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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.


What 'the Imitation Game' Didn't Tell You About Turing's Greatest Triumph
From ACM Opinion

What 'the Imitation Game' Didn't Tell You About Turing's Greatest Triumph

Freeman Dyson, 91, the famed physicist, author and oracle of human destiny, is holding forth after tea-time one February afternoon in the common room of the Institute...

Beijing Subway Swipe Data Betrays Social Class
From ACM News

Beijing Subway Swipe Data Betrays Social Class

Beijing is an enormous city, sprawling over an area 10 times larger than Greater London.

Spies Can Track You Just By Watching Your Phone's Power ­se
From ACM News

Spies Can Track You Just By Watching Your Phone's Power ­se

Smartphone users might balk at letting a random app like Candy Crush or Shazam track their every move via GPS. But researchers have found that Android phones reveal...

Is Your Toaster a Silent Recruit in a 'thingbot' Army?
From ACM News

Is Your Toaster a Silent Recruit in a 'thingbot' Army?

All kinds of gadgets, from toasters to sprinklers, fridges to domestic heating systems, are now boasting sensors, actuators and low-powered embedded chips.

The Great Sim Heist
From ACM News

The Great Sim Heist

American and British spies hacked into the internal computer network of the largest manufacturer of SIM cards in the world, stealing encryption keys used to protect...

Hacking the Hill
From ACM News

Hacking the Hill

A growing number of organizations think technology holds the potential to improve the efficiency of government.  

How Hackers Could Attack Hard Drives to Create a Pervasive Backdoor
From ACM News

How Hackers Could Attack Hard Drives to Create a Pervasive Backdoor

News that a hacking group within or associated with the National Security Agency compromised the firmware of hard drive controllers from a number of manufacturers...

Physics in Finance: Trading at the Speed of Light
From ACM News

Physics in Finance: Trading at the Speed of Light

Financial traders are in a race to make transactions ever faster.

Nist Announces Pilot Grants Competition to Improve Security and Privacy of Online Identity Verification Systems
From ACM TechNews

Nist Announces Pilot Grants Competition to Improve Security and Privacy of Online Identity Verification Systems

The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has announced a fourth round of grants for developing online identity verification systems that help...

White House Names Nation's First Chief Data Scientist
From ACM Careers

White House Names Nation's First Chief Data Scientist

Taking a page from Silicon Valley's playbook, the White House said on Wednesday it had appointed the nation's first chief data scientist.

Time Lords: The Clocks That Rule Our World
From ACM News

Time Lords: The Clocks That Rule Our World

Time is money—and never was this clearer than at 09:59:59.985 Eastern Time, on 3 June 2013.

If Software Looks Like a Brain and Acts Like a Brain—will We Treat It Like One?
From ACM News

If Software Looks Like a Brain and Acts Like a Brain—will We Treat It Like One?

Long the domain of science fiction, researchers are now working to create software that perfectly models human and animal brains.

Obama Calls For New Cooperation to Wrangle the 'wild West' Internet
From ACM TechNews

Obama Calls For New Cooperation to Wrangle the 'wild West' Internet

President Barrack Obama has called on the private sector to take greater steps to share information about cybersecurity threats. 

Did Nsa Plant Spyware in Computers Around World?
From ACM News

Did Nsa Plant Spyware in Computers Around World?

Did the National Security Agency plant spyware deep in the hard drives of thousands of computers used by foreign governments, banks and other surveillance targets...

Hoping Google's Lab Is a Rainmaker
From ACM Careers

Hoping Google's Lab Is a Rainmaker

Google's research arm, Google X, is called the company's Moonshot Factory. One reason the company picked the word "Moonshot" was to remind people to tackle big...

Cryptographers Could Prevent Satellite Collisions
From ACM News

Cryptographers Could Prevent Satellite Collisions

In February 2009 the U.S.'s Iridium 33 satellite collided with the Russian Cosmos 2251, instantly destroying both communications satellites.

The Coming Boom In Brain Medicines
From ACM News

The Coming Boom In Brain Medicines

Tony Coles could have had any job he wanted in the drug industry.

A Crypto Trick That Makes Software Nearly Impossible to Reverse-Engineer
From ACM News

A Crypto Trick That Makes Software Nearly Impossible to Reverse-Engineer

Software reverse engineering, the art of pulling programs apart to figure out how they work, is what makes it possible for sophisticated hackers to scour code for...

Facebook, Linkedin Join to Help Women in Tech
From ACM TechNews

Facebook, Linkedin Join to Help Women in Tech

Facebook and LinkedIn have launched a collaborative initiative to boost the shrinking numbers of women studying engineering and computer science. 

The Invisible Network That Keeps the World Running
From ACM News

The Invisible Network That Keeps the World Running

It’s been just over 45 years since the Apollo Moon landings, and some would have it that we are failing to build big anymore; that we've since become too fascinated...
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