Interacting online today means being besieged by system-generated recommendations, but do we want what the machines tell us we want?
The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | July 29, 2022
The S.E.C. has yet to set clear rules on cryptocurrencies, leaving the industry guessing. Maybe that's how the agency wants it.
The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | October 7, 2021
Last Wednesday, a day after Google's C.E.O., Sundar Pichai, sat before the House Judiciary Committee to answer questions about the company's search engine,Donald...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | December 26, 2018
Acording to some estimates, about eighty-five per cent of the world's smartphones run on Google's Android operating system.
The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | July 20, 2018
The reason you've been receiving a steady stream of privacy-policy updates from online services, some of which you may have forgotten you ever subscribed to, is...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | June 12, 2018
Two years ago, Jack M. Balkin, a constitutional-law professor at Yale, published a fifty-page article in the U.C. Davis Law Review examining what he called problems...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | April 13, 2018
Between mid-December and early February, bitcoin lost more than half its value, dropping from a high of nearly twenty thousand dollars to just below seven thousand...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | February 22, 2018
The end of a politician's time in office often inspires a turn toward the existential, but few causes are as quixotic as the one chosen by James Vacca, who this...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | December 28, 2017
On the evening of October 30, 1938, a seventy-six-year-old millworker in Grover's Mill, New Jersey, named Bill Dock heard something terrifying on the radio.
The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | September 6, 2017
Back in 1980, Milton Friedman, the University of Chicago economist, starred in a public-television series called "Free to Choose," in which he presented his free...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | July 12, 2017
Sometime before dawn on March 29th, not too many hours after Congress approved legislation that allows Internet-service providers to sell your browsing historyInternet...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | April 5, 2017
Back in March, James Michael McAdoo, the power forward for the Golden State Warriors, tweeted out a photo of himself in the training room, sporting a pair of slick...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | June 16, 2016
It's welcome news that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has dropped its legal effort to force Apple to help it create a method of accessing data on a lockedSan...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | April 6, 2016
This summer, American Psychologist, the official journal of the American Psychological Association, released a special issue on the topic of bullying and victimization...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | October 26, 2015
Last Thursday, John Legere, the C.E.O. of T-Mobile, joined the ranks of the dozens of chief executives who, in the past few years, have had to inform their customers...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | October 9, 2015
It is possible, according to many sources, to become invisible, but you must be patient, methodical, and willing to eat almost anything.The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | September 1, 2015
Now that Congress has passed, and President Obama has signed, the U.S.A. Freedom Act, which places some limits on the domestic-surveillance powers of the National...The New Yorker From ACM Opinion | June 4, 2015