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ACM TechNews - Monday, December 2, 2002
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ACM TechNews
Volume 4, Number 429
Date: December 2, 2002
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Top Stories for Monday, December 2, 2002:
http://www.acm.org/technews/current/homepage.html
"Black Market For Software Is Sidestepping Export Controls"
"Hollywood, Tech Become Wary Partners Against Piracy"
"Listening to the Internet Reveals Best Connections"
"Total Info System Totally Touchy"
"Fishing for Data"
"From Darwin to Internet at the Speed of Light"
"Don't Write Off Existing IT Skills"
"Biology May Help Shrink Electronic Components at NASA"
"DARPA Looks to Quantum Future"
"The Rogue DNS Phenomenon"
"Purdue Panel Maps Safer Wireless World for United Nations"
"Future Security"
"Coding with Life's Code"
"Seething over Spam"
"The Making of a Policy Gadfly"
"Software Doesn't Work. Customers Are in Revolt. Here's the Plan."
******************* News Stories ***********************
"Black Market For Software Is Sidestepping Export Controls"
Export restrictions are in place to bar the sale of scientific
and engineering software to rogue nations such as Iraq or North
Korea, but such countries can acquire these technologies easily
through a black market. Worse, clamping down on this market is ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item1
"Hollywood, Tech Become Wary Partners Against Piracy"
Executives of entertainment companies hope that partnerships with
technology companies will better their chances of curtailing the
digital piracy of music and movies, and are making efforts to
overcome long-term animosity between the two sectors. Fox Group ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item2
"Listening to the Internet Reveals Best Connections"
Chris Chafe of Stanford University's Center for Computer Research
in Music and Acoustics has developed a way to check the quality
of Internet connections by converting latency variations into a
musical format. The conventional method of assessing an Internet ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item3
"Total Info System Totally Touchy"
The Total Information Awareness System proposed by the Pentagon's
Office of Information Awareness will require new database mining
technologies that leave many in the industry unsettled. The
project, which has received $137 million in funding for 2003, ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item4
"Fishing for Data"
As the amount of digitized information created continues to
increase, ways of extracting needed data are struggling to keep
up. Meanwhile, researchers are also working on ways to
accommodate wireless computing technologies, such as a project at ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item5
"From Darwin to Internet at the Speed of Light"
The European Space Agency (ESA) is pursuing integrated optics
technology as a way to detect Earth-like planets through the
Darwin project and the ESA/ESO Ground-based European Nullifying
Interferometer Experiment (GENIE); such research could also be ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item6
"Don't Write Off Existing IT Skills"
New research published in vnunet.com's sister publication
Computing concludes that demand for basic IT skills still
exists, but many professionals are in danger of devaluing
them and casting them aside too quickly because of ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item7
"Biology May Help Shrink Electronic Components at NASA"
Researchers at NASA's Ames Research Center are working to
construct electronics that are many times smaller than current
components using proteins that are genetically manipulated to
self-assemble into nanoscale structures. Principal project ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item8
"DARPA Looks to Quantum Future"
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is
using its High Performance Computing Systems (HPCS)
program as a vehicle for making progress on quantum computing.
DARPA has asked five vendors (include Cray, Hewlett-Packard, ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item9
"The Rogue DNS Phenomenon"
ICANN's cancellation of elections for ICANN board seats was
unpopular among Internet users, most of whom do not realize that
there are alternatives to dealing with ICANN. ICANN governs the
servers that transform domain names like various .com names into ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item10
"Purdue Panel Maps Safer Wireless World for United Nations"
Addressing the security of wireless networks is critical,
especially for developing countries hoping to enter the
Information Age without taxing their limited financial resources,
according to a report that Purdue University's 2002 Wireless ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item11
"Future Security"
Software vendors know that the market is overcrowded with
information security products, while enterprise customers are
clamoring for applications that are designed for security up front
and that offer real-time system monitoring and rapid response to ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item12
"Coding with Life's Code"
Various projects in the emergent field of DNA computing--which
postulates that biological processes are defined by computational
algorithms--are testing whether DNA molecules can carry out
computations and can be applied to the design of nanotechnology, ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item13
"Seething over Spam"
There is a diverse array of tools and services on the market
designed to block junk email, or spam, thus saving companies
money and improving productivity. Joyce Graff of Gartner
recommends that small- and medium-sized businesses outsource spam ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item14
"The Making of a Policy Gadfly"
Princeton University computer scientist Edward W. Felten is part
of a growing number of academic researchers who are opposed to
legislation that seeks to regulate digital technology, a move
that reportedly threatens important scientific research and ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item15
"Software Doesn't Work. Customers Are in Revolt. Here's the Plan."
Software developers are striving to make software compatible amid
customers refusing to invest in more products because they have
yet to realize returns on existing systems, which are often
non-interoperable and result in added implementation costs--for ...
http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2002-4/1202m.html#item16
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