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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.


In Search of New Rules to Protect Other Worlds From Earth's Cooties
From ACM News

In Search of New Rules to Protect Other Worlds From Earth's Cooties

NASA has to start protecting planets better. The international treaty governing space—there is one—and the laws and regulations that follow it date back to the...

Dawn's Latest Orbit Reveals Dramatic New Views of Occator Crater
From ACM News

Dawn's Latest Orbit Reveals Dramatic New Views of Occator Crater

NASA's Dawn spacecraft reached its lowest-ever and final orbit around dwarf planet Ceres on June 6 and has been returning thousands of stunning images and other...

I Never Said That! High-Tech Deception of 'Deepfake' Videos
From ACM News

I Never Said That! High-Tech Deception of 'Deepfake' Videos

Hey, did my congressman really say that? Is that really President Donald Trump on that video, or am I being duped?

NIST Researchers Simulate Simple Logic for Nanofluidic Computing
From ACM TechNews

NIST Researchers Simulate Simple Logic for Nanofluidic Computing

U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology researchers have shown how computational logic operations could be performed in a liquid medium by simulating...

Time Split to the Nanosecond Is Precisely What Wall Street Wants
From ACM News

Time Split to the Nanosecond Is Precisely What Wall Street Wants

Computer scientists at Stanford University and Google have created technology that can track time down to 100 billionths of a second. It could be just what Wall...

Why Are Countries Creating Public Random Number Generators?
From ACM News

Why Are Countries Creating Public Random Number Generators?

In Chile, politicians resent the Comptroller General, which audits government officials to prevent corruption.

Inventing the Future in Chinese Labs: How Does China Do Science Today? 
From ACM Careers

Inventing the Future in Chinese Labs: How Does China Do Science Today? 

Genetic engineering, the search for dark matter, quantum computing and communications, artificial intelligence, brain science—the list of potentially disruptive...

Complex Organics Bubble ­p from Enceladus
From ACM News

Complex Organics Bubble ­p from Enceladus

Data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft reveal complex organic molecules originating from Saturn's icy moon Enceladus, strengthening the idea that this ocean world...

The Rise of DNA Data Storage
From ACM News

The Rise of DNA Data Storage

The 144 words of Robert Frost's seminal poem "The Road Not Taken" fit neatly onto a single printed page. Or in a 1-kilobyte data file.

Daring Japanese Mission Reaches ­nexplored Asteroid Ryugu
From ACM News

Daring Japanese Mission Reaches ­nexplored Asteroid Ryugu

After travelling for three-and-a-half years, the Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa-2 this week makes its final approach to the asteroid Ryugu.

China Extends Lead as Most Prolific Supercomputer Maker
From ACM News

China Extends Lead as Most Prolific Supercomputer Maker

America is now home to the world's speediest supercomputer. But the new list of the 500 swiftest machines underlines how much faster China is building them.

Are We Alone in the ­niverse?
From ACM News

Are We Alone in the ­niverse?

Say goodbye to ET, Marvin the Martian and Yoda. Humans are probably the only intelligent life in the universe, researchers from the University of Oxford have reported...

NASA Asks: Will We Know Life When We See It?
From ACM News

NASA Asks: Will We Know Life When We See It?

In the last decade, we have discovered thousands of planets outside our solar system and have learned that rocky, temperate worlds are numerous in our galaxy.

Adobe Is Using AI to Catch Photoshopped Images
From ACM News

Adobe Is Using AI to Catch Photoshopped Images

While picture editors have tweaked images for decades, modern tools like Adobe Photoshop let them alter photos to the point of complete fabrication.

The Quest to Make Super-cold Quantum Blobs in Space
From ACM News

The Quest to Make Super-cold Quantum Blobs in Space

On a frigid day last January in northern Sweden, a German-led team of physicists loaded a curious machine onto an unmanned rocket.

Japan's Hayabusa2 Spacecraft Creeps ­p on the Ryugu Asteroid
From ACM News

Japan's Hayabusa2 Spacecraft Creeps ­p on the Ryugu Asteroid

Here's the mission for Japan's Hayabusa2 spacecraft in a nutshell: Fly to a carbon-rich asteroid between the orbits of Earth and Mars, study it for a year and a...

Why a 40-Year-Old SCOT­S Ruling Against Software Patents Still Matters Today
From ACM News

Why a 40-Year-Old SCOT­S Ruling Against Software Patents Still Matters Today

Forty years ago this week, in the case of Parker v. Flook, the US Supreme Court came close to banning software patents.

Pain Is Weird. Making Bionic Arms Feel Pain Is Even Weirder
From ACM News

Pain Is Weird. Making Bionic Arms Feel Pain Is Even Weirder

Pain is an indispensable tool for survival.

Finally, a Problem That Only Quantum Computers Will Ever Be Able to Solve
From ACM News

Finally, a Problem That Only Quantum Computers Will Ever Be Able to Solve

Early on in the study of quantum computers, computer scientists posed a question whose answer, they knew, would reveal something deep about the power of these futuristic...

How to Control Robots with Brainwaves and Hand Gestures
From ACM News

How to Control Robots with Brainwaves and Hand Gestures

Getting robots to do things isn't easy: Usually, scientists have to either explicitly program them or get them to understand how humans communicate via language...
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