Tennessee Public School Sued After Suspending A Student Over Instagram Memes
Schools don't get to censor nondisruptive off-campus speech.
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.
"Disinformation" researchers alarmed by the injunction against government meddling with social media content admire legal regimes that allow broad speech restrictions.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion about lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic with Institute for Progress founder Alec Stapp.
Abortion and privacy activists join over concerns that cell phones track our movements.
The response to the decision illustrates the alarming erosion of bipartisan support for the First Amendment.
The new energy drink has about as much caffeine as a large Starbucks coffee.
Plus: A listener questions last week’s discussion of the Supreme Court's decision involving same-sex wedding websites and free expression.
Plus: Groups ask Supreme Court to say public officials can't block people, latest jobs report shows openings down, and more...
Many politicians offer a simplified view of the world—one in which government interventions are all benefits and no costs. That couldn't be further from the truth.
Unfortunately, there is reason to doubt that the judge's decision will meaningfully constrain the feds.
Plus: Teaching A.I. about the Fourth of July, and more...
As beef prices increase, biotech could provide a cheaper and tasty alternative.
Excerpts from a dialogue with ChatGPT
If you can't force a web designer to serve a gay wedding, can you force a web platform to serve a politician?
How not to distribute federal funds
Asked about people in general, respondents perceive moral decline. But when asked about specific acts or people in their personal worlds, the data tell a different story.
No, it's not ethical to keep them from potentially lifesaving information about their babies—and themselves.
At last, a chance to watch elite athletes openly taking advantage of modern science.
Wired's "senior maverick" on his new book of accumulated wisdom, backlash against tech, and why the future still looks bright.
The enigmatic privacy obsessive is fighting to keep the cypherpunk dream alive.
Plus: Maine prostitution measure becomes law, "significant misconduct" in jail where Epstein hung himself, Mike Pence defends free markets, and more...
More than 90 percent of Americans already have access to high-speed internet.
The Mars Sample Retrieval program is now estimated to cost double than what was originally projected.
Americans are more afraid than excited about A.I. But these technologies offer far more to cheer than to fear.
Smith appreciated the beauty and allure of intricate systems.
"People are comparing A.I. to smartphones or the internet. I think it's much closer to the invention of fire or the wheel," says Flo Crivello.
The New York Times tries to blame social media for conspiracy theories that have been around for decades. Don't fall for it.
The ruling is likely the first by a state supreme court to undercut the popular forensic technique.
When your business relies on volunteer moderators and user-generated content, angry denizens can threaten the whole enterprise.
Plus: Texas’ new anti-porn law, Biden meets with A.I. critics, and more...
Doomsayers have a long track record of being wrong.
But don't expect taxpayers to rescue adventurers when they fail, either.
Caitlin Long's Custodia Bank will hold 108 percent of customer funds on deposit...if the Federal Reserve will allow it to open.
We once ranked No. 4 in the world, according to the Heritage Foundation. Now we're 25th.
The ideal number of clicks to cancel an online subscription may be four or five instead of six, but we don't need government to make that decision.
Confirmation of Wuhan scientists as "patients zero" makes the lab leak theory look likely—and the misinformation police look like fools.