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On today's show: Selling online data; fair treatment for female hockey players; bias in the jury box. (episode)
Congress has voted to overturn broadband privacy rules that required internet service providers to ask permission to collect, use, and sell personal user information.
The internet is often perceived as the great democratizer and great equalizer, but one author argues that the networks we rely on are designed by elites, for elites.
With Great Britain’s divorce from the European Union, there is growing anxiety in Ireland that the border between North and South will once again be a point of division.
The U.S. Women's National Hockey Team protested over unfair pay and treatment, but the sport's national governing body was able to reach an agreement with the team on Tuesday night.
Sports editor Dave Zirin argues that the NCAA is exploiting student-athletes, and that players should strike during the Final Four in order to change how they're treated.
Racially-biased juries can have their decisions thrown out. One former prosecutor argues that we should turn individual jurors to send an important message about an unequal system.
Andrew Ferguson, a law professor at the UDC David A. Clarke School of Law and author of "Why Jury Duty Matters," answers some frequently asked questions about jury duty.