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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.


The Next Best Thing to Being There
From ACM News

The Next Best Thing to Being There

Encouraged by the pandemic, augmented and mixed realities bring new views to end-users in medicine, industry, and the military.

Scope of Russian Hack Becomes Clear: Multiple U.S. Agencies Were Hit
From ACM News

Scope of Russian Hack Becomes Clear: Multiple U.S. Agencies Were Hit

The Pentagon, intelligence agencies, nuclear labs, and Fortune 500 companies use software found to have been compromised by Russian hackers. The sweep of stolen...

This Robot Can Rap—Really
From ACM TechNews

This Robot Can Rap—Really

A Georgia Institute of Technology music technologist modified an improvisational musical robot called Shimon to create lyrics and perform rap in real time.

Bad News for Fake News: Rice Research Helps Combat Social Media Misinformation
From ACM TechNews

Bad News for Fake News: Rice Research Helps Combat Social Media Misinformation

Rice University researchers have invented a more efficient method for preventing the online spread of misinformation on social media.

'Accessible Christmas,' an Application That Allows Blind People to Enjoy Christmas Lights
From ACM TechNews

'Accessible Christmas,' an Application That Allows Blind People to Enjoy Christmas Lights

Visually impaired people can enjoy Christmas lights in Madrid through a mobile application from researchers at Spain's Universidad Carlos III de Madrid.

The Smellicopter: An Obstacle-Avoiding Drone that Uses Live Moth Antenna to Seek Out Smells
From ACM TechNews

The Smellicopter: An Obstacle-Avoiding Drone that Uses Live Moth Antenna to Seek Out Smells

An autonomous flying drone called the Smellicopter uses a live antenna from a moth to navigate toward smells.

Amazon Wants to Train 29 Million People to Work in the Cloud
From ACM TechNews

Amazon Wants to Train 29 Million People to Work in the Cloud

Amazon plans to help train 29 million people worldwide to work in the cloud by 2025.

AI Needs to Face Up to its Invisible-worker Problem
From ACM News

AI Needs to Face Up to its Invisible-worker Problem

Machine-learning models are trained by low-paid online gig workers. They're not going away—but we can change the way they work, says Saiph Savage.

Smarter Traffic Lights, Calmer Commuters
From ACM News

Smarter Traffic Lights, Calmer Commuters

Advances in technology may come to a corner near you, easing traffic and possibly helping the environment.

Drones Are Poised to Reshape Home Design
From ACM TechNews

Drones Are Poised to Reshape Home Design

A rethink of home design may be needed to accommodate remote drone delivery, which could reconfigure entire neighborhoods to establish designated drone airspace...

Consumers Increasingly Touch on Contactless Payments
From ACM News

Consumers Increasingly Touch on Contactless Payments

The ability to pay touch-free during the Coronavirus pandemic is persuading more consumers and retailers to go contactless.

Researchers Find Even 'Fair' Hiring Algorithms Can Be Biased
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Find Even 'Fair' Hiring Algorithms Can Be Biased

Researchers at Harvard University and Germany's Technische Universität Berlin analyzing how "fair" ranking algorithms affect gender uncovered inconsistent ranking...

Facebook Hit With Antitrust Lawsuits by FTC, State Attorneys General
From ACM News

Facebook Hit With Antitrust Lawsuits by FTC, State Attorneys General

Claims target social-media giant's past acquisitions, tactics against competitors.

Critical Flaws in Millions of IoT Devices May Never Get Fixed
From ACM TechNews

Critical Flaws in Millions of IoT Devices May Never Get Fixed

Internet of Things security firm Forescout uncovered 33 flaws in seven open source TCP/IP stacks that potentially leave millions of IoT devices vulnerable.

Stanford Researchers Study Trust in Autonomous Products
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Researchers Study Trust in Autonomous Products

Stanford University engineers investigating how altering peoples' moods affect their trust in a smart speaker were surprised by their results.

Silicon Valley's Next Goal Is 3D Maps of the World--Made by Us
From ACM TechNews

Silicon Valley's Next Goal Is 3D Maps of the World--Made by Us

Ordinary online users are being conscripted by Silicon Valley technology companies to produce three-dimensional digital maps of the world.

Coronavirus Apps Show Promise but Prove a Tough Sell
From ACM TechNews

Coronavirus Apps Show Promise but Prove a Tough Sell

Despite pilot studies demonstrating that smartphone applications can slow Covid-19 transmission, buy-in from people and states is lacking.

Police in Mississippi Want Access to Live Home Security Video, Alarming Privacy Advocates
From ACM TechNews

Police in Mississippi Want Access to Live Home Security Video, Alarming Privacy Advocates

Officials in Jackson, MS, are expanding police surveillance by permitting live feeds from private security cameras to be sent to the city's real-time command center...

Computer Science Professor,  Postdoc Launch Online Database on History of Slavery
From ACM News

Computer Science Professor, Postdoc Launch Online Database on History of Slavery

"Enslaved: Peoples of the Historical Slave Trade," a database collecting archives and entries documenting the lives of those who were enslaved, owned slaves, or...

Global Losses from Cybercrime Skyrocketed to Nearly $1 trillion in 2020, Report Finds
From ACM News

Global Losses from Cybercrime Skyrocketed to Nearly $1 trillion in 2020, Report Finds

IP theft and financial crime account for at least 75% of cyber losses and pose the greatest threat to companies, according to the report.
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