Risk Mitigation
NASA was dangerously cavalier about the dangers of the shuttle launches.
We've been somewhat lucky in the past...
As technology advances, the use of laser weapons in space becomes more likely.
A marine scientist explains the threat of the Loop Current, a 800-pound gorilla of Gulf hurricane risks.
Sick of remembering a random string of letters, numbers, and special characters?
An out-of-this-world idea could help reduce some of the risk of solar geoengineering.
Fire-retardant gels and slimes combine the best attributes of water and foam.
Morbid fatality statistics on digital highway signs seem to distract drivers, thus increasing the number of car crashes.
You can’t control external threats, but you can manage how you prepare and respond to the risk.
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COVID-19 and other microbes have shed light on disease spillover from animals to humans, but we can also spillback disease to wildlife.
Forty Starlink satellites were destroyed earlier this year in a geomagnetic storm.
60% of all potentially dangerous asteroids remain undetected.
Russia's cyberattacks against Ukraine have been prolific and ongoing for several years. The future of war may begin in cyberspace.
Can space ever be safe? What about the metaverse?
Someone breaks into a mailbox that stores letters waiting to be sent and grabs some of them in hopes they’ll contain a check that’s been filled in. That's just the start.
“Think defensively about how you can protect yourself from an almost inevitable attack, rather than assuming you’ll avoid harm.”
Between fake vaccine passports and targeted supply chain attacks, things are only getting more risky.
On Nov. 15, 2021, U.S. officials announced that they had detected a dangerous new debris field in orbit near Earth. Later in the day, it was confirmed that Russia had […]
“Should they strike, each of them has an energy at impact equal to all of the nuclear weapons on Earth combined."
Intrapreneurs tap into the spirit of entrepreneurialism to innovate and find personal meaning at work, but organizations need to celebrate their efforts more.
You may only have a few minutes to prepare.
While we can see many solar storms coming, some are "stealthy." A new study shows how to detect them.