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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.


Radio Hack Steals Keystrokes from Millions of Wireless Keyboards
From ACM News

Radio Hack Steals Keystrokes from Millions of Wireless Keyboards

You should be able to trust your wireless keyboard.

Feds Want to ­se Your Fingerprints to Open Iphones. Why Isn't It Working?
From ACM News

Feds Want to ­se Your Fingerprints to Open Iphones. Why Isn't It Working?

A single sentence was all that was needed to detail the results of a search warrant executed last month on a cell phone in Texas: "Unable to obtain forensic aquisition...

Open Source Software No Longer Optional
From Communications of the ACM

Open Source Software No Longer Optional

Open development and sharing of software gained widespread acceptance 15 years ago, and the practice is accelerating.

They Promised ­S Jet Packs. They Promised the Bosses Profit.
From ACM News

They Promised ­S Jet Packs. They Promised the Bosses Profit.

Project Foghorn is one of those straight-from-science-fiction concepts we've come to expect from Alphabet, the sprawling conglomerate formerly known as Google.

Microsoft's President Explains the Company's Quiet Legal War For ­ser Privacy
From ACM Opinion

Microsoft's President Explains the Company's Quiet Legal War For ­ser Privacy

Apple's legal battle over encryption dominated headlines earlier this year, but another tech giant is fighting a quieter legal war over user privacy: Microsoft....

Partially Automated Cars Provide Enough Benefits to Warrant Widespread Adoption of Current Safety Technologies
From ACM TechNews

Partially Automated Cars Provide Enough Benefits to Warrant Widespread Adoption of Current Safety Technologies

Carnegie Mellon University researchers say the public would benefit if safety-oriented, partially automated vehicle technologies were deployed in all cars.

Baidu ­ses Millions of ­sers' Location Data to Make Predictions
From ACM News

Baidu ­ses Millions of ­sers' Location Data to Make Predictions

Baidu, China's internet search giant, has shown just what you can learn when you have access to enough location data.

Snowden Designs a Device to Warn If Your Iphone's Radios Are Snitching
From ACM News

Snowden Designs a Device to Warn If Your Iphone's Radios Are Snitching

When Edward Snowden met with reporters in a Hong Kong hotel room to spill the NSA's secrets, he famously asked them put their phones in the fridge to block any...

Learning to Trust a Self-Driving Car
From ACM News

Learning to Trust a Self-Driving Car

On a clear morning in early May, Brian Lathrop, a senior engineer for Volkswagen's Electronics Research Laboratory, was in the driver's seat of a Tesla Model S...

­.s. Pumps $400 Million Into Next-Generation Wireless Research
From ACM TechNews

­.s. Pumps $400 Million Into Next-Generation Wireless Research

The U.S. National Science Foundation will invest more than $400 million over the next seven years to fund next-generation wireless research.

Can We Protect Against Computers Being Fingerprinted?
From ACM TechNews

Can We Protect Against Computers Being Fingerprinted?

University of Adelaide researchers are working to find new methods of protecting against the fingerprinting of personal computers.

Hololens Augmented Reality to Foil Hack Attacks in Factories
From ACM TechNews

Hololens Augmented Reality to Foil Hack Attacks in Factories

An augmented reality "IT help desk" could allow factories to identify and mitigate cyberattacks on industrial control systems.

Nyu Researchers Report Cybersecurity Risks in 3D Printing
From ACM TechNews

Nyu Researchers Report Cybersecurity Risks in 3D Printing

Additive manufacturing, also known as three-dimensional printing, faces some of the same cybersecurity risks as the electronics industry.

Europe Is Going After Google Hard, and Google May Not Win
From ACM News

Europe Is Going After Google Hard, and Google May Not Win

Microsoft pulled the strings. At least, that’s what Google and so many business and tech journalists said when the search giant first faced antitrust complaints...

DARPA Hopes Automation Can Create the Perfect Hacker
From ACM News

DARPA Hopes Automation Can Create the Perfect Hacker

Look out, human hackers. Pentagon research agency DARPA says people are too slow at finding and fixing security bugs and wants to see smart software take over the...

Clever Tool Shields Your Car From Hacks By Watching Its Internal Clocks
From ACM News

Clever Tool Shields Your Car From Hacks By Watching Its Internal Clocks

Car-hacking demonstrations tend to get all the glory in the security research community—remotely paralyzing a Jeep on the highway or cutting a Corvette’s brakes...

How to Stay Anonymous Online
From ACM TechNews

How to Stay Anonymous Online

New technology for protecting anonymity online provides stronger security guarantees but uses bandwidth much more efficiently than previous anonymity networks.

Extortion Extinction: Researchers Develop a Way to Stop Ransomware
From ACM TechNews

Extortion Extinction: Researchers Develop a Way to Stop Ransomware

University of Florida researchers have developed a system they say can thwart ransomware.

Computer Hackers Don't Stand a Chance Against These Girls
From ACM TechNews

Computer Hackers Don't Stand a Chance Against These Girls

The GenCyber program consists of 119 summer camps for girls sponsored by the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) and the National Academy of Sciences.

How to Stay Anonymous Online
From ACM News

How to Stay Anonymous Online

Anonymity networks protect people living under repressive regimes from surveillance of their Internet use. But the recent discovery of vulnerabilities in the most...
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