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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.


Most U.s. Drones Openly Broadcast Secret Video Feeds
From ACM News

Most U.s. Drones Openly Broadcast Secret Video Feeds

Four years after discovering that militants were tapping into drone video feeds, the U.S. military still hasn't secured the transmissions of more than half of its...

From ACM News

When Is a Cyberattack an Act of War?

On the night of Oct. 11, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta stood inside the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum, housed in a former aircraft carrier moored at a New...

Tracking Voters' Clicks Online to Try to Sway Them
From ACM News

Tracking Voters' Clicks Online to Try to Sway Them

A few weeks ago, Thomas Goddard, a community college student in Santa Clara, Calif., and a devoted supporter of President Obama, clicked on mittromney.com to check...

The 'copycat' War: Iran Strikes Back
From ACM News

The 'copycat' War: Iran Strikes Back

The growing evidence that Iran was behind a number of recent cyber attacks against Western and Arab institutions has raised concerns in many quarters about how...

­.s. Looks to Replace Human Surveillance with Computers
From ACM News

­.s. Looks to Replace Human Surveillance with Computers

Computer software programmed to detect and report illicit behavior could eventually replace the fallible humans who monitor surveillance cameras.

A Spy-Gear Arms Race Transforms Modern Divorce
From ACM News

A Spy-Gear Arms Race Transforms Modern Divorce

Danny Lee Hormann suspected his wife was having an affair.

World’s Top Supercomputer Simulates the Human Heart
From ACM TechNews

World’s Top Supercomputer Simulates the Human Heart

LLNL researchers say they used Sequoia, currently ranked as the world's most powerful supercomputer, to develop the fastest computer simulation of the human heart...

Researchers Launch Innovative, Hands-on Online Tool For Science Education
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Launch Innovative, Hands-on Online Tool For Science Education

Two computer science graduate students have developed an online tool designed to teach science by requiring students to complete increasingly difficult problems...

Study Reveals Impact of Public Dns Services; Researchers Develop Tool to Help
From ACM TechNews

Study Reveals Impact of Public Dns Services; Researchers Develop Tool to Help

Northwestern University researchers have found that public Domain Name System services could slow down users' Internet connections, and have developed namehelp,...

The Consequences of Machine Intelligence
From ACM Opinion

The Consequences of Machine Intelligence

The question of what happens when machines get to be as intelligent as and even more intelligent than people seems to occupy many science-fiction writers.

Rapture of the Nerds: Will the Singularity Turn ­S Into Gods or End the Human Race?
From ACM Opinion

Rapture of the Nerds: Will the Singularity Turn ­S Into Gods or End the Human Race?

Hundreds of the world’s brightest minds—engineers from Google and IBM, hedge funds quants, and Defense Department contractors building artificial intelligence—were...

Robots Get Around By Mimicking Primates
From ACM News

Robots Get Around By Mimicking Primates

Give a friend directions, such as, "it's across the street from a petrol station, just after a red brick building on the right..." and you can be pretty sure they'll...

Nasa's Spitzer Sees Light of Lonesome Stars
From ACM News

Nasa's Spitzer Sees Light of Lonesome Stars

A new study using data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope suggests a cause for the mysterious glow of infrared light seen across the entire sky.

­S Gov't Agencies Embrace Collaborative Software Development
From ACM TechNews

­S Gov't Agencies Embrace Collaborative Software Development

Several U.S. federal agencies are embracing the collaborative model of open source software development and are releasing code back to the general public.  

Cybercrime: Mobile Changes Everything—and No One's Safe
From ACM Opinion

Cybercrime: Mobile Changes Everything—and No One's Safe

The FBI recently put out a mobile malware alert, providing us with a sobering reminder of this "evil software" for phones and tablets.

The End For Keyboards and Mice?
From ACM News

The End For Keyboards and Mice?

Apple's iPhone and its rivals may have introduced touchscreens to the masses, but now a raft of technologies promise to change the way we interact with computers...

Gps-Free Tech Can Track Miners' and Soldiers' Boots ­nderground
From ACM News

Gps-Free Tech Can Track Miners' and Soldiers' Boots ­nderground

A mining crew is trapped deep underground after a cave-in. Firefighters run into a smoke-spewing high-rise to battle a violent blaze. A team of soldiers breaches...

Google's Street View Goes Into the Wild
From ACM News

Google's Street View Goes Into the Wild

Google's Street View maps are headed into the backcountry. Earlier this week, two teams from Google strapped on sophisticated backpacks jammed with cameras, gyroscopes...

In Mobile World, Tech Giants Scramble to Get ­p to Speed
From ACM News

In Mobile World, Tech Giants Scramble to Get ­p to Speed

Intel made its fortune on the chips that power personal computers, and Microsoft on the software that goes inside. Google’s secret sauce is that it finds what you...

A Bandwidth Breakthrough
From ACM TechNews

A Bandwidth Breakthrough

Academic researchers have developed coded Transmission Control Protocol, a method for improving wireless bandwidth by one order of magnitude that involves using...
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