From Communications of the ACM
Digital innovation is not working in the interest of the whole of society. It is time to radically rethink its purpose without…
Filippo Gualtiero Blancato| March 1, 2024
Like many people who are careful about their weight, Larry Smarr once spent two weeks measuring everything he put in his mouth. He charted each serving of food...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | June 22, 2012
In the last week or so, cyberwarfare has made front-page news: the United States may have been behind the Stuxnet cyberattack on Iran; Iran may have suffered another...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | June 6, 2012
In 1984, Yale sociologist Charles Perrow published his classic book, Normal Accidents: Living with High-Risk Technologies. The odd term, "normal accident," Perrow...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | May 22, 2012
From state-sponsored cyberattacks to autonomous robotic weapons, 21st century war is increasingly disembodied.The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | March 30, 2012
A mile or two away from Facebook's headquarters in Silicon Valley, Helen Nissenbaum of New York University was standing in a basement on Stanford's campus explaining...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | March 30, 2012
Footnotes—or endnotes, or just notes; whatever you want to call them—are a problem. They're a problem for writers and a problem for readers and a problem for typesetters...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | March 13, 2012
Evi, the Siri knockoff that got attention last week for looking too much like Siri, has beendownloaded over 200,000 times, leading us to believe that this one might...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | February 28, 2012
The New York Times recently ran an opinion piece about the concept of a morality pill, a theoretical-but-apparently-not-implausible panacea for humankind's ethical...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | February 5, 2012
The data revolution has turned customers into unwitting business consultants, as our purchases and searches are tracked to improve everything from Web sites to...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | November 23, 2011
Bits and Base Pairs explores the concept that the information encoded in our DNA can be compressed down to just 4MB, the equivalent, for example, of "the three...The Atlantic From ACM News | October 28, 2011
"I never forget a face," goes the Marx Brothers one-liner, "but in your case, I'll be glad to make an exception." Unlike Groucho Marx, unfortunately, the cloud...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | October 11, 2011
The Internet causes connections to multiply and strengthen, creating a frenzy of positive feedback, which can drive people apart—not together.The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | September 21, 2011
The technology in question starts with "gigapixel" photography. Gigapixel photos are giant panoramas that themselves consist of hundreds of component mega-pixel...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | August 31, 2011
When Colin Hughes was about 11 years old his parents brought home a rather strange toy. It wasn't colorful or cartoonish; it didn't seem to have any lasers or...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | June 14, 2011
Thanks to many people who have written in asking whether the recent Google announcement of a new China-based wave of attacks on Gmail accounts is related to the...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | June 6, 2011
Once upon a time, before the age of the Internet, we lived in a world of "many economists." If a newspaper reporter was writing a story on inflation, for instance...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | March 10, 2011
In the race to build computers that can think like humans, the proving ground is the Turing Test—an annual battle between the world’s most advanced artificial...The Atlantic From ACM News | February 8, 2011