It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Wednesday, November 15, 2023
Julian Spector
Mon, November 13, 2023
Flow batteries, a long-promised solution to the vicissitudes of renewable energy production, boast an outsize ratio of hype to actual performance. These batteries, which store electricity in a liquid electrolyte pumped through tanks, have been kicking around in labs for ages and in startup pitch decks for the last couple of decades. The technology’s promoters insist it excels where lithium-ion batteries are weak, but grid-storage buyers keep failing to notice.
But the flow-battery sector’s slow roll didn’t stop a relative newcomer, Germany’s CMBlu, from pulling in 100 million euros last month. European construction-services firm Strabag made that investment while promising to lend its infrastructural expertise to help install the batteries around the world.
To contextualize the scale of this funding, it comes close to what was once the largest-ever equity investment for a grid-storage hardware startup, announced just four years ago (that was for Energy Vault’s block-stacking robo-crane, since discontinued). These days, the check sizes have gotten bigger — see Form Energy’s $450 million round last fall — but CMBlu may well have pulled in the largest venture investment for the subcategory of flow-battery startups. Fellow flow-battery-maker ESS, which already has a real factory and real installations, raised a total of $57 million from venture investors before going public via a special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) in 2022.
So what is CMBlu doing differently to break through the flow-battery malaise and make a technology that really helps decarbonize the electric grid?
Ben Kaun, president of CMBlu’s U.S. division, told Canary Media earlier this fall that the company stands apart from the flow-battery pack by augmenting liquid electrolytes with solid components to squeeze more energy storage into its physical footprint. And by choosing organic components, CMBlu avoids having to use the often-controversial minerals that mainstream clean-energy technologies rely on.
“We're transitioning from a fossil fuel economy to a renewables and metals economy — there's so much metal” needed to manufacture wind, solar and conventional batteries, Kaun said. In contrast, “What we have here at CMBlu is a rechargeable polymer, a rechargeable plastic. We can make the plastic [and] recycle the plastic.”
That pitch has won two large-scale contracts with U.S. utilities and a couple in Europe, demonstrating some commercial traction for the unusual liquid-solid batteries. CMBlu is building an automated pilot factory in Alzenau, Germany and plans to install that system at larger-scale factories in one or more parts of the U.S. in 2025.
Bodily inspiration for energy-dense flow batteries
CMBlu’s U.S. chief brings an informed perspective to the role — Kaun spent the previous 12 years researching the whole swath of long-duration storage contenders for the nonprofit Electric Power Research Institute. CMBlu managed to lure him from analyzing the field to competing in it.
CMBlu founder Peter Geigle previously worked on energy management within brain cells as a medical doctor and biotech entrepreneur, Kaun told me at the RE+ trade show in Las Vegas this September. The human brain, incidentally, runs on electricity but doesn’t require piles of lithium and cobalt. Geigle’s understanding of how the body stores and transmits energy via organic materials propelled CMBlu’s unique approach to flow batteries.
CMBlu fills its storage tanks with a solid polymer that holds a charge, and then transfers it to and from the liquid electrolyte, which is pumped into an electrode stack for charging and discharging cycles. Kaun likened that system to how the human body stores energy in fat, and then transfers that energy to blood sugar when it needs to be delivered to cells.
This mimicking of human anatomy could give CMBlu an edge in the metric of energy density, or how much storage capacity can be packed into the physical footprint of the product.
Generally speaking, flow batteries and other non-lithium-ion storage devices sprawl out a bit — they don’t have to squeeze into the chassis of a sports car, so companies are willing to try less-dense approaches. But even though power plants can accommodate more spacious battery technologies, there are costs to letting things get bloated.
“With anything where you have low energy density, you're putting in a lot of extra infrastructure to make it happen,” Kaun said. “There're a lot of costs that you don't see immediately. But once you try to build a project, everything's bigger.”
Avoiding the use of metals distinguishes CMBlu’s technology from that of conventional lithium-ion batteries or certain chemistries that are popular in the flow-battery field, like vanadium redox. When the price of vanadium shoots up, companies that rely on that ingredient feel the pain. And while mining supplies haven’t constrained the growth of lithium-ion batteries thus far, there are real concerns about the pace of new mine openings keeping up with projected demand growth in the coming decades. CMBlu dodges that impending challenge by working with plastics; ESS does it by using iron, an abundant and inoffensive commodity.
Some demand now: Select utilities test flow batteries
All investments make a bet on the future, but that’s particularly apparent with flow batteries because their actual sales and construction today are so limited. This makes it hard to evaluate the relative success of various types of flow batteries — even the category leaders have little to show by way of built and operating storage projects.
Flow batteries’ commercial appeal increases as power companies need to store energy for longer periods of time, Kaun explained. That’s because it’s cheaper to extend storage duration by installing a larger tank than it is to add more lithium-ion battery packs.
“There really hasn't been demand for those solutions until recently,” he said. For now, the economic adoption of 4-hour lithium-ion batteries largely depends on capacity payments, a mechanism to ensure that utilities always have enough power to meet demand at peak times. Grid planners and regulators in places like California have recognized the value of 4-hour storage, so battery developers build 4-hour batteries to qualify for capacity payments.
“But in the future, it's evolving,” Kaun said. He predicts demand ramping up for 6- and 8-hour batteries before too long.
CMBlu’s U.S. sales strategy, then, has been to seek out utilities whose coal plant retirements are forcing them to figure out a clean-energy replacement sooner rather than later. When they realize they need something more than what lithium-ion can give them, CMBlu offers an alternative.
Two major U.S. utilities have taken up the offer. First came Wisconsin utility WEC, which chose CMBlu in February for a pilot of 1 to 2 megawatt-hours at the Valley Power Plant in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. That’s a modest size, but already past the megawatt-hour threshold.
Then, Phoenix-area public power company Salt River Project chose CMBlu from a cattle call of proposals submitted by emerging long-duration storage companies. This “pilot,” announced in late August, will have a capacity of 5 megawatts and 50 megawatt-hours, making it, to use a technical term, pretty big actually. The warehouse-like structure will be built in 2025 to go online by the end of that year; it will help SRP stretch its growing solar production into the more valuable nighttime hours. Kaun’s former colleagues at EPRI will study both projects to document how well the technology performs in real life.
The biggest flow battery in the world is reportedly a 100-megawatt/400-megawatt-hour vanadium redox flow system in Dalian, China. Other major flow-battery projects include ESS’ multiyear contract to install 2 gigawatt-hours of iron flow batteries in Sacramento to help the municipal utility reach zero carbon by 2030. Invinity, formed by the merger of two flow-battery startups, is selling a new-generation product and recently clinched Department of Energy grants to support 84 megawatt-hours installed across several sites in the U.S.
In other words, the flow-battery market is still in its trial period, and no clear winners have swept the field yet. CMBlu still has plenty of time to establish itself before the alternative grid-battery market gets going, and now it has the money to stick around, too.
Engineers have created a revolutionary new battery that could replace costly lithium-ion options: ‘Efficient, cheap, safe’
Jane Donohue
Mon, November 13, 2023
Researchers at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology have tripled the energy density of their experimental proton batteries, presenting an alternative to conventional lithium-ion batteries.
Lithium-ion batteries are everywhere. Chances are, they power your phone, laptop, appliances, and other electronics. Lithium-ion batteries have a high energy density, which means they can store a lot of energy in a relatively small space. Because of this, they are often used to power electric vehicles.
They don’t come without a cost, though. Lithium and other rare earth metals necessary to make lithium-ion batteries are difficult to recycle. If they end up in landfills, they can release harmful toxins into the soil and nearby waterways. In addition, mining and processing lithium and the other metals that lithium-ion batteries require significant energy, contributing to air pollution that requires frequent use of the battery to offset. Finally, demand for EVs could soon outpace lithium supplies, threatening attempts to reduce reliance on fossil fuels.
The RMIT team’s timing couldn’t be better. Their new proton battery has an energy density of 245 watt hours per kilogram, nearly three times the energy density of the team’s 2018 prototype. This energy density rivals that of conventional lithium-ion batteries, which typically have an energy density of around 260 Wh/kg.
Proton batteries use a carbon electrode and are charged by splitting water molecules.
“The main resource used in our proton battery is carbon, which is abundant, available in all countries, and cheap compared to the resources needed for other types of rechargeable battery such as lithium, cobalt, and vanadium,” said lead researcher and RMIT professor John Andrews in a statement.
The battery is charged with a conventional power outlet. After that, electricity from the power supply splits water molecules, releasing protons that bond with the battery’s carbon electrode. The battery can store these protons to be discharged and converted into power later.
“When discharging, protons are released from the carbon electrode and pass through a membrane to combine with oxygen to form water — this is the reaction that generates power,” Andrews said.
Because they use abundant and readily available materials, these batteries are both cheap and more environmentally friendly than lithium-ion batteries. Aside from the power used to charge them, the production and usage of the batteries themselves generate almost no pollution. They don’t require the mining and processing lithium-ion batteries do, and, unlike lithium-ion batteries, they’re easily recyclable.
“As the world shifts to intermittent renewable energy to achieve net-zero greenhouse emissions, additional storage options that are efficient, cheap, safe, and have secure supply chains will be in high demand,” Andrews said. “That’s where this proton battery — which is a very equitable and safe technology — could have real value and why we are keen to continue developing it into a viable alternative.”
The RMIT team will continue its partnership with automotive component supplier Eldor Corporation to further develop the technology.
Battery breakthrough brings ‘unprecedented performance’ to next-gen cells
Anthony Cuthbertson
Tue, November 14, 2023
Battery breakthrough brings ‘unprecedented performance’ to next-gen cells
A battery breakthrough made by researchers in Japan could pave the way for next-generation batteries to finally enter mass production.
A team from Tokyo University of Science discovered a way to build sodium-ion batteries with an equivalent performance to conventional lithium-ion batteries.
Lithium-ion, or li-ion, batteries are found in everything from electric cars to smartphones, however they are made from difficult-to-extract and expensive resources, while also containing liquid electrolytes that are toxic and flammable.
By contrast, sodium-ion batteries are cheaper, offer stability against extreme temperatures, and pose no risk of overheating. Until now, their main limitation has been a lower energy density compared to li-ion batteries.
To overcome this limitation, the scientists developed a high-capacity electrode made from nanostructured hard carbon, which they were able to optimise and then incorporate into an actual battery.
The researchers said the new electrodes deliver “unprecedented performance” and offer a viable option for producing next-generation batteries for consumer electronics and electric vehicles.
“This value is equivalent to the energy density of certain types of currently commercialised lithium-ion batteries... and is more than 1.6 times the energy density of the first sodium-ion batteries, which our laboratory reported back in 2011,” said Professor Shinichi Komaba from Tokyo University of Science.
The breakthrough could also make sodium-ion batteries viable for other practical applications, such as low carbon footprint energy storage systems for solar and wind farms.
The research was detailed in a study, titled ‘New template synthesis of anomalously large capacity hard carbon for Na- and K-ion batteries’, published in the journal Advanced Energy Materials.
Morrisville to get new NC lithium-ion battery plant promising to create over 200 jobs
Brian Gordon
Tue, November 14, 2023
Forge Nano
A Colorado-based materials engineering firm has plans to bring more than 200 jobs to Morrisville as part of a new lithium-ion battery business. The company, called Forge Nano, seeks to be the latest to join North Carolina’s burgeoning lithium-based economy by establishing a division called Forge Battery in the Triangle.
“We are extremely excited to launch Forge Battery in the Battery Belt, where we intend to produce batteries for the world’s most demanding applications,” Forge Nano CEO Paul Lichty said in a statement.
On Tuesday, Forge committed to hiring 204 people in Wake County and investing $142 million in the area by the end of 2027. The facility will be located on Southport Drive at a new life science manufacturing site called CaMP Morrisville.
On Tuesday, the North Carolina Economic Investment Committee awarded Forge a job development grant worth up to $1.5 million over 12 years. Wake County and the Town of Morrisville combined to offer additional incentives valued at $1.7 million.
In addition to its jobs grant, the company said it stands to receive another $6.5 million from the state, including “sales tax exemptions on planned capital investment.”
Forge Nano is set to join a growing field of lithium-based businesses in the state.
Last month, North Carolina approved a lithium-ion battery plant from the India-based Epsilon Advanced Materials that promises to bring 500 jobs to a new facility near Wilmington. Soon after, Toyota announced a substantial increase in employment and investment targets at its lithium-ion battery site outside of Greensboro.
Two lithium mining companies — Albemarle Corp. and Piedmont Lithium — are also seeking to expand or revive operations in North Carolina.
Lithium-ion batteries are key components in many electric vehicles and energy storage systems.
“North Carolina’s growing leadership in clean energy can be seen everywhere you look, and Forge Battery’s decision continues our momentum,” Gov. Roy Cooper said in a statement Tuesday. “New jobs, new investment, and new opportunities for our people are coming fast as we embrace this vital new sector of the global economy.”
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James Whitbrook
Mon, November 13, 2023
SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher (L) speaks as SAG-AFTRA National Executive Director Duncan Crabtree-Ireland looks on at a press conference discussing their strike-ending deal with the Hollywood studios on November 10, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
Although the season of Hollywood strikes came to an end when SAG-AFTRA closed its picket lines last week having secured a tentative agreement with the AMPTP, it’s not over yet—ahead of the union membership vote on the potential three-year contract, SAG-AFTRA has released a summary of the deal to read online.
Eighty-six percent of SAG-AFTRA’s board voted to approve the agreement last Friday, November 10, estimated to value around $1 billion, but ahead of the wider membership’s vote a new extended summary of the deal has been released online—as well as a specific visual aid concerning the deal’s AI regulations, a major sticking point during negotiations that saw the strike draw out across 118 days.
Image: SAG-AFTRA
While there are certainly gains here in terms of requiring clear and specific terms of consent—from both living actors and the estates of deceased parties—and levels of compensation for the use of such replicas, especially for background actors, where there are specific protections to ensure replicas cannot be used to fill out minimum requirements for employing background actors, there are no doubt going to be concerns raised at how broad some of the arrangements are as laid out in the tentative agreement.
This is especially the case when it comes to actors consenting to the use of digital replicas and AI to make changes in post-production. According to the agreement, consent is not required in most cases if AI is used for a litany of changes post-production, including dubbing, or to changes to “cosmetics, wardrobe, noise reduction, timing or speed, continuity, pitch or tone, clarity, addition of visual/sound effects or filters, standards and practices, ratings, an adjustment in dialogue or narration” or other similar scenarios, including where traditionally a double would be used.
The broad caveats as well as what details are left out of the summary could be cause for concern as the wider union membership as the ratification process begins—already concerns were being raised over the weekend by some members, such as actress/writer Justine Bateman, who served as a union advisor on generative AI.
“The train track is split. One train track is going, ‘OK, we’re going to participate in this sort of negotiation with the cannibals and we’re going to talk about just how you’re going to be cutting my foot off, and are you going to grill it or boil it, and what kind of sauce are you going to put on it?’” That track is the one that includes generative AI,” Bateman told MSNBC describing the caveats for consent in the agreement, adding that members should only vote to support the agreement “if they don’t want to work anymore” and be replaced by synthetic replicas.
The full Memorandum of Agreement on the deal has yet to be made public, but voting by SAG-AFTRA membership will begin tomorrow, November 14, and is expected to last through to early December.
Gizmodo
What SAG-AFTRA’s Contract Gives — And Doesn’t Give — on AI Protection and Streaming Pay
Jeremy Fuster
Mon, November 13, 2023
SAG-AFTRA released an 18-page summary of its deal with Hollywood studios estimated to be worth just over $1 billion. While the summary is sprinkled with details about gains in areas such as auditions, diversity and intimacy coordinators, the key matters of streaming and artificial intelligence will draw the most attention.
Those two issues were front and center with members on the picket lines. Top SAG-AFTRA officials demanded in speeches that studios agree to protect actors’ right to consent to their faces and performances being used to train AI to create replicas. The guild was also pushing for a change in the status quo compensation model, as thousands of actors are losing TV residuals without getting no new compensation from streaming.
On both fronts, actors get a lot of things from this new deal, but they don’t get everything.
A new streaming fund
SAG-AFTRA pushed for a model in which studios would share a portion of revenue from their streaming services and place it into a new fund that would share that revenue among actors who perform in films and television shows made for streaming. The studios, which are still struggling to get their streamers to turn a profit, flatly refused such an offer.
Looking for a compromise, SAG-AFTRA agreed to give up the revenue sharing model and replace it with what the studios wanted: a performance-based model that rewards shows and films watched by at least 20% of a streamer’s subscribers, as agreed to by the Writers Guild of America in its deal back in September. The big difference is that while WGA members will get a bonus equivalent to 50% of their fixed residual, SAG-AFTRA members will get a 100% bonus.
But the fund that SAG-AFTRA fought to maintain will also be included in the contract, with a portion of the actors’ bonus getting sent to the fund to be shared with all actors who work on streaming shows. SAG-AFTRA agreed in principle with the studios that 25% of the bonus will go to the fund, but that percentage, along with how the fund’s money is disseminated, will be fully determined by a board of trustees that have yet to be selected and will consist of both SAG-AFTRA officials and studio representatives.
Artificial Intelligence
Along with the summary, SAG-AFTRA released a side pamphlet breaking down the key gains on artificial intelligence protections. First and foremost, studios must provide actors with a full description of how they plan to use an AI-generated “digital replica” on a project, and must gain their consent based on that information. This process must be repeated if the studio wishes to create a replica of a performer beyond the project the performer was initially employed on.
Performers whose digital replicas are used must be compensated according to their “pro rata daily rate or the minimum rate, whichever is higher,” along with residuals based on that replica’s performance. Productions must also compensate performers for the number of days that a project’s producer, with “good faith effort,” determines the performer would have needed to work if those scenes were filmed in person.
Some of the protections have caveats, however. While studios are required to gain the consent of an actor if they wish to significantly change their performance in post-production, that consent is not required if it is for standard post-production processes, which the contract lists as “editing, arranging, rearranging, revising or manipulating of photography and/or sound track for purposes of cosmetics, wardrobe, noise reduction, timing or speed, continuity, pitch or tone, clarity, addition of visual/sound effects or filters, standards and practices, ratings, an adjustment in dialogue or narration or other similar purposes.”
Another issue that will likely prompt many questions and discussions during the ratification vote period is that of “synthetic performers,” or AI-generated digital characters created by training AI software with the performances of real-life actors.
SAG-AFTRA negotiated a clause requiring a studio to give them notice and the chance to “bargain in good faith” if a synthetic performer is “used in place of a performer who would have been engaged under this Agreement in a human role,” but was not able to secure the right to veto such use of performers. Actors also will only be able to require consent and compensation from a studio if the synthetic performer includes a distinctive facial feature recognized as belonging to that actor.
The post What SAG-AFTRA’s Contract Gives — And Doesn’t Give — on AI Protection and Streaming Pay appeared first on TheWrap.
The SAG-AFTRA strike is over. Here are 6 things actors got.
Megan Cerullo
Tue, November 14, 2023
The actors strike is over, with the union representing performers last week approving a tentative agreement with Hollywood studios. Leaders of the Screen Actors Guild - American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) characterized the deal as a big win, with the contract achieving significant breakthroughs on actors' pay and putting guardrails on the industry's use of generative AI.
Here's a rundown of what actors will get under the new contract, which SAG-AFTRA members must still ratify.
1. Minimum compensation increases
Performers will earn a 7% wage increase effective immediately. That initial pay hike will be followed by a 4% increase on July 1, 2024, and a 3.5% increase on July 1, 2025.
Background actors, stand-ins and photo doubles will immediately earn an 11% wage increase, followed by the same 4% and 3.5% hikes as general performers in 2024 and 2025.
2. Streaming bonuses
The new contract calls for actors to earn "a success payment," along with the usual residual payments, if they work on streaming projects that attract a significant number of viewers.
The success metric is determined by the following formula: The total number of domestic streaming hours over the first 90 exhibition days is divided by the total runtime of the movie or a television series' episodes to determine "domestic views." The "success metric" is calculated by dividing the "domestic views" by the total number of domestic subscribers. If the result is at least 0.2, a bonus is paid.
Seventy-five percent of any bonus money will go to the performer, with the remainder going into a new streaming payment distribution fund to compensate performers who work on streaming shows.
3. Disclosure of viewership stats
On high budget streaming productions, streaming producers will be required to disclose the total number of hours the content was streamed both in the U.S. and Canada and abroad for each quarter. That's intended to help actors determine if they're being fairly compensated relative to a show's distribution and popularity.
4. Limits on artificial intelligence
Film and TV producers must obtain consent from actors to create and use their digital replicas, as well as specify how they intend to use that digital likeness. Actors are entitled to compensation at their usual rate for the number of days they would otherwise have been paid for to do the work being performed by a digital replica.
5. Minimum number of background actors
The new labor contract requires that an increased number of background actors be hired on union terms on the West Coast to equal the minimum number in New York.
Under the new agreement, on TV shows in West Coast cities, 25 background actors, up from 22, will be covered by the contract. For feature films, the West Coast minimum jumps from 57 to 85.
6. Relocation bonuses
Performers in series who have to relocate for work will be entitled to a maximum relocation benefit of up to $5,000 a month
Studios Can Now Make AI Clones of Your Favorite Actors
Krystie Yandoli
Mon, November 13, 2023
SAG-AFTRA Holds Press Conference To Discuss Strike-Ending Agreement With Studios - Credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images
Last week when SAG-AFTRA reached a tentative agreement on a new contract with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), the details around the issue of artificial intelligence were at the top of everyone’s mind. Now, the union has released specific language around how AI provisions will appear in the contract. A graphic chart breaks down how the union and the studios plan to regulate artificial intelligence for actors across the entertainment industry.
In the case of artificial intelligence, any actor can be digitally recreated. The contract says employment-based digital replicas are “created during a performer’s employment with their physical participation, and used to portray the performer in scenes they didn’t actually shoot.” It’s mandatory for performers to give their consent, and if the performer does not consent before they die, then consent is still needed from “an authorized representative or the Union,” and the contract needs to clearly and specifically describe the use of this replica. As far as compensation, actors are entitled to be paid “for the creation and use of their replicas, and for use in additional projects or other mediums.” They will also be paid residuals, when actors are paid for their TV or film project re-airing on cable or streaming, in the amount they would typically receive if they were acting themselves, not using replicas.
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For those independently created digital replicas, which are made from existing materials and used to portray actors in scenes they didn’t actually film in real life, producers are also obligated to get permission from these actors beforehand. If consent is not obtained before death, the studios still need “an authorized representative or the Union” to approve it. The contract also needs to explicitly describe how studios and producers intend to use the digital replica. Regarding payment, the contract states that “compensation and residuals [are] freely bargained,” which does not mean performers are necessarily “entitled” to compensation for the creation of the replicas and subsequent use in other projects.
When it comes to Generative AI (GAI), which is defined in the contract as, “A subset of artificial intelligence that learns patterns from data and produces content based on those patterns, able to simulate a performer’s voice, facial expressions, and movements to create entirely new content,” the agreement states that producers need permission from an actor if they plan to make a computer generated character that clearly looks like that actor. Both parties need to agree on how the artificially created character will be used in the project. The Union also has to be notified by producers if they create artificial performers so the two parties can then “bargain over whether compensation or any other consideration is appropriate.” The guidelines also state that, “Producers acknowledge importance of human performance and the risk of job replacement when utilizing GAI.”
Specifically, when it comes to digital replicas of background actors, which the contract defines as a “digital version of a background actor’s voice or likeness, made with the actor physically present, for scenes they didn’t actually film,” performers must be notified 48 hours in advance “or at booking if less than 48 hours ahead.” There’s also a requirement for “clear and separate consent” when using a background actor’s digital replica in a movie. In circumstances when the actor has died, the Union or the actors’ estate must also consent. As far as using digital replicas to replace background actors entirely, the contract states these replicas “will not be used to avoid the engagement of background actors” nor will they be used to meet the background counts for the day of filming. Compensation-wise, background actors will be paid for their digital replicas as if they were working the full day themselves. If their digital replica is used prominently in the film, background actors will also get paid a principal actor’s rate for the amount of days they would have worked in-person.
On Friday, the potential new contract was approved by 86 percent of union board members. SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher and Chief Negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland discussed some of the details in a press conference on the same day.
“We feel that there is a robust and comprehensive set of protections for our members against the implementation of AI in the industry,” Crabtree-Ireland said. “It allows the industry to go forward. It does not block AI but it makes sure that performers are protected, the rights of consent are protected, the rights to pay compensation and the rights of employment are protected.”
While the majority of SAG national board members voted in favor of this contract and Drescher and Crabtree-Ireland are lauding the AI restrictions as a success, some other members are not happy with the deal the Union struck with the AMPTP.
Actress Justine Bateman has been notably critical of the provisions around artificial intelligence, sharing on X, formerly known as Twitter, a breakdown of her specific issues with the new contract. She also appeared on MSNBC to discuss where she believes the proposed AI negotiation fell short.
“The most serious issue of them all is the inclusion in the agreement of ‘Synthetic Performers,’ or ‘AI Objects’ resembling humans. This gives the studios/streamers a green-light to use human-looking AI Objects instead of hiring a human actor,” Bateman posted on X. “It’s one thing to use GAI to make a King Kong or a flying serpent (though this displaces many VFX/CGI artists), it is another thing to have an AI Object play a human character instead of a real actor. To me, this inclusion is an anathema to a union contract at all.”
Bateman added: “I find it baffling that a union representing human actors would give approval of those same actors being replaced by an AI Object. And don’t forget, those AI Objects are a mash-up of all actors’ past performances, adding insult to injury. Bottomline, we are in for a very unpleasant era for actors and crew. The use of ‘digital doubles’ alone will reduce the number of available jobs, because bigger name actors will have the opportunity to double or triple-book themselves on multiple projects at once.”
Voting is set to begin on Tuesday for members of SAG-AFTRA to ratify the agreement and make it official.
Rolling Stone
Fran Drescher Decries “Low-Level” Critics Of SAG-AFTRA Deal; Full Contract May Not Be Available Before Ratification Vote Finishes
Dominic Patten
Mon, November 13, 2023
Fran Drescher may have injected some Buddhism into SAG-AFTRA’s online meeting today on the new tentative agreement with the studios, but there was almost nothing monastic about the guild president’s opinion of critics of the November 8 deal.
“I just want you to know that nobody was thrown under the bus,” Drescher told a self-described Official Member Informational Meeting on Zoom this morning of less-than-stellar assessments of the agreement that SAG-AFTRA and the AMPTP reached last week after a 118 days strike that shut Hollywood down for months.
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“If you read things like that, it’s very inflammatory and unfortunate because it’s using social media and chat rooms to advance someone’s personal agenda,” the recently overwhelmingly re-elected SAG-AFTRA president add, stressing she wasn’t “going to name names” Monday.
Still, while not mentioning the likes of Justine Bateman, it was pretty clear who Drescher was referring to in the virtual meeting. Decrying “naysayers” and “low-level people who are buzzing,” the union chief addressed the dozens and dozens of members on the Zoom with a hard swipe at “principled people who will vote over one issue or kill an entire deal that benefits so many because of one issue that was not obtained — and I implore you to not think that way.”
On November 10, a SAG-AFTRA National Board meeting went much longer than anticipated as debate over the deal raged behind closed doors. In the end, Drescher and chief negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland emerged late Friday afternoon to reveal that nearly 14% of the board had voted against taking the deal to the general membership for ratification — a stark contrast to the uniformity DGA and WGA leaders brought to the equivalent votes earlier this year.
As details have dribbled out of the language and scope of the new deal with the studios, Bateman and others have spotlighted the shortcomings of the hard-fought agreement on issues such as AI protections and success-based bonuses for streaming shows. “Bottom line, we are in for a very unpleasant era for actors and crew,” the Family Ties alum and guild AI adviser cautioned on November 11 online. “The use of ‘digital doubles’ alone will reduce the number of available jobs, because bigger-name actors will have the opportunity to double- or triple-book themselves on multiple projects at once,” Bateman stated, strategically noting the fallout to IATSE and Teamsters members – both of whom have contract negotiations of their own coming next year.
As eligible members of the 160,000-strong SAG-AFTRA start the three-week voting process Tuesday on ratifying the tentative agreement, a PR battle is taking shape to sell the deal – with today’s meeting the first of many with members to come over the next few weeks.
“This deal has set the groundwork for our future and generations to come, it is major,” an already-campaigning Drescher said Monday in a sharp tone with language she has used many times since the AMPTP and the guild buried the hatchet last week on the new three-year deal. “We didn’t get that, but we got this, this, this and this, and we’ll get that next time. In negotiation, you have to weigh and measure and make your informed decision on behalf of the greater good.”
In that vein, a fully-informed decision might not be possible for SAG-AFTRA members this year before they vote on the tentative agreement.
“I know there’s been a lot of people who have asked about the full Memorandum of Agreement and when or if they’ll be able to see that,” Crabtree-Ireland said today of the 128-page document after delving into details of the deal and before taking questions.
“I want to just know that has never been the case in the past that we’ve had a Memorandum of Agreement done in time for the ratification process,” the guild National Executive Director added. “This contract negotiation is even more expansive than any of the prior ones — certainly than I’ve been involved in my last 23 years here. We will do our best to try and get that completed in time to publish it for purposes of the ratification vote but the 18-page summary of the agreement is what we have ready now, and that’s what’s posted. I think that should, you know, that’s been what we’ve always published in the past and has very detailed and extensive information about what’s been agreed to in the in the contract.
“So we definitely will do the best we can on that front, but just wanted to let everybody know what to expect there,” Crabtree-Ireland said.
RELATED: “This Was A Negotiation For The Future”: Fran Drescher & Duncan Crabtree-Ireland On SAG-AFTRA Deal, AI & Informed Consent + Importance Of CEOs
Since the “unprecedented” deal, as SAG-AFTRA brass have called it, with the AMPTP was announced late last week, the guild has held a press conference on the agreement, and Drescher and Crabtree-Ireland have given innumerable interviews. On November 10, after the presser at SAG-AFTRA HQ on Wilshire Blvd, the guild put out an expanded bullet points, followed late last night by that aforementioned 18-page summary.
RELATED: Netflix’s Ted Sarandos Talks About End Of Strike As Star-Powered Hollywood Premieres Return With ‘The Crown’
Today’s members-only online huddle was the latest session in the leadership’s push to seal the deal. In that context, the persuasive Drescher and Crabtree-Ireland have a public ally from the other side of the table. Telling Deadline last night that he is “definitely” happy with the deal, Netflix’s co-CEO Ted Sarandos added, “It’s all in front of the members now, so it’s up to them to ratify it.”
Very Zen of the exec, who was one of the CEO Gang of Four who directly participated in the final round of talks with the guild.
SAG-AFTRA’s Strike-Ending Deal Wasn’t Finalized Until Hours Before Its Approval
Jeremy Fuster
Tue, November 14, 2023
Late last Tuesday, 27 members of the actor’s negotiating committee — with another 18 on Zoom — huddled for a third straight day at the SAG-AFTRA headquarters in Los Angeles to meticulously review the “best, last and final offer” from the Hollywood studios.
As the committee prepared to vote on whether to approve the deal and declare the 117-day actors strike over, David Jolliffe, a 25-year veteran of SAG-AFTRA contract negotiations, urged president Fran Drescher to wait just one more day. The key compromise on streaming compensation made with studio executives, he implored, needed to be locked in before any vote could be made.
“I told Fran and the committee that we should take a step back, spend the night and wait for a response from the AMPTP, because there were key points that we needed to ensure were going to be in this contract for us to approve it,” Jolliffe told TheWrap.
In the end, SAG-AFTRA did not finalize its agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers until just hours before announcing its approval on Wednesday evening. The $1 billion agreement ended six months of strikes that had paralyzed the entertainment world.
The turbulent five weeks of on-and-off talks to end the actors’ strike were in some ways similar and in other ways very different to the talks that led to a deal between the AMPTP and the Writers Guild of America.
While there were as many counterproposals exchanged between SAG-AFTRA and AMPTP — as well as a studios-imposed pause in the talks as they did with the WGA — there was no “finally, they f—ing get it” breakthrough.
The talks that went from Oct. 2 to Nov. 8 were the first between the two sides since the strike began. The impasses that had prevented a deal from being reached back during the summer still remained, and it took weeks of talks between AMPTP President Carol Lombardini, the studio CEOs, SAG-AFTRA chief negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland and Drescher to come to a compromise.
Impeding the road to agreement, Crabtree-Ireland told TheWrap, were discussions on artificial intelligence, which were an active part of negotiations from start to finish. They required input from a wide range of studio representatives because of the impact the technology has on IP rights, the production process, labor compensation and many other issues.
“It was a complex issue that was made more difficult by the fact that we had gone more than two months without talking,” Crabtree-Ireland said.
Beyond those principal figures, there were dozens of others ironing out the finer details. Negotiating committee members like Jolliffe, Frances Fisher, Shari Belafonte and chief contracts officer Ray Rodriguez spent many days in side rooms with AMPTP representatives, joined by attorneys for both sides.
It was in these talks that key contract gains such as an increased relocation allowance for series performers, protections against burdensome requirements for auditions, and the inclusion of performance capture work under union coverage, were locked into the contract.
Duncan Crabtree-Ireland (Getty Images)
Throughout the process, Drescher was insistent that the CEOs be present to discuss all the issues in the contract. With the guild aiming to build a deal that reflected the dramatic shifts Hollywood has undergone in the era of streaming, the president felt it was necessary to have the top executives’ input every step of the way.
“We said [to the AMPTP], ‘We’re going to go over your heads. We want to talk to your bosses,’” Drescher told TheWrap.
It was an approach that chafed the studio execs, according to two insiders with knowledge of the AMPTP side of talks. The CEOs, while keeping abreast of how talks were progressing, were expecting to only negotiate directly with Drescher and Crabtree-Ireland on the biggest issues on the contract.
“All the execs wanted a deal to get done, but there’s a reason why [Lombardini] and all the AMPTP lawyers do much of that contract work,” one insider said. “The CEOs have companies to run and wildly different schedules, and while they know the key issues, they aren’t as deeply involved in the contract language as the labor reps who are hired to represent them.”
Streaming fund lines in the sand
But the CEOs did need to be on hand to construct the key compromise that ended the strike: the new fund that will be established through streaming performance bonuses to help working class performers get a new source of income that had been lost from years of eroding linear TV residuals.
The issue led the AMPTP to break off talks on Oct. 11, just hours after receiving a SAG-AFTRA counterproposal including the revenue-sharing proposal. The stalemate ended on Oct. 23 after Disney CEO Bob Iger reached out to Drescher and Crabtree-Ireland, saying there was an urgent need to finish the deal and get the industry back to work.
Even after talks resumed, any contract involving SAG-AFTRA’s proposed system of sharing a percentage of a streaming service’s revenue would prove a dealbreaker for the studios. The executives felt it was unfair for the union to ask the studios to share in the riches of a show or film’s streaming success while leaving them to take the hit on any failures.
Studio insiders say that while all the CEOs present at the meetings made that argument, it was Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos who particularly drove home to SAG-AFTRA that the AMPTP would not agree to revenue sharing in any way, and whatever streaming compensation model was created needed to be based around the performance bonus model agreed to by the WGA.
“Every studio is still trying to get these streaming services to turn a profit,” one insider said. “There was no way that revenue sharing was ever going to fly.”
Drescher and Crabtree-Ireland eventually accepted that hard line, and presented a hard line of their own: They would not yield on the fund intended to create a new stream of income for actors.
As Drescher put it, the number of shows that would have qualified for performance bonuses under the WGA’s model were a “thimbleful” of the thousands of titles added to streaming services each year. Agreeing to the same terms on streaming bonuses that the WGA agreed to would have left thousands of actors who don’t perform on those top-performing titles in the same precarious position: With their acting income at a fraction of what they once got in the era of linear TV, pay TV, and physical home video residuals.
Ted Sarandos (Netflix)
“I told myself that money is money, no matter where it comes from, but we explained to them that we needed another source of revenue because the people that were working in the streaming platforms didn’t have the tail of earnings that they did in linear television,” Drescher said.
As the talks dragged into November, further talks between Crabtree-Ireland and the AMPTP led to the breakthrough: SAG-AFTRA would agree to a performance bonus structure with more money than what was offered to the WGA. While 75% of that bonus money would go to the actors on shows and movies watched by a certain percentage of a streamer’s subscribers, the remaining 25% would go to a new fund run by trustees from the guild and the studios to be sent to all actors who work on streaming services.
But when SAG-AFTRA presented its final offer on Nov. 4, the guild found that the studios had not yet included the fund in the contract. The AMPTP assured SAG-AFTRA that it would be there. But Jolliffe insisted that was not enough.
AMPTP insiders told TheWrap that the fund was not in the contract when the studios presented the final offer because their lawyers were still reviewing the proposed fund to ensure it was legally sound. The concern was that such a fund could face a legal challenge for violating anti-bribery statutes in the Labor Management Relations Act forbidding employers from paying union officials.
AI ‘synthetic performers’ protections a final sticking point
Those lawyers were also reviewing the contract’s AI provisions, as they had been for much of the final week of talks, particularly clauses sought by the guild regarding the potential use of actors’ performances to create “synthetic performers,” or AI-generated characters that are not strictly replicas of real-life actors.
“The guild was arguing that if an actor’s performance was used to train AI to create a whole new character, that actor was still entitled to money,“ a studio insider said. “That’s something no court has ever ruled on.”
On Wednesday morning, the AMPTP reached out to Crabtree-Ireland and confirmed that the fund and the synthetic performer protections would be included in the contract. The studio lawyers determined that the streaming fund would not violate anti-bribery labor laws as the funds were specifically earmarked for rank-and-file SAG-AFTRA members, not officials. And the two sides agreed that an actor could be entitled to consent and compensation over a synthetic performer if that AI character used a distinct facial characteristic of the actor.
With that guarantee locked in, SAG-AFTRA’s negotiating committee unanimously approved the deal, and at 5 p.m. on Nov. 8, the guild sent out an announcement that the strike was over.
Every studio is still trying to get these streaming services to turn a profit. There was no way that revenue sharing was ever going to fly.”
Studio insider
One day later, in a phone conversation with TheWrap, Drescher said she felt “grateful, exhausted, relieved and triumphant all at once.” While she and her negotiating committee never wavered in their insistence that the strike wouldn’t end without a fair deal, she acknowledged the immense anxiety that had gripped countless Hollywood workers who had spent months dealing with the financial and emotional stress of the strike. She said she didn’t take any of that sacrifice for granted.
“We could feel the pressure mounting in those last few days. I don’t think any of us were getting much sleep,” Drescher said. “It was so great that it was almost unbearable, but I am so proud of the work that every member of our committee, all of them taking this on as volunteers, did to get us to the end of this long fight.”
For David Jolliffe, whom has now finished his ninth SAG-AFTRA contract cycle, this one is by far his proudest.
“Every time we’ve finished negotiations, I’ve felt disappointed that we lost out on something important,” he said. “Definitely not this time.”
The post SAG-AFTRA’s Strike-Ending Deal Wasn’t Finalized Until Hours Before Its Approval appeared first on TheWrap.
Dawn Chmielewski
Wed, November 15, 2023
Striking writers and actors slashed spending, burned through savings and piled up debt to survive. Dry cleaners and other service industries laid off staff, while prop houses sold inventory or shuttered.
Preliminary estimates place the economic cost at more than $6 billion in lost wages and business impacts across California and other production-heavy states such as Georgia and New Mexico, as most scripted film and television production ground to a halt.
Sets for movies and TV shows are lighting up again as studios rush to resume filming. Still, Hollywood is unlikely to return to the frenzied production pace of the streaming wars, when studios competed for subscribers and cachet. Studios facing higher labor costs, falling television ad revenue and an increasingly skeptical Wall Street are reducing the number of TV shows, cutting jobs and moving some production to cheaper locations overseas.
Total economic damage from the strike, including business failures, will take time to tabulate as experts sort through data.
The human toll will be harder to quantify beyond the painful personal accounts of people like Celia Finkelstein, an actor and member of the Writers Guild of America (WGA). She and her production-coordinator husband went without work for six months.
“There was no income in our household,” Finkelstein told Reuters. “We were grateful to have WGA loans and savings to lean on, but it was a very tough summer."
WGA members went on strike in May, followed in July by SAG-AFTRA performers' union members.
Screenwriters returned to work in September after winning pay increases, curbs on artificial intelligence use and benefits such as residuals that reward writers for popular streaming shows. Hollywood actors won similar gains in a tentative agreement reached with the studios on Nov. 8.
STRUGGLING TO EARN ENOUGH
The strike dealt a final blow so some careers. Aspiring actor Serena Kashmir quit the business after working in Hollywood for more than 11 years.
“I was working five ‘survival jobs’ and was still living with my mother,” Kashmir said. “I have a decent resume, footage, connections, and a degree in acting, but it didn't add up.”
Kashmir concluded “full-time acting” was not a reality, so she moved to Colorado to make her living in another field.
SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher has said the new contract has "historic" gains that would help preserve acting as a profession. But if talent flight persists, it can have long-term implications for Hollywood, which has long relied on a steady influx of workers attracted to the glamorous industry, said Kevin Klowden, chief global strategist for the Milken Institute think tank.
“If people can't afford to stick around, then the pool of people trying to get in diminishes, and it's a real concern,” Klowden said.
Long-established businesses, like Faux Library Studio Props in North Hollywood, a warehouse brimming with hollowed Styrofoam books, desks and office decor, barely hung on.
Owner Marc Meyer Jr. laid off all but one employee and relied on his landlord's generosity — and a GoFundMe campaign started by two friends — to remain afloat. He avoided the fate of Sony Pictures Entertainment’s prop warehouse, which closed and auctioned off everything from surf boards to fake skulls.
“I’ve seen executive desks go for $5," Meyer said. "It just breaks my heart."
'A BIG SLOWDOWN'
Even before the strikes, production had already started to decline or move abroad before in response to declining television advertising revenue, a diminished movie box office and investor pressure to turn streaming businesses profitable.
The companies began laying off thousands of workers and reducing content spending by billions. Disney, for example, told investors on a recent earnings call it expected content spending in fiscal 2024 to total $25 billion, down $2 billion from the prior year.
Global spending on programming effectively flatlined in 2023, according to analytics firm Ampere Analysis.
“That’s a very different trend to what’s been happening over the prior 10 years,” said Ampere executive director Guy Bisson, noting worldwide content spending rose 31% from 2015 to 2019. “Relatively speaking, there is a big slowdown.”
Moody’s Investors Service estimates the new labor agreements will cost studios an additional $450 million to $600 million a year collectively. Analyst Neil Begley predicts companies will try to absorb costs by hiring fewer A-list actors, doing less on-location filming or reducing spending on special effects and post-production.
Companies may seek out more tax breaks and financing subsidies to offset expenses. Moody’s predicts studios will film more productions outside the U.S., where costs are lower, and emulate the Netflix model, greenlighting stories with global appeal.
Ampere data shows that 69% of Netflix’s upcoming new original shows are being produced outside the U.S., as it fuels the global growth of its platform with local content.
One talent agent predicted the number of scripted series could drop from “Peak TV” levels of 599 in 2022 to 350 or fewer next year, which will ripple through cast and crew.
“So they won wonderful things,” said the agent, who requested anonymity. “But I do think the new costs that every movie and show will incur, because of what they were able to get, you’re going to see the other side. You’re going to see less production within a year or two, for sure.”
(Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski, Danielle Broadway and Lisa Richwine in Los Angeles; Editing by Mary Milliken and David Gregorio)
Sara Boboltz
Tue, November 14, 2023
A demonstrator holds a poster bearing the image of Israeli-Canadian Vivian Silver during a protest for her release in Jerusalem on Oct. 29.
Vivian Silver, the Canadian Israeli humanitarian believed to have been abducted by Hamas militants during their Oct. 7 attack, was confirmed dead Monday by Israeli authorities, according to her sons.
Silver, a 74-year-old retiree, had for years dedicated herself to the cause of peace between Israelis and Palestinians. She was at home in Kibbutz Be’eri near the Gaza Strip when militants stormed the community, prompting her to flee to a safe room where she was able to text loved ones until intruders set the house ablaze.
Her sons, Yonatan Zeigen and Chen Zeigen, told multipleoutlets that Silver’s remains were identified from the rubble of her home. While the safe room had been incinerated, no body was initially found.
For five weeks, her family and friends thought she was one of around 240 hostages that Israel says Hamas is hiding in the Gaza Strip.
Silver was a well-known activist figure who lobbied for a diplomatic solution to the regional conflict and volunteered to drive Palestinian children from Gaza into Israel for medical treatments. She fought against Israel’s blockade of Gaza and, in the aftermath of the country’s 2014 war with Hamas, she helped start the activist group Women Wage Peace, which posted a tribute to her on its website.
“We will not rest until we achieve the goal to which you dedicated your life’s work,” the group said.
A Palestinian friend, Samah Salaime, wrote that “nothing” prepared her for news of Silver’s death. She recalled, in a piece for +972 Magazine, Silver’s humor and determination to breathe fresh life into the peace movement last November after an election ushered in a new, far-right government.
Salaime recalled Silver saying, “Our camp has lost quite a few times; we’ve taken many hits on the jaw. And I’ve been through plenty in my own life as well. I’ve learned a lot, the hard way, about Arab-Jewish partnership, and I know that when it succeeds, it succeeds because every side understands that the justice it seeks depends heavily on the justice of the other side. Closing the gap comes from collaborative work, and not from struggling against one another.”
Silver’s sons gave repeated interviews to news outlets while they believed her to be a hostage. They shared how she grew up in Winnipeg, Canada, choosing to move to Israel in the 1970s to lobby for peace and help start a kibbutz, a type of collective community traditionally based in agriculture.
Yonatan and Chen Zeigen told The Washington Post they were sure that their mother would have opposed Israel’s retaliatory bombardment of Gaza.
More than 11,000 Palestinians have been killed so far, according to the Palestinian health authority run by Hamas.
Silver carried a relentlessly optimistic attitude. Yonatan told the Post: “I would tell her, ‘Israel is dead. It’s hopeless,’ and she would say, ‘Peace could come tomorrow.’”
Renowned Canadian-born Israeli peace activist Vivian Silver is confirmed killed in Hamas attack
AMY TEIBEL
Updated Tue, November 14, 2023
A person holds a poster of Vivian Silver ,top center, as medical staff and health professionals attend a demonstration in front of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in London, Thursday, Nov. 9, 2023, calling for an immediate intervention in the case of the hostages kidnapped from Israel on Oct. 7. Vivian Silver, a Canadian-born Israeli activist who devoted her life to seeking peace with the Palestinians, was confirmed killed in Hamas' Oct. 7 attacks in southern Israel.
JERUSALEM (AP) — Vivian Silver, a Canadian-born Israeli activist who devoted her life to seeking peace with the Palestinians, was confirmed killed in Hamas’ Oct. 7 incursion into southern Israel.
For 38 days, Silver, who had moved to Israel in the 1970s and made her home in Kibbutz Be’eri, was believed to be among the nearly 240 hostages held in the Gaza Strip. But identification of some of the most badly burned remains has gone slowly, and her family was notified of her death on Monday.
Silver was a dominant figure in several groups that promoted peace between Israel and the Palestinians, as well as a prominent Israeli human rights group. She also volunteered with a group that drove Gaza cancer patients to Israeli hospitals for medical care.
“On the one hand, she was small and fragile. Very sensitive,” her son Yonatan Zeigen told Israel Radio on Tuesday. “On the other hand, she was a force of nature. She had a giant spirit. She was very assertive. She had very strong core beliefs about the world and life.”
Zeigen said he texted with his mother during the attack. The exchanges started out lighthearted, with Silver maintaining her sense of humor, he said. Suddenly, he said, there was a dramatic downturn when she understood the end had come, and militants stormed her house.
“Her heart would have been broken” by the events of Oct. 7 and its aftermath, Zeigen said. “She worked all her life, you know, to steer us off this course. And in the end, it blew up in her face.”
At least 1,200 people were killed in Hamas attacks on Israel while more than 11,000 Palestinians have been killed so far in the Israeli war in Gaza, now in its 39th day.
“We went through three horrific wars in the space of six years,” Silver said in a 2017 interview with The Associated Press. “At the end of the third one, I said: 'No more. We each have to do whatever we can to stop the next war. And it’s possible. We must reach a diplomatic agreement.'”
Zeigen said he has now taken on his mother's baton.
“I feel like I’m in a relay race,” he said. “She has passed something on to me now. I don’t know what I’ll do with it, but I think we can’t turn the clock back now. We have to create something new now, something in the direction of what she worked for.”
Israeli peace activist identified after being kidnapped, killed by Hamas terrorists
Stepheny Price
Mon, November 13, 2023
The Israeli peace activist and leader of Women Wage Peace, who was thought to be kidnapped by Hamas terrorists, has been identified five weeks after she was killed.
Forensic examiners have identified the remains as Vivian Silver, 74, confirming she was killed during the October 7 massacres in southern Israel by Hamas terrorists.
According to the Women Wage Peace page, early Saturday morning on October 7, Silver wrote to say that terrorists had infiltrated the kibbutz and entered her home.
The post stated she hid behind a cupboard door and since 11:07 a.m. and had not been heard from again. The page indicated that Silver had been most likely abducted by Hamas terrorists and taken into Gaza.
Vivian Silver, 74
The organization said Silver had been transporting ailing Gazans from the border checkpoint to Israeli hospitals for years and was a renowned peace activist in many other organizations.
Victor Tangermann
Tue, November 14, 2023
In June 2014, just nine months after retiring from the US Marine Corps, 38-year-old SpaceX employee named Lonnie LeBlanc was sitting on a piece of foam insulation to keep it on a moving vehicle when a gust of wind blew him him off, killing him.
As a shocking new Reuters investigation reveals, employees of Elon Musk's space company in South Texas didn't have straps to secure the foam while transporting it to the facility's main hangar in South Texas.
While the senseless loss of life is a tragedy in itself, it's particularly surprising that the incident was never reported to the public over the past nine years. Worse yet, Reuters found, there have been at least 600 injuries of varying severity since then that haven't been previously reported either — indicating a safety crisis at the notoriously scrappy rocket maker.
Since 2016, SpaceX has failed to consistently report the total number of annual injuries to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), despite it being a regulatory requirement. Roughly 400 of the 600 cases uncovered by Reuters occurred during these unreported years.
The shocking report details some serious lapses in worker safety, many of which were reportedly the result of a chaotic workplace or under-trained or exhausted staff.
It also highlights the human cost of producing rockets under Musk's characteristically breakneck and reckless pace, a systemic problem that isn't just limited to SpaceX, but applies to the mercurial CEO's EV maker Tesla just as much.
OSHA inspectors determined the company had failed to provide the tie-downs needed to stop the insulation foam from being blown away and striking LeBlanc. Per the report, SpaceX did acknowledge these problems and agreed to implement new safety measures.
Out of the 600 injuries revealed by Reuters, there were 100 instances of employees suffering cuts, 29 broken bones or dislocations, and 17 cases of "crushed" fingers or hands. There was also one skull fracture, one traumatic brain injury, and four concussions. SpaceX also reported eight accidents leading to amputations, and seven eye injuries.
Employees speaking with the news agency said Musk often saw safety as being the responsibility of the individual worker. Musk even reportedly discouraged employees from wearing safety yellow because he "disliked bright colors."
Eight former SpaceX employees also told Reuters that a rocket part flying off during a pressure test fractured the skull of one employee, putting him in a coma.
SpaceX has largely gotten away with putting its employees in danger. Despite the space company's failure to consistently report the number of injuries over the years, Reuters found regulators never filed any sanctions against the company, apart from small fines ranging only from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars.
Meanwhile, SpaceX has offloaded its responsibility to a number of "responsible engineers," a spokesperson told the news agency.
The space company's South Texas facilities, the home base of SpaceX's Mars rocket called Starship, has a particularly bad track record when it comes to safety, with employees reportedly working more than 80 hours a week and sleeping at the facility overnight. Some even took Adderall without a prescription, per Reuters.
That's more or less in line with Musk's repeated calls to throw caution to the wind and construct these massive rockets at a record pace.
That kind of approach has seemingly come at the cost of a more rigorous training program, sufficient testing, and fixing known defects that later resulted in injuries.
The company has had a culture of rationalizing this kind of unsafe working environment, and given the insignificant fines it has received so far, it's been able to do this largely without any consequences.
"SpaceX shouldn’t be exempt from protecting workers from being injured or killed," Jordan Barab, who served as an OSHA deputy assistant secretary between 2009 and 2017, told Reuters, "just because they’re doing innovative work."
More on SpaceX: SpaceX Says Feds Are Being Unfair About Its Rocket That Exploded