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Communications of the ACM

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The news archive provides access to past news stories from Communications of the ACM and other sources by date.

May 2022


From ACM TechNews

Clearview AI's Facial Recognition Tool Coming to Apps, Schools

Clearview AI's Facial Recognition Tool Coming to Apps, Schools

Clearview AI said it is expanding sales of its facial recognition software to companies outside of law enforcement.


From ACM TechNews

PDF Smuggles Microsoft Word Doc to Drop Snake Keylogger Malware

PDF Smuggles Microsoft Word Doc to Drop Snake Keylogger Malware

Threat analysts at HP Wolf Security have discovered a recent malware distribution campaign that uses PDF attachments to transport Word documents with malicious macros.


From ACM TechNews

He Dropped Out of School to Learn Robotics. Now He's Teaching STEM Across Ghana

He Dropped Out of School to Learn Robotics. Now He's Teaching STEM Across Ghana

Jonathan Kennedy Sowah founded a tech club that became InovTech STEM Center, which travels to schools across Ghana to teach students and teachers STEM subjects through robotics education.


From ACM News

ORNL's Frontier First to Break the Exaflop Ceiling

ORNL's Frontier First to Break the Exaflop Ceiling

The 59th edition of the TOP500 revealed the Frontier system to be the first true exascale machine with an HPL score of 1.102 Exaflop/s.


From ACM News

ACM Elects Yannis Ioannidis as President

ACM Elects Yannis Ioannidis as President

Ioannidis serves on the ACM Digital Library Board, is faculty advisor of his university's ACM Student Chapter, and will chair the ACM Europe Council Working Group on summer schools.


From ACM TechNews

AI Predicts Potential Nutrient Deficiencies from Space

AI Predicts Potential Nutrient Deficiencies from Space

Geographic areas with populations at high risk of micronutrient deficiencies can be identified using publicly available satellite data and artificial intelligence.


From ACM TechNews

Could Contact Lenses Be the Ultimate Computer Screen?

Could Contact Lenses Be the Ultimate Computer Screen?

Saratoga, CA-based Mojo is one of a number of companies currently testing smart contact lens products.


From ACM TechNews

Smart Dissolving Pacemaker Communicates with Body-Area Sensor, Control Network

Smart Dissolving Pacemaker Communicates with Body-Area Sensor, Control Network

Northwestern Medicine Feinberg School of Medicine

Northwestern University scientists have unveiled a smart version of a transient pacemaker, which dissolves when it is no longer needed, mated to a coordinated ‘body-area network”…


From ACM News

Highest Paying Jobs with a Computer Science Degree

Highest Paying Jobs with a Computer Science Degree

Computer science is a broad and rewarding field. Find out the computer science degree salary you can expect depending on your chosen career path.


From ACM News

Error-Free Quantum Computing Gets Real

Error-Free Quantum Computing Gets Real

The researchers implemented two computational gates on fault-tolerant quantum bits, which are necessary for a universal set of gates.


From ACM News

Accused of Cheating by an Algorithm, and a Professor She Had Never Met

Accused of Cheating by an Algorithm, and a Professor She Had Never Met

An unsettling glimpse at the digitization of education.


From ACM News

Algorithm Optimally Divvies up Tasks for Human-Robot Teams

Algorithm Optimally Divvies up Tasks for Human-Robot Teams

The team's work could be valuable in manufacturing and assembly plants, for sorting packages, or in any environment where humans and robots collaborate to complete jobs.


From ACM News

Philadelphia Launches Real-Time Smart City Project

Philadelphia Launches Real-Time Smart City Project

The SmartCityPHL project in Philadelphia is a partnership of the city, Comcast, and US Ignite to help collect real-time data on air quality, weather, transportation, and more.


From ACM News

'Quantum Internet' Inches Closer With Advance in Data Teleportation

'Quantum Internet' Inches Closer With Advance in Data Teleportation

Scientists have improved their ability to send quantum information across distant computers—and have taken another step toward the network of the future.


From ACM TechNews

NSF Program Hopes to Rev Nation's Innovation 'Engines'

NSF Program Hopes to Rev Nation's Innovation 'Engines'

A new U.S. National Science Foundation program aims to help communities outside innovation hubs create companies and well-paying jobs from local research.


From ACM TechNews

Using Light, Sound to Reveal Rapid Brain Activity in Unprecedented Detail

Using Light, Sound to Reveal Rapid Brain Activity in Unprecedented Detail

Duke University researchers have developed an approach that allows for real-time scanning and imaging of blood flow and oxygen levels in a mouse brain.


From ACM TechNews

An Electric Connection: Homes Helping the Grid

An Electric Connection: Homes Helping the Grid

Researchers have invented technology that could reduce strain on the national power grid by controlling residential appliances more efficiently.


From ACM TechNews

Uber Launches Robot Food Delivery in California

Uber Launches Robot Food Delivery in California

Uber has rolled out pilot food delivery services that use autonomous vehicles in Santa Monica and West Hollywood, CA.


From ACM TechNews

Countermeasure Against Unwanted Wireless Surveillance

Countermeasure Against Unwanted Wireless Surveillance

A  new system protects privacy in wireless communications based on intelligent reflective surfaces.


From ACM TechNews

AI Powered Autonomous Cargo Ship for 500 Miles

AI Powered Autonomous Cargo Ship for 500 Miles

A 749-gross-ton vessel is the first commercial cargo ship to be navigated entirely by artificial intelligence during a nearly 500-mile, 40-hour journey.


From ACM TechNews

Trilobite-Inspired Camera Boasts Huge Depth of Field

Trilobite-Inspired Camera Boasts Huge Depth of Field

Chinese and U.S. researchers collaborated on the development of a camera with a massive depth of field.


From ACM TechNews

'Tough to Forge' Digital Driver's License Actually Easy to Forge

'Tough to Forge' Digital Driver's License Actually Easy to Forge

Security researchers have found that the supposedly hard-to-counterfeit digital driver's licenses in use in New South Wales, Australia, actually can be altered easily.


From ACM News

Americans Have Their Sensitive Online Activity Exposed Over 700 Times Daily

Americans Have Their Sensitive Online Activity Exposed Over 700 Times Daily

Real-time bidding is a process that runs in the background on websites and apps and tracks what you look at, no matter how private or sensitive it is.


From ACM News

Why Isn't New Technology Making Us More Productive?

Why Isn't New Technology Making Us More Productive?

Innovations like cloud computing and artificial intelligence are hailed as engines of a coming productivity revival, but a broad payoff across the economy has been elusive.


From ACM News

U.K. Orders Clearview AI to Delete Images Belonging to U.K. Residents

U.K. Orders Clearview AI to Delete Images Belonging to U.K. Residents

The U.S. software company brands itself as "the world's largest facial network" holding billions of face photographs from the Internet.


From ACM TechNews

U.S. Civil Rights Enforcers Warn Employers Against Biased AI

U.S. Civil Rights Enforcers Warn Employers Against Biased AI

The U.S. government has warned employers that artificial intelligence technology for screening new job candidates or tracking productivity could violate civil rights laws.


From ACM TechNews

Zyxel Remote Execution Bug Being Exploited

Zyxel Remote Execution Bug Being Exploited

Researchers found that a bug in Zyxel firewalls that could enable unauthenticated remote attackers to execute code.


From ACM TechNews

Perception-Based Nanosensor Platform Could Advance Detection of Ovarian Cancer

Perception-Based Nanosensor Platform Could Advance Detection of Ovarian Cancer

A multi-institutional research team analyzed spectral signatures of ovarian cancer by harnessing machine learning and the fluorescence of carbon nanotubes.


From ACM News

Microchips that Mimic the Human Brain Could Make AI More Energy Efficient

Microchips that Mimic the Human Brain Could Make AI More Energy Efficient

Neuromorphic chips could cut the power demands of digital assistants and other devices by orders of magnitude.


From ACM News

Machine Learning Has A Backdoor Problem

Machine Learning Has A Backdoor Problem

The researchers explored how the vast available knowledge about backdoors in cryptography could be applied to machine learning.

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