![]() "As Plug&Charge (PnC) rolls out for EVs, simply plugging the car into the charging station involves the exchange of payment, driver, and vehicle information, making cybersecurity essential. This year's AutoTech Breakthrough Awards program attracted more than 1,400 nominations from over 15 different countries across the globe, with categories including Connected Car, Electric Vehicles, Engine Tech, Automotive Cybersecurity, Sensor Technology, Traffic Tech, and many more. "With the industry's most capable R&D professionals holding decades of experience in IT and vehicular cybersecurity prior to our spinoff, we truly understand the challenges of OEMs and infrastructure developers and aim to tackle them at the individual level." This back-to-back recognition is a strong indication that we have done things right, yet also encourages us to continue refining our products and solutions to exceed customer expectations," said Daniel ES Kim, AUTOCRYPT's Co-Founder and CEO. "We are thrilled to be recognized by AutoTech Breakthrough for this award again this year. ![]() From securing in-vehicle systems and V2X communications to EV charging and fleet management, AUTOCRYPT provides a custom-built end-to-end solution for each client looking to integrate cybersecurity with functional safety, eliminating the complexity of searching for different providers. With branches and subsidiaries in Asia, North America, and Europe, AUTOCRYPT works closely with its clients based on regional needs. Run by the Tech Breakthrough group, AutoTech Breakthrough is a leading market intelligence organization that recognizes the top companies, technologies, and products in the global automotive and transportation technology markets today.ĪUTOCRYPT is the only automotive cybersecurity provider in the world that offers a complete security package for the entire mobility ecosystem. 21, 2021 /PRNewswire/ - Leading EV and autonomous vehicle cybersecurity provider AUTOCRYPT, announced today that for the second year running, it has been named "Automotive Cybersecurity Company of the Year" in the 2021 AutoTech Breakthrough Awards, making it the only company to have won this title to date.
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![]() The murder reporter is convinced the song had to be written about the case and by someone from the community where it happened- in addition to the street name "Foresyth" being in the song, it talked about a woman's cheek on the ground (the murder was a husband who killed his wife in front of their children & buried her in the garden), there was mention of a grey house (the family's surname was Grey, making their house literally the "Grey House"), and it talked about a "jack and a queen" (the son's name was Jack, a fact that wasn't released by the press to protect him, and the neighbors had given the wife the nickname "Queen" because they thought she was stuck up, although it was really that she couldn't socialize due to her husband's controlling behavior, something only someone from the neighborhood would have known about) She talks with a reporter who covered the murder case & has her review Clara's lyrics about it (not telling her at first that they were written 20 years prior to the crime taking place) She searches & finds a gruesome murder that took place on Foresyth Street, 20 years after Clara's death. ![]() The reporter & grandnephew talk again, she's leaning towards the "telling the future" thing and he seems to be leaning more towards "she was tragically mentally ill." The reporter looks through the notebooks/listens to the recordings to see if she can find anything specific to pin down an indisputable prediction & finds a song with a proper name in it- Foresyth. The reporter also takes the lyric notebooks to a professional songwriter because Clara's notebooks don't show any of the "rough draft/ revision" work songwriters normally go through while working on a song, which the other songwriter confirms is very weird- basically Clara just wrote out each of her songs, in their entirety, exactly as she wanted to perform them the first time she put pen to paper. She consults with a shrink who tentatively says Clara appears to show symptoms of perhaps paranoid schizophrenia but that it's impossible to make a diagnosis without having evaluated her in person. The reporter listens through the recordings & Clara often talks to herself, leaves sometimes hours-long parts of the recording with nothing but dead air on them, repeats the same words or sentences over & over, and says other strange things. After his grandmother, Clara's sister, passed away he inherited more recordings of Clara & also Clara's notebooks (which have pages ripped out) that she wrote her lyrics in. ![]() She also learns it's a sensitive subject for the grandnephew because his mother, Clara's niece, was also mentally unwell. She finds out Clara was presenting with symptoms of mental illness for nearly a year prior to her death, locked herself away in a room in her sister's house for that period, and ultimately committed suicide. The reporter talks with the grandnephew of Clara, who is a musician himself & also a skeptic about the "predictions of the future" thing because he thinks it's mostly coincidence combined with vague ominous lyrical imagery people are just cherry picking to apply to disasters after the fact. Clara, the singer of the Apocalypse Songs, only did one live performance during which she seemed to predict the death of a member of the crowd, which did come to pass. It's cited as an influence by many of the NZ alt music crowd and has gained a reputation as having lyrics that can tell the future. Sorry for the length of this, for 5 episodes the story had a lot of twists & turns:Ī reporter talks with members of the NZ music scene about an underground 1960s record known as the Apocalypse Songs. |
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