Blog

  • Researchers at the University of Magdeburg discover new class of materials

    Researchers at the University of Magdeburg discover new class of materials

    Physicists at Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg have developed a new class of materials: so-called multiferroic liquids. These materials combine ferromagnetic and ferroelectric properties in a liquid state for the first…

    Continue Reading

  • Limited Effectiveness of Neo-Adjuvant Chemo-Radiotherapy in Stage II a

    Limited Effectiveness of Neo-Adjuvant Chemo-Radiotherapy in Stage II a

    Introduction

    Mucinous adenocarcinoma of the rectum is characterized by a high mucin content and represents 10–20% of all rectal cancers. This distinct histopathological subtype is associated with unique clinicopathological features such as…

    Continue Reading

  • Charlie Sheen Says Hiding Having HIV Was Harder Than Living With It

    Charlie Sheen Says Hiding Having HIV Was Harder Than Living With It

    Charlie Sheen says the weight of hiding his HIV diagnosis took a greater toll on him than managing the condition itself.

    On Thursday’s episode of “In Depth with Graham Bensinger,” the actor spoke about his new memoir…

    Continue Reading

  • Palmar Forensics uses CLEAR for vendor fraud protection

    Palmar Forensics uses CLEAR for vendor fraud protection

    Why Thomson Reuters Risk & Fraud Solutions?

    After a comprehensive process evaluating alternative solutions, Palmar Forensics selected Thomson Reuters CLEAR as the backbone of its investigative and vendor credentialing workflows for several reasons.

    The first was comprehensiveness and navigability; full reports are thorough yet easier to navigate than alternatives. Their prior tool generated 200 to 300-page reports with lots of noise; CLEAR’s reports contain less irrelevant information, are structured, and searchable. As Joseph Palmar, CEO of Palmar Forensics puts it, “CLEAR is more effective and efficient. The CLEAR report is still 60 or 70 pages long, but it’s simple to navigate. It’s just so much easier to find out what you need to know. And it’s complete and accurate — it’s so comprehensive.”

    CLEAR’s algorithms and logic were also praised. Particularly the strong relationship and ownership discovery that uncovers shell or sister companies and bid-rigging; targeted modules like CLEAR Risk Inform, CLEAR ID Confirm, and seamless alerts for continuous monitoring. These features gave CLEAR a competitive advantage.

    Lastly, Palmar called out the credibility of Thomson Reuters and CLEAR within the industry, making it easy for him to trust.

    “The Thomson Reuters CLEAR solution is the gold standard of fraud investigations. Law enforcement and the federal government both use it. I’ve lost count of how many meetings I’ve walked into where we’ve mentioned that we use CLEAR and they instantly realize we know what we’re talking about,” he says.

    The value of CLEAR

    Since 2012, Palmar Forensics has been using CLEAR — which provides comprehensive, up-to-date information from public records, sanctions databases, and media coverage. It also performs ID validation through CLEAR ID Confirm and subject-risk analytics through CLEAR Risk Inform.

    When onboarding new vendors, Palmar Forensics uses CLEAR as the backbone of its proprietary vendor credentialing tool, VETTED®, to verify that the suppliers its clients want to work with are legitimate and independent businesses — and that their officers and or directors are “clean.” CLEAR does so by researching areas such as current and previous addresses, business relationships, criminal records, and creditworthiness. Then, they can be onboarded with greater certainty.

    “We make sure clients are dealing with reputable organizations that aren’t shell companies, that aren’t linked to other similar businesses for bid-rigging purposes, and that the company’s officers aren’t criminals or have a nefarious history. In our world, that’s not an unusual situation — it’s an everyday occurrence,” says Palmar.

    Uncovering hidden insights

    If clients have suspicions about an existing vendor, Palmar Forensics uses CLEAR as part of an automated tool called VETTED to do a deeper dive to check for undisclosed relationships with other organizations, criminal links or backgrounds, or any lawsuits, liens or judgements. In one recent example, an investigation into a list of vendors provided by a client uncovered a conflict of interest in the awarding of contracts — several “separate” vendors were owned by the same people. In another example, one company owner was unaware that their business partner of 20 years had been charged with assault with a deadly weapon.

    “Using Thomson Reuters Risk & Fraud Solutions as the backbone of VETTED gives us insights we wouldn’t otherwise have, so clients can understand who they’re doing business with,” explains Palmar. “CLEAR allows us to identify whether there’s anything in a company or individual’s background that’s fraudulent or in any way problematic. We have a suite of tools that we use, but the backbone of everything is CLEAR from Thomson Reuters.”

    CLEAR alerts are incredibly useful, according to Palmar. By setting up alerts on certain entities and officers, it is notified about any potential reputational or financial hit to its clients, after the initial onboarding verification process. For Palmar Forensics, this continuous monitoring adds another important layer to the solution’s capabilities.

    When considering the value of CLEAR, Palmar says decision-makers need to think beyond strict return on investment (ROI) metrics. That’s because vendor fraud does not usually happen at volume. But when it does occur, the damage can be incalculable. So, while only a small fraction of vendors commit fraud or have criminal associations, organizations must do everything they can to root them out. CLEAR enables them to do that — and that’s where its true value lies.

    He cites the example of a charitable foundation where seven of its 500 vendors — accounting for 1% of its vendor base — stole $3 million over the course of five years. In addition to the direct financial loss, this raised the risk that donors would no longer donate money to that organization. Similarly, in the health care sector, if fraud is uncovered in the Medicaid or Medicare space, companies may find their government funding is suspended or withheld, which could have significant implications for business continuity beyond the loss itself.

    “You need to spend money to prevent fraudulent expenditures and protect your reputation,” Palmar says. “If you have a massive fraud, your stock price may be affected but there may be even bigger problems to deal with. You can’t measure reputational harm, but one mistake can destroy the reputation you’ve worked so hard to develop.”

    “To my mind, it’s better to do the preemptive work to protect the organization. At least if you’ve done your checks, that’s something you can say to the media, or to the board, as opposed to saying no, we didn’t do that because there was no ROI for doing so.”

    Continue Reading

  • ‘One contestant makes wool vulvas!’ Tom Daley on his knockout knitting show – and arguing with Traitors producers | Television

    ‘One contestant makes wool vulvas!’ Tom Daley on his knockout knitting show – and arguing with Traitors producers | Television

    In The Game of Wool, Channel 4’s quest to find Britain’s best knitter, you can’t take your eyes off Tom Daley’s outfits. One of his goals for the series, he says, is that “what I was wearing would get progressively more interesting”,…

    Continue Reading

  • Research identifies biomarkers in blood to fine-tune breast cancer interventions

    Research identifies biomarkers in blood to fine-tune breast cancer interventions

    Doctors may be able to spare patients unnecessarily aggressive breast cancer treatments by collecting and testing cancer cells in patients’ blood, research from the University of Michigan and the University of Kansas suggests.

    Of the…

    Continue Reading

  • Home exercise alone highly effective for meniscal tear and osteoarthritis pain, says study

    Home exercise alone highly effective for meniscal tear and osteoarthritis pain, says study

    People with a meniscal tear and osteoarthritis prescribed home exercises with or without physical therapy reported substantial improvements in knee pain, according to a new study led by Mass General Brigham researchers. Participants…

    Continue Reading

  • Are Agentic AI Browsers Safe?

    Are Agentic AI Browsers Safe?

    For decades together, browsing the web meant combing through static blue links…


    However, we’ve come a long, long way since “Ask Jeeves” and even traditional search engines like Firefox, Edge, and Chrome, which defined an entire Internet…

    Continue Reading

  • Antibiotic use within 24 hours of birth reduces wound severity in childbirth injuries

    Antibiotic use within 24 hours of birth reduces wound severity in childbirth injuries

    Giving antibiotics to women within 24 hours of an obstetric tear during childbirth is associated with a reduced risk of larger/clinically relevant wound complications, find the results of a clinical trial from Denmark published by…

    Continue Reading

  • MHI and Nippon Shokubai to Develop Ammonia Cracking System for NEDO’s “Development of Technologies for Building a Competitive Hydrogen Supply Chain” Project

    MHI and Nippon Shokubai to Develop Ammonia Cracking System for NEDO’s “Development of Technologies for Building a Competitive Hydrogen Supply Chain” Project

    Ammonia Cracking Plant (3D Rendering)

    Tokyo, October 30, 2025 – Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. (MHI) and NIPPON SHOKUBAI CO., LTD. (Nippon Shokubai) have received approval for their jointly submitted proposal to Japan’s New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) for its “Development of Technologies for Building a Competitive Hydrogen Supply Chain” project.

    The selected project aims to develop technology for the construction of a hydrogen supply chain using ammonia as a hydrogen carrier (hydrogen storage and transport medium), promoting development of medium-scale, decentralized ammonia cracking technology near hydrogen demand sites. The project advances ammonia cracking technology using steam and exhaust gases, employing an independently developed, low-temperature, highly active and highly durable ammonia cracking catalyst without the use of noble metals typically used in conventional low-temperature active catalysts. This innovative technology will be used to verify challenges toward practical application.

    Following the project selection, the two companies will conduct the following activities during the project period through fiscal 2027, with long-term testing in mind, using a commercial-scale demonstration plant. MHI will leverage its extensive experience in ammonia plant construction and its knowledge of ammonia handling to carry out the basic design (Front End Engineering Design: FEED) of the demonstration plant. MHI will finalize the demonstration plant specifications aiming to resolve technical challenges necessary for commercialization, with support from Hokkaido Electric Power Co., Inc. (HEPCO). Nippon Shokubai will promote the development of elemental technologies focused on verifying the durability of ammonia cracking catalysts, utilizing its abundant experience and expertise in catalyst development and practical application, including process catalysts such as acrylic acid catalysts and environmental catalysts for automotive and exhaust gas treatment.

    MHI and Nippon Shokubai will promote the development of ammonia cracking systems that contribute to building hydrogen and ammonia supply chains, aiming for early establishment and social implementation of decarbonization technologies, and contributing to the realization of a sustainable carbon-neutral society.

    HEPCO, aiming to achieve carbon neutrality in Hokkaido by 2050 across the entire energy sector, is expanding the introduction of renewable energy and decarbonizing power sources, while promoting initiatives related to ammonia, hydrogen, and carbon capture utilization and storage (CCUS) in the Tomakomai region and other areas of Hokkaido.

    Continue Reading