My Husband’s Rare Cancer
Dr. Ricki Lewis delves into her own husband’s rare type of cancer and ponders why some medical people are dismissive of science.
Restaurant Reviews by Seattle First-Graders
Pam Carter surveys a group of Seattle first-graders for their thoughts on fine dining around Seattle.
Sunday Comics
This Week in Sunday Comics: Portnoy and Hodge Podge return atop Rosebud the Jackalope. We wish.
FBI Wants to Remove Privacy Protections from its Massive Biometrics Database
Jennifer Lynch considers the absurdity of it all.
Broadband Privacy Can Prevent Discrimination: The Case of Cable One and FICO Scores
Neutrality also means more freedom from bias. Harold Feld studies an example in the case of FICO.
The Enemy Within: How Patent Lawyers, Their Media, and the Whole Patent Establishment Became an Enemy to Their Nations
In the patent microcosm — just like the military–industrial complex — a conflict of interests has been created wherein demand is being artificially created for undesirable things, typically for the empowerment of those who are already very powerful. Dr. Roy Schestowitz writes.
How to Not Love the National Parks to Death
More visitors than ever will head to national parks this summer. Here’s what we can do to keep the wild in wilderness—and set parks on a sustainable path for the next century.
Three Years After Snowden, Bipartisan Coalition Demands Congress End Warrantless Spying
“The Snowden leaks caused a sea change in the policy landscape related to surveillance,” writes watchdog, from the recent passage of the USA Freedom Act to the coming showdown in Congress over Section 702. Lauren McCauley reports.
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