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Cybersecurity can present challenges in health care
Technology in health care goes beyond the latest surgical instruments and can create challenges for an organization’s information technology (IT) department. One of the biggest challenges that health-care organizations face on cybersecurity is retaining talent, according to Charlie Wood, a partner and practice lead at FoxPointe Solutions, the cyber risk-management and compliance subsidiary of the […]
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Technology in health care goes beyond the latest surgical instruments and can create challenges for an organization’s information technology (IT) department.
One of the biggest challenges that health-care organizations face on cybersecurity is retaining talent, according to Charlie Wood, a partner and practice lead at FoxPointe Solutions, the cyber risk-management and compliance subsidiary of the Bonadio Group.
It can be hard for employers in Central New York to compete with those in bigger cities when it comes to attracting top talent, he notes. “You can’t pay what they pay in the big cities.”
That can often lead to turnover as employees move on to new career opportunities. The problem, Wood notes, is that those IT staff members take their knowledge and experience with them when they leave.
That means there can be a vulnerable period at the organization while it searches for and brings a new employee up to speed.
Individuals or groups trying to maliciously access data, the “bad actors,” are always looking for those vulnerabilities to gain access. Threats can come from a variety of sources, both externally and internally, Wood adds.
Phishing and ransomware attacks remain a concern. Other attacks can come from surprise means like a computer inadvertently left unlocked and accessible, Wood says.
Other events like mergers and acquisitions can create challenges, especially as smaller organizations are integrated into larger systems. For other organizations, budget constraints may impact the IT department and cybersecurity.
Regulatory complexity is an ongoing concern, especially for health-care systems, which have to protect health information, private data, and payment information.
“In health care, you have so much sensitive data,” Wood notes. “It’s a never-ending battle for these organizations.”
A breach can have far-reaching impact for an organization. “Reputational damage can be pretty significant,” Wood says. A breach can also come with fines or potential lawsuits. Some attacks may even prevent a health-care facility from providing care.
To best protect themselves, health-care organizations need to have robust cybersecurity and rigorous training for employees. Telling employees to “use common sense” on emails isn’t enough, Wood adds. Email content filtering, for example, can help weed out phishing attacks.
Some organizations may want to consider outsourcing at least some of their IT functions. “Find a virtual something instead of having IT in house,” Wood recommends. A virtual compliance officer, for example, is focused solely on all the laws and regulations to ensure compliance for an organization, freeing up in-house IT staff to focus on other things.
There are also resources available to help health-care organizations better protect themselves that may offer things like free software or vulnerability scans.
Organizations can also look for grants to supplement their IT budgets.
“There are grants out there,” Wood says. “There are cost-effective solutions out there.”

Kris-Tech Wire leader set for MACNY’s Wall of Fame
DeWITT — Graham Brodock, president of Kris-Tech Wire of Rome, is set for induction to MACNY’s Manufacturers Wall of Fame. DeWitt–based MACNY, The Manufacturers Association is recognizing Brodock for his “visionary leadership and transformative impact” at Kris-Tech Wire, where he has served as president since 2014. MACNY’s Manufacturers Wall of Fame recognizes people who have
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DeWITT — Graham Brodock, president of Kris-Tech Wire of Rome, is set for induction to MACNY’s Manufacturers Wall of Fame.
DeWitt–based MACNY, The Manufacturers Association is recognizing Brodock for his “visionary leadership and transformative impact” at Kris-Tech Wire, where he has served as president since 2014.
MACNY’s Manufacturers Wall of Fame recognizes people who have “demonstrated long-term dedication, outstanding leadership, and significant contributions” to their industries and communities in Central and Upstate New York, the association said in its announcement.
MACNY members and community leaders will honor Brodock at the association’s 112th annual Celebration of Manufacturing on May 22 at the SRC Arena & Events Center on the campus of Onondaga Community College in the town of Onondaga.
Under Brodock’s guidance, Kris-Tech has evolved from a small regional wire mill to a nationally recognized manufacturer, MACNY said. Brodock’s approach to leadership, which blends culture, employee wellness, and cutting-edge manufacturing practices, has “propelled the company into a new era of growth and success,” per the announcement.
“Graham exemplifies the values of innovation, dedication, and leadership that MACNY seeks to recognize with our Manufacturers Wall of Fame,” Randy Wolken, president and CEO of MACNY, said. “His ability to blend visionary leadership with a deep respect for culture and employee well-being has transformed Kris-Tech Wire into a highly respected leader in the manufacturing sector. His commitment to continuous improvement, both in manufacturing and in people development, is truly inspiring. We are proud to honor him with this prestigious recognition as he continues to make a lasting impact on the manufacturing industry and his community.”
Brodock’s investments in manufacturing capabilities have also made a big impact. He led the construction of a new facility in Rome and has driven continuous upgrades to Kris-Tech’s production lines. Brodock has also focused on employee training and leadership development, which has positioned Kris-Tech for global expansion in the years ahead, MACNY said.
“It’s a real honor to be acknowledged by the manufacturing community and our peers at MACNY,” Brodock said in the MACNY announcement. “Kris-Tech has been fortunate enough to flourish as a national manufacturer for over 40 years. As we all know, moving a company forward takes more than a single person or idea. Our company has prided itself on attracting and hiring the best people and giving them the tools to be their best selves. With that in mind, our team has taken it upon themselves to grow our culture, build our market, and support our community. Without our employees, none of this would be possible.”
MACNY describes Brodock’s journey to leadership in manufacturing as “unique.” With no formal background in manufacturing or business, he studied art history as an undergraduate and went on to earn a master’s degree in Ancient Greek and Latin from Cambridge University in Cambridge, England.
Brodock later taught high school Latin in Austin, Texas, before pivoting to the manufacturing industry by joining Kris-Tech Wire. His liberal-arts education and “diverse experiences have shaped his distinctive leadership style, emphasizing respect, personal growth, and a commitment to continuous learning,” MACNY said.

New Christopher Community leader starts position
SYRACUSE — Christopher Community, Inc., a housing development and management organization, has a new president and CEO. Jeffrey Eysaman, who started in the new role April 23, succeeds Justin Rudgick, who departed Christopher Community earlier in the year to pursue other opportunities, a spokesman tells CNYBJ in an email. The nonprofit Christopher Community manages more
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SYRACUSE — Christopher Community, Inc., a housing development and management organization, has a new president and CEO.
Jeffrey Eysaman, who started in the new role April 23, succeeds Justin Rudgick, who departed Christopher Community earlier in the year to pursue other opportunities, a spokesman tells CNYBJ in an email.
The nonprofit Christopher Community manages more than 3,300 units across 70 properties across Central and Western New York.
As president and CEO, Eysaman will oversee the overall management, operations, and strategic direction of Christopher Community. He will lead the organization in executing its mission and vision, promoting growth and sustainability, and ensuring financial health and operational efficiency, Christopher Community said.
Eysaman most recently served as executive director of the Thomas M. Menino YMCA in Boston between 2024 and 2025. His time in Boston followed leadership roles with the YMCA of Central New York, the Boys & Girls Clubs of Syracuse, and Peaceful Schools. His career has centered on creating inclusive, supportive environments for underserved communities throughout New York and beyond, Christopher Community said.
His achievements include being a TEDx speaker at Onondaga Community College in 2018, receiving the New York State Senate Certificate of Achievement for Outstanding Civic Virtue from Senator Rachel May (D–Syracuse) in 2019, and graduating from the LeadForward Leadership Program in 2022 and the YMCA of the USA Emerging Global Leaders Institute in 2023.
Eysaman earned bachelor’s degree in history and political science from the College of Saint Rose.
“I’m honored to return to a community that means so much to me, and I’m deeply grateful for the chance to lead an organization committed to ensuring safe, affordable housing for those who need it most,” Eysaman said in the Christopher Community announcement. “Together with our dedicated team, I look forward to building solutions that strengthen lives and neighborhoods across Central New York.”
Christopher Community says that for more than 50 years it has helped low- and moderate-income families and seniors find housing to fit their specific needs. It administers Onondaga County’s Rental Assistance Program (Section 8), which serves more than 1,200 households.

State OGS certifies three Central New York firms as SDVOBs
ALBANY— New York State Office of General Services (OGS) Commissioner Jeanette Moy recently announced that 33 businesses across the state were certified as service-disabled veteran-owned businesses (SDVOBs), including three small businesses in the 16-county Central New York region. The New York OGS Division of Service-Disabled Veterans’ Business Development (DSDVBD) issued the certification to CM Property
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ALBANY— New York State Office of General Services (OGS) Commissioner Jeanette Moy recently announced that 33 businesses across the state were certified as service-disabled veteran-owned businesses (SDVOBs), including three small businesses in the 16-county Central New York region.
The New York OGS Division of Service-Disabled Veterans’ Business Development (DSDVBD) issued the certification to CM Property Group, a residential and commercial building construction company located in Liverpool; Masi Sand and Gravel, a poured concrete foundation and structure contractor based in Westmoreland; and William Graham Woodworks, a business located in Sherburne that specializes in commercial and residential wood restoration, installation, and repair, the OGS announced on April 8.
The DSDVBD was created by New York State government in May 2014 through passage of the Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business Act. The state currently has 1,330 certified businesses.
For a business to receive certification, one or more service-disabled veterans — with a service-connected disability rating of 10 percent or more from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (or from the New York State Division of Veterans’ Affairs for National Guard veterans) — must own at least 51 percent of the company. Other criteria include: the business has to be independently owned and operated and have a significant business presence in New York, it must have conducted business for at least one year prior to the application date, and it must qualify as a small business under the New York State program. Several more requirements also need to be met.
Oneida County hotel occupancy jumps in March
UTICA, N.Y. — Oneida County hotels registered a robust rise in overnight guests in March, as two other key benchmarks of business performance also improved.

Former Candor mayor sentenced to 60 days jail for theft
CANDOR — The former mayor of the Village of Candor in Tioga County has been sentenced to two months in jail for his theft of more than $23,500 in village funds. Eric Halstead, who was Candor’s mayor from 2012 until he resigned shortly after his arrest in July 2024, pled guilty on Jan. 10 to
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CANDOR — The former mayor of the Village of Candor in Tioga County has been sentenced to two months in jail for his theft of more than $23,500 in village funds.
Eric Halstead, who was Candor’s mayor from 2012 until he resigned shortly after his arrest in July 2024, pled guilty on Jan. 10 to grand larceny in the third degree.
New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli and the New York State Police Superintendent Steven James announced Halstead’s sentencing on April 14. Halstead was sentenced before Judge Adam R. Schumacher in Tioga County Court. As part of his sentence, he is barred from running for public office ever again. His guilty plea also required Halstead to pay full restitution.
“Halstead was elected to serve his community but chose instead to steal from it,” DiNapoli said in the announcement. “He now faces the consequences of his crime. Public corruption does lasting damage to people’s confidence in the institutions that exist to serve them.”
Halstead’s crime was uncovered when unusual entries referring to ATM withdrawals and a “Mayor’s discretionary fund” were found in the Village of Candor’s records. A subsequent investigation by DiNapoli’s office and law enforcement determined that Halstead stole $23,519 in village funds from February 2017 to May 2023. At random intervals he put money back into the village’s accounts totaling $19,302.
“The sentencing of Mr. Halstead demonstrates the vital collaborative work of our law enforcement partners focused on the same goal; holding those who break our laws accountable. The victims in this case are the people of New York who put their trust in the former village of Candor Mayor. I commend our State Police members, our partners at the Comptroller’s Office and Tioga County District Attorney’s Office for their commitment to investigating those who prey on the unsuspecting public for their own gain,” State Police Superintendent James said in the announcement.

OSWEGO — Oswego Health recently announced the launch of its new medical assistant certification program. This initiative is designed to provide current employees with a clear pathway to advance into clinical roles, equipping them with the skills and credentials to excel in health care while strengthening the local workforce, Oswego Health explained in an April
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OSWEGO — Oswego Health recently announced the launch of its new medical assistant certification program.
This initiative is designed to provide current employees with a clear pathway to advance into clinical roles, equipping them with the skills and credentials to excel in health care while strengthening the local workforce, Oswego Health explained in an April 8 announcement.
Oswego Health is implementing the medical assistant program in collaboration with Cengage and adhering to the standards of the National Healthcareer Association (or NHA). The program offers a flexible, online learning experience where employees will engage in coursework covering vital topics such as medical terminology, clinical procedures, and CPR certification while gaining hands-on clinical experience. Successful program completion will prepare participants to take the certified clinical medical assistant (CCMA) exam, Oswego Health said, ensuring they are well-equipped to thrive in various clinical settings across the health system.
The medical assistant program is designed to be completed in six to nine months, allowing employees to balance their studies with their current positions, the health system stipulated. Upon certification, employees will be eligible to transition into clinical positions in multiple departments throughout Oswego Health. The health system said it is investing $4,000 per employee to support this career growth and fund their participation in the certification program.
“We are dedicated to fostering a culture of growth and opportunity at Oswego Health. By offering programs like the Medical Assistant Certification, we empower our employees to advance their careers while enhancing the level of care we provide to our community,” Marq Brown, VP of human resources and chief people officer at Oswego Health, said in the announcement. “This is just one example of how we are reinvesting in our workforce and positioning ourselves as an innovative and supportive employer of choice in Oswego County.”
The first group of six Oswego Health employees began their training on April 15.
Most CNY sub- regions gained jobs in March compared to a year ago
The Syracuse, Watertown–Fort Drum, Binghamton, and Elmira regions all gained jobs between March 2024 and this past March. At the same time, the Utica–Rome and Ithaca metro areas lost jobs in that same 12-month period. That’s according to the monthly employment report that the New York State Department of Labor issued on April 17. The
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The Syracuse, Watertown–Fort Drum, Binghamton, and Elmira regions all gained jobs between March 2024 and this past March.
At the same time, the Utica–Rome and Ithaca metro areas lost jobs in that same 12-month period. That’s according to the monthly employment report that the New York State Department of Labor issued on April 17.
The Syracuse region gained 5,800 jobs between March of last year and March 2025, an increase of 1.9 percent.
Elsewhere, the Watertown–Fort Drum area added 800 jobs, a gain of 2 percent; the Binghamton region gained 500 jobs, a rise of 0.5 percent; and the Elmira area picked up 300 positions, an increase of 0.9 percent, in the same timeframe.
On the flip side, the Utica–Rome region lost 300 jobs, a dip of 0.2 percent, and the Ithaca area shed 200 jobs, a decline of 0.4 percent, in the past year.
New York state as a whole added more than 114,000 jobs, an increase of 1.2 percent, between March 2024 and this past March.
The state economy also gained more than 6,000 jobs, a 0.1 percent uptick, between February and March of this year, the state Department of Labor reported.

NNY Community Foundation’s Rock Charitable Fund supports 11 St. Lawrence County nonprofits
WATERTOWN — The Northern New York (NNY) Community Foundation in early April announced that 11 nonprofit organizations serving St. Lawrence County residents will share $148,460 in grant funding from its Rock Charitable Fund to preserve local history and maintain churches and cemeteries in the region. The legacy fund was established at the Community Foundation in
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WATERTOWN — The Northern New York (NNY) Community Foundation in early April announced that 11 nonprofit organizations serving St. Lawrence County residents will share $148,460 in grant funding from its Rock Charitable Fund to preserve local history and maintain churches and cemeteries in the region.

The legacy fund was established at the Community Foundation in 2019 through a bequest from St. Lawrence County resident and retired U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel Marjorie J. Rock, who passed away in February 2017 at age 96.
“Marjorie’s legacy continues to have a profound impact, ensuring that St. Lawrence County’s history, heritage, and community spaces are preserved for future generations,” Kraig Everard, the NNY Community Foundation’s director of philanthropy, said in the announcement. “Through support for these important projects, we honor her generosity and her deep connection to the place she called home.”
The following 11 St. Lawrence County organizations will share $148,460 in grant support:
• Notre Dame Catholic Church, Ogdensburg — $36,500 to support the restoration of a highly visible large stained-glass transept window.
• Unitarian Universalist Church of Canton — $25,040 to help replace two heating systems. Capital-reserve funding will cover up to 50 percent of the project.
• Bayside Cemetery Association — $20,000 to help restore an urn-bearing tower adjacent to the cemetery’s gatehouse building. This project provides for the restoration and stabilization of the sandstone gates and towers of the entrance to preserve this cultural and historic legacy.
• Clark-Robinson American Legion Post 68, Norwood — $16,133 to complete a floor-replacement project. Grant funding will support half the project budget while the Sons of the American Legion and the Legion’s Auxiliary will cover remaining costs.
• St. Olympia Orthodox Church, Norwood — $20,814 to support a restoration project and complete a facility assessment. Grant funding will help restore ceilings and walls in a side room and foyers. The total grant award includes up to $6,000 to consult with a preservation architect to create a preservation and restoration plan.
• Frederic Remington Art Museum, Ogdensburg — $10,587 to help replace the gift shop window, the largest window in the museum, which has deteriorated due to wood rot and other weather-related damage.
• Pierrepont Hill Cemetery Association — $6,533 to support planting Green Mountain Boxwoods along the north and east border of the property that will serve as a more aesthetically pleasing boundary.
• Town of Waddington — $5,680 to help conduct a building-condition assessment for the old Waddington Town Hall. Town officials plan to use the assessment as support for future funding applications that would seek repairs to preserve this historic building.
• Flackville Cemetery Association, Lisbon — $2,900 to help purchase top soil, grass seed, crusher run for driveway, tree removal, and monument work. The Cemetery Association and its cadre of volunteers are working to maintain the property for the benefit of the community it serves.
• United Methodist Church of Norwood — $2,600 to help stop rainwater runoff from further damaging the church’s historic steeple. As part of an ongoing capital-improvement project, immediate support is needed to preserve the historic steeple.
• Purmort Cemetery Corporation, Heuvelton — $1,673 to help remove a large dying maple tree and repair a large headstone in danger of toppling. The Town of Depeyster recently increased its support of the cemetery.
Since the Rock Charitable Fund began grantmaking efforts in 2019, it has awarded nearly $705,000 in grant funding to support 43 projects at 39 St. Lawrence County organizations, including churches, cemeteries, places of historical significance, and those supporting veterans of the U.S. military.

VIEWPOINT: 10 reasons to fit social media into your multi-platform selling strategy
Social-media platforms can be a daunting frontier for brands who are unfamiliar with how to leverage various platforms for brand awareness, customer education, and activation. Although platforms rise and fall in popularity, and their back-end tools often evolve, social-media marketing still holds the potential to meet a variety of objectives to marketers who can master
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Social-media platforms can be a daunting frontier for brands who are unfamiliar with how to leverage various platforms for brand awareness, customer education, and activation. Although platforms rise and fall in popularity, and their back-end tools often evolve, social-media marketing still holds the potential to meet a variety of objectives to marketers who can master their nuances.
Here are 10 ways to leverage social media within a multi-platform strategy:
1. Geofencing
Geofencing — the use of GPS technology to create a virtual geographic boundary, which then triggers an action when a mobile device enters or leaves a particular area — fills a variety of purposes for marketers. Mobile ads can be served to potential customers and clients who attend a fair, sporting event, open house — anywhere that would be relevant to their interests — showing where your brand is already activated.
It’s the friction-free, 21st-century version of a clipboard on which visitors write their home address or email by hand: not only can you serve ads to people during an event itself, but ads can be retargeted digitally to the same user after the event to keep your brand top of mind.
2. Creating personalized experiences
Social-media users are generally in the habit of checking and re-checking their social platforms. An ad on TikTok, Instagram, LinkedIn, or X can reach social users more continuously than an ad on any dot-com site they don’t visit as often.
The upshot: it’s easier to use cookies to tailor a personalized ad experience on these platforms with relatively little lag time since the last time they opened their favorite app.
3. Social-media ads can meet buyers at all stages of the journey
From awareness to consideration, conversion (research and evaluation) to retention, social-media ads have the potential to meet buyers at all stages of their journey. The potential for more continuous ad reach can effectively serve the buyers who journey from awareness to retention while checking their social feed intermittently over the course of a month, week, day, or hour.
Social media also offers immense potential for customers to serve as ambassadors and advocates for your brand. Its ability to generate referrals organically, without paid partnerships, can foster the most powerful word-of-mouth marketing campaign in your brand’s history.
4. Deeper conversion tools than other online ads
For some brands, quickly moving the buyer from one stage of their journey to the next is paramount. Social media helps here, too. For example, offering a 10-percent-off coupon can move the buyer from the consideration stage to the conversion stage in one click.
Remember that social-media users are accustomed to rapid-fire information processing. Going deeper in the consideration and conversation stages — through visual or written social posts that offer deadline-oriented messages, incentives, and stronger calls-to-action — often elicit instant movement out of the awareness stage.
5. Social text offers more opportunities than image-based ads
When it comes to social-media posts, forget character limits. Text-based ads allow for more space when the text is placed in an image than a text field on Facebook, for example. Written coupon codes and QR codes blend cleanly in an Instagram post with text in the image field.
These are just a few reasons why, compared to the average web/mobile ad, a well-designed social-media placement offers users a more holistic blend of headline, description, and visual elements.
6. Tools for social-media advertisers are always growing
AI-based options are expanding on all platforms in 2025, offering useful shortcuts to every copywriter and designer who’s ever wondered “can’t there be a faster way to do this?” Meta can now read visual ad copy and suggest things like “we noticed this coupon code ― would you like to use it in your ad?” X’s AI image generator, Grok, offers a native tool within the app for generating crisp, clean images in seconds.
Social-media platforms already provided easy opportunities for entry based on a variety of factors, including cost. Multiple social platforms are now providing recommendations that brands can consider to help optimize their messaging, such as AI-suggested text, making animations based on static imagery, and serving content and creative dynamically based on user demographics and how they typically receive information.
7. New platforms with new audiences pop up quickly
The social platform Bluesky saw its user base double from October 2024 to January 2025, an extreme example that highlights the potential for rapid growth of any social platform. It’s rarely a bad idea to scoop up a desired user handle (or two) on a new platform, but posting, buying ads, and engaging with users on a new platform can probably wait — unless it meets and aligns with the company’s marketing strategies.
When TikTok first offered ad buys, for example, its ad targeting was very broad. The platform initially didn’t make sense for advertisers that only used targeted geofencing or more niche audiences, but has since expanded its capabilities. Threads was expected to open up for advertisers by the end of 2024, but hesitation on the part of parent company Meta, potential advertisers, or both seems to have postponed those plans — for now at least.
8. Social platforms offer direct-sales platforms now
Amazon might have started with books, and TikTok with viral “dance videos.” Now, both platforms offer direct-sales platforms that can force legacy businesses to re-think every aspect of their online presence.
Instagram and Pinterest have also emerged as players in the direct-sales space. This should be a point of consideration for brands weighing whether to budget for influencers to promote on these platforms.
9. Speaking of influencers
Partnering with a trusted influencer who shares your values can be a simple matter of finding the right person on the right platform. As their direct-sales platforms have grown in popularity, TikTok and Amazon have gone over and above in their efforts to make influencers feel at home on their platforms.
The skincare company GoPure, for example, effectively built its name off TikTok. TIAA, a Fortune 100 financial-services organization, leveraged 50 NIL (name, image, and likeness) college athletes on Instagram and TikTok to create buzz around retirement equity. Sometimes the marriage between brand, influencer, and platform requires creative thinking.
10. Your competition might already be there
A number of independent journalists were among the first to amass large audiences on Bluesky when X amended its algorithm to suppress outside links. The early adopters who made the leap were predictably rewarded with engagement and traffic.
Scoping out the landscape of a new platform — even if it’s only new to your brand and potential audience — is never a bad idea before diving in head-first.
Andrea Ness is media strategy and oversight director at the marketing agency, ddm marketing + communications. She provides leadership and oversight to ddm’s media team.
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