The first rule of riding in Google's self-driving car, says Dmitri Dolgov, is not to compliment Google's self-driving car.The Atlantic From ACM News | April 28, 2014
Last Thursday, the underground classroom at the National Museum of Mathematics in New York was filled to capacity for a college professor's PowerPoint-aided lecture...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | March 21, 2014
When Radia Perlman attended MIT in the late '60s and '70s, she was one of just a few dozen women (about 50) out of a class of 1,000.The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | March 4, 2014
Glenn Greenwald is back reporting about the NSA, now with Pierre Omidyar's news organization FirstLook and its introductory publication, The Intercept.The Atlantic From ACM News | February 12, 2014
Since the beginning of this century, the most rapidly advancing field in the life sciences, and perhaps in human inquiry of any sort, has been genomics.The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | February 7, 2014
In defending the NSA's telephony metadata collection efforts, government officials have repeatedly resorted to one seemingly significant detail: This is just metadata—numbers...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | December 26, 2013
Beijing's surveillance network, one of the most extensive and invasive in the world, has been compromised by an unexpected foe: smog.The Atlantic From ACM News | November 6, 2013
Say you're at a gas station. Say you're buying some supplies—bottled water, coffee, maybe some M&Ms—before you head back to your car.The Atlantic From ACM News | November 4, 2013
From the front of his classroom, University of Nebraska-Lincoln associate professor Barney McCoy noticed that students’ smart phones were making regular appearances...The Atlantic From ACM News | October 25, 2013
In 2012, the photograph of Barack and Michelle Obama embracing after his re-election was "liked" over 4 million times.The Atlantic From ACM News | September 25, 2013
How will police use a gun that immobilizes its target but does not kill? What would people do with a device that could provide them with any mood they desire? What...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | September 20, 2013
Stealing 10 million dollars a few hundred dollars at a time used to be too labor-intensive to be a great business.The Atlantic From ACM News | August 26, 2013
Seems like everything gets hacked these days. Baby monitors. White House employees' personal email. Toilets.The Atlantic From ACM News | August 19, 2013
In the early 1970s, the U.S. government learned that an undersea cable ran parallel to the Kuril Islands off the eastern coast of Russia, providing a vital communications...The Atlantic From ACM News | July 18, 2013
It is the rare entrepreneur who hits it truly big twice. Those who do—such as Ev Williams, Ted Turner, and Elon Musk—tend to stay within the original industry that...The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | June 21, 2013