A man in Emden, Mo., recently mailed a letter that he had addressed, in a scribble, to somebody in "Shelhjreille, Mo." That's the way his handwriting made it...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | November 7, 2011
Law-enforcement and intelligence agencies are increasingly relying on information from the Web and electronic records to help solve crimes and evaluate threats...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | November 7, 2011
The U.S. Department of Justice now says its use of a cellphone-tracking device in a controversial Arizona case could be considered a "search" under the Fourth...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | November 4, 2011
When David Kirkby and Daniel Margala entered a contest to find out who could most accurately map dark matter in the universe, the first algorithm they submitted...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | October 17, 2011
Without Steve Jobs, Apple Inc. investors and customers are asking a big question: Can it continue to turn out innovative products without its co-founder and design...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | October 12, 2011
Want to monitor an earthquake, track political activity or predict the ups and downs of the stock market? Researchers have found a bonanza of real-time data in...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | October 5, 2011
For more than a year, federal authorities pursued a man they called simply "the Hacker." Only after using a little known cellphone-tracking device—a stingray—were...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | September 23, 2011
Today, hospitals and doctors use a system of about 18,000 codes to describe medical services in bills they send to insurers. Apparently, that doesn't allow for...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | September 16, 2011
A group of researchers said that by examining the whole genome of a family of four, they were able to make unusually specific findings, including the daughter's...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | September 16, 2011
During a "hackathon" last year, GroupMe co-founders Steve Martocci and Jared Hecht built a group text-messaging service in one 24-hour stretch. In August, the...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | September 14, 2011
Robots created by William "Red" Whittaker have crawled into mines and volcanoes, crossed deserts, won a 60-mile road race, helped clean up nuclear waste and harvested...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | July 5, 2011
Google Inc. launched its most ambitious social-networking effort yet, broadening a battle with Facebook Inc. to grab the attention of Web users and future advertising...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | June 29, 2011
Homeland Security's Bruce McConnell on the government's role in helping companies fight online attacks.The Wall Street Journal From ACM Opinion | June 28, 2011
The Federal Trade Commission is poised to serve Google Inc. with civil subpoenas, according to people familiar with the matter, signaling the start of a wide-ranging...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | June 24, 2011
On Monday, the organization that regulates the world's Internet domain names—yes, there is central coordination—approved changes that could allow anyone to register...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | June 22, 2011
When email-marketing firm Epsilon Data Management discovered in March that hackers had stolen consumer email addresses it maintains for major banks and retailers...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | June 20, 2011
RSA Security is offering to provide security monitoring or replace its well-known SecurID tokens—devices used by millions of corporate workers to securely log...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | June 7, 2011
From this city of six million, Shandong Lanxiang Vocational School quietly churns out 30,000 mechanics, barbers, and welders each year. One of its triumphs was...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | June 6, 2011
Google Inc. executive chairman Eric Schmidt said one of his biggest failures as chief executive of the search giant over the last decade was grappling with the...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | June 1, 2011
The Pentagon has concluded that computer sabotage coming from another country can constitute an act of war, a finding that for the first time opens the door for...The Wall Street Journal From ACM News | May 31, 2011