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The Conversation

Passwords, privacy and protection: can Apple meet FBI's demand without creating a 'backdoor'?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The San Bernardino terrorist suspect Syed Rizwan Farook used an iPhone 5c, which is now in the possession of the FBI. The iPhone is locked. The FBI wants Apple to help unlock it, presumably so they can glean additional evidence or information about other possible attacks. Apple has declined, and appears to ready to defy a court order. Its response...

Read more: Passwords, privacy and protection: can Apple meet FBI's demand without creating a 'backdoor'?

Five years after the Arab Spring, how does the Middle East use social media?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFree Syrian Army fighters on their smartphones.Jalal Al-mamo/Reuters

In 2011, the Arab Spring rocked many parts of the Middle East.

Regime change in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya saw the departure of long-established – seemingly untouchable – political leaders and inspired ripples of protest and disquiet in many neighboring Arab nations. The...

Read more: Five years after the Arab Spring, how does the Middle East use social media?

Former clerk on Justice Antonin Scalia and his impact on the Supreme Court

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

I was in Washington, D.C., over the weekend to attend memorial services for my old boss, Justice Antonin Scalia.

As one of his former clerks – 15 years ago now – I met his casket on the steps of the Supreme Court on a chilly Friday morning and witnessed thousands of people standing in line for three hours or more to get a brief glimpse...

Read more: Former clerk on Justice Antonin Scalia and his impact on the Supreme Court

How should we measure the size of a university's endowment?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe statue of John Harvard, the first benefactor of Harvard UniversityWally Gobetz, CC BY-NC-ND

Congress is rattling its saber at colleges and universities with endowments worth U$1 billion or more. Committees from the House and Senate have sent a joint letter to 56 private colleges and universities, asking for comprehensive information about...

Read more: How should we measure the size of a university's endowment?

Clean energy could save hundreds of billions in health costs every year

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIf the U.S. moved to electric vehicles, there would be a substantial cut in air pollution – and health benefits to go with it. thomanication/flickr, CC BY-ND

In Paris late last year, the countries of the world pledged to reduce emissions to keep global warming “well below a 2 degree Celsius” rise in global average temperatures...

Read more: Clean energy could save hundreds of billions in health costs every year

Has World War Three begun?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

A pallid version of a peace agreement is supposed to go into effect in Syria February 27. We wait with bated breath to see if the aid convoys can deliver relief to thousands of starving Syrians who have been awaiting food for months.

In principle, it should be a time for a degree of optimism, if not rejoicing. But, as we know, few of the parties to...

Read more: Has World War Three begun?

How do we know the Zika virus will cost the world $3.5 billion?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The mosquito-borne Zika virus has been declared a “Public Health Emergency of International Concern” by the World Health Organization.

The virus not only appears to severely harm unborn children but is also hurting the economies of many Latin American and Caribbean countries. The World Bank estimates Zika will cost the world US$3.5...

Read more: How do we know the Zika virus will cost the world $3.5 billion?

Zika: _Aedes aegypti_ mosquitoes love biting humans, and that's why they spread viruses so well

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

While researchers work to develop a Zika virus vaccine to combat the outbreak spreading through South America, efforts to control the spread of the virus are focusing on the mosquito Aedes aegypti.

This particular mosquito is especially good at transmitting disease from one human to another. Besides Zika, this mosquito is also a vector for dengue,...

Read more: Zika: _Aedes aegypti_ mosquitoes love biting humans, and that's why they spread viruses so well

More Articles ...

  1. Hospitals rationing drugs behind closed doors: a civil rights issue
  2. To meet the Paris climate goals, do we need to engineer the climate?
  3. A beginner's guide to sex differences in the brain
  4. A closer look at Rubio, Cruz and the Latino vote in Nevada
  5. Why do we pretend Supreme Court justices are anything but political officials?
  6. Why big tech companies are open-sourcing their AI systems
  7. U.S. mayors desperate to fix crumbling infrastructure but states, feds hold them back
  8. Making sense of the Scalia conspiracy theory
  9. Trump's South Carolina victory could make him unstoppable in GOP race
  10. Four reasons why Clinton's Nevada victory is important
  11. The GOP moves to South Carolina, the first red state battleground
  12. Malheur occupation is over, but the war for America's public lands rages on
  13. Extreme numbers: the unimaginably large and small pop up in recent experiments
  14. With bodies piling up, the war on Mexican journalists has no end in sight
  15. Obama may be a lame duck, but his final budget isn't
  16. DoD detainee photos raise disturbing questions about transparency
  17. Pregnant, in prison and facing health risks: prenatal care for incarcerated women
  18. Straight A students may not be the best innovators
  19. Solving 'Darwin's Paradox': why coral island hotspots exist in an oceanic desert
  20. When do children learn to write? Earlier than you might think
  21. Why statin users should still get the flu shot, even if cholesterol drugs make it less effective
  22. Five years of war in Syria: five lessons Western leaders haven't learned
  23. John Kasich's rhetoric versus his record in Ohio
  24. Curbing cravings: can kitchen chaos influence cookie consumption?
  25. Eying exomoons in the search for E.T.
  26. What Scalia's death means for environment and climate
  27. Our finances are a mess – could behavioral science help clean them up?
  28. Chicago police shooting data may reveal new ways to reduce deaths and racial disparity
  29. Hollywood's piracy problem
  30. Reimagining the Internet as a mosaic of regional cultures
  31. Is your child taking a test? When is the right time?
  32. The little-understood connection between Islamic terror and drug profits
  33. Will anyone be prosecuted in the Flint water crisis?
  34. Why the IRS was just hacked – again – and what the feds can do about it
  35. Trump's anti-trade tirades recall GOP's protectionist past
  36. Could FDA e-cigarette regulations help more people quit smoking?
  37. How satellites can help control the spread of diseases such as Zika
  38. How should the U.S. government help coal communities?
  39. There's a new addiction on campus: Problematic Internet Use (PIU)
  40. TPP trade pact still needs improvements to protect governments from foreign suits
  41. Four steps to appointing a Supreme Court justice
  42. Justice Antonin Scalia: more quotable than influential
  43. The Supreme Court just handed the next president a powerful lever to control U.S. climate policy
  44. Bernie Sanders isn't a woman, but is he a better feminist than Hillary Clinton?
  45. Ted Cruz's linguistic chutzpah
  46. Facing a physician shortage, can we leave medical school grads on the sidelines?
  47. In blocking EPA Clean Power Plan, is the Supreme Court wading deeper into politics?
  48. Why music education needs to incorporate more diversity
  49. Yes, robots will steal our jobs, but don't worry, we'll get new ones
  50. Are dating apps killing long-term relationships?