The Government Has Made College an Overpriced Scam
Thankfully, you don't need fancy dining halls or a college degree to have a good life or get a good job.
Thankfully, you don't need fancy dining halls or a college degree to have a good life or get a good job.
Just published, closing out our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech.
How cable TV transformed politics—and how politics transformed cable TV
Artificial intelligence poses the most risk when it is embedded in a centralized, tightly coupled organization. But it can facilitate decentralization too.
If you don't take Oliver Anthony's surprise hit song too seriously, it's a lot of fun. Regrettably, a lot of people are taking the song much too seriously indeed.
Plus: A listener inquires about the potential positive effects of ranked-choice voting reforms.
The founder of Custodia Bank discusses the future of bitcoin and banking.
Profs. Peter Henderson, Tatsunori Hashimoto, and Mark Lemley, just published in our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech; more articles from the symposium coming in the next few days.
Just published, in our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech; more articles from the symposium coming in the next few days.
Just published, in our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech; more articles from the symposium coming in the next few days.
"Is It a Platform? Is It a Search Engine? It's Chat GPT!," by Prof. Beatriz Botero Arcila, just published in our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech; more articles from the symposium coming in the next few days.
by Prof Jon M. Garon, just published in our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech; more articles from the symposium coming in the next few days.
by Prof. Nina Brown, just published in our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech; more articles from the symposium coming in the next few days.
Humanity has always adjusted to the reliability of new information sources.
Just published, in our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech; more articles from the symposium coming in the next few days.
Plus: A warning about trigger warnings, Biden blocks uranium mining near Grand Canyon, and more...
Just published, in our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech; more articles from the symposium coming in the next few days.
The plaintiffs in VanDerStok think that BATF's 2022 regulations defining certain gun-making kits as legally the same as guns overreached its constitutional authority.
Alex Gladstein on how "monetary colonialism" has crippled the Third World
The doomsday consensus around climate change is "manufactured," says scientist Judith Curry.
The Kids Online Safety Act imposes an amorphous "duty of care" that would compromise anonymous speech and restrict access to constitutionally protected content.
Plus: Why don't journalists support free speech anymore?
Unwired makes an unconvincing argument for heavy-handed tech regulation.
A new documentary film argues that the second-largest website on the planet is flooded with misinformation. Is that right?
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook at 1 p.m. Eastern this Thursday for a discussion with director Alex Winter about his new documentary The YouTube Effect.
Between A.I. and TikTok, the actors and writers will be returning to a changed industry.
People see a continuing role for the space agency, but mostly in national defense.
New research on Facebook before the 2020 election finds scant evidence to suggest algorithms are shifting our political views.
A boomer, a Gen Xer, and a Millennial discuss the causes and conflicts of today's generational gaps.
"Can someone quickly remind me why we were removing—rather than demoting/labeling—claims that Covid is man made," asked Meta's president for global affairs.
If you're getting Satoshi's name wrong, you might not know what you're talking about.
The E.U.’s Digital Services Act will encourage censorship around the world and even in the U.S.
It's a short-sighted approach that distracts us from the more important question.
The senators say they're creating an "independent, bipartisan regulator charged with licensing and policing the nation's biggest tech companies." What could go wrong?
Plus: Moralism is ruining cultural criticism, Biden administration mandates bigger plane bathrooms, and more...
The independent journalist talks about true press freedom, the Twitter Files, Russiagate, Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
As states continue to implement digital ID systems, it is essential that they build tools in ways that inherently protect civil liberties rather than asking citizens to just trust government officials.
Plus: court strikes down Arizona law against filming cops, GOP candidates want to cut Social Security for young people, and more...
Schools don't get to censor nondisruptive off-campus speech.
The country's favorite blue-collar champion calls attention to the 'skills gap' and asks why young men spend so much time online.
Plus: GOP candidate defends “limited role of government” in parental decisions for transgender kids, some common sense about Diet Coke and cancer, and more…
One thing is clear about Missouri v. Biden: The decision cannot be understood by viewing it through a polarized lens.
What should governments, private companies, and individuals do differently next time disaster strikes?
Plus: Few Americans support full abortion bans, a win for cryptocurrency in Ripple case, and more...
Plus: Steep drop in confidence in higher education, what The Bear can teach us about dynamism and bureaucracy, and more...
The gaming market remains competitive with a wide variety of options.