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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.


Nsa Hacker Chief Explains How to Keep Him Out of Your System
From ACM News

Nsa Hacker Chief Explains How to Keep Him Out of Your System

It was the talk most anticipated at this year's inaugural Usenix Enigma security conference in San Francisco and one that even the other speakers were eager to...

Future Delivery Drones Start Learning How to Fly on Their Own
From ACM TechNews

Future Delivery Drones Start Learning How to Fly on Their Own

Boston University researchers are developing ways to enable drones to learn how to fly on their own. 

If Killer Robots Arrive, the Terminator Will Be the Least of Our Problems
From ACM TechNews

If Killer Robots Arrive, the Terminator Will Be the Least of Our Problems

Experts warned of the threat of autonomous weaponry at last week's World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. 

Is Blockchain the Most Important It Invention of Our Age?
From ACM News

Is Blockchain the Most Important It Invention of Our Age?

There are not many occasions when one can give an unqualified thumbs-up to something the government does, but this is one such occasion.

Europe's Top Digital-Privacy Watchdog Zeros In on ­.s. Tech Giants
From ACM News

Europe's Top Digital-Privacy Watchdog Zeros In on ­.s. Tech Giants

The latest standoff between Europe and American tech companies runs through a quiet street just north of the Louvre Museum, past chic cafes and part of the French...

ACM Inducts Fellows
From Communications of the ACM

ACM Inducts Fellows

ACM has recognized 42 of its members for significant contributions to the development and application of computing, in areas ranging from data management and spoken...

How a Supervillain (or a Hacker in His Basement) Could Destroy the Internet
From Communications of the ACM

How a Supervillain (or a Hacker in His Basement) Could Destroy the Internet

Network experts share their greatest fears about attacks and accidents that could destroy the Internet.

In Privacy Law, It's the U.S. vs. the World
From Communications of the ACM

In Privacy Law, It's the U.S. vs. the World

Snowden revelations force changes, but Facebook (and others) resist.

Why Doesn't Silicon Valley Hire Black Coders?
From ACM Careers

Why Doesn't Silicon Valley Hire Black Coders?

In the fall of 2013 a young software engineer named Charles Pratt arrived on Howard University's campus in Washington.

British Voice Encryption Protocol Has Massive Weakness, Researcher Says
From ACM TechNews

British Voice Encryption Protocol Has Massive Weakness, Researcher Says

A researcher charges the protocol created by a U.K. governmental group to encrypt voice calls has a weakness built into it by design that could enable mass surveillance...

Japan Road Tests Self-Driving Cars to Keep Aging Motorists Mobile
From ACM TechNews

Japan Road Tests Self-Driving Cars to Keep Aging Motorists Mobile

Japan's automakers aim to meet the challenge of aging drivers with few transportation options by testing self-driving vehicles on roads. 

Crispr Goes Commercial
From ACM News

Crispr Goes Commercial

Within just three years since the discovery of its gene-editing potential, the new technique Crispr has become the hottest, and most controversial, development...

German ­niversity Reports Severe Software Vulnerabilities ­p in 2015
From ACM TechNews

German ­niversity Reports Severe Software Vulnerabilities ­p in 2015

Fewer software security vulnerabilities were reported worldwide in 2015 than in 2014, but the number of published vulnerabilities with a high level of severity...

Why Biotech's Biggest Breakthrough Is Now In Dispute
From ACM News

Why Biotech's Biggest Breakthrough Is Now In Dispute

It sounds like the stuff of science fiction: A new gene-editing technology allows scientists to precisely locate and cut out bits of DNA from live cells in bacteria...

Shrinking the Haystack
From ACM TechNews

Shrinking the Haystack

Technologists are helping counter-terrorist forces with software that can identify locations to be searched for hideouts and weapons, or be put under surveillance...

For Now, Self-Driving Cars Still Need Humans
From ACM News

For Now, Self-Driving Cars Still Need Humans

Car enthusiasts, after hearing industry executives discussing the self-driving technology being built into their vehicles, might be forgiven for thinking robotic...

Scientists Capture Crispr's Gene-Cutting in Action
From ACM News

Scientists Capture Crispr's Gene-Cutting in Action

For all the furious hype around the gene-editing tool Crispr/Cas9, no one has ever really seen it in action. Like really seen it.

Wikipedia Turns 15
From ACM Opinion

Wikipedia Turns 15

It must be difficult for the roughly half a billion people who visit Wikipedia every month to remember a world without the free online encyclopedia.

­.s. Proposes Spending $4 Billion on Self-Driving Cars
From ACM TechNews

­.s. Proposes Spending $4 Billion on Self-Driving Cars

The Obama administration on Thursday promised to accelerate regulatory guidelines for driverless cars and to make an investment in research to commercialize them...

The Convenience-Surveillance Tradeoff
From ACM News

The Convenience-Surveillance Tradeoff

People love free stuff. That's the principle that helps explain the complicated series of privacy-related calculations that modern life increasingly requires.
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