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Is anything ever 'forgotten' online?

  • Written by Keith W. Ross, Dean of Engineering and Computer Science at NYU Shanghai; Professor of Computer Science and Engineering, New York University
imageHow hard is it to find what people would prefer was forgotten?Magnifying glass with person and question mark via shutterstock.com

When someone types your name into Google, suppose the first link points to a newspaper article about you going bankrupt 15 years ago, or to a YouTube video of you smoking cigarettes 20 years ago, or simply a webpage that...

Read more: Is anything ever 'forgotten' online?

Americans think national parks are worth US$92 billion, but we don't fund them accordingly

  • Written by Linda J. Bilmes, Daniel Patrick Moynihan Senior Lecturer in Public Policy and Public Finance, Harvard University
imageViewing wildlife in Yellowstone National Park, WyomingNational Park Service/Flickr

One of the quirks of government accounting is that our nation’s most valuable assets – from aircraft carriers to interstate highways – don’t appear on any national balance sheet. In part this is because it is hard to put a value on them. How...

Read more: Americans think national parks are worth US$92 billion, but we don't fund them accordingly

NATO summit: Despite high public support for defense spending in Europe, discord over burden sharing emerges

  • Written by Richard C. Eichenberg, Associate Professor, Tufts University
imagePresident Obama with UK Prime Minister David Cameron.NATO

The NATO summit in Warsaw that wrapped up on July 9 demonstrated once again that the defense spending effort of European allies remains a contentious issue in the alliance.

On the eve of the summit, news reports indicated that American officials had prepared a briefing designed in part to...

Read more: NATO summit: Despite high public support for defense spending in Europe, discord over burden...

Why is it so hard to improve American policing?

  • Written by Frederic Lemieux, Professor and Program Director of Bachelor in Police and Security Studies; Master’s in Security and Safety Leadership; Master’s in Strategic Cyber Operations and Information Management, George Washington University

The use of lethal force by police officers in Minnesota and Baton Rouge has once again sparked protests over the violent dynamic between citizens and the police.

The ideal today is “democratic policing,” a concept developed by scholars like Gary T. Marx at MIT. Broadly, this refers to a police force that is publicly accountable, subject...

Read more: Why is it so hard to improve American policing?

A tragic reminder that policing takes a toll on officers, too

  • Written by John Violanti, Professor of Epidemiology and Environmental Health , University at Buffalo, The State University of New York

The recent police shootings and the murder Thursday of five police officers put a spotlight on the troubled occupation of policing. Recent public perception of police has reached a 22-year low in the United States, with a 2015 poll showing that about only 52 percent have a “great deal” of confidence in the institution. Among those who...

Read more: A tragic reminder that policing takes a toll on officers, too

Fed's focus on 'too big to fail' won't save taxpayers from next bank bailout

  • Written by Oz Shy, Senior Lecturer in Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Last month, the Federal Reserve announced that 31 out of 33 U.S. banks had passed its latest “stress test,” designed to ensure that the largest financial institutions have enough capital to withstand a severe economic shock.

Passing the test amounts to being given a clean bill of health by the Fed. So are taxpayers – who were on...

Read more: Fed's focus on 'too big to fail' won't save taxpayers from next bank bailout

Freaks, geeks, norms and mores: why people use the status quo as a moral compass

  • Written by Christina Tworek, Ph.D. Student in Developmental Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
imageDoes what's most usual seem inherently good to you?Fish image via www.shutterstock.com.

The Binewskis are no ordinary family. Arty has flippers instead of limbs; Iphy and Elly are Siamese twins; Chick has telekinetic powers. These traveling circus performers see their differences as talents, but others consider them freaks with “no values or...

Read more: Freaks, geeks, norms and mores: why people use the status quo as a moral compass

Should parents ask their children to apologize?

  • Written by Craig Smith, Research Investigator, University of Michigan
imageApologies can help improve the feelings of someone hurt.Andrew Yee, CC BY

Have you ever felt deserving of an apology and been upset when you didn’t get one? Have you ever found it hard to deliver the words, I’m sorry?

Such experiences show how much apologies matter. The importance placed on apologies is shared by many cultures. Diverse...

Read more: Should parents ask their children to apologize?

Public health research reduced smoking deaths -- it could do the same for gun violence

  • Written by Sandro Galea, Dean, School of Public Health, Boston University

After the most recent mass shooting in the U.S. at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said:

Other politicians echoed that sentiment. But prayers are not going to fix the fact that each year 30,000 deaths and many more injuries are caused by firearm violence. Recognizing gun violence for the public health problem...

Read more: Public health research reduced smoking deaths -- it could do the same for gun violence

Debunking one of the biggest stereotypes about women in the gaming community

  • Written by Cuihua Shen, Professor of Communication, University of California, Davis
imageWhen girl gamers do well, men will often find ways to discredit the success.'Gamer' via www.shutterstock.com

Although women now make up almost half of all video game players, the gaming community remains, in some ways, hostile toward women.

For example, the GamerGate controversy, which began in 2014 and involved a harassment campaign against...

Read more: Debunking one of the biggest stereotypes about women in the gaming community

More Articles ...

  1. There's more than practice to becoming a world-class expert
  2. What would Abraham Lincoln say to Donald Trump about religion, politics and being a 'Know Nothing'?
  3. Learning to live with wildfires: how communities can become 'fire-adapted'
  4. Can next-generation bomb 'sniffing' technology outdo dogs on explosives detection?
  5. Opioid crisis: How did we get here?
  6. Why are people starting to believe in UFOs again?
  7. Helping ex-prisoners keep out of prison: what works
  8. How video can help police – and the public
  9. Reducing water pollution with microbes and wood chips
  10. How today's crisis in Venezuela was created by Hugo Chávez's 'revolutionary' plan
  11. Is Trump right that the TPP will destroy millions of jobs and cede US sovereignty?
  12. Eid al-Fitr 2016: understanding the differences among America's Muslims
  13. American Islam: a view from the suburbs
  14. The curious history of 'Mein Kampf' in France
  15. Plate tectonics: new findings fill out the 50-year-old theory that explains Earth's landmasses
  16. Why river floodplains are key to preserving nature and biodiversity in the western US
  17. Most Americans believe we should have gun regulation. Here is why those who don’t are winning the debate.
  18. Can slower financial traders find a haven in a world of high-speed algorithms?
  19. Dr. Franklin, I presume? The founder who could have been our founding physician
  20. Fading hope: why the youth of the Arab Spring are still unemployed
  21. Playing a science-based video game? It might be all wrong
  22. Where are new college grads going to find jobs?
  23. Early-onset Alzheimer's: should you worry?
  24. Explaining the Istanbul bombing: Turkey's six foreign policy sins
  25. Green and cool roofs provide relief for hot cities, but should be sited carefully
  26. Is there life after debt for Puerto Rico?
  27. How social media can distort and misinform when communicating science
  28. Concussions and kids: know the signs
  29. How TV dating shows helped change love and marriage in China forever
  30. Bikini islanders still deal with fallout of US nuclear tests, 70 years later
  31. Whatever the soul is, its existence can't be proved or disproved by natural science
  32. Early days of internet offer lessons for boosting 3D printing
  33. Can outsiders help Venezuela in the midst of crisis, again?
  34. Is it time to eliminate tenure for professors?
  35. Why Iran's anti-American hardliners want to buy US-made Boeings for Iran Air
  36. Criminal injustice: Wounds from incarceration that never heal
  37. Thorny technical questions remain for net neutrality
  38. Intolerance on the march: do Brexit and Trump point to global rejection of liberal ideals?
  39. Sex and other myths about weight loss
  40. Just graduated? Does it make you feel like a grown up?
  41. Even scientists take selfies with wild animals. Here's why they shouldn't.
  42. What's lost when we photograph life instead of experiencing it?
  43. Un-Trapped: Supreme Court strikes down Texas law limiting abortion
  44. How do food manufacturers pick those dates on their product packaging – and what do they mean?
  45. How do children learn to detect snakes, spiders and other dangerous things?
  46. Explainer: how Panama Canal expansion will transform shipping once again
  47. License and registration, please: how regulating guns like cars could improve safety
  48. Bartering for science: using mobile apps to get research data
  49. The geography of Brexit: what the vote reveals about the Disunited Kingdom
  50. Supreme Court immigration confusion? Blame the U.S. Senate