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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.


Researchers Dare AI Experts to Crack New Gotcha Password Scheme
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Dare AI Experts to Crack New Gotcha Password Scheme

Carnegie Mellon University researchers have developed GOTCHA, Generating panOptic Turing Tests to Tell Computers and Humans Apart, a password system based on visual...

The Hidden Technology That Makes Twitter Huge
From ACM News

The Hidden Technology That Makes Twitter Huge

Consider the tweet.

The Highs and Hazards of Bitcoin
From ACM News

The Highs and Hazards of Bitcoin

Bitcoin, the leading online alternative currency, has attracted high-minded entrepreneurs and crooks alike.

Here's What the Morris Worm Prosecutor Thinks About Aaron Swartz
From ACM Opinion

Here's What the Morris Worm Prosecutor Thinks About Aaron Swartz

It was 25 years ago Tuesday that The New York Times first named 23-year-old Cornell graduate student Robert Morris as the culprit behind what became known as the...

Quantum 'sealed Envelope' System Enables 'perfectly Secure' Information Storage
From ACM TechNews

Quantum 'sealed Envelope' System Enables 'perfectly Secure' Information Storage

Cambridge University researchers say they have achieved a breakthrough in quantum cryptography by demonstrating that information can be encrypted and then decrypted...

Nsa's Reported Tampering Could Change How Crypto Standards Are Made
From ACM TechNews

Nsa's Reported Tampering Could Change How Crypto Standards Are Made

The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology is formally reviewing its cryptographic standards development processes to address a loss of public confidence...

Intense Smog Is Making Beijing's Massive Surveillance Network Practically Useless
From ACM News

Intense Smog Is Making Beijing's Massive Surveillance Network Practically Useless

Beijing's surveillance network, one of the most extensive and invasive in the world, has been compromised by an unexpected foe: smog.

How a Grad Student Trying to Build the First Botnet Brought the Internet to Its Knees
From ACM Careers

How a Grad Student Trying to Build the First Botnet Brought the Internet to Its Knees

On November 3, 1988, 25 years ago Sunday, people woke up to find the Internet had changed forever.

The Fight Against Biometric Spoofing
From ACM TechNews

The Fight Against Biometric Spoofing

The European Union has provided additional funding for the Tabula Rasa Consortium, a research group developing countermeasures against spoofed biometric identifiers...

Who Has the Right to Know Where Your Phone Has Been?
From ACM News

Who Has the Right to Know Where Your Phone Has Been?

You probably know, or should know, that your cellphone is tracking your location everywhere you go.

Of Course Gas Stations Will ­se Facial Recognition Tech to Serve 'Relevant' Ads
From ACM News

Of Course Gas Stations Will ­se Facial Recognition Tech to Serve 'Relevant' Ads

Say you're at a gas station. Say you're buying some supplies—bottled water, coffee, maybe some M&Ms—before you head back to your car.

The Dark Corners of the Internet
From ACM News

The Dark Corners of the Internet

The way information spreads through society has been the focus of intense study in recent years.

Fifth Amendment Prohibits Compelled Decryption, New EFF Brief Argues
From ACM Opinion

Fifth Amendment Prohibits Compelled Decryption, New EFF Brief Argues

Encryption is one of the most important ways to safeguard data from prying eyes.

NSA Infiltrates Links to Yahoo, Google Data Centers Worldwide, Snowden Documents Say
From ACM News

NSA Infiltrates Links to Yahoo, Google Data Centers Worldwide, Snowden Documents Say

The National Security Agency has secretly broken into the main communications links that connect Yahoo and Google data centers around the world, according to documents...

Web Giants Threaten End to Cookie Tracking
From ACM News

Web Giants Threaten End to Cookie Tracking

The end could be near for cookies, the tiny pieces of code that marketers deploy on Web browsers to track people's online movements, serve targeted advertising,...

Who Tracks the Trackers that Track You Online? You Can, with Lightbeam.
From ACM News

Who Tracks the Trackers that Track You Online? You Can, with Lightbeam.

When your browser landed on this article, it didn't just talk to the friendly servers at washingtonpost.com.

Researchers Integrate Social Science Into Cyberattack Project
From ACM TechNews

Researchers Integrate Social Science Into Cyberattack Project

Carnegie Mellon University researchers are helping to develop methods for computers to make security decisions in cyberspace by investigating psychological and...

Why We Should Think About the Threat of Artificial Intelligence
From ACM Opinion

Why We Should Think About the Threat of Artificial Intelligence

If the New York Times's latest article is to be believed, artificial intelligence is moving so fast it sometimes seems almost "magical."

Dm Warns of Enemies' Cyber War Against Iran
From ACM News

Dm Warns of Enemies' Cyber War Against Iran

Iranian Defense Minister Brigadier General Hossein Dehqan warned of enemies' possible plots to wage a cyber war against the country to destroy Iran's scientific...

Software Beats Captcha, the Web's 'are You Human?' Test
From ACM TechNews

Software Beats Captcha, the Web's 'are You Human?' Test

California-based startup Vicarious says it has developed software that can successfully crack any text-based CAPTCHA program, defeating Google's reCAPTCHA program...
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