Type: Video

Social Media Prank Shows Why You Need To Manage Your Privacy Settings ASAP

Many people keep their various social media accounts public and check in everywhere without ever giving a second though to the repercussions. This new hidden camera short from Jack Vale Films shows you why that may not be such a good idea. He approaches random people in public and reveals information about them that is available for anyone to see, and they are still amazed. Some folks even threatened to call the cops for “invasion of privacy”. So update your privacy settings or else you may be the next person approached by a creepy dude in public who may or may not have a hidden camera channel.

U.S. Crushes 6 Tons of Seized Ivory to Save Elephants

The U.S. government destroyed nearly six tons of ivory on November 14 by crushing the products into tiny pieces. This symbolic event aimed to bring attention to the corruption and illegal activity surrounding the killing of elephants for the ivory trade.

Physics Explained in Ten Seconds (Part 1: 5 videos)

This amazing series that talks about physics in just 9.999 seconds. As it turns out, 10 seconds is enough time to explain various physical phenomena: Time Dilation, Negative Temperature, The Tides, Farenheit, Celsius and Kelvin, Number of Stars in the Sky.

Do Vitamins Really Improve Health?

Vitamin supplements are everywhere, touting that a normal food diet doesn’t provide the entire nutrition we need. Supplementing with vitamins will make us healthier and will prolong our lives. But is this actually true? And could we be doing more harm than good by swallowing all these extracts each day?

Fukushima Radiation: What You’ve Heard are LIES!

You may have seen that image purportedly showing the alarming spread of Fukushima radiation across the Pacific. But dig deeper, and you’ll find that’s not the case at all. And that’s not the only piece of false information spreading about this scary nuclear disaster. Trace dispels the rumors and tells us what’s really going on.

The Age Bomb: Japan’s Aging Crisis

More than a quarter of Japanese people are over 65 and the number is rising. Soon more than 100 other nations will face a similar problem. Can they learn from the Japanese approach to their ageing demographic?