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North Bud Farms Inc. $NBUD.ca – Cannabis edibles, plant proteins and other food trends to watch for in 2019 $ACB $WEED.ca $HIP.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:38 PM on Friday, February 22nd, 2019

SPONSOR: North Bud Farms Inc. (NBUD:CSE) Sustainable low cost, high quality cannabinoid production and procurement focusing on both bio-pharmaceutical development and Cannabinoid Infused Products. Click Here For More Information

NBUD: CSE

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Cannabis edibles, plant proteins and other food trends to watch for in 2019

Canada is high on cannabis edibles

  • Cannabis will soon be a major driver in the food and beverage category.
  • This year should see edible products incorporated into Bill C-45 (the Cannabis Act), opening up opportunities for health foods and supplements, snack foods, packaged meals, restaurants and tourism.
  • A recent Deloitte report found that 58 per cent of current Canadian cannabis users intend to consume edibles once they’re legalized.

This article, written by Michael von Massow, University of Guelph; Aaron De Laporte, University of Guelph; Alfons Weersink, University of Guelph, and Liam D. Kelly, University of Guelph, originally appeared on The Conversation and is republished here with permission:

Food continues to find its way into the consciousness of Canadians.

It’s in our news feed, on our television screens and, more and more, part of our day-to-day conversations. The challenge is to separate the fact from the fiction, the ephemeral from the soon-to-be everyday. The University of Guelph’s newest Food Focus Trends Report highlights six key trends likely to be front and centre this year.

Flexitarians on the rise

While vegans and vegetarians get all the attention, the flexitarians are rapidly growing in number — and in clout. A flexitarian is someone who is eating less meat rather than giving it up entirely.

Almost 85 per cent of Canadians claim to eat at least one vegetarian meal per month, with nearly 50 per cent saying they do so at least once a week. Despite only seven to eight per cent of Canadians identifying as vegetarian or vegan, the conscious consumption of flexitarians will likely have a profound impact on the quantity and types of meat we eat as well as spurring the growth of protein alternatives.

By choosing to eat less meat, consumers are likely to indulge in more premium cuts while sacrificing staples like ground beef.

Plant-based proteins are also sure to grow in popularity, as are those from previously taboo sources, such as insects. Canada’s new Food Guide also recommends an increased focus on plant-based foods.

Should Canada’s meat industry be concerned? Possibly, but increased international demand should keep overall prices in our country steady for the foreseeable future and population growth here will also continue to increase the total demand for meat.

Easing fears about gene-editing

If comic books and horror movies have taught the average Canadian anything, it’s that nothing good ever comes from playing with genes.

Unfortunately, fiction can sometimes be more believable than facts. When it comes to agriculture, gene editing increases yields, develops tolerances to things like drought or pests, removes allergens (to make gluten-free wheat, for example) and enhances nutritional quality.

And the biggest benefit may be for the world’s poor. Basically, gene editing is doing what animal and plant breeders have been doing for hundreds and hundreds of years, only in a way that’s much faster, much cheaper and much more specific.

The only challenge? Reducing unfounded fears and communicating the incredible potential of genetically modified crops and foods in a way that Canadians can fully embrace.

Protecting our pollinators

In recent years, the humble bee has gone from picnic pest to cause célèbre. The decline of bee populations and its potential impact on food resources has Canadians rallying in support. And with good reason — a third of the world’s crops rely on pollinators.

In Canada, the contribution of bees to crops like apples, blueberries and canola has been estimated at over $5 billion.

So shouldn’t we all be behind the bee? It’s not that simple.

While they are essential for some crops, other crops rely on methods of pest control that are associated with the decline of pollinators.

As we’ve seen with the neonicotinoids debate, striking a delicate balance between the needs of farmers and the protection of pollinators is an ongoing challenge and a goal that will not be easily achieved.

Canada is high on cannabis edibles

Cannabis will soon be a major driver in the food and beverage category. This year should see edible products incorporated into Bill C-45 (the Cannabis Act), opening up opportunities for health foods and supplements, snack foods, packaged meals, restaurants and tourism.

A recent Deloitte report found that 58 per cent of current Canadian cannabis users intend to consume edibles once they’re legalized.

But these highs do have some potential lows — work will need to be done to ensure proper dosing and to prevent unintended secondary consumption by children and pets.

As well, the path to market for cannabis products in Canada goes through three different pieces of legislation: the Cannabis Act, the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act and the Food and Drugs Act.

In addition, products for medical consumers must also meet the Access to Cannabis for Medical Purposes Regulations that are included in the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. But with the total market estimated at more than $7 billion (on par with Canada’s wine industry), the future is nonetheless bright for cannabis companies.

Prospering in a time of protectionism

The whirlwind of trade deals and disputes in the past few years has left many Canadians reeling. While there has been much hand-wringing over inter-provincial barriers, NAFTA/USMCA and new agreements with Europe and the Pacific Rim, freer trade in food has actually provided Canadian farmers with markets that are hungry for our products.

Plus, Canadian consumers have benefited and now enjoy a wider range of affordable food products.

The one downside? Our regulated dairy industry, along with other supply managed commodities, has ceded nearly 10 per cent of its market through recent trade deals.

This will not only be painful for the dairy sector, but it isn’t likely to result in lower prices for Canadians — although we will probably see a broader array of cheeses and other dairy products. Overall, though, trade has been good for Canada and will continue to be for the foreseeable future.

Growing divide between food & farms

Farms may feed people, but they have very little to do with the price you pay for food.

Fluctuating prices of agricultural commodities like corn, wheat or soybeans often fuel news stories but the reality is the increases in food prices Canadians have seen over the years have been relatively consistent.

Put simply, food and farm prices are not the same and the relationship between the two continues to weaken. Today, the farmers’ share of the food dollar is around 20 per cent — higher for less processed foods (nearly 50 per cent for eggs) and lower for more processed foods (two per cent for corn, which is used as a sweetener in manufactured food products).

While the effect of low commodity prices may be felt in farming regions and associated industries, it has little impact on Canadians when they’re checking off their grocery lists — and that isn’t expected to change in 2019.

Michael von Massow, Associate Professor, Food Economics, University of Guelph; Aaron De Laporte, Research Associate, University of Guelph; Alfons Weersink, Professor, Dept of Food, Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Guelph, and Liam D. Kelly, Ph.D. Candidate, University of Guelph

Source: https://www.kitchenertoday.com/local-news/cannabis-edibles-plant-proteins-and-other-food-trends-to-watch-for-in-2019-1252723

BetterU Education Corp. $BTRU.ca – Indian education unicorn Byju’s aims to ace global test $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:18 AM on Friday, February 22nd, 2019
SPONSOR:  Betteru Education Corp. Connecting global leading educators to the mass population of India. BetterU Education has ability to reach 100 MILLION potential learners each week. Click here for more information.
BTRU: TSX-V

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Indian education unicorn Byju’s aims to ace global test

posted on Feb 22, 2019 11:01AM Use the IP Check tool [?]

MUMBAI — India, widely considered the birthplace of the number zero, has a proud mathematics tradition. So it came as a shock to Byju Raveendran when he learned that many middle school students were unable to do basic arithmetic.

This was before 2011, and the struggle continues. In 2018, one study by a nongovernmental organization found that 56% of eighth-graders could not solve a three-digit by one-digit division equation.

Raveendran, who calls himself an “accidental entrepreneur,” is determined to crack the problem with his $4 billion startup Byju’s, the most valuable education venture anywhere.

The 38-year-old wants to do more than that, though — he is out to change the way the rest of the world learns, too.

Byju’s exemplifies a new wave of Indian startups that are tackling social issues, like inadequate medical care or poor logistics, rather than trying to compete in fields such as ride-hailing or e-commerce. And the company has made believers out of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s philanthropic foundation, Chinese tech giant Tencent Holdings and the World Bank Group’s International Finance Corp.

All have invested, helping to make Byju’s the fifth-largest unicorn in India, out of 14 startups with valuations of at least $1 billion as of January, according to U.S. research firm CB Insights.

Byju’s educational approach centers on a freemium app, combining free access with subscriptions. It features slick and colorful videos with animations designed to keep children captivated. “I help [students] visualize concepts instead of just discuss theories,” Raveendran told the Nikkei Asian Review.

The app has been downloaded 30 million times and attracted 2 million paying subscribers. Three or four months into a subscription, Byju’s conducts an online assessment and, depending on the student’s progress, assigns a personal mentor.

The company appears to be getting results both educationally and, to an extent, financially.

Akshath Mugad, an 11th-grade student preparing for exams in Mumbai, and his sister Akriti Mugad, a seventh-grader, have been using the app for the past three months.

Akshath has never taken private tutoring. He said most such programs move at their own pace, out of sync with the school curriculum. But since the Byju’s app is personalized and covers everything from physics and chemistry to biology and math, he is able to keep up with his class.

Meenakshi Mugad, their mother, said it is hard to tell how much the app helps until they take a test. “But I can see them taking interest in the lessons without me having to push them to study. That’s a positive.”

An International Finance Corp. study on Byju’s last year found that 92% of 20,000 parents reported improvement in grades.

When it comes to earnings, Byju’s is not yet profitable, but it has doubled its revenue over the past three years. For the fiscal year through March, it expects to log 15 billion rupees ($209 million) in revenue, triple the previous year’s figure.

For the fiscal year ended March 2018, Byju’s nearly halved its net loss, to 372 million rupees from 618 million rupees.

The company employs around 3,200, including a large video, animation and information technology team that produces clips that simplify subjects for students in grades four through 12. It also offers materials to help with entrance exams for engineering, medical, civil service and business schools.

The videos range from 30 seconds to 25 minutes depending on the subject, and users spend an average of 64 minutes a day on the app.

Behind the scenes, the venture uses artificial intelligence to recommend the learning materials that are best suited to a particular user. “We’re focused on deepening understanding, not having children memorize things to pass tests,” said Raveendran, who serves as CEO of operating company Think & Learn, though the business goes by its brand name.

An overreliance on rote memorization is often considered one shortcoming of Indian education. The country of 1.3 billion also faces a shortage of over 500,000 elementary school teachers, while 14% of government-run secondary schools do not have the prescribed minimum of six instructors, according to a report by the Centre for Budget and Governance Accountability and Child Rights and You.

A high school class in the state of Uttar Pradesh: The country of 1.3 billion faces a shortage of teachers and schools. (Photo by Kosaku Mimura)

The India Brand Equity Foundation estimates the country needs 200,000 more schools, 35,000 more colleges, another 700 universities and 40 million more seats in vocational training centers.

Overcrowded classrooms, a lack of teachers in suburbs and rural areas and generally low government spending on education have all given rise to a major side industry: tutoring.

Most of these services give students more face time with teachers but do little to inspire.

Byju Raveendran speaks to the Nikkei Asian Review at his company’s headquarters in Bangalore. (Photo by Rosemary Marandi)

“Traditionally, parents tend to believe that the right education can be imparted only in a face-to-face manner, preferably in a classroom,” Raveendran said. “Also, in India and several parts of the world, learning is driven by the fear of exams rather than the love of learning. The mindset has been our biggest challenge.”

It was in this environment that Raveendran carved a niche.

Raveendran, who hails from the southern coastal village of Azhikode in the state of Kerala, was a standout student himself. While traveling the world as an engineer for a British shipping company, he came home for a holiday and took the entrance exam for the country’s top business schools, the Indian Institutes of Management. He scored in the 100th percentile.

Yet he did not enroll. He had found his true vocation helping friends prepare for the same test. He went from holding impromptu sessions for his buddies to speaking to 1,200 people in packed auditoriums.

The success of these sessions prompted Raveendran and some of his students to try creating videos. In 2011, when he started the company, he had some of the best and brightest producing content. His first eight employees were all former students who had attended top business schools and gained experience at well-known companies like Boston Consulting Group.

Early backers included Mohandas Pai, a former CFO of information technology consultancy Infosys, who had attended one of Raveendran’s auditorium lectures. The first round of venture capital funding came in 2013.

Along the way, Raveendran leveraged his own star power as a renowned tutor, and later brought in Bollywood superstar Shahrukh Khan as a pitchman. The spread of affordable smartphones in India also helped Byju’s take off.

Investors appreciate the founder’s determination to monetize the app in an age where many expect online content for free.

GV Ravishankar, Sequoia Capital’s managing director for India, wrote in a note about Byju’s that most education technology companies cite large numbers of visits or downloads of free content. The plan always seems to be to monetize someday in the future.

“With so many resources available online, there is limited perceived value if something is offered free,” Ravishankar wrote. “Parents are not looking for free ways to make their child successful. They are looking for The Best Way! Have the courage to charge for the value you provide.”

Byju’s packages start from $160 a year, a significant sum in a country where annual per capita income averages around $1,670.

Its closest competitor, Toppr, has attracted 5 million users with stories and games and charges $70 to $352. The Khan Academy, a U.S. nonprofit organization, posts video breakdowns of complex math and science on YouTube for free.

N Chandramouli, chief executive of TRA Research, thinks Byju’s has taken coaching to a different level. “It has created a sense of curiosity among the students. … Their style of communicating has been very subtle, it is targeted at the child, not the parent. They are changing the way kids learn and preparing them to face life.”

Raveendran said the challenge is not just to persuade parents to pay for content, but to raise awareness of online tutorials in the first place. He also expects a wave of technology-driven change in Indian education.

“There is no place for complacency for us,” Raveendran said. “We need to grow and grow fast.”

To help spur that growth, Byju’s in 2017 started recruiting teachers from across the English-speaking world to come and record videos in its Bangalore studios. The company looks for educators with large followings on YouTube and pays them to participate, hoping their fans will follow them to the Byju’s app. The company would not say how much it pays the teachers.

Byju’s is growing through acquisitions, as well. It has made four so far, aimed at either securing content or extending its global reach.

The latest came in January. Fresh off a $540 million round of funding from South African media company Naspers and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, the unicorn announced a $120 million deal for Osmo, a U.S. developer of online learning tools that mix in offline activities.

Byju’s wanted to make an acquisition “that will eventually help us launch in a new market,” Raveendran had told Nikkei before the deal.

By the July-September quarter, Byju’s plans to make its app available in the U.S. and some Commonwealth countries such as the U.K., Australia and New Zealand on a trial basis. The startup will introduce materials for kids ages 5 to 8 in these countries, with a heavier emphasis on game-based learning than pure visuals.

“We are in the process of building a product for international markets,” the founder said, adding some of the most popular YouTube teachers are helping with this.

Raveendran is confident parents outside India will buy what Byju’s is selling.

Harish HV, a former partner at Grant Thornton India, agrees. “In the Western world,” he said, “those who get the benefit of education would definitely be willing to pay and will pay. It would depend on the product they introduce there, how they market it. I don’t see a problem.”

Whatever happens abroad, Raveendran sees the huge Indian market as a strong backbone. He is aiming for an initial public offering in two or three years and reckons the company will be successful enough at home to go ahead. “By that time we will generate enough money from the Indian business itself,” he said.

But Raveendran harbors bigger ambitions.

“We have the required talent and capabilities [to] create a product for students across the globe,” he said. “Currently, there are no products like Byju’s Learning App which can reach out to such a large number of students and create great engagement at the same time.

“We strongly believe that such a product can come out of India.” Chennai: Bengaluru’s Mariam Fatima, a middle school social s ..

Read more at:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/68098808.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Why 2019 May Become The Year Of Enterprise Blockchain $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:45 AM on Friday, February 22nd, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

Idk large
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Why 2019 May Become The Year Of Enterprise Blockchain

  • Last year, 95% of companies across different industries were investing in blockchain tech projects.
  • In 2019, those pilot projects are finally moving from the test stage to the end users.
  • Goldman Sachs, a former vocal skeptic of the blockchain, has launched a crypto-investing product for their clients in the end of last year.

Andrew Arnold Contributor  

Last year, 95% of companies across different industries were investing in blockchain tech projects. In 2019, those pilot projects are finally moving from the test stage to the end users. Goldman Sachs, a former vocal skeptic of the blockchain, has launched a crypto-investing product for their clients in the end of last year. Beyond investing and finance, major blockchain projects have been released in several other industries including cybersecurity, healthcare and agriculture.  

Enterprises no longer question whether blockchain is even worth the attention, according to Sky Guo, CEO of Cypherium, a startup offering enterprise-ready blockchain solutions. On the contrary, Guo says they are now proactively seeking new ways of incorporating this technology in their legacy systems. Henri Arslanian, head of fintech and crypto department at PwC, said that 2018 ‘cleared the noise’ in the blockchain space, and 2019 will be the year when big players enter the crypto world. Indeed, in the first months of 2019, several major companies have signed off new partnerships with blockchain startups (ING Bank and R3); invested in blockchain projects (Nasdaq and  Symbiont); and new consortium partnerships emerged (Wall Street Blockchain Alliance and R3).

Further in 2019, we should see more enterprise-level decentralized ledger technologies (DLTs) emerging on the market as the underpinnings for those a strong.

1. Ready-to-use software is now available from top vendors

Amazon, IBM and most recently Oracle offer enterprise-grade blockchain solutions. R3 – an international blockchain consortium, also plans to unveil its platform, Enterprise Corda, later this year.

“Unlike the open-source blockchain software, enterprise solutions come with better scaling mechanisms, security, privacy and additional protocol changes that make them more attractive to the private sector,” Guo said. “In our case, we have improved upon the existing Ethereum consensus mechanism to maximize decentralization and scalability, without sacrificing one for the other. This, in turn, allows to achieve higher transaction speed and smart contract execution time.”

The particular appeal of enterprise-grade DLT is that it also enables unprecedented collaboration opportunities not just within large organizations, but cross-company as well. Several of the largest world food suppliers including Nestle, Unilever, Walmart, Kroger and others, are working with IBM to create a global food tracing system on blockchain. The collaboration is a crucial factor here to reach complete visibility into the origins of potentially hazardous goods and rapidly trace the source of contamination. Guo said enterprise-grade solutions set unified standards for such collaboration, enabling faster adoption and better interoperability between companies, ultimately benefiting everyone in the industry.

2.  Interoperability has significantly improved

Lack of connectivity mechanisms between different types of blockchain solutions was a major roadblock to wider adoption. But these days, tech companies are presenting new viables ways for establishing connections between different ledgers.

Ripple has released an Interledger – mid-ware arbitrary protocol that can “connect” different types of ledgers, both distributed and traditional centralized ones. Its main goal is to improve interoperability between financial institutions. The additional benefit is that Interledger allows users to store aggregate transaction data off a public blockchain by using a connector to transfer funds between private versions of the Ripple network.

“Customer data privacy remains a sore point for enterprises as they must constantly upgrade their systems to remain compliant with emerging regulations,” Guo said. “By leveraging blockchain businesses can actually reduce their data ownership. Customer information recorded on the distributed ledger doesn’t have to change hands when transactions are executed. Instead, users can simply grant permission for access to those records whenever needed. This, in turn, allows enterprises to remain compliant with less effort, and users can benefit from greater privacy and security.”

3. The overall improved understanding and sentiment around blockchain

Blockchain is no longer viewed as an abstract technology supporting crypto-currencies. Over a half (58%) of investors and 55% of consumers feel that blockchain are optimistic about the blockchain’s potential for money transfers. What’s more important though, is that customers’ perception of the blockchain is changing too. Per Deloitte survey, only 18% of respondents in the US consider blockchain to be just “a database for money” with little other applications outside the financial industry. For the majority, it’s a promising new technology capable to transform a multitude of business processes.

In fact, that’s how most businesses now view blockchain. According to the same survey, 74% of companies state that they already have a “compelling business case” for blockchain technology; 34% already initiated a blockchain deployment.

As the sector clears of opportunistic ICO projects and speculative use cases, Guo argues that enterprises are becoming the key market players. And as more successful projects emerge, legacy companies are feeling an increasing pressure to innovate as well. With ready-to-use software and a burgeoning ecosystem of blockchain consortiums joining the bandwagon has become easier than ever.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/andrewarnold/2019/02/21/why-2019-may-become-the-year-of-enterprise-blockchain/#70688acb427e

Esports Entertainment Group $GMBL – Activision’s $5 million bet on esports kicks off today with the 2019 season of ‘Overwatch League’ $ATVI $TTWO $GAME $EPY.ca $TCEHF

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:46 PM on Thursday, February 21st, 2019
SPONSOR: Esports Entertainment $GMBL Esports audience is 350M, growing to 590M, Esports wagering is projected at $23 BILLION by 2020. The company has launched VIE.gg esports betting platform and has accelerated affiliate marketing agreements with 190 Esports teams. Click here for more information
GMBL: OTCQB

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Activision’s $5 million bet on esports kicks off today with the 2019 season of Overwatch League

Activision’s $5 million bet on esports kicks off today with the 2019 season of ‘Overwatch League’ from CNBC.

INTERVIEW: CardioComm Solutions $EKG.ca Is Connecting Your Heart To The Cloud

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:09 PM on Thursday, February 21st, 2019

CardioComm is a leading global provider of consumer heart monitoring and ane electrocardiogram (aka “EKG”) solutions.  Their products are sold in over 20 countries and they’ve received numerous awards over the years.

So what does that mean?

If you’ve ever had to have your heart checked out, you know the experience involves going to a hospital / clinic and being hooked up to machines that make you look like you’re plugged into the matrix.  A technician takes a bunch of readings and a doctor tries to come up with a status of your heart’s condition.

PROBLEM 1:  It is a terribly outdated system.  You have to leave work.  The hospital / clinic has to buy & maintain a bunch of machines.  The process is very time consuming.  The entire problem also gets a lot worse if you don’t live near a major city with great hospitals, doctors and equipment.

PROBLEM 2: WORSE of all, if your heart is playing nice that day and isn’t showing signs of problems that have got your worried, you don’t get a proper diagnosis and / or you may have to come back again.

SOLUTION?  You guessed it >> CardioComm.  Thanks to the combination of your smartphone + an app and some tiny nodes to place on your chest, your heart can be monitored at length during normal activity to get you the best diagnosis possible.  The results are shot up to the cloud, where they are remotely analyzed by doctors / technicians that can then speak to you directly, or get you into a hospital ASAP.

This is the simplified version.  Now watch CEO Etienne Grima give you the deep dive in a way that will actually have you on the edge of your seat yearning for more.

If you love the transition of big existing things to digital, then you are going to love what CardioComm does.  Grab a cup of coffee and watch this.

CLIENT FEATURE: Tartisan Nickel $TN.ca Kenbridge Property Hosts M&I Resource of 7.14 Million Tonnes at 0.62% Nickel, 0.33% Copper $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:25 AM on Thursday, February 21st, 2019

Investment Highlights

  • Kenbridge property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper
  • 17.5 (21.8 fully diluted) percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property

Kenbridge Ni Project (ON, Canada)

  • Advanced  stage  deposit  remains open  in  three  directions,  is  equipped with a 623m  deep  shaft  and  has  never  been  mined. 
  • Preliminary  Economic Assessment completed and updated returned robust project 
    economics and operating costs including  a  NPV  of  C$253M  and  cash costs of US$3.47/lb of nickel net of  
    copper credits.
  • Plans for Kenbridge include updating PEA, advancing the project through to feasibility and exploring the open mineralization at depth

FULL DISCLOSURE: Tartisan Nickel Corp. is an advertising client of AGORA Internet Relations Corp.

CardioComm Solutions $EKG.ca Engages US Law Firm to Address Licensing and IP Opportunities

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:16 AM on Thursday, February 21st, 2019


  • Move is Part of Growing Sales, Marketing and Strategic Partnership Activities in the United States
  • confirms it has retained Whiteford, Taylor & Preston L.L.P. to assist in software licensing and intellectual property business matters on a go forward basis.

Toronto, Ontario–(February 21, 2019) – CardioComm Solutions, Inc. (TSXV: EKG) (“CardioComm” or the “Company“), a leading global provider of consumer heart monitoring and electrocardiogram (“ECG”) acquisition and management software solutions, confirms it has retained Whiteford, Taylor & Preston L.L.P. to assist in software licensing and intellectual property business matters on a go forward basis.

Whiteford, Taylor & Preston includes over 170 attorneys in sixteen offices located in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia, and is one of the mid-Atlantic’s leading law firms.

As new opportunities develop in the US, the Company will be well served with representation from a firm located in the United States with experience in identifying, protecting, expanding and leveraging the Company’s technologies and IP assets. Further, Whiteford, Taylor & Preston meets the Company’s need for guidance from a firm with expertise in working with a medical software company that does business in both hospital and large institutional environments, as well as the consumer health and wellness sectors.

To learn more about CardioComm’s products and for further updates regarding software releases and new device integrations, please visit the Company’s websites at www.cardiocommsolutions.com and www.theheartcheck.com.

About CardioComm Solutions

CardioComm Solutions’ patented and proprietary technology is used in products for recording, viewing, analyzing and storing electrocardiograms for diagnosis and management of cardiac patients. Products are sold worldwide through a combination of an external distribution network and a North American-based sales team. CardioComm Solutions has earned the ISO 13485:2016 certification, is HIPAA compliant and holds clearances from the European Union (CE Mark), the USA (FDA) and Canada (Health Canada).

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:

Etienne Grima, Chief Executive Officer
1-877-977-9425 x227[email protected]
[email protected]

Forward-looking statements

This release may contain certain forward-looking statements and forward-looking information with respect to the financial condition, results of operations and business of CardioComm Solutions and certain of the plans and objectives of CardioComm Solutions with respect to these items. Such statements and information reflect management’s current beliefs and are based on information currently available to management. By their nature, forward-looking statements and forward-looking information involve risk and uncertainty because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that will occur in the future and there are many factors that could cause actual results and developments to differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements and forward-looking information.

In evaluating these statements, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements and forward-looking information. The Company does not assume any obligation to update the forward-looking statements and forward-looking information contained in this release other than as required by applicable laws, including without limitation, Section 5.8(2) of National Instrument 51-102 (Continuous Disclosure Obligations).

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Report: Bank of China Joins New Blockchain Platform for Property Buyers $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 8:33 AM on Thursday, February 21st, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Report: Bank of China Joins New Blockchain Platform for Property Buyers

  • Property development firm New World Development and the Hong Kong Applied Science and Technology Research Institute (ASTRI) will jointly launch a blockchain platform for home buyers with the Bank of China reportedly being the first bank user.

By Ana Alexandre

Property development firm New World Development and the Hong Kong Applied Science and Technology Research Institute (ASTRI) will jointly launch a blockchain platform for home buyers with the Bank of China reportedly being the first bank user. The news was announced by local news outlet the Standard on Feb. 20.

The platform reportedly aims to replace paperwork operations — such as signing the Provisional Sale and Purchase Agreement or a mortgage application — with digital authorization. This will supposedly allow users to send the purchaser’s authorized, encrypted and digitally signed provisional agreement to selected banks.

Integration of distributed ledger technology (DLT) into organizations’ internal processes is estimated to help reduce banks’ operating costs by 15 to 60 percent, while the platform itself expects to see an increase in the number of users.

ASTRI CEO Hugh Chow reportedly said that DLT could reshape property market operations, resulting in efficient and flexible property buying procedures, while the HKMA argued that DLT “allows all […] users in the ecosystem to share customer information and transaction histories securely over a distributed data infrastructure, without compromising customer privacy or sensitive business information.”

Last August, Bank of China — one of the four largest state-owned banks in China — partnered with financial services corporation China UnionPay (CUP) to jointly explore blockchain technology applications for payment systems. Within the initiative, CUP was set to build a unified port for mobile integrated financial services, where cardholders will be able to use a QR code to spend, transfer and trade on a cloud flash payment app.

In January, China’s self-regulatory bank organization, the China Banking Association (CBA), announced it will launch a blockchain-based platform to improve efficiency across the sector. The project, formally dubbed the “China Trade Finance Inter-bank Trading Blockchain Platform,” aims to use blockchain to target trade finance, transactions and other financial services.

China has been actively adopting blockchain technology in various sectors. Recently, the country’s government issued the “Guiding Opinions on Rural Service Revitalization of Financial Services.” The new framework aims to use emerging technologies like blockchain to “improve the identification, monitoring, early warning, and disposal levels of agricultural credit risks.”

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/report-bank-of-china-joins-new-blockchain-platform-for-property-buyers

Enthusiast Gaming $EGLX.ca – Any Brand Not Marketing in the Esports World Is Already Behind the Curve $ATVI $TTWO $GAME $EPY.ca $TCEHF

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 4:46 PM on Wednesday, February 20th, 2019

SPONSOR: Enthusiast Gaming Holdings Inc. (TSX-V: EGLX) Uniting gaming communities with 80 owned and affiliated websites, currently reaching over 75 million monthly visitors. The company partial 2018 reported revenue of $7.4 million representing a 625% increase over the same period in 2017.

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EGLX: TSX-V
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Any Brand Not Marketing in the Esports World Is Already Behind the Curve

It’s valued at $1.5 billion and has a reach of 385 million people globally

  • EGLX is one of the leading platforms for brands to reach the gaming and Esports Audience.
  • “Any Brand Not Marketing in the Esports World Is Already Behind the Curve. It’s valued at $1.5 billion and has a reach of 385 million people globally.
  • Enthusiast’s network of 80+ gaming and Esports related websites with over 75 million visitors on a monthly basis and 900 gaming youtube channels reaching an additional 50 million visitors is well positioned as a lead

By Robert Davis

Esports suffers from a gaming stigma, which has marketers hesitant to delve into the industry. Getty Images

The conference circuit is rife with people preaching about disruption and missed opportunities. Did you hear how Apple redefined the music industry? How about how Uber rearranged the business of personal transportation? I bet you have.

Well, what about that time when the marketing world sat on the sidelines and missed the video game revolution?

Yes, that happened, even though we don’t like to talk about it. As early 8-bit console gaming grew into a $140 billion global juggernaut that captured millions of eyeballs for billions of hours, we never quite figured out the role of advertising within a gaming environment. Aside from a few cool award-winning integrations (e.g., Verizon’s Minecraft phone) and a niche market for in-game programmatic logo placements (think, billboards in car racing games), the gaming landscape is littered with dead pixels from ham-fisted, force-fit attempts at in-game branding that annoyed gamers and disappointed advertisers. Brands can participate via advertising, sponsorships and creative activations much in the same way already they do with any analog sport.

We have a second chance to embrace gaming. One extra life, in the form of esports.

Marketers’ reaction to esports is typically rather black and white: overt enthusiasm or adamant incredulity. Rest assured, fans really do fill professional sports arenas to watch organized competitions among skilled teams of video gamers. With a projected $1.5 billion market next year, a global audience of 385 million people and an inordinate amount of money being invested by the NFL, NBA and NHL along with big-name former players (Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Shaq), many would argue that esports is already the next big thing.

When one peels back the veneer, there’s actually a lot of familiar territory for brands to explore in esports. The model of event/broadcast/influence prevails in every major traditional sport; esports is no different, other than using screens in place of a playing surface. The esports world revolves around a growing network of tangentially aligned teams, leagues and tournaments. Like their counterparts on the ice, parquet and grass, esports stars wield a great amount of social influence. Feeding off social currency and monetary value from posting videos on Twitch and YouTube, gaming stars are rising fast. The best earn millions of dollars a year from their craft and have followings that eclipse even the most popular analog athletes.

Brands can participate via advertising, sponsorships and creative activations much in the same way already they do with any analog sport. There’s no pressure to solve the conundrum of in-game advertising; the value lies in the surrounding media and opportunities. Esports should be a slam dunk for advertisers: Fans pack into arenas, devotedly follow their favorite gamers and watch competitions at home via TV and online streams. That’s right in our wheelhouse.

So why aren’t brands and agencies flocking to esports?

To be fair, some have found their way. Endemic industries and some brave consumer-focused brands have jumped in feet-first. But the gold rush is not on yet. Esports suffers from a stigma passed down from video gaming, the misperception that fans are reclusive tweens and unemployed teens who spend their days worshipping at the altar of Xbox or the sanctum of PlayStation. It’s a popular belief that happens to be wrong. Esports fans skew older (traditionally males between the ages of 21 to 35), and with higher income than marketers generally give them credit for.

There is a generation gap in perception, perhaps a bit of cynical generation gap. The tone used by people who don’t understand esports is similar to that which is directed at snowboarders in that sport’s early days, as if it were somehow an abomination just because it was new.

We blew it with gaming all those years ago, but let’s not do it again with esports. Now is the time for us to take this growing industry seriously. There are only so many multi-billion-dollar trends that come around.

We’ve got that extra life. What will we do with it?

Source: https://www.adweek.com/brand-marketing/any-brands-not-marketing-in-the-esports-world-is-already-behind-the-curve/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Why #blockchain may be blockchain’s best cybersecurity option $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 4:29 PM on Wednesday, February 20th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Why blockchain may be blockchain’s best cybersecurity option

By Jong Kim, Contributor, Network World

One of the hallmark features of blockchain is that it is supposedly much more secure, adding remarkable levels of transparency that could help better identify and mitigate cyber threats. But, at a time when we’re approaching 2,000 blockchain projects in development worldwide, watching thousands of crypto miners do their thing each day and seeing billions of investment dollars pouring in each year, are we taking warnings about potential threats seriously? Has the greater community taken some aspects of blockchain’s security for granted? The hard truths reveal affirmatives to both questions.

There are multiple ways that enthusiasts can contribute to their favorite blockchain projects – whether that’s mining, staking or operating all types of nodes. Regardless of what they’re doing, these private deployments require an investment of time, money and effort to set up, so the last thing anyone wants is to fall victim to hackers. Unfortunately, people often don’t invest as much energy in securing their deployments as they do in getting their different features to work and scale, making the hacker threat very real.

Various attacks have already been seen on mining software, and there have been multiple high-profile thefts that were worth a lot of money. Tokens in staking wallets make very attractive targets. Malicious actors have successfully infected enterprise infrastructures with sneaky mining malware, called cryptojacking; and in 2016, Hong Kong-based exchange platform Bitfinex was hacked, resulting in more than $60 million (at the time) of crypto losses. The fact is that a victim may not even realize they’ve been hacked until it’s too late. Savvy hackers are careful to cover their tracks and siphon only a portion of tokens at a time.

Another emerging security challenge in the crypto community is the potential exposure of  sensitive metadata through common actions like checking balances, initiating transactions or just receiving block updates. This was recently called out by Ethereum Core Developer Peter Szilagyi. While metadata may seem harmless, it can lead to exposing the physical location of a blockchain deployment, which is something most would prefer to avoid. Why is it important to call out some of these threats?

The difficulty of securing blockchain projects with traditional security applications

Addressing these and other threats today can lead you down a rabbit hole. Some of the chatter on BitcoinTalk forums reveals useful advice – often learned the hard way – about using virtual private networks (VPNs) and firewalls to secure deployments. However, these discussions are often light on more specific details, especially on adequately configuring protective applications. As you dig deeper, you can get lost in threads upon threads detailing which ports need to be opened for each blockchain and which should be locked down. That’s all to say that solutions like traditional VPNs and firewalls to protect blockchain networks are possible solutions, but it’s difficult, messy and sometimes fragile. And it’s not just necessarily fragile in the sense of penetrable, but even more so in that one misstep or misconfiguration could open the door to vulnerabilities. What you’re left with is a security fig leaf: a false sense of safety actually covering for a gaping hole.

Then there is the centralized nature of network traffic management itself, as it is largely managed by a few centralized internet service providers (ISPs), which are vulnerable to threats like routing attacks. In fact, research previously suggested that just 13 ISPs host 30 percent of the Bitcoin network, while just three ISPs route 60 percent of the transaction traffic.

Making blockchain work for blockchain

So how can we be sure that the networks blockchain developers and crypto miners use are secure? The answer may be to fuse network security directly into blockchain implementations. For example, secure channels for data transport using packet-level encryption can be enabled by default for any deployment, rather than enabling with a separate solution like a VPN. VPNs not only require specialized knowledge to set up and maintain, but also introduce a central authority and point of failure into an otherwise decentralized system. Isn’t decentralization one of the main points of blockchain?

It’s also essential that peers establish secure connections between all nodes in a network so traffic is securely transported. Many existing networks may have transport layer security (TLS) for encryption, and some networks still have its predecessor, secure sockets layer (SSL). But neither may be enough in today’s complex cybersecurity environment, especially as it relates to metadata. Instead, directly building in things like network layer virtualization and traffic proxying within a blockchain implementation would make protecting traffic much easier.  

Speaking of protecting traffic, by managing traffic routing and packet processing with rules stored in blockchain-based smart contracts, users could simplify deployment and maintenance of rules across multiple machines instead of updating them individually. Furthermore, this configuration allows developers to define their own network traffic rules, such as conditioning on packet-level features to spot common phishing strategies (e.g. a misleading website, similar to a trusted one, is sent to lure in a user). However, these framework ideas are just the beginning, especially with an enthusiastic blockchain developer community. Developers should take the initiative to build their own decentralized security applications for anti-phishing, anti-malware, intrusion detection and distributed VPNs to deploy on the global blockchain.

The bottom line is that it’s not enough to just trust blockchain’s security because of more transparency than other technological data security and privacy methods. Developers, miners and even enterprises need to look at the entire digital ecosystem when considering security, as every single point provides savvy hackers a weak link to exploit. As blockchain investment continues to skyrocket and the crypto markets continue to diversify – even with the recent slowdown – we will see more unique and sophisticated examples of cyber criminals penetrating blockchain’s security veneer.

That’s the paradoxical ratio of technology: for as many positive innovations that tech creates, there almost is an equal amount of sinister “innovations” to match. This is most certainly true regarding blockchain. The key is to keep discussing threats to blockchain to inspire those securing it.

Source: https://www.networkworld.com/article/3342037/blockchain/why-blockchain-may-be-blockchains-best-cybersecurity-option.html