Recent Press Coverage

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  • 3 Ways Augmented Reality Will Change Your View in the Future

    June 13, 2017

    Janet Murray, professor in the School of Literature, Media and Communication was quoted in “3 Ways Augmented Reality Will Change Your View in the Future” for Inc.

    Excerpt:

    Augmented reality has the potential to involve far more than catching Pikachu and checking in at fictional gyms. And while plenty of companies are working on building up that ecosystem, including Pikachu's creator, Niantic Labs, the technology has a ways to go. What's in store for these companies--as well as users of the technology--was the key question panelists pondered at an AR in Action summit panel in New York City this week.

    Currently, people can connect with AR through their smartphones, headsets and smart glasses. But the future of connecting to this world may involve other senses as well. Associate Dean for research at Georgia Tech Janet Murray specifically cited touch as a key sense that's currently underutilized. She said it wasn't enough to see things through headsets like Microsoft's HoloLens. Being able to use your hands to interact with the AR, however, would be transformative.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Inc

    Janet Murray
  • AI Summit Aims to Help World’s Poorest

    June 13, 2017

    Milton Mueller, professor in the School of Public Policy was quoted in “AI summit aims to help world’s poorest” for Nature.com.

    Excerpt:

    In the world’s wealthiest neighbourhoods, artificial intelligence (AI) systems are starting to steer self-driving cars down the streets, and homeowners are giving orders to their smart voice-controlled speakers. But the AI revolution has yet to offer much help to the 3 billion people globally who live in poverty.

    That discrepancy lies at the heart of a meeting in Geneva, Switzerland, on 7–9 June, grandly titled the AI for Good Global Summit. The meeting of United Nations agencies, AI experts, policymakers and industrialists will discuss how AI and robotics might be guided to address humanity’s most enduring problems, such as poverty, malnutrition and inequality.

    Ultimately, it is the firms developing AI that will have the greatest say in the technology’s future direction, warns Milton Mueller, an expert on Internet governance at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Nature.com

    Milton Mueller
  • 10 Challenges for Scholars Writing for Wider Audiences

    June 7, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, wrote “10 Challenges for Scholars Writing for Wider Audiences” for Inside Higher Ed

    Excerpt:

    For four years we’ve been editing a crossover series of books and essays called Object Lessons. The idea is simple: authors choose an object to write about -- say, refrigerators or fruit wax -- and then illuminate a lesson about its hidden role in historical and contemporary life.

    There’s a yawning gap between academic writing and popular, hot-take journalism. Scholars fancy that they cover important, current topics, but they do so in styles and venues that reach only narrow audiences. And yet there has never been a better time for academics to reach the public directly, and in ways that are compatible with their professional contexts and goals.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Inside Higher Ed

    Ian Bogost
  • Ethereum, Bitcoin and Litecoin: Will Investing in Cyrptocurrency Make You Rich? Here's What to Know

    June 5, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the Georgia Tech School of Literature, Media, and Communication, Graduate Program in Digital Media, was quoted in an article in Payoff  “Ethereum, Bitcoin and Litecoin: Will Investing in Cyrptocurrency Make You Rich? Here's What to Know”

    Excerpt:

    “The vast majority of bitcoin proponents are now either in finance or government,” said Ian Bogost, an author, professor and game designer who has written about bitcoin for the Atlantic. “And for them, the speculative aspect is like a repurposing. The speculatists couldn’t give a shit what they’re speculating on, what the object is. Just that there is the possibility of substantial gain.”

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Payoff

    Ian Bogost
  • Cryptocurrency Might be a Path to Authoritarianism

    June 2, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, wrote “The Real Chaos of Campus Gun Laws” for The Atlantic.

    Excerpt:

    All over town, the parking meters are disappearing. Drivers now pay at a central machine, or with an app. It’s so convenient I sometimes forget to pay entirely—and then suffer the much higher price of a parking ticket. The last time that happened, I wondered: Why can’t my car pay for its own parking automatically?

    It’s technically possible. Both my car and my smartphone know my location via GPS. My phone already couples to my car via Bluetooth. An app could prompt me to pay for parking upon arrival.

    Or imagine this: My car, which is already mostly a computer, enters an agreement to lease time from a parking lot, which is managed by another computer. It “signs” this contract just by entering the lot and occupying a parking space. In exchange, the car transfers a small amount of Bitcoin, the currency of choice for computers, into the parking lot’s wallet.

    For the full article, read here.

     

    Published in: The Atlantic

  • Nunn School Alumna Jilani Is Published in United States Studies Center

    June 2, 2017

    Nunn School BS/MS alumna Erum Jilani’s report, “Next Steps for the U.S. - Australia - Japan Trilateral Defence Relationship” was published by the United States Studies Center at the University of Sydney.

    Jilani served as a senior regional policy advisor on Asian and Pacific Affairs at the United States’ Office of the Secretary of Defense

    Excerpt:

    The Asia-Pacific region is facing a raft of geopolitical challenges. North Korea is ascending the nuclear ladder, China’s influence in Southeast Asia is growing, as is uncertainty about China’s commitment to the international rules-based order. Amidst this, the United States, Australia, and Japan partnership is uniquely placed to champion international rules and norms, demonstrate deterrence, and build security capacity throughout the region. This trilateral is now more important than ever and it is critical that its members strengthen and invest in their relationship, as well as continue to demonstrate its role in stewarding peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific.

    Each partner has good reason to approach the region’s challenges through a trilateral lens. For the United States, involving Australia and Japan in collectively responding to the peaceful rise of China and deterring increasingly provocative actions from North Korea is essential to any regional strategy

    For the full report, read here.

    Published in: United States Studies Centre, the University of Sydney.

    INTA BS/MS alumna Erum Jilani
  • The Complete and Modern Guide to Technology Convergence

    May 30, 2017

    Margaret Kosal, associate professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affiars was quoted in “The Complete and Modern Guide to Technology Convergence” for AT&T Developer Program Blog.

    Excerpt:

     I have over 15 years as an experimentalist, technology developer, strategist, policy developer and implementer, and academic scholar in the field of Technology Convergence. My strategic direction has been to bring technology convergence into the Federal Biodefense and C-Weapons of Mass Destruction programs with the goal of generating revolutionary disruptive capabilities for the military.

    The converging technology landscape is hugely varied. There are places where it is thriving; different sectors have taken off –especially in the field of biotechnology we are seeing the biggest strides and intersections. These are happening at the science and application level at the intersection of biotechnology and informatics, biotechnology and cellular telephony, biotechnology and genomics, data analytics, nano-enabled devices and delivery systems. I am concerned about certain factors of American society. These include the death of expertise and the erosion of the value of expert knowledge. Everyone can Google something and think that they are experts. They get just enough knowledge to get them in trouble. Additionally, we have a lack of new, young professionals being able to enter the federal workforce because of hiring freezes and budget austerity. This is a long-term problem. With the aging of the federal workforce, we are unable to hire and keep new young folks with new skills and areas of knowledge. We need these professionals to eventually become strategic leaders. It is comparatively easier for them to get jobs in laboratories, and needed, but we need some of them to come out of the lab and lead.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: AT&T Developer Program Blog

    Margaret E. Kosal
  • Why Do We Want Robots to Destroy Us So Badly?

    May 26, 2017

    Lisa Yaszek, professor in the School of Literature, Media and Communication was quoted in “Why Do We Want Robots to Destroy Us So Badly?” for Gizmodo.

    Excerpt:

    According to Lisa Yaszek, a professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at Georgia Tech, the answer goes back decades. “The word ‘robot’ comes from RUR—[the 1921 play] ‘Rossum’s Universal Robots’—and the Czech word for a “slave laborer,” she explained. “In the play, we create these biological synthetic humans they call “robots” to do our work, and eventually the robots start killing us off because we’re not useful—we don’t do any work.”

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Gizmodo

  • Non-Profit Concrete Jungle Partners Up With Georgia Tech to Build Fruit Sensors

    May 19, 2017

    Carl DiSalvo, associate professor in the School of Literature, Media and Communication was mentioned in “Non-Profit Concrete Jungle Partners Up With Georgia Tech to Build Fruit Sensors” for Hypepotamus.

    Excerpt:

    The non-profit not only wanted to collect produce when they find it, but track and document the most fruitful (pun intended) spots around Atlanta. They have documented over 2,800 fruit trees so far of over 20 different varieties on an interactive food map. As their urban harvest grew, one of the biggest challenges the team encountered was keeping track of the varying fruit tree production and monitoring when the ideal time is for the perfect ripe fruit.

    Durkin, along with co-founder Aubrey Daniels and director Katherine Kennedy, reached out to Georgia Tech’s School of Digital Media for help solving this problem — how to remotely access thousands of trees and sense when fruit is ready to pick. Carl DiSalvo’s Public Design Workshop research studio at Georgia Tech specializes on experimenting with different avenues of design. The combined team of academics, agricultural specialists, and social good leaders came up with an array of ideas to detect ripe fruit, from drones and mechanical sensors to embedded tree cameras or even using old-fashioned human sensors (passersby) .

     

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Hypepotamus

    Carl DiSalvo
  • WannaCry Update: Microsoft Pushes a "Geneva Convention" to Thwart Cyberattacks

    May 16, 2017

    Hans Klein, associate professor in the School of Public Policy was quoted in “WannaCry Update: Microsoft Pushes a “Geneva Convention” to Thwart Cyberattacks” for IEEE Spectrum.

    Excerpt:

    “In some ways it’s a daring move by Microsoft,” Klein says. “It opens up the question of global regulation of companies like Microsoft. … If we start talking about global public policy, and Geneva Conventions and industry agreements, suddenly it might not just be the governments that are being asked to behave better—and possibly with sanctions backing that up. The companies might be asked or required to behave better too. And that might not be a bad thing.”

    For instance, Klein says, what if Windows XP (whose support Microsoft officially cut off in April 2014) is so broadly adopted around the world that governments begin requiring Microsoft to continue supporting XP regardless of its profitability or un-profitability for the company? What if, in other words, Windows XP has become something closer to a public utility?

     

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: IEEE Spectrum

    Hans Klein
  • This Is What a True Artificial Intelligence Really Is

    May 14, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was quoted in an article in Futurism "This Is What a True Artificial Intelligence Really Is"

    Excerpt:

    In an article titled “‘Artificial Intelligence’ Has Become Meaningless,” Bogost takes issue with the widespread overuse of the term AI both within and outside the tech realm. “[I]n most cases, the systems making claims to artificial intelligence aren’t sentient, self-aware, volitional, or even surprising. They’re just software,” he argues, noting the use of the term to describe everything from fairly simple pattern-matching filters to easily fooled algorithms.

    By those definitions, Bogost is clearly right that a great number of AI systems don’t deserve the name.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Futurism

  • Founder of Israel’s Islamic Movement dies at 69

    May 14, 2017

    A report authored by Larry Rubin, associate professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs was cited in the Times of Israel “Founder of Israel's Islamic Movement dies at 69.”

    Excerpt:

    According to a Brookings report on the Islamist Movement, Darwish was originally a communist activist before studying Islam in Nablus from 1968 to 1971.

    For the full report, read here.

     

    Published in: Times of Israel

    Assistant Professor Lawrence Rubin
  • 63 Georgia Tech Athletes Graduated on May 6

    May 9, 2017

    Yellow Jackets athletes from the Ivan Allen College, Brandon Boggs (LMC), Zane Coburn (HTS), Shamire Devine (LMC), J.J. Green (HTS), Cordaro Howard (HTS), Alexander Goerzen (ECON) and Camille Felix (LMC) were featured in the news report “63 Georgia Tech athletes graduating Saturday” by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

    Excerpt:

    At Georgia Tech’s Commencement exercises Saturday, among those expected to graduate were 63 Yellow Jackets athletes. They included football players Harrison Butker and Matthew Jordan and former team members Rod Sweeting and Cord Howard, who both returned to school to complete their degree work.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Atlanta Journal Constitution

    Georgia Tech athletes graduate
  • The Real Chaos of Campus Gun Laws

    May 8, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, wrote “The Real Chaos of Campus Gun Laws” for The Atlantic.

    Excerpt:

    Last week, Georgia Governor Nathan Deal signed a bill that will allow Georgia weapons permit holders over 21 years of age to carry concealed firearms in most parts of the state’s college and university campuses. The impacted schools include the Georgia Institute of Technology, where I teach, and the University of Georgia.

    Here, as in other states where similar laws have arisen, opponents contend that guns on campus will only cause accidental violence. But supporters see the prohibition of firearms at colleges and universities as a greater risk. Given the knowledge that campuses are gun-free, the reasoning goes, would-be assailants might choose them as easy targets. Opponents respond that few attacks ever have been prevented by the “good guys with guns” that the laws supposedly arm for the task.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: The Atlantic

    Ian Bogost
  • Lessons From Left Field: The Culture of Auburn Avenue

    May 3, 2017

    Nick Tippens (graduate student, Digital Media) and Ali Yildirim (undergraduate student, History, Technology, and Society) in the Design and Social Interaction Studio, a lab affiliated with the Digital Media program in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, were interviewed in “Lessons From Left Field: The Culture of Auburn Avenue” by Georgia Public Broadcasting. Tippens and Yildirim discussed Came From Nothing, a documentary they produced about Aurburn Avenue local Benjamin “Big Mouth Ben” Graham. Nassim JafariNaimi, Design and Social Interaction Studio director and assistant professor in LMC, was also interviewed in the piece. 

    Excerpt:

    A class at Georgia Tech focuses on the history and community of Auburn Avenue in Atlanta. The neighborhood was home to Martin Luther King Jr. and an important setting for the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. Now, Georgia Tech students are documenting that community, while trying to raise awareness of issues there. We speak with Professor Nassim JafariNaimi, and students Nick Tippens and Ali Yildirim.

    For their final class project, Tippens and Yildirim produced a documentary about local Benjamin Graham, who goes by "Big Mouth Ben." Graham kicked a 17-year drug addiction, and opened his iconic store on Auburn Avenue. The documentary about Ben and his wife Tanya is called "Came From Nothing," and premieres Thursday, May 4 at 7:30 p.m. at the APEX Museum in Atlanta.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Georgia Public Broadcasting

    Design and Social Interaction Studio with Benjamin “Big Mouth Ben” Graham
  • SpaceX Launches Classified Spy Satellite for U.S. Department of Defense

    May 1, 2017

    Mariel Borowitz, associate professor in the Ivan Allen College School of International Affairs, was quoted in “SpaceX Launches Classified Spy Satellite for U.S. Department of Defense” by Christian Science Monitor.

    Excerpt:

    By breaking the monopoly, the launch became something of a coup for both SpaceX and private space companies in general. Governmental organizations like NASA are increasingly turning to private companies for tasks ranging from satellite deployment to human transportation into space, blurring the line between public and private space missions. While NASA has worked with commercial companies before, the degree of responsibility given to private companies like SpaceX has risen considerably in recent years, according to Mariel Borowitz, a technology and space policy specialist and associate professor at the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

    "Private space launch companies have been around for a long time – Arianespace became the first commercial launch company in 1980, and Orbital Sciences, Lockheed, and Boeing have been involved in commercial launch activities since the 1990s," Dr. Borowitz tells The Christian Science Monitor in an email.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Christian Science Monitor

    Mariel Borowitz
  • The Two Key Questions of Trump's Tax Proposal

    April 28, 2017

    Ivan Allen College School of Economics Professor Christine Ries wrote “The Two Key Questions of Trump's Tax Proposal” for the Georgia Tech AmplifierApril 28, 2017

    Excerpt:

    Tax programs can be used to raise revenue for the government, redistribute income or encourage economic growth. The plan just released by the president’s economic team is designed to promote growth, growth and growth.  They project the new plan will enable the economy to reach a growth rate of at least 3 percent up from our current sluggish rate of about 1.5 percent. Christine Ries, an economics professor at Georgia Tech, said the plan boosts income, innovation and job creation by changing incentives and reducing tax burdens on pro-growth activities. She said two questions remain:

    Will it work? And will Congress pass it?

    Absolutely. It always has in the past. 

    Check out past pro-growth tax reform programs of Presidents Kennedy, Reagan and Bush 43. Compare growth rates of states with low income tax rates to those with high rates. 

    Most people fail to understand the difference between tax levels and tax rates.  Pro-growth tax reform changes rates. The President’s plan lowers taxes on income, savings and investment to get the economy to produce more of all three.  This formula has been proven to increase economic growth substantially.  Also, over a short period of time, such programs result in big increases in revenue for the government.

    Will it pass?

    The plan dodges two major bullets:

    First, the plan provides a base level of income, $24,000 for a married couple, below which taxpayers don’t pay.  Without having to worry about deductions, their income tax filing is simplified enormously. 

    Read full article

    Published in: http://amplifier.gatech.edu/

    Christine Ries
  • Marietta Ice Cream Plant Wary of Trump Talk on NAFTA, Import Tax

    April 26, 2017

    Ivan Allen College Economics Professor Usha Nair-Rechert was quoted in the article “Marietta Ice Cream Plant Wary of Trump Talk on NAFTA, Import Tax published in the Atlanta Journal Constitution, April 26, 2017.

    Exerpt:

    That smiling embrace of global trade is now tempered by uncertainty, for Schroeder and many other Georgia business owners or executives. They are waiting to see how President Donald Trump’s tough trade talk plays out, and what that will mean for the state’s manufacturers and the 387,000 jobs they support… When it comes to ice cream, exports from Georgia have quadrupled since 2010, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. More than one-third of the roughly $16 million in state ice cream exports went to Mexico last year. “There’s a sizable market to be tapped in the ice cream sector, there’s no doubt about that,” said Usha Nair-Reichert, an economist at Georgia Tech. She questioned pulling out of NAFTA, especially given the economic interdependence of the three countries. She also pointed out that if disagreements with Mexico cause the Peso to fall, Mexican exports become more competitive. Comments by the president since his election have been linked to fluctuations in that country’s currency.
     

    Read full article

    Published in: Atlanta Journal Constitution

    Usha Nair-Reichert
  • Georgia Campaigns Keep Up Pressure Ahead of Runoff Vote

    April 25, 2017

    Richard Barke, associate professor in the Ivan Allen College School of Public Policy, was quoted in “Georgia Campaigns Keep Up Pressure Ahead of Runoff Vote” by The Hill.

    Excerpt:

    Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) appeared to deliver Ossoff a blow last week when he said he didn’t know whether Ossoff is a progressive. But Ossoff brushed off the slight, and Sanders later endorsed him — although the former Democratic presidential candidate still didn’t call Ossoff a progressive.

    “To the degree he can move to the middle and sustain a positive message, that will be helpful,” said Richard Barke, a political science professor at Georgia Tech.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: The Hill

    Richard Barke
  • Co-working Spaces are the Future of Work But That Could Be a Good Thing

    April 23, 2017

    Thomas Lodato, an alumnus of the School of Literature, Media, and Communication (Ph.D. Digital Media 2015), was quoted in “Co-working Spaces are the Future of Work But That Could Be a Good Thing” by The Guardian.

    Excerpt:

    According to research by user experience researchers Melissa Gregg and Thomas Lodato, co-working can be a positive choice for many freelancers . They argue that, in part, such workers are seeking “relief from the emotional demands of the corporate office”.

    Co-working spaces, they write, “expanded significantly in the wake of the global financial crisis of 2008/9”, adding this “style of work emerged in response to the slow plod of austerity, hollowed-out corporations, underemployment and career insecurity”. They argue that “co-working spaces met a growing demand for care and fulfilment as much as employment”.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: The Guardian

    Thomas Lodato

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