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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.


Phones Leave a Telltale Trail
From ACM News

Phones Leave a Telltale Trail

The April robbery at the Cartier store in Chevy Chase, Md., was brazen and quick.

Now You Can Build Google's $1m Artificial Brain on the Cheap
From ACM News

Now You Can Build Google's $1m Artificial Brain on the Cheap

Andrew Ng wants to bring deep learning—an emerging computer science field that seeks to mimic the human brain with hardware and software into the DIY era.

A Revolution in the Making
From ACM News

A Revolution in the Making

On a dark and stormy night two weeks ago in Schenectady, N.Y., Ken Hislop was relaxing at home when his cellphone suddenly began buzzing in his pocket. It was an...

Will the Nsa Rethink Its Data Collection System?
From ACM Opinion

Will the Nsa Rethink Its Data Collection System?

Weekend Edition Sunday Host Rachel Martin talks to Joel Brenner, former senior counsel at the National Security Agency, about whether the NSA can protect Americans'...

Making Online Translation Accurate, Reliable, and Efficient
From ACM TechNews

Making Online Translation Accurate, Reliable, and Efficient

The European Union is funding Multilingual On-Line Translation, a project designed to create an online tool that will enable Web-content providers to automatically...

Secret Court Ruling Put Tech Companies in Data Bind
From ACM News

Secret Court Ruling Put Tech Companies in Data Bind

In a secret court in Washington, Yahoo's top lawyers made their case.

Computer Scientists Grapple With How to Manage the Digital Legacy of the Departed
From ACM TechNews

Computer Scientists Grapple With How to Manage the Digital Legacy of the Departed

Current concerns for privacy and access shows a disconnect between the disposition of digital legacies and the technological advancements for generating them.

Carnegie Mellon Method Uses Network of Cameras to Track People in Complex Indoor Settings
From ACM TechNews

Carnegie Mellon Method Uses Network of Cameras to Track People in Complex Indoor Settings

Researchers have developed a method for tracking the locations of multiple individuals in complex, indoor settings using a network of video cameras. 

China Could Supplant U.S. as the Supercomputing Superpower
From ACM News

China Could Supplant U.S. as the Supercomputing Superpower

Two weeks ago, Jack Dongarra flew to Changsha, China for a meeting with researchers at the National University of Defense Technology, home to the country's top...

The Remarkable Properties of Mythological Social Networks
From ACM News

The Remarkable Properties of Mythological Social Networks

Ten years ago, few people would have heard of a social network.

From ACM Careers

Study Gauges Value of Technology in Schools

With school districts rushing to buy computers, tablets, digital white boards, and other technology, a new report questions whether the investment is worth it.

Why Google Is the Big Data Company That Matters Most
From ACM Opinion

Why Google Is the Big Data Company That Matters Most

Every now and then, someone asks "Who’ll be the Google of big data?"

Graffiti Codes Let You Surf With a Wave of Your Phone
From ACM TechNews

Graffiti Codes Let You Surf With a Wave of Your Phone

Researchers want to enable people to create quick response (QR) codes on the spot, like graffiti. 

Supreme Court Says Human Genes Aren't Patentable
From ACM News

Supreme Court Says Human Genes Aren't Patentable

The Supreme Court unanimously ruled Thursday that human genes isolated from the body can't be patented, a victory for doctors and patients who argued that such...

1st Web Page Proves as Elusive as Mysteries of the Universe
From ACM TechNews

1st Web Page Proves as Elusive as Mysteries of the Universe

Scientists may never make a clear-cut discovery of the first Web page ever created because of the nature of how data is stored.

The Nsa Could Collect Far More Than Your Phone Records from Mobile Operators
From ACM News

The Nsa Could Collect Far More Than Your Phone Records from Mobile Operators

The revelation that the National Security Agency is collecting our phone records has generated considerable outrage, but phone call metadata is just the beginning...

Big Data Sleuthing, 1960s Style
From ACM News

Big Data Sleuthing, 1960s Style

America's intelligence agencies have long prodded the frontiers of computing and data analysis as the most demanding of customers, willing to pay whatever it takes...

How Social Media Is Changing Disaster Response
From ACM News

How Social Media Is Changing Disaster Response

When Hurricane Katrina ravaged the U.S. Gulf Coast in 2005, Facebook was the new kid on the block. There was no Twitter for news updates, and the iPhone was not...

Laws of Physics Say Quantum Cryptography Is Unhackable. It’s Not
From ACM TechNews

Laws of Physics Say Quantum Cryptography Is Unhackable. It’s Not

Quantum cryptography can theoretically encrypt a message in a way that can't be hacked, but even quantum cryptography systems can fail. 

Spies Like ­s: How We All Helped Build Prism
From ACM Careers

Spies Like ­s: How We All Helped Build Prism

It used to be that the National Security Agency and its ilk had to pay through the nose for the latest in spying technology.
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