From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 5 10:04:46 2024 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Fri Apr 5 14:11:56 2024 Subject: [Ssnet_list] iHuman Spring 2024 International Guest Seminar Series - The Imperfectly Perfect Robot with Katherine Harrison Message-ID: Apologies for cross-posting! Stevienna de Saille : Apr 04 12:30PM +0100 Hello all -- please circulate to your networks! (and apologies for any cross-posting). We're happy to say we've now been able to reschedule this seminar which was postponed in March. === The iHuman Spring 2024 International Guest Seminar Series (Human Futures theme) cordially invites you to join us for: *The Imperfectly Relatable Robot: a critical robotics approach to failures in human-robot relations - Katherine Harrison, Department of Thematic Studies ? Gender Studies, Link?ping University, Sweden* *NEW DATE: Tuesday, 16 April at 15:00 GMT (link to be circulated to attendees)* *Please book your place here: **https://forms.gle/ChSaA4ZBp1amutJ5A* === ?Critical robotics? denotes a field that aims to address the tendency in Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) towards relying on technical knowledge to resolve the challenges of achieving social interactions with robots. In particular, it aims to provide more ?human-centered and holistic approaches to question established assumptions of design in HRI research? (Serholt et al 2022). It is an inherently interdisciplinary activity, which often involves collaboration between social scientists and engineers or computers scientists working ?within? HRI. In this presentation, I will talk about a critical robotics research project titled ?The ethics and consequences of AI and caring robots? currently underway in Sweden. In particular, I want to share a sample from my own work within the project which focuses on failure. Usually, research to improve human-robot interactions in social robotics focuses on producing a ?positive? affective experience by exploring how to increase human participants? feelings of trust or safety. However, there is an emerging interest amongst roboticists in the role played by robotic failures in building more complex and nuanced relationships between humans and social robots. Robots fail often, in many and varied ways, some quite mundane, some more significant. But this might not be a bad thing. What if encountering a robot who fails, who is a little less ?perfect?, might actually make it more relatable and human-like? Bringing critical theory into conversation with social robotics research, my project explores how failure might be used to improve human-robot relations. *Bio*: Katherine Harrison is Associate Professor in Gender Studies at Link?ping University. Her research sits at the intersection of Science & Technology Studies, media studies, and feminist theory, bringing critical perspectives on knowledge production to studies of different digital technologies. She has received funding from the Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency, the Danish Council for Independent Research, Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Foundation, Riksbankens Jubileumsfond, Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation and the Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development (FORMAS). She is currently co-PI for two WASP-HS (Wallenberg AI, Autonomous Systems and Software Program ? Humanity and Society) projects titled: "The ethics and social consequences of AI and caring robots: Learning trust, empathy and accountability", and "Operationalising ethics for AI: translation, implementation and accountability challenges". *The Institute for the Study of the Human (iHuman)* at the University of Sheffield brings together the fields of Science and Technology Studies and Critical Disability Studies for disruptive research into what it means to be human. For more information, visit us at: https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/ihuman -- Dr. Stevienna de Saille, Lecturer in Sociology Institute for the Study of the Human (iHuman), Department of Sociological Studies The University of Sheffield, 2 Whitham Road, Sheffield S10 2AH http://ihuman.group.shef.ac.uk *SEE OUR NEW BOOK: Being Human During Covid-19 @ Bristol UP* *PI - Mapping Trustworthy Systems for robots in social care (Map-RAS) < https://tas.ac.uk/research-projects-2023-24/mapping-trustworthy-systems-for-ras-in-social-care-map-ras/ >* *Co-I (Research lead) - Imagining Robotic Care * -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Tue Apr 9 15:21:37 2024 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Amy Hinterberger via Ssnet_list) Date: Tue Apr 9 20:12:29 2024 Subject: [Ssnet_list] The Ethics of Human Brain Organoids and Human-Animal Neural Chimeras Among U.S. Bioethicists and Public | Apr 23rd 12 Noon In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Please join us online for the below discussion of human brain organoids - all are welcome. Amy Please circulate to your colleagues. Amy Date : April 23rd, 2024 Time : 12 Noon PDT Zoom : Link provided Here (You will be prompted to register upon joining) [cid:image001.png@01DA875E.1131E890] AMY HINTERBERGER, PhD (she/hers) [cid:image002.png@01DA8A91.9C3DAE70] Chair & Associate Professor Department of Bioethics & Humanities | UW Medicine University of Washington, School of Medicine 1959 NE Pacific St.| Box 357120| Seattle, WA 98195-7120 Assistant to the Chair: Megan Mason, mkmason@uw.edu 206.616.5601 EMAIL: amyhint@uw.edu WEB: https://depts.washington.edu/bhdept/amy-hinterberger-phd Zoom link: Drop-in Open Meeting Hour | Tuesdays 2:15 - 2:45 [logo] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 326561 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.png Type: image/png Size: 1548 bytes Desc: image002.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 1303 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Wed Apr 10 18:05:28 2024 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Tibbles Daniel via Ssnet_list) Date: Wed Apr 10 18:31:20 2024 Subject: [Ssnet_list] STSS Reading List Message-ID: At the STSS community gathering two weeks ago there was a request for recommended STSS readings. Here is a link to the list built up from?and supplied to?STSS 591 students. I've taken the liberty to streamline the formatting and sort by author, as well as adding Dr. LaTonya Trotter's book, *More than Medicine*, to the list. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1WhVBZZszGQnAM3x7SddiIVpkO1SDzb4VvwkSiqyh49Y/edit Dan Tibbles Student Bioethics & Humanities University of Washington -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Tue Apr 16 11:27:16 2024 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Tue Apr 16 12:24:00 2024 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Fwd: [UW First Monday STSS] Welcome and reading for Monday, May 6 In-Reply-To: <66b7abe3-46a8-40ea-85b9-b8a7c233e02an@googlegroups.com> References: <66b7abe3-46a8-40ea-85b9-b8a7c233e02an@googlegroups.com> Message-ID: Hi everyone! I am writing to forward the invitation to the first meeting of the UW First Monday STSS Reading Group, see details below. Please forgive the cross-posting, I know many of you have already joined the listserv. For those who haven't, if you'd like to join the UW First Monday STSS Reading Group listserv or share with someone who might be interested, there are details and instructions below. Best, Monika Sengul-Jones Program Manager, Society + Technology University of Washington ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: UW First Monday STSS Reading Group < uw_first-monday-stss@googlegroups.com> Date: Tue, Apr 16, 2024 at 11:16?AM Subject: [UW First Monday STSS] Welcome and reading for Monday, May 6 To: UW First Monday STSS Reading Group < uw_first-monday-stss@googlegroups.com> Dear UW STSS-ers, Welcome to the UW First Monday STSS Reading Group listserv! This is a participant-led interdisciplinary reading group at the University of Washington that meets on the first Monday of each month via Zoom from 12: 30-1: 20 PM ZjQcmQRYFpfptBannerStart This Message Is From an Untrusted Sender You have not previously corresponded with this sender. See https://itconnect.uw.edu/email-tags for additional information. Please contact the UW-IT Service Center, help@uw.edu 206.221.5000, for assistance. ZjQcmQRYFpfptBannerEnd Dear UW STSS-ers, Welcome to the UW First Monday STSS Reading Group listserv! This is a participant-led interdisciplinary reading group at the University of Washington that meets on the first Monday of each month via Zoom from 12:30-1:20 PM PDT. Our first meeting is Monday, May 6 from 12:30-1:20 PM Zoom link: https://washington.zoom.us/j/9582622762 Hosts (for the first session only): Monika Sengul-Jones and Leah Ceccarelli Article: Martin, A., Myers, N., & Viseu, A. (2015). The politics of care in technoscience. Social Studies of Science, 45(5), 625?641. Link: https://orbiscascade-washington.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?&context=PC&vid=01ALLIANCE_UW:UW&search_scope=UW_EVERYTHING&tab=UW_default&docid=cdi_webofscience_primary_000363323600001CitationCount Calendar to bookmark for future meetings: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Nmy2xgpNgzzzRn7w0S-lkPFSalk_LzXSaGAyMSiGQT0/edit#gid=0 *What is UW First Monday STSS Reading Group? * The purpose of the UW First Monday STSS Reading Group is to foster community and deepen intellectual connections and collaborations amongst STSS-curious faculty, students, and staff at the University of Washington?s three campuses and the School of Medicine by meeting online monthly to discuss a recent article or publication. The articles may take up topics, themes, controversies, and responses to the urgent and emergent themes in this vast intellectual domain of inquiry, which includes but is not limited to scholarship in the humanities and social sciences, such as anthropology, communication, gender and women?s studies, global and ethnic studies, history, law, literature, philosophy, and sociology. We're just getting started. Please feel free to forward this introductory message and details about the first meeting to people in your UW network who might be interested in participating now or in the future. All are welcome. Instructions to join the listserv are below. *FAQ* How do I participate? - It?s easy! Mark your calendar and attend! No RSVP is required. - Review the guidelines for inclusively reading together in an interdisciplinary cross-campus online community https://docs.google.com/document/d/14qyh60o9gssxekTSFZzUVnIlsjNxpq-fR35VY5M0C1s/edit?usp=sharing - Read the paper shared by the host in advance. Prepare to share or discuss your reflections and learnings. What does the paper give to you and to the field? What questions does the paper raise for you? - Listen and share during the reading group in large or small online groups. - Sign up to volunteer to be a host for a future meeting. More instructions below. - Share your feedback and ideas for improvement with the facilitators/organizers Monika Sengul-Jones (mmjones@uw.edu) and Leah Ceccarelli (cecc@uw.edu). Who are the meeting hosts? - All participants in the UW First Monday STSS Reading Group are invited to volunteer to host a reading group session. How do I volunteer to be a host and what are the responsibilities? - One month to three weeks before the session. If you haven't yet, sign up to be a host by adding your name and email to the calendar spreadsheet: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Nmy2xgpNgzzzRn7w0S-lkPFSalk_LzXSaGAyMSiGQT0/edit?usp=sharing - Three to two weeks before your session. Select a recently published paper or article that takes up topics, themes, controversies, and responses to the urgent and emergent themes in this vast intellectual domain of inquiry, which includes but is not limited to scholarship in the humanities and social sciences, such as anthropology, communication, gender and women?s studies, global and ethnic studies, history, law, literature, philosophy, and sociology. - Two to one weeks before the session. Provide the stable URL to the PDF or link to the group and email uw_first-monday-stss@googlegroups.com, the reading group listserv, and paste the link to your article into the group spreadsheet. - At the session. Join the meeting a few minutes early. You might open the conversation by sharing details or context about your article choice. You might have prepared questions or comments to facilitate discussion or gesture to what they hope to get out of a group conversation on the paper and topic. - Afterwards. Thank you for hosting! You and/or the facilitator(s) might follow up with the group to share additional resources or ideas. Now it?s time for another volunteer to get started. - *Can't make your session? *Be sure to let the facilitator(s) know as soon as possible so that we can arrange a backup plan. Practicalities - Meeting times may change quarterly or annually; check the calendar for updates: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Nmy2xgpNgzzzRn7w0S-lkPFSalk_LzXSaGAyMSiGQT0/edit#gid=0 - Forwarded this message? To subscribe please email a request to join uw_first-monday-stss@googlegroups.com - To unsubscribe from this group, send email to uw_first-monday-stss+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com - View this message at https://groups.google.com/a/googlegroups.com/d/msg/uw_first-monday-stss/topic-id/message-id Other questions? Ask one of the facilitators/organizers (Monika mmjones@uw.edu or Leah cecc@uw.edu) ? -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "UW First Monday STSS Reading Group" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to uw_first-monday-stss+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/uw_first-monday-stss/66b7abe3-46a8-40ea-85b9-b8a7c233e02an%40googlegroups.com . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Tue Apr 23 11:02:03 2024 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Amanda L. Swarr via Ssnet_list) Date: Tue Apr 23 11:07:39 2024 Subject: [Ssnet_list] TODAY: Sick of it All: Care & Depathologization Activism in Trans Health with Prof Chris Hanssmann In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Tuesday, Apr. 23, 2024, 3:30 - 4:30 p.m. at the Communications Building CMU 120 Annual SQS Certificate Lecture: "Sick of it All: Care & Depathologization Activism in Trans Health," presented by Chris Hanssmann Speaker: Chris Hanssmann, University of California, Davis Respondent: Oliver Rollins, UW Seattle Ethnic Studies Trans depathologization has often centered around the claim, "We're trans, we're not sick." However, activists' efforts to push back against psychiatric diagnoses are increasingly being identified as ableist in their work to distinguish trans wellness and sanity from "true" forms of mental pathology. Given these critiques, what's useful now about thinking with depathologization? Rather than focusing solely on disavowals of disability, this talk examines depathologization as a more expansive set of phenomena. Drawing on ethnographic and document-based research in New York City and Buenos Aires between 2012-2018, it analyzes varying strands of trans depathologization activism, their specific objectives, and their dispersed effects. Centering the activist-advanced desire for "care without pathology", the talk examines how activists have developed distinct orientations to depathologization depending on their understanding of what comprises pathologization in the first instance. Looking to interviews, historiography, and activist writing and art, Hanssmann shows how activists theorized pathologization and depathologization in different ways, leading to a range of political visions. Bringing together critiques of trans normativity, feminist science and technology studies, and analyses of care and political economy, Hanssmann argues that depathologization must be recognized diffractively and in a broader historical and political landscape. In so doing, he focuses on how coalition-focused activists approached depathologization with a desire not only to change medicine, but also to intervene in structures of racialized immiseration and to transform care politics. About the Speaker Christoph Hanssmann is an Assistant Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies at the University of California, Davis. His first book, Care without Pathology: How Trans- Health Activists are Changing Medicine (2023) was recently published by the University of Minnesota Press. He works collaboratively with researchers and activists in feminist, queer and transfeminist health and justice, and has published articles in Transgender Studies Quarterly, Medical Anthropology Quarterly, Feminist Formations, and Social Science and Medicine. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: SQS lecture, 4.23.24.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 141055 bytes Desc: SQS lecture, 4.23.24.jpg URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Wed Apr 24 15:40:14 2024 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Amanda L. Swarr via Ssnet_list) Date: Wed Apr 24 16:17:31 2024 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Thursday, May 2: How to Center Intersex: Refusing Pathology, Defying the Binary In-Reply-To: References: <1611312281.372350754.1713377746269@sjmktmail-batch1d.marketo.org> Message-ID: Greetings, Those of us in GWSS wanted to share information about our upcoming departmental event (attached and below). Please feel free to publicize and forward this information in whatever ways you see fit. All are welcome, and we hope that both the conversations and food will be enticing! Thank you so much! Warmly, Amanda Amanda Swarr Associate Professor Department of Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies University of Washington, Seattle Space is limited, RSVP Now! View the web version of this message [University of Washington - College of Arts & Sciences] DEPARTMENT OF GENDER, WOMEN & SEXUALITY STUDIES How to Center Intersex: Refusing Pathology, Defying the Binary [||text_1918313||] EVENT INFORMATION [May 2 2024] Join us for a dynamic, food-filled community gathering at Hugo House, the nonprofit literary arts organization located in the heart of Capitol Hill. Space is limited, RSVP Now! Date: May 2nd, 2024 Program: * 5:30: Food, drink, and music, including a bibimbap buffet! * 6:30: Conversation with Amanda Swarr and Hil Malatino, followed by a book signing of their recent publications with Left Bank Books * 7:15: Food, drink, and music continue until 9pm Location: Hugo House, Lapis Theater 1634 11th Ave. (at East Olive) Register now: the first drink is on the house for the first 50 registrants. Those who are 21+, please bring your I.D. RSVP NOW! [https://explore.uw.edu/rs/131-AQO-225/images/arrow-purple.png] THE SECOND ANNUAL GWSS SPRING COMMUNITY GATHERING Join us for the Annual Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies Community Gathering that brings leading feminist thinkers into community with local activists, allies, and alumni. This spring, Amanda Lock Swarr will discuss her recent book Envisioning African Intersex in conversation with Hil Malatino. These scholars at the forefront of intersex and transgender studies will delve into the legacy of medical violence on intersex and gender non-conforming lives and the resistance and visions of activists advocating for change, on local and global stages. Swarr's Envisioning African Intersex exposes the colonial and racist histories of intersex medicine and highlights collective actions of intersex activists in African contexts. Her work explores how these activists are challenging and reframing our understandings of sex and gender. Malatino and Swarr's discussion will address this book and tackle some of the most pressing contemporary issues related to gender binaries, including the invisibility of intersex and possibilities for coalitions in the face of ongoing political attacks. They will think with those in attendance about what we should all do to depathologize and center intersex. This conversation, mixed with a book signing with Left Bank Books and a delicious bibimbap buffet from Oma Bap, offers a celebratory opportunity to engage with two visionary authors who are taking the field of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies in exciting new directions that move beyond binary ideas of men vs women. This event is free of charge and open to all. Students, faculty, and interested community members are welcome! ABOUT THE SPEAKERS Amanda Lock Swarr [||text_1918330||] Associate Professor, University of Washington Amanda Lock Swarr is Associate Professor of Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies and faculty of African Studies at the University of Washington. She is the author of Envisioning African Intersex: Challenging Colonial and Racist Legacies in South African Medicine (Duke 2023) and Sex in Transition: Remaking Gender and Race in South Africa (SUNY 2012). She is co-editor of "The Intersex Issue" of TSQ (with Michelle Wolff and David A. Rubin, 2022) and the anthology Critical Transnational Feminist Praxis (with Richa Nagar, SUNY 2010), and her essays have appeared in journals including TSQ, Feminist Studies, and Signs. Dr. Swarr has been awarded the Sylvia Rivera Prize in Transgender Studies, the Samuel E. Kelly Distinguished Faculty Award, and the UW Distinguished Teaching Award. She has been collaborating with LGBTQI+ activists in South Africa since 1997. Hil Malatino [||text_1918335||] Associate Professor, Penn State University Hil Malatino is Joyce L. and Douglas S. Sherwin Early Career Professor in the Rock Ethics Institute and Associate Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and Philosophy at Penn State University. He is the author of Side Affects: On Being Trans and Feeling Bad (Minnesota 2022), Trans Care (Minnesota 2020), and Queer Embodiment: Monstrosity, Medical Violence, and Intersex Experience (Nebraska 2019), and co-editor the t4t issue of TSQ alongside Cam Awkward-Rich and the "Care Ethics Otherwise" issue of Essays in Philosophy alongside Sarah Clark-Miller and Amy McKiernan. His essays have appeared in Hypatia, TSQ, Signs, and many other journals and edited volumes. He is a Lambda Literary Award finalist and recipient of the Leslie Feinberg Award in Trans Literature. TRANSPORTATION & PARKING Hugo House is located at 1634 Eleventh Avenue on Capitol Hill, on the corner of Eleventh and East Olive. Public transportation: Hugo House is a short walk from the Capitol Hill light rail station and the First Hill streetcar (Broadway & Pike-Pine stop), and within a half-mile of many buses, including routes 2, 8, 10, 11, 12, 43, 49, and 60. Parking: Multiple pay parking lots are available nearby. Street parking is also available but not guaranteed. The garage beneath Hugo House is for tenants only. UW Home GENDER, WOMEN & SEXUALITY STUDIES College of Arts & Sciences [Facebook] [Twitter] [Instagram] [YouTube] [LinkedIn] Contact Us | Privacy | Terms (c) 2024 University of Washington | DEPARTMENT OF GENDER, WOMEN & SEXUALITY STUDIES Padelford Hall Room B110 | Box 354345 | Seattle, WA 98195-4345 This email was sent to aswarr@uw.edu Unsubscribe or change your email preferences -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: 5-2-24 Community Gathering Poster.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 4578833 bytes Desc: 5-2-24 Community Gathering Poster.pdf URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Tue Apr 30 19:24:28 2024 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Matthew Weinstein via Ssnet_list) Date: Tue Apr 30 20:25:25 2024 Subject: [Ssnet_list] FW: [CASTAC] CASPR 'AI in/and Anthropology: Navigating a Shifting Landscape' Message-ID: <2C1F2613-2585-4F76-AC20-6AD6F5E22AD3@uw.edu> From: Matthew Weinstein Reply-To: "CASTAC PR Manager media@castac.org [AAA_CASTAC]" Date: Tuesday, April 30, 2024 at 7:23 PM To: Matthew Weinstein Subject: EXT: [CASTAC] CASPR 'AI in/and Anthropology: Navigating a Shifting Landscape' [http://castac.org/wp-content/themes/castac/library/img/listserv-logo.png] [CASTAC] CASPR 'AI in/and Anthropology: Navigating a Shifting Landscape' Having trouble viewing this message? Read it online. [68055e32-6a6d-4857-81a1-633383b64b76.png] Have you registered for CASTAC in the Spring yet? If you haven't, this is the moment! CASPR 2024 brings together anthropologists to think about the multifaceted relationship between Artificial Intelligence (AI) and anthropology. As AI rapidly grows and integrates into the professional, communal, and personal lives of many people around the globe, and as talk about AI mushrooms and sparks controversy, CASTAC hopes to approach AI and its growing hype and scare with a critical lens. Join us for a roundtable discussion and Q&A with Dr. Lisa Messeri (Yale University), Dr. Rachel Douglas-Jones (IT University of Copenhagen), and Dr. Sydney Yeager (Boston Mountain Research), moderated by CASTAC Co-Chair Dr. Svetlana Borodina. Date: Monday, May 6, 2024 Time: 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM (Central US) Location: Online via Zoom Register: caspr2024.eventbrite.com All are welcome! This event is free. CASTAC membership is not required. Registration is required. The event link is provided after registration. Learn more about CASTAC at castac.org or join CASTAC at castac.org/join. CASTAC is part of the General Anthropology Division (GAD) of the American Anthropological Association Best, Natalia Orrego, Public Relations Manager Subscription Reminder You're Subscribed to: AAA_CASTAC using the address: media@castac.org Manage Your Subscription Unsubscribe Automatically [Powered by: Dada Mail] Contact http://castac.org webmaster@castac.org 2300 Clarendon Blvd., Suite 1301, Arlington, VA 22201 Connect Platypus, the CASTAC Blog Assemblage, the CASTAC Directory CASTAC on Facebook CASTAC on Twitter CAUTION: EXTERNAL SENDER Do not click any links, open any attachments, or REPLY to the message unless you trust the sender and know the content is safe. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 1221573 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: