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To protect the future of the internet, US-led tech diplomacy must change tack – TechCrunch

Andrew BennettContributor

Andrew Bennett is a senior policy analyst at the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, focused on internet policy and geopolitics. He recently co-authored "The Open Internet on the Brink: A Model to Save Its Future."

TheTechCrunch Global Affairs Projectexamines the increasingly intertwined relationship between the tech sector and global politics.

In the wake of its recent Democracy Summit, the U.S. has proposed that like-minded democracies should form a new Alliance for the Future of the Internet to uphold open, liberal values online. The latest in a long line of cooperation initiatives, it is a promising candidate for delivering progress. But in its current guise, it risks falling short. Now, with disagreements between officials delaying the launch, the U.S. must take this opportunity for a rethink.

The underlying logic behind the Alliance remains sound: Internet freedoms are increasingly under threat globally, governments are competing to assert their authority, and a decades-long governance system formed of voluntary bodies is now creaking. As Tim Wu, adviser to the Biden administration on tech policy, recently said, we are on the wrong trajectory. Against this backdrop, a new initiative to promote and defend open, liberal values in the internet era is sorely needed.

In practice, however, the U.S. focus on like-minded democracies working together risks undermining its own objectives. Thats because the future of the open internet will not be secured either by a small club of democracies talking only to themselves or by employing coercion alone. Instead, any Alliance must be far more inclusive, focusing on setting the economic and security incentives right from day one to build a wide and sustainable coalition for the long term.

This would represent a much more internationalist approach to internet policy than the U.S. has usually needed to take. For decades, Americas outsized jurisdictional power has underwritten the open internet model: Despite only 7.1% of the worlds internet users being based in the U.S., it is home to 61% of core infrastructure services for the global internet. Its dominance has supported the model of permissionless innovation, interoperable networks and dumb pipes infrastructure that cant see what content it is transporting which has generated such immense economic and social value. Only China, home to 19% of global internet users, has comparable geopolitical sway.

Yet U.S. hegemony can be relied upon no longer to maintain a free internet. Many countries are at a tipping point in how they govern the internet, with authoritarian internet models including censorship, surveillance and shutdowns quickly gaining ground. And today, 3.7 billion people still do not have internet access.

As connectivity improves, the developing countries that are home to most of this group will come to determine the future of the internet and at present they are likelier to receive the necessary financing from China than anywhere else. The shift to a multipolar internet is a given, but its direction open or closed, liberal or authoritarian is not.

On these trends, focusing only on cooperation among todays democracies amounts to overindexing on an ever-smaller section of the internet. Organizing solely around values also highlights those areas where traditional allies are not yet in agreement, such as the EU and U.S. on several areas of internet regulation. For any alliance to succeed, therefore, it must move beyond the accepted clich of like-minded partners and adopt a twin approach prioritizing economic and security incentives alongside commitments on internet openness, such as a ban on internet shutdowns to encourage a broader set of countries to join.

This strategy will be particularly important to convince those countries that are increasingly considering more restrictive internet policies. For example, since 2015, 31 of 54 African countries have blocked access to social media to some degree. Undoubtedly, some of these shutdowns have been due to overt repression and must be met with a strong international response. Yet other interventions have been less ideological: When violent content online has left leaders worried about public safety, a combination of muddled policy, low state capacity and underinvestment in content moderation from major social media services has led to regrettable actions that might otherwise have been avoided with greater support.

It is not too late to arrest this trend and secure core internet freedoms. But such efforts will not succeed through coercion alone. While the fight against authoritarianism is crucial, allowing every debate to get wrapped up into polarized democracies versus authoritarians language can actually close off opportunities for cooperation, only accelerating greater restrictions and fragmentation. The effect of this corrosive discourse can already be seen in Africa, where the West too often treats states as little more than sites for proxy battles in a larger U.S.-China cold war. Neither of these conceptions are helpful.

China is not a monolith: It is a partner, competitor and adversary to the West all at once. The U.S., EU and others cannot force China out of the global internet infrastructure market, and nor should they want or need to. Africa, the U.S. and China would all be better served by a globally competitive market for internet infrastructure, with no one state either monopolizing provision or footing the entire bill.

Similarly, not only do African countries have their own political priorities and challenges, but it is often in the Wests own economic interests to offer support. Connecting all 3.7 billion people without internet access would, for example, cost just 0.02% of the gross national incomes for OECD states a group of countries including the U.S., UK, Korea and Japan while generating a huge 25x return.

Yet when the G7 launched its Build Back Better World project this year, designed to compete with Chinas infrastructure offer, it came with no new money. Meanwhile there has been little effort to reform World Bank and IMF development programs, which the U.S. could influence, despite them being uncompetitively bureaucratic, risk averse and expensive for many African leaders facing fragile development pathways and urgent job-creation demands.

For years, weve lacked the necessary political leadership and ambition for a program of this kind. But the Alliance for the Future of the Internet has the potential to provide a reset. To succeed, it must show there is no pathway to prosperity that undermines core internet freedoms, while also providing the right guidance and incentives to enable a different approach. While there will always be some countries who never sign up, these strong incentives could persuade many swing states such as Indonesia, Kenya or Brazil to join. Only by building wide, internationalist coalitions that are in everyones economic and security interests to sustain will the open, global internet truly be protected for the long term.

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How to disable your webcam and protect it from hackers – for free – TechRadar

Webcams are great for sharing moments with friends and family, but not so much if you're being spied on by rogue websites or malicious apps.

Antivirus software providers like Avast, Bitdefender, Norton and others have internet security suites which warn you about unauthorized access to your webcam, and allow you to block untrusted apps.

There's no need to spend big money or install heavyweight security suites just to take more control over your webcam, though. Tweak a system setting or two, and you can do it right now...and for free!

If you're mostly concerned about websites accessing your camera, then the solution could be just a browser click or two away.

In Chrome, for instance, click Settings, Privacy and Security, Site Settings. Scroll down, click Camera and make sure the default is set to 'Don't allow sites to use your camera'.

If you're at a site and decide it should be able to use your webcam after all, just click the site (padlock) icon to the left of the address bar, and click the 'Camera: not allowed' switch to turn it on. Chrome still blocks webcam access for other websites, but this one will be able to use the camera in future.

You'll find a similar options in Firefox, at Settings > Privacy and Security > Camera Permissions in Firefox. And in Safari, visit Preferences, Websites, Camera, and make sure 'all other websites' is set to Deny.

Controlling browser access to your webcam is a smart way to prevent external attacks, but there's the possibility that a rogue app might be capturing frames without your knowledge.

Fortunately, most platforms have permission-based systems which give you control over what an app can do, and what it can't. Set the default Camera permission to Off, and no app can access your webcam until you specifically approve it. (In theory, anyway. Real life can be more complicated, but we'll talk about that in a moment.)

In Windows, press Win+I to launch Settings, then click Privacy, Camera.

Scroll down and you'll find switches to disable webcam access for specific apps. Or for more security, set 'Allow apps to access your camera' off to block Microsoft Store apps, and disable the 'Allow desktop apps to access your camera' setting to cover everything else.

Life is a little simpler on mobile devices, where you can usually just disable permissions for your camera app. On Android, go to Settings, Apps, Camera, Permissions, Disable; on iOS, go to Settings, Restrictions, Camera, Disable.

App permissions systems work well, most of the time, but there are exceptions. For instance, Windows can only control webcam use for apps which use standard Windows commands to access your hardware. If an app installs a driver, or uses some other sneaky trick of its own, turning webcam permissions off may not make any difference at all.

If you really want to turn off a webcam completely, then - to make nothing can use it, at all - you'll get better results by disabling it at the device or the driver level.

In Windows, click Start, type Device Manager and press Enter. Click the arrow to the left of Cameras to expand the device list, right-click your camera and select Disable. (Right-click and choose Enable if you need to restore access to the camera, later.)

Other platforms don't typically give access to devices at this level. There are apps which might be able to help, but beware - they can cause new problems.

The Permanently Disable Camera Android app turns off your camera ever, for instance, and even blocks factory resets to prevent you getting it back. It works, but that's a serious step, and you should be very sure what you're doing before you try it. (Just read the reviews for plenty of people who didn't realize 'permanently disable' really did mean 'permanently.')

If that's a little too scary, there's always the tried-and-tested 'stick some tape over the lens' route. Not exactly stylish, but it works, and it's very easy to reverse when you find you need your camera, after all.

Today's best webcams deals

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Anxinsec won two awards of the Top 100 of Cybersecurity Innovation Capability 2021 by ISC – PRNewswire

BEIJING, Dec. 22, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- In the middle of December 2021, initiated by Internet Security Conference (ISC), the award ceremony of Top 100 of Cybersecurity Innovation Capability 2021, also referred to as "Innovation Top 100", was successfully concluded in both Beijing and Shanghai. ISC, founded in the Asia-Pacific region, is a global security summit with high specifications, wide radiation and far-reaching influence.

As one of the candidates, Anxinsec won the award of top 10 cybersecurity companies of innovation capability 2021, and its Memory Protection System was shortlisted for the top 100 products of innovation capability in endpoint security field. Additionally, as one of the cutting-edge forces among the top 10 companies entering the hall of fame for future digital security by ISC, Anxinsec will jointly leverage the future of cybersecurity innovation and comprehensively empower the digital transformation to high-quality development.

Meanwhile, in the recently-published 2021 China Digital Security Capability Map by one of the co-sponsors of Innovation Top 100- a credible and independent research agency in digital industry in China- Digital World Consulting, Anxinsec has been selected as the innovator in endpoint security field, the application scenarios of AD domain security and risk and threat assessment.

As a leading company of memory security and a delver in endpoint security, Anxinsec has always taken technological innovation as its core support of enterprise development, by taking the lead in adopting hardware virtualization and context behavior analysis to form three-dimensional protection in the application-layer, system-layer and hardware-layer. We build security defense for endpoints from the bottom layer, and it is well applied to attack and defense exercise, AD domain defense, memory Webshell defense and other scenarios.

Equipped with a strong expert service team and senior information security experts with more than 10 years of security service experience, Anxinsec provides clients with Regulatory and Standard Compliance Consultation, Compromise Assessment, Penetration Test and Red/Blue Team Test. By delivering those services, what we want to achieve is to help organizations comply with cybersecurity law and privacy protection regulations, prevent or mitigate legal and regulatory risks, build up brand credit and reputation, earn trust from customers and investors, and boost business performance.

http://www.anxinsec.com

SOURCE Anxinsec

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1.1 billion identities were recently exposed to theft Here’s how to find out if you’re at risk – Salt Lake Tribune

Sponsored: Were you exposed?

(Getty Images) Is your identity protected?

| Dec. 21, 2021, 7:00 a.m.

Symantec Corporations most recent Internet Security Report is 77 pages but heres the scary truth:

They report 1,209 breaches in recent years.

15 of those breaches exposed more than 10 million identities, deeming them mega breaches.

The total number of identities exposed soared to 1.1 billion

The average number of identities exposed in each breach were 927,000.

Do note, these numbers are from across the globe. However, the United States sits pretty (or not) at the top the list of the top 10 countries by number of identities stolen.

The best way to quickly check is to peek at your credit. You might know federal law entitles you to one free credit report per year.

But your annual report doesnt include your actual credit scores, which are a nice, easy benchmark for figuring out if somethings wrong.

Most companies will charge you for this information which is why we like the free website Credit Sesame.

Once you create a free account, the first thing youll see is a user-friendly overview of your current credit situation, including a TransUnion score.

Even if youre pretty sure youre not a victim of identity theft, its worth checking out. I mean, its free, and its always good to know where you stand

It takes 90 seconds to sign up and see if your identity was stolen.

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Jordan Peterson | About

Dr. Jordan B. Peterson is a clinical psychologist and professor emeritus at the University of Toronto. From 1993 to 1998 he served as assistant and then associate professor of psychology at Harvard. He spent fifteen years writing Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief (1999; released in June 2018as a now bestselling author-readaudiobook). Maps of Meaning is a scholarly investigation into the nature of narrative and religious thought, the structure of perception, the regulation of emotion, and the motivation for atrocity in the service of ideology. Dr. Peterson also penned the popular global bestsellers Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life & 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos, #1 for nonfiction in 2018 in the US, Canada, the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, the Netherlands, Brazil and Norway, both translated into some 50 languages. The latter book has sold more than five million copies; the former, released in mid 2021, 750,000.

Raised and toughened in the frigid wastelands of Northern Alberta :), Dr. Peterson has flown a hammer-head roll in a carbon-fiber stuntplane, piloted a mahogany racing sailboat around Alcatraz Island, explored an Arizona meteorite crater with a group of astronauts, built a Native American Long-House on the upper floor of his Toronto home, and been inducted into a Pacific Kwakwakawakw family (see charlesjoseph.ca). Hes been a dishwasher, short-order cook, beekeeper, tow-truck driver, gas jockey, bartender, oil derrick bit re-tipper, plywood mill laborer and railway line worker. Hes taught mythology to physicians, lawyers, and businessmen; worked with Jim Balsillie, former CEO of Blackberrys Research in Motion, on Resilient People, Resilient Planet, the report of the UN Secretary Generals High Level Panel on Global Sustainability; helped his clinical clients manage the triumphs and catastrophes of life; served as an advisor to senior partners of major Canadian law firms; penned the forward for the 50th anniversary edition of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyns The Gulag Archipelago; lectured to university audiences all around the English-speaking world (see Harvard 2017, Cambridge (2018, 2021, 2021 TBA) and Oxford (2018, 2021 TBA); identified thousands of promising entrepreneurs, with the The Founder Institute in 60 different countries; spoke to sold-out audiences across North America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand in the course of one of the most-well attended booktours ever mounted; and is currently mounting the 2022 Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life book tour on a similar scale (tickets available here).

With his students and colleagues, Dr. Peterson has published more than a hundred scientific papers with his colleagues and students, advancing the modern understanding of alcoholism, antisocial behavior, play, emotion, creativity, competence and personality. He was nominated for five consecutive years as one of Ontarios Best University Lecturers, and was one of only three profs rated as life changing in the U of Ts underground student handbook of course ratings.

In 2016, shortly before the publication of 12 Rules, several of Dr. Petersons online lectures, videos and interviews went viral, launching him into unprecedented international prominence as a public intellectual and educator. His work, public postings and discussions are featured on the following platforms:

Dr. Petersons classroom lectures on mythology and the psychology of religion, based on Maps of Meaning (2016 version here), were turned into a popular 13-part TV series on Canadian public televisionsTVO. Malcolm Gladwell discussed psychology with him while researching his books; Norman Doidge, author of The Brain that Changes Itself, wrote the forward to 12 Rules; and bestselling thriller writer Gregg Hurwitz employed several of his valuable things as a plot feature in his #1 international bestseller, Orphan X.

With his colleagues, Dr. Daniel M. Higgins and Dr. Robert O. Pihl, Dr. Peterson has also produced two online programs to help people understand themselves better and to improve their psychological and practical functioning. The most recent of these, UnderstandMyself, provides its users with detailed information about their personalities, based on work he published with his students here. Tens of thousands of people now know themselves better, as a consequence of completing this 15-minute program.His original self-analysis program,theSelf Authoring Suite, (featured in O: The Oprah Magazine, CBC radio, and NPRs national website), has helped over 200,000 people resolve the problems of their past, rectify their personality faults and enhance their virtues, and radically improve their future. Research documenting the programs effectiveness can be found here and here.

Dr. Peterson has appeared on many popular podcasts and shows, including the Joe Rogan Experience (#877, #958, #1006), The Rubin Report (12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos, Free Speech, Psychology, Gender Pronouns), H3H3(#37), and many more. He is currently working on a new book, tentatively titledBeyond Mere Order: 12 More Rules for Life, slated for publication in late 2020.

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Jordan Peterson, Custodian of the Patriarchy – The New …

The left, he believes, refuses to admit that men might be in charge because they are better at it. The people who hold that our culture is an oppressive patriarchy, they dont want to admit that the current hierarchy might be predicated on competence, he said.

Mr. Peterson illustrates his arguments with copious references to ancient myths bringing up stories of witches, biblical allegories and ancient traditions. I ask why these old stories should guide us today.

It makes sense that a witch lives in a swamp. Yeah, he says. Why?

Its a hard one.

Right. Thats right. You dont know. Its because those things hang together at a very deep level. Right. Yeah. And it makes sense that an old king lives in a desiccated tower.

But witches dont exist, and they dont live in swamps, I say.

Yeah, they do. They do exist. They just dont exist the way you think they exist. They certainly exist. You may say well dragons dont exist. Its, like, yes they do the category predator and the category dragon are the same category. It absolutely exists. Its a superordinate category. It exists absolutely more than anything else. In fact, it really exists. What exists is not obvious. You say, Well, theres no such thing as witches. Yeah, I know what you mean, but that isnt what you think when you go see a movie about them. You cant help but fall into these categories. Theres no escape from them.

Recently, a young man named Alek Minassian drove through Toronto trying to kill people with his van. Ten were killed, and he has been charged with first-degree murder for their deaths, and with attempted murder for 16 people who were injured. Mr. Minassian declared himself to be part of a misogynist group whose members call themselves incels. The term is short for involuntary celibates, though the group has evolved into a male supremacist movement made up of people some celibate, some not who believe that women should be treated as sexual objects with few rights. Some believe in forced sexual redistribution, in which a governing body would intervene in womens lives to force them into sexual relationships.

Violent attacks are what happens when men do not have partners, Mr. Peterson says, and society needs to work to make sure those men are married.

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Jordan Peterson: Descensus ad inferos – reddit

Jordan Peterson's goal is to strengthen the individual. Life contains tragedy and evil. The hero's journey justifies the burden of being by pursuing truth, making order out of chaos. The alternative is deceiving yourself with ideology and nihilism. So, take yourself seriously, know the monster within you, and become a responsible person with an integrated character.

r/JordanPetersonis an open forum where controversial topics can be discussed in good faith. Free speech, despite risking offense, is necessary to conduct civil discourse between opposing ideologies. Bans will be given to users who post excessively abusive material.

Follow Jordan Peterson on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Youtube, and JBP Daily

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Jordan B. Peterson Quotes (Author of 12 Rules for Life)

We deserve some respect. You deserve some respect. You are important to other people, as much as to yourself. You have some vital role to play in the unfolding destiny of the world. You are, therefore, morally obliged to take care of yourself. You should take care of, help and be good to yourself the same way you would take care of, help and be good to someone you loved and valued. You may therefore have to conduct yourself habitually in a manner that allows you some respect for your own Beingand fair enough. But every person is deeply flawed. Everyone falls short of the glory of God. If that stark fact meant, however, that we had no responsibility to care, for ourselves as much as others, everyone would be brutally punished all the time. That would not be good. That would make the shortcomings of the world, which can make everyone who thinks honestly question the very propriety of the world, worse in every way. That simply cannot be the proper path forward. Jordan B. Peterson, 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos

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DeepMind Releases Weather Forecasting AI Deep Generative Models of Rainfall – InfoQ.com

DeepMind open-sourced a dataset and trained model snapshot for Deep Generative Models of Rainfall (DGMR), an AI system for short-term precipitation forecasts. In evaluations conducted by 58 expert meteorologists comparing it to other existing methods, DGMR was ranked first in accuracy and usefulness in 89% of test cases.

The model and several experiments were described in an article published in Nature. DeepMind developed DGMR in collaboration with the UK Met Office to perform nowcasting: short-term, high-resolution predictions of precipitation. Using a deep learning technique called generative models, DGMR learns to generate "radar movies": given a short series of radar images of rainfall, it learns to predict future radar images, thus predicting the amount and location of future precipitation. According to DeepMind:

We think this is an exciting area of research and we hope our paper will serve as a foundation for new work by providing data and verification methods that make it possible to both provide competitive verification and operational utility. We also hope this collaboration with the Met Office will promote greater integration of machine learning and environmental science, and better support decision-making in our changing climate.

Nowcasts are often used for assisting decision-making in many areas, such as air traffic control and energy management; thus, their accuracy has economic and safety implications. Current methods, such as STEPS and PySTEPS, often use numeric approaches to solve physics equations that describe weather behavior. These systems model the uncertainty of their predictions by producing ensemblesof predictions. More recently, researchers have developed deep learning models that are trained on datasets of radar observations; however, the DeepMind team note that these models have limited operational usefulness, as they are "unable to provide simultaneously consistent predictions across multiple spatial and temporal aggregations."

The DGMR model is based on a conditional generative adversarial network (GAN). The generator network takes in four observed radar frames as context and generates output predictions for the next 18 frames. The generator is trained along with two discriminator networks which learn to tell the difference between real radar data and generated data; one discriminator focuses on spatial consistency within frames, and the other on temporal consistency across a sequence of frames. The entire system is trained on historical data from radar observations in the UK, from the years 2016 to 2019. The trained model can generate a prediction in "just over a second" using a single NVIDIA V100 GPU.

To evaluate DGMR's performance, DeepMind compared it to three baseline models: PySTEPS, UNet, and MetNet. Besides the general ranking of accuracy and value, a group of expert meteorologists also judged the models' predictions for a single "meteorologically challenging event". In this case study, 93% indicated DGMR's results as their first choice. The DeepMind team also evaluated the models on several metrics, including critical success index (CSI), radially averaged power spectral density (PSD), and continuous ranked probability score (CRPS); on these metrics, DGMR compared "competitively" to the baselines.

AI models for weather forecasting is an active research area. InfoQ previously covered an AI model for predicting electrical outages caused by storms, as well as a model for solving partial differential equations, which could be used for modeling climate. Google recently announced MetNet-2, which "substantially improves on the performance" of MetNet.

In a discussion about DGMR on Reddit, one commenter questioned the usefulness of the approach. Another pointed out,

The GAN is basically just hallucinating plausible details on top of the L1 prediction, but the fact is, this still leads to a higher predictive skill and value! Is the method really garbage if it has higher predictive performance on multiple metrics than other leading deep networks and statistical baselines? Furthermore, there is a ton of research into avoiding GAN mode-dropping that can be integrated into this baseline approach. That seems like a pretty promising way to gain even more performance!

The trained DGMR model and dataset are available on GitHub.

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‘Deep canvassing’ has helped support gay and trans rights. What about abortion? : Shots – Health News – NPR

Planned Parenthood volunteer Sarah Mahoney checks a list of addresses in Windham, Maine to see which door to knock on next. Patty Wight/Maine Public Radio hide caption

Planned Parenthood volunteer Sarah Mahoney checks a list of addresses in Windham, Maine to see which door to knock on next.

It's Saturday, and Sarah Mahoney is one of several Planned Parenthood volunteers knocking on doors in Windham, Maine, a politically moderate town not far from Portland.

No one answers at the first couple of houses. But as Mahoney heads up the street, she sees a woman out for a walk.

"Hey! We're out canvassing," she says. "Would you mind having a conversation with us?"

Mahoney wants to talk about abortion not a typical topic for a conversation, especially with a stranger.

But the woman, Kerry Kelchner, agrees to talk.

If this were typical door-to-door canvassing, Mahoney might ask Kelchner about a political candidate, remind her to vote and then be on her way.

But Mahoney is deep canvassing a technique that employs longer conversations to move opinions on hot-button issues.

Planned Parenthood in Maine has deployed the strategy for several years amid what it says are increasing threats to reproductive rights. This year alone, states have enacted more than 100 restrictions on abortion, including one in Texas that bans most abortions after six weeks. This month, the US Supreme Court heard arguments in a case about a Mississippi law that could lead to the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that established a constitutional right to abortion.

Although state law in Maine protects abortion rights even if Roe v. Wade is overturned, abortion opponents have gained traction in the state in recent years. So volunteers like Mahoney start conversations. And they can get quite personal.

Mahoney first assesses Kelchner's baseline attitude on abortion access on a scale of 0 to 10. A 10 means the interviewee believes anyone should be able to get an abortion for any reason.

Kelchner says she's a 7.

Next, Mahoney asks Kelchner a series of questions to better understand her values.

"Can you tell me a little bit about what shaped your views on abortion?" she asks. "Have you known anybody who's had an abortion, a friend or a family member?"

"My mother," says Kelchner. She explains her parents were young when she was born, and they weren't ready for another baby.

Then Mahoney, who's 60, shares that she also had an abortion. "I was in my early 20s," she says. "I was a little conflicted about it, and I wanted to have a family. I knew I wanted to have a family, but I was in no way ready to do that."

Mahoney points out that she and Kelchner have similar views on what an unplanned pregnancy can mean. Then she asks her opening question again, to see whether Kelchner's feelings about abortion access have shifted on the 0-to-10 scale.

"Still around 7," Kelchner says.

Mahoney probes further: "What would be the circumstances where you would say, 'No they shouldn't have the right to have an abortion?'"

Kelchner pauses. "That's a good question."

They talk more. Ultimately, Kelchner can't think of any circumstance in which she believes someone should be denied an abortion.

"There should be no judgment," she concludes.

"So that would be a 10?" Mahoney asks.

"Yep," says Kelchner.

Planned Parenthood organizer Katie McClelland (L) gives a pep talk to volunteers outside the library in Windham, Maine, on Oct. 16. The volunteers then fan out to different neighborhoods to engage in "deep canvassing" The goal is to have four conversations with voters over the next two hours. Patty Wight/Maine Public Radio hide caption

Planned Parenthood organizer Katie McClelland (L) gives a pep talk to volunteers outside the library in Windham, Maine, on Oct. 16. The volunteers then fan out to different neighborhoods to engage in "deep canvassing" The goal is to have four conversations with voters over the next two hours.

In the five years that she's been deep canvassing for Planned Parenthood, Mahoney says, she hasn't had a single unpleasant conversation.

"What we've found doing this is that it is an effective way to change minds about abortion," says Amy Cookson, director of external communications for Planned Parenthood of Northern New England.

Cookson says Planned Parenthood started deep canvassing in Maine in 2015, after Paul LePage, an anti-abortion Republican, won a second term as governor. Gay rights advocates in California had used deep canvassing on the same-sex marriage issue, and she wondered: "Can it work around abortion stigma?"

The technique has been used to garner support for gay marriage, transgender rights, police reform efforts, and for Biden in the 2020 election.

Joshua Kalla, a political scientist at Yale University, has conducted research that found the technique can change people's deeply held beliefs. The crucial elements are that canvassers listen without judgment and share their own stories.

"So whether the person had an abortion and is talking about their abortion story," says Kalla, "or whether the person is an ally and is talking about a friend or family member who had an abortion and is sharing that story, the effects seem to be quite similar."

Kalla has also studied Planned Parenthood's efforts in Maine and says the group has added something else that's effective: moral reframing. Canvassers listen for the moral values a voter emphasizes and then incorporate those values into the story they share.

But deep canvassing is not exclusively a progressive tactic, Kalla says. Conservative groups can use it, too, and he thinks that would improve political discourse: "You know, it would be good for American society if the way we had political conversation was more grounded, and listening to the other side, and being nonjudgmental, and being curious."

Planned Parenthood volunteer Sarah Mahoney talks to a voter about abortion access outside a home in Windham, Maine on Oct 16, 2021. Patty Wight/Maine Public Radio hide caption

Planned Parenthood volunteer Sarah Mahoney talks to a voter about abortion access outside a home in Windham, Maine on Oct 16, 2021.

Back in Windham, Mahoney continues to walk through the neighborhood. She meets a man outside his apartment building who gives only his first name, Chris. He says he's a 4 on the abortion access scale. He opposes abortion except in cases of sexual assault. Chris tells Mahoney he had a daughter when he was 15.

"Do you talk about, I'm curious, birth control and abortion?" Mahoney asks.

"I do with her a lot," Chris says. She's a teenager, he says, and he's not sure what he'd do if she got pregnant accidentally.

"It's her own life," he says. "I don't know if I would even try to change her mind. Because it's her decision."

As the conversation goes on, Chris seems as though he supports access to abortion. But at the end, he doesn't budge on his rating.

Mahoney says that's OK. Some people won't change their minds right away.

"The worst way to think about this is that it's some kind of Jedi mind trick," she says, "and I'm going to let them talk about themselves and then pow! I'm going to change their mind."

What Mahoney wants most from these conversations is for people to think more deeply about the nuances around abortion, and to identify common ground: "I just feel like we all need to be taking steps to hear one another and move towards each other, instead of just diving into this divisive, contrary, hostile, Red-and-Blue world."

Because of the success Planned Parenthood in Maine has had with deep canvassing, it has trained volunteers in other states, including Texas and Kansas. Next year, Kansas voters will cast ballots on a referendum question that seeks to revoke abortion access as a fundamental right.

This story comes from NPR's health reporting partnership with Maine Public Radio and KHN.

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'Deep canvassing' has helped support gay and trans rights. What about abortion? : Shots - Health News - NPR

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