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OPINION

In defence of encryption for a digital future

Oped, Sally Wentworth, Published on 22/10/2025

» Encryption, the simple act of scrambling data so that it cannot be read by third parties, keeps us, our loved ones, and our communities safe by protecting everything from private messages to online-banking details and medical records. It is the foundation of trust in our digital society, as crucial for personal security as it is for national security.

OPINION

Reform lending laws

Oped, Postbag, Published on 03/09/2025

» Re: "Buy now, bankrupt later", (Business, Sept 1). Little is ever said about the so-called many (often SET-listed) prolific finance companies here, which charge very high interest rates, levy late fees very quickly, and impose other strict rules that are often, may we say, not very consumer-finance friendly.

OPINION

Are you a 'doomscroller' or 'hopescroller'?

Oped, Jennifer Mercieca, Published on 10/07/2025

» My students tell me that they don't sleep. They stay up all night endlessly scrolling their social media feeds. Their attention has been captured, but not by anything in particular, not really, they say. Like a lot of us, my students are chronic doomscrollers.

OPINION

Hubris a barrier

Oped, Postbag, Published on 08/05/2025

» Re: "Tourism officials wary of Vietnam", (Business, May 6). 

OPINION

Give equal jail care to all

Oped, Editorial, Published on 09/11/2024

» As the probe into Thaksin Shinawatra's questionable illnesses and treatment on the 14th floor of the Police General Hospital deepens, with several state officials already in hot water, so too do reports of a sick prisoner in jail on charges relating to a Section 112 violation being rejected hospital admission. What irony!

OPINION

'Time tax' rises despite modern tech innovations

Oped, Diane Coyle, Published on 04/07/2024

» Despite the rapid proliferation of artificial-intelligence chatbots and virtual assistants, finding an answer to a question that a company's software is not programmed to address can be frustrating. Searching through countless options on price-comparison websites for the best insurance policy or airline ticket can be equally exhausting. Yet, we tend to view this "time tax" as the cost of doing business in today's digitised global economy.

OPINION

Weighing in on trucks

Oped, Editorial, Published on 17/11/2023

» The outcome of the Royal Thai Police's probe into an overloaded lorry that caused a roadworks cover to collapse on Sukhumvit Road last week is simply a letdown. Instead of helping combat bribery in the transport sector, the probe has only raised more doubts over the integrity of the police.

OPINION

Coming clean on Thaksin

Oped, Editorial, Published on 26/10/2023

» By the time the Corrections Department and the Justice Ministry decided to communicate with the public about former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra's health, it was too little, too late. The agency's reputation has been badly tainted as a result.

OPINION

Curbing govt internet surveillance

Oped, Riana Pfefferkorn and Callum Voge, Published on 24/10/2023

» Government efforts to access private communications are nothing new. In decades past, such attempts at prying were often justified on national-security grounds. Today, however, policymakers point to child safety and disinformation as reasons to limit privacy protections. Established democracies are often leading this charge, inadvertently paving the way for the world's autocrats.

OPINION

Should the brain be blamed for rebellious urge?

Oped, Matt Qvortrup, Published on 22/02/2023

» Why do people take part in insurrections, like the Jan 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol, the storming of the presidential residence in Sri Lanka, or January's sacking of Congress, the Supreme Court, and the presidential palace in Brazil?