To protect our privacy, we should divorce the Duke Marriage Pact
By Niharika Vattikonda and Jess Edelson | February 13, 2021We’re here to crash your (algorithmically-selected) weddings.
We’re here to crash your (algorithmically-selected) weddings.
It’s clear that we’re seeing a new path forward for privacy advocates: the ballot box.
The reality is, right now, our data isn’t even treated as our property.
That camera shot of you panicking about a logic game on the LSAT? Still hanging out on the virtual proctor company’s servers, maybe even after you graduate from law school.
When the Twitter algorithm decides to resize a photo and hide non-white faces, it’s not just a fluke. It’s a major problem.
Students in 2020, many of whom do not remember a world without Facebook, are not the same as they were in 2004. We must hold Facebook's new product to higher privacy standards.
It’s time for Zoom (and others) to join the ranks of America’s critical infrastructure.
July 30 was National Intern Day, a holiday many interns experienced not in a New York City skyscraper or Washington think tank, but over Zoom, Slack, Microsoft Teams or any other technology their workplaces used to connect employees across states and time zones.
Collaborative research is a little bit harder when nobody can meet in person to collaborate.
How would you spend $100,000? One Duke club can teach you how to invest for positive social impact. The Duke Impact Investing Group (DIIG) recently secured $100,000 from University administration to invest in impact-oriented businesses. The goal of impact investing is to generate a social and environmental impact in addition to financial returns, according to the DIIG website.