Category: Technology

  • Introducing the Agent Skills Security Index

    The Agent Skills Security Index community powered by Tego is a public database that analyzes and maps security risks within AI agent capabilities and workflows.

    The Agent Skills Security Index provides a structured way to analyze the emerging attack surface created by AI agent capabilities, helping teams understand how behavior translates into risk.”
    — Agent Skills Security Index community powered by tego.ai

    SAN FRANCISCO, CA, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — A New Database Maps the Security Risks of AI Agent Skills

    A new public database has launched to analyze the security risks introduced by AI agent skills, the capabilities that increasingly define how modern AI agents operate. The site available at https://index.tego.security/skills/ presents what appears to be the first dedicated database focused on the security assessment of AI agent skills. The project, called the Agent Skills Security Index, catalogs the capabilities these modules grant to AI systems and evaluates the risks they may introduce into agent-driven workflows.

    The Agent Skills Security Index is an initiative of the Agent Skills Security Index community, which aims to provide security researchers and practitioners with a structured way to analyze the emerging attack surface created by AI agent capabilities.
    AI skills, sometimes called tools, functions, or plugins, are rapidly becoming the core building blocks of agentic AI systems. They allow language models to retrieve data, perform specialized reasoning tasks, and execute automated workflows.
    But these capabilities also introduce a new layer of attack surface that many organizations are only beginning to understand. Research examining large ecosystems of agent skills has already found that more than a quarter contain at least one security vulnerability, including prompt injection vectors, privilege escalation opportunities, and data-exfiltration risks.

    The new database aims to make this emerging attack surface visible.
    Each skill entry includes a structured security analysis designed to help practitioners understand how a capability might be abused inside real agent deployments. The assessment process uses a multi-dimensional security methodology combining automated scanning, specialized AI models trained to analyze agent behavior, and manual security review.

    Rather than simply flagging potentially dangerous code patterns, the analysis follows a practical philosophy: instructions and behaviors are evaluated within the context of the skill’s intended purpose. This allows the review process to distinguish between normal operational capabilities and behaviors that could realistically be exploited by attackers manipulating an AI agent’s reasoning process.
    The project reflects a broader shift occurring in AI system security. As AI agents move beyond text generation into task execution and autonomous workflows, the security boundary is increasingly defined by the capabilities those agents can invoke.

    In this model, skills effectively become the execution layer of AI systems, capable of:
    • influencing agent decision-making
    • injecting context into reasoning processes
    • triggering automated actions
    • exposing data through tool outputs
    • interacting with other agents

    Security researchers are beginning to recognize that these capabilities introduce attack patterns with few direct parallels in traditional software, including indirect prompt injection through retrieved content and confused-deputy attacks caused by agent tool invocation.
    By cataloging and analyzing these capabilities, the Agent Skills Security Index aims to provide security teams with a clearer understanding of how agent behavior translates into real security risk.

    The resource is publicly accessible and is expected to expand as the ecosystem of AI agent skills continues to grow.
    The initiative is supported by contributors from the AI security community, including researchers working on security technologies for the emerging agentic AI ecosystem and powered by Tego.AI

    Dan Benger
    Tego AI
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  • Sage Bionetworks Partners with NYU Langone Health to Build Data Infrastructure for NIH’s Complement-ARIE Program

    New data hub will accelerate development and adoption of human-based New Approach Methodologies

    The NYU Langone-Sage NDHCC will expand upon the work Sage Bionetworks has been doing for more than a decade, building infrastructure that makes collaborative biomedical research possible at scale.”
    — Jineta Banerjee, Ph.D.

    SEATTLE, WA, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — Researchers developing new drugs or studying human diseases often rely on animal models that don’t accurately reflect human biology. A growing body of research points to human-based alternatives, such as organ-on-chip devices and organoids grown from patient cells, collectively called New Approach Methodologies (NAMs), as more reliable tools for modeling human health and disease. But these emerging methods generate complex, diverse data that currently lacks shared standards or infrastructure, making it difficult for researchers to compare results or build on each other’s work.

    Sage Bionetworks today announced its role as a key partner in the newly funded NAMs Data Hub and Coordinating Center (NDHCC), part of the National Institutes of Health Common Fund’s Complement Animal Research In Experimentation (Complement-ARIE) program. The NDHCC, led by NYU Langone Health in collaboration with Sage Bionetworks, will build the data and standards infrastructure needed to accelerate the development, standardization, and adoption of NAMs, helping researchers and independent validation groups find, reuse, and compare data across labs and experiments and verify recapitulation of human disease. The Complement-ARIE program represents a major investment by the NIH Common Fund in advancing human-based research methods, at a time when regulators including the FDA and European Commission are actively encouraging the field to move beyond animal testing.

    As part of the NDHCC, Sage will host the consortium’s data backbone, providing a FAIR-compliant hub for data, code, and computational models, along with AI-augmented data curation and quality control, a standardized framework for harmonizing NAMs data across the consortium, and analytical tools to help researchers work with complex datasets. The cloud-native semi-federated hub will incorporate Sage’s AI-powered Curator tool for metadata curation and leverage the organization’s Synapse platform, which supports over 100,000 researchers and stewards more than 3.5 petabytes of annotated biomedical data across more than 100 modalities. The data hub will leverage and build upon Sage Bionetworks’ experience from 26 data coordinating centers, including the Human Tumor Atlas Network (HTAN), the Accelerating Medicines Partnership for Alzheimer’s Disease (AMP-AD), the BRAIN Initiative, Bridge2AI, and the AD Knowledge Portal. The NDHCC will also foster community adoption of NAMs by supporting DREAM Challenges – open data science competitions hosted on Synapse – along with workshops, training materials, and consortium-wide meetings to broadly disseminate findings and tools.

    “The NYU Langone-Sage NDHCC will expand upon the work Sage Bionetworks has been doing for more than a decade, building infrastructure that makes collaborative biomedical research possible at scale,” said Jineta Banerjee, Ph.D., Associate Director of Advanced Data Analytics at Sage Bionetworks and one of the Principal Investigators of the NDHCC. “We’re bringing our experience in FAIR data principles, metadata harmonization, ML model evaluation, and AI-enabled data curation to the Complement-ARIE program to enable a ‘live’ data pipeline from raw data to computational models. Our work in the new approach methodologies (NAMs) will support this emerging research community working towards transforming how we model and study human health and disease.”

    “I am extremely pleased that the NYU Langone–Sage Bionetworks partnership will play a key role in coordinating the data and activities of the Complement-ARIE program,” said Gustavo Stolovitzky, PhD, Director of the Biomedical Data Science Hub at NYU Langone and a member of the Board of Directors at Sage Bionetworks. “The NYU–Sage Data Hub and Coordinating Center will make the data generated by the Complement-ARIE consortium analysis- and AI-ready, enabling researchers to translate the curated data into new discoveries. It is a privilege to contribute to the consortium’s mission of reducing reliance on animal models through data-driven innovation.”

    ABOUT THE COMPLEMENT-ARIE PROGRAM
    The NIH Common Fund’s Complement Animal Research In Experimentation (Complement-ARIE) program speeds the development, standardization, validation, and use of human-based New Approach Methodologies. The program brings together technology development projects, a data and resource coordination center, a validation network, community engagement and training, and strategic partnerships with regulatory agencies and industry. For more information, visit commonfund.nih.gov/complementarie.

    ABOUT SAGE BIONETWORKS
    Sage Bionetworks is a nonprofit biomedical research organization based in Seattle, Washington, dedicated to promoting open science, responsible data sharing, and collaborative research. Through its Synapse platform, Sage enables large-scale collaborative research projects that advance understanding of complex diseases and accelerate translation of discoveries into clinical applications. For more information, visit sagebionetworks.org.

    Mackenzie Wildman
    Sage Bionetworks
    communications@sagebionetworks.org

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  • Eric Doctorow’s Imaginative PORTRAITS Book Now Available

    Book Imagines a Single Face Painted By History’s Greatest Painters Across Time and Imagined eras—from Pompeii to the Titanic to a Distant Future Spaceport

    Portraits began as curiosity. I wasn’t setting out to ‘be an artist.’ I just had an idea that kept growing.”
    — Eric Doctorow

    LOS ANGELES, CA, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — Visionary entertainment veteran and longtime home entertainment executive Eric Doctorow, whose three-decade career includes leading worldwide businesses for Paramount, MGM, and Miramax, announces the release of his exciting and thought-provoking new hardcover art book Portraits, a visually arresting exploration of what makes an image endure.

    Now available, the unique new book is built around a single portrait reimagined through time. Portraits asks readers to consider a deceptively simple idea: if art is meant to move people—shifting perspective and opening a door to mind and spirit—what happens when the same face is seen again and again, in different styles, different worlds, and different times?

    Portraits imagines the portrait’s “life” through environments and eras that reshape what it means to the viewer. The book positions the portrait in scenes that include:

    • Pompeii, moments before eruption—and after
    • Boarding the Titanic, in stateroom, and later drifting in the wreckage
    • Modern Masters, including Renoir, Warhol and others
    • Contemporary life, overlooked in a modern New York penthouse
    • A far-future spaceport, where the portrait is rediscovered again

    By carrying a single portrait through these settings, Portraits frames art as something that evolves rather than stands still—absorbing new meanings as it moves through time and circumstance.

    ORIGIN: One Photograph That Sparked the Project –
    The project began with a real-world source image: an original photograph of Eric Doctorow taken over lunch by his friend Jay Heifetz. That photograph became the foundation for the recurring portrait—Doctorow’s face—reimagined across multiple artistic lenses and historical backdrops.
    Doctorow has described the work as the product of a concentrated creative burst—an intense period of momentum during which the concept expanded rapidly from an initial experiment into the full sequence that became Portraits.

    Contemporary Tools, Enduring Questions –
    Portraits acknowledges modern image-making methods and credits AI models among the tools that supported the creation of the book’s images—positioned within a broader process of transformation, composition, and storytelling. The book ultimately returns to enduring questions: What makes an image timeless? How does meaning shift when context changes? And what happens when one face becomes a mirror for anyone who looks at it?
    Book Information

    PORTRAITS Spec
    • Title: Portraits
    • Author: Eric Doctorow
    • Format: Hardcover
    • Publisher: Blurb
    • Length: 38 pages
    • Language: English
    • ISBN-13: 979-8295063824
    • ASIN: B0G319TX4R
    • Trim Size: 10 × 8 inches

    Availability
    Portraits is now available for purchase online via Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/Portraits-Eric-Doctorow/dp/B0G319TX4R/ref=sr_1_1?crid=37POQQ7898VVO&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.VOxDjXHRoavSosxfr2rvRg.ZVfYbtAiPU9IKMhrMWodl4rGupDl5I_GY9ekHsIDGc0&dib_tag=se&keywords=eric+doctorow+portraits&qid=1773858159&sprefix=eric+doctorow+portriat%2Caps%2C221&sr=8-1#detailBullets_feature_div

    About Eric Doctorow
    Prior to writing Portraits, Doctorow’s career includes founding Random Media, a film distribution company, and more than 30 years of experience managing worldwide home entertainment organizations for major studios and independent companies. Most recently, he led Miramax’s worldwide home entertainment business when the company was re-launched as an independent company in 2011. Prior to founding Random Media and writing Portraits, Doctorow spent twenty years with Paramount Home Entertainment—rising to President, Worldwide Home Entertainment for ten years—then served as General Manager, MGM Worldwide, overseeing the MGM home entertainment business through 20th Century Fox for five years; he is also a founding member of DEG, a past NARM board member, and an inductee into the Video Industry Hall of Fame.

    Eric Doctorow first book a visually driven hardcover art project that reimagines Doctorow’s own portrait across historical styles and imagined eras, exploring how time, context, and aesthetic language reshape the meaning of an image.

    # # #

    For review copies, interviews, excerpts, or special image requests:
    Rick Rhoades
    High Roads Branding
    RickRhoades@HighRoadsPR.com

    Press Materials: High-res images, select spreads, and author Q&A: https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/n7spj7yx3lie750jbsunk/AGPgKoTKF5e2WerdHOhiak8?rlkey=cl5v8sxaefwqs5y7x4w0jopjc&st=cqomvm8y&dl=0

    Rick Rhoades
    High Roads Media & Brand
    +1 818-468-5585
    email us here

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  • A.I. Competitors Locking Down Infrastructure Deals, Mogin Law Analysis Shows

    Review of the Mogin Law A.I. Deal Table shows growing use of power generation, compute power and datacenter commitments to solidify long-term market positions.

    What we’re observing in the general A.I. arena follows history. Firms have long vied for competitive advantage by securing control over the infrastructure necessary to support an industry’s growth.”
    — Dan Mogin

    SAN DIEGO, CA, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — Analysis of the Mogin Law A.I. Deal Table finds that competition in the broader artificial intelligence space is increasingly being shaped by long duration infrastructure arrangements rather than consumer applications or standalone models.

    Transactions announced this year reveal a persistent pattern of multiyear commitments involving electricity generation, A.I. ready data centers, advanced chips, and optical interconnects—inputs that economists and competition authorities have identified as essential to AI market participation.

    The Mogin Law A.I. Deal Table tracks significant acquisitions, investments, partnerships, and major financing rounds across the artificial intelligence ecosystem, with a focus on competition, market structure, and antitrust implications. More than 200 entries in the interactive table date back to 2012. Transactions span a wide monetary range—from nine-figure acquisitions and equity investments to megadeals measured in the tens of billions of dollars—signaling that infrastructure control is being pursued at both tactical and system-shaping scale.

    According to the analysis, recent deals go beyond acquiring existing capacity and instead pre-allocate future access to power, compute, and data movement at scale. Scholars and antitrust experts have cautioned that such chokepoint control can affect competition well before traditional concentration metrics are observable.

    The updated review highlights why antitrust law agencies in the United States, European Union, and United Kingdom have intensified scrutiny of cloud infrastructure, vertical integration, and interoperability in AI markets. As the report concludes, the next phase of AI competition may be determined less by model innovation than by who controls the stack’s critical infrastructure layers—and for how long.

    “What we’re observing in the general artificial intelligence arena follows a historical pattern seen as competitors elbow for position in newer industries,” said Dan Mogin, Managing Partner of Mogin Law. “Deals in the early days of railroads, electricity, telecommunications, and the internet show how firms have long vied for competitive advantage by securing control over the underlying infrastructure necessary to support an industry’s growth.”

    Mogin Law LLP is an antitrust and class action law firm with a national practice based in San Diego.

    Additional reading:
    A.I. Deals Continue Focus on Much Needed Infrastructure
    A.I. “Chokepoint” Deals Are Reshaping the Competitive Map of the Tech Stack

    Tom Hagy
    Mogin Law LLP
    email us here
    Visit us on social media:
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  • Techbridge Girls and Cloud Girls Launch Joint Fundraising Campaign to Expand Pathways for Girls in STEM

    Techbridge Girls and Cloud Girls launch a joint fundraising campaign to support TBG’s work to reengineer STEM education and expand belonging-centered learning.

    We’re honored to partner with Cloud Girls during a month where we celebrate the achievements of women across the globe.”
    — Savita Raj, CEO of Techbridge Girls

    SACRAMENTO, CA, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — Techbridge Girls (TBG) proudly announces a new collaboration with Cloud Girls, launching a joint fundraising campaign throughout March 2026 to support Techbridge Girls’ work to reengineer STEM education and expand access to high-quality, belonging-centered learning experiences for girls and gender-expansive youth.

    Cloud Girls, a community of senior women leaders across cloud, data, and technology innovation, has selected Techbridge Girls as the organization’s first fundraising partner of the year through its membership-driven giving campaign. The collaboration brings together two organizations committed to ensuring that the future of technology reflects the full diversity of talent, creativity, and leadership in our communities.

    “I am proud that philanthropy is not just one of our pillars, it is part of the DNA of our members at Cloud Girls,” said Rachel Turkus, CEO of Cloud Girls. “Launching our first fundraising campaign of 2026 with Techbridge Girls is a meaningful way to put that into action by backing their work to reengineer STEM education and create spaces of belonging for girls. ROX research shows why this matters right now: only 59% of girls believe they are good at math and science, down from 73% in 2017, and 58% of high school girls do not think they are smart enough for their dream job. Together, we are investing in confidence, access, and real pathways into STEM.”

    Funds raised through the International Women’s Month campaign will directly support Techbridge Girls’ national network of afterschool and out-of-school STEM programs, educator training, and community partnerships—helping more girls develop the skills, confidence, and sense of belonging needed to pursue futures in science, technology, engineering, and math.

    “We’re honored to partner with Cloud Girls during a month where we celebrate the achievements of women across the globe. Cloud Girl members are leaders shaping the future of technology today, and through this collaboration, they are helping ensure that tomorrow’s innovators reflect the full diversity of talent in our communities.” said Savita Raj, CEO of Techbridge Girls.

    This partnership reflects a growing movement among technology leaders to invest not only in innovation, but in the diverse young women who will shape its future. By mobilizing Cloud Girls’ national membership to support Techbridge Girls, the campaign creates a powerful bridge between today’s women leaders in tech and the next generation of STEM changemakers.

    The joint fundraiser will run throughout March 2026, with opportunities for Cloud Girls members and supporters to give, share, and engage in support of Techbridge Girls’ mission. If you’d like to join Cloud Girls in this celebration, you can also donate at techbridgegirls.org/donate and put “Cloud Girls” in the dedication line.

    About Cloud Girls

    Cloud Girls is a diverse community of female technology leaders who help narrow the gender gap within the technology industry while providing opportunities for the next generation of women and girls in tech. We educate, inspire, and support women in their career growth and leadership journeys through networking, partnerships, and professional development.

    About Techbridge Girls

    Techbridge Girls (TBG) is a national nonprofit on a mission to transform STEM education so that all girls—especially Black, Latina, Indigenous, and gender-expansive youth—can see themselves as leaders, innovators, and change agents in STEM.
    Now celebrating 25 years of impact, TBG designs joyful, rigorous, and culturally relevant programs that equip educators and ignite girls’ confidence and brilliance. With a systemic approach that reaches across classrooms, communities, and institutions, Techbridge Girls is not just expanding opportunity—we’re rewriting the STEM narrative for the next 25 years and beyond.

    Learn more at www.techbridgegirls.org.

    Media Contact:

    Jennifer Stancil, Chief Development Officer
    jstancil@techbridgegirls.org

    Jennifer Stancil
    Techbridge Girls
    510-998-2242
    email us here

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  • ZyDoc Highlights AI + Human Hybrid Documentation Solution for Retina Practices at ASRS Business of Retina in Houston

    ZyDoc will showcase its AI documentation platform at ASRS 2026, offering a secure U.S.-based alternative that boosts efficiency, accuracy, and revenue.

    ZyDoc empowers retina practices to capture more revenue from every patient visit by improving documentation accuracy, reducing missed charges, and helping physicians focus more on care, not paperwork.”
    — James Maisel, MD, Founder & CEO of ZyDoc

    HOUSTON, TX, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — ZyDoc, a leader in AI-powered clinical documentation solutions, announced its participation in the 2026 ASRS Business of Retina Meeting, taking place March 20–22 in Houston. The company will showcase its AI-driven documentation platform designed to help retina specialists reduce administrative burden while maintaining strict HIPAA compliance.

    The conference comes at a time when many ophthalmology and retina practices are reassessing the use of offshore transcription and documentation services due to evolving compliance concerns and patient privacy risks. Healthcare organizations are increasingly evaluating whether offshore documentation workflows meet evolving HIPAA security and privacy standards, particularly as protected health information (PHI) moves across international boundaries.

    “Retina specialists are under intense pressure to document more while seeing higher patient volumes,” said James Maisel, Founder & CEO at ZyDoc. “Our platform enables physicians to generate structured clinical documentation without relying on offshore transcription services, helping practices maintain control over sensitive patient data while significantly boosting practice efficiency and therefore revenue as a result.”

    ZyDoc’s platform uses AI-powered clinical documentation technology to capture physician-patient interactions and automatically generate structured notes tailored for ophthalmology and retina workflows.

    Key benefits for retina practices include:
    -Reduced documentation time for physicians
    -Structured retinal exam documentation
    -Improved coding accuracy
    -HIPAA-compliant workflows with secure data handling

    Attendees of the ASRS Business of Retina Meeting can visit ZyDoc on the exhibit floor to learn more about the platform.

    As an incentive for physicians attending the meeting, ZyDoc is offering a 30-day free trial for retina practices interested in evaluating the platform.

    “With increasing regulatory focus on patient data security, many practices are exploring alternatives to offshore documentation models,” said Dr. Maisel. “AI-powered solutions allow practices to improve efficiency while keeping data secure and compliant.”

    The ASRS Business of Retina Meeting is one of the premier events focused on the operational and financial management of retina practices.

    Retina specialists attending the conference can learn more or schedule a demo at:
    www.zydoc.com/events/asrs2026

    About Zydoc
    Zydoc provides AI-powered clinical documentation solutions that help physicians reduce administrative burden, improve documentation quality, and maintain regulatory compliance. The platform supports structured clinical documentation across multiple specialties while prioritizing security and HIPAA-compliant data handling.

    For more information, visit www.zydoc.com

    James M. Maisel, M.D.
    ZyDoc Medical Transcription, LLC
    800-546-5633
    james.maisel@zydoc.com
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  • Lightspeed Systems Enhances Student Safety Platform with Emoji Detection Capability

    Lightspeed Alert Now Identifies Violence and Self-Harm Signals Expressed Through Emojis, Closing a Critical Gap in Student Safety Monitoring

    Emoji detection isn’t about flagging every concerning signal, it’s about making sure Alert sees the full picture of how students express what they’re going through.”
    — Jennifer Duer, VP of Product

    AUSTIN, TX, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — Lightspeed Systems, a leader in student safety and digital learning solutions for K–12 schools, today announced the addition of emoji detection to Lightspeed Alert™, the company’s AI-powered student safety monitoring platform. The new capability allows Lightspeed Alert™ to identify concerning signals expressed through emojis related to threats of violence and indicators of self-harm.

    As student communication continues to evolve, emojis have become a meaningful part of how young people express emotion and intent — including in situations involving potential risk. Phrases like “end it 💀,” “🔫 school,” or “🪢 myself” may reflect real distress or threatening intent, yet have historically been invisible to text-based monitoring systems. Alert’s emoji detection closes that gap by evaluating emoji-based phrases in context, alongside the surrounding language and behavioral signals Alert already analyzes.

    “Students communicate differently than they did even a few years ago, and safety tools have to keep up,” said Jennifer Duer, VP of Product, Student Success. “Emoji detection isn’t about flagging every concerning signal, it’s about making sure Alert sees the full picture of how students express what they’re going through. When a student signals they need help, it shouldn’t matter whether they used words or emojis to say it.”

    Key capabilities:

    Context-aware detection: Emojis are evaluated alongside surrounding activity and language patterns, not as isolated flags
    Violence and self-harm focus: Targeted at threats of harm, weapons and violent intent, and suicidal ideation or self-harm signals
    Broad platform coverage: Active across Gmail, Outlook, Google Drive, OneDrive, Canvas LMS, Chrome Helper Extensions, and iOS Cloud Proxy for Safari
    No admin configuration required: Works automatically within existing Alert monitoring pipelines
    Emoji detection is available to all Lightspeed Alert™ customers and requires no changes to existing configurations or workflows.

    About Lightspeed Systems
    With more than 25 years of serving education, Lightspeed Systems delivers the most in-depth visibility and control to power exceptional schools where students are safe and engaged; technology is compliant and easily managed; and resources are secure and optimized. Purpose-built for school networks and devices, Lightspeed’s cloud-managed solutions include the most effective web filtering, student safety monitoring, classroom management, device management, and data analytics software available. Headquartered in Austin, Texas, with a European office in London, UK, Lightspeed serves over 23 million students across 31,000 schools in 43 countries, utilizing 15 million devices.

    Amy Bennett
    Chief of Staff, Lightspeed Systems
    503-891-7956
    email us here
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  • Dream Air Begins Construction on Corporate Aviation Facility at New Century AirCenter

    When owners can visit multiple facilities or markets in a single day, the aircraft becomes a business tool rather than a luxury purchase.”
    — Chin Rajapaksha

    GARDNER, KS, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — A locally founded aviation company is expanding its footprint in Johnson County with a new aviation services development at New Century AirCenter in Gardner, Kansas.

    Dream Air, led by CEO Chin Rajapaksha and COO Tidus Spencer, has begun construction on a multi-phase corporate aviation facility that will serve private aircraft owners, business operators, and visiting aircraft in the Kansas City metro area.

    The project marks the company’s evolution from an aircraft brokerage and advisory firm into a full-service aviation operation offering aircraft storage, fueling, management, and operational support.

    Construction started in September 2025 on the first phase of the development, which includes a 40,000-square-foot hangar, operational offices, and customer support facilities. The initial building is expected to open in August 2026.

    A second phase — already in planning — will add an approximately 33,000-square-foot maintenance hangar designed to support based aircraft and transient corporate operators.

    The overall development will occupy more than nine acres at the airport.

    A Growing Segment of Business Travel
    Dream Air was founded in Kansas nearly seven years ago as a small aircraft sales operation focused on pre-owned business jets. The company advises entrepreneurs and privately held businesses on aircraft acquisition and operating strategy.

    Rajapaksha said the company’s clients are often business owners who previously relied on airlines, charter flights, or fractional programs but reached a point where scheduling limitations began affecting productivity.

    “For many companies, travel time becomes a major operational cost,” Rajapaksha said. “When owners can visit multiple facilities or markets in a single day, the aircraft becomes a business tool rather than a luxury purchase.”

    The company says one of its primary roles is educating first-time aircraft buyers on ownership economics. Many prospective owners assume operating a business jet requires extremely high hourly expenses. Dream Air instead focuses on properly selected pre-owned aircraft with known maintenance histories and predictable operating costs.

    The company has facilitated transactions involving multiple aircraft platforms, including Dassault Falcon, Gulfstream, Cessna Citation, and Beechcraft models.

    Fuel Supply Partnership
    As part of the development, Dream Air has entered into a strategic fuel supply partnership with Avfuel Corporation, a global independent supplier of aviation fuel and logistics services.

    Through the partnership, the facility will have access to Avfuel’s contract fuel programs, supply network, and logistics infrastructure, allowing Dream Air to offer competitive jet fuel pricing and consistent supply availability for both based and transient aircraft operators.

    Company leadership said the agreement is critical to the operational model of the facility. Fuel represents one of the largest operating expenses in business aviation, and access to a national fuel network allows the company to provide predictable pricing and coordinated fueling support for customers operating across multiple airports.

    The partnership also connects the facility into Avfuel’s broader aviation services ecosystem, including flight departments, charter operators, and corporate aviation operators traveling throughout the United States.

    Why Gardner
    Dream Air evaluated multiple regional locations before selecting New Century AirCenter. Company leadership cited available land, runway capability, and proximity to the Kansas City business community as key decision factors.

    Airport officials have been working to expand business aviation activity at the airport, and the development aligns with broader efforts to attract aviation-related investment to southern Johnson County.

    The company also noted that many business aircraft operators prefer airports outside congested commercial airline environments while still maintaining access to the metropolitan area.

    Long-Term Vision
    Dream Air executives say the long-term goal is to create a Midwest hub for entrepreneur-owned aircraft — a growing segment of aviation where companies operate their own aircraft to improve travel efficiency and schedule control.

    As the Kansas City region continues to expand economically, the company believes business aviation demand will grow alongside it.

    “We see Kansas City as an underserved market for accessible corporate aviation,” Spencer said. “Our objective is to provide practical, reliable services that support business growth in the region.”

    Chin Rajapaksha
    Dream Air Global
    +1 785-856-7172
    email us here
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  • Aerolib Launches AI-Powered Mobile Ecosystem to Revolutionize Hospital Revenue Cycle and Denial Management

    Aerolib launches Aerolib.app for Physician Advisors, featuring P2P simulations, IP-only search tools, & real-time payer updates to reduce hospital denials.

    The Aerolib App puts years of physician advisor expertise in the pocket of every UR professional, ensuring hospitals have the data they need to win appeals and secure reimbursement at the bedside.”
    — Deepak Pahuja MD MBA

    FRISCO, TX, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — In an era where healthcare reimbursement is increasingly dictated by complex algorithmic audits and shifting payer policies, Aerolib Healthcare Solutions, a pioneer in clinical revenue cycle excellence, today announced the official launch of the Aerolib App. This comprehensive mobile ecosystem is meticulously engineered to empower Physician Advisors, Case Managers, and Utilization Review (UR) professionals with the high-velocity tools required to mitigate denials, secure appropriate inpatient status, and maintain total regulatory compliance.

    The launch of the Aerolib App marks a pivotal shift in how hospital revenue cycle teams interact with clinical data and payer intelligence. Historically, Physician Advisors have been tethered to desktop EMR systems or forced to sift through thousands of pages of CMS manuals and private payer medical policies. The Aerolib App consolidates these disparate resources into a singular, intuitive mobile interface, providing a “digital headquarters” for the modern clinician-advisor.

    Solving the “Status” Crisis in Modern Medicine
    At the heart of the Aerolib App is a commitment to solving the industry’s most persistent challenge: appropriate patient status. With the introduction of the CMS 2-Midnight Rule and the increasing scrutiny of Medicare Advantage plans, the financial health of a hospital often rests on the accuracy of the initial admission decision.

    The Aerolib App addresses this through its Clinical Tool Suite, which includes 57+ evidence-based clinical calculators and proprietary decision trees. These tools, such as the Condition Code 44 Rules and Status via 2MN Rule Benchmark, provide UR teams with a standardized, defensible framework for clinical decision-making. By moving these flowcharts from static PDFs into an interactive mobile format, Aerolib ensures that the most current regulatory guidance is always at the bedside.

    Interactive Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Simulations
    One of the most innovative features of the platform is the P2P Simulation Engine. Peer-to-peer reviews are often the last line of defense against an insurance denial, yet many Physician Advisors enter these calls without formal training in the specific “payer language” required to win.

    The Aerolib App allows users to practice these high-stakes conversations against a simulated medical director. Scenarios include:

    Inpatient Admission Denials: Defending the medical necessity of a 72-year-old female with CHF exacerbation.

    Observation vs. Inpatient Status: Navigating acute pancreatitis cases under Aetna or UnitedHealthcare criteria.

    Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Denials: Arguing for continued stay in post-acute settings.

    Behavioral Health Inpatient Denials: Handling complex psychiatric medical necessity reviews.

    By utilizing these simulations, hospital staff can refine their arguments, identify clinical “red flags,” and increase their win rates during actual payer negotiations.

    Real-Time Payer Intelligence and Regulatory Monitoring
    The healthcare regulatory landscape is in a constant state of flux. In early 2026 alone, hospitals have seen significant updates to NCDs regarding AI-assisted imaging and massive shifts in prior authorization criteria from major carriers like BCBS and UnitedHealthcare.

    The Aerolib App features a Regulatory Updates feed that is live-monitored and categorized by clinical impact (High, Medium, or Low). This ensures that a Physician Advisor in Frisco, Texas, or a Case Manager in New York City is instantly alerted to a CMS Transmittal or a Payer Policy change that could affect their hospital’s bottom line. The app also includes a dedicated IP-Only Procedure Search Tool, allowing users to instantly verify CPT/HCPCS codes against the CMS Inpatient-Only list for the years 2020 through 2026, preventing costly billing errors before they are ever submitted.

    The “SOS” Feature: Direct Line to Expertise
    Recognizing that technology is most effective when paired with human expertise, Aerolib has integrated a direct “SOS” feature within the app. Users facing an urgent deadline or a particularly complex status question can trigger a direct line to a board-certified Aerolib Physician Advisor. This feature offers same-day response times for UR teams, providing a safety net of MD/MBA-level expertise for the most challenging clinical scenarios.

    A New Standard for Hospital RCM
    “The Aerolib App is the culmination of years of boots-on-the-ground experience in hospital consultation,” said Deepak Pahuja, CMO of Aerolib Healthcare Solutions. “We realized that the greatest friction in the revenue cycle isn’t a lack of data, but the inability to access that data at the moment of truth. Whether you are at the bedside, in a UR committee meeting, or on a call with a payer medical director, the Aerolib App provides the clinical and regulatory evidence needed to protect hospital revenue and, ultimately, patient care.”

    The platform’s user-centric design includes a Member Directory for internal collaboration, a Media Library for ongoing education, and a Quiz of the Day to keep staff sharp on the latest clinical documentation standards. With a low-friction “Get Started” process, Aerolib is making professional-grade Physician Advisor tools accessible to hospitals of all sizes, from small rural facilities to large academic medical centers.

    The Aerolib App is available now. To learn more about how Aerolib is transforming healthcare revenue cycles for hospitals nationwide, visit https://aerolib.app.

    Deepak Pahuja
    Aerolib Healthcare Solutions LLC
    +1 810-610-7726
    email us here

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  • BTR: How Monitoring Analog Power Signals to Feed AI Is Reshaping Performance at Mid-Market Manufacturer Alleguard

    WASHINGTON, DC, UNITED STATES, March 18, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — Mid-market manufacturers are entering the AI era with less patience for experimentation and more exposure to consequences. The sector is being pushed to invest by cost pressure and competitive urgency, but it is also being forced to confront an uncomfortable reality. A large share of AI initiatives still stall in pilots, fail to operationalize, or produce unclear returns, even as budgets keep rising.

    Gartner has reported that at least 50% of generative AI projects are abandoned after proof of concept because of poor data quality, risk controls, surging costs or unclear business value. Meanwhile, a 2025 survey by RSM US LLP found that 91 percent of middle-market companies are using generative AI in some capacity, but many are still working to integrate it into core operations, underscoring both strong adoption momentum and the ongoing challenge of translating pilots into scaled business value.

    That mismatch between spend and value realization is shaping how the mid-market adopts AI. Instead of beginning with automation, many plants are beginning with observability. They are instrumenting operations so that AI can be fed reliable signals, and so that frontline teams can act on what the data infers.

    That adoption logic was on display in a BizTechReports vidcast interview with Lauren Dunford, CEO of Guidewheel, and two leaders from Alleguard’s Greenville facility, plant manager Heath Evans and maintenance manager Steve Billock. Their discussion centered on a pragmatic idea. If factories are going to “use AI,” the first step may be turning analog machine signals into digital data that people can trust, classify, and use to run the plant operations.

    At a facility operated by Alleguard in Greenville, Michigan, that signal is amperage. Alleguard is a North American manufacturer of engineered styrofoam products used in industrial, commercial and consumer applications. While the company name may not be widely recognized, its products are commonly found protecting appliances, automotive components, pharmaceutical shipments and in retail stores that carry disposable coolers.

    Evans and Billock said the perennial struggle for manufacturers is to optimize uptime, improve overall equipment effectiveness and reduce cost and operational risk. The question was how to harness emerging technologies, including AI, in a way that could be integrated into daily operations and augment, rather than disrupt, the capabilities of the team.

    That challenge showed up as a lack of real-time visibility into performance.

    “You didn’t know if you were winning or losing until the end of the shift,” Evans said.

    That is where Guidewheel’s approach came into focus.

    Dunford said the premise was straightforward. The plant began by capturing the electrical heartbeat of equipment. Noninvasive sensors were clipped around power lines to measure amperage and power draw. Algorithms translated fluctuations in that signal into machine states such as running, idle or down. Over time, the system incorporated plant context, including operating schedules, and could layer in additional sensor inputs, while remaining compatible with older equipment that lacked modern control systems.

    “What we’re capturing is these real-time, tiny little fluctuations of that electrical heartbeat,” Dunford said.
    By converting those fluctuations into structured data, the plant was able to see machine performance as it happened rather than reconstruct it after the fact.

    Billock described it in practical maintenance terms.

    “If you want to know how much a motor’s pulling, you put your amp clamp on the wire,” he said. “All Guidewheel’s done with this particular clamp is taken that signal that we all use to troubleshoot every single day and turned into an ongoing window into real-time data.”

    Billock said the team deployed clamps broadly across the plant’s production equipment and then began developing a working understanding of how to interpret the signals under different operating conditions. Each press generates distinct electrical patterns depending on whether it is preheating, cycling or fully producing parts. By monitoring hydraulic systems, total incoming power and hopper activity, the team learned to distinguish between machines that were energized and those that were actually manufacturing. Without that contextual interpretation, preheating cycles could be mistaken for productive runtime, distorting performance data.

    From Signal Capture to Operational Discipline

    That technical foundation was only the beginning. The harder task was standardizing how the data was classified, shared and acted upon across shifts and roles. Evans said the plant began in what he called a crawl-to-walk phase, focused on uptime and downtime classification. The goal was to build data integrity before addressing more complex optimization challenges.

    “We wanted to ensure the downtime’s getting tagged properly, coded properly,” he said. “Because if we don’t have good data integrity going in, then trying to create solutions for the problems, we’re going to be chasing our tail.”

    The plant’s deployment timeline also reflected a mid-market pattern. Leadership wanted to replace paper-based reporting with technology, but it did not start by rebuilding equipment or tearing out systems. Evans said the Greenville site served as a beta plant, trialing the system on one press in October. After extending the pilot, the plant expanded deployment the week before Thanksgiving, supported by Guidewheel staff and then carried forward by Billock’s maintenance team.

    That sequence matters because mid-market manufacturers often face a credibility hurdle with new technology. If a system is seen as “another dashboard” imposed from outside, operators may comply superficially or resist quietly. The Greenville team emphasized that adoption accelerated once operators and supervisors could all see the same version of the truth on the floor.

    Guidewheel monitors display machine status across the plant. Tablets at equipment allow operators to classify downtime in real time. Alerts can trigger when downtime persists beyond defined thresholds. Evans said the visibility changed behavior quickly.

    “Nine times out of 10, if you give somebody a challenge and they know what the target is, they’re going to go after it and they’re going to win,” he said, “provided you give them the right tools.”

    Over the first three months, Evans said the plant’s uptime moved from the low 70 percent range to about 86 percent. He said overall equipment effectiveness, which averaged in the mid-70s in the last quarter of 2025, reached 88.9 percent month to date in February of 2026.

    Those gains, the participants said, did not come from a single predictive breakthrough. They came from faster feedback loops and consistent problem definition. Each morning, Evans, Billock and supervisors review downtime events and clean up anomalies in tagging. Each week, they identify the biggest downtime driver and focus on it.

    Billock said the team focuses each week on its single largest downtime driver rather than trying to solve every issue at once. The weekly routine also highlights a subtle but consequential shift in plant culture. Visibility tools can easily become punitive if they are used only to find failure. To that point, the team uses the same data to reinforce what is going well.

    “It doesn’t just have to be a negative,” he said. “Use it to show them how good they’re doing.”

    Evans described a moment that underscored the cultural shift underway. A team lead sent him a photo of the scoreboard showing an hour in which presses were running at 100 percent. She sent it, he said, not as a report, but as a reflection of how the team was performing in real time. The visibility allowed operators to see the results of their work as it happened, reinforcing ownership and pride on the floor.
    The most vivid example of usability illustrated how operational visibility had moved beyond the plant floor. By converting electrical signals into structured digital data, the system made machine performance securely accessible to authorized personnel in real time, rather than confining it to physical equipment or end-of-shift reports.
    Billock said that shift has changed how he begins his day.
    “I’ve got a three-month-old baby,” he said. “Every morning we get up, I get my coffee, he gets his bottle, and we sit there and go through Guidewheel.”
    From his phone, he reviews the prior two shifts before arriving on site. He can see every downtime event, compare it with supervisor notes and identify patterns that may require attention. Instead of walking into the plant to reconstruct what happened overnight, he arrives with context and priorities already in mind.
    The difference, he said, is not convenience alone. It is confidence. “It’s so surprisingly accurate,” he said.
    In practical terms, information that was once locked inside individual machines and paper logs is now available securely to the people responsible for acting on it. That mobility shortens response times and extends accountability, while allowing plant leaders to remain connected without being physically tethered to the factory floor.

    A Universal Signal Across Diverse Machines

    That portability of information reflects a deeper architectural decision.

    Guidewheel’s bet is that amperage and power draw provide a universal denominator. If the system can infer machine states from electrical signatures, it can establish apples-to-apples visibility across heterogeneous environments without requiring deep integration into every machine’s control stack.

    That design choice also intersects with risk management. Manufacturers have become prominent targets for cyber incidents, and many mid-market operators remain cautious about connecting operational technology to corporate networks. Dunford said the system can be deployed in ways that avoid touching existing networks or equipment controls, which can reduce perceived exposure.

    “It’s air gapped,” she said, describing configurations that keep the monitoring separate from the plant network while still sending data to the cloud.

    Dunford described a future in which the system learns both locally and comparatively. Each machine has a unique history and usage pattern. But as more machines across more plants are monitored, benchmarking across similar equipment could improve pattern recognition and predictive accuracy. She cited incidents where anomalies have helped teams find overheating risks before they became larger problems.

    The Greenville case suggests that the frontier for many mid-market manufacturers may not lie in developing fully automated factories. It may hinge on having analog behavior of machines translated into digital formats that informs AI systems and human decision-making at the same time.

    Click here to read the Q&A based on this interview.

    Airrion Andrews
    BizTechReports
    email us here

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    EIN Presswire provides this news content “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability
    for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this
    article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.