protestsBusinessCurfews Can Quell Violence—but Also Spark More ProtestsBy Aarian MarshallIdeasMark Zuckerberg Believes Only in Mark ZuckerbergBy Siva VaidhyanathanCultureOn Instagram, Black Squares Overtook Activist HashtagsBy Arielle PardesSecurityHow the Pentagon’s Hand-Me-Downs Helped Militarize PoliceBy Brian BarrettBusinessProtests Renew Scrutiny of Tech's Ties to Law EnforcementBy Sidney FussellSecurity‘Nonlethal’ Crowd-Control Weapons Can Cause Serious HarmBy Louise MatsakisCultureTrump's Antifa Obsession Is an Unconstitutional DistractionBy Emma Grey EllisScienceIn Minneapolis, Neighbors Are Mobilizing—OfflineBy Megan MolteniBusinessFacebook Employees Take the Rare Step to Call Out ZuckerbergBy Steven LevyBusinessTech Companies Denounce Racism. Will Silicon Valley Change?By Aarian Marshall and Arielle PardesIdeasGoogle and the Cost of 'Data Voids' During a PandemicBy Francesca TripodiIdeasAnti-Quarantine Protests Are Dangerous and WeirdBy Whitney PhillipsSecurityIn Hong Kong, Which Side Is Technology On?By Zeynep TufekciBusinessAmazon Employees Will Walk Out Over Climate Change InactionBy Louise MatsakisBusinessUsing AI and Film to Track Tear Gas Use Against CiviliansBy Tom SimoniteBusinessWayfair Walkout, Facebook Data Value, and More NewsBy Lydia HorneBusinessWayfair Employees Are Walking Out. Here's WhyBy Louise MatsakisScienceThe Youth Climate Strike as Seen by Teen PhotographersBy Emily DreyfussScienceKids and Teens Strike Against Adults’ Climate Screw-UpsBy Emily Dreyfuss and Andrea ValdezBusinessWhere Did the 'Freedom From Facebook' Campaign Come From?By Louise MatsakisSciencePhysicists Condemn Sexism Through ‘Particles for Justice’By Sophia ChenCultureWhat It Takes to Make Congress Actually ListenBy Issie LapowskySecurityMeet Antifa's Secret Weapon Against Far-Right ExtremistsBy Doug Bock ClarkSecurityTech Companies Are Complicit in Censoring Iran ProtestsBy Firuzeh Mahmoudi and Fereidoon BasharMore Stories