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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.


Tech Could Help Secure Public Spaces, If Europe Wants More Surveillance
From ACM News

Tech Could Help Secure Public Spaces, If Europe Wants More Surveillance

Facial recognition software, scanners that detect weapons and cameras that spot nervous people are some of the technologies that could be used more widely to secure...

Locking Out the Hackers
From ACM News

Locking Out the Hackers

New hardware and services are aimed at identifying malware before it has the chance to execute.

Bright Spots and Color Differences Revealed on Ceres
From ACM News

Bright Spots and Color Differences Revealed on Ceres

Scientists from NASA's Dawn mission unveiled new images from the spacecraft's lowest orbit at Ceres, including highly anticipated views of Occator Crater, at the...

Fbi Director Says Fight with Apple About Terrorism, Not Setting Precedent
From ACM News

Fbi Director Says Fight with Apple About Terrorism, Not Setting Precedent

James Comey, the Federal Bureau of Investigation director, is defending the agency's legal battle with Apple, saying it is about fighting terrorism and not about...

Why You Should Be Skeptical That Any Video Is Real
From ACM News

Why You Should Be Skeptical That Any Video Is Real

Be careful about believing what your eyes are telling you.

How New Yorker Cartoons Could Teach Computers to Be Funny
From ACM TechNews

How New Yorker Cartoons Could Teach Computers to Be Funny

The New Yorker magazine is using crowdsourcing algorithms to mine a massive volume of cartoon caption submissions to identify the funniest captions. 

Tor Project Says It Can Quickly Catch Spying Code
From ACM TechNews

Tor Project Says It Can Quickly Catch Spying Code

A Tor Project developer reports the project is enhancing its software to rapidly detect tampering to its network for the purpose of surveillance. 

Analyzing Twitter: Advanced Algorithm Predicts Likelihood of Online Protests
From ACM TechNews

Analyzing Twitter: Advanced Algorithm Predicts Likelihood of Online Protests

Arizona State University researchers have developed and studied an algorithm to help anticipate online protests via Twitter. 

Supercomputer Simulates Whole-Body Blood Flow
From ACM TechNews

Supercomputer Simulates Whole-Body Blood Flow

A new supercomputer simulation of the circulation of blood throughout the entire human body correlates very closely with real-world flow measurements.

Automating Proofs
From Communications of the ACM

Automating Proofs

Math struggles with the usability of formal proofs.

Existing Technologies Can Assist the Disabled
From Communications of the ACM

Existing Technologies Can Assist the Disabled

Researchers consider how to adapt broadly available technology products for those battling physical impairments.

Marvin Minsky
From Communications of the ACM

Marvin Minsky: 1927-2016

Marvin Minsky, an American scientist who co-founded the Massachusetts Institute of Technology AI laboratory and was honored with the ACM A.M. Turing Award, passed...

A Decade of ACM Efforts Contribute to Computer Science For All
From Communications of the ACM

A Decade of ACM Efforts Contribute to Computer Science For All

President Obama has asked Congress to approve $4.1 billion in spending to support the Computer Science for All initiative, aimed at providing computer science education...

A Computer With a Great Eye Is About to Transform Botany
From ACM News

A Computer With a Great Eye Is About to Transform Botany

My dad is a wildlife biologist, and during road trips we took when I was growing up he spent a lot of time talking about the grasses and trees along the highway...

The Black-Hole Collision That Reshaped Physics
From ACM News

The Black-Hole Collision That Reshaped Physics

The event was catastrophic on a cosmic scale—a merger of black holes that violently shook the surrounding fabric of space and time, and sent a blast of space-time...

How the Hell Could the FBI Hack Into That iPhone?
From ACM News

How the Hell Could the FBI Hack Into That iPhone?

You know that part about the FBI needing Apple's help to unlock a terrorist's iPhone 5C?

What's the Year, Make, and Model of Your Vehicular Cloud?
From ACM TechNews

What's the Year, Make, and Model of Your Vehicular Cloud?

Old Dominion University  engineers want to use Internet-connected cars as a cloud computing resource. 

Envisioning Supercomputers of the Future
From ACM TechNews

Envisioning Supercomputers of the Future

The Argo Project funded by the U.S. Department of Energy has enlisted 40 researchers to devise a new approach for extreme-scale system software. 

Human Eyes Assist Drones, Teach Machines to See
From ACM TechNews

Human Eyes Assist Drones, Teach Machines to See

Researchers have developed a new strategy combining crowdsourcing and machine learning for rapidly interpreting aerial images captured by camera drones. 

Scientists on Verge of Developing Emotional Computer
From ACM TechNews

Scientists on Verge of Developing Emotional Computer

Researchers plan to develop a computer agent imbued with both narrative and emotional intellect. 
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