AI Creates False Documents That Fake Out Hackers
The algorithm hides sensitive information in a sea of decoys
The algorithm hides sensitive information in a sea of decoys
The 3-D tracking systems used in Tokyo may one day enable digital twins of athletes
Then it played Super Mario Bros.
If you understand how these systems operate, then you understand why they could change everything.
Scientists achieved a record level of visual detail with an imaging technique that could help develop future electronics and better batteries
An online animal catalogue lets you decode communications and other behaviors for everyone’s favorite pachyderm
One year after supercomputers worked together to fight COVID, it’s time to broaden the partnership to prepare for other crises
The double helix can archive a staggering amount of information in an almost inconceivably small volume
Ransomware is steadily hitting harder. Could banks or subway systems be next?
Machine-learning algorithms can quickly process thousands of hours of natural soundscapes
In the centuries before envelopes, “letterlocking” secured a message’s information
The experiment connects three devices with entangled photons, demonstrating a key technique that could enable a future quantum Internet
The give-and-take of formal arguments is still outside of a machine’s “comfort zone”—at least for now
Today on the Science Talk podcast, Noam Slonim of IBM Research speaks to Scientific American about an impressive feat of computer engineering: an AI-powered autonomous system that can engage in complex debate with humans over issues ranging from subsidizing preschool and the merit of space exploration to the pros and cons of genetic engineering. In a new Nature paper, Slonim and his colleagues show that across 80 debate topics, Project Debater’s computational argument technology has performed very decently—with a human audience being the judge of that...
Stanford is offering its popular computer science intro course for free—and you can help teach it
A small and shrinking number of the world’s computer chips are made in the U.S.
You can call it the “revenge of the computer scientist.” An algorithm that made headlines for mastering the notoriously difficult Atari 2600 game Montezuma’s Revenge can now beat more games, achieving near perfect scores, and help robots explore real-world environments...
The annual science education event describes imaginary encounters to teach ecology
A cybersecurity expert explains how safety systems stopped the attack
A massive amount of information downloaded from Parler includes potentially incriminating material. But innocuous posts on mainstream platforms can also create vulnerabilities
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