Three Indian-origin students make it to TIME magazine's 25 most influential teens of 2018

Kavya Kopparapu, Rishab Jain, and Amika George are among the teenagers recognised by the magazine.

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From left: Kavya Kopparapu, Rishab Jain, and Amika George.
HOUSTON: Three Indian-origin students have been named among the 25 most influential teens of 2018 by Time magazine for making a mark across numerous fields.

Indian-American Kavya Kopparapu, Rishab Jain, and British-Indian Amika George are among the group who have become inspirations for youngsters across the world due to their spectacular achievements through their work and passion.

Rishabh, an eighth grader, who has developed an algorithm that can possibly be a cure to pancreatic cancer.


Kavya Kopparapu is a freshman at the Harvard University. She developed a deep-learning computer system that can scan slides of tissue from brain cancer patients looking for differences in density, colour, texture and cellular alignment that are unique to that particular person's case.

She developed the system after learning how the survival rate of glioblastoma, an aggressive brain cancer, has not improved from the past 30 years.

According to Time magazine, her goal is "to develop targeted therapies that are also unique to the person."
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Amika George's goal is to convince policymakers to end "period poverty," as she calls it, by funding the distribution of menstrual products to girls and women who cannot afford them.

"It really upsets me," she tells the magazine of learning that many girls in the UK were routinely missing school during their periods because they could not afford to buy menstrual products.

"The government knew this was happening on their watch, but they were refusing to find a solution," she said.

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She launched the #FreePeriods campaign as a response, gathering nearly 200,000 signatures on her petition to help eradicate period poverty; the movement eventually garnered the support of over a dozen UK policymakers, galvanising the government to allocate funds to the issue for the first time.

Carlos Ghosn, Zuckerberg: A Look At 2018's Biggest Whistleblowers
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A look at the biggest whistleblowers this year and the cascade effect of their truth-telling.

(In Pic: On the left is Carlos Ghosn, and on the right is Mark Zuckerberg)

A look at the biggest whistleblowers this year and the cascade effect of their truth-telling. (In Pic: On the left is Carlos Ghosn, and on the right is Mark Zuckerberg)

What happened: Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn was accused of “significant acts of misconduct” in a whistleblower report earlier this year. Investigations found that Ghosn had under reported his compensation to the Tokyo Stock Exchange for close to $88 million over five years. Representative director Greg Kelly was also accused.

Status: Ghosn was responsible for the alliance between Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi, so all three companies have been hit. The action cost Ghosn the chairmanship of Nissan and Mitsubishi, but Renault is conducting an independent inquiry and is yet to take a decision. Ghosn was arrested on November 19 and continues to be in detention.

What happened: Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn was accused of “significant acts of misconduct” in a whistleblower report earlier this year. Investigations found that Ghosn had under reported his compens..
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What happened: In March, it was reported that about 87 million Facebook profiles were harvested by Cambridge Analytica, a London-based political data analytics firm, in a massive data scandal. The whistleblower was Cambridge Analytica’s co-founder Christopher Wylie, who said that the data was used to create ‘psychographic’ profiles online and deliver pro-Trump material on the web. Zuckerberg was called to testify before the Senate Judiciary and Commerce committees in April.

Status: Last week, the parliamentary committee published a cache of Facebook internal documents, which contained some highly confidential documents and emails about how the social media giant treated user data. Zuckerberg responded by providing context to the emails so that there would be no misrepresentation.

What happened: In March, it was reported that about 87 million Facebook profiles were harvested by Cambridge Analytica, a London-based political data analytics firm, in a massive data scandal. The wh..
Read More

What happened: Howard Wilkinson contacted Danske Bank’s senior management in Estonia with allegations of money laundering at the branch in 2014. Wilkinson worked with Danske’s trading unit in the Baltic region until 2014. Earlier this year, following reports of how CEO Borgen refused to scale back the Estonian non-resident business, Danske published its own report looking into the multi-billion dollar scandal. Last month, Wilkinson told the Danish Parliament that over $150 billion of the money from the scandal passed through Danske’s US subsidiary Deutsche Bank.

Status: Andersen and Borgen have stepped down from their respective roles of chairman and CEO.

What happened: Howard Wilkinson contacted Danske Bank’s senior management in Estonia with allegations of money laundering at the branch in 2014. Wilkinson worked with Danske’s trading unit in the Bal..
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What happened: Staley, who became the Barclays chief executive in 2015, was involved in a whistleblower scandal, beginning in 2016, as he tried to find out the identity of an anonymous employee who wrote a letter protesting a senior hire. The two British regulators, the Financial Conduct Authority and Bank of England’s Prudential Regulation Authority, began looking into Stanley’s attempts to disclose the letter writer’s identity.

Status: The awkward chapter finally drew to a close with Staley being fined an undisclosed amount of money. No action was taken against Barclays itself.

What happened: Staley, who became the Barclays chief executive in 2015, was involved in a whistleblower scandal, beginning in 2016, as he tried to find out the identity of an anonymous employee who w..
Read More

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