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An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


Flame Malware Required World-Class Crypto Abilities
From ACM News

Flame Malware Required World-Class Crypto Abilities

Flame appears to be the first public example of malware “in the wild” using a cryptanalytic attack on digital signatures using the MD-5 hash function.

War With Friends: Pentagon Eyes a Drone App Store
From ACM News

War With Friends: Pentagon Eyes a Drone App Store

The U.S. military has dozens of different types of drones in its arsenal. Each one has its own unique controller. And each of those various controllers flies a...

You For Sale: Mapping, and Sharing, the Consumer Genome
From ACM News

You For Sale: Mapping, and Sharing, the Consumer Genome

It knows who you are. It knows where you live. It knows what you do.

Google Reports 'alarming' Rise in Government Censorship Requests
From ACM News

Google Reports 'alarming' Rise in Government Censorship Requests

Western governments, including the United States, appear to be stepping up efforts to censor Internet search results and YouTube videos, according to a "transparency...

New Software Forecasts Noise Levels in a Street
From ACM TechNews

New Software Forecasts Noise Levels in a Street

University of Granada researchers are using neural networks to help predict and analyze urban noise.  

'No-Sleep Energy Bugs' Drain Smartphone Batteries
From ACM TechNews

'No-Sleep Energy Bugs' Drain Smartphone Batteries

Purdue University researchers have proposed a method for automatically detecting software glitches in smartphones known as "no-sleep energy bugs," which can completely...

Honeynet Project Tackles Usb-Carried Malware Like Flame
From ACM TechNews

Honeynet Project Tackles Usb-Carried Malware Like Flame

The Honeynet Project has launched an initiative to build technology that traps malware spread from PC to PC via USB storage.  

Why Do Some Programming Languages Live and Others Die?
From ACM TechNews

Why Do Some Programming Languages Live and Others Die?

Researchers at Princeton University and the University of California, Berkeley are trying to determine why some programming languages become popular while others...

'facebook For Animals' Tested on Birds
From ACM TechNews

'facebook For Animals' Tested on Birds

Oxford University researchers have developed a way of analyzing the social networks that link individual animals to each other via their study of around one million...

What Have We Learned: Flame Malware
From ACM Opinion

What Have We Learned: Flame Malware

When the news about the Flame malware first broke several weeks ago, people from all parts of the security community, political world and elsewhere quickly began...

Inside Google's Plan to Build a Catalog of Every Single Thing, Ever
From ACM Opinion

Inside Google's Plan to Build a Catalog of Every Single Thing, Ever

The ugly truth is that computers don't know anything. They have no common sense.

How Depressives Surf the Web
From ACM News

How Depressives Surf the Web

In what way do you spend your time online? Do you check your email compulsively? Watch lots of videos? Switch frequently among multiple Internet applications—from...

Verifying Ages Online Is a Daunting Task, Even For Experts
From ACM News

Verifying Ages Online Is a Daunting Task, Even For Experts

Just how hard can it be to verify the age of a person online?

Why You Should Care About Robocup
From ACM News

Why You Should Care About Robocup

This month, soccer fans are glued to Euro 2012. But another prestigious championship is about to kick off, too. The game is slower—much slower—and the players fall...

New Grad Looking For a Job? Pentagon Contractors Post Openings For Black-Hat Hackers
From ACM Careers

New Grad Looking For a Job? Pentagon Contractors Post Openings For Black-Hat Hackers

Mikko Hypponen enjoys his position as the chief research officer at the Helsinki-based security firm F-Secure. He has no intention of leaving. But lately, he's...

Looking For the Perfect Tweet
From ACM TechNews

Looking For the Perfect Tweet

Researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles and Hewlett-Packard's HP Labs have developed an algorithm that weighs factors such as an article's subject...

Incentives For Drivers Who Avoid Traffic Jams
From ACM TechNews

Incentives For Drivers Who Avoid Traffic Jams

Stanford University researchers have developed the Congestion and Parking Relief Incentives system, which enables people driving in congested areas to enter a daily...

The New Science of Computational Advertising
From ACM TechNews

The New Science of Computational Advertising

University College London researchers recently conducted a review of computational advertising technology and outlined the challenges that it faces.  

'moneyball' For Basketball: Using Science to Change the Nba
From ACM TechNews

'moneyball' For Basketball: Using Science to Change the Nba

USC researchers are using SportVU optical tracking data, which uses video cameras installed in participating basketball arenas to capture real-time video footage...

British Authorities Unveil Plan For Mass Electronic Surveillance
From ACM TechNews

British Authorities Unveil Plan For Mass Electronic Surveillance

British authorities have unveiled a plan to compile details about every email, phone call, and text message in the United Kingdom.  
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