Battle of the brands

https://twitter.com/ndimichino/status/1098621012990664705

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In praise of Twitter and SSRN

As we approach the end of the month, here’s a partial list of what we’re reading these days:

  1. Carissa Byrne Hessick on “Vagueness Principles.”
  2. Daniel B. Klein on “Adam Smith’s 1759 Rebuke of the Slave Trade.”
  3. Jonathan R. Macey & Joshua Mitts on “The Three Justifications for Piercing the Corporate Veil.”
  4. Michael Risch’s provocatively-titled paper “Sue First, Negotiate Later.”
  5. Larry Solum on “Artificially Intelligent Law.”
  6. D. A. Jeremy Telman on “John Marshall’s Constitution.”

Two notes: I stumbled upon these sundry scholarly papers via my Twitter feed. (Your Twitter feed is only as good as the persons you follow!) Also, all of these fascinating research papers may be downloaded free of charge via the Social Science Research Network (SSRN), though SSRN now makes you log into their platform in order to access their database of free papers.

Image result for ssrn twitterImage result for twitter logo

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A modest proposal (email ceasefire edition)

How much time do you spend responding to emails? Is this “email time tax” worth it? (Or does email bring you joy?) We recently stumbled upon this critique of email by Cal Newport, a computer science professor at Georgetown University. Below the fold is an excerpt from his excellent essay in which email is aptly described as a form of digital water torture: Continue reading

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Communism: the greater evil

Their forceful ideas inspired countless crimes against humanity and massive amounts of human suffering (here is a partial list): Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels published “The Communist Manifesto” in London on this day in 1848. File under: Garbage In, Garbage Out.

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Road trips

If you could take only one road trip in your life (assume a fixed budget of $2000 USD or 2000 euros for either trip), which one would you prefer: (a) Seattle to Boston or (b) Lisbon to Moscow?

https://i.redd.it/an6wp6eouih21.jpg

Hat tip: u/ttoxicite

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Coase to the rescue!

As my friend and colleague Alex Tabarrok (@ATabarrok), an economics professor at George Mason University, recently pointed out (see chart below), CO2 emissions in the USA are actually falling, but alas they are rising in the rest of the world, especially in fast-growing countries like China and India. Professor Tabarrok thus proposes a novel (?) Coasean solution to climate change: instead of Pigovian carbon taxes, what if rich countries (and rich men like Bill Gates, I would add) were to buy out or lease the legal rights to coal fields in China and India and then shut those fields down or convert them into parks? Here is an excerpt from Tabarrok’s ingenious proposal:

Coal use in China is very high and increasing. India has been canceling coal plants as solar becomes cheaper but coal is still by far the largest source of power in India. Thus, there is plenty of opportunity to buy out, high-cost coal mines in China and India. It might seem odd to buy Chinese and Indian coal mines but we buy Chinese and Indian labor, why not a coal mine? Moreover, it’s important to understand that the policy is to buy only up to the point that it benefits both parties. Buying coal isn’t foreign aid, it’s a pollution reduction plan just like a carbon tax or R&D investment and because we can buy barely-profitable coal mines and avoid the problem of leakage this is a low-cost method to reduce CO2 emissions.

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Happy holiday?

Do you have the day off? The third Monday of February is a federal holiday, but what should we call it? Read about the history of Washington’s Birthday here, via Wikipedia. Below is a portrait of George Washington by John Trumpbull.

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Taxonomy of fake national emergencies

Credit: @scottlincicome

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The Little Mars Rover that Could

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Visualization of Facebook’s terms of service

I printed out Facebook’s terms of service (10 point font or smaller) and attached all the pages together into a single master document, eliminating all blank spaces. (The picture on the bottom shows the first page of this massive undertaking.) Then I took this picture of this enormous monstrosity:

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