Contents contributed and discussions participated by Siobhan Chapman
Skype has not been cracked. But it is still vulnerable - 0 views
RIPE launches new website for Internet community - 0 views
Cyborg implants may be closer than you think - 1 views
Microsoft Azure - no blue sky thinking - 0 views
Sunbelt bought by GFI for antivirus mojo - 0 views
Wikileaks founder: We are right to expose Iraq helicopter massacre video - 0 views
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"That shows you something about media quality," Assange said. "This action broke the rules of engagement."
Hacker claims to have cracked Skype protocol - 0 views
Russian spy ring tech troubles in photos - 0 views
Russian spies lacked computer nous, says FBI - 0 views
Supreme Court skips over software patent issue in Bilski case - 0 views
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The long-awaited US Supreme Court has side-stepped the question of whether the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) should continue to issue software patents in a ruling Monday striking down a business-method patent. The ruling on Bilski vs. Kappos is a mess. Where many hoped fervently for some clarity to be brought to the ill-defined rules for patenting business methods and software in the US, the court instead was timid in the extreme.
Obama 'Internet kill switch' plan approved by US Senate panel - 0 views
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The bill would define the powers the president already has to cause "the closing of any facility or stations for wire communication" in the event of a massive cyber-attack or national-security emergency. Many critics fear the cybersecurity bill contains a "kill switch" that would enable the President to turn off the Internet.In reality, the bill would strengthen and extend congressional oversight and protections of the Internet in the event of an emergency while providing the White House and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) with appropriate mechanisms to respond to an attack, the bill's sponsors replied. What do you think?
Humble LEDs power quantum computing breakthrough - 0 views
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What the Toshiba and Cavendish teams have managed to do is simply to make the production of those all-important photons simple enough that the process could happen outside a physics lab.
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British scientists have come up with a simple way to generate the entangled photons needed by quantum computers using a cheap light emitting diode (LED) powered by electrical voltage. The optical quantum computer is powerful enough to solve problems so far intractable using conventional digital logic, but requires a large number of entangled photons.
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