like a woman being given less credit on the basis of her gender by a biased algorithm or a man getting arrested due to a facial recognition algorithm misidentifying him, are on the rise. It turns out that data access is important not only to those who create AI but for those who are subjected to its decisions. By leveraging synthetic data, businesses can embark on a path of responsible AI development, where data privacy is preserved, biases are mitigated, and AI models are thoroughly understood and trusted. Embracing synthetic data represents a critical step towards realizing the full potential of AI while upholding ethical standards and ensuring a positive impact on society.

About MOSTLY AI

MOSTLY AI is the pioneering leader in the creation of structured synthetic data. It enables anyone to generate high-quality, production-like synthetic data for smarter AI and smarter testing. Synthetic data teams at Fortune 100 companies and others can originate, amend, and share datasets in ways that overcome the ethical challenges of using real, anonymized, or dummy data. AI-generated synthetic data is private, provides a reduction in time-to-data, and puts more machine learning models into production. For press inquiries, email [email protected]

 

THE LAST PROFESSIONAL – Another Potential Classic in America’s Literary Landscape

(NewsUSA) - It’s been said that Ed Davis has done for American railroads what Jack Kerouac did for American highways and John Steinbeck did for American nomads. Lofty comparisons indeed.

And it’s amazing this can all happen while writing a book about hobos, what Davis calls a “brotherhood of travelers who emerged with the coming of the great iron roads and who held dominion over them for more than a century.”

Yet maybe it is precisely the scrutiny given this band of tramps, capturing the filth, hunger, exhaust, grit, ingenuity and slice of America they embody that makes The Last Professional so powerful.

It’s the story of a hobo, a wanderer and a madman -- three characters hurtling toward a heart-wrenching climax where their way of life, and their lives, hang in the balance.

Lynden Hoover, a young man on the brink of a new beginning, cannot embrace it without confronting the traumas of his past. Help comes from The Duke, an old loner who calls America's landscape his home. He clings to an honor code, but in fleeing from Short Arm, his merciless enemy, his code is being tested. The Duke mentors Lynden, enlisting old traveling friends to keep himself and his apprentice just ahead of Short Arm's relentless pursuit.

Bonds are formed, secrets exposed, sacrifices made, and trusts betrayed -- all against a breathtaking American landscape of promise and peril. It’s three unforgettable characters, hurtling toward a spellbinding climax where pasts and futures collide, and lives hang in the balance.

Ed DavisBut the essence of The Last Professional is much greater than its intriguing plot. The rambling trains are a metaphor for an American journey, a frenetic yet serene search for identity. Is it a train to freedom or a train to survival?

The book continues to receive lofty praise:

"It reads like an amalgam of adventure and drama, with a touch of Cormac McCarthy-esque neo-noir," says Colin Jordan of Medium.

"Part Peckinpah, part Stephen King's Stand by Me, and part something else entirely -- The Last Professional feels honestly like escapism done right,” says Daily Pop News. “The kind that completely envelopes you, with dream-like seduction, in a fully realized and fleshed out environment."

The book has won the American Fiction Award, New Mexico, Arizona Fiction Award, and NYC Big Book Audio Fiction Award.

It’s not so much what Ed Davis has done for American railroads in The Last Professional. It’s what he has done for human awareness, for our conscience, for our understanding of the many paths we take, some by choice and some perhaps outlined in a higher preconceived scheme. Whatever picture your personal perspective presents, view life through a wider lens and marvel in the majesty before you, whatever outward stereotypes lead you to believe. 

“There’s no secret to it. We’re all of us on a train. It doesn’t run smooth, it doesn’t run easy, and it don’t run one minute longer than it’s meant to. You gonna ride it, or let it ride you? That’s the only choice we really get.”

Visit www.eddavisbooks.com.

 

Camp Lejeune Litigation Enlists Acclaimed Environmental Counsel

(NewsUSA) -  As far back as 1980, scientists determined that two water supply systems for Camp Lejeune in Jacksonville, N.C., were contaminated with hazardous chemicals.

The water supply systems served unmarried service personnel, as well as families of enlisted Marines. The systems also provided water for schools, offices, and recreational areas. In addition, another system provided water for the base’s hospital and a housing community.

As a result of long-term exposure to the contaminated water, individuals stationed at Camp Lejeune have developed many debilitating illnesses linked to the contaminated water, including:

● Leukemia

● Parkinson’s disease

● Bladder, cervical, kidney, and liver cancer

● Hepatic steatosis

● Kidney disease and renal toxicity

● Multiple myeloma

● Myelodysplastic syndromes and aplastic anemia

●Non-Hodgkins lymphoma.

●Scleroderma

● Systematic sclerosis

Finally, litigation is underway to bring benefits to those impacted by the Camp Lejeune contamination.

Thanks to the Honoring Our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Act, signed in August 2022 by President Biden, those harmed by contaminated water at Camp Lejeune now have a way to make legal claims against the U.S. government.

Military personnel who were stationed at Camp Lejeune for more than 30 days between 1953 and 1987, may be eligible to file and join lawsuits currently in progress. Individuals and families who were not serving in the military, but who lived or worked on the Marine base and developed any of the associated illnesses may also be eligible.

Robin Greenwald, a partner at the Weitz & Luxenberg (W&L) law firm, has been appointed by the courts as Co-Lead Counsel for the ongoing Camp Lejeune litigation.

“It is an honor to be awarded a position to help the potentially hundreds of thousands of U.S. service personnel and their families stationed at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina to recover for their physical injuries caused by contaminated drinking water,” says Ms. Greenwald, who co-chairs W&L’s Environmental Toxic Torts and Consumer Protection Litigation group. “We want to thank our Lejeune clients for entrusting us with their lawsuits,” Ms. Greenwald adds. The legal team’s combined efforts will benefit all Lejeune plaintiffs, and not just W&L clients.

Ms. Greenwald is a widely recognized environmental toxic tort and consumer protection attorney with a proven track record of legal victories, including a multi-billion-dollar settlement with Monsanto on behalf of nearly 100,000 Americans who developed Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, an aggressive type of cancer, after being exposed to the leading weedkiller Roundup.

Weitz & Luxenberg encourages those who believe they fit the criteria and have been diagnosed with one or more of those conditions to schedule a free consultation.