Fair Use and Open Education

One of the strengths of the copyright system is the acknowledgement that although authors have rights to their work, others can use copyrighted work when it falls within the boundaries of Fair Use. With the growth of international online educational opportunities, Fair Use should be reevaluated. Until the Fair Use doctrine truly incorporates the educational uses needed for Open Education, traditional copyright hinders the development of equal access.

Why People Make Bad Decisions

Most people make most of their decisions in the hope of achieving the best outcome -- but because the amount of social, economic and cultural data to be parsed is too huge for most people to survey, many decisions come out pretty eccentric. "Our brains work like big coincidence detectors and use improbable coincidences to make decisions about what is real," as psychologist Tom Stafford explained. If a coincidence is neither big enough nor improbable enough, it may not register at all. MMR is a good example.

Major Garrett's 'What Took You So Long' Question

There's some buzz about Major Garrett's "What took you so long" question to President Obama today. The question was in reference to the President's toughening attitude toward Iran since Friday. If you listen to Garrett's entire question, it doesn't appear disrespectful. Most people won't know that, however, since the media isn't reporting it accurately.

Jamaica Radio Bans 'Daggering Songs'

The Commission assures the public that it continues to actively work with broadcast licensees, the Minister of Information, the Media Association of Jamaica, the Jamaica Association of Community Cable Operators, the Entertainment Fraternity and other stakeholders to bring a halt to the deluge of inappropriate content on the airwaves. The Commission has examined a number of songs, popularly referred to as "daggering songs." "Daggering" is a colloquial term or phrase used in dancehall culture as a reference to hardcore sex or what is popularly referred to as "dry" sex, or the activities of persons engaged in the public simulation of various sexual acts and positions.

Rothbard on Greenspan

There are so many people who call themselves free marketeers, or liberals, or libertarians that one has to always be careful about "alliances of convenience" -- consistency matters, and most people I know and read -- myself included -- are very inconsistent.

Demystifying the 'Wealth of Nations'

Economists from time immemorial have questioned and researched why some nations have been able to grow wealth and some have not. Transforming an underdeveloped economy to a developed economy requires long term strategic mapping as well as a huge amount of capital outlay.

Health is an R&D Problem

Our health care system is notoriously inefficient. Spending is too high, while quality is too low. Some patients undergo expensive treatments that provide little or no benefit. At the same time, other patients don't receive some inexpensive treatments that could materially improve their health.

It’s Hard to Live in the City

The American ran a really great article last week on some recent demographic shifts in America's biggest cities (esp. New York). Joel Kotkin documents how urban areas have increasingly transformed into playgrounds where an elite class entertains themselves, where the middle-class (and almost anyone with kids) can barely afford to hang around.

Dodd: I Now Support Gay Marriage

Public officials aren't supposed to change their minds. But I firmly believe that it's important to keep learning. Last week, while I was in Connecticut meeting with members of the gay and lesbian community from across the state, I had the opportunity to tell them what I've learned about marriage, and about equality.

Astronomy Pioneer Frank Low Dies

On June 11, Dr. Frank Low, a pioneer of infrared astronomy, died after a long illness in Tucson, AZ. Until the mid-60s, infrared astronomy was virtually impossible to conduct on Earth due to the absorption of infrared radiation (IR) waves by water vapor molecules in lower atmosphere. While working at Texas instruments in the early 1960s, Dr. Low developed a bolometer, an electomangetic radiation detector, that could absorb infrared wavelengths at high altitudes. Dr. Low was instrumental in the development of the first IR space-based telescope Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) which identified over 500,000 IR sources during its 10 month lifecycle in 1983.