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Europe's Controversial Digital Copyright Directive Finalized
From Communications of the ACM

Europe's Controversial Digital Copyright Directive Finalized

Considering the new liability risks for ISPs, search engines, and news aggregators under recent EU-wide mandatory rules.

Why American Workers Need to Be Protected From Automation
From ACM Opinion

Why American Workers Need to Be Protected From Automation

Bill de Blasio, New York City mayor and a candidate for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, says that as president he would issue a robot tax for corporations...

How Voice Assistants Reinforce the Tech Gender Gap
From ACM Opinion

How Voice Assistants Reinforce the Tech Gender Gap

Voice assistants are becoming commonplace in most homes and offices, but using women's voices for most devices may be doing more harm than good.

Online Voting
From Communications of the ACM

Online Voting: We Can Do It! (We Have To)

Seeking to make online voting more secure than today's flawed paper systems.

Internet Immunity and the Freedom to Code
From Communications of the ACM

Internet Immunity and the Freedom to Code

A call to preserve the capability of developing the next generation of Internet services.

The Success of the Web
From Communications of the ACM

The Success of the Web: A Triumph of the Amateurs

Connecting the unique factors that influenced the origination and subsequent development of the World Wide Web.

MUST and MUST NOT
From Communications of the ACM

MUST and MUST NOT

On writing documentation.

Block-based Programming in Computer Science Education
From Communications of the ACM

Block-based Programming in Computer Science Education

Considering how block-based programming environments and tools might be used at the introductory level and beyond.

Richard Feynman Was Wrong About Beauty and Truth in Science
From ACM Opinion

Richard Feynman Was Wrong About Beauty and Truth in Science

Richard Feynman was unquestionably one of the outstanding physicists of the 20th century. In the area of philosophy of science, though, Feynman didn't really shine—to...

Our Disabilities Have Made ­s Better Scientists
From ACM Opinion

Our Disabilities Have Made ­s Better Scientists

Scientific research is rarely designed to accommodate scientists with medical conditions or disabilities.

Should Data Scientists Also Learn Social Sciences?
From ACM Opinion

Should Data Scientists Also Learn Social Sciences?

The need of the hour is to become an active technological citizen which involves the ability to code and asking questions about how that code is going to affect...

API Copyrights Revisited
From Communications of the ACM

API Copyrights Revisited

Deliberating on the main arguments in recent sets of briefs filed in support of Google's U.S. Supreme Court petition.

Who Benefits?
From Communications of the ACM

Who Benefits?

Considering the case of smart cities.

A New Labor Market for People with 'Coolabilities'
From Communications of the ACM

A New Labor Market for People with 'Coolabilities'

How the unique perspective and enhanced strengths accompanying disabilities can benefit the workforce.

GOTO Rankings Considered Helpful
From Communications of the ACM

GOTO Rankings Considered Helpful

Seeking to improve rankings by utilizing more objective data and meaningful metrics.

Where Are All the Working Mothers in STEM?
From ACM Opinion

Where Are All the Working Mothers in STEM?

Parenthood is a key driver of gender imbalance in STEM. Almost half of all women in full-time science jobs leave or go part-time after the birth of their first...

An Interview with David Brin on Resiliency
From Communications of the ACM

An Interview with David Brin on Resiliency

Many risks of catastrophic failures of critical infrastructures can be significantly reduced by relatively simple measures to increase resiliency.

Global Data Justice
From Communications of the ACM

Global Data Justice

A new research challenge for computer science.

Encryption and Surveillance
From Communications of the ACM

Encryption and Surveillance

Why the law-enforcement access question will not just go away.

The FBI Wanted a Backdoor to the iPhone. Tim Cook Said No
From ACM Opinion

The FBI Wanted a Backdoor to the iPhone. Tim Cook Said No

In 2016, Tim Cook fought the law—and won.
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