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Friday Links: October 14, 2016

October 14, 2016 By James Calder

Taps by Tim Brown
Taps by Tim Brown
  • Sign up for two photo walks this weekend with the Historical Society of Washington, D.C. in the neighborhoods of Burleith and Congress Heights, two of the places that will be featured in their For the Record photo contest.
  • Register now for Artomatic 2016. This, the eighth iteration of the local, unjuried show opens November 3 and takes place in Potomac Park in Maryland. The cost is $140 and requires volunteer hours.
  • Check out the schedule at the Leica Store for the next few months, including a Monthly Group Critique this Sunday at 2pm, a print exchange, a cosplay photoshoot, and more.
  • If you’re an independent female photographer, send your info to Danielle Zalcman by the end of the weekend to go into a database she’s putting together.
  • An investigation by the ACLU revealed that data marketing company Geofeedia has been sifting through Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram in order to provide data to police departments. In one case, the Baltimore Police Department was able to make real-time maps and use facial recognition software to find and arrest protestors after the death of Freddie Gray. All three social media services have since terminated access to Geofeedia.
  • The Washington Post profiles Wayne Sherwin, who has been photographing Washington, D.C. for 70 years.
  • “The deserts of Rajasthan in northwestern India are expansive, but the photographs of Gauri Gill go narrow and deep.” WCP’s Louis Jacobson reviews the new Sackler and Freer Galleries exhibit.
  • Astrophotographers: Would you be interested in a celestial object finder/tracker for your DSLR, and if so, what would it be like? Help a senior from the Rochester Institute of Technology develop one by filling out her survey by the end of the weekend.
  • Go inside an underground amusement park in Syria built by volunteers.
  • Two critically endangered eastern black rhinos that were bred in England have given birth to two babies in Tanzania. Only 700 of the rhinos are thought to remain.
  • Don’t worry. This poor bald eagle that got stuck in a car’s grill during Hurricane Matthew is totally fine and in no way a metaphor for our nation right now.

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