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Gold! Gold! Gold from the Blockchain River!

By Kate Baucherel
April 20, 2018
In 2017, $5.6 billion was raised for blockchain-based development projects through a new funding mechanism dubbed an ‘ICO’ or Initial Coin Offering. By comparison, $240 million was raised by the same method in 2016, while it’s estimated $1 billion has already been invested in the first two months of 2018. There is a rush for digital gold and with it comes a hefty dose of snake oil. Ethics takes a back seat in the dash for cash as the authorities scramble to keep pace.

Sentence by Numbers: The Scary Truth Behind Risk Assessment Algorithms

By Nikki Williams
May 7, 2018
Although crime rates have fallen steadily since the 1990s, rates of recidivism remain a factor in the areas of both public safety and prisoner management.

Uncle Sam Wants Your Phone? Military Funds Smartphone App to Monitor Health

By Nikki Williams
June 1, 2018
The secretive Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has recently funded a program aimed at tracking the health of soldiers on the battlefield using sensors inherent in all smartphones. In addition to tracking sudden injury, the app will also monitor evolving health for early detection of disease.

Facebook, Cambridge Analytica and Why Your Data is Still for Sale

By Karis Hustad
June 7, 2018
The Location Privacy Protection Act should have been an easy bill to pass.

Digital Supermodels—Fake it Till You Make It

By Nikki Williams
June 15, 2018
Any girl who’s ever doubted her own attractiveness after comparing herself with the surgically-enhanced, photoshopped female beauty in today’s media now has a new nemesis — the digital supermodel. Taking perfection to a new level, the digital supermodel has made her first foray onto the fashion scene bolstered by a fake Instagram account and real-world press.

Accuracy and ethics in reporting the Boston bombing

By Randy Minkoff
July 2, 2018
In an era of instant news and reaction on social media sites, it is natural for journalists to use sites like Twitter, Facebook and Instagram as a gateway. But ethical questions have evolved: is it proper to use the information received without proper attribution? M<more importantly, it is safe to trust this information when you have not actually seen the event yourself?