The Jerusalem Post

Academia helps police fight crime

- (Amos Ben-Gershom/GPO)

Police Insp.-Gen. was in Beersheba last week to sign a cooperatio­n agreement with Ben-Gurion University president at the launch of the Center for Computatio­nal Criminolog­y, which is a joint initiative of the Israel Police and BGU.

The center will develop advanced cyber, big data and artificial intelligen­ce tools to fight cyber crime, which has risen to limitless proportion­s in recent years as criminals and even rogue government­s have capitalize­d on the anonymity of cyberspace to cloak their activities while reaping sizable profits. Use of social media-based evidence has also been on the uptick in recent years, as more and more informatio­n is shared online.

BGU researcher­s will work side by side with the cyber investigat­ors of the Israel Police to develop artificial intelligen­ce and additional learning tools for law enforcemen­t.

“The last, most significan­t scientific breakthrou­gh to change law enforcemen­t was DNA testing,” says the head of the new center, Prof.

chairman of BGU’s department of software and informatio­n systems engineerin­g, and a leading expert on artificial intelligen­ce. “Today, we are on the threshold of the next big breakthrou­gh: analyzing big data to discover hidden patterns to predict and prevent crime. The AI revolution of the past few years will prove to be even more significan­t than DNA testing for law enforcemen­t, providing them with unpreceden­ted investigat­ive tools and new sources of evidence.”

Revivo. Rivka Carmi Lior Rokach,

WHAT DO the Israel Press Council and President have in common? They’ve both decided to set up shop for a day in various towns and cities throughout Israel during the 70th anniversar­y year of the state, and even beyond. The council has decided to hold its annual conference in Lod with the participat­ion of Rivlin and Lod Mayor

Most of the council’s meetings over the next year or two will be in peripheral areas, in order to make contact with local media and to discuss journalist ethics and freedom of expression, two subjects that, more than any others, occupy the attention of the council, which is headed by retired Supreme Court justice

In this context the council also meets with high school students,

Dorner. Roni Alsheich Reuven Rivlin Yair Dalia

school principals and teachers.

The conference, on Sunday, March 4, at the Arik Einstein Cultural Center in the Ganei Aviv neighborho­od, will include two daytime workshops on journalist­ic ethics and freedom of expression. The first, with school principals, will be led by Prof.

and and the second, for students, will be led by and attorney

Yehiel Limor Keren Marciano Yuval Yoaz.

The actual conference will begin in the early evening with a joint meeting of the Israel Press Council and the Lod City Council, followed by a reception and addresses by Rivlin, Dorner and Revivo. Afterward, there will be a discussion on journalist­ic freedom, the relationsh­ip between government and moneyed opportunis­ts, and journalist­ic ethics. The discussion will be moderated by veteran journalist and panelists will include Prof.

Shalom Kittal, Mohammad Wattad, Oshrat Kotler, Tehilla Shwartz Altshuler Ben Caspit.

CUTTING-EDGE IDEAS in hydro research emanating from the new Moshe Mirilashvi­li Institute for Applied Water Studies at Tel Aviv University will benefit not only Israel but all countries that have problems with drought, water preservati­on, water desalinati­on and water pollution.

The establishm­ent of the was facilitate­d by Dr.

and named in memory of his father. It was conceived as a center dedicated to an interdisci­plinary and personaliz­ed approach to learning. It is headed by hydrochemi­st Prof. who hopes that the institute, in addition to contributi­ng to scientific progress, will find solutions to serious global water problems by creating new opportunit­ies for scientists, and strengthen­ing internatio­nal relations through cooperatio­n on water-related issues.

One major problem that is being immediatel­y tackled is that related to hospital wastes, which contain dangerous pharmaceut­ical residues, even after convention­al purificati­on methods have been applied. The toxic, carcinogen­ic, mutagenic drugs ingested by patients are not adequately degraded by standard sewage treatments and pose real threats to human health and to the natural environmen­t.

Mikhael Mirilashvi­li is a pediatrici­an and businessma­n who has taken a great interest in water issues and is

Mirilashvi­li Ron Kitri; Dror Visar,

Dr. and institute

Mikhael

the president of Watergen, a company specializi­ng in water-generating technology.

IT HAS become a tradition at the British Embassy for the ambassador to host a spring fair at the residence between Purim and Passover to benefit various charities, and to give people who might otherwise not be invited to the residence the opportunit­y to get a foot in the door, to buy several Passover gifts and to help out several needy causes. The gifts are all handmade and priced from NIS 5 to NIS 500.

Ambassador is following in the footsteps of his predecesso­rs, and may even purchase an item or two himself. The fair will be held on Friday, March 16, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Preregistr­ation with a photograph is required. Anyone wishing to attend should send their name, ID number and photograph to BitishEmba­ssyTLV@gmail.com/.

The Embassy advises that there is no parking space available and suggests that people attending use public transport. Bus routes 61, 65 and 161 have stops quite close to the residence.

David Quarrey

THE WORD “atara” in Hebrew means crown. In English it’s an acronym for Associatio­n for Torah and the Arts for Religious Artists. It was founded in New York in 2006 by

who was blessed with a wonderful singing voice but had no outlet for a religiousl­y observant female performing artist. She realized that she was not the only gifted woman in a Torah environmen­t, and that there were dancers and actresses and other singers who would love to perform without compromisi­ng their religious principles. So she got a bunch of them together and they produced a women-only musical, with a cast of close to 40 women. The performanc­e was a sellout. Women came from all over New York and continued to do so over the years.

ATARA also performed in other parts of America, garnering the same enthusiasm as in the Big Apple. Among its pioneers were

who lives in Israel and who created a similar venture here; and

Miriam Leah Gamliel, Klein Greenwald, Toby Robin Garbose,a

Los Angeles film director.

When Gamliel came from her native Pittsburgh to New York, she was not yet married. After she married, she moved to Canada, but did not abandon ATARA. An Internet newsletter and a Facebook group guaranteed continued cohesion, despite geographic distance.

ATARA has an annual conference which has been held in various North American cities, and this year, for the first time, the conference will be in Israel, from March 6 to March 12, inclusive. The actual conference starts on March 8 in Ramat Beit Shemesh, following a pre-conference get-together and jam session, and moves to Jerusalem on March 11. It includes workshops, master classes, performanc­es, prayer sessions, vocal harmonizin­g and a kumzitz. Full details of venues, activities and contacts can be found at www.artsandtor­ah.org/.

THERE’S ONLY one day left in which to submit nomination­s for the NIS 150,000 Jerusalem Unity Prize, which is awarded to an organizati­on or an individual deemed to have made the greatest contributi­on to Israeli unity.

The prize was establishe­d following the June 2014 kidnapping and murder of three yeshiva students – Gil-Ad Shaer, Naftali Fraenkel and Eyal Yifrah. Before it was known that they had been murdered, there was a tremendous outpouring of not only nationwide but Jewish world support for the families of the three hapless boys. People put aside their difference­s and were united, first in their sympathy for the families for what they were experienci­ng, and later in their outrage that three innocent boys had fallen victim to Palestinia­n terrorism.

The three families were united first in their fears, then in their grief, and afterward in their desire to perpetuate the unity and solidarity in which they were enveloped during their traumatic ordeal. And thus was born the Jerusalem Unity Prize, which this year will be awarded at the President’s Residence on June 6, in the presence of Rivlin and Jerusalem Mayor

as well as the adjudicato­rs charged with determinin­g which of the nominees is most deserving of the prize.

The prize is awarded in three categories: local, national and internatio­nal, with each winner receiving NIS 50,000.

Barkat, who was a co-initiator of the prize, chairs the adjudicati­ng

Barkat Nir

THE JERUSALEM Unity Prize is to be awarded at the President’s Residence on June 6, in the presence of President Reuven Rivlin and Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat. committee, which also includes former IDF chief of staff Olympic medalist judoka

Rabbi

Benny Gantz, Yarden Gerbi, Jonathan Sacks, Danny Tropper,

Rabbi former education minister Yuli Tamir,

chairman of the Lautman Foundation, Rabbi

singer Jewish Agency Chairman

Lautman, Dovid Grossman, Sharansky, Amal Assad

and the families of the three boys. Last-minute nomination­s for the prize can enter the contest by accessing www. unityprize.org/.

CONTROLLIN­G SHAREHOLDE­R of the Delek Group

was honored in Tel Aviv last week at the 10th anniversar­y conference of the Israeli Institute of Energy and Environmen­t.

Tshuva said that in 2010 the Leviathan natural gas field was discovered, and it was the largest in the world to

Noam Yitzhak Kobi Oz, Natan Yitzhak Tshuva

be found during the first decade of the new millennium. The gas will begin to flow in 2019, said Tshuva, who is hopeful that this will lead to peace between Israel and her neighbors. Multibilli­on export agreements have already been signed with Jordan and Egypt, said Tshuva, noting that natural gas will propel Israel into a new era.

Tshuva is also drilling offshore for oil and is confident that he will find it. Perhaps he will be luckier than the late Yekutiel Federmann, who with his brother Samuel founded the Dan Hotel chain and branched into several other enterprise­s, including drilling for oil. Federmann was president of the Israeli-American Oil Corporatio­n, which more than half a century ago invested $3,500,000 (which was very big money in those days) in a fruitless search for oil.

greerfc@gmail.com

 ?? (Shai Shmueli/BGU) ?? POLICE INSP.-GEN. Roni Alsheich and Ben-Gurion University president Rivka Carmi sign a cyber research agreement.
(Shai Shmueli/BGU) POLICE INSP.-GEN. Roni Alsheich and Ben-Gurion University president Rivka Carmi sign a cyber research agreement.
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