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Feds: We can read all your email, and you'll never know

  • Written by Clark D. Cunningham, W. Lee Burge Chair in Law & Ethics; Director, National Institute for Teaching Ethics & Professionalism, Georgia State University
imageThe feds say they can secretly read all your email.FBI agent with computer via shutterstock.com

Fear of hackers reading private emails in cloud-based systems like Microsoft Outlook, Gmail or Yahoo has recently sent regular people and public officials scrambling to delete entire accounts full of messages dating back years. What we don’t expect...

Read more: Feds: We can read all your email, and you'll never know

The NFL joins the data revolution in sports

  • Written by Galen Clavio, Associate Professor of Sports Media; Director of the National Sports Journalism Center, Indiana University, Bloomington
imageThe NFL joins the Age of Metrics.Chart with field via shutterstock.com

In some potentially game-changing news for the way we understand professional football, the National Football League began the 2016 preseason by placing tracking sensors in its footballs for the first time. The chips are also in balls used in Thursday night games.

Over the past...

Read more: The NFL joins the data revolution in sports

Refugees, migration addressed in first-time UN summit: What was accomplished?

  • Written by Jeffrey H. Cohen, Professor of Anthropology, The Ohio State University

This week the United Nations General Assembly held the first-ever Summit for Refugees and Migrants.

According to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, the summit represented “a watershed moment to strengthen governance of international migration and a unique opportunity for creating a more responsible, predictable system for responding to large...

Read more: Refugees, migration addressed in first-time UN summit: What was accomplished?

Scientist at work: Tracking melt water under the Greenland ice sheet

  • Written by Joel T. Harper, Professor of Geosciences, The University of Montana

During the past decade, I’ve spent nearly a year of my life living on the Greenland ice sheet to study how melt water impacts the movement of the ice.

What happens to the water that finds its way from the melting ice surface to the bottom of the ice sheet is a crucial question for glaciologists like me. Knowing this will help us ascertain how...

Read more: Scientist at work: Tracking melt water under the Greenland ice sheet

Here's how to raise a child to be sympathetic

  • Written by Tina Malti, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Toronto
imageChildren learn to share and show concern from an early age.Angela Sevin, CC BY-NC

Parents and teachers might often wonder how to teach children caring toward others – more so when the world feels full of disagreement, conflict, and aggression.

As development psychologists, we know that children start to pay attention to the emotions of others...

Read more: Here's how to raise a child to be sympathetic

Was the Fed right to delay raising interest rates? Two scholars react

  • Written by Sheila Tschinkel, Visiting Faculty in Economics, Emory University

The Federal Reserve decided to leave its target interest rate unchanged at a range of 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent while suggesting a hike later in the year was very likely.

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which just concluded a two-day meeting in Washington, said a string of recent economic data shows growth is picking up but not enough...

Read more: Was the Fed right to delay raising interest rates? Two scholars react

Police shootings and race in America: Five essential reads

  • Written by Danielle Douez, Associate Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of stories related to policing and the Black Lives Matter movement.

Police and protesters clashed last night in Charlotte after Keith Lamont Scott, a 43-year-old African-American man, was shot and killed by a police officer.

Lamont’s death followed a shooting last week in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where...

Read more: Police shootings and race in America: Five essential reads

How corporate America can curb income inequality and make more money too

  • Written by Wallace Hopp, Associate Dean, University of Michigan
imageShare a little?Two fish via www.shutterstock.com

Scorpion met Frog on a river bank and asked him for a ride to the other side. “How do I know you won’t sting me?” asked Frog. “Because,” replied Scorpion, “if I do, I will drown.” Satisfied, Frog set out across the water with Scorpion on his back. Halfway...

Read more: How corporate America can curb income inequality and make more money too

Why isn’t science better? Look at career incentives

  • Written by Paul Smaldino, Assistant Professor of Cognitive and Information Sciences, University of California, Merced
imageExperiment design affects the quality of the results.IAEA Seibersdorf Historical Images, CC BY-SA

There are often substantial gaps between the idealized and actual versions of those people whose work involves providing a social good. Government officials are supposed to work for their constituents. Journalists are supposed to provide unbiased...

Read more: Why isn’t science better? Look at career incentives

Harvard study: Policy issues nearly absent in presidential campaign coverage

  • Written by Thomas E. Patterson, Bradlee Professor of Government and the Press, Harvard University

Years ago, when I first started teaching and was at Syracuse University, one of my students ran for student body president on the tongue-in-cheek platform “Issues are Tissues, without a T.”

He was dismissing out of hand anything that he, or his opponents, might propose to do in office, noting that student body presidents have so little...

Read more: Harvard study: Policy issues nearly absent in presidential campaign coverage

More Articles ...

  1. To curb North Korea's nuclear program, follow the money
  2. How the American online sex trade continues to thrive
  3. How can we get pharma companies to do more for global health? Try ranking them
  4. The rise of a conspiracy candidate
  5. How ZIP codes nearly masked the lead problem in Flint
  6. Why teen brains need later school start time
  7. Memo to next president: Here's how to avoid our history of energy policy mistakes
  8. Psychology expert: Why extremists use violence in their quest for significance
  9. Suffering from Fed rate hike anxiety? You're not the only one
  10. What is terrorism, and is it getting worse?
  11. 'Snowden,' a picture of the cybersecurity state
  12. Taking the GUESSwork out of video game satisfaction
  13. How Congress is failing on Zika
  14. How random is your randomness, and why does it matter?
  15. Should Wells Fargo execs responsible for bilking customers be forced to return their pay?
  16. Black Americans may be more resilient to stress than white Americans
  17. Why the Native American pipeline resistance in North Dakota is about climate justice
  18. As climate change alters the oceans, what will happen to Dungeness crabs?
  19. Clinton and Trump 2016: A battle to win over ambivalent voters
  20. Memetics and the science of going viral
  21. Why do the Paralympics get so little media attention in the United States?
  22. How a volcano in Indonesia led to the creation of Frankenstein
  23. What exactly does 'instantaneous' mean?
  24. Millions rely on cheap cloth masks that may provide little protection against deadly air pollution
  25. What do the Clinton charities actually do and where does their money go?
  26. With 10,000 Syrian refugees resettled in the US, are more on the way?
  27. Affording child care in America: Four essential reads
  28. Can headband sensors reduce underreported concussions in kids?
  29. The twilight of the mom and pop motel
  30. Considering ethics now before radically new brain technologies get away from us
  31. Science achievement gaps start early - in kindergarten
  32. Overcooling and overheating buildings emits as much carbon as four million cars
  33. Teaching the next generation of cybersecurity professionals
  34. Why you should dispense with antibacterial soaps
  35. Can Congress build bipartisanship through caucuses?
  36. A short history of presidents lying about their health
  37. Eager for some good economic news? New census report has you covered
  38. Women’s key role in Islamic State networks, explained
  39. Zika virus: Only a few small outbreaks likely to occur in the continental US
  40. Stumped about what to make of Obama's TPP trade deal? You're not alone
  41. New research shows how Native American mascots reinforce stereotypes
  42. Saving lives by letting cars talk to each other
  43. Here's how homeschooling is changing in America
  44. Most say they're okay with interracial marriage, but could the brain tell a different story?
  45. Scientist at work: Revealing the secret lives of urban rats
  46. Bioethicist: The climate crisis calls for fewer children
  47. Another cost of smoking: Sky-high insurance
  48. Disaster communications: Lessons from 9/11
  49. Miss America 1968: When civil rights and feminist activists converged on Atlantic City
  50. Putin, IS and military preparedness: Six essential reads