Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Google has overhauled the way its human reviewers work in a bid to cut down on upsetting and offensive content in search results.

The review teams – comprised of contractors known as ‘quality raters’ – comb through websites and other content to flag questionable items such as pornography.

Now Google has added a new category, ‘upsetting-offensive,’ in its guidelines for its estimated 10,000 quality raters around the world.


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Google is now directing its review teams to flag content that might come across as upsetting or offensive in search results, such as content with ‘racial slurs or extremely offensive terminology’.


For example, content with ‘racial slurs or extremely offensive terminology’ could now get flagged as such.

While flagging something doesn’t directly affect the search results themselves, it’s used to tweak the company’s software so that better content ranks higher.

The changes were reported in the blog Search Engine Land.

Paul Haahr, one of Google’s senior engineers who is involved with search quality, told the site ‘We’re explicitly avoiding the term ‘fake news,’ because we think it is too vague.

‘Demonstrably inaccurate information, however, we want to target.’

The guidelines , which run 160 pages, are an interesting look into how Google ranks the quality of its search results.

‘As a Search Quality evaluator, you will work on many different types of rating projects,’ it begins.


googlehumanraters

 

For instance, it gives examples of ‘high-quality’ pages, such as the home page of a newspaper that has ‘won seven Pulitzer Prize awards,’ and ‘low-quality’ pages, such as an article that includes ‘many grammar and punctuation errors.’

The guidelines cite an example of ‘Holocaust history’ as a search query.

A resulting website listing ‘Top 10 reasons why the holocaust didn’t happen’ would get flagged.

Another example addresses a blog claiming Angela Merkel is the daughter of Adolph (sic) Hitler.

‘This LP is a blog post presenting a factually unsupported conspiracy theory that Angela Merkel is the daughter of Adolph Hitler,’ the guide says.

‘Because the MC is inaccurate and misleading, it completely Fails to Meet the user intent, even though the topic of the page matches the query,’ the guide says, adding ‘A more helpful result for this query might confirm that Adolf Hitler had no children, or provide information on the novel Hitler’s Daughter by Jackie French.’

The new ‘upsetting-offensive’ flag instructs quality raters to ‘flag to all web results that contain upsetting or offensive content from the perspective of users in your locale, even if the result satisfies the user intent.’

‘Because the MC is inaccurate and misleading, it completely Fails to Meet the user intent, even though the topic of the page matches the query,’ the guide says, adding ‘A more helpful result for this query might confirm that Adolf Hitler had no children, or provide information on the novel Hitler’s Daughter by Jackie French.’


The new ‘upsetting-offensive’ flag instructs quality raters to ‘flag to all web results that contain upsetting or offensive content from the perspective of users in your locale, even if the result satisfies the user intent.’ 

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The guidelines also include examples. For instance, here’s one for a search on ‘holocaust history,’ giving two different results that might have appeared and how to rate them


‘The Internet contains all sorts of content, including content which many users find offensive or upsetting,’ the Google guide says.

‘Additionally, users of all ages, genders, races, and religions use the Internet to understand the world and other people’s points of view.

‘Users may issue queries on sensitive topics to understand why people believe, say, or do upsetting or offensive things.

‘Search engines exist to allow users to find the information they are looking for.

‘Please assign the Upsetting­Offensive flag to all web results that contain upsetting or offensive content from the perspective of users in your locale, even if the result satisfies the user intent.’

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So even if the results are what the person searched for, such as white supremacist websites, they could still get flagged.

But it doesn’t mean the results won’t show up at all when someone searches for them.

Google has over 10,000 quality raters, contractors worldwide that evaluate search results.


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Raters are given actual searches to conduct, drawn from real searches that Google sees.

They then rate pages that appear in the top results as to how good those seem as answers.

Quality raters do not have the power to alter Google’s results directly.

Instead, the data produced by quality raters is used to improve Google’s search algorithms generally.

In time, that data might have an impact on low-quality pages that are spotted by raters, as well as on others that weren’t reviewed.

Quality raters use a set of guidelines that are nearly 200 pages long, instructing them on how to assess website quality and whether the results they review meet the needs of those who might search for particular queries.

Additional Info Here


Clues of Climate Change

Humans are “eating away at our own life support systems” at a rate unseen in the past 10,000 years by degrading land and freshwater systems, emitting greenhouse gases, and releasing vast amounts of agricultural chemicals into the environment, new research has found.

Two major new studies by an international team of researchers have pinpointed the key factors that ensure a livable planet for humans, with stark results.

Of nine worldwide processes that underpin life on Earth, four have exceeded “safe” levels — human-driven climate change, loss of biosphere integrity, land system change, and the high level of phosphorus and nitrogen flowing into the oceans due to fertilizer use.

Researchers spent five years identifying these core components of a planet suitable for human life, using the long-term average state of each measure to provide a baseline for the analysis.

They found that the changes of the last 60 years are unprecedented in the previous 10,000 years, a period in which the world has had a relatively stable climate and human civilization has advanced significantly.

Carbon dioxide levels, at 395.5 parts per million, are at historic highs, while loss of biosphere integrity is resulting in species becoming extinct at a rate more than 100 times faster than the previous norm.

Since 1950, urban populations have increased sevenfold, primary energy use has soared by a factor of five, while the amount of fertilizer used is now eight times higher. The amount of nitrogen entering the oceans has quadrupled.

All of these changes are shifting Earth into a “new state” that is becoming less hospitable to human life, researchers said.

“These indicators have shot up since 1950 and there are no signs they are slowing down,” said professor Will Steffen of the Australian National University and the Stockholm Resilience Center. Steffen is the lead author on both of the studies.

“When economic systems went into overdrive, there was a massive increase in resource use and pollution. It used to be confined to local and regional areas but we’re now seeing this occurring on a global scale. These changes are down to human activity, not natural variability.”

Steffen said direct human influence upon the land was contributing to a loss in pollination and a disruption in the provision of nutrients and fresh water.

“We are clearing land, we are degrading land, we introduce feral animals and take the top predators out, we change the marine ecosystem by overfishing — it’s a death by a thousand cuts,” he said. “That direct impact upon the land is the most important factor right now, even more than climate change.”

There are large variations in conditions around the world, according to the research. For example, land clearing is now concentrated in tropical areas, such as Indonesia and the Amazon, with the practice reversed in parts of Europe. But the overall picture is one of deterioration at a rapid rate.

“It’s fairly safe to say that we haven’t seen conditions in the past similar to ones we see today and there is strong evidence that there [are] tipping points we don’t want to cross,” Steffen said.

“If the Earth is going to move to a warmer state, 5-6 degrees C warmer, with no ice caps, it will do so and that won’t be good for large mammals like us. People say the world is robust and that’s true, there will be life on Earth, but the Earth won’t be robust for us.

“Some people say we can adapt due to technology, but that’s a belief system, it’s not based on fact. There is no convincing evidence that a large mammal, with a core body temperature of 37 degrees C, will be able to evolve that quickly. Insects can, but humans can’t and that’s a problem.”

Steffen said the research showed the economic system was “fundamentally flawed” as it ignored critically important life support systems.

“It’s clear the economic system is driving us towards an unsustainable future and people of my daughter’s generation will find it increasingly hard to survive,” he said. “History has shown that civilizations have risen, stuck to their core values and then collapsed because they didn’t change. That’s where we are today.”

The two studies, published in Science and Anthropocene Review, featured the work of scientists from countries including the U.S., Sweden, Germany, and India. The findings will be presented in seven seminars at the World Economic Forum in Davos, which takes place between Jan. 21 and 25.

Source

Re-Design Concept

Facebook has made another interesting move today, hiring away much of the design team from Teehan + Lax, who are responsible for the popular blogging platform Medium as well as Readability. The move is not an acquihire, as Teehan + Lux the firm isn’t rolling into Facebook. Some team members are, though, so it’s an odd hire-then-shutter scenario. It’s a great day for Facebook, who have hired in some talented designers. It could also be a banner day for you, and could signal a redesign is in-store for Facebook.

Teehan + Lax’s two major platform designs focus on minimal, easily digestible blocks of information. Both are still beautifully crafted, and keep minimalism as a core value.

Re-Design Concept 2

Facebook could use a touch of minimalism. The cluttered page is often overwhelming, so a total re-working might bring users back to center with the social platform.

Then again, something else may be in store. Facebook is keen to knock out apps via their Creative Labs arm, so we could be seeing something from them. It’s also important to remember Facebook has new initiatives like Newswire, so we could be seeing some diligent design done there.

It’s hard to overlook Facebook’s ad philosophy of late when considering this news, too. They’ve made spammy ads and “please like this!” posts much harder to find, suggesting a more delicate touch is coming to their service proper.

Teehan + Lax’s entire team isn’t coming along; just the remaining brain trust at the firm. It’s not currently known how many are making the move, only that the leads are leaving and shutting the boutique firm down.

It’s also not clear what those making the transition will be working on. Facebook has some strokes of genius when it comes to aesthetics (chatheads is nice, Paper is special), but also some clumsy dogs (Slingshot, the home page, Rooms). Hopefully, the new designers can give Facebook the design direction it really needs.

See Their Post

Facebook recently announced that it will deliver AMBER Alerts to people’s News Feeds in targeted search areas after a child has been abducted. Learn more here.

The new initiative will deliver AMBER Alerts to people’s News Feeds in targeted search areas after a child has been abducted and the National Center has issued an alert.

These alerts, which include photographs and other details about the missing child, are shown on mobile and desktop. People can share the alert with friends and link directly to the National Center’s missing child poster, which always has the most up-to-date information about the case.

For years, people have used Facebook to post news articles about missing children and AMBER Alerts. In several cases, someone saw a post or photo in their News Feed, took action, and a child was safely returned.


When 14-hour days seven days a week are your normal, days sometimes run together. But then, right in the middle of feeling “every day is basically the same,” something happens to open your eyes to the importance of individuals looking out for each other. This is my story of how Facebook played a part in my unusual opportunity to help some total strangers.

My husband, Jon, and I have owned and run the Colonial Inn in South Carolina for more than 30 years. It is located in downtown Florence, which makes it a good stopover place for people traveling both North and South. It is a full time job for both of us to run a motel that is open 24 hours a day. Working the front office can get very hectic at times, but at other times I may have a stretch of down time. During these times, I sit down with my iPad and check my mail and go on Facebook.

One evening in early March started out just like so many others. When I had a moment to myself and opened up Facebook, I was surprised by something my friend Linda had posted. It was an AMBER Alert. I had seen them before, but this one was different because I recognized the two faces in the post!

The evening before, a man and his daughter checked in for the night. There was nothing out of the ordinary about them. The little girl appeared to be a happy, curious child. The next morning, when the man came in and paid for another night, I didn’t think anything about it. But at that moment, looking at the alert, there was no doubt in my mind it was the same man and child that were just across the parking lot from where I was sitting.

The alert said the man was suspected of committing a crime and taking his daughter with him as he ran from the law. The police in Baltimore had issued the alert, which meant the father and daughter had traveled about 400 miles to get to our motel. After checking our room registry to verify the man’s identity, I called the police. While I was startled that it was me who had made the connection, I didn’t feel scared.

Two police officers came by and I showed them the Facebook post and the registry. At that time, they took over and a SWAT team was assembled. When everything was in place, they went and knocked on the door. Thankfully, the man came out without any problems and the little girl was fine.

I never imagined that I would be the person to do something like this, but it has taught me how important one person can be. I am thankful my friend posted the alert, and I am thankful that God placed me in the office when they checked in and that I had time to stop and check Facebook when I did.

I hope my story will encourage others to look carefully at every AMBER Alert and then be aware of those around you. You never know who you might have seen or how you might be able to help.

Get more information about AMBER Alerts on Facebook & Like the Page.

See Facebook Stories

Huge List of Search Engines

Posted: January 16, 2015 in News

 

  • AccessMyLibrary
    – Search information that libraries trust
  • Alexa
    The
    web
    information company
  • AllAcademic
  • AllTheWeb
    – Find it all
  • Alltop.com
    – All the top stories
  • Altavista
    – company owned by Yahoo
  • Answers
    – full text queries
  • Archive
    – The Internet Archive
  • Ask
    – a
    leading search engine on
    the web
  • Beaucoup!
    the ultimate source of free information
  • Bing
    – Microsoft – a decision engine (Live Search)
  • Blekko – /
    slash searches – create lists
  • Dogpile
    – All the best search engines piled into one
  • Dot.What
    – File
    extension search resource
  • DuckDuckGo
    – Google alternative – ‘we do not track you’
  • FILExt
    – The file extension source
  • Find
    Sounds

    – Search the web for
    sounds
  • FreePatentsOnline
    -Very comprehensive free patent information
  • Google
    search
  • Inbox
    Search
  • Isearch
    – The world’s leading people search engine
  • Kartoo
    – meta search engine which presents its results on a map
  • Library
    of
    Congress
    Online Catalog
  • Lycos
    Search
  • MetaCrawler
    – Search the search engines
  • Musictonic

    Searches YouTube for artists
  • Peeplo
    – Search among the best selected sites and blogs
  • Scirus

    Search for science information only
  • Spokeo.com

    Reference of available personal public information
  • Subzin

    Find phrases in movies and series
  • SweetSearch – Search engine for students – vetted sources only
  • Qwiki
    Online encyclopedia that shows short videos or slideshows with voiceover
  • USASearch
    – The US Government’s official search engine
  • WebCrawler
    – Top search engines spun together
  • WolframAlpha
    – computational
    knowledge engine
  • Wordnik.com
    – See as many different takes on a word’s meaning as possible
  • Yahoo
    Search
  • Yippy
    – Safe, family friendly, untracked searches (like for school libraries)

                                 Political

                                 General

 

                                           Health

 

Help with Meds –

              Computers, Science and Electronics

 

Hope these links help some people out. Enjoy!

 

 

I have been using tens units for years. I was delighted to see user friendly versions coming to market soon. The Quell units seem to be aimed at the right nerves to help aid in pain relief. The electrical leads make contact with your calf, which Quell describes as a “veritable USB port” for plugging into your body’s nervous system. They will  be offered to doctors first then public second. Either way, I will definitely be investing in one or more of these units.

What it does

Small electrical impulses go from your calf to your lower brain, which in turn releases the body’s natural opiates to aid in pain relief. TENS technology is proven, but doesn’t work for everyone, so Quell will be offering a 60-day money-back guarantee—a nice safety net for skeptics. When you wear a TENS device, you feel only a faint buzzing, tingling sensation where the leads make contact with your skin. Pain relief usually kicks in within 15 minutes.

The Quell sensor promises 40 hours of pain relief on a single charge, and is designed to be worn 24-7. It even reduces to 80 percent intensity during the middle of the night to ensure a good night’s sleep. Quell also includes an accelerometer that provides sleep data through an iOS app.

NeuroMetrix President and Chief Executive Officer, Shai N. Gozani, M.D., Ph.D., was interviewed in the Digital Health LIVE CES WebMD Lounge. The interview is available at:

C|NET profiled Quell in their CES2015 center. The segment is available at:

Quell was selected as one of four finalist in the Engadget Best of CES 2015 Digital Health and Fitness category.

Quell utilizes NeuroMetrix’s proprietary non-invasive neuro stimulation technology to provide relief from chronic pain, such as due to diabetes, sciatica, fibromyalgia, and degenerative knee conditions. The advanced wearable device is lightweight and can be worn during the day while active, and at night while sleeping. It has been cleared by the FDA for treatment of chronic pain without a prescription. Users of the device will also have the option of using their smartphone to automatically track and personalize their pain therapy.

Consumers and medical professionals can visit QuellRelief to learn more and sign up to receive information. The company expects to begin taking pre-orders for Quell in March and to ship during the second quarter. Quell will initially be available exclusively through doctor’s office and online.

NeuroMetrix is an innovative health-care company that develops wearable medical technology and point-of-care tests that help patients and physicians better manage chronic pain, nerve diseases, and sleep disorders.

For links to articles click here

 

 

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The Connecticut Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a 17-year-old girl with cancer must continue to get chemotherapy against her will.

The girl, identified in court documents as Cassandra C., had asked the court to allow her to make her own medical decisions, even though she won’t turn 18 until September. But CBS Connecticut reports the justices unanimously upheld a lower court ruling ordering her to continue treatment.

The Associated Press reports Cassandra currently is confined in a room at Connecticut Children’s Medical Center in Hartford, where she is being forced to undergo chemotherapy. Doctors said the treatment would give her an 85 percent chance of survival, but without it she would likely die within two years.

Cassandra was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma four months ago. Doctors recommended she receive chemo, a common treatment for that type of cancer, but the girl refused and her mother supported her decision.


Court sides with DCF, teen will remain in custody for forced chemotherapy


The family searched for alternative treatments, but a judge ordered Cassandra to undergo chemotherapy. After two just treatments, she ran away from home. The Connecticut Department of Children and Families (DCF) intervened and placed Cassandra into protective custody.

Cassandra’s mother, Jackie Fortin, told “CBS This Morning” earlier this week that it should be Cassandra’s choice to refuse to treat her cancer with chemotherapy.

“She does not want the toxins. She does not want people telling her what to do with her body and how to treat it,” Fortin said — even if the purpose of those toxins is to kill the cancer.

“They are also killing her body. They are killing her organs. They’re killing her insides. It’s not even a matter of dying. She’s not going to die,” Fortin said.

But the state argued that Fortin was putting her daughter at risk in a life-or-death situation. “We really do have the expert testimony, the expert advice of physicians who are saying unequivocally if she does not get the treatment that she needs she will die,” DCF’s Kristina Stevens said.

Fortin’s attorney asked the court to recognize what’s known as the “mature minor doctrine,” which allows 16- and 17-year-olds in some states to get a judge’s permission to make medical decisions for themselves.

But the justices said Cassandra had not proven mature enough or competent to make those decisions, citing the fact that she had run away from home.

The type of cancer Cassandra has, Hodgkin’s (or Hodgkin) lymphoma, is a cancer of the lymphatic system that strikes about 9,000 Americans each year. According to the National Cancer Institute, about 1,100 patients a year die from it.

I cannot understand how Abraham’s Law in Virginia lets a 14 year old decide on his own as to treatment but this 17 year old is not allowed this same right. Virginia lawmakers passed a bill called “Abraham’s Law” agreeing that 14 is the appropriate age for a teenager with a life-threatening condition to have a hand in making medical decisions.

The bill is named after Starchild Abraham Cherrix, 16, who won a court battle last summer to forgo chemotherapy and instead treat his lymphatic cancer with alternative medicine.

Virginia legislature enacted “Abraham’s Law”, which amended § 63.2-100 of the Code of Virginia

View the bill here

via Connecticut court rules on case of teen cancer patient refusing chemo – CBS News.

Polaroid’s Cube camera

Posted: January 8, 2015 in News, Tech
Tags: , , , , , , ,

A Tiny Adorable Camera

Polaroid Cube Lifestyle Action Camera

The Polaroid Cube is a delightful little camera that takes still shots and video. Like the name suggests, it’s a tiny cube just 35mm on a side. It sticks to any and all magnetic surfaces—even your dinner fork. It can be tossed around and taken out on the town and record all of life’s oh-so-precious moments. But so can your smartphone. Does being darling make a difference? Yes, but perhaps not enough to justify your $99.

Some gadgets feel like they need to be handled with care until you settle into a comfort zone and they become part of your life. The Cube isn’t one of those. The moment it came out of the package, I was totally comfortable stuffing it in my pocket. I threw it in my bag; I let buddies futz around with it; I accidentally dropped it a few times. It’s solidly built, but super friendly and maneuverable. It just screams: “I’m here for good times! Enjoy me!”

Polaroid commissioned San Francisco-based studio Ammunition to oversee the entire design, and it shows. Wrapped in what feels like a hard rubber eraser with a “retro” rainbow stripe that runs around the perimeter, the Cube is totally adorable. Ammunition’s the company that created the ubiquitous Beats by Dre headphones, so that makes sense: the company is well-familiar with making distinctive products with mass-market appeal. They’ve proven they know how to make something that people not only want to use, but want to be seen using.

There’s only one button on this baby, a nod to the One-Shot Polaroids of yore. A teensy—like, really small—adjacent light swaps from red to green, flashing or steady, to let you know the camera’s current mode. As you switch between them, a series of corresponding beeps will give you an audible heads-up.Here’s how it works: Hold the button down for three seconds and the Cube turns on. Push it once and you’ll snap a still pic, or press it twice and you’ll start to record video and sound. One more touch will stop recording, and another three-second hold will turn it off again. That’s it. It’s super simple…

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The Cube comes in blue, red, and black, each water-resistant enough to be splashed or rained on, but you can opt for a waterproof case. There are also tripod, bike, and helmet mounts, a strap, a “bumper” that envelops the body so the whole thing becomes a kind of pendant; and a sweet little headless monkey. The light weight and tiny size of the Cube makes it easy to attach to all kinds of everyday objects.Which brings me to the best part: the super-strong dime size magnet on the flip-side from the on-off button. It’s awesome. Armed with that little sucker, I stuck the Cube to a fork, a knife, the metal stand that holds your pizza at a restaurant, even a bobby pin in my friend’s hair!

This thing is just plain fun. It’s fun to look at, it’s fun to toss around. It’s super simple to operate. It’s durable.I actually really appreciate the fact that the Cube is not Wi-Fi enabled and has no viewscreen. If this had been a smartphone, everyone would have spent time hunched over it to see what kind of footage we got and how we all looked and oh wait let’s take another then upload it to Twitter and has anyone faved it yet? There is something charmingly old school dare I say, nostalgic about having to wait until later to see what you’ve captured. I mean, we snapped a bunch of clips throughout the course of the night way more than we would have on any normal eve but it didn’t take us out of the moment, and no one was bothered about what the results were going to be. If anything, it freed us up and made for even sillier stuff.

via Polaroid Cube Review: A Tiny Adorable Camera.

Who is Ant-Man?

Ant-Man is the name of a Marvel superhero, first created by legendary comic book writer Stan Lee and illustrator Jack Kirby in 1962 (predating other superheroes such as the Hulk, Spider Man and Thor by several months). According to the original comic books, the first man to become Ant-Man – yes, there’s more than one – was Hank Pym, a scientist who invented Pym Particles, a substance that allowed him to shrink to the size of an insect and develop the Ant-Man suit.

Later on, another character named Scott Lang took up the Ant-Man suit and title. A petty criminal and former jailbird, Lang stole the suit from Pym in order to save his sick daughter, Cassie Lang. (The doctor capable of saving Cassie’s life was being held prisoner, and Lang was desperate.) Impressed by the former criminal’s capacity for good, Pym decided to mentor Lang, training him up to become the next Ant-Man.

Paul Rudd as Scott Lang in Marvel’s Ant-Man

In Marvel’s forthcoming Ant-Man film, veteran star Michael Douglas will play Pym, while Paul Rudd (Anchorman, The 40 Year Old Virgin) will play Lang (who becomes Ant-Man during the course of the film). According to Marvel’s official plot summary, in the film “Pym and Lang must plan and pull off a heist that will save the world”.

Why would anyone want to shrink to the size of an insect?

In the comic books, the Ant-Man suit doesn’t just allow the wearer to shrink: it also enables them to maintain their usual strength when ant-sized. Plus, according to Marvel’s official plot summary (see below), in the film, Lang will actually increase in strength when wearing the suit. So, if you’re a budding supervillain – no, crushing Ant-Man underfoot isn’t an option.

The suit also comes complete with a cybernetic helmet, which allows the wearer to communicate telepathically with insects. The first poster for Marvel’s film, unveiled at last year’s San Diego Comic Con, depicted Ant-Man sat astride an ant, hinting that this may well be something we’ll be seeing in the film.

Anyone else I need to look out for?

Corey Stoll (House of Cards, The Strain) stars as Darren Cross, who goes on to become Yellowjacket, believed to be the film’s main antagonist. Cross takes over Pym’s company, and uses the technology behind the Ant-Man suit to create the more advanced, militaristic Yellowjacket suit.

Evangeline Lilly (who starred as the elf Tauriel in Peter Jackson’s Hobbit films) will play Hope van Dyne, also known as Red Queen, the daughter of Pym and his wife Janet van Dyne (also a superhero, who goes by the name of the Wasp). While many have speculated that she will be Lang’s love interest, her character sounds a little more complicated than that: according to Lilly, Hope is “messed up by being raised by two superheroes” and “not a big fan” of her father.

Who directed it?

Good question. Edgar Wright, known for directing Simon Pegg and Nick Frost in his “Cornetto trilogy”, originally signed on to direct Ant-Man, working from a script by Wright and his friend, Attack the Block director Joe Cornish. But Wright later left, citing creating differences with Marvel. He was replaced by Peyton Reed, a director who made his name with comedies including The Break Up and Down With Love, with the script being rewritten by Will Farrell’s Anchorman collaborator Adam McKay, with contributions from Rudd.

So, it’s a film about a shrinking man who rides ants, made by comedians. Is it going to be funny?

There has been a lot of speculation as to just how comedic Ant-Man will be. Wright, the film’s original director, is known for his ability to blend comedy with horror (Shaun of the Dead), and sci-fi (The World’s End). Replacement director Reed is primarily a comedy director, and star Rudd is known for his role in comedy films, suggesting that Marvel may well be aiming for a light-hearted tone, at the very least. But fans can rest assured that the film will still treat its source material with respect: when Wright was attached to direct, he said: “I think some people assume that it must be a spoof, but it’s not really. I guess it’s as funny as something like Iron Man is. It’s on that level of entertainment, really.” McKay has since said that his script is “bigger” and “more aggressive” than Wright’s.

How will it fit in with the rest of the Marvel Universe?

Howard Stark, the father of Robert Downey Jr’s Tony Stark/Iron Man, will be shown in flashback in the film, cementing the fact that Iron-Man takes place in the same world as Marvel’s other films. He will be played by John Slattery, the same actor who starred as the character in Iron Man 2.

On a wider scale, in the original Marvel comic books, Scott Lang’s Ant-Man has teamed up with everyone from The Avengers to The Fantastic Four: Marvel may well include the character in future films. Ant-Man may also overlap with Marvel’s forthcoming TV series Agent Carter in some way, according to its star Hayley Atwell. Speaking about the show, Atwell said: “It’s really its own piece, but yet, obviously, because it’s Marvel, it’s interlinked with lots of the different worlds – Captain America and Ant-Man.”

The Trailer

 

via Ant-Man: everything you need to know – Telegraph.

Look out below! The plunge in oil prices may not be over just yet.

Oil took another hit Wednesday, sinking below $53 to a level last seen during the Great Recession. It’s hard to recall that crude oil traded for over $100 a barrel as recently as July.

Few saw the energy meltdown coming. Now that it’s here, industry analysts warn another move lower is possible as the momentum remains firmly to the downside.

“If this doesn’t hold, we could go back to price levels in late 2008 and early 2009 — down in the $30s. There’s no reason why it couldn’t happen,” said Darin Newsom, senior analyst at Telvent DTN.

That would be good news for the overall U.S. economy, especially consumers who are saving money each time they fill up their gas tanks. If oil fell to around $40 a barrel, that would translate to a national gas average of roughly $1.80 a gallon.

Yet lower prices are also pinching the oil industry, including the previously red-hot Texan economy and high-cost U.S. shale and Canadian oil sands producers. Several thousand layoffs in the energy sector have already been announced.

Why is oil so cheap? The oil plunge has been fueled largely by excess supply caused by the North American energy revolution.

In an effort to squeeze these new players and maintain market share, OPEC exacerbated the oversupply problem by deciding to keep production steady in late November.

“It really is pretty mathematical. There is more oil than we need,” said Tamar Essner, energy analyst at Nasdaq Advisory Services.

Slowing demand for oil: The world’s appetite for oil no longer looks insatiable. That’s largely due to the slowing Chinese economy. The country’s oil demand had been growing at incredible rates, but now it’s in the low single digits.

“Their economy is maturing. Just by definition it’s going to need less oil,” said Essner.

Global demand is also being slowed by the fact that the U.S. and other mature economies have become more fuel efficient.

“If you look out your window and watch cars going by you don’t see huge gas guzzlers as much. When the market spiked to $140, we actually saw a change in consumer habits,” said Newsom.

Now that the U.S. and Canada have moved towards energy independence, scary headlines out of the Middle East no longer seem to spook the energy markets. The so-called “geopolitical risk premium” built into the price of oil has all but vanished.

“So much supply was contingent on the Middle East where there was always the potential for things to go haywire,” said Essner.

She pointed to recent supply disruptions in Libya that had no impact on oil prices. In fact, prices kept dropping.

What’s next: This is hardly the first time oil prices have suffered a dramatic tumble. A supply glut and economic turmoil in Asia caused prices to collapse in the late 1990s.

One key difference between then and now is how much oil has grown as an asset class for investors.

That could increase the chances of a downward spiral as investors panic and dump their holdings, said Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at the Oil Price Information Service.

“If panic hits those financial companies that have a lot of exposure to oil on the upside, the numbers you may think are burlesque or hyperbole like $35 or even $25 suddenly become real possibilities, if only for a brief period of time,” said Kloza. “Anything can happen in 2015.”

via How low will oil fall? $30 is possible – Dec. 31, 2014.