Donnacha DeLong, president of the National Union of Journalists, argues that those over-reacting to the NUJ's proposals to the Leveson Inquiry have got it wrong.
The fall of the Berlin Wall prompted the more optimistic proponents of globalisation to hail the advent of a new "borderless" world. Two decades later, however, borders and boundaries have acquired a political importance not witnessed even during the hottest period of the Cold War. Matt Carr considers why this has happened.
Musab Younis argues that our perception of the "battle for the internet" is skewed by our acceptance of a hierarchical network run in the interests of advertisers, whose ability to codify, individuate and manipulate large populations is being increased by the spread of social media.
On Wednesday, CERN physicists announced they may have discovered the Higgs boson, known as the elusive "God particle," launching feverish speculation about possibilities such as time travel. Not so fast, says Sebastian Meznaric.