Monthly archives: December, 2018

More than 4.1M students were in a school lockdown last year

Washington Post: “School shootings remain rare, even after 2018, a year of historic carnage on K-12 campuses. What’s not rare are lockdowns, which have become a hallmark of American education and a byproduct of this country’s inability to curb its gun violence epidemic. Lockdowns save lives during real attacks, but even when there is no …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Defense, Education

New on LLRX – Will America’s libraries miss out while Harvard grows still richer? Library endowment could help

Via LLRX.com –Will America’s libraries miss out while Harvard grows still richer? Library endowment could help. David Rothman is an indefatigable advocate for a national library endowment. He states: “Just ten Americans are together worth more than half a trillion dollars, and the assets of the top 400 U.S. billionaires added up to a cool …

Subjects: Economy, Education, Financial System, Libraries

NYT historical news clippings and photos via Google Cloud

Google Cloud: “For over 100 years, The New York Times has stored its historical news clippings and photographs in an underground archive lovingly named the “morgue.” Most of us keep stacks of pictures in our attic or basement. And media organizations are no different. The New York Times has archived approximately five to seven million …

Subjects: E-Records, Education, Intellectual Property, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Libraries

How Credit Cards are used to Finance Mass Shootings

How Banks Unwittingly Finance Mass Shootings: “The New York Times reviewed hundreds of documents including police reports, bank records and investigator notes from a decade of mass shootings. Many of the killers built their stockpiles of high-powered weapons with the convenience of credit. No one was watching. Mass shootings routinely set off a national debate …

Subjects: Economy, Financial System, Government Documents, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

In Talks With Elsevier UCLA Reaches for Novel Bargaining Chip

The Chronicle of Higher Education: In Talks With Elsevier, UCLA Reaches for a Novel Bargaining Chip: Its Faculty “…In a letter on Tuesday, campus officials asked faculty members to consider declining to review articles for Elsevier journals until contract negotiations “are clearly moving in a productive direction.” The letter also asked professors to consider publishing …

Subjects: Economy, Education, Knowledge Management, Libraries

The Top Free Online University Courses of 2018, Ranked by Popularity

Free Code Camp – The Top Free Online University Courses of 2018, Ranked by Popularity “The list…contains the top enrolled courses from the major MOOC providers: Coursera, edX, Udacity, and FutureLearn. Combined, these providers represent a big chunk of the MOOC learners (70+ million!)…You can also find this list on Class Central which I built …

Subjects: Education, Internet

Facebook’s New ‘Supreme Court’ Could Revolutionize Online Speech

Lawfare Blog: Facebook’s New ‘Supreme Court’ Could Revolutionize Online Speech – “The Supreme Court of Facebook is about to become a reality. When Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg first mentioned the idea of an independent oversight body to determine the boundaries of acceptable speech on the platform—”almost like a Supreme Court,” he said—in an April 2018 interview …

Subjects: Courts, Free Speech, Internet, Legal Research, Privacy, Social Media