Biometric markers are increasingly popular targets of data theft, potentially endangering far more than your locally stored information…
From ACM NewsDavid Geer Commissioned by CACM Staff| June 23, 2022
An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.
Iarpa, the intelligence community’s way-out research shop, wants to know where you took that vacation picture over the Fourth of July. It wants to know where...Wired From ACM News | August 2, 2011
Someone types a command into a laptop, and Actroid-DER jerks upright with a shudder and a wheeze. Compressed air flows beneath silicone skin, triggering actuators...National Geographic From ACM News | August 2, 2011
Many high-end cars today come equipped with brake assist systems, which help a driver use the brakes correctly depending on particular conditions in an emergency...Technology Review From ACM News | August 2, 2011
Can't wait for 4G to become the ubiquitous standard for mobile communication? On the edge of your seat for the unveiling of Microsoft's secret Menlo Project and...Wired From ACM News | August 2, 2011
A Canadian company developing a quantum computer made news in May when it sold a system to defense manufacturer Lockheed-Martin for $10 million, though skeptics...Neil Savage From ACM News | August 2, 2011
NASA's Dawn spacecraft, the first ever to orbit an object in the main asteroid belt, is spiraling toward its first of four intensive science orbits. That initial...NASA From ACM News | August 2, 2011
Every week it seems there are reports about U.S. drones—unmanned, remote-controlled aerial vehicles—tracking down suspected terrorists in remote, unreachable...National Public Radio From ACM News | August 1, 2011
Research at the University of Oxford is playing a key role in the development of revolutionary insect-sized vehicles with micro-cameras, suitable for different...EarthSky From ACM News | August 1, 2011
A research team recently presented a paper at the International Symposium on Computer Architecture that highlights the problem of developing smaller, more densely...The New York Times From ACM TechNews | August 1, 2011
Super-stealthy submarines may one day glide through the water without creating a wake, if a plan to channel fluid intelligently around objects can be made to...New Scientist From ACM News | August 1, 2011
Vulnerabilities in electronic systems that control prison doors could allow hackers or others to spring prisoners from their jail cells, according to researchers...Wired From ACM News | August 1, 2011
Gravity may be woven into the very fabric of space-time, but some objects seem nearly immune to its pull. Scale something down to the size of a dust particle...IEEE Spectrum From ACM News | July 29, 2011
SofCheck's Tucker Taft has developed the Parallel Specification and Implementation Language, a new programming language designed to maximize the potential of multicore...Technology Review From ACM TechNews | July 29, 2011
Steve Perlman, Silicon Valley’s self-styled Thomas Edison, has found a way to increase wireless capacity by a factor of 1,000.Businessweek From ACM Opinion | July 29, 2011
A rash of cyberattacks has raised the profile of such incursions and led to a booming cyberweapons industry. Bloomberg Businessweek From ACM TechNews | July 28, 2011
The U.S. Army wants to allow soldiers to communicate just by thinking. ?The new science of synthetic telepathy could soon make that happen.Discover Magazine From ACM News | July 28, 2011
Anyone can now view for themselves the raw data that was at the centre of last year's "climategate" scandal.New Scientist From ACM News | July 28, 2011
England's Premier League and any others who want to introduce goalline technology got the go-ahead to do so from FIFA president Sepp Blatter on Wednesday, as...Reuters From ACM News | July 28, 2011
For more than a decade, scientists have been touting the promise of nanomaterials as a source of new and better products, from stronger structural materials to...Technology Review From ACM News | July 27, 2011