Showing results for: user (page 57)
What Facebook’s new political ad system misses
Jeremy B. Merrill, Ariana Tobin, Madeleine Varner
Facebook announced a new system to make political ads more transparent. It’s got holes
Neighborhood social media platform Nextdoor makes us regret the internet
Nicole Karlis
A Twitter account mocking the petty grievance culture of Nextdoor becomes more popular than the real thing
Facebook opts to label political ads — but experts say their plan is deeply flawed
Shira Tarlo
Facebook's promise to restrict political ads prompts a flurry of new rules, often governed by opaque algorithms
DNA apps promise deeper insights for consumers — but at what cost?
Sarah Catherine Nelson
Users may want to know more than what’s in a basic report from a genetic testing company
Donald Trump was right: Trade wars are “easy to win”! For the Chinese, anyway
Andrew O'Hehir
In the chronicles of Trumpian bluster and gaslighting, his thoroughly pointless trade war holds a special place
In studying brain activity, a neuroscientist begins to crack the Yanny/Laurel mystery
Nicole Karlis
Brain measurements of a subject who could hear both words revealed something strange
4 ways “internet of things” toys endanger children
Marie-Helen Maras
Are toys sharing too much personal information?
How to master social media marketing in 2018
Salon MarketplaceCryptojacking spreads across the web
Pranshu Bajpai, Richard Enbody
Is someone else making money on your computer?
What would Roger Stone do?
Roger Stone
From menswear to political strategy, political strategist Roger Stone has strong opinions
Stormy Daniels savagely takes down Roseanne Barr’s alternative facts about her work in pornography
Shira Tarlo
Daniels fired back at the comedian, calling her an "ignorant tw*t" for spreading fake news about her career
Tax-funded mental health programs not always easy to find
Emily Bazar
In 2004, Californians approved Mental Health Services Act to help counties expand mental health care services
Michelle Wolf is right to reject the empty ritual of the forced apology — just ask Miley and Kathy
Mary Elizabeth Williams
A new day: Michelle Wolf isn't playing along and Miley Cyrus and Kathy Griffith are taking their old sorries back
Facebook announces new dating feature because romance isn’t dead
Shira Tarlo
Facebook's pivot to online dating makes sense; it has long served as the critical ingredient to get people swiping
NRA takes heat for banning guns at their annual meeting
Matthew Rozsa
NRA doesn't want guns in the arena during a speech by Vice President Mike Pence
The internet is designed for corporations, not people
Gordon Hull
Conversations on Facebook ethics are part of a bigger conversation about information architecture
Win your online privacy battles with this app
Salon MarketplaceHow to talk to teens about dealing with online creeps
Christine Elgersma
Use this script to kick off a conversation with your kid
Joy Reid: “I genuinely do not believe I wrote those hateful things”
Nicole Karlis
However, the MSNBC host can’t prove she was hacked either
Bike-share companies are transforming US cities — and they’re just getting started
Douglas Johnson
Bike-sharing offers bikes for short-term public rental from multiple stations in the city
MSNBC host Joy-Ann Reid claims her blog was “compromised” after alleged anti-gay posts surface
Rachel Leah
"We’re going to hit pause on Reid’s columns," the The Daily Beast says. Left-leaning MSNBC has yet to do the same
A new frontier in gun control: Can online sites be stopped from selling guns to criminals?
Amanda Marcotte
A court finds Armslist can be held liable after a mass shooter used the site to evade a background check
The law that made Facebook what it is today
Frank LoMonte
The Facebook story started long before Zuck's testimony
When virtual reality feels real, so does the sexual harassment
Jessica Buchleitner
In striving to make virtual reality as real as possible, this also means the worst of behavior feels as real too
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