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In a driverless future, what happens to today's drivers?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageAre today's drivers yesterday's horses?Winton Motor Carriage Company

Self-driving cars are becoming a very real technology. The latest Tesla car has an autopilot feature. The CEO of Uber has stated that he will buy every self-driving car Tesla can produce for a year (about 500,000). The Google self-driving car occasionally overtakes me as I cycle...

Read more: In a driverless future, what happens to today's drivers?

Odds are $1.5 billion Powerball winner will end up bankrupt

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe Powerball prize got so big that it wouldn't fit on some signs – and it keeps growing.Reuters

The U.S. Powerball lottery is holding a drawing this week for a jackpot that’s already reached US$1.5 billion. That’s after the 18 drawings held since November failed to yield a winner, causing the grand prize to swell to this record...

Read more: Odds are $1.5 billion Powerball winner will end up bankrupt

What Marco Rubio's heels say about fashion – and height – in American politics

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePresidential candidate Marco Rubio dons Cuban heels at a town hall meeting in Rochester, New Hampshire.Brian Snyder/Reuters

The uproar over Republican presidential candidate Marco Rubio’s decision to sport Cuban heels shows two things. First, height matters – at least, for skyscrapers and presidential elections. Second, a heeled boot...

Read more: What Marco Rubio's heels say about fashion – and height – in American politics

Can businesses succeed in a world of corruption (without paying bribes)?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageBribe or tip?Cash exchange via www.shutterstock.com

Every global business has to be careful about running afoul of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), the federal law that prohibits paying bribes to foreign officials to “obtain or retain” business.

The Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are...

Read more: Can businesses succeed in a world of corruption (without paying bribes)?

What is the right response to North Korea's fourth nuclear test?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageNegotiations between members of the United Nations Command and North Korean counterparts in 2013defenseimagery.mil/Wikimedia

The emerging consensus among technical experts is that North Korea did not conduct a successful hydrogen bomb test last week. The seismic activity that international monitoring stations detected on Jan. 5 was too small to...

Read more: What is the right response to North Korea's fourth nuclear test?

Can schools punish students for off-campus, online speech?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat are free speech rights of students when they are off-campus?Michael Coghlan, CC BY-SA

In January 2014, Reid Sagehorn, a student at Rogers High School in Minnesota, jokingly tweeted “actually yeah” in response to a question about whether he had made out with one of his high school teachers.

The public school, acting on the tweet, susp...

Read more: Can schools punish students for off-campus, online speech?

Explainer: Why can't anyone tell me how much this surgery will cost?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhy is it so hard to figure out what medical care costs?Bill image via www.shutterstock.com.

Thanks to rising annual deductibles and a push toward consumer-driven health care, people are increasingly encouraged to shop around for medical care. Many states or state hospital associations have price transparency initiatives, and there are a number of...

Read more: Explainer: Why can't anyone tell me how much this surgery will cost?

More Articles ...

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  2. That's what zhe said: mx-ing up the language of gender
  3. Congress' bipartisan Christmas gifts will lead to ballooning deficits
  4. Federal control of western land: two perspectives
  5. What makes a 'smart gun' smart?
  6. US–Saudi relations and the search for leverage
  7. The twisted roots of U.S. land policy in the West
  8. Can we curb the opioid abuse epidemic by rethinking chronic pain?
  9. What Pantone's colors of 2016 mean for the future of design
  10. How the homeless population is changing: it's older and sicker
  11. The Paris Agreement: the first _local_ global environmental pact
  12. Can 10,000-character tweets boost Twitter's flatlining user growth?
  13. Hong Kong copyright battle tests U.S. candidates' commitments to free speech
  14. Quest to find bitcoin's founder highlights currency's biggest threat: the taxman
  15. Far more microplastics floating in oceans than thought
  16. It's too late for a two-state solution in Israel-Palestine
  17. Playing 'serious games,' adults learn to solve thorny real-world problems
  18. A small Norwegian city might hold the answer to beating the winter blues
  19. Malheur occupation in Oregon: whose land is it really?
  20. Affordable Care Act's push to consolidate health care to curb costs may backfire
  21. How 3D printing threatens our patent system
  22. At UC San Diego, retired professors are mentoring first-generation college students
  23. Why isn't learning about public health a larger part of becoming a doctor?
  24. Obama's executive order on guns is mostly political theater
  25. More Mexicans are leaving the US than coming across the border
  26. The secret to all great art forgeries
  27. Why stories matter for children’s learning
  28. As El Niño rains arrive, Los Angeles shunts precious water to sea
  29. Can pharmacists help fill the growing primary care gap?
  30. How dangerous people get their guns
  31. Pleasure is good: How French children acquire a taste for life
  32. What North America can expect from El Niño
  33. Outlook for 2016: middle-class woes, hopeful on wages, the fear factor
  34. Five things you should know about the Iowa caucuses
  35. Was 2015 such a terrible year? And what will 2016 look like?
  36. 2015, the year that was: education
  37. 2015, the year that was: politics and society
  38. 2015, the year that was: environment and energy
  39. 2015, the year that was: economics and business
  40. 2015, the year that was: arts and culture
  41. 2015, the year the was: health and medicine
  42. 2015, the year that was: science and technology
  43. The impersonal politics of the Guy Fawkes mask
  44. If Elon Musk is a Luddite, count me in!
  45. Why 2015 was the year that changed TV forever
  46. Paying people to stay away is not always the best way to protect watersheds
  47. After eight years, NASA's Dawn probe brings dwarf planet Ceres into closest focus
  48. Hoverboards and health: how good for you is this year’s hottest trend?
  49. Gift-giving taboos that aren’t as bad as you think
  50. How the Nazis co-opted Christmas