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Comments: 18 + -   StarCraft AI Competition Results on Friday October 15, @10:48AM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday October 15, @10:48AM
from the teaching-skynet-the-zerg-rush dept.
programming
bgweber writes "The StarCraft AI Competition announced last year has come to a conclusion. The competition received 28 bot submissions from universities and teams all over the world. The winner of the competition was UC Berkeley's submission, which executed a novel mutalisk micromanagement strategy. During the conference, a man versus machine exhibition match was held between the top ranking bot and a former World Cyber Games competitor. While the expert player was capable of defeating the best bot, less experienced players were not as successful. Complete results, bot releases, and replays are available at the competition website."
Read More... 18 comments story

Comments: 55 + -   Data Miners Scraping Away Our Privacy on Friday October 15, @10:08AM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday October 15, @10:08AM
from the hopefully-they-get-trapped-in-a-chilean-digitial-mine dept.
privacy
Presto Vivace writes "Twig, writing for Corrente, reports on data scrapers. They are not looking for passwords and such; scrapers are looking at blogs and forums searching for material relevant to their corporate clients. We are assured that the information is 'anonymized' to protect the identities of forum participants. However, a tool called PeekYou permits users to connect online names with real world identities. No worries, though — if you have a week to spare, you can opt-out of some of the larger data banks."
Read More... 55 comments story

Comments: 109 + -   French Government May Subsidize Music Downloads on Friday October 15, @09:26AM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday October 15, @09:26AM
from the opening-a-new-front dept.
music
angry tapir writes "The European Commission has approved a French program to subsidize legal music downloads for young people. The Carte Musique scheme gives €25 (US$35) to French residents aged 12 to 25 to spend on music downloads or subscription services. Young people can purchase a €50 card for just €25, with the balance paid by the state."
Read More... 109 comments story

Comments: 132 + -   Putting the Squeeze On Broadband Copper Robbers on Friday October 15, @08:45AM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday October 15, @08:45AM
from the bubbs-is-at-it-again dept.
crime
nk497 writes "As the price of copper rises, thieves have taken to stealing broadband cables, taking out internet connections and slowing down the rollout of super-fast broadband by giving engineers more work to do. To battle the criminals, UK provider BT has 21 investigators on staff to track down thieves and has started using SmartWater bombs that spray stolen property and the criminals. The SmartWater liquid carries a DNA fingerprint that links a criminal to the scene of the crime and police units carrying ultra-violet light detectors can use the incriminating stains to make an arrest after the trap has been sprung. 'We had one case recently where someone in Dagenham was stopped and searched after acting suspiciously and the police used a UV light on them and could show that they had been tampering with the equipment,' said Auguste. The SmartWater liquid can also be pasted inside cables, making them easier to trace — and less appealing to scrap metal buyers, helping to cut demand for stolen copper."
Read More... 132 comments story

Comments: 79 + -   Digital Dashboard Device Detects Driver Drowsiness on Friday October 15, @08:02AM

Posted by timothy on Friday October 15, @08:02AM
from the string-between-ceiling-and-nostril dept.
Pickens writes "Science Daily Headlines reports that researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Digital Media Technology have developed a self-contained, dashboard-mounted assistant system that tracks a driver's eye movements and issues a warning before the driver has an opportunity to nod off to sleep. 'What we have developed is a small modular system with its own hardware and programs on board, so that the line of vision is computed directly within the camera itself,' says Professor Husar. 'Since the Eyetracker is fitted with at least two cameras that record images stereoscopically — meaning in three dimensions — the system can easily identify the spatial position of the pupil and the line of vision.' The cameras, which can be installed in any model of car, evaluate up to 200 images per second to identify the line of vision. If the camera modules detect that the eye is closed for longer than a user-defined interval, it sounds an alarm. The Eyetracker also has applications in computer games where players could look around themselves without requiring a joystick to change their viewing direction, and in marketing and advertising, where researchers could determine which parts of a poster or advertising spot receive longer attention from their viewers."
Read More... 79 comments story

Comments: 114 + -   Unspoofable Device Identity Using Flash Memory on Friday October 15, @05:00AM

Posted by timothy on Friday October 15, @05:00AM
from the double-edged-sword dept.
security
wiredmikey writes with a story from Security Week that describes a security silver lining to the inevitable errors that arise in NAND flash chips. By seeking out (or intentionally causing) defects in a given part of the chip, a unique profile can be created for any device using NAND flash which the author says may be obscured, but not reproduced: "[W]e recognize devices (or rather: their flash memory) by their defects. Very much like humans recognize faces: by their defects (or deviations from the 'norm') a bigger nose, a bit too bushy eyebrows, bigger cheeks. The nice twist is that if an attacker manages to read your device identity, he cannot inscribe it into his own device. Yes, he can create errors — like we did. But he cannot control where in the block they occur as this relies solely on microscopic manufacturing defects in the silicon."
Read More... 114 comments story

Comments: 189 + -   Norwegian Day Traders Convicted For Manipulating Computer Trading System on Friday October 15, @01:53AM

Posted by timothy on Friday October 15, @01:53AM
from the shades-of-eudaemonia dept.
software
An anonymous reader submits news of the conviction of two Norwegian day traders, Svend Egil Larsen and Peder Veiby, who were on Wednesday fined and given suspended sentences (Norwegian court, Norwegian document) for cleverly working out — and cashing in on — the way the computerized trading system of Interactive Brokers subsidiary Timber Hill would respond to certain trades. They used the system's predictable responses to manipulate the value of low-priced stocks. The pair have gotten some sympathetic reactions from around the world, and promise to appeal.
Read More... 189 comments story

Comments: 127 + -   Genetically Engineered Silkworms Spin Spider Silk on Thursday October 14, @11:53PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday October 14, @11:53PM
from the waiting-for-the-spider-silk-boxers dept.
biotech
disco_tracy writes "Silkworms have been modified to produce spider silk, creating a fabric that could be used in everything from bulletproof clothing to artificial tendons." For some reason, this is far less revolting to me than the idea of spider silk being milked out of goats.
Read More... 127 comments story

Comments: 130 + -   Google Maps Adds Drone Imagery on Thursday October 14, @10:42PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday October 14, @10:42PM
from the hook-'em-horns-but-closer dept.
google
joshuadugie writes "Slashdot carried a story a while ago that Google had purchased drones for unknown purposes. Google Maps has now added new non-satellite imagery (at UT Austin, for example) when you zoom in close enough. Mystery solved!" I'd like to think that there really are (or were) drones over Austin, but would also like to see Google's explanation for the close-up images.
Read More... 130 comments story

Comments: 213 + -   FCC Approves Changes To Cable Box Rules on Thursday October 14, @07:40PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday October 14, @07:40PM
from the crack-in-the-castle-wall dept.
government
GovTechGuy writes "The FCC issued an order Thursday that should make it much easier and cheaper for consumers to purchase and install third-party cable boxes made by manufacturers such as TiVo. The rules are aimed at spurring competition in the cable box market; currently consumers overwhelmingly choose to rent a box from their cable provider rather than buy their own. Lawmakers have complained the current cable box technology is outdated and doesn't allow consumers to leverage new sources of video content such as the Web or streaming services from providers such as Netflix. The new rules should result in a smarter, more advanced cable box in the near future."
Read More... 213 comments story

Poll When automating everyday tasks with robots, the line must be drawn...
... at letting them build things
... at letting them vacuum my floor
... at letting them bring me food
... at letting them play with kids
... at letting them drive cars
... at letting them perform surgery
... at letting them run for political office
... Hee-ah! This far, no farther!
[ Results | Polls ]
Comments:28 | Votes:1167

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