See how we created a form of invisible surveillance, who gets left out at the gate, and how we’re inadvertently teaching the machine to see, think like us.
Instead of believing that ideas are strengthened by rational debate, much of our media and our online spaces behave as if ideas deserve to be insulated from criticism.
There is an omnipresent loneliness that many people recognise but cannot put their finger to: the feeling of being surrounded by voices online yet feeling unseen as a person.
Ana Fernández-Arcos, ​​42, is a neurologist specializing in sleep medicine and a researcher at the Pasqual Maragall Foundation in Barcelona. She talks to EL PAÍS by phone from her office at 11 a.m. on ...
Opinion
The Business & Financial Times on MSNOpinion

Reflections by S.M.A.: When prophecy becomes performance

Every election year in Ghana, a familiar ritual unfolds. Political rallies colour our streets, manifestos flood the airwaves, and debates rage in taxis, chop bars and living rooms. Yet alongside the ...
When a 62-year-old goes into withdrawal over Instagram, it’s time we confronted an uncomfortable truth: Social media is no longer harmless entertainment ...
Growing up before widespread digital connectivity fostered specific emotional strengths in earlier generations, including delayed gratification and higher frustration tolerance. These individuals also ...
Nappanee, Indiana, is the antidote to modern life’s chaos, a place where stress goes to die and peace comes naturally, like breathing or blinking. Let’s be honest: you’re probably stressed right now, ...
You can still work from home and earn a big salary. These six-figure jobs prove it, and many are available to those who have only a bachelor's degree or even less.
Criminals exploit AI for automated scams, hyper-realistic deepfakes that deceive victims or manipulate narratives, and ...
For years, big tech companies have placed the burden of managing screen time squarely on individuals and parents, operating on the assumption that ...