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Quest to find bitcoin's founder highlights currency's biggest threat: the taxman

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageBut for how long?Reuters

Bitcoin enthusiasts have recently been roiled by claims that an Australian named Craig Wright and his deceased partner are the mysterious founders behind the cryptocurrency.

Of course, we’ve been down this path before. The New York Times, Fast Company, The New Yorker and Newsweek have all made similar claims about...

Read more: Quest to find bitcoin's founder highlights currency's biggest threat: the taxman

Far more microplastics floating in oceans than thought

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageMicroplastics sample collected in a plankton net trawl in the North Pacific subtropical gyre from the SSV Robert C Seamans.Giora Proskurowski/Sea Education Association, Author provided

Plastic pollution in the ocean frequently appears as seabird guts filled with cigarette lighters and bottle caps, marine mammals entangled in fishing gear and...

Read more: Far more microplastics floating in oceans than thought

It's too late for a two-state solution in Israel-Palestine

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageUS Secretary of Defense Ash Carter leaves Israel with business undone. July 21, 2015. Carolyn Kaster/REUTERS

Many obstacles stand in the way of a two-state solution to the conflict in Israel and Palestine.

At the moment, negotiations are a nonstarter for all parties.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has only a razor-thin majority in one of...

Read more: It's too late for a two-state solution in Israel-Palestine

Playing 'serious games,' adults learn to solve thorny real-world problems

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIt takes more than protest: demonstrators at a 2012 climate change conference in Doha, Qatar.Omar Chatriwala/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

It is never easy for interest groups with conflicting views to resolve public policy disagreements involving complex scientific issues. To successfully formulate complex treaties, such as the recent Paris Climate Change...

Read more: Playing 'serious games,' adults learn to solve thorny real-world problems

A small Norwegian city might hold the answer to beating the winter blues

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageAn aerial shot of Tromsø, Norway.JakobErde/flickr, CC BY-NC

Many dread the approaching winter – the darkness, frigid weather and lower energy levels that blow in along with cold fronts and snowstorms.

Inundated with headlines of looming “snowpocalypses,” most will begrudgingly grit out the winter months, grinding through...

Read more: A small Norwegian city might hold the answer to beating the winter blues

Malheur occupation in Oregon: whose land is it really?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe Malheur National Wildlife Refuge is part of a complicated history of land in the western US.US Fish and Wildlife Service, CC BY-SA

The Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, a 187,757-acre haven for greater sandhill cranes and other native birds in eastern Oregon, is usually a pretty peaceful place. But its calm was shattered on Saturday, January 2...

Read more: Malheur occupation in Oregon: whose land is it really?

Affordable Care Act's push to consolidate health care to curb costs may backfire

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe good old days.House call via www.shutterstock.com

In the United States, physicians practice medicine in a variety of settings, ranging from small solo practices to large, multispecialty group practices consisting of hundreds or even thousands of practitioners.

The tradition of the solo practitioner is one that is immediately familiar to most...

Read more: Affordable Care Act's push to consolidate health care to curb costs may backfire

At UC San Diego, retired professors are mentoring first-generation college students

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageA mentoring program can provide crucial support to students.JD Lasica, CC BY-NC

My mother cried when I told her I was changing my major from engineering to chemistry. Her fear was that I would never earn a living as a chemist.

When she heard a few years later that I planned to go for a PhD in chemistry, her only comment was,

So why don’t you at...

Read more: At UC San Diego, retired professors are mentoring first-generation college students

Why isn't learning about public health a larger part of becoming a doctor?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePublic health isn't a standard part of medical school curricula.Medical school class images via www.shutterstock.com.

Chronic conditions, such as Type II diabetes and hypertension, account for seven in 10 deaths in the United States each year. And by some estimates, public health factors, such as the physical environment we live in, socioeconomic...

Read more: Why isn't learning about public health a larger part of becoming a doctor?

More Articles ...

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  3. The secret to all great art forgeries
  4. Why stories matter for children’s learning
  5. As El Niño rains arrive, Los Angeles shunts precious water to sea
  6. Can pharmacists help fill the growing primary care gap?
  7. How dangerous people get their guns
  8. Pleasure is good: How French children acquire a taste for life
  9. What North America can expect from El Niño
  10. Outlook for 2016: middle-class woes, hopeful on wages, the fear factor
  11. Five things you should know about the Iowa caucuses
  12. Was 2015 such a terrible year? And what will 2016 look like?
  13. 2015, the year that was: education
  14. 2015, the year that was: politics and society
  15. 2015, the year that was: environment and energy
  16. 2015, the year that was: economics and business
  17. 2015, the year that was: arts and culture
  18. 2015, the year the was: health and medicine
  19. 2015, the year that was: science and technology
  20. The impersonal politics of the Guy Fawkes mask
  21. If Elon Musk is a Luddite, count me in!
  22. Why 2015 was the year that changed TV forever
  23. Paying people to stay away is not always the best way to protect watersheds
  24. After eight years, NASA's Dawn probe brings dwarf planet Ceres into closest focus
  25. Hoverboards and health: how good for you is this year’s hottest trend?
  26. Gift-giving taboos that aren’t as bad as you think
  27. How the Nazis co-opted Christmas
  28. From blood diamonds to dirty gold: how to buy gold less tainted by mercury
  29. A purported new mathematics proof is impenetrable – now what?
  30. Democratic debate takes on ISIS, guns and taxes
  31. Does it matter if there was really a Star of Bethlehem?
  32. What should America do with its $2-per-gallon gas windfall?
  33. Who is shaping notions of right parent involvement?
  34. Celebrating Christmas in an age of religious extremism
  35. The Force Awakens: a sugar high, but not a great movie
  36. Fed's rate rise shows it recognizes when the economic line of scrimmage shifts
  37. Forests gain long-awaited recognition in Paris climate summit
  38. What stories should you be telling kids this holiday season?
  39. Training to reduce 'cop macho' and 'contempt of cop' could reduce police violence
  40. A force awakened: why so many find meaning in Star Wars
  41. Can elephants retain their social bonds in the face of poaching?
  42. How Charles Dickens redeemed the spirit of Christmas
  43. The day after Paris: politicians hand the baton to green industries
  44. Could an end to Syria's civil war be in sight?
  45. How computers help biologists crack life's secrets
  46. Latest Star Wars film may be 'biggest movie of all time' – just not at the box office
  47. Experts weigh in on Fed hike: it was the right call, but will it work?
  48. Seven market signals that business needs before it embraces the Paris Climate Agreement
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  50. Does it matter that Greenpeace journalists lied in order to expose academics-for-hire?