Transparency is No Substitute for Free Speech
Companies like Twitter believe that conducting censorship for Turkey or Russia prevents them from getting blocked, but at what cost?
Weekly E-book: Open Access and the Humanities
Humanities have been much slower than science to adopt open access, even at the university level. Martin Paul Eve considers why in out ebook of the week.
Science for the People
A history of how the British Society for Social Responsibility in Science brought science out of the academy to the people.
The Red Plain
The dead return and some need guidance as Cole Hornaday’s novel continues.
FCC’s Latest Net Neutrality Proposal: Pros, Cons, and Question Marks
The FCC could help put some concerns to rest by sharing more details about its proposal with the public. So why haven’t they done so? Corynne McSherry reports.
Saved: How Addicts Gained the Power to Reverse Overdoses
Naloxone can reverse an otherwise fatal heroin overdose within minutes. Carrie Arnold meets the doctors who put this remarkable drug in the hands of the police, families and addicts—and saved thousands of lives.
Twenty-Eight Words of Hate, or Rotting in Hell/Guantánamo
Hell is other people…and Guantánamo. Abby Zimet reports.
The Raptured Soul Defies the Sword: Händel’s Theodora
Some thoughts on the Northwest Baroque Orchestra’s debut concert.
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