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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 FCC Just Passed Sweeping New Rules to Protect Your Online Privacy
From ACM News

The FCC Just Passed Sweeping New Rules to Protect Your Online Privacy

Federal officials delivered a landmark ruling in favor of online privacy Thursday, limiting how Internet providers use and sell customer data, while asserting that...

Further Clues to Fate of Mars Lander, Seen From Orbit
From ACM News

Further Clues to Fate of Mars Lander, Seen From Orbit

The most powerful telescope orbiting Mars is providing new details of the scene near the Martian equator where Europe's Schiaparelli test lander hit the surface...

Your Dvr Didn't Take Down the Internet, Yet
From ACM News

Your Dvr Didn't Take Down the Internet, Yet

Last week ended with a mid-level internet catastrophe. You may have noticed that for most of Friday popular sites like Netflix, Twitter, Spotify (and yes, WIRED)...

Twitter's 'firehose' of Tweets Is Incredibly Valuable, and Just as Dangerous
From ACM News

Twitter's 'firehose' of Tweets Is Incredibly Valuable, and Just as Dangerous

There are half a billion tweets a day. For the company, they’re sellable data. For despots, they’re a great way to hunt dissidents.

Tangled ­p in Spacetime
From ACM News

Tangled ­p in Spacetime

"All the world’s a stage…," Shakespeare wrote, and physicists tend to think that way, too.

X-Rays Are Revealing the Mysterious Writings in Mummy Coffins
From ACM News

X-Rays Are Revealing the Mysterious Writings in Mummy Coffins

It's a sleepy summer Friday at Lawrence Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source.

Study Finds 'lurking Malice' in Cloud Hosting Services
From ACM TechNews

Study Finds 'lurking Malice' in Cloud Hosting Services

Up to 10% of the repositories held by cloud hosting services have been compromised, according to a newly released study.

It Ain't Me, Babe: Researchers Find Flaws In Police Facial Recognition Technology
From ACM News

It Ain't Me, Babe: Researchers Find Flaws In Police Facial Recognition Technology

Nearly half of American adults have been entered into law enforcement facial recognition databases, despite problems with the accuracy of the technology.

Computing Glitch May Have Doomed Mars Lander
From ACM News

Computing Glitch May Have Doomed Mars Lander

Photos of a huge circle of churned-up Martian soil leave few doubts: a European Space Agency (ESA) probe that was supposed to test landing technology on Mars crashed...

The Pentagon's 'terminator Conundrum': Robots That Could Kill on Their Own
From ACM News

The Pentagon's 'terminator Conundrum': Robots That Could Kill on Their Own

The small drone, with its six whirring rotors, swept past the replica of a Middle Eastern village and closed in on a mosque-like structure, its camera scanning...

How Nasa Fights To Keep Our Dying Spacecraft Alive
From ACM News

How Nasa Fights To Keep Our Dying Spacecraft Alive

Sometime in the next 10 or so years, the massive antennas that comprise NASA's Deep Space Network will pick up a faint, distant signal for the final time.

Webcams ­sed to Attack Reddit and Twitter Recalled
From ACM News

Webcams ­sed to Attack Reddit and Twitter Recalled

Chinese electronics firm Hangzhou Xiongmai issued the recall soon after its cameras were identified as aiding the massive web attacks.

Icy Heart Could Be Key to Pluto's Strange Geology
From ACM News

Icy Heart Could Be Key to Pluto's Strange Geology

Pluto's icy heart beats with a planetary rhythm.

New Technique Allows Scientists to 'listen' to Proteins
From ACM News

New Technique Allows Scientists to 'listen' to Proteins

Researchers have come up with a bold new method for representing and understanding a protein's shape: translating it into music.

Wits Researchers Find Techniques to Improve Carbon Superlattices For Quantum Electronic Devices
From ACM TechNews

Wits Researchers Find Techniques to Improve Carbon Superlattices For Quantum Electronic Devices

The quantum properties of carbon-based superlattices could lead to a fundamental shift in the design and development of electronics.

A New Era of Internet Attacks Powered By Everyday Devices
From ACM News

A New Era of Internet Attacks Powered By Everyday Devices

When surveillance cameras began popping up in the 1970s and '80s, they were welcomed as a crime-fighting tool, then as a way to monitor traffic congestion, factory...

The Amazing Cloud Cities We Could Build on Venus
From ACM News

The Amazing Cloud Cities We Could Build on Venus

It's hot enough to melt lead, the acid rain will scorch the flesh from your bones – and it's the perfect place to raise a family. Venus, not Mars, might be the...

Inside Microsoft's Quest For a Topological Quantum Computer
From ACM Opinion

Inside Microsoft's Quest For a Topological Quantum Computer

The race is on build a "universal" quantum computer. Such a device could be programmed to speedily solve problems that classical computers cannot crack, potentially...

If Planet Nine Is Out There, It Tilts Our Solar System
From ACM News

If Planet Nine Is Out There, It Tilts Our Solar System

Most people think the eight planets in our solar system orbit the sun along a straight plane, like a disc on a record player.

Camera on Mars Orbiter Shows Signs of Latest Mars Lander
From ACM News

Camera on Mars Orbiter Shows Signs of Latest Mars Lander

NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has identified new markings on the surface of the Red Planet that are believed to be related to Europe's Schiaparelli test lander...
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