NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Why we choose terrible passwords, and how to fix them

  • Written by Megan Squire, Professor of Computing Sciences, Elon University
imageHow secure are you?Rawpixel.com via shutterstock.com

The first Thursday in May is World Password Day, but don’t buy a cake or send cards. Computer chip maker Intel created the event as an annual reminder that, for most of us, our password habits are nothing to celebrate. Instead, they – and computer professionals like me – hope we...

Read more: Why we choose terrible passwords, and how to fix them

How crossing the US-Mexico border became a crime

  • Written by Kelly Lytle Hernandez, Associate Professor, History and African-American Studies, University of California, Los Angeles

It was not always a crime to enter the United States without authorization.

In fact, for most of American history, immigrants could enter the United States without official permission and not fear criminal prosecution by the federal government.

That changed in 1929. On its surface, Congress’ new prohibitions on informal border crossings...

Read more: How crossing the US-Mexico border became a crime

A digital archive of slave voyages details the largest forced migration in history

  • Written by Philip Misevich, Assistant Professor of History, St. John's University
imageA slave fortress in Cape Coast, Ghana.AP Photo/Clement N'Taye

Between 1500 and 1866, slave traders forced 12.5 million Africans aboard transatlantic slave vessels. Before 1820, four enslaved Africans crossed the Atlantic for every European, making Africa the demographic wellspring for the repopulation of the Americas after Columbus’ voyages....

Read more: A digital archive of slave voyages details the largest forced migration in history

Can blockchain technology help poor people around the world?

  • Written by Nir Kshetri, Professor of Management, University of North Carolina – Greensboro
imageNo need for a bank: Just a smartphone and a blockchain. Houman Haddad/UN World Food Program

Big Wall Street companies are using a complicated technology called blockchain to further increase the already lightning-fast speed of international finance. But it’s not just the upper crust of high finance who can benefit from this new technology.

Most...

Read more: Can blockchain technology help poor people around the world?

Too pretty to play? Stephen Curry and the light-skinned black athlete

  • Written by Ronald Hall, Professor of Social Work, Michigan State University

During a recent interview, Golden State Warriors Draymond Green discussed why players around the league have long doubted or dismissed the talents of his superstar teammate, Stephen Curry. But it was Green’s last point, mentioned almost as an aside – “And of course, Steph is light-skinned so [players] want to make him out to be...

Read more: Too pretty to play? Stephen Curry and the light-skinned black athlete

Two key takeaways from the pope's TED talk

  • Written by Massimo Faggioli, Professor of Theology and Religious Studies at Villanova University, Villanova University
imagePope Francis giving a TED talk.TED Conference, CC BY-NC

Pope Francis gave a talk at the TED international conference, which brings in influential speakers, in Vancouver on the evening of Tuesday, April 25.

The talk – a surprise for all in the audience – recapitulated the key themes of the Argentinian pope’s view of the human...

Read more: Two key takeaways from the pope's TED talk

How parents can help autistic children make sense of their world

  • Written by Allyssa McCabe, Professor of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Lowell
imagePeople with autism sometimes struggle to tell stories, but there are ways parents can help.Pressmaster / Shutterstock.com

Glenn, a high-functioning seventeen-year-old with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), comes home from school and tells his mother at dinner, “Allen was mean today.” His mother debates what to do. Should she ask for more...

Read more: How parents can help autistic children make sense of their world

The patients we do not see

  • Written by Dave A. Chokshi, Physician, New York University Langone Medical Center
imageAn empty wheelchair – or is there a person there we do not see?From www.shutterstock.com

In medicine, we speak of “seeing patients” when we are rounding in the hospital or caring for those who come to our clinics. But what about those people who may be sick but do not seek care? What is our responsibility to the patients we do...

Read more: The patients we do not see

How Woodrow Wilson's propaganda machine changed American journalism

  • Written by Christopher B. Daly, Professor of Journalism, Boston University
imageThe censorship board. George Creel is seated at far right.Harris & Ewing/Library of Congress

When the United States declared war on Germany 100 years ago, the impact on the news business was swift and dramatic.

In its crusade to “make the world safe for democracy,” the Wilson administration took immediate steps at home to curtail...

Read more: How Woodrow Wilson's propaganda machine changed American journalism

Can charity save journalism from market failure?

  • Written by Victor Pickard, Associate Professor, University of Pennsylvania
imageAs journalism loses its financial footing, it may need more support from foundations.Tim Karr/Free Press, CC BY-SA

A foundation created by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and his wife Pam recently announced it’s giving US$100 million to investigative news outlets and other initiatives, a rare boon for media institutions under duress. Even a...

Read more: Can charity save journalism from market failure?

More Articles ...

  1. Is charter school fraud the next Enron?
  2. New statistical methods would let researchers deal with data in better, more robust ways
  3. Is there any way to stop ad creep?
  4. National monuments: Presidents can create them, but only Congress can undo them
  5. Trump’s offshore oil drilling push: Five essential reads
  6. Is the death penalty un-Christian?
  7. Did artists lead the way in mathematics?
  8. The changing nature of sacred spaces
  9. Is the paper industry getting greener? Five questions answered
  10. One way Trump went big league in his first 100 days
  11. Should the giving styles of the rich and famous alarm us all?
  12. Federal role in education has a long history
  13. Physics of poo: Why it takes you and an elephant the same amount of time
  14. Would Trump's tax cut be the biggest ever? Fat chance
  15. Mine wars: The struggle for coal miners' health care and pension benefits comes to a head
  16. To have impact, the People's Climate March needs to reach beyond activists
  17. 100 days of presidential threats
  18. Syria’s forgotten pluralism and why it matters today
  19. 'Anumeric' people: What happens when a language has no words for numbers?
  20. Can Bill Nye – or any other science show – really save the world?
  21. Cutting EPA budget puts babies at risk – and makes little economic sense
  22. Police around the world learn to fight global-scale cybercrime
  23. Confused about Trump's border wall?: 7 essential reads
  24. Why cuts in funding for UN, climate change research imperil fight against malaria
  25. What the Trump team should consider before axing Meals on Wheels funds
  26. For restaurants looking to boost profits, it's often about everything but the food
  27. Can we design a better fuel economy label?
  28. Does cooperating with ICE harm local police? What the research says
  29. How statistical thinking should shape the courtroom
  30. Making robots that can work with their hands
  31. Trump's fiery brand of populism gets a makeover in first 100 days
  32. Trump's brand of economic populism gets a makeover in first 100 days
  33. Surprise! Round one of the French presidential election went pretty much as expected
  34. What the Leo Frank case tells us about the dangers of fake news
  35. Scientist at work: Bio-prospecting for better enzymes
  36. More people than ever before are single – and that's a good thing
  37. Water, weather, new worlds: Cassini mission revealed Saturn's secrets
  38. Why environmental groups need more volunteers of color
  39. Defending science: How the art of rhetoric can help
  40. Theresa May's snap election gamble, explained
  41. There's a new generation of water pollutants in your medicine cabinet
  42. What Gorsuch's conservative Supreme Court means for workers
  43. Why Native Americans do not separate religion from science
  44. Why are we dragging our feet when more automation in health care will save lives?
  45. US business schools failing on climate change
  46. Trump and the history of the 'first 100 days'
  47. How companies like United and Wells Fargo can win back consumer trust
  48. Ella Fitzgerald's flirtation with reefer songs
  49. Will a conservative Supreme Court give new life to the death penalty?
  50. The extraordinary return of sea otters to Glacier Bay