Author: Daniel Keem
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Wearable health devices aren’t always accurate
Smartwatches and rings give the illusion of clinical-grade data, but heart rate, sleep, and SpO2 readings vary widely from medical baselines.
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Collaborative divorce is mostly a marketing brand for expensive lawyers
Collaborative divorce promises a kinder, cheaper split. The branding is good. The fee structure and incentive design quietly favor the lawyers, not the couple.
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The Dark Side of the Jingle: Noise Ordinances, Bans, and Complaints Against Ice Cream Trucks
Ice cream truck jingles are nostalgic for some and a daily nuisance for others. Cities and HOAs are restricting them, and operators are pushing back.
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You’re probably taking the wrong kind of risk
Most people take risks that feel safe and avoid risks that actually matter. Here’s how to tell the difference and reallocate accordingly.
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The Palm Beach Police Investigation: The Local Cops Who Refused to Let It Go
Detective Joseph Recarey and Chief Michael Reiter built a meticulous Epstein case in 2005. Federal prosecutors gutted it. Their work still defines the record.
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NIL ruined college sports and we should say it
Name, Image, and Likeness rules promised fairness for athletes. What arrived was a chaotic auction that hollowed out the programs it was supposed to help.
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Algorithmic Underwriting: How AI Is Replacing the Traditional Payday Loan Application
Machine learning models now decide payday loans in seconds using thousands of data points. Faster underwriting isn’t always fairer underwriting. Here’s why.
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Confessions aren’t always reliable
False confessions account for a meaningful share of wrongful convictions. The interrogation methods that produce them are still routine in U.S. policing.
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The Challenge of Proving Intent
Intent is the linchpin of most criminal cases, and it’s almost impossible to prove directly. Here’s how prosecutors do it and where the system still fails.