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Washington Post

TikTok’s case is a stunning swing toward paternalism

Congress passed a law because it doesn’t trust Americans with freedom of speech.

Anupam Chandler and G.S. Hans argue that the Supreme Court should hear TikTok's appeal, arguing that attempts to ban the app violate the First Amendment.

Dec 12, 2024
New York Academy of Sciences

Loneliness and Social Media

Jeffrey Hall surveys the extant literature on the relationship between social media use and loneliness.

Dec 12, 2024

Serena Booth

Serena Booth is an Assistant Professor in Computer Science at Brown University.

Flipboard

Making Better Networks for Humans

Darius Kazemi and Erin Kissane discuss their recent work on the 'fediverse,' continuing to make the case for federated and decentralized social platforms.

Dec 11, 2024

Nora Trapp

Nora Trapp is an engineer at the Applied Social Media Lab, where she is deeply passionate about advancing privacy as a fundamental human right. With…

Open Observatory of Network Interference
Dec 9, 2024

Censorship Chronicles

The systematic suppression of independent media in Russia

Maria Xynou and coauthors document media censorship in Russia over the last year.

CommonWealth Beacon

Does AI interfere in our democracy?

Bruce Schneier and Nathan Sanders join Jennifer Smith to discuss ways to wield AI toward pro-democratic ends.

Dec 9, 2024
The Atlantic

Around the Globe, Governments Lean into AI

Mark Esposito examines how governments around the world are beginning to deploy AI.

Dec 8, 2024
LSE Blog

The elite contradictions of generative AI

Nick Couldry offers his vision of the future, and of AI's role in it.

Dec 6, 2024
Indiana Legal Studies

On Software Bugs and Legal Bugs

Product Liability in the Age of Code

Asaf Lubin points out interstate inconsistencies in legal definitions of 'products,' and contrasts the US's and the EU's approaches to considering software as products.

Dec 5, 2024
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