Infosecurity.US

Information Security & Occasional Forays Into Adjacent Realms

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Dr. Mann's 'Veillance Contract' →

January 26, 2018 by Marc Handelman in Communications, Computation, TEDx, Surveillance

January 26, 2018 /Marc Handelman
Communications, Computation, TEDx, Surveillance

Photograph by  Mark Richards, the  Synchro Operated Differential Analyzer - ensconced at the Computer History Museum

Arnold Nordsieck's Synchro Operated Differential Analyzer →

December 04, 2017 by Marc Handelman in Computer Science, Computation, Analog Computation

Ladies and Gentlemen, Girls and Boys Behold: The Nordsieck Synchro Operated Differential Analyzer.

"As with other analog computers, each calculation required its own setup. You plugged in the tangle of patch cords to the left in a particular pattern. The cords served as the computer’s control program, with other parts of the program embodied and executed by the spinning disks, gears, rotating shafts, cranks, and the like. (You can read Nordsieck’s early description of the computer here [PDF] and his written instructions here [PDF]." - via IEEE Spectrum Magazine

December 04, 2017 /Marc Handelman
Computer Science, Computation, Analog Computation

IBM cryostat wired for a 50 qubit system.

50 Qubits →

November 15, 2017 by Marc Handelman in Computer Science, Compute Infrastructure, Computation, Quantum Mathematics, Quantum Information, Must Read

An astounding image (some might call it a percolator of the multiverse), and announcement via IBM (NYSE: IBM) of the company's newly minted 50 Qubit Processor. Today's Must Read.

"The first IBM Q systems available online to clients will have a 20 qubit processor, featuring improvements in superconducting qubit design, connectivity and packaging. Coherence times (the amount of time available to perform quantum computations) lead the field with an average value of 90 microseconds, and allow high-fidelity quantum operations. IBM has also successfully built and measured an operational prototype 50 qubit processor with similar performance metrics. This new processor expands upon the 20 qubit architecture and will be made available in the next generation IBM Q systems." - via

November 15, 2017 /Marc Handelman
Computer Science, Compute Infrastructure, Computation, Quantum Mathematics, Quantum Information, Must Read

Information Is Quantum →

November 12, 2017 by Marc Handelman in Computation, Computer Science, Education, All is Information, Quantum Information
November 12, 2017 /Marc Handelman
Computation, Computer Science, Education, All is Information, Quantum Information

TechVancouver, Geordie Rose's 'Superintelligent Aliens are Coming to Earth' →

October 14, 2017 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Artificial Intelligence, Canada, Computation, Quantum Effects, Quantum Mathematics
October 14, 2017 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Artificial Intelligence, Canada, Computation, Quantum Effects, Quantum Mathematics

USENIX Enigma 2017, Manuel Blum's 'Human Computation with an Application to Passwords' →

September 18, 2017 by Marc Handelman in Computer Science, Computation, Wetware Computation, Information Security
September 18, 2017 /Marc Handelman
Computer Science, Computation, Wetware Computation, Information Security

USENIX Enigma 2017, Dave Evans' 'Classifiers under Attack' →

September 15, 2017 by Marc Handelman in Conferences, Information Security, Machine Learning, Computation, Computer Science
September 15, 2017 /Marc Handelman
Conferences, Information Security, Machine Learning, Computation, Computer Science

Community Memory →

July 07, 2017 by Marc Handelman in History, History of the Internet, History of Computation, History of Software, Computation

via IEEE's Spectrum Magazine, comes this oddity of computational flotsam in the guise of an early terminal, which permitted reading messages on a bulletin-board-like system in San Francisco, California.

"Among the volunteers who made up Loving Grace Cybernetics and Resource One was Lee Felsenstein, who would go on to help establish the Homebrew Computer Club and who played a number of other pioneering roles in the nascent personal computing industry." - via via IEEE's Spectrum Magazine writer David C. Brock (David C. Brock is Director of the Center for Software History at the Computer History Museum, in Mountain View, California)

July 07, 2017 /Marc Handelman
History, History of the Internet, History of Computation, History of Software, Computation

Brain Meet Internet →

June 22, 2017 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Biology, Communications, Computation, Biological Computation

Superlative study (funded by the Department of Defense - Army Research Office) - via Duke University's Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Durham, Nort Carolina and the Salk Institute for Biological Studies - Integrative Biology Laboratory in La Jolla, California - targeting the apparent similarities between artifical and biologic network implementations. Today's must read!

“The founders of the Internet spent a lot of time considering how to make information flow efficiently,” says Salk Assistant Professor Saket Navlakha, coauthor of the new study that appears online in Neural Computation on February 9, 2017. “Finding that an engineered system and an evolved biological one arise at a similar solution to a problem is really interesting.”

June 22, 2017 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Biology, Communications, Computation, Biological Computation

Steam Computation, Polynomial Edition

June 05, 2017 by Marc Handelman in Computer Science, Compute Infrastructure, Computation

Constructed by Dr. Piers Plummer and Team (Dr. Doron Swade, Professor Adrian Johnstone and Professor Elizabeth Scott), direct from the Department of Computer Science at Royal Holloway University of London comes this superlative steam driven compute device... Eagle-eyed readers may note the brass bits dropping onto the floor plate of the device (due to the gear-teeth grinding against the opposing gear's cog-teeth). H/T

June 05, 2017 /Marc Handelman
Computer Science, Compute Infrastructure, Computation

Machine-Based Investigation: Fully →

March 14, 2017 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Analytics, Computation, Data That Is Big, Exploration, Fingerprinting, Information Sciences, Intelligence, Robots, Machine Learning

via Motherboard writer Michael Byrne, comes this well-wrought piece on the apparent proliferation of 'bots on Twitter, ie., the implications of algorithm-driven entities on the Twitterverse. The fascinating component to this study by Onur Varol, Emilio Ferrara, Clayton A. Davis, Filippo Menczer and Alessandro Flammini, was the utilization of a machine-learning apparatus (and the feature-sets therein) to tease out the truth. Additional documentation (in the form of the paper) is available on arXIv. Today's MustRead.

"Part of what makes the new research interesting is the sheer number of features used in the classification model..." - Motherboard's Michael Byrne

March 14, 2017 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Analytics, Computation, Data That Is Big, Exploration, Fingerprinting, Information Sciences, Intelligence, Robots, Machine Learning

33c3, Jos Wetzels',and Ali Abbasi's 'Wheel of Fortune' →

January 30, 2017 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Computation, Computer Science, Conferences, Information Security, Randomness, Random Numbers, Random Number Generators
January 30, 2017 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Computation, Computer Science, Conferences, Information Security, Randomness, Random Numbers, Random Number Generators

33c3, Jased's 'Untrusting the CPU' →

January 28, 2017 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Computation, Computer Science, Conferences, Hardware Security, Information Security
January 28, 2017 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Computation, Computer Science, Conferences, Hardware Security, Information Security

33c3, Kai Kunze's 'Beyond Virtual and Augmented Reality' →

January 28, 2017 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Conferences, VR Security, Computer Science, Computation
January 28, 2017 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Conferences, VR Security, Computer Science, Computation

33c3, Ben Gras, Kaveh Razavi, Eric Bosman and Antonio Barresi's 'Memory Deduplication: The Curse that Keeps on Giving' →

January 27, 2017 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Conferences, Computer Science, Computation, Information Security
January 27, 2017 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Conferences, Computer Science, Computation, Information Security

33c3, Clémentine Maurice and Moritz Lipp's 'What could possibly go wrong with {insert x86 instruction here}? ' →

January 22, 2017 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Computation, Computer Science, Conferences, Information Security, Hardware Security
January 22, 2017 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Computation, Computer Science, Conferences, Information Security, Hardware Security

Lightly... Squeezed →

January 11, 2017 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Science, Quantum Effects, Quantum Mechanics, Computation, Communications

News via the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of NIST physicists efforts to cool down a component has yeilded an unexpected result. The effort utilized squeezed light (microwaves within an electromagnetic cavity, if you will) to cool the apparatus below the theoretical limit, in this case, below the so-called quantum limit.

January 11, 2017 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Science, Quantum Effects, Quantum Mechanics, Computation, Communications

O'Reilly Security 2016, Matthew Carroll 's 'Inserting Privacy Controls and Due Process' →

December 08, 2016 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Compliance, Computation, Conferences, Demise of Privacy, Education, Information Security
December 08, 2016 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Compliance, Computation, Conferences, Demise of Privacy, Education, Information Security

Amazon Snowmobile →

December 01, 2016 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Computation, Cloud Security, Cloud Data Storage

When you've got 100 Petabytes of data burning a big hole in your datacenter's front pocket, and you just have to import said data into Amazon S3 or Amazon Glacier storage... Whom - shall we say - are you going to call?

H/T

December 01, 2016 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Computation, Cloud Security, Cloud Data Storage

Ada, Calculated →

October 14, 2016 by Marc Handelman in All is Information, Brilliant, Computation, History
October 14, 2016 /Marc Handelman
All is Information, Brilliant, Computation, History
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