Business, Science, & Tech

Annals of Gaming

How Fortnite Captured Teens’ Hearts and Minds

The craze for the third-person shooter game has elements of Beatlemania, the opioid crisis, and eating Tide Pods.

The Latest

Deep in the Honduran Rain Forest, an Ecological SWAT Team Explores a Lost World

Centuries ago, the City of the Monkey God was home to a mysterious civilization. Since then, the region has been overrun by jaguars, snakes, and other jungle creatures.

8:14 P.M.

A Rat Named Nemesis

Trying, and mostly failing, to study the life of New York City rodents.

May 19, 2018

At Last, Scientific Proof That Eurovision Makes People Happier

“Even an abysmal performance would be better than complete absence from the contest,” a group of British researchers concluded.

May 11, 2018

Free Will, Video Games, and the Profoundest Quantum Mystery

How an international team of experimental physicists used the unpredictability of the human brain to probe the nature of reality.

May 9, 2018

Fleeing the Lava from Hawaii’s Kilauea Volcano

“You don’t think about it until it comes,” one evacuee said. “It just goes to show you nothing is permanent in this world.”

May 8, 2018
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Spotlight

Is Capitalism a Threat to Democracy?

The idea that authoritarianism attracts workers harmed by the free market, which emerged when the Nazis were in power, has been making a comeback.

The Digital Vigilantes Who Hack Back

American companies that fall victim to data breaches want to retaliate against the culprits. But can they do so without breaking the law?

The Promise of Vaping and the Rise of Juul

Teens have taken a technology that was supposed to help grownups stop smoking and invented a new kind of bad habit, molded in their own image.

How Frightened Should We Be of A.I.?

Thinking about artificial intelligence can help clarify what makes us human—for better and for worse.

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