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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.


Drones Over America: What Can They See?
From ACM News

Drones Over America: What Can They See?

Unmanned aircraft systems, or drones, have long played a role in military operations. But imagine thousands of drones flying over U.S. skies—something we may see...

Tech Industry Climbs Out of Silicon Valley, Moves Abroad
From ACM TechNews

Tech Industry Climbs Out of Silicon Valley, Moves Abroad

Washington, D.C., has replaced Silicon Valley as the locus for technology jobs as non-tech industries continue to add tech professionals, according to Dice.com....

Work on Causality Causes Judea Pearl to Win Prize
From ACM News

Work on Causality Causes Judea Pearl to Win Prize

Humans have always made inferences about causes and effects, sometimes based on scanty information. Many machines do now, too, and Judea Pearl is frequently cited...

New Interest in Hacking as Threat to Security
From ACM News

New Interest in Hacking as Threat to Security

During the five-month period between October and February, there were 86 reported attacks on computer systems in the United States that control critical infrastructure...

Arm Wants to Put the Internet in Your ­mbrella
From ACM News

Arm Wants to Put the Internet in Your ­mbrella

Chip designer ARM wants to put the internet in your fridge. And it insists this cliche of tech prognostication is no longer just talk. Really.

Tracking Pedestrians Indoors Using Their Smart Phones
From ACM TechNews

Tracking Pedestrians Indoors Using Their Smart Phones

The embedded inertial sensors in many smartphones could be used to track the movement of smartphone users when indoors, even without global positioning systems.

Life on Mars? Funds to Find Answer Fade
From ACM News

Life on Mars? Funds to Find Answer Fade

Just as NASA is on the cusp of answering the most fascinating questions about Mars—is there, was there or could there be life there?—the money needed to provide...

DARPA Director Bolts Pentagon For Google
From ACM News

DARPA Director Bolts Pentagon For Google

Darpa director Regina Dugan will soon be stepping down from her position atop the Pentagon's premiere research shop to take a job with Google.

Behind The Mask, Accused Lulzsec Members Left Trail Of Clues Online
From ACM News

Behind The Mask, Accused Lulzsec Members Left Trail Of Clues Online

When the long arm of the law reached in to arrest members of Anonymous's senior leadership on Tuesday, speculation immediately turned to the identities of the six...

How Hackers Are Caught Out By Law Enforcers
From ACM News

How Hackers Are Caught Out By Law Enforcers

The Internet has gained a reputation as somewhere you can say and do anything with impunity, primarily because it is easy to disguise your identity.

Cyberwar Is Already ­pon ­S
From ACM Opinion

Cyberwar Is Already ­pon ­S

In the nearly 20 years since David Ronfeldt and I introduced our concept of cyberwar, this new mode of conflict has become a reality.

Three Things that Scare Google
From ACM News

Three Things that Scare Google

Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt told a crowd of journalists Wednesday night that there are some things about technology and the Internet that scare him,...

Fbi's 'sabu' Hacker Was a Model Informant
From ACM News

Fbi's 'sabu' Hacker Was a Model Informant

As soon as he was caught, an influential computer hacker agreed to become a government informant and "literally worked around the clock" to help federal agents...

Where 4,000,000 Phones a Year Go to Be Resurrected
From ACM News

Where 4,000,000 Phones a Year Go to Be Resurrected

The first thing I noticed when I stepped into Recellular's Ann Arbor warehouse was the flags. From the rafters, the flags of the world oversee the processing of...

The First Google Maps War
From ACM News

The First Google Maps War

Did Google Maps almost cause a war in 2010? On Nov. 3 of that year, Edén Pastora, the Nicaraguan official tasked with dredging the Rio San Juan, justified his country's...

Stanford Offers More Free Online Classes For the World
From ACM TechNews

Stanford Offers More Free Online Classes For the World

Stanford University is introducing five free online classes in March as the next step in a university initiative to use new technologies to improve education....

Stakeout: How the Fbi Tracked and Busted a Chicago Anon
From ACM News

Stakeout: How the Fbi Tracked and Busted a Chicago Anon

"Script kiddie." No hacker worth his salt wants to hear the term used to describe him.

Cloud Will Create 14 Million Jobs, Study Says
From ACM TechNews

Cloud Will Create 14 Million Jobs, Study Says

Cloud computing technologies will help create nearly 14 million technology-related jobs worldwide by 2015, resulting in $1.1 trillion in revenue annually, according...

Hackers Arrested as One Turns Witness
From ACM News

Hackers Arrested as One Turns Witness

Federal prosecutors brought charges against a group of men allegedly behind "LulzSec"—a globe-spanning collective of computer hackers who wreaked havoc on companies...

The Bright Side of Being Hacked
From ACM News

The Bright Side of Being Hacked

Hackers operating under the banner Anonymous have been poking a finger in the eye of one private company after another for two years now.  
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