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Proximity Marketing: Often Creepy, but It Doesn’t Have to Be.

By Nora Dunne
October 26, 2017
Imagine you’re out shopping one Saturday afternoon. You walk into a department store and see a big sign that reads, “Get our app and save!” You love a good deal so you scan the QR code and select “download.” You scroll through a user agreement with about 10,000 words of legalese and click “agree.” Then you open the app and skim through a list of coupons, bookmark one or two and proceed through the store. You spend a few minutes browsing the shoe department and try on a pair.

NCAA’s Clamp Down on Athletes’ YouTube Use: Out of Touch and Out of Control?

By Randy Minkoff
November 6, 2017
November 6, 2017 The NCAA has more than its share of battles with the colleges it oversees through the years. These include grade tampering, recruiting irregularities, transfer regulations and a wide assortment of alumni/booster infractions. Most seem to funnel through one key element — money. Who gets it, who gives it and how much.

Implanting Microchips: Sign of Progress or Mark of the Beast?

By Terri Williams
November 15, 2017
November 15, 2017 This summer, Three Square Market (also known as 32M), a Wisconsin-based technology company, announced that it was implanting microchips under the skin of its employees. While the process was voluntary, at least 50 of the 80 employees at the company’s headquarters agreed to have a small chip — the size of a grain of rice — implanted between their index finger and thumb. The company held a “chip party” where participating employees received the $300 implant.

Who takes ethical responsibility for social media influence?

By Kate Baucherel
November 30, 2017
There’s a storm brewing, and social media is at its eye. For a decade, businesses and politicians have increasingly used both Twitter and Facebook as convenient mouthpieces. Twitter’s values declare: “We believe in free expression and think every voice has the power to impact the world.” Facebook’s mission is to “bring the world closer together.”

The Negative Lottery: Equifax and the Lost Art of Risk Management

By David Stockdale
December 11, 2017
You might not be aware of it, but there is a strong likelihood that you've recently been entered into a special lottery. This is not some kind of philosophical thought experiment. It’s a statistical fact. It is through no action of your own but the mere circumstance that you happened to have established credit in the U.S. economy.

Is It a Feature? Is it a Bug? No, It’s an Antifeature.

By Owen King
January 16, 2018
This past summer, as Hurricane Irma threatened Florida, Tesla Motors provided some of their customers with a free upgrade. It was a software update to some of their vehicles to increase those cars’ battery capacity, making it less likely that their owners would be stranded as they attempted to flee the giant storm.