26 Burst results for "Bosworth"

Telecom Reseller
A highlight from Telit Cinterion keeps Cyber-Criminals relentless search to find an IoT entry-point on susceptible technology at bay! Part 2, Podcast
"Hello, this is Don Witt with the Channel Daily News from telecom reseller. And today we had the privilege of speaking with Neil Bosworth. He is the head of vertical segments and IoT products at Telecinturium. How are you doing today, Neil? I'm fine. Thank you very much, Don. And thank you very much for having me on your, your fantastic podcast series. I, I really appreciate it. And our listeners are going to be all ears when we start talking about our IoT subject today. So let's go ahead and get started with part two of the podcast. Neil, how does remote management play into the IoT security? Maybe you can give us a little example. Yeah, I'd be happy to do that. When it comes to remote management, it's important to first understand its purpose. Unlike traditional enterprise IT systems, IoT devices are dispersed and they lack physical supervision or onsite technicians. You know, the guys in white coats that do routine tests and repairs. And these decentralized systems have multiple computational points spread across potentially vast geographical areas. In a sense, the fundamental role of IoT could be generalized as remote monitoring and control. Therefore, remote management could be seen as monitoring and control of the remote monitoring and control system, or maybe an IoT system for the IoT system, right? And clearly you can't have this never -ending loop. So it's essential to consider remote management as an integral component of the wider IoT solution. Another key consideration is the longevity of IoT systems. So while enterprise IT systems often go through hardware upgrade programs, IoT devices, especially edge devices, which is the thing, may remain in place for 10 years or more. And this poses a challenge as technology evolves rapidly and the cyber villains constantly seek new vulnerabilities. As time goes by, IoT hardware might just become outdated and this could potentially expose security risks. And furthermore, IoT devices are physically exposed. So sometimes even located in people's homes. And this opens the door for our cyber rogues to tinker with these devices and exploit their weaknesses. So remote management tools must perform supervisory and maintenance tasks, just like in corporate IT systems. However, they face the added complexity of dealing with geographic dispersion across diverse radio networks and all sorts of radio standards, and while interacting with the thing that's often a resource -constrained device. So what are the tasks that remote managements need to address in IoT systems? Well, firstly, they need to securely distribute authorized firmware updates to devices, you know, to address performance enhancements, adjustments due to network evolution and crucial security patches to address possible vulnerabilities in the edge devices. They need to detect abnormalities in the behavior of edge devices, identifying any abnormal patterns that could include potential security breaches or operational issues like weak signal strength or something like this. Then the remote management tools need to perform updates to digital identities. We're talking about the security keys and the credentials and, excuse me, doing this at scale and often in the form of digital certificates. And this ensures that the devices maintain secure access and authentication throughout their lifetime. And finally, the remote management tools need to coordinate cloud integration, allowing seamless connectivity and data exchange between the cloud and the edge devices. So managing a system comprised of multiple remote assets is a complicated task for remote management. It really must seamlessly integrate with all the various layers mentioned earlier to ensure the overall IoT system functions smoothly and securely. This is basically, you know, for organizations, they have a lot to think about. So how can they really actually ensure that the IoT network networks are secure while utilizing the remote management devices themselves? Yeah, that's great. Well, I don't know where you lived on, but the more windows or doors you have within your house to hide the risk of unauthorized intrusion, right? I'm going to start boarding them up right now. Well, I can say securing your house by breaking over all the doors and windows, it may be super secure, but clearly it's not practical. And in a similar vein, remote management in IoT introduces both opportunities and challenges. Remote management involves distributing your central system and granting access to your data. And while it's essential for keeping your IoT devices up to date and functioning optimally, it also presents a potential entry point for security threats, right? And that's why it's imperative to ensure that remote management itself is adequately protected within the broader IoT architecture. And it's important to remember that remote management is not a standalone solution. It relies on a suitable architecture system design and the configuration of the whole IoT system. So when considering an IoT solution, businesses must make a decision. Will they develop their own remote management system or invest in a third -party solution? Now, if you choose to implement your own remote management solution, it's crucial to align with established standards and incorporate security modules that's being assessed by the security ecosystem. And a popular standard for remote management is Lightway 10 to M, which provides a secure foundation based on best practices and state -of -the -art protocols.

Telecom Reseller
A highlight from Telit Cinterion keeps Cyber-Criminals relentless search to find an IoT entry-point on susceptible technology at bay! Part-1, Podcast
"Hello, this is Don Witt with the Channel Daily News from telecom reseller. And today we had the privilege of speaking with Neil Bosworth. He is the head of vertical segments and IoT products at TELIT Centurion. How are you doing today, Neil? I'm fine. Thank you very much, Don. And thank you very much for having me on your fantastic podcast series. I really appreciate it and our listeners are going to be all ears when we start talking about our IoT subject today. Let's go ahead and get started with part one of the podcast. Neil, can you give our listeners a little background of yourself and where you fit in your career with your technology at TELIT Centurion? Sure. Okay. Well, my professional career began as an electronics design engineer and I used to work with wired communication products and I moved into field application engineering, which gave me first hand exposure to multiple real projects across many sectors in the electronics industry and the issues that they face. And then in the early part of the century, it sounds like such a long time ago, I discovered this thing called machine to machine communications, a term which is gradually morphed into Internet of Things or IoT, of course. And although now IoT covers multiple factors and disciplines such as connectivity, cybersecurity, cloud architecture, AI, analytics, et cetera, my focus has been really pointed towards securely connecting things portion of IoT with in the past with companies such as Arrow, I've worked with Centurion, Gemalto, and TALIS. And today I work in strategic marketing with TELIT Centurion, where we address IoT applications that really need secure and reliable communications.

Bitcoin Audible
"bosworth" Discussed on Bitcoin Audible
"And established on the fly with a few Bitcoin transactions and all you need is liquidity, and you can earn a return. And the chart, I'm not exactly sure how to read the chart and what they were meaning exactly because it ranges from 0% to 6%, APY, but I'll just use an example of something that I have seen someone try or I think Alex bosworth was even talking about. And this was almost like a half a year, a year ago or something. But he was talking about what sort of percentage he was making on his liquidity. And enlightening pool in the lightning liquidity pool, which is another non custodial decentralized marketplace. It's an exchange for people who need liquidity, LSP's would be the perfect market for this because if you are trying to build an automated LSP and you're automatically going to connect to breeze so that you're already operating, but you have other liquidity and you're trying to find a designated percent on it. You're trying to make a designated percent return, built right in, you can have built right into the same software stack. This automating your ability to open and manage liquidity for users connect you to something like the lightning liquidity pool, which is a decentralized, that's not quite the word. It is a non custodial blind market to make an explicit return to people who need liquidity. So you're literally getting paid 1% on your channel balance or whatever it is. For like the period of a month to offer this up to some other service. But if an LSP is managing to they have this automated software installed and they're managing to make any kind of return on users, well then if they purchase liquidity to two, three, four other like LSP's elsewhere on the market, or they offer the liquidity to other LSP's, which gives them a better connection as well. So not only are they offering liquidity for somebody else, but it means that they have better payment liquidity out for all of their users, so it's a mutual benefit and they get paid a set percentage and none of this is custodial. Nobody gives up key control over any of the funds. That's insane. That is insane.

The Dan Patrick Show
"bosworth" Discussed on The Dan Patrick Show
"Right? And you think about it, you go from kindergarten to first grade, no more naps, like so much has changed in that year. Not a lot has changed. Based on everything you're saying. About your nap joy? Yeah. Maybe you don't take a morning shower, do you take baths like bubble baths? With little scuba Steve. You don't get it later on taking a nap and I have a bubble meth. Steven is busy. He's taking his bath, taking his bath. Maybe that's your style. Maybe I just got you bowl wrong. Tell you what my toys, my rubber ducky. You put your pajamas on to take a nap. My feet pajamas, yeah. Yeah. My Brian bosworth, Jamie. When I was a kid, I was the kid that did fall asleep during nap time, right? And it was the worst feeling. You're talking about the worst feeling, wake it up. The class had already be on its way again after the nap. And I would still be there sleeping, drooling on myself. On that little flattened mat on the floor. On your mom's side and your grandmother's rag mat or whatever you brought in on your little blankie, your blanket that you brought in. You guys remember, right? I wouldn't even on the floor. Yeah, you'd be sleeping on the floor. I would be the kid that would really fall asleep. No pillow. They leave me there, Joel. And I'd wake up in the middle of the class, embarrassed to bedhead, have to walk back to my desk and all the kids would stare at me. Yeah. So anyway, it's a throwback Thursday's cavina and rich and for Dan Patrick. When you wake up and you're not used to the schedule, start thinking about later on and getting back to bed. I posed the question. You could think about it later, our naps for weenies. You know what? When you have to wake up a little earlier than usual. Again, it's not that early. But you're not used to it. It's like that 6 a.m. flight when you book it, it feels like a brilliant idea, like 6 a.m. flight, perfect. I'll get there. I'll start my vacation early, or I'm visiting family. Take that early flight. When that day hits, the night before and you're like, are you serious? I gotta leave for the airport at three 34 in the morning. You're like, why did I book this ridiculous flight? You feel that every time you fly early? Oh yeah, it's a nightmare. Or the red eye. You're like, I'll take the ready, I'll sleep on the plane. They take that flight. And your day is ruined. No, it's good intentions. Oh, sleep on the plane never sleep on. So right now, thinking about my nap, but the truth is, I'll never get to my nap. Especially if you have kids or like Danny G said, someone with a loud weed whacker. You're never getting asleep. So enjoy the day. Let's have a kick ass Thursday, like I said. And let's talk about Aaron rod. He is emerged. I said that this morning and Danny G was like, what are you talking about? It's Jesus. Aaron Rodgers has emerged from the darkness. He was in his four days of darkness in an Oregon facility. And it looks like we have an insider. It's called a darkness retreat, by the way. An Aaron Rodgers insider bob and Oregon on line one, let's go to bob. Bob, any insight before I even get into the Aaron Rodgers story. Well, the kings actually happened to be right up in Ashland from where my mom lives and I just found out that he came out of these caves about maybe 15 minutes before your guys show came on. So I was like, hey. Did he see a show? I want to get some information to you guys. Okay. Yes. And you know, let's see what we changed our about and maybe I'll do a call in from the caves and get you guys a four one one. Before anyone else does. Give us the scope. Yeah, what's going on with Aaron Rodgers in Oregon? Right. Well, I guess checked out Wednesday, which was yesterday. So I don't know if I was a pretty fun cool little town. I mean, lots of Iowa lost lots of mushrooms and all sorts of fun stuff, so who knows? You might be getting down for a day or two, you know? Wait, so bob, since you're out there, can you do us a favor, do a little investigating, get the scoop, like scoops Callahan and come back and from what I gather right now, bob's just a guy that man? Bob's just the guy that's sort of lives around there. So he's really not. Can he go into these caves? I feel like they're probably protected. It would be like if something happened in Sherman oaks and you're like, guys, I'm an insider. Are you or did you just live there? I appreciate you. I appreciate his investigative journalism. Get on the case there, scoops Callahan. I do know what bob knows, though. Bob knows yesterday. With Wednesday. That's what I learned from that call. Well, yesterday. Thank you bob. And the color of his car is green. Thank you. Thank you. Aaron Rodgers has emerged from his ductus to treat according to the owner of the facility. 6 more weeks of winter. 6 more weeks of indecisiveness. He won't decide. Scott Berman, who owns sky cave retreats at Aaron's Aaron Rodgers left the dark room and facility Wednesday. Man, bob was right. Wednesday. Before entering the retreat, he said he did this so they could have a quote better sense of where he was at in life. And a mother, he was there for four days and darkness. Look, I'm not here to judge. No. What he's doing, right? Whatever floats your taco boat. He's got big decisions to make. So if it helps, good for him. By the way, it's not for me. 300 ft² room. I like taking naps, but not in caves for four days. Devoid of light. Sounds nice. With a queen bed, a bathroom. And a meditation mat. How do you know? It's powered? And you know if you're done? And the lights can be turned on if needed from the inside. Just a meditation mat? Yeah. Yoga man? Just like a little cushioning. Yeah, like a little like a soft mat. Well, so darkness retreat is over. Aaron Rodgers has emerged as rich said. He's emerged from the darkness. So we ask you Fox Sports radio nation. If you're an insider yet, give us a call 8 7 7 9 9 on Fox. If you've got any scoop, or if you've done something like this, what did you learn? What was your experience like, but we ask you, what's the most shocking thing that Aaron Rodgers is going to hear that happened in the past four days? Well, that's a good question. What has happened? You know, he's like a little mini van winkle. He's going to wake up and be like, what? What happened? No way. We landed on the moon. He's like Steven Seagal and hard to kill. Remember he was in a coma for 7 years? Well, most recently, were you going to share the most recent infamous story? With Jared Leto? Jared Leto was on one of these retreats. We've interviewed him. We met him. He's a bit of a weird. He's a bit of a weird bit of a weird bit of weird. Jared Leto Joker. But let's be real about it. He was on, I don't know where he was in the middle of the desert somewhere. Danny, Joel, do you guys know that Jared Leto story? No. And he started this. I feel like he started this retreat sometime around February or March of 2020. This is something called a lonesome retreat. He just went away by himself. And he reemerged a few months into the pandemic and came back and had no idea why everything was shut down. He had no idea because he was in this remote location. He's earning the start of the pandemic. Wait, what? Yeah, everyone's wearing masks. Everything shut down. People are scrambled for toilet paper and Jared Leto was like, what? He happened to plan a lonely, solo, cut off all communication retreat right before COVID. It's only four days. But a lot happens in four days. And there's no wrong answers. You could be serious about it. You can have fun with it. It doesn't really matter. I do have a question. Sure. Four days in darkness. How did Aaron Rodgers come out?

Game of Crimes
"bosworth" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"But anyway, I say all that to say that everyone is very, very gracious and Oklahoma, wonderful state, love the people of the wide open spaces, and I'm just, you know, I don't people very well anymore, and there's North Carolina is getting a little bit crowded for me, even though I live in the country. This is good stuff. Welcome to the Midwest pal band of Kansas farm boy. We'll welcome you out there. Just whatever you do, do not root for the sooners. William O'Brien bosworth did play for them, so. Yeah, actually, and he's great as the sheriff on smallville. What is it? Whatever that Dr Pepper commercial is. Yeah, yeah. The whole NFL thing didn't really take off for him, but you know, no. Hey man, so we're gonna bring this to a close, this has been a couple of the funniest stories mixed in with some really sad stuff. You know, we've had laughter. We've had tears, but that's kind of the way law enforcement is, right? So it is. But this is us, this is me saluting you there. Whatever you are this week, whatever agency you work for this week. This is I love it when I get to hang out with guys that I've known for years and years. We all say the law enforcement culture were brothers and sisters for life and this is a perfect example. So as much as we like to bust each other's chops, Gavin, it has been a true pleasure and honor to have you on here, man. Guys, I really appreciate the opportunity using you. You don't know how much it means to me. We'll let you know what the feedback feedback is about your crappy stories. Nobody's going to remember anything but the poop story. You could have saved the world cared cancer all they're going to be. Kevin shit his pants and cut off his own underwear and left it in the trash can. I did the blame it on the homeless people. What a way to go down in history. On that note, we're going to hit it here. So don't you guys go anywhere? Everybody else, stay tuned for the debrief.

Real Estate Coaching Radio
"bosworth" Discussed on Real Estate Coaching Radio
"The business with the world's most simple script that you just did. Exactly. And it's a script because it's a script that all of you, even the most amiable least direct people on Planet Earth can ask that question because you're ending it with whom I can help. Who do you know who's thinking about banger selling real estate in this market? Who am I? Who I can help. And if it's them, they'll tell you. This is easier than saying, hey Tim, when do you plan on moving? We're not doing that. We're talking about who do you know who I could help? I love to help friends and family of people that I already know. Super easy. Non confrontational, very amiable, and people love to help each other. The other thing I like about that script is that you can't give a yes or no answer. You have to think. I mean, maybe they don't know anybody, but they're at least going to give it more thought. Then when do you plan on moving or something like that? Now, the more advanced version of that is who are the two or three people you know who are thinking about buying or selling real estate in this market that I should be helping. And so that question, again, don't change it. Don't take the bite out of the question. Don't make the question ineffective because you made it less direct. If you make it less direct, I promise you, they're not going to send you referrals because you have it, essentially, told them that you're looking for a referrals. They're going to assume subconsciously mostly that you have an ask them for business because you're too busy or because you're, I don't know. Nothing work like with people like them or that neighborhood, that price range, et cetera. People make up thoughts in their head when you don't tell them what to think, which is you're in real estate. It's your pleasure to help people buy and sell real estate. If you sell insurance and you're seeing, or if you go to the gym, orange theory on a regular basis and the person you sit next to, when you're about to go into the actual workout room, sells insurance, and that insurance person never wants, and you know they sell mostly residential retail types. Yeah. And they never once, and they know you're in real estate, and they know you sell your successful, and they never once ask you if you guys could somehow connect and some way of asking you for business. That your mind tells you about them. They're lazy, they're complacent, they're too busy. They must not like me. They must not want to work with my customers. Your brain backfills with nothing but negative information about why that person hasn't actually asked you for a referral. Well, your centers of influence and your past clients, your mom thinks the exact same thing. You have got to ask for referrals every single time. So again, guys, it's habit stacking. A goal is a dream with an action plan. Kate bosworth. Jillian, thank you. Agility chose the picture of Kate bosworth. She put it up on her dream board. She did look like that girl.

TuneInPOC
"bosworth" Discussed on TuneInPOC
"Tonight's adventure of George Valentine has been brought to you by standard of California on behalf of independent Chevron gas stations and standard stations throughout the west. Let George do it, stars Robert Bailey at George with Francis Robinson as player. Wally Mayer appears as lieutenant Riley, tonight's story was written by David Victor and Herbert junior and erected by Don Clarke, also heard in the cast where lorene tuttle as Louise, Jeff Chandler is Michael, Tommy cook is Stephen, Ted for Elsa's coburg, may baker's lenore and her brawling as bosworth. The music is composed and conducted by Eddie dunster. He announced Sir John Houston. Listen again next week, same time same station to let George do it.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"bosworth" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"She and treasury that went to someone else So again one way for her to ease herself out of the company So let's take a look at the next generation of Facebook leaders Javi el Levin will take over ICO but the role is being somewhat reconstituted He won't oversee all of the things that Cheryl did and her iteration of chief operating officer obviously there's Nick Clegg Chris Cox and product Andrew bosworth chief technology officer You just wrote a book You interviewed A lot of these people And I know exactly What's your take Yeah I think the one person that people might not know very well is all a hobby who came out of the growth organization He was a lieutenant to chamath Who was the growth at all costs lieutenant Zuckerberg who really drove the company Sometimes in dicey ways as it grew and he gained trust and really has been very quietly one of the very top executives at Facebook slash meta and I think you're going to learn more about him now Of course Andrew bosworth is again Someone who's been with the company since 2005 I think He helped launch the news feed That's how far back he goes Also in the didn't have any women unfortunately And that line there But Naomi gleit is someone who is in the inner circle Who again one of the earliest Facebook employees So it's sort of striking that now as meta faces its next big focus as next challenge of the metaverse the people behind it are people who have been with Mark Zuckerberg since almost the very beginning Speaking of women at Facebook a number of powerful women who came up in Facebook have left quite frankly Stephen Carolyn Everson Fiji simo who is now the CEO of Instacart I actually had a chance to sit down with Fiji to ask her about Facebook's future this pivot to the metaverse her thought on whether or not this was a good idea Take a listen to what she had to say I personally don't love spending a ton of time in the air I am incredibly motion sick which would have been a very big problem if I had stayed at Facebook to build a metaverse You know what's interesting Steve and I wonder if Cheryl.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"bosworth" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Whole new business model Kurt and I also asked her if that had anything to do with this the fact that she's kind of got to write a whole new business plan take a listen to what she had to say We have a current business which is our current apps connecting customers to businesses And I think there's a lot of opportunity there right now but also over the long run And then the metaverse is a much longer term business opportunity And it's going to take some of the same form in that I believe we will be a place and then the amount of ours will be a place where businesses and consumers connect But I think the exact form that takes is something that will be figured out over the next number of years Much longer term Now there's a team in place whose job that is to do now figure out how consumers and businesses are going to interact in the metaverse and Kurt you know talk to us a little bit about the new leadership structure You've got javi oliva who's going to be taking on the role of COO You've got obviously Nick Clegg who's continuing to run policy and communications You've got Chris Cox the chief product officer Andrew bosworth the chief technology officer and of course Mark Zuckerberg Yeah I mean historically the way Facebook has been set up is that they kept the product side of the house under Mark Zuckerberg and the business side of the house under Cheryl Now what you'll see from this image right here is that a lot of the people up there with the exception of Nick Clegg are kind of from the product side of the house under Mark Zuckerberg you know Chris Cox a very good friend Andrew bosworth a very good friend javi a very good friend So these are people who had worked with and four Mark Zuckerberg for more than a decade There's someone there are people that he trusts very very completely and they're also people who are going to you know listen to what Mark says and believe in the vision that Mark sets forth right And not that Cheryl was at all Someone who was sitting in the room and banging her first and saying you know I'm not going to go that direction but my point is sort of that Mark has now surrounded himself with people who he very much trusts and who have worked for him for a very long time And so when you look at the future and you look about what might be uncertain about this idea of the metaverse I don't see the company wavering on it because the people again who are going to be talking with them at all of these important meetings are people he's known for a very long time And of course there are a lot of powerful women at Facebook who continue to work there but David what do you make of the fact there are no women No it's a bunch of white men isn't it Given that you know Cheryl Sandberg did a lot to change the world for working women This has been a key priority of her as a key priority in terms of evolving Facebook's culture to one that is friendlier to women Well she served as a symbol of women's success in business There's no question I mean for most of the last 14 years certainly for the last maybe ten or 11 years she could have left Facebook at any time and become the CEO of any company in the world And I know she was solicited for those kinds of jobs time and time again And didn't show interest because she really wanted to stay here I wouldn't be at all surprised however if she really has been feeling very not only left out but quite critical of a lot of the company's moves I wouldn't even be shocked to learn that she was not in favor of changing the company name and didn't really believe in the metaverse shift which I frankly think is still an unproven and highly questionable shift She's a very rational grounded business person but I want to reiterate one thing She created what was probably the best business in the history of capitalism for most of her time there The profit per dollar of revenue of Facebook's advertising business that she created is greater than the profit margin of any public company you can name And that has declined in recent years for a variety of reasons But she really is an astonishingly effective business leader for whatever other flaws we might want to point to She is not I've heard many times today one of the most influential women in business She is one of the most influential people Absolutely In business Totally Full stop And still is Yeah And of course now there's this big open question what's she going to do next She talked about her philanthropy She talked about her women's advocacy Take a listen to that portion of the conversation The decision I didn't come to lightly but it's in 14 years It's been 14 years and I want to make more room to do more philanthropically to do more with my foundation I've definitely not been able to do nearly as much As I have wanted to recently it's a really important moment for women Emily I know you and I have spent a lot of time talking about that over the years but it really feels like a very very important moment When I think more focused there was really important to me personally And of course Kurt and I are immediate next question was will you ever go back to business Will you ever get into politics take a listen to what she had to say I learned a long time ago never make any predictions about the future But I think a lot of that is pretty unlikely and I'm really I really think there's a lot hopefully that I can do with my foundation and so on topically Current do you believe it Is it unlikely.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"bosworth" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"But it's been 14 years It's been 14 years and I want to make more room to do more philanthropically to do more with my foundation I've definitely not been able to do nearly as much As I have wanted to recently it's a really important moment for women It really feels like a very very important moment When I think more focused there we've really important to me personally Sheryl Sandberg in her own words The story was broken by our own Emily Chang who joins us now Emily is anchor of Bloomberg technology on Bloomberg TV You've covered this company for such a long time What was this a big shock to you So what happened is we had some warning that this news was going to happen today And we had an opportunity to talk to Cheryl Sandberg my colleague Kurt Wagner and I just about why You know I think whenever you hear there might be big news from Facebook that's the first thought Is Cheryl gonna leave Is this the time you know she's been there for this many years or this many years or now today it's 14 years And I don't think anybody expected it to last that long I interviewed Stephen levy a longtime tech reporter on my show earlier and he said I think the surprise is how long she stayed I think she was probably looking for a good time to leave but there wasn't always a good time because Facebook is one of the biggest companies in the world with controversy after controversy that this company has weathered And perhaps she saw this pivot to the metaverse as an opportunity to say okay it's time for someone else to write the next chapter at Facebook or at meta and it's time for me to start something else Now what she told me directly was look it's been 14 years It's been the honor and the privilege of a lifetime but I want to spend more time with my family I want to work on my philanthropy I want to take advantage of this moment that women are facing now where I think she very strongly she may want to get involved in the roe versus wade debate who knows But it's certainly the end of an era And she will have made a big impact You know one of the things go ahead I was just going to say who's going to replace her Emily So the new COO is a guy named Javier olivan who was up to this point focused on growth at the company and then you look at this cadre of longtime Facebook lieutenants the CTO Andrew bosworth the PO that chief product officer Chris Cox obviously Mark Zuckerberg and all of these folks who've been at the company for an incredibly long time and have been very close to Mark Zuckerberg for a long time And then a newcomer Nick clag who's only been at the company for a few years but clearly has the political experience to weather these big controversies and help Facebook craft the message of what the future of this company is Those are the folks that are going to be figuring out how to build the metaverse and what the business plan is for it Before Sandberg arrived in Silicon Valley I believe she was assistant to US Treasury secretary Larry summers If she's regarded as being super smart I'm sure she was very helpful to mister Zuckerberg and building the business But I think she became the target of a lot of criticism There was the hope then that she could bring her influence to try to correct some of the things that people judged Facebook for doing wrong Is there a sense that she could have done more Does she feel a sense of regret There was a big hope that Cheryl would be able to use her relationships and her communication skills quite frankly to deal with lawmakers in Washington who have really had a target on Facebook and that has turned out not to be the case I think Facebook and meta has increasingly drawn the ire of lawmakers And that may be one of her biggest failures that she wasn't able to improve Meta's relationship with Washington now Nick Clegg is kind of in charge of doing that But you're absolutely right There was great hope that she had all of these connections She had this relationship These relationships she had this style of communication was very well regarded and that she would be able to make some headway there but unfortunately it was controversy after controversy and she often became the face of those controversies fair or not Rich do you have anything you'd like to add No not really just it must be a big holder for any response from her boss So Mark Zuckerberg did post and it was a glowing and very supportive post and I was told in terms of just contacts for our background that he is very supportive of her It was a fairly quick decision You know I can imagine that they've been talking about this for months if not years How and when this might happen but you know based on SEC disclosure rules there's really not a lot of time once they make a decision that they have to then deliver that news to The public So she said she made the decision of the weekend She told him over the weekend and here we are today The rest is silence I'm just wondering whether or not this is going to be a topic of conversation for your tech podcast I'm sure it will be Yes please listen to the Bloomberg technology podcast We've got a roundup of all the day's news and a deep dive on Cheryl Sandberg with some great guests Emily thank you so much Emily Chang from Bloomberg This is Bloomberg.

Podcasts – Telecom Reseller
"bosworth" Discussed on Podcasts – Telecom Reseller
"This is the green and I'm the publisher of telecom reseller, and today I'm with Tim Johan, who is the solution manager at foss, Tim, thank you for joining me today. I took not to be on the podcast with you. Well, Tim, I'm really excited we're going to be able to do this podcast. So many of our readers are Cisco users, so many of our readers use Cisco call manager. Many of our other readers have customers use Cisco, and you've recently announced there was a vos announcement, you unveiled an enhanced dial plan, integration between Microsoft Teams, phone system and Cisco call manager. We're going to be diving right into that topic in just a minute. But Tim, first of all, what is Voss? Bosworth, we're a global company. We work with the organizations broadly around helping them to build operate and run. They're used in their collaboration networks in their organizations. That's really our remit. We do that on a global basis with partners and customers. And my role within that is, I work as a solution manager so I'm working with our customers and partners and really helping them design and build out solutions that meet their particular business requirements. So Tim, let's start at the beginning. We've got Cisco. We've got Microsoft, what's the challenge here? So interesting point there. Doug, I think if you look at what's driving the RTA gender at the moment and sort of where organizations are putting their push in energy, just a lot of work around hybrid working. Agile remote remote working and it's really tending organizations towards building out what we call digital fabrics or digital workplaces to really connect up all the employees inside their organization, but out. But here's a challenge really. Those same organizations are also running. Existing Cisco Systems for their voice networks, so the challenge in the question is just how do you manage both these two worlds, whilst you're transforming your communication network essentially and moving that up to the cloud. That's what the challenge is. The real danger here is that organizations embark on these journeys. And they get to one I call this midpoint crisis and not so much a midlife crisis, more midpoint crisis..

Telecom Reseller
"bosworth" Discussed on Telecom Reseller
"This is the green and I'm the publisher of telecom reseller, and today I'm with Tim Johan, who is the solution manager at foss, Tim, thank you for joining me today. I took not to be on the podcast with you. Well, Tim, I'm really excited we're going to be able to do this podcast. So many of our readers are Cisco users, so many of our readers use Cisco call manager. Many of our other readers have customers use Cisco, and you've recently announced there was a vos announcement, you unveiled an enhanced dial plan, integration between Microsoft Teams, phone system and Cisco call manager. We're going to be diving right into that topic in just a minute. But Tim, first of all, what is Voss? Bosworth, we're a global company. We work with the organizations broadly around helping them to build operate and run. They're used in their collaboration networks in their organizations. That's really our remit. We do that on a global basis with partners and customers. And my role within that is, I work as a solution manager so I'm working with our customers and partners and really helping them design and build out solutions that meet their particular business requirements. So Tim, let's start at the beginning. We've got Cisco. We've got Microsoft, what's the challenge here? So interesting point there. Doug, I think if you look at what's driving the RTA gender at the moment and sort of where organizations are putting their push in energy, just a lot of work around hybrid working. Agile remote remote working and it's really tending organizations towards building out what we call digital fabrics or digital workplaces to really connect up all the employees inside their organization, but out. But here's a challenge really. Those same organizations are also running. Existing Cisco Systems for their voice networks, so the challenge in the question is just how do you manage both these two worlds, whilst you're transforming your communication network essentially and moving that up to the cloud. That's what the challenge is. The real danger here is that organizations embark on these journeys. And they get to one I call this midpoint crisis and not so much a midlife crisis, more midpoint crisis..

ignore
"bosworth" Discussed on ignore
"It also, by the way, making Linux the number one operating system on Mars, which is, I think. I will never get tired of that, too. You've heard it before. Finally, Linux wins. Facebook is considering face recognition in its upcoming smart glasses. According to Facebook, vice president Andrew bosworth, their value in their name. Are you surprised? Yeah. They're evaluating the legal and privacy issues around it. Ryan back ready for BuzzFeed. Here's the quote face recognition might be the thorniest issue where the benefits are so clear and the risks are so clear and we don't know where to balance those things. Come on, bosworth, your Facebook. Just do it. We think after destroying the U.S. democracy, that we can really tackle this process up to really good. We're really experienced really, really good. It's a shame. I really want a pair of glasses that tell me who I'm looking at. All the time. But Facebook may be the worst company to do it because of their reputation. Google was not a better company to do it, by the way. So maybe Apple. Give me LinkedIn glasses. Just LinkedIn. But Apple is already in. LinkedIn, LinkedIn. They can't do anything. They're so boring. Yeah, they should, though. The LinkedIn glasses. Microsoft has another shot at this. It's all of us. Yeah, that's true. Did you stock? That's what they're announcing on Tuesday. Or a robotic vacuum that doesn't get drunk, maybe. Instead of they did it in it? It'll play the windows startup sound. Oh, that'll be good. Did you get it on the GameStop, big run up there? A 100%? Nope. I wish. I wish. This is funny because this is CNBC and they're trying to pretend it has something to do with actual news. GameStop pronounced its CFO will resign on March 26th. That's why the stock doubled. Sure. Sure. That's what it was. It had nothing to do with those guys on Reddit. No. Actually, I guess the Reddit guys might have gotten excited because he was being forced out by Ryan Cohen who is the guy who has been pushing GameStop to go online to be a download company instead of a brick and mortar store. So maybe there is some maybe there's some legit there. There's also some evidence according to Reuters that bots hyped up GameStop on social media platforms. Wow. Really? Yeah. Yeah, not surprised. That's not scary about these things..

xperi-test-v1-c
"bosworth" Discussed on xperi-test-v1-c
"It also, by the way, making Linux the number one operating system on Mars, which is, I think. I will never get tired of that, too. You've heard it before. Finally, Linux wins. Facebook is considering face recognition in its upcoming smart glasses. According to Facebook, vice president Andrew bosworth, their value in their name. Are you surprised? Yeah. They're evaluating the legal and privacy issues around it. Ryan back ready for BuzzFeed. Here's the quote face recognition might be the thorniest issue where the benefits are so clear and the risks are so clear and we don't know where to balance those things. Come on, bosworth, your Facebook. Just do it. We think after destroying the U.S. democracy, that we can really tackle this process up to really good. We're really experienced really, really good. It's a shame. I really want a pair of glasses that tell me who I'm looking at. All the time. But Facebook may be the worst company to do it because of their reputation. Google was not a better company to do it, by the way. So maybe Apple. Give me LinkedIn glasses. Just LinkedIn. But Apple is already in. LinkedIn, LinkedIn. They can't do anything. They're so boring. Yeah, they should, though. The LinkedIn glasses. Microsoft has another shot at this. It's all of us. Yeah, that's true. Did you stock? That's what they're announcing on Tuesday. Or a robotic vacuum that doesn't get drunk, maybe. Instead of they did it in it? It'll play the windows startup sound. Oh, that'll be good. Did you get it on the GameStop, big run up there? A 100%? Nope. I wish. I wish. This is funny because this is CNBC and they're trying to pretend it has something to do with actual news. GameStop pronounced its CFO will resign on March 26th. That's why the stock doubled. Sure. Sure. That's what it was. It had nothing to do with those guys on Reddit. No. Actually, I guess the Reddit guys might have gotten excited because he was being forced out by Ryan Cohen who is the guy who has been pushing GameStop to go online to be a download company instead of a brick and mortar store. So maybe there is some maybe there's some legit there. There's also some evidence according to Reuters that bots hyped up GameStop on social media platforms. Wow. Really? Yeah. Yeah, not surprised. That's not scary about these things..

Daily Tech News Show
"bosworth" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"Facebook stopped being facebook and changed. Its name to meta m. e. t. a. seems obvious. In retrospect now the social network will still be called facebook. So i saw somebody say we're not gonna stop calling facebook. Keep calling the social network facebook because it will continue to be called facebook. The company that owns facebook and reality labs and instagram and oculus will be called meta. Ceo mark zuckerberg said from now on. We're going to be metaverse. I not facebook. I so for those of you keeping track facebook is youth. I two now and meta is metaverse. I which. I don't know where that leads the youth that also means the end of the oculus brand name to andrew bosworth wrote on meta's facebook social network starting in early twenty twenty two. You'll start to see the shift from oculus quest from facebook to meta quest and oculus app to meta quest app overtime meta spend most of facebook connect trying to explain its approach to the metaverse. Medicine mark zuckerberg said. It's not a thing that accompany builds. It's a broader platform. That i think we're all gonna contribute towards building in a way that is open and interoperable. That's what you wanna hear He talked about the metaverse. Being a place you're in now looking at so. He's like that really going to be that different. It's just you're going to be immersed in it you're going to be able to be inside instead of looking at it. They're a screen. Like you do now. Reality labs head. Andras pointed out that the metaverse will not exist. Just in vr either but it will be better in vr and ar Before we get to the announcements justin. What do you think of them. Changing the name. Which i hasten dad is not a restructuring like alphabet alphabet actually restructured google to be a new organization. This is really just a name change. Yes it's a fine name. Horizon was supposed to hint at the idea of the metaverse. We knew that metaverse was. They were very very focused on meta works. I guess that makes mark zuckerberg a ceo. Which i think is kind of funny. I do think that it is a mistake to lose the oculus. Branding oculus to me was the first breakthrough. Vr device that you could just hand anybody and because of its room scaling. It worked right off the rack. I do think that that is a mistake to not continue with oculus. That was a great brand name. Yeah and now it's a medicalised. Take a minute all right. Let's get to the announcement. Horizon home is going to let you use a medical to hang out in vr space. You're embodied as an avatar in a virtual home where you can watch videos and launch apps play games. Do all that with your friends is getting to the apps slack. Dropbox facebook and instagram. The work has to d- panels in your virtual space. I are in the oculus store now using progressive web app standards..

The Paul Finebaum Show
"bosworth" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Well his anyone checked out because the co-chair got can does he not know that there was a lot of money exchanging hands and just like it just fell from the low local cactus and no one knew it was coming from bethlehem. I i greg was certainly a in tucson. You're right but i don't. He's i think he's on the show tomorrow. Maybe we'll just turn the whole interview About about arizona. Then the other thing is is that. I don't understand why anyone's making a do about this. Little alliance between the pac twelve and the big ten in the acc. First off they see see is has no desire in my opinion to wanna play with the pac twelve and ended up sending miami go crush arizona state in el paso or something in the sun bowl game or have a clue clemson matchup against southern cal that worked out real well when they sent them against alabama a few years ago. You're absolutely I don't and so it's kind of to me. It's like much to do about nothing. And i think that the sec can continues to control college football from a talent in addition of oklahoma and texas that just solidifies. It and i don't understand why they're beating up on The sec for accepting them because at the end of the day it's like the lady said earlier. What would you expect somebody to do. Not take them no john. I think everyone would have. And there's just a lot of layers of this and it's hard to explain. Thanks so much for the call. We move one state over canada's in new mexico. Hello hello paul. Thanks again two days in a row against a privilege to be on your show and mimicking the caller from arizona. Today kind of shakespeare theme Going and so for the alliance say much ado about nothing You know the sec. As much about nothing. And the and the great line from macbeth A lot of sound and fury signifying. Nothing you know. That's really good to paul. We can have you know to to shakespearean themes going on now. You're shakespeare a little better than i do. It sounds like But macbeth one of my favorites but You know it seems to me you know. It's funny how things sometimes in sports a lot of time in sports mimic. What's going on in the country and vice versa. You know this kind of us and them and you know if we all work together. I think it will come out better. I love watching a great pac twelve game after all the sec's done or an early Big ten game too. You know i love. I love all of college football. And you know to try to kind of divide like that is not to me in the best interest but Hopefully it'll be some more working together than apart my next shakespearian theme. I was watching after your show last night. The you know the mardian mcgee Short interview all the coaches and They had the commercial on there from fans ville and just last week. I saw you know i watch. Sec football and i go to the opera and santa fe. Paul was midsummer night's dream which part of that show is the play within the play Paramus in visby of course a midsummer night's dream but. There's you know. Brian bosworth looking at the tv seeing the quarterback from clemson. Doing you know the commercial within the commercials that were bosworth saying wish it was on a commercial and My how times have changed. But i think. I think it's good for the athletes to be able to make money on their likeness and You know a long time coming In that respect. I know it does create some disadvantages. Here you know in new mexico. We got the new mexico lobos. I'll be going to be getting any Dr pepper commercials. You know maybe some. You know an appliance store or something you know. We can solve local refrigerators. Something like that. And then paul one big. I didn't know how to Apply shakespeare to platypus from pittsburgh. I do remember any shakespearean references to a platypus. I'm trying to think to be or not to be a duck billed of that but you know one thing. He'd been hammering home polit. And you know i used to work you know in the ticket office more the logistical part of things. And that's kind of what you've been getting out with doggy with your Guest a couple of weeks ago that. Hey it's real easy to say you know. Hey we want peace in the middle east. Well it's easy to save it how you're going to do it. You know we wanna know. Check everybody's trying to get a hundred thousand people into the stadium and trying to check their ticket. You gotta check the vaccine to everybody comes once and maybe you know not you know in a sober can dish you know and look. Look what's going on with the airlines and stuff you know again microcosm of society you could be asking for some trouble at those games you know with a lot of people in the you know the volatility In the country that she really you know in you know you ask that gentlemen a couple of weeks ago and then he's great he's been on your show before but he said you know everybody needs to be vaccinated to go in the games and you ask him well how you going to do and he said well. That's not you know. If you're going to write a column like that it seems to me to have some journalistic responsibility or at least have thought up something other than that someone else's job and that but i hope he comes back. He's a great guest for you but you know how are we going to do it. And that's a real question. I think To do it. And you know 'cause i had been you know the ticket side or where you know you're trying to deal with getting a lot of people in late and it's a real problem a lot of times even without you know a vaccination mandate so Those are pretty much my things for today. Paul and great show is always an hey by the way i love your segments with the local reporters and stuff it. You know a lot of people talk about the younger generation. But i you could see a lot of hope you know with these young journalists and I mean i used to work on campus here university of mexico. And i'll tell you you know the the young people they work hard and you know have a lot of passion for all things they do and it's I have nothing but hope for the future their pollen. I hope Especially you know for tennessee football this year. Hope which real good impressed with the coach and You know i was thinking. You've probably seen a lot more games than i have. Been a big tennessee fan. I've seen one the two thousand fifteen georgia tennessee game and we actually won thirty. Eight thirty one. What's your favorite game in one hundred years of neilan stadium. Oh my now. We're at i would. It might be early on. I saw tennessee when i was in college. Beat auburn It was the first weekend of the year. And that's the last thing. I remember about that weekend. So i'm gonna. I'm gonna i'm gonna marry that game. Hey thanks for the call..

Stuff You Should Know
"bosworth" Discussed on Stuff You Should Know
"Right. Unless it's four score man enforce gore. More couldn't help get humpty restored or something like that sure. That's what i'm going with. I i like that but the first the first rhyme did you say it was back in seventeen ninety seven hundred first appeared. Yeah and so. From the from the gecko. I think everybody was like what is what is everybody talking about. Here there's gotta be something to this. So people started thinking that there were there were there was more to the humpty nursery rhyme because it is so bizarre like gives you almost no context whatsoever. It's really dumb. it's a little dumb. You know not a lot happens in the thing that does happen. It's very unsatisfying. So i think people After the people who understood what this is all about had died off and failed to pass along. What what they meant Those people started wondering exactly what was behind all this and so this is some theory started developing. Yeah one of it is that humpty dumpty was supposed to be richard the third king of england In shakespeare about richard the third. He's picked it as a poisonous humpback towed and that's basically how history came to see him. Thanks to shakespeare's depiction right. The king richard was only in an office Ruled for a couple years about twenty six months and supposedly like you know fought for the common man and was against you know corruption and bribery and enacted a bunch of laws to fight that stuff so not fair to king richard. No for some reason. Some little part of my brain's being tickled right now. Like we talked about king richard as if he was in. I think the robin was there. Robin hood episode. Doesn't king richard like a bad guy in that maybe like he was like a just a lion who just wanted his pudding or something weird like that. I don't remember but yeah. Apparently he wasn't a bad king but it was basically shakespeare. Who did that. But the point is is richard. The third was the last english king to die in battle. He died at the battle of boswell. Bosworth bosworth difference. Yeah charlie's angels lately. I wanted to say bosley i. Are you really watching lunch. Yeah remember keep re-showing that one where. Sammy davis junior. Got you hooked but yeah king. Richard had a horse named wall and supposedly fell off of the horse and was bludgeoned. So you know fell off Sat on a wall and fell off the wall. So that's sort of where that connection comes in couldn't be saved all the king's horses and all the king's men couldn't put them back together again. So do it. this is where my money is. I just want everyone to know that. That is where i think. That's what i think. Humpty dumpty is all about all right. Well let's take our break and we'll come back and talk about lewis carroll kind of gumming up the works and some other theories right after this..

Pod Save America
"bosworth" Discussed on Pod Save America
"And one of the authors of an ugly truth inside facebook's battle for domination sheer franko. Thank you so much for being here anki. So much for having me love the book i it. It is I feel like for years. There's been a lot of reporting about what's going on inside of facebook but it's sometimes hard to figure out the difference between the company's positive spin some of the kind of worst possible readings on their decisions and then the reality of what goes on inside of a company of of just human beings. sometimes Being malevolent sometimes being incompetent. And i felt like this was an incredible window into how facebook works. I wanted to start by asking but something that's happening right now. Which is a facebook kicked off some misinformation researchers connected to nyu cybersecurity for democracy project. They cited privacy concerns. And when i saw the news what i immediately thought of is that is something. Facebook does in your book repeatedly whether or not sure what to do they just say. We can't do anything there. Privacy concerns senator. Ron wyden made this point like it's pretty laughable that they would site privacy as the reason that they're kicking off these researchers who were seeking transparency. What was your reaction to the the the the news about this About these two research being kicked off. I just thought that this fits so well into the pattern that was established in the book of what we see facebook doing again and again this really sort of almost random piecemeal effort at fixing things which doesn't ever get to the root of the problem but just offers these really sort of surface level solutions so in this case kicking off one group of nyu researchers you happen to be conducted fairly interesting and important academic researchers while not addressing a number of other academic researchers that are doing similar things a number of commercial groups that are doing similar things. I mean there are actual group's making money off of collecting data on facebook the same way that these nyu researchers are and it's baffling to me. Facebook wooden address those groups while they would address a group of academic researchers who've been very public about what kind of steps they're taking to safeguard people's privacy and what the actually doing with the data. They've collected so one thing. I learned from the book that i was really surprised by so in two thousand eighteen. Kara swisher interviews mark zuckerberg. It's a famous conversation because it is the conversation in which he says he would leave holocaust-deniers on the platform Because people should just see all the information including information like that creates a a firestorm of controversy. Obviously so what. I was surprised to learn was that this was planned. I thought this was mark zuckerberg going off script. Because he believes what he believes in would been. He's prep to within an inch of his life. But just said something offhand. But this was a plan response he planned to make this philosophical argument about holocaust. Denial which i found to be shocking but then by summer of twenty twenty zuckerberg has changed course. Completely orders. Facebook to craft a policy to ban deniers. What changed in those two years. So it's funny as a reporter how you come to something. The reason we have that anecdote in the book is because as reporters. We had this thought you did like. Surely this was mark zuckerberg acting off the cuff. Surely he just said something without the gang and then because he was in the middle of an interview with very high profile journalist he double down on it. Edit turned out like he just said no. This was a planned idea. He came up with it ahead of time. He was actually really intuit. He thought it showed. Just how staunch she was in his beliefs that as a jewish man he believed so much freedom of speech that he would allow something opponent like people denying the holocaust in his mind that was like intellectual pure. And i think that tells you a lot about him as a person how he thinks. You know what changed. If you were asking for facebook's version of this they would tell you. That mark zuckerberg was shown a study an internal study done. In which millennials people are you know. Roughly the age of myself and mark zuckerberg were increasingly coming to believe theories that denied the holocaust. There are increasingly coming to gravitate towards some of these antiseptic groups. And that really frightened him. That idea that someone his own age would be so persuaded. By false information on facebook it finally caused reverse course i think in fact it was two years of people wearing down him and showing him repeatedly that this was a horrible decision. This just didn't make sense and again. I think what's interesting here is that it's really piecemeal. He makes a call to reverse. His is his thinking on that one thing but he doesn't get to the bigger issue at play which is that he ultimately is a person that believes that like more speeches that are that good speech will outweigh speech. And if you give people this. This this broad array of ideas will gravitate towards the things that are true. His own platform keeps showing him that that is not the case that is not what his algorithms push people towards and instead of being like. Okay so broadly my ideas about free speech not actually accurate. He makes these really one off decisions. Yeah that that was. I think that was also in general surprising to me in reading this really great account of these decisions around what they limit and what they don't because they're so you have people like Andrew bosworth baas writing these sort of like dorm. Room style memo's describing. It's okay to have the harm because connecting people is the good Clearly for the bookmark. Has this instinct as you're saying. This libertarian instinct but when they realized that that won't apply that they need to do some kind of a limit there doesn't seem to be at least in in the reporting. You have here any moment where they look really kind of put the same level of thought into how to manage violations as they do into building a new product in your reporting have you come across any clear articulation of a philosophy around facebook's role when it does decide to limit speech on the platform. No and i think it's because they don't have it and as a reporter is search for that for years. You knows this book. We did over four hundred interviews with people who worked at facebook or still work at facebook and you ask them like what's the philosophical idea. Driving mark zuckerberg explain it to me not a one off decision on cunanan or conspiracy theorists or cova misinformation one off explanations. I want to know what is the big idea about how you create a social media platform with algorithms that drive really emotive content and then you allow what to exist on the platform. Right you allow. Where's your line. What is the thinking around what it means to have an idea free speech on a puffing like this and there is no articulation of that and i think that as a reporter it can sometimes she'll fruitless when you search for something and then you learn it doesn't exist and then you kind of subtle into that and you're like oh well how terrifying is that that doesn't exist and it is. I want to get to sheryl sandberg because this seemed to be like where the kind of the mark zuckerberg philosophy and the sheryl sandberg philosophy seemed to meet She has there was a nickname for the conference. Which was the only good news. Is that right and good news. What sheryl sandberg calls for conference room and there are a few moments in the book where it is pretty striking that she seems to get pretty frustrated that the truth doesn't comport with what she wishes the truth to be. Can you talk a little bit about what happened. When cheryl sandberg met with. I believe senator mark warner of virginia with The head of securities Stamos john stamos from full house In a second very stupid. I'm so sorry Minogue sushi's meeting with Congress and describing what they have found about russian interference But there's a disagreement between what sheryl sandberg are saying. What the head of security you talk more about that. Yeah i think that's a fascinating moment because it shows so many problems at facebook. So alex not john but alex status is the head of security He for months at this point has been looking russian election difference with his team. They found a lot of relief frightening. Detailed information about how. Russia had used facebook to interfere with the elections. And they're still looking. This is the key right. They know they haven't found everything. There is defined and actually his motivations..

Krypton Report: The Supergirl Podcast
"bosworth" Discussed on Krypton Report: The Supergirl Podcast
"Well we got this time to chat again. We talked about man. We keep talking. We could keep talking. We definitely but no. I think at episode and i think i think we'll do good. I like the ron. But what are your favorite lowest moment listeners. Like what lowest you like. What you resonate about the character do not like it helped me how much you don't like me bosworth's performance you know where to reach out to us kelly. Where can people can performance. Please please identify yourself to my. You really want to hear your argument if utah you can. Maybe a convincing argument. Why do you think he was good. I will listen non-judgmental here who actually can say it without being who might be curious but where can people here. You find you online. Beaming this tres. Patas play on youtube instagram and facebook. Drunk palmach on facebook instagram drunk. Pamuk is rolled into my youtube though. All right well we look forward to being your Episodes and the whenever you want to come back on you have a thought these please. I'm back and talk. Always nice to get new perspectives. Thought you ends is a that we love and enjoy. And you know my mom's. I we worship though you know well thank you so much for having me suspend fun and i definitely be back both the threat and a promise in sky..

Inside the Huddle
Bo Jackson believes he'd average 350-400 yards per game in today's NFL
"This next topic quickly by prefacing it. With falling statement. Oh, Jackson. Is the most impressive athlete I have ever seen. Period. Oh, Jackson, the most impressive athlete I've ever seen. In my lifetime, and it's not just that he played professional baseball and pro football and did so at the same time. There's been a few other guys who have done that. But they didn't come anywhere near Anywhere close to his holy crap moments in both sports did Bo produced. I'm talking about a guy was an all star in both sports, Not just a guy that played both sports at the same time, But a guy who was an all star in both sports a guy who not only could have been a whole family in one I'd argue he could be a whole family in both. I mean in either, but in both, Yeah, I said it like if he doesn't get hurt, and Bo want to spend his entire career playing both sports he probably could have, and he probably could have ended up with two bus. The guy was that explosive. He was that much of a freak show. Like if you're the right age, and I say Bo Jackson's name you might think of that frozen rope that he threw to gun down Harold Reynolds at the plate Or maybe that home run in the All Star game or the home run. He hit with one hand on the back. Or that wall run. Or maybe you Michael football and think about him humiliating Brian Bosworth and the Seahawks on Monday night. The guy was an unbelievable talent. Ah, fear ist running back and his career ended way too soon. I mean, you want to talk about a two sports door? This guy was so talented Once when he came on this program, he did an interview. Any ate a salad at the exact same time. So it is great to have you back on. How are you doing? I'm sitting. I'm sitting making phone calls after emails. Trying to eat up Caesar salad with grilled calamari at my favorite Italian restaurant. It's a good life, but it's a good life and you've earned it. So where are you right now? What city actually roll in Chicago on Like I said, I've been out running errands and just working. Actually, I'm working harder now than I did both sports. It's against you an interview with me, and he's eating a calamari salad. On answering email, too. So again, Let me say this very loudly, very proudly and very clearly, both. Jackson is the most impressive athlete I've ever seen. Having said that? Po was on the 21st and prime podcast. Check out would bow had to say about Bo. Nobody no more with me being a ball carrier. My coat's caught us number one, he said. I know you can run. But I will teach you How to carry that football, He said. That football is like your newborn baby. Don't put it on the ground and keep it away from the alright so nothing too crazy there A former players saying the guys today don't want to tackle But they don't attack the right way. I mean, nothing really crazy about that. Not really surprising. It's kinda what former players do write in pretty much every single sport. They say that was way better back when they played. But then Bo takes it a step further like this. Then I want to take me. I don't know about the hit Iraq, wrapping everybody's running into each other and trying to use a shoulder pants but not the ball carrier down. All right. Cool. Once again. I'm fine with this. Maybe wrapping up really is a lost art. Maybe guys are too focused on trying to hit guys with their shoulders and knock him down instead of actually tackling them. Maybe they're not focused on proper technique and fundamentals. I see you, Bo. Like if you start to think about it, and you watch Derrick Henry run and you watch what Derrick Henry is doing right now. You might start to imagine, man. If Derrick Henry could do that today. What would Bo Jackson be able to Dio if he played in today's game? What kind of damage could Bo do on a weekly basis? Funny you should ask because Bo himself has been thinking about that very thing. And while you were doing the Alfredo Bo did the math. If I play doing this here man is free because nobody wraps up anymore. They run into each other with the path notice. Bo's the only one not laughing when he made that statement. Bo just said he would be averaging 3 52 400 yards per game in the NFL. But I could see that in Tech Mobile, the only thing more impressive than real life. Bo Jackson was techno bowl. Bo Jackson. Techno Bobo was going for 3 52 400 per game every single time out. Hell, he was doing that in the first half. But in real life in the NFL 3 52 400 yards per game in today's game. Listen, there are two dudes that I do not mess with ever Mike Tyson and Bo Jackson. Still

Skimm'd from The Couch
Lo Bosworth, founder and CEO of Love Wellness: My body could just not manage the stress anymore.
"We talk a lot about career transitions and it seems like yes. You're on the show and then you're doing things that were kind of ten gentle brands to entertainment industry and then you started to do something. That was really different which was go to culinary school. Yeah did you think about that first transition so the culinary school thing actually does for me have its roots in the entertainment industry? At that time I was talking to cooking channel and food network about doing something in the space because we had had conversations and I love to cook it was my biggest passionate still is one of my biggest passions and so to cook. Got Everything vegetables all vegetables and one hundred different ways chicken not what? I was going to expect certain people that really love to cook really liked to cook basic things but in twenty five different ways. You know it's like how do you take a carrot and turn it into five different things? That's how I really approach cooking back to what we were talking about those so everybody who is working on my team at that point was like listen. We think that you should probably go to culinary school. You know you do have this hurdle to cross now which is going from reality star or somebody who's cooking space than we need to legitimize you see. You need to go to culinary school and I always had always wanted to go and so I went to Culinary School and Oh my God. It was the best thing I've ever done. It was so exciting every day. You Good Oh God I was the best truly and I don't mean to show off but yeah I kicked everyone else's asked but it's just comes really naturally to me. It's something that I don't really have to think about but it was the best thing I've ever done. It was so fun to work in the kitchens and to be on the line. And you just feel like you're a part of a team was the goal to do this that you could get the cooking show. Yes so the goal was to go to culinary school. Legitimize yourself in this space start making a ton of food content talks about your experience and then we'll make something happen sort of like with one of these networks and it was at that time that I was in a relationship that I thought was like my permanent partner relationship and it ended up not working out and it created a lot of stress and anxiety in my body. I got a call that the cooking stuff was not gonNA work out. They were not interested in like pursuing the contract that we were working on and it was at that point that I started to get sick. I was experiencing really bad depression and anxiety really bad dizziness exhaustion fatigue. I was truly upside down in my body. It's like if you have a glass of water and you start filling up with water and all of a sudden the water search to spillover. That's how I felt in my body. All of a sudden I I was fine one day and then the next day I was not fine anymore and I think. It was like a confluence of factors. You know your career you have something that doesn't come to fruition after you've been working on it for really long. Your relationship is not working. Something's not right in your body and you sort of come to a crossroads and have to make decisions about how you want to move forward with your life and it was through that experience of not being well and trying to heal my body and trying to be a better place or an okay place again physically and mentally and emotionally that love wellness was born during this period which you're talk describing a very dark and difficult period for yourself. Were you doing everyday? Adjust my timeline a little bit but you had finished the school finish culinary school. I was creating a lot of content scales so it was on the low down on my Youtube Channel at that point And were you being open with your audience but your struggle eventually but not as you were going through not as I was going through it. It sort of closer to the tail of the experience because I just didn't know what was going on totally understand. Who would who would share that? You know that was a two thousand. Fifteen Odi was talking about this stuff yet. People talk about it all the time now but in two thousand fifteen not talking about this stuff so he's still creating content and at that point. I was really monetize and everything I was doing. It was going really well. I had a great youtube channel. I was putting out videos all the time. Blog post a team a small team. Yeah so we still have the low down. And I had three people creating content alongside of me. I would say that a couple years ago really was kind of like heyday for content creators. And so everything was going really well but I was just sick but at that point I would say that my content definitely transition for more of beauty focused to definitely wellness and food focus and nutrition for me replete a huge part in my life when I was trying to sort of get better and so my content started to reflect that without me revealing what was going on so low. Wellness was obviously born out of your personal journey that you're going through Wallace. The white space that you saw that you were like there's a business here so along with sort of just like the depression the anxiety all of those things. I was at the Obgyn all the time. Because like when you're chemicals are out of balance your is out of balance. You'RE GONNA get infections all the time I was. Obgyn constantly. Because I just could not get control over my body and it turns out that I was suffering from really severe vitamin deficiencies and so it took me a year and a half to make that discovery or for a doctor to connect what I was going through to something that was actually physically manifesting itself in my body. It's like the example. I gave with a glass of water. The water started to spill over for me. My vitamin levels dropped so low that my body could just not manage the stress anymore and so it started to manifest itself physically mentally emotionally in all of these different ways so I went from doctor to doctor and practitioner to practice. Schnur natural path to chiropractor to healer to meditation specialist. You name it. I did it in an effort to try to feel normal because I was so uncomfortable at my body that I just knew that something was wrong beyond just generalized anxiety or a moment of depression. Right when I finally discovered that it was these vitamin deficiencies. It really blew my mind. It was a huge sense of relief. I would say not because I could sort of put the blame on it but just because I finally had some kind of path forward you can get a name. I could give it a name and I could take some kind of action that actually improve my life and so it was really a pivotal moment for me but back to the White Space Question. I was the obgyn constantly. And the prescriptions didn't work or they would work for a limited time and I was at the drugstore constantly and I was standing in the fucking Tampon. I'll looking at all of these products from legacy brands and just a feeling bad about myself because it was there again. Be embarrassed that I needed products to take care of my body which is a shared experience among women. When you have been low key advertise anti-feminist messages from these companies. Your whole life and see. I just felt like when I use those products. They didn't actually work. You know they were irritating for your body. They they didn't work people still sell douches. That's crazy to me so I think that's a really interesting point because when I think about wellness. Yeah the space there are kind of two camps that I see one is. It's definitely a hot space. Unlike what you were talking about your experience in two thousand fifteen today people are talking about it off which is great and I think that there are kind of the companies that look at wellness and don't necessarily take the scientific backed approach and then there are companies that definitely do. What was your thought in coming up with what you wanted. Love Wellness to stand for. Shar so for me. I couldn't find products that were readily available. That made me feel better and so it was sort of the graduation to different kind of specialists in women's health and research that really changed my perspective on how to take care of my body and it's interesting because doctors will still tell you don't use this kind of detergent etta healthy diet get sleep but until you actually put those lifestyle changes into practice so you don't really realize how serious they are about those things and there's nobody out there until sort of recently that is saying the products that these legacy brands put out. There are not actually that great. For Women's unique biology's they were invented by men decades ago. They have been sitting on the shelf for a really long time and women's research has come a long way since these products were invented. Right clearly. What we're talking about. We're not talking about Tampon. I mean we are talking about tampons. We're talking about douches. We're talking about lubricant. We'RE TALKING ABOUT PERSONAL CARE. Washes Oak all that stuff that you find in the women's personal care while we're talking about Antifungal over here. All of these products were invented a while ago and they have not gotten makeovers in a really long time and they've been marketed as safe and effective for women. But I would say that most women's could could say honestly from their experience with them that they really are not. Nobody has really been talking about that but brands like level wellness and other brands in the space are talking about that. But there's this huge sort of area of misinformation when it comes to this kind of stuff that we're trying to sort of breakthrough and solve with good education doctors that are on our team et Cetera et

Skimm'd from The Couch
Lo Bosworth: From Reality Star to CEO of Love Wellness
"Today. Lobos worth joins us on skimmed from the couch. She is the founder and CEO of Love Wellness. A Body Care Company. That's changing the conversation about self care for women. You may know her name from her time on reality TV shows including the hills and Laguna beach which we all watch. I certainly did but in the past decade low has also made a name for herself as an entrepreneur and a businesswoman. So we are very excited to have you with us. Welcome to skimmed from the couch. Thanks for having me you guys. We're going to start how he start all interviews with just give me a resume for us so for the past four years. I've been the founder and CEO of Love Wellness and two point. We make clean personal care products for women And we also create a lot of really empowering education for women About their bodies so that they know how to take care of their bodies better before that I was really heavily involved in the content creation space and I created a ton of wellness and food content. Just before that. I was actually a student at the French Culinary Institute right injury and we're going to talk about God. It was so good it had always been my dream to go to culinary school. I love cooking. I do love cooking and so a lot of content at the time was sort of centered on wellness nutrition and food before that I was a partner in a different tech startup that failed spectacularly. It was called revelry is irony really this yes so this was like twenty twelve which is when we started. Yeah yeah since you the scam. I remember twenty twelve and we had this idea that we wanted to put cute party supplies all too hard partying a box like a curated experience and it turns out that it's really hard to put thirty different products from different manufacturers into a box and ship it at a cost effective price. The boxes were enormous. I wanted to pivot. But my co-founder didn't anyway didn't workout. Before that I wrote a book that's when I was living in L. A. Still and then before that I was on the hills before that I was at Ucla. And before that I was on Laguna beach before that I was in high school. So that's it so when something that is not on your wikipedia linked in bio that. Maybe we didn't see on TV either that we should know about you. We actually just updated my wikipedia like two weeks ago because Rizzi are publicists was like have you ever updated your wikipedia like no. That sounds like a horrible thing to do for yourself. Right to go on your wikipedia read through it and then be like this is the crazy. I don't WanNa pull up. The old version was pretty cringe worthy. It like went into episode detail on my. How is this relevant off? Wow so when you google then so what do you think is something that is deeply misunderstood about you? I think for me and I have just started to talk to people about this with love wellness. I haven't really done too many interviews or spoken about this company at great length yet and I think for me sort of coming to terms with the transition between being somebody who was on television. And when you're on reality. Tv definitely put into a certain box right. And then if you are an influence or you're put into a certain box and so how do I sort of bridge the gap between living in that space and being taken seriously as an entrepreneur and the founder of business? That's doing really really well. So how do I reconcile that? And how do people that know me from a distance? Reconcile that so. I think that that's something that we sort of talk about often. And I think part of why I'm out doing interviews because I've been working so hard on this for the past four years and we we really feel like we're making a difference and so why wouldn't I want to share that story but it's definitely something that I feel like. I have to still overcome. You know what I mean. Yeah I think that makes sense. So let's get into that a little bit more because we want to talk about your journey from when people started to get to know you to obviously what you are doing today. I love wellness so to start out. I mean as you said you were a high school student and then everything else happened you everything change which is when I think back if someone had filmed my high school experience I would die. Yeah what was it like shoo? Be Not even a young adult like a k. The kid child Yes how old are you when you started well so it was my junior year when MTV I came to Laguna and they were interested in doing something and at that point we were a little unclear on what that was and then I believe if memory serves correct it was like the summer before senior year or senior year that they recorded that first season of Laguna beach and the show premiered my very first week that I was a college student and it was traumatic. It was right within Perez Hilton. Was starting to hop off and all of those blogs if you recall And all of a sudden we were on this show that had instant overnight success and social media didn't exist back then you know. They live because God but facebook was in its first European facebook. And so you know you're a kid you're on this show. You don't have any way to communicate with people in the way that you do now and so people got to know us as we were portrayed on television and yes we were children right and so we tried to do our best to not look stupid so obviously as a kid you look stupid. They were also trying to make you again. That was the of course point of reality. Tv is to make its nonsensically latest story. Yeah I know so as kids you know you have to get parental permission to be able to film. How did you convince your parents let you do this? My mom was not about it but my dad was like this is cool. What do you think like you were going to get out of it? My Dad is a really smart guy and I think from a career Opportunity Perspective. He sought from the very beginning. He was like you could really do something with this. And for years after the fact when people would come up to me in public. I would pretend that I wasn't me because I was so embarrassed. And he was like Lauren. You just have to own this. Why are you so reluctant to just own what you have done and try to use it to your advantage and your dad was saying. I think you could really do something with this. Who What did you think you were going to be when you grow up? Like what was what did he think this could be a platform to do. I wanted to be a doctor actually. I wanted to be a dermatologist or plastic surgeon and I love biology. I think medicine is so fascinating but I'm not great at math and so when I was at school I actually was like sort of on the pre med track but couldn't get through those terrifically difficult math classes. Which is disappointing. But I think it lends itself to my interest in in wellness and health and in general. So it's definitely still a passion of mine. All of that information is really sticky and my brain. It's the stuff that I think about all day long and I really care about. But it's when you get cast on television show and it changes your life sort of derails any plans that you had before looking back at the attention that all of you guys got and now looking at how many people are young in either college or their careers and are blasting themselves all over social media and sometimes that can be a good brand building decisions and sometimes you go into a job interview and I definitely look up of course their profile. And it's not Weiss. What advice do you have for people who are thinking about how to present themselves? I would just say to exercise caution more than anything else. I'm somebody that doesn't go onto instagram. It like wrestling with me to get me to post something on instagram. I don't WanNa do it? It's like when you have five dollars in your bank account. You don't WanNa look in your bank account so I have a very different relationship with social media than I think. A lot of people do of course when you post something and you get likes. It feels good like that experience. I don't think is different for anybody. But for me I think just because of the experience of being on a reality show and feeling so judged for doing something like that and feel like I always had so much more to offer. I'm always a little bit hesitant to put anything out into the universe from an emotional experience that something that you know. I'm still working through. Are you looking back that you agreed to do the show? Yeah it's really not in my personality do stuff like this. I never wanted to be somebody who was like unknown person. You know what I mean. It just sort of happened when Laguna Beach I started. We didn't even know what the show is going to be. We thought it was like you remember that. Show true life we do. We kinda thought it was gonNA be like that. Just a documentary style. Look at kids that lived in this part of the country and then we go away and it didn't go away did not never been away. And so it's just been me trying to figure out how to be satisfied with my life knowing that it'll never go away so obviously we're gonNA reach became. The hills became such a part of the Zeitgeist for this age group. And you're right hasn't gone away and we heard it is weird and the fact that you're like weird. It's really weird. Like I feel like I know you hear you had to develop your career and and essentially your public persona. Yeah after the show. Yeah walk us through your mental state. At this moment you're early. Twenty s at this point yes Early twenties so I guess it would have been like thousand ten right Thousand Eleven. Yes so blogs were just becoming a thing and they were like. It was still really early days on me. Song didn't exist yet. There is that one girl on Youtube. Who do the lady Gaga makeup videos? Michelle fan is like the only person who is influencing the time and so. I know that that age is all of us. Whatever I think for me. I've always loved writing. I've always loved expressing myself creatively and so I started to write. I had my own website for a period of time and just started to create content and actually had some kids that I went to Ucla with like writing articles. Moore's writing articles about stuff and from there. I wrote a book but truly I had no clue what I was doing at that point. I I suppose I didn't realize that what I was doing was actually laying the foundation for my future in terms of content creation. But at that point nobody could monetize their content. And so if you were doing it you're just doing it because you enjoyed it and I want to drill down on kind of what your motivations are at this point. Because was it this thing that I signed up for in highschool took on a life of its own and I now need to make money to a degree. It was about making money but remember at the time. Nobody who's blogging was earning any money. I couldn't see the clear Pathak. I think for me I wanted to have my own voice okay. I think that's what it was about right. I wanted to have some kind of platform where I could express myself and try to get outside of you know the space that I had been in for the past few years and I think that originally that was sort of the

Who? Weekly
Why is Chester Hanks, AKA Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson’s Son, Like This?
"This is chester. Hanks big doc big up the whole island massive cowboy Chattanooga coming from that Golden Globes to- amongst Mexican and. I'll watch I mean it's not the worst thing he's ever done. I think that's the best way to put it. That's the best way to put it. It's the worst thing he's ever done as any Tom Hanks fan longtime hang longtime Tom. Hanks Fan knows Chad. Hayes is the kind of loose puzzle piece in the whole thing of it all yet. He's the son of Tom and Rita. They have their oldest son sons. He's a rapper slash actor slash instagram user and people often he comes up sometimes and then he goes away and then he comes up then he goes away and he's currently coming up because he was at the golden goal to this parents he also like recently in the past four years got sober and had a kid so like his life was just very drama and now it's a little bit less drama. He's wingless academian more less wrapping and more acting and he sort of quieted down down. Yeah everyone could see less of him but that sort of a good thing whatever right but everyone forgot about him and then he was front and center at the Golden Globes last night. Everybody I was like. Oh yeah remember like Tom. Hanks son who's like a little bit yeow unexpectedly Tom. Hey brought the whole. They brought the whole all clan there today all the kids. They brought the kids with Tom. Tom Hanks's other kids. His his non-readers children his children. Even his non on reader children are invited. Children were on. Hank's is a Non Rita Child. It's only they're not talked about over for to their their Colin Hanks as an unruly child. Elizabeth is a Non Rita Child and Truman and chat are Rita Children. But we only read our about chat chester as we really only care about him. Jim Collins Boring Elizabeth is an actor the end. Truman is just to Truman's a little too young to have actually had his coming out party. You know we focus on the real like relevant Tom. Hanks news is aiming to say. Rita Wilson commented on this video of chat doing his thing and he said maybe the best laugh of the night crying laughing. I'm Oh boy it's like. She's so supportive. Wilson is Rita. Wilson is the Hollywood version version of. He's so talented. I'm so proud of talented talented. Don't comment directly about what Chet Hayes is doing like they're really not like getting they're not really we see their pr person is like just. Don't just don't talk about it. It's fine Rita's. Night was not without drama of her own. She she needed a laugh. She tweeted around God win was. When did she tweet this around the Golden Globes the Golden Globes start at noon? La Time so this was probably around six am she between my hair and makeup is person is one hour and twenty minutes late next week hair and makeup is still not here trying to be then next week booked this person in September hair and makeup. Still not here. And if that's like not bad. She went over to instagram because the woman loves to cross platform tweeted a instagram picture of herself with like her hair. That looked slightly curly. Not Not blown out not done up and said we're I don't even have the link but like the version of those tweets again. My hair and makeup person is late. I this is about one thirty. La Time is when she tweeted and she said what you look like when your hair and makeup person for the Golden Globes as one and a half hours late even though you booked him in September will leave one hour to do hair and makeup. What the only leave him what she's like? How will I do this? One in one hour. Will you know when I saw that night. And she figured it out she looked great loved. Always pulls is through. Julianne Moore commented. Oh my God I feel you. Michelle pfeiffer commented heart. Kate Bosworth commented. Oh that's the craziest feeling healing and of course the most Christie comment which was I cannot go on until I know who I have no life. It's like who the fuck needs to know who the makeup artist test is. Like Rosanna. arquette is on a different planet and just as beauty love you bravo Rose rose rose. Rose Rose Clap Clap Balloon. Peace sign for ransom. Wow that's really funny Roseanne Arquett. What's happening Rita Wilson? And I'm not saying this about evidence like Bu- via unnamed sources but also also these tweets themselves like she's kind of a monster I mean. Come on no. I feel feel like celebrities like love her but Jesus Christ yeah I mean. The rumor mill is grinding out. News that she's a bit of a monster but that's okay not not everyone I mean especially. You're a monster. When you're married to Tom Hanks just by comparison? Let's juxtaposed these two people. You come across across as a little more monstrous whenever your husband is saying. It's true like the sacrifice you make by being married to Tom. Hanks that you come off as a monster. Because it's like Mr Rogers is why people are like you know. I Love Fred but his wife was a bitch Da. She was a baby. She was slightly mean. Once you know but I I do feel like looking at read those tweets. I'm just like what is hurt. What's your damage? Lady looking at those three tweets.

Todd and Don
Army dropped motto of white supremacist origin
"The army ditch the football team's model after discovering it's racist roots yeah the army football program they remove the abbreviated slogan from a team flagon team merchandise in September because it originated with white supremacist since the mid nineties the army cadets you know they have this flag day wave before the football games of bears the skull and crossbones with G. F. B. D. emblazoned above the mouth now G. F. B. D. stands for god's forgiveness brother god forgives brothers don't it was used by the Arian brotherhood of Texas and racist motorcycle gangs to discourage snitching one internal investigation found the team's use of the slogan was was but nine adding that the cadets who introduced the phrase to the school was well they were unaware of the slogan are unaware of its origins G. F. B. D. was adopted at west point from the movie a stone cold starring a university of Oklahoma linebacker Brian Bosworth who lives in the area yeah that's over in the the Westlake area and they were unaware of the origins G. F. B. D. god forgives brothers don't well the practice of waving the skull and crossbones flag has been abandoned for a number of years until it was revived by the culture Jeff mine can back in twenty fourteen so there you go he was mortified when he found out the the the the racist roots of that

Daily Tech Headlines
Mark Zuckerberg reportedly ordered all Facebook executives to use Android phones
"Sources tell the New York Times that Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerberg ordered the company's management team to only use Android phones. After apple CEO, Tim, cook, criticized Facebook in an interview with MSNBC claiming that Facebook traffics in your personal life, the verge notes that several Facebook executives, including blockchain lead, David Marcus, and VP of AR and VR Andrew Bosworth are. Still using iphones at least based on devices tied to their recent

Lori and Julia
Sharon Tate’s sister supports Kate Bosworth playing late actress
"Partly cloudy fourteen tonight it's 30 now you win is a my covered alert update a quick look at what's happening in entertainment eliminated ever all loopholes on my top might declining guy to we on through it for this first doors of a puzzle in the we'll explain to you why after a talked about it sharon tate sister's supports kate bosworth playing her sibling after slamming hillary duff this is debra tate and she confirmed the people that all she is acting as a producer of the movie tate starring cate vase worth explained i'd also directed by cates husband michael polish she explained debra did that she approves of the film because it has nothing to do with sharon's death she added they're telling your story as a woman aside from the murders gate is going to capture sharon's heart filling in attitude while there is no one has ever going to be like sharon at the she educate is very sharon like she's kindhearted gentle and generous the labral i am all was okay with this no because these producing it and shall make money there and it's also going to be about you know as we all know in your area all i know is i'm looking at a photo of key browsers as guaranteed in a assailed from that will be and it is terrible oh not no it's not his in verse into ag personnel she's older than sharon tate sharon tate was twenty seven when she was her life was taken so they should be per train i'm thinking like sharon tate from high school to you know like yes he keith bosworth is not even a good actor yeah selling it i have to say that if we're just doing sidebyside comparison elista looks hillary duff looks more like sharon tate heating k vaas where he added all down i'm good the area has denied verdict we will never see the movie yep must for proud michael jordan who we all love announced that he will add the inclusion rider to all projects produced by his company outline our society productions of course frances mcdormand spark interest in the inclusion writer at the un excellent data that the mayoralty michael would be jordan says in support of the.