Stalled Out
After a fashion, Cole Hornaday’s supernatural horror novel resumes.
Haiku 37
Hamlin’s new poem
About lofty ideals midst
Conflicted desires
Four Key Takeaways From Copyright Reform Committee’s Silicon Valley Listening Tour
The Copyright Reform Committee’s hearings in Silicon Valley gave citizens and lawmakers much to think about. Here are four of them. Parker Higgins reports.
The Ghastly Impermanence: Mark Time
The Mark Time & Ogle Awards have come and gone. Omar Willey reflects upon the nominees and the festival itself.
Your Vizio TV is So Smart That It Watches You
Your Vizio Smart TV is not only great for sports, it’s great for spying on you, too. Julia Angwin reports.
The Rigging of the American Market
Robert Reich discusses the not-so-free-for-you-and-me market that redistributes the wealth of the working class upward.
Immigrants and the Wages of Less-Skilled Workers
Does competition from immigrants lower the pay of less-educated native born workers? Conventional prejudice says yes. The reality is different. David Rosnick reports.
An Interview with Urdu Novelist, Rahman Abbas
An interview with Rahman Abbas on returning his State Sahitya Academy Awards for moral reasons.
Seattle continues business as usual trend when deploying surveillance systems
City of Seattle recently adopted sweeping privacy principles. So why do they thinking tracking individual drivers is not a surveillance system?
![Creative Commons License](https://www.seattlestar.net/wp-content/plugins/creative-commons/includes/images/by.png)
Except where otherwise noted, the content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.