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The Independent Student Newspaper at Boston University

The Daily Free Press

The Independent Student Newspaper at Boston University.

The Daily Free Press

The Daily Free Press

Gianna Horcher | Senior Graphic Artist

Ask Abby (Or Analise): Please stop asking for my Snapchat

Analise Bruno April 8, 2025
Free yourself from the nonchalant, noncommittal shackles pushed on us by social media, and you’ll be on the right path to finding real love. 
Analise Bruno | Graphic Artist

‘Pretty Baby’ or ‘Pretty Terrible?’ — when it comes to children on social media, it’s the latter | On the Record

Addison Schmidt April 13, 2023
It rests on our collective conscience to avoid the unnecessary exploitation of a generation who cannot yet spell the word privacy — let alone understand its importance.
A surveillance camera. The Boston City Council’s Committee on Government Operations discussed an ordinance Thursday that would ban the use of face surveillance by the City. COURTESY OF PAWEL CZERWINSKI VIA UNSPLASH

City Council updates ordinance overseeing surveillance, information sharing at hearing

Olga Benacerraf October 12, 2021
The Boston City Council discussed surveillance oversight at a virtual meeting Thursday.
Yvonne Tang / DFP Staff

EDITORIAL: We should be wary of digital cities

Editors September 16, 2021
The digital city is rapidly approaching, but it may introduce more problems than it solves.
Alexia Nizhny/DFP STAFF

EDITORIAL: Community tactics that utilize home surveillance present dangers of vigilantism, racism

Editors April 20, 2021
Security cameras could potentially create a safer environment, but it also comes with many pitfalls.
Alexia Nizhny/DFP STAFF

EDITORIAL: The toxicity of tabloids can be lessened with respect, empathy

Editors March 29, 2021
Tabloids will never be fully ethical or accurate, but we can try to be respectful.
Alexia Nizhny/DFP STAFF

EDITORIAL: The spread of COVID-19 in zoos highlights continued unethical practices

Editors March 22, 2021
The COVID-19 outbreak in the San Diego Zoo is the most recent symptom of unethical animal captivity.
Alexia Nizhny/DFP STAFF

EDITORIAL: Remote work allows more accessibility, but poses risk for overworking, increasing disparity

Editors March 5, 2021
We don’t exactly know how increasing permanent remote work will impact the workforce — though it certainly comes with a number of risks and faults. But if employers can implement healthy practices and anticipate the technological needs of their employees, it could be an evolution for the better.
Alexia Nizhny/DFP STAFF

EDITORIAL: Boston Globe’s Fresh Start initiative is a step in the right direction

Editors January 25, 2021
Considering the number of people this program has the potential to help, the Fresh Start ushers us into the new year on a hopeful note. While it remains to be seen whether The Boston Globe will follow through with reforming its system for criminal reporting, it has set a necessary precedent for reexamining established journalistic practices.
EDITORIAL: Facebook is rightfully subpoenaed for its careless oversight of survey platform

EDITORIAL: Facebook is rightfully subpoenaed for its careless oversight of survey platform

Editors January 27, 2020
To a certain extent, we do have control over the type of information that goes into cyberspace and out of our hands. When Facebook users agreed to participate in a survey from the Cambridge Analytica app, “This is Your Digital Life,” they agreed to release certain answers for the purpose of academic research. What they did not consent to was giving a politically motivated firm all of their personal information as well as access to all of their social network’s personal information.
Danielle Citron, legal scholar at Boston University’s School of Law, was named a MacArthur Fellow on Wednesday for her work addressing cyber harassment. COURTESY OF JOHN D. & CATHERINE T. MACARTHUR FOUNDATION

Boston University Professor receives MacArthur Fellowship

Emma Lindsey October 1, 2019
Boston University Professor of Law Danielle Citron was named a MacArthur Fellow on Wednesday, an accolade awarded annually to U.S. citizens or residents working in any field that demonstrates “promise for important future advances” and “exceptional creativity,” according to the MacArthur Fellows website.
Mark A. Rothstein, a professor at the University of Louisville and founding director of the Institute for bioethics speaks during the “Is Patient Privacy Dead?” lecture on Tuesday afternoon. The lecture addressed questions about the future of health privacy in the 21st century. PHOTO BY DENGFENG YANG/ DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF

SPH guest lecturer discusses pros and cons of patient health privacy

Haley Lerner March 20, 2018

Mark Rothstein, the Herbert F. Boehl Chair of Law and Medicine at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, gave a lecture Tuesday afternoon on patient and health privacy in the 21st century....

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