Over the past 19 months, millions of Americans have discovered the benefits of working from home.
However, while Insider correspondent @AkiIto7 loves the freedom of working from home, she’s starting to worry that we may end up paying a heavy price for it. businessinsider.com/flexibility-of…
For college-educated professionals like @AkiIto7, work from anywhere is starting to look more like work from everywhere.
Decades of research have highlighted the dangers of giving people unfettered autonomy in the workplace: Rather than setting their own boundaries, employees often end up working longer and harder than before.
If all the workplace technologies of the past two decades had steadily chipped away at the boundary between work and home, then full-time work from home — enabled by those technologies — finally obliterated that boundary altogether.
But the rapid rise of working from home raises an important question: How can we create boundaries around work when we're doing our jobs from our bedrooms and carrying our offices with us on our phones?
Today, wacky C-suite titles are all the rage. Chief amazement officers, chief heart officers, and chief empathy officers are popping up across companies. businessinsider.com/companies-inve…
Your company might operate more compassionately because it hired a chief heart officer, but at the end of the day it's still a business, and that person can still fire you, Limsky writes. businessinsider.com/companies-inve…
Remote work sparked a surge in whistleblower complaints. There's more free time, less risk, and more support to call out wrongdoing when you work from home.
@BrittaLokting explains why so many remote workers are deciding to squeal on their companies. ⬇️
In 2017, Simon Edelman blew the whistle on his former employer, the US Department of Energy, as he leaked photographs to the news site @inthesetimesmag of a meeting between the Energy Secretary Rick Perry and the CEO of one of the largest coal companies.
Data from the Yellowstone Wolf Project hints that it's just the side effect of a protozoan inhabiting our brains in a failed attempt to make more protozoa, Adam Rogers (@jetjocko) writes. ⬇️ businessinsider.com/parasite-cat-f…
Curious about what motivates a wolf to leave its pack, Kira Cassidy, a field biologist with the Yellowstone Wolf Project, and her team hypothesized that a parasitic infection was egging them along. Specifically, a microorganism called Toxoplasma gondii. businessinsider.com/parasite-cat-f…
Toxo, as it's colloquially known, reproduces in cat species but leaps to other hosts like rats, hyena, people, and wolves. Once it takes up residence in a new animal, it’s linked to weird behavior — much of it spurred by an elevated appetite for risk. businessinsider.com/parasite-cat-f…