Not long ago, the internet mostly hunted for our attention with curiosity, novelty, and the lure of a click. Now it increasingly catches us through irritation, anger, and outrage. Oxford University Press named rage bait its Word of 2025, noting separately that usage of the term tripled over the year. Oxford University Press defines rage bait as content deliberately made irritating, provocative, or offensive to trigger anger in people — and thereby drive reach, comments, and traffic. Today we take a close look at this phenomenon.

Information bubbles are now one of the core elements of the digital environment: platforms personalize feeds, search results, and recommendations to keep users inside their comfortable version of reality for as long as possible. The result is that people living on the same street — or even in the same building — increasingly receive fundamentally different accounts of what is happening in the world. Today we examine why this problem will only get worse.

Healthcare systems differ widely in financing models, access to high-end technologies and nearly every aspect of care with probably one exception. Paperwork. It is unavoidable and merciless, in the US resident physicians spend an average of 45.6 minutes on the health records per patient. While the average ambulatory encounter runs 15–18 minutes of actual face time.