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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.


Can AI All but End Car Crashes? The Potential Is There
From ACM TechNews

Can AI All but End Car Crashes? The Potential Is There

Proponents of artificial intelligence believe it can be used to predict, and help to prevent, dangerous driving behaviors.

'Tamper-Evident Container' Will Snitch if Anyone Tries to Meddle with What's Inside
From ACM TechNews

'Tamper-Evident Container' Will Snitch if Anyone Tries to Meddle with What's Inside

A team of researchers three-dimensionally (3D)-printed a prototype Tamper-Evident Container designed to record attempts to break into it.

Scientists Use 3D-Printed Shells to Ward Off Ravens, Save Desert Tortoises
From ACM TechNews

Scientists Use 3D-Printed Shells to Ward Off Ravens, Save Desert Tortoises

Researchers have developed a Techno-tortoise that eventually could help curtail a decline in the desert tortoise population.

Web Scraping is Legal, U.S. Appeals Court Reaffirms
From ACM News

Web Scraping is Legal, U.S. Appeals Court Reaffirms

The Ninth Circuit's decision is a major win for archivists, academics, researchers, and journalists who use tools to collect, or scrape, information that is publicly...

Football Tech That's More Than a Laser and Light Show
From ACM News

Football Tech That's More Than a Laser and Light Show

The U.S.F.L. is testing tech that could resolve disputes over where balls are spotted, clearly show if a first down was reached, and track players who stand too...

A 2020 Ransomware Attack is Still Harming Baltimore Teachers
From ACM News

A 2020 Ransomware Attack is Still Harming Baltimore Teachers

A glitch that affects up to 9,000 retirees is one of the longest-lasting effects of the devastating ransomware attack that cost the district roughly $10 million...

The Tech Bubble That Never Burst
From ACM News

The Tech Bubble That Never Burst

Today's warnings are different from those of the last decade. Investors tiptoe around the word "bubble," referring instead to a "recalibration," a "pullback" or...

Want to 3D-Print a Kidney? Start by Thinking Small
From ACM TechNews

Want to 3D-Print a Kidney? Start by Thinking Small

Scientists have developed microfludic-enabled three-dimensional (3D) printing of organs.

AF2Complex: Researchers Leverage Deep Learning to Predict Physical Interactions of Protein Complexes
From ACM TechNews

AF2Complex: Researchers Leverage Deep Learning to Predict Physical Interactions of Protein Complexes

Researchers built a deep learning model to predict the biologically active structure of proteins and protein complexes.

Feel the Attraction of Zwitterionic Janus Particles
From ACM TechNews

Feel the Attraction of Zwitterionic Janus Particles

Researchers have simulated the electrostatic self-configuration of zwitterionic Janus nanoparticles.

Ancient Namibian Gemstone Holds Key to Future Quantum Computers
From ACM News

Ancient Namibian Gemstone Holds Key to Future Quantum Computers

Hamid Ohadi of the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of St Andrews said: "Making a quantum simulator with light is the holy grail of science."

Magnetic Snoops Plunder Deep Learning's Secrets
From ACM News

Magnetic Snoops Plunder Deep Learning's Secrets

Even the smallest window of opportunity for snooping cab pose a threat to the intellectual property and privacy of neural architectures.

How Democracies Spy on Their Citizens
From ACM News

How Democracies Spy on Their Citizens

The inside story of the world's most notorious commercial spyware and the big tech companies waging war against it.

Driverless Cars Can Be Tricked into Seeing Red Traffic Lights as Green
From ACM TechNews

Driverless Cars Can Be Tricked into Seeing Red Traffic Lights as Green

Researchers at China's Zhejiang University found driverless cars could be fooled into seeing red traffic lights as green.

Quantum Computing Ambition: Japan Aims for 10 Million Users by 2030
From ACM TechNews

Quantum Computing Ambition: Japan Aims for 10 Million Users by 2030

Japan has unveiled plans to bring its first domestic quantum computer online by next March, and to have 30 million users by 2030.

Tool Could Predict How at Risk Your Job is From Automation
From ACM TechNews

Tool Could Predict How at Risk Your Job is From Automation

Scientists  have designed an algorithm to predict the extent to which specific occupations are at risk from automation.

Hospital Robot Vulnerabilities Promptly Caught, Killed
From ACM TechNews

Hospital Robot Vulnerabilities Promptly Caught, Killed

Researchers at New York-based cybersecurity startup Cynerio identified five zero-day vulnerabilities affecting Aethon TUG smart autonomous robots used in hospitals...

Dutch Scandal Serves as a Warning for Europe over Risks of Using Algorithms
From ACM News

Dutch Scandal Serves as a Warning for Europe over Risks of Using Algorithms

The Dutch tax authority ruined thousands of lives after using an algorithm to spot suspected benefits fraud — and critics say there is little stopping it from happening...

A.I. Is Mastering Language. Should We Trust What It Says?
From ACM News

A.I. Is Mastering Language. Should We Trust What It Says?

OpenAI's GPT-3 and other neural nets can now write original prose with mind-boggling fluency — a development that could have profound implications for the future...

Web Surfing that Feels Instantaneous, Even Though It's Not
From ACM TechNews

Web Surfing that Feels Instantaneous, Even Though It's Not

Researchers have developed a design for a speed-of-light Internet network across 120 U.S. cities.
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