In Canada and Austria, there are some signs that the young Swedish activist is already reshaping the political landscape.
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The global financial system is under an increasing amount of pressure to get with the times and evolve to the needs of its customers. Crises like the 2008 housing bubble’s […]
GenTech aren’t happy about how their data is being collected and used.
A gift guide of the hottest educational toys for your budding scientist, engineer, or mathematician.
While legalization has benefits, a new study suggests it may have one big drawback.
How do you do justice to the truth in a headline-driven world?
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The massive Starlink satellite network from SpaceX is causing worries.
Japanese researchers carry out quantum teleportation within a diamond.
The results contradict the popular assumption that men react far more strongly to pornography.
Have swipes and scrolls replaced deep thinking?
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Your opinions about a large number of complex scientific issues are probably wrong. That’s why we have science. In 2016, an Italian virologist named Roberto Burioni was invited to appear on […]
Observations have been ruined; scientific satellites with the right-of-way have had to alter course. Here’s a how-to guide to doing better. In any field of business or industry, the prevailing rule […]
Your next payday could be all digital.
Peaceful protest in the face of Putin.
We’re bored, and we’ve lost our ability to be awestruck and amazed. Let’s fix that.
A new paradigm for machine vision has just been demonstrated.
It will take a crack team of scientists, programmers and philosophers to cure the online hate pandemic.
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Study finds that readers are still the best judge of fake news and misinformation.
Scholars often debate risking their livelihoods and personal safety in order to conduct research in certain areas.
The neuralnanorobotics are coming.
Former NYTimes executive editor Jill Abramson dissects the big problem with internet news.
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The axolotl is known to regrow its lower jaw, its retinae, ovaries, kidneys, heart, rudimentary lungs, spinal cord, and large chunks of its brain.
Eli Pariser explains why we can’t just think of civility as being polite to one another.
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IF your goal is to persuade people, that is.
What does the power of the online mob hold for tyranny and conformity?
A new study finds that societies use the same acoustic features for the same types of songs, suggesting universal cognitive mechanisms underpinning world music.
Less local newspapers are making the populace more uninformed.
Can algorithms use collective knowledge to make us all internet explorers?
Can changing who delivers your electricity to you solve a slew of problems?