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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.


When Doctors 'google' Their Patients
From ACM Opinion

When Doctors 'google' Their Patients

I remember when I first looked up a patient on Google.

How Google Cracked House Number Identification in Street View
From ACM News

How Google Cracked House Number Identification in Street View

Google Street View has become an essential part of the online mapping experience.

Selling Social Media Clicks Becomes Big Business
From ACM News

Selling Social Media Clicks Becomes Big Business

Celebrities, businesses, and even the U.S. State Department have bought bogus Facebook likes, Twitter followers or YouTube viewers from offshore "click farms,"...

Nsa Encryption Backdoor Proof of Concept Published
From ACM TechNews

Nsa Encryption Backdoor Proof of Concept Published

A security freelancer  has published a proof-of-concept code for exploiting a security flaw in the Dual Elliptic Curve Deterministic Random Bit Generator. 

Pirate Bay Unveils Ambitious New Software Scheme to Foil Anti-Piracy Measures
From ACM TechNews

Pirate Bay Unveils Ambitious New Software Scheme to Foil Anti-Piracy Measures

The Pirate Bay is developing a tool designed to thwart copyright enforcers. 

How To Track Vehicles Using Speed Data Alone
From ACM News

How To Track Vehicles Using Speed Data Alone

Location is a key indicator of personal travel patterns and habits.

Apps For Mobile Viewing Challenge Cable Operators, Tv Networks
From ACM News

Apps For Mobile Viewing Challenge Cable Operators, Tv Networks

U.S. cable and satellite television operators, already locking horns with programmers over subscriber fees, are now squaring off over the mobile apps that viewers...

How the Nsa (may Have) Put a Backdoor in Rsa's Cryptography: A Technical Primer
From ACM News

How the Nsa (may Have) Put a Backdoor in Rsa's Cryptography: A Technical Primer

There has been a lot of news lately about nefarious-sounding backdoors being inserted into cryptographic standards and toolkits.

Study: Self-Driving Car Sales Will Explode
From ACM TechNews

Study: Self-Driving Car Sales Will Explode

The global population of self-driving cars is projected to grow to 11.8 million by 2030, according to a study by IHS Automotive.

Viewing Where the Internet Goes
From ACM Opinion

Viewing Where the Internet Goes

Will 2014 be the year that the Internet is reined in?

The Top Four Tech Legal Cases to Watch in 2014
From ACM Opinion

The Top Four Tech Legal Cases to Watch in 2014

While we're all wiping the champagne-induced sleep from our eyes, inevitably we have to sober up for 2014.

Inside Tao: Documents Reveal Top Nsa Hacking ­nit
From ACM News

Inside Tao: Documents Reveal Top Nsa Hacking ­nit

In January 2010, numerous homeowners in San Antonio, Texas, stood baffled in front of their closed garage doors.

Faa Picks Six Projects to Tackle Drone Technology Development
From ACM News

Faa Picks Six Projects to Tackle Drone Technology Development

The Federal Aviation Administration on Monday designated six projects across the U.S. for research into drones, the unmanned aircraft that have the potential to...

Dogecoins and Litecoins and Peercoins Oh My: What You Need to Know About Bitcoin Alternatives
From ACM News

Dogecoins and Litecoins and Peercoins Oh My: What You Need to Know About Bitcoin Alternatives

By now, most people have heard of Bitcoin, the peer-to-peer currency whose value has soared over the past couple of years.

Reading Your Palm For Security's Sake
From ACM News

Reading Your Palm For Security's Sake

They aren't taking any chances at Barclays Bank in Britain.

Nsa Phone Surveillance Legal, Federal Judge Rules
From ACM News

Nsa Phone Surveillance Legal, Federal Judge Rules

The debate over the National Security Agency's collection of millions of Americans' telephone records fell squarely into the courts when a federal judge in Manhattan...

How Microsoft's 1 Percenters Balance Basic Research with Short-Term Success
From ACM Opinion

How Microsoft's 1 Percenters Balance Basic Research with Short-Term Success

When Microsoft launched its research labs in 1991, the personal computer was just beginning to blossom into a worldwide phenomenon, thanks in no small part to Windows...

The One Big Question About Rsa and Its Relationship With the Nsa
From ACM News

The One Big Question About Rsa and Its Relationship With the Nsa

Last week, the Internet security world was jolted by a Reuters report detailing a secret $10 million payment to the security company RSA from the National Security...

Stanford Researchers: It Is Trivially Easy to Match Metadata to Real People
From ACM Opinion

Stanford Researchers: It Is Trivially Easy to Match Metadata to Real People

In defending the NSA's telephony metadata collection efforts, government officials have repeatedly resorted to one seemingly significant detail: This is just metadata—numbers...

The Predictive Power of Big Data
From ACM Opinion

The Predictive Power of Big Data

Right now, the average person's data footprint—the annual amount of data produced worldwide, per capita—is just a little short of one terabyte.
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