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Apple can scan your photos for child abuse and still protect your privacy – if the company keeps its promises

  • Written by Mayank Varia, Research Associate Professor of Computer Science, Boston University
imageIf you have an Apple device and upload photos to iCloud, the company will use some clever math to sniff them for instances of child abuse – without actually looking at the photos.Vinicius "amnx" Amano/Unsplash

The proliferation of child sexual abuse material on the internet is harrowing and sobering. Technology companies send tens of millions...

Read more: Apple can scan your photos for child abuse and still protect your privacy – if the company keeps...

What are COVID-19 variants and how can you stay safe as they spread? A doctor answers 5 questions

  • Written by Lilly Cheng Immergluck, Professor of Microbiology, Biochemistry and Immunology, Morehouse School of Medicine
imageVaccination, masking and social distancing are tried and true ways to protect against COVID-19 infection.Marko Geber/DigitalVision via Getty Images

With the delta variant making up over 93% of COVID-19 cases in the U.S. at the end of July 2021, questions arise about how to stay protected against evolving forms of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Here,...

Read more: What are COVID-19 variants and how can you stay safe as they spread? A doctor answers 5 questions

The maximum human life span will likely increase this century, but not by more than a decade

  • Written by Michael Pearce, PhD Candidate in Statistics, University of Washington
imageBiologists and demographers are actively debating whether there is a natural cap on the human life span, and how high that might be.eucyln/iStock via Getty Images Plus

When Jeanne Calment of France died in 1997 at the age of 122 years and 164 days, she set a record for oldest human. That record still stands.

As statisticians who study demography,...

Read more: The maximum human life span will likely increase this century, but not by more than a decade

State policies can provide clear guidance on when to put on and take off masks – with benefits to health, education and the economy

  • Written by Julia Raifman, Assistant Professor of Health Law, Policy and Management, Boston University
imageAmid growing COVID-19 transmission, hospitalization and death rates, mask mandates are returning in some states.Luis Alvarez/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Although many people are eager to remove their masks, experts and much of the public increasingly recognize that indoor mask mandates can provide protection in areas where COVID-19 cases,...

Read more: State policies can provide clear guidance on when to put on and take off masks – with benefits to...

Claims of voter suppression in newly enacted state laws don't all hold up under closer review

  • Written by Derek T. Muller, Bouma Fellow in Law & Professor of Law, University of Iowa
imageActivists at a voting rights rally near the U.S. Capitol on Aug. 3, 2021. Drew Angerer/Getty Images

As states across the U.S. enact new laws relating to elections, there have been efforts to capture, in aggregate, the effects of those laws. Reports, found in both journalism and advocacy group statements, that new election laws will...

Read more: Claims of voter suppression in newly enacted state laws don't all hold up under closer review

5 tips from a play therapist to help kids express themselves and unwind

  • Written by Jessie D. Guest, Professor of Play Therapy, University of South Carolina
imageFantasy play, painting, playing made-up games and building with blocks are a few examples of free play. Mauro Pimentel/AFP via Getty Images

As many children go back to school after 18 months of global pandemic, social isolation and on-and-off remote learning, they too are feeling the additional stress and uncertainty of these times.

Children need...

Read more: 5 tips from a play therapist to help kids express themselves and unwind

Beyond the ratings, NBC's Olympics telecast showed video's future

  • Written by Michael J. Socolow, Associate Professor, Communication and Journalism, University of Maine
imageThe cameras at the Olympics supplied video to television broadcasts – and to online streams.AP Photo/David J. Phillip

NBC’s Olympic Games programming from Tokyo has proved a historic success.

Perhaps you’ve heard otherwise. Much reporting focused upon the decline in traditional Olympic TV ratings. On Twitter, Washington Post media...

Read more: Beyond the ratings, NBC's Olympics telecast showed video's future

New technology can create treatment against drug-resistant bacteria in under a week and adapt to antibiotic resistance

  • Written by Kristen Eller, PhD Candidate in Chemical Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder
imageEffective delivery of PNA therapies may offer a way to treat multidrug-resistant infections and other diseases.sorbetto/DigitalVision Vectors via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

A new technique my colleagues and I developed that can kill deadly, multidrug-resistant bacteria in real time...

Read more: New technology can create treatment against drug-resistant bacteria in under a week and adapt to...

Robots are coming for the lawyers – which may be bad for tomorrow's attorneys but great for anyone in need of cheap legal assistance

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Associate Professor of Law, University of Oregon
imageSign on the dotted line.AndreyPopov/iStock via Getty Images

Imagine what a lawyer does on a given day: researching cases, drafting briefs, advising clients. While technology has been nibbling around the edges of the legal profession for some time, it’s hard to imagine those complex tasks being done by a robot.

And it is those complicated,...

Read more: Robots are coming for the lawyers – which may be bad for tomorrow's attorneys but great for anyone...

Taxing bachelors and proposing marriage lotteries – how superpowers addressed declining birthrates in the past

  • Written by Amy Froide, Professor of History, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageIn England, children were seen as a way to replenish the military and sustain the economy.Universal Images Group via Getty Images

There’s growing awareness – and concern – about declining birthrates in the U.S. and other countries around the world.

Falling birth rates are usually seen as a sign of societal decline, a nation’s...

Read more: Taxing bachelors and proposing marriage lotteries – how superpowers addressed declining birthrates...

More Articles ...

  1. Why refusing the COVID-19 vaccine isn't just immoral – it's 'un-American'
  2. In Moscow, Idaho, conservative 'Christian Reconstructionists' are thriving amid evangelical turmoil
  3. Hip-hop holiday signals a turning point in education for a music form that began at a back-to-school party in the Bronx
  4. What is Pegasus? A cybersecurity expert explains how the spyware invades phones and what it does when it gets in
  5. What is ranked choice voting? A political scientist explains
  6. Shutting down school vaccine clinics doesn't protect minors – it hurts people who are already disadvantaged
  7. Is drinking good for you in any way? If not, why is alcohol legal for adults?
  8. People living with HIV face harmful stigma daily – DaBaby's rant was just more public than most
  9. The water cycle is intensifying as the climate warms, IPCC report warns – that means more intense storms and flooding
  10. IPCC climate report: Profound changes are underway in Earth's oceans and ice – a lead author explains what the warnings mean
  11. 3 wildfire lessons for forest towns as Dixie Fire destroys historic Greenville, California
  12. Why Andrew Cuomo's job is more vulnerable to scandal than Donald Trump's was
  13. ¿Creías que el trabajo en la oficina murió? Estas son las razones por las que regresarás a tu escritorio
  14. How parents can help kids deal with back-to-school anxiety
  15. Forget the American Dream – millions of working Americans still can't afford food and rent
  16. Machine learning plus insights from genetic research shows the workings of cells – and may help develop new drugs for COVID-19 and other diseases
  17. Dinosaur bones became griffins, volcanic eruptions were gods fighting – geomythology looks to ancient stories for hints of scientific truth
  18. Space travel for billionaires is the surprise topic with bipartisan American support – but not from Gen Z
  19. There's a religious revival going on in China -- under the constant watch of the Communist Party
  20. Making peace between Israelis and Palestinians – is now the time for a different approach?
  21. Why condos caught on in America
  22. We used peanuts and a climbing wall to learn how squirrels judge their leaps so successfully – and how their skills could inspire more nimble robots
  23. Tracking anniversaries of Black deaths isn't memorializing victims – it's objectifying them
  24. From CRISPR to glowing proteins to optogenetics – scientists' most powerful technologies have been borrowed from nature
  25. What is decentralized finance? An expert on bitcoins and blockchains explains the risks and rewards of DeFi
  26. 3 takeaways from Melinda French Gates and MacKenzie Scott teaming up to fund women's and girls' causes
  27. 234 scientists read 14,000+ research papers to write the upcoming IPCC climate report – here's what you need to know and why it's a big deal
  28. Olympic athletes excel at their sports but are susceptible to unproven alternative therapies
  29. 234 scientists read 14,000+ research papers to write the IPCC climate report – here's what you need to know and why it's a big deal
  30. What is a cult?
  31. Change to college application represents a step forward in how colleges can better support trans students
  32. Por qué los CDC de Estados Unidos recomiendan a los vacunados usar mascarilla
  33. Moon lacked a magnetic field for nearly all its history – new research resolves mystery sparked by rocks brought back on Apollo
  34. Giant sea bass are thriving in Mexican waters – scientific research that found them to be critically endangered stopped at the US-Mexico border
  35. Formerly incarcerated teens share their research and ideas on how to improve the juvenile justice system
  36. 4 low-cost ways to create safe public spaces where all kids can play
  37. Lyme disease protection: No vaccine yet, but an antibody shot could soon provide a season of immunity
  38. Biden moves to protect the Tongass, North America's largest rainforest, from logging and road building
  39. Earth's energy budget is out of balance – here's how it's warming the climate
  40. Earth's energy budget is out of balance – here's how that's warming the climate
  41. 5 ways Americans often misunderstand Cuba, from Fidel Castro's rise to the Cuban American vote
  42. With abortion heading back to the Supreme Court, is it time to retire the 'my body, my choice' slogan?
  43. Understanding evangelicalism in America today
  44. Does a Trump endorsement make a difference? Yes, but not the way a candidate hopes it will
  45. Emperor penguins may be headed for 'threatened' status under Endangered Species Act – they're at risk from climate change
  46. 98% of emperor penguin colonies could be extinct by 2100 as ice melts -- can Endangered Species Act protection help them?
  47. 98% of emperor penguin colonies could be extinct by 2100 as ice melts – can Endangered Species Act protection save them?
  48. Expansion of Second Chance Pell Grants will let more people in prison pursue degrees
  49. Declined invitations go over more graciously when lack of money is cited instead of lack of time – new research
  50. House committee investigating Capitol insurrection has a lot of power, but it's unclear it can force Trump to testify