The Attorney Fighting Revenge Porn
Carrie Goldberg is a pioneer in the field of sexual privacy, using the law to defend victims of hacking, leaking, and other online assaults.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
Carrie Goldberg is a pioneer in the field of sexual privacy, using the law to defend victims of hacking, leaking, and other online assaults.
Margaret Talbot New Yorker Nov 2016 35min Permalink
Revisiting California’s grape vines more than 70 years after the publication of The Grapes of Wrath.
Gabriel Thompson Virginia Quarterly Review Jul 2015 20min Permalink
Video-game designer Zoë Quinn in the aftermath of Gamergate, an act of web harassment with world-altering implications.
Noreen Malone New York Jul 2017 25min Permalink
A case of mistaken identity leads to the prosecution of an ordinary Eritrean for human smuggling.
Ben Taub New Yorker Jul 2017 20min Permalink
The haunted past of Amy Bishop, a University of Alabama neurobiologist who shot six colleagues during a staff meeting.
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker Feb 2013 55min Permalink
After a cop walks into his station and confesses to murder, an investigation reveals the toll of lethal force on both sides of the gun.
Wendy Gillis The Toronto Star Dec 2017 35min Permalink
The decades-long saga of Michael Morton, who was wrongfully convicted of killing his wife.
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly Dec 2012 1h50min Permalink
A young paleontologist may have discovered a record of the most significant event in the history of life on Earth.
Douglas Preston New Yorker Mar 2019 30min Permalink
Inside the compulsive world of airline rewards hobbyists, who spend the bulk of their lives flying around the world for free.
Ben Wofford Rolling Stone Jul 2015 25min Permalink
The need for a new letter on an old manual machine leads the author to the shop of Martin Tytell — repairman, historian, and high priest of typewriters.
Ian Frazier The Atlantic Nov 1997 25min Permalink
Hundreds of pages of documents obtained by Motherboard show how Facebook is using the Menlo Park Police Department to reshape the city.
Sarah Emerson Vice Oct 2019 20min Permalink
For eight hours last fall, Paradise, Calif., became a zone at the limits of the American imagination — and a preview of the American future.
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Jul 2019 45min Permalink
For hundreds of years, there were rumors of a shipwrecked treasure on the Oregon coast. But no one found anything, until Cameron La Follette began digging.
Leah Sottile The Atavist Magazine Jan 2020 35min Permalink
The inside story of the president and Deutsche Bank, his lender of last resort.
David Enrich New York Times Magazine Feb 2020 30min Permalink
How a dating app helped a generation of Chinese come out of the closet.
Yi-Ling Liu New York Times Magazine Mar 2020 30min Permalink
Humpbacks are some of the most watched whales in the world, and yet so much of their lives remains a mystery.
Bruce Grierson Hakai Magazine Jul 2020 25min Permalink
Many young South Koreans were beginning to live in isolation years before the rest of the world joined them.
Ann Babe Rest of World Jul 2020 15min Permalink
Each year, California’s child protective services agencies remove thousands of kids from their homes. The story of how some parents decided to fight back.
Exploring the dark and far-reaching consequences of our dependence on the Internet.
Tom Scocca New York Review of Books Oct 2020 25min Permalink
Long before the likes of Kim Kardashian, Marie Bashkirtseff sought to secure celebrity through curation of “personal brand.”
Sonia Wilson Public Domain Review Sep 2020 20min Permalink
The newsletter service is a software company that, by mimicking some of the functions of newsrooms, has made itself difficult to categorize.
Anna Wiener New Yorker Dec 2020 20min Permalink
An ambitious new system will track scores of species from space—shedding light, scientists hope, on the lingering mysteries of animal movement.
Sonia Shah The New York Times Magazine Jan 2021 15min Permalink
How warnings of AI doom gave way to primal fear of primates posting.
Adam Elkus The New Atlantis Apr 2021 20min Permalink
Deep in southwest Arkansas is a state park that charges visitors $10 to search for gems that can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Katherine LaGrave Afar May 2021 20min Permalink
What the sensation of uncontrollable itch and the phantom limbs of amputees can tell us about how the brain works.
Atul Gawande New Yorker Jun 2008 30min Permalink