Curbing in a sentence as a noun

A reporter should have some facility in curbing his own bias.

Could this be a hint for curbing the expenses for this kind of people?No, it is a hint that you are making the wrong choices in life.

Does anybody else see why such patents are curbing innovation?

I naively notified Twitter thinking they would have interest in curbing this type of behavior, but I received the form corporate response of f-off.

1-2B is a heck of a reduction, presumably beyond mere curbing of procreation; as others ask - are you willing to sacrifice yourself and/or [potential] offspring to get there?

Limiting availability to more content, or in this case "curbing piracy", will not result in more sales and more money, because the user will not be willing to spend more than they were already spending.

This will remove the motivation for importing out-of-region discs while simultaneously curbing piracy.

As it stands, prison can't be included in any reasoning about consequences, except in an overly simplistic binary matter that has no effect at curbing any behavior once it is on the table.

What I meant to say is, electric battery technology will move humanity in the right step which I strongly believe will have a big impact on curbing climate change, which I feel is one of the biggest challenges humans collectively face.

Curbing definitions

noun

an edge between a sidewalk and a roadway consisting of a line of curbstones (usually forming part of a gutter)

See also: curb kerb