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After consumer data is mined by companies, a hypothetical computer program would return the data to consumers so individuals can modify their buying habits in earth-friendly ways.
Only three percent of people who develop Alzheimer's inherit a rare, genetic early-onset form of the disease. But sussing out its genetic triggers could help to yield treatments for everyone.
Riding the rails with U.S. Amtrack may feel even slower after a Chinese train's latest record-breaking run. The unmodified passenger train reached a blistering 302 m.p.h.
The debate over net neutrality is reaching a new phase, says Matt Warman. One that depends on defining the nature of the Internet: is it a simple utility or is privileged access allowed?
Is being polite honest? Young adults aren’t quite sure. Being too polite or conscious of the feelings of others is a sign that you are out of touch with your core self, they say.
In contradiction to most cosmologists’ opinions, two scientists have found evidence that the universe may have existed for ever. One is Oxford's famous Dr. Roger Penrose.
Forget slashing tires. You can trick a cheating ex into thinking he has an STD...or worse. Lucy Knight on the strange, and often murky, market for cybervengeance.
Crucial to an entrepreneur's success is the idea that he or she can play their hand better than anyone else at the table, but what accounts for such a strong optimistic outlook?
Can the hypothetical X particle solve unanswered questions about the nature of matter: why is there more matter than antimatter, and where and what is dark matter?
The early 20th century was a boom time for the American drinks industry. Prohibition wrecked all of that, severely damaging American’s collective knowledge and experience of drinking.
John Pistole, head of the Transportation Security Administration, says the inconvenience of body scanners and pat downs is a small price to pay for safety.
Analytically, the task of deficit reduction is simple: cutting expenditures and raising rntaxes, says Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz in his plan to reduce long-term budget deficits.
A bacterium found in the arsenic-filled waters of a Californian lake is poised to overturn scientists' understanding of the biochemistry of living organisms, says Nature.
If you were to track the daily happenings that flatten people's moods, you would likely find rejection at the core.
We ought to make opt-out easy but beware of injuring the model that brings us free content.
We are full of the accumulated baggage of our idiosyncratic histories. From hiccups to wisdom teeth, the evolution of homo sapiens has left behind some glaring imperfections.
We can start changing attitudes to pay inequality by looking each other in the eye and asking each other what we earn – without pride, without bitterness.
Putting U.S. secrets on the Internet...requires a reconceptualization of sabotage and espionage — and the laws to punish and prevent them.
The Federal Reserve has made public an enormous trove of data about the emergency measures it took during the worst of the credit crunch and the ensuing recession.
The best way to avoid a new Korean War is to deter future North Korean provocations. Reducing U.S. forces in the region doesn't do that.