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dr tech

Campaign | Project Liberty - 0 views

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    "We demand a stop to addictive design features - Also known as the social slot machine. Ninety-five percent of teens in the US have or have access to a smartphone, while ninety percent have a desktop or laptop computer and eighty-three percent have a gaming console, a survey from the Pew Research Institute found. The data also found that roughly one in six teens describe their use of two platforms - YouTube and TikTok - as "almost constant.""
dr tech

Watch a 'USB killer' stick destroy a laptop when it's plugged in - 0 views

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    "A new type of threat, however, goes one step further: the physical destruction of your computer."
julia barr

Protecting Your Data on The Cloud - 0 views

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    By connecting laptops and smartphones to enormous, remote computing banks, cloud computing gives us access to more processing power than could ever fit in any one of those devices, along with access to all our data and documents from anywhere in the world.
dr tech

The most embarrassing data losses of all time | Geek with Laptop - 0 views

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    Woweee - look at these and you realise the economics and problems with security of data...
Max van Mesdag

Why Apple Can't Sell Business Laptops - 1 views

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    Apple is slowly becoming a dangerous competitor again Microsoft, but the Windows operating systems still dominate the business world. What does this mean for Apple?
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    Be careful of articles like these as they are really dealing with business but not in terms of the technology or a social and ethical issue. Equality of access for these businesses is only a by product - unlike for something like the OLPC where it was the main issue...
yeehaw

Forget Passwords: How Playing Games Can Make Computers More Secure - Scientific American - 0 views

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    Sounds a bit extreme just to make sure no one can log on to your laptop or smartphone, but a team of researchers from Stanford and Northwestern universities as well as SRI International is nonetheless experimenting at the computer-, cognitive- and neuroscience intersection to combat identity theft and shore up cyber security-by taking advantage of the human brain's innate abilities to learn and recognize patterns.
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