The Feds Are Talking to Social Media Companies Again
Unless the Supreme Court rules against this practice, it is certain to continue.
Unless the Supreme Court rules against this practice, it is certain to continue.
The Department of Justice indicted the creators of Samourai Wallet, an application that helps people spend their bitcoins anonymously.
Congress is "silencing the 170 million Americans who use the platform to communicate," the company argues.
Historical teaching and research are being revamped by AI.
Is AI-written poetry cheating if you laboriously trained the AI?
Instead of lobbying for age verification and youth social media bans, parents can simply restrict their kids' smartphone use.
Historical teaching and research are being revamped by AI.
David Brin, Robin Hanson, Mike Godwin, and others describe the future of artificial intelligence.
Revolutionary AI technologies can't solve the "wicked problems" facing policy makers.
How did an obviously fabricated article end up in a peer-reviewed journal?
Proposed AI legislation would enshrine tech-killing precautionary principle into law.
Can artificial intelligence overhaul the regulatory system?
According to Grok, Robert Heinlein's novel reminds us that even a supercomputer can have a heart—or at least a well-programmed sense of humor.
When does a sufficiently advanced algorithm start to mimic our conception of God?
While the governor framed the legislation as necessary to protect Floridians from "the global elite," he's the real authoritarian.
Jesse Singal questions the science of "gender-affirming care."
Introducing Reason's artificial intelligence issue
No technology exists today to enable railroads to comply with the state's diktat, which villainizes a mode of transportation that is actually quite energy efficient.
The government always has seemingly good reasons to sidestep people’s rights.
AI developer Andrew Mayne explains why technology could create more jobs and lead to unprecedented economic growth.
Calls from the left and right to mimic European speech laws bring the U.S. to a crossroads between robust First Amendment protections and rising regulation.
This new school-to-parent pipeline allows parents to micromanage yet another aspect of their kids' lives.
AI developer Andrew Mayne explains why technology could create more jobs and lead to unprecedented economic growth.
Instead of trusting parents to manage their families, lawmakers from both parties prefer to empower the Nanny State.
Local hostility to free speech may become a global problem.
Weather and climate disaster losses as a percentage of U.S. GDP have not increased between 1990 and 2019, a new study finds.
One hundred Nobel laureates agree: The campaign against biotech-enhanced golden rice is a "crime against humanity."
The American Sunlight Project contends that researchers are being silenced by their critics.
Net neutrality rules have been instituted and repealed multiple times in the past 15 years, and yet internet use has thrived in each scenario.
The News2Share cofounder is revolutionizing news coverage.
Plus: Masking protesters, how Google Search got so bad, Columbia's anti-apartheid protests of the '80s, and more...
Science can detect increasingly small particles of plastic in our air and water. That doesn't mean it's bad for you.
Did Elizabeth Warren help cause hundreds of layoffs in Massachusetts?
Plus: A listener asks the editors to steel man the case for the Jones Act, an antiquated law that regulates maritime commerce in U.S. waters.
Plus: Homework liberation in Poland, Orthodox rabbi tells students to flee Columbia, toddler anarchy, and more...
Banning companies for doing business with China is a bad path to start down.
The 9th Circuit determined that forcibly mashing a suspect's thumb into his phone to unlock it was akin to fingerprinting him at the police station.
"This bill would basically allow the government to institute a spy draft," warns head of the Freedom of the Press Foundation.
Having someone take your fast-food order on a virtual call may seem strange, but the benefits speak for themselves.
Ethan Blevins of the Pacific Legal Foundation explains why. I myself have made similar arguments.
"I am not in the newsroom," the embattled NPR chieftain said over and over again.
Plus: Europoor discourse, NPR's woke CEO, a forgotten tech panic, and more...
Science can detect increasingly small particles of plastic in our air and water. That doesn't mean it's bad for you.
"Profound irreparable harm flows from the Act's chilling of adults' access to protected sexual expression," the filing reads.
The author of The Anxious Generation argues that parents, schools, and society must keep kids off of social media.
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