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Facebook is killing democracy with its personality profiling data

  • Written by Timothy Summers, Director of Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and Engagement, University of Maryland
Facebook's data know exactly what fits best in your mind.leolintang/Shutterstock.com

What state should you move to based on your personality? What character on “Downton Abbey” would you be? What breed of dog is best for you? Some enormous percentage of Facebook’s 2.13 billion users must have seen Facebook friends sharing results...

Read more: Facebook is killing democracy with its personality profiling data

Tariffs won't save American steel jobs. But we can still help steelworkers

  • Written by Morten Wendelbo, Lecturer, Bush School of Government and Public Service; Research Fellow, Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs; and, Policy Sciences Lecturer, Texas A&M University Libraries, Texas A&M University

President Donald Trump has been promising to save American manufacturing, and the steel industry in particular, since the presidential campaign. His attempt to follow through on that promise was the March 8 tariff increase on foreign steel and aluminum, arguing that the tariffs were necessary to protect U.S. industries and workers.

Trump joins a...

Read more: Tariffs won't save American steel jobs. But we can still help steelworkers

Buried, altered, silenced: 4 ways government climate information has changed since Trump took office

  • Written by Morgan Currie, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Digital Civil Society Lab, Stanford University, Stanford University

After Donald Trump won the presidential election, hundreds of volunteers around the U.S. came together to “rescue” federal data on climate change, thought to be at risk under the new administration. “Guerilla archivists,” including ourselves, gathered to archive federal websites and preserve scientific data.

But what has...

Read more: Buried, altered, silenced: 4 ways government climate information has changed since Trump took office

Eager to dye your hair with 'nontoxic' graphene nanoparticles? Not so fast!

  • Written by Andrew Maynard, Director, Risk Innovation Lab, Arizona State University
Subbing new risks for the current dyes’ dangers?Evgeny Savchenko/Shutterstock.com

Graphene is something of a celebrity in the world of nanoscale materials. Isolated in 2004 by Nobel Prize winners Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov, these ultrathin sheets of carbon atoms are already finding novel uses in areas like electronics, high-efficiency...

Read more: Eager to dye your hair with 'nontoxic' graphene nanoparticles? Not so fast!

On his 250th birthday, Joseph Fourier's math still makes a difference

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
Fourier's name is inscribed on the Eiffel Tower.philmciver/flickr, CC BY-NC

March 21 marks the 250th birthday of one of the most influential mathematicians in history. He accompanied Napoleon on his expedition to Egypt, revolutionized science’s understanding of heat transfer, developed the mathematical tools used today to create CT and MRI...

Read more: On his 250th birthday, Joseph Fourier's math still makes a difference

Some officials want to ban school suspensions – here's how that could backfire

  • Written by K. Juree Capers, Assistant Professor of Public Management and Policy, Georgia State University
Efforts to ban school suspensions to reduce racial disparities are on the rise, but experts warn they could backfire.pixelheadphoto digitalskillet/Shutterstock

When it comes to school discipline, the fact that low-income and minority students are more likely to get suspended than students who are white or more well off is nothing new.

In an effort...

Read more: Some officials want to ban school suspensions – here's how that could backfire

Merit matters in US immigration, but agreeing on what 'merit' means is complicated

  • Written by John Carson, Associate Professor of History, University of Michigan
A naturalization ceremony in Los Angeles. AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

Fierce debate over who deserves to be an immigrant to the United States has drawn on for decades.

Recently, President Donald Trump and hardliner Republicans have proposed overhauling the U.S. immigration system to focus principally on “merit-based” immigration. As they...

Read more: Merit matters in US immigration, but agreeing on what 'merit' means is complicated

Silver nanoparticles in clothing wash out – and may threaten human health and the environment

  • Written by Sukalyan Sengupta, Professor of Wastewater Treatment, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
There are nanometals in your washing machine.Evgeny Atamanenko

Humans have known since ancient times that silver kills or stops the growth of many microorganisms. Hippocrates, the father of medicine, is said to have used silver preparations for treating ulcers and healing wounds. Until the introduction of antibiotics in the 1940s, colloidal silver...

Read more: Silver nanoparticles in clothing wash out – and may threaten human health and the environment

Why Denmark dominates the World Happiness Report rankings year after year

  • Written by Marie Helweg-Larsen, Professor of Psychology, Dickinson College
Okay, we get it, you're happy – no need to rub it in.Very_Very/Shutterstock.com

The new World Happiness Report again ranks Denmark among the top three happiest of 155 countries surveyed – a distinction that the country has earned for seven consecutive years.

The U.S., on the other hand, ranked 18th in this year’s World Happiness...

Read more: Why Denmark dominates the World Happiness Report rankings year after year

MS-13 is a street gang, not a drug cartel – and the difference matters

  • Written by Steven S. Dudley, Senior Fellow, Center for Latin American and Latino Studies, American University

In October 2017, Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that pursuing the Mara Salvatrucha, a Salvadoran gang also known as MS-13, was “a priority for our Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces.”

“Drugs are killing more Americans than ever before, in large part thanks to powerful cartels and international gangs and deadly...

Read more: MS-13 is a street gang, not a drug cartel – and the difference matters

More Articles ...

  1. Trump believes he can make an Israeli-Palestinian deal. Don't hold your breath
  2. Kurdish troops fight for freedom — and women's equality — on battlegrounds across Middle East
  3. Why Americans are unhappier than ever – and how to fix it
  4. Recent stock market sell-off foreshadows a new Great Recession
  5. You're probably paying more for your car loan or mortgage than you should
  6. Sessions suing California is the latest battle in a centuries-old war for power over immigration
  7. A history of loneliness
  8. My Lai: 50 years after, American soldiers' shocking crimes must be remembered
  9. Black holes aren't totally black, and other insights from Stephen Hawking's groundbreaking work
  10. Xi's indefinite grasp on power has finally captured the West's attention – now what?
  11. Thomas Eakins: Brilliant painter, gifted photographer ... sexual predator?
  12. Just competing in March Madness is a fundraising win for the schools
  13. Americans should welcome the age of unexceptionalism
  14. Why Wikipedia often overlooks stories of women in history
  15. Stephen Hawking warned about the perils of artificial intelligence – yet AI gave him a voice
  16. Sustainable cities need more than parks, cafes and a riverwalk
  17. Zero tolerance discipline policies won't fix school shootings
  18. What is a tariff? An economist explains
  19. Fearless leader or lame duck? Putin's certain triumph heralds fresh uncertainty
  20. Pompeo's rise will make Mideast war more likely
  21. Can Haspel bring the CIA in from the cold?
  22. Haspel is Trump's chance to reset his bad start with the CIA
  23. Stephen Hawking as accidental ambassador for assistive technologies
  24. In Pennsylvania's 18th, a very important, unimportant election
  25. Colombian guerrilla leader ends controversial presidential bid, giving peace a chance
  26. Controversial brain study has scientists rethinking neuron research
  27. The man responsible for making March Madness the moneymaking bonanza it is today
  28. What to expect when a college assigns students to random roommates
  29. Does cloud seeding work? Scientists watch ice crystals grow inside clouds to find out
  30. Where does the controversial finding that adult human brains don't grow new neurons leave ongoing research?
  31. What the National School Walkout says about schools and free speech
  32. Why do gun-makers get special economic protection?
  33. Could the open government movement shut the door on Freedom of Information?
  34. How Trump can avoid the setbacks that doomed North Korean nuclear talks in the past
  35. Booze and basketball: Why binge drinking increases during March Madness
  36. Why bland American beer is here to stay
  37. People are stranded in 'transit deserts' in dozens of US cities
  38. This March Madness, we're using machine learning to predict upsets
  39. DeVos and the limits of the education reform movement
  40. Potent Mexico City earthquake was a rare 'bending' quake, study finds – and it could happen again
  41. El sismo que azotó a la Ciudad de México fue 'peculiar' y podría pasar de nuevo, según estudio
  42. 10 things to know about the real St. Patrick
  43. Why mental health treatment is not an easy solution to violence
  44. Teaching students how to dissent is part of democracy
  45. Trump-Hitler comparisons too easy and ignore the murderous history
  46. Celebrating Marion Walter – and other unsung female mathematicians
  47. What is March Madness – and the nonprofit that manages the mayhem?
  48. Embroidering electronics into the next generation of 'smart' fabrics
  49. Adult human brains don't grow new neurons in hippocampus, contrary to prevailing view
  50. Is the NRA an educational organization? A lobby group? A nonprofit? A media outlet? Yes