acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

News


bg-corner

An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.


U.s. Gets Warnings and Advice About the Internet of Things
From ACM TechNews

U.s. Gets Warnings and Advice About the Internet of Things

Industry groups have submitted more than 130 reports to the U.S. Department of Commerce detailing positive and negative aspects of the Internet of Things.

First Experimental Demonstration of a Quantum Enigma Machine
From ACM News

First Experimental Demonstration of a Quantum Enigma Machine

One of the great unsung heroes of 20th century science was a mathematician and engineer at the famous Bell Laboratories in New Jersey called Claude Shannon.

Why the Economic Payoff From Technology Is So Elusive
From ACM News

Why the Economic Payoff From Technology Is So Elusive

Your smartphone allows you to get almost instantaneous answers to the most obscure questions. It also allows you to waste hours scrolling through Facebook or looking...

5 Things That Give Self-Driving Cars Headaches
From ACM News

5 Things That Give Self-Driving Cars Headaches

Fully automated cars don’t drink and drive, fall asleep at the wheel, text, talk on the phone or put on makeup while driving.

Mobile Phone Records Reveal Largest Gathering in the History of Humanity
From ACM News

Mobile Phone Records Reveal Largest Gathering in the History of Humanity

Mobile phones have revolutionized the way scientists study human behavior, allowing them to watch people on a scale that has never been previously imagined.

Smaller Chips May Depend on Vacuum Tube Technology
From ACM TechNews

Smaller Chips May Depend on Vacuum Tube Technology

Vacuum tubes may enjoy a resurgence as computer chips continue to shrink.

New Devices, Wearable System Aim to Predict, Prevent Asthma Attacks
From ACM TechNews

New Devices, Wearable System Aim to Predict, Prevent Asthma Attacks

A wearable system of sensors could help people with asthma predict and prevent asthma attacks by tracking environmental and physiological data. 

How Mark Zuckerberg Led Facebook’s War to Crush Google Plus
From ACM News

How Mark Zuckerberg Led Facebook’s War to Crush Google Plus

In Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg built not just a business, but a company culture with the fervor of a messianic sect.

Researchers ­ncover a Flaw in Europe's Tough Privacy Rules
From ACM News

Researchers ­ncover a Flaw in Europe's Tough Privacy Rules

Europe likes to think it leads the world in protecting people’s privacy, and that is particularly true for the region’s so-called right to be forgotten.

CRISPR Gene-Editing System ­nleashed on RNA
From ACM News

CRISPR Gene-Editing System ­nleashed on RNA

Researchers who discovered a molecular "scissors" for snipping genes have now developed a similar approach for targeting and cutting RNA.

Fifty Years of Moon Dust: Surveyor 1 Was a Pathfinder For Apollo
From ACM News

Fifty Years of Moon Dust: Surveyor 1 Was a Pathfinder For Apollo

Before humans could take their first steps on the moon, that mysterious and forbidding surface had to be reconnoitered by robots.

Pittsburgh Roads Wired With 'talking' Traffic Signals
From ACM TechNews

Pittsburgh Roads Wired With 'talking' Traffic Signals

Researchers have installed dedicated short-range communication radios at 35 intersections in Bloomfield and Marshall, PA.

Plan to Synthesize Human Genome Elicits Mixed Response
From ACM News

Plan to Synthesize Human Genome Elicits Mixed Response

Proposals for a large public-private initiative to synthesize an entire human genome from scratch—an effort that could take a decade and require billions of dollars...

Internet Trends 2016 Code Conference
From ACM News

Internet Trends 2016 Code Conference

The 2016 edition of Mary Meeker's annual Internet Trends report covers today's Internet growth.

Pc Hardware Is Physically Leaking Your Encryption Keys
From ACM News

Pc Hardware Is Physically Leaking Your Encryption Keys

Your computer has an aura. That sentence causes me actual physical pain to type, but there's not really a better way to put it—whether you're surfing really fucked...

How Ad Blockers Have Triggered an Arms Race on the Web
From ACM TechNews

How Ad Blockers Have Triggered an Arms Race on the Web

A team at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology has conducted the first large-scale analysis of ad-block detection on the Internet. 

IBM Watson's Creative Director on Amazon Echo and How AI Can Save Lives
From ACM TechNews

IBM Watson's Creative Director on Amazon Echo and How AI Can Save Lives

In an interview, Maya Weinstein, creative director at IBM Watson, discusses artificial intelligence assistants and how the technology can help save lives. 

A Car's Computer Can 'fingerprint' You in Minutes Based on How You Drive
From ACM TechNews

A Car's Computer Can 'fingerprint' You in Minutes Based on How You Drive

Data collected from a car's internal computer network, or its CAN bus, can identify its driver based on driving style, a new study has found. 

Pluto's Heart: Like a Cosmic 'lava Lamp'
From ACM News

Pluto's Heart: Like a Cosmic 'lava Lamp'

Combining computer models with topographic and compositional data gathered by NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft last summer, New Horizons team members have determined...

This 'demonically Clever' Backdoor Hides In a Tiny Slice of a Computer Chip
From ACM News

This 'demonically Clever' Backdoor Hides In a Tiny Slice of a Computer Chip

Security flaws in software can be tough to find. Purposefully planted ones—hidden backdoors created by spies or saboteurs—are often even stealthier.
Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account