Jan 24 2009

BotPrize — A Turing Test For Bots

Philip Hingston writes “Computers can’t play like people — yet. An unusual kind of computer game bot-programming contest has just been held in Perth, Australia, as part of the IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence and Games. The contest was not about programming the bot that plays the best. The aim was to see if a bot could convince another player that it was actually a human player. Game Development Studio 2K Australia (creator of BioShock) provided ,000 cash plus a trip to their studio in Canberra for anyone who could create a bot to pass this ‘Turing Test for Bots.’ People like to play against opponents who are like themselves — opponents with personality, who can surprise, who sometimes make mistakes, yet don’t robotically make the same mistakes over and over. Computers are superbly fast and accurate at playing games, but can they be programmed to be more fun to play — to play like you and me?” Read on for the rest of Philip’s thoughts.

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Jan 24 2009

How Apple’s Macintosh changed computer screens forever

At a time when computers were more like glorified typewriters, Apple introduced the Macintosh – and changed how people interacted with them. In exclusive interviews, Steve Wozniak, Apple’s co-founder, and Andy Hertzfeld, one of the developers, recall how it happened.

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Jan 24 2009

UK Judge Grants Extradition Review To Cracker Gary McKinnon

JobsEnding writes with this quote from IBTimes: “A British court ruled on Friday that a man who hacked into US military computers will be given permission for a judicial review against his extradition to the United States. Hacker Gary McKinnon, 42, who had been diagnosed recently with Asperger’s syndrome, a form of autism, has admitted hacking into the military computers. His lawyers had said McKinnon was at risk of suicide if he were extradited.” We discussed the granting of McKinnon’s extradition in 2006 when it was first granted, as well as a profile of the man more recently.

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Jan 23 2009

Building a Better CAPTCHA

jcatcw writes “Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols reports that CAPTCHA cracking isn’t that difficult these days. It has even become a business. For example, DeCaptcher.com will solve CAPTCHAs for your spamming needs at a rate of per 1,000 successfully cracked CAPTCHAs. In response, newer systems are in development. Both Carnegie Mellon and Penn State (is there something about the water in PA?) are working on image-based systems. ESP-PIX and SQ-PIX both require the viewer to interpret pictures. Imagination CAPTCHA from Penn has the user find the center of an image. The idea is that humans are better at image recognition that computers, but humans can legitimately disagree on their interpretations and some humans are color blind. Problems remain. For now, sites would be well advised to look at reCAPTCHA — the system that works with Google Books and the Internet Archive to digitize printed texts — which comes with a wide variety of application and programming plug-ins and an open API.”

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Jan 23 2009

Worm Infects Millions of Computers Worldwide – New York Times


PC Magazine

Worm Infects Millions of Computers Worldwide
New York Times – 19 hours ago
By JOHN MARKOFF A new digital plague has hit the Internet, infecting millions of personal and business computers in what seems to be the first step of a multistage attack.
Security industry counts down to Conficker activation Register
Can of worms Financial Times
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Jan 23 2009

Security industry counts down to Conficker activation – Register


Telegraph.co.uk

Security industry counts down to Conficker activation
Register – 3 hours ago
By John Leyden • Get more from this author Security watchers are bracing themselves to respond to the activitation of the huge botnet created by the Conficker superworm.
Worm Infects Millions of Computers Worldwide New York Times
Windows worm being spread through USB memory sticks Telegraph.co.uk
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Jan 21 2009

US-CERT Says Microsoft’s Advice On Downadup Worm Bogus

CWmike writes “Microsoft’s advice on disabling Windows’ “Autorun” feature is flawed, the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT) said today, and it leaves users who rely on its guidelines to protect their PCs against the fast-spreading Downadup worm open to attack. US-CERT said in an alert that Microsoft’s instructions on turning off Autorun are ‘not fully effective’ and ‘could be considered a vulnerability.’ The flaw in Microsoft’s guidelines are important at the moment, because the “Downadup” worm, which has compromised more computers than any other attack in years, can spread through USB devices, such as flash drives and cameras, by taking advantage of Windows’ Autorun and Autoplay features.”

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Jan 21 2009

Details Emerge On the 2006 Hacking of Congress

The National Journal just published an article with details about the hacking of Congress in 2006, possibly by agents in China, though the attack’s origin is uncertain. The article notes the difficult work of the House Information Systems Security Office, which must set security policies and then try to enforce them on a population of the equivalent of C-level executives. The few members who have called attention to the issue of Congressional cyber-security have been advised to shut up about it, by whom the reporter did not discover. “Armed with this information about how the virus worked, the security officers scanned the House network again. This time, they found more machines that seemed to match the profile — they, too, were infected. Investigators found at least one infected computer in a member’s district office, indicating that the virus had traveled through the House network and may have breached machines far away from Washington. Eventually, the security office determined that eight members’ offices were affected; in most of the offices, the virus had invaded only one machine, but in some offices, it hit multiple computers. It also struck seven committee offices, including Commerce; Transportation and Infrastructure; Homeland Security; and Ways and Means; plus the Commission on China, which monitors human rights and laws in China.”

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Jan 20 2009

A developer's eye view of smartphone platforms – InfoWorld


PC World Canada

A developer's eye view of smartphone platforms
InfoWorld – 13 hours ago
As smartphones evolve into serious computers, the worlds of iPhone, Android, BlackBerry, Nokia Symbian, Palm, and Windows Mobile offer developers new possibilities.
The iPhone 3G could make mobile management legit, if only… Computerworld
ANDTEK to present iPhone World
Newmobilecomputing.com – PC World Canada
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Jan 20 2009

Intel slashes processor prices as AMD looms – Reuters


dBTechno

Intel slashes processor prices as AMD looms
Reuters – 1 hour ago
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Intel Corp (INTC.O) is slashing prices on a number of its processors, including cuts of up to 40 percent on some of its higher-powered, faster quad-core chips, as the world's largest chip maker copes with weakening demand.
Intel Cuts Quad-core Chip Prices PC World
Intel Drops CPU Prices TrustedReviews
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