Since the Start of the War Against Hamas, the anti-Israel Sentiment on Western Campuses Is Slowing Cooperation With Israeli Researchers, According to Local Professors: 'There's a Refusal to Review Publications, a Rejection to Attend Conferences in Israel, and an End of Invitations to Conferences Abroad'
There have been legion studies published in recent years showing the apparent effects of constant clicking and doom-scrolling, many of them homing in social media such as Instagram and Tiktok and on their potential to harm children and teenage girls. But there may not, after all, be much truth to the links between too much surfing and poor mental health. Or at least nothing that can be confirmed, going by research done at the University of Oxford and published by the journal Clinical Psychological Science, which, in something of a revisionist outcome, found "links between internet adoption and psychological well-being" to be "small at most."
UBQ Materials, a Startup Based in a Negev Kibbutz, Did the Seemingly Impossible: It Converted Trash Into a Useful Plastic-like Material. On Oct. 7 Two of Its Employees Were Murdered; Others Lost Relatives or Were Uprooted. Then the Company Made Time Magazine's 'Best Inventions' List
The Battle Being Staged on Both Conventional and Social Media Between Israel and Hamas Over the October 7 Massacre and Subsequent War Isn’t Only About Swaying Public Opinion, but Also About Sowing Distrust in News Reporting Itself