Technology It is more vital now than ever that we reclaim our digital privacy Ignore the use of your digital data at your peril: today’s personal data businesses are profiling you in ways that could have a profound impact on your life News
Health Covid-19 antibodies may give us partial immunity to SARS and MERS Antibodies from people who have had covid-19 or been vaccinated against it may give them partial protection against most other pathogens in the coronavirus family News
Life Is it time to do away with species names that honour odious people? Taxonomy is embroiled in its own version of the statues culture war, and the case for abandoning names such as Anophthalmus hitleri is strong, says Graham Lawton Comment
Humans These ancient sand drawings could be a fifth type of palaeoart Was this perfect circle with a central depression drawn by our ancestors in the sand, around 136,000 years ago? Palaeontologist Charles Helm certainly thinks so Regulars
Environment How we broke the water cycle and can no longer rely on rain to fall We thought Earth's water cycle was resilient to human meddling, but new analysis shows our supplies of water in plants and soil that are critical to generating rainfall are dangerously low. Here is what we must do to repair the damage Features
Comment Disputed Inheritance review: Why do we still bother with Mendel? Where does "father of genetics" Gregor Mendel fit in a post-genomic world? Gregory Radick has written an excellent reset Culture
Puzzle #236: In which order should my shopping be carried in? Can you solve this week’s logic puzzle, Picky eaters? Plus the answer to puzzle #235 Regulars
Young adults fall over if texting while walking, find scientists Feedback is disappointed to realise that older adults aren't considered in a piece of research about how texting while walking interferes with "locomotor tasks", but delighted to discover an academic with no fewer than 22 abbreviations attached to their name Regulars