Bay Area: Join us TONIGHT, 8/17, to talk diversity (or lack thereof) in tech

Slack Director of Engineering Leslie Miley will talk about problems with diversity in Silicon Valley.

The fifth episode of Ars Technica Live is coming up tonight, August 17, in Oakland, California, at Longitude! Join Ars Technica editors Cyrus Farivar and Annalee Newitz, with guest Leslie Miley, for a conversation about Silicon Valley's problems with diversity. In 2015, Miley was the only black engineer at Twitter in a leadership position, and he wrote a widely circulated article about his experiences. Now a director of engineering at Slack, Miley has continued to be an advocate for diversity in tech. Miley formerly worked in leadership roles at Apple and Google and serves as an adviser to several startups founded by women and minorities. He is an investor in a fund dedicated to diverse entrepreneurs.

Filmed before a live audience at Oakland tiki bar Longitude, each episode of Ars Technica Live is a speculative, informal conversation between Ars Technica hosts and an invited guest. The audience, drawn from Ars Technica’s readers, is also invited to join the conversation and ask questions. These aren’t soundbyte setups; they are deep cuts from the frontiers of research and creativity.

Doors are at 7pm, and the live filming is from 7:30 to 8:20-ish pm (be sure to get there early if you want a seat). You can stick around afterward for informal discussion at the bar, along with delicious tiki drinks and snacks. Can't make it out to Oakland? Never fear! Episodes will be posted to Ars Technica the week after the live events.

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No Man’s Sky: Onlinedienste wegen Überlastung offline

Die Entwickler Hello Games haben offenbar die Nachfrage nach ihrem Spiel No Man’s Sky unterschätzt. Seit dem offiziellen Start des Titels fallen regelmäßig die Server aus. Auch Abstürze plagen das Science-Fiction-Abenteuer. (No Man’s Sky, Spieletest)

Die Entwickler Hello Games haben offenbar die Nachfrage nach ihrem Spiel No Man's Sky unterschätzt. Seit dem offiziellen Start des Titels fallen regelmäßig die Server aus. Auch Abstürze plagen das Science-Fiction-Abenteuer. (No Man's Sky, Spieletest)

Linux bug leaves USA Today, other top sites vulnerable to serious hijacking attacks

“Off-path” attack means hackers can be anywhere with no man-in-the-middle needed.

(credit: Cao et al.)

Computer scientists have discovered a serious Internet vulnerability that allows attackers to terminate connections between virtually any two parties and, if the connections aren't encrypted, inject malicious code or content into the parties' communications.

The vulnerability resides in the design and implementation of RFC 5961, a relatively new Internet standard that's intended to prevent certain classes of hacking attacks. In fact, the protocol is designed in a way that it can easily open Internet users to so-called blind off-path attacks, in which hackers anywhere on the Internet can detect when any two parties are communicating over an active transmission control protocol connection. Attackers can go on to exploit the flaw to shut down the connection, inject malicious code or content into unencrypted data streams, and possibly degrade privacy guarantees provided by the Tor anonymity network.

At the 25th Usenix Security Symposium on Wednesday, researchers with the University of California at Riverside and the US Army Research Laboratory will demonstrate a proof-of-concept exploit that allows them to inject content into an otherwise legitimate USA Today page that asks viewers to enter their e-mail and passwords. The malicious, off-site JavaScript code attack is possible because the vulnerable USA Today pages aren't encrypted. Even if they were protected, attackers could still terminate the connection. Similar attacks work against a variety of other unidentified sites and services, as long as they have long-lived connections that give hackers enough time—roughly 60 seconds—to carry out the attack.

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Report: Next-gen Microsoft Surface products include new Surface Book, Surface all-in-one PCs

Report: Next-gen Microsoft Surface products include new Surface Book, Surface all-in-one PCs

Microsoft has released new Surface products every year since the launch of the first Microsoft Surface tablet. So it should come as no surprise that the company is expected to unveil new Surface hardware soon.

But if you don’t feel like waiting for an official announcement, there’s always the rumor mill.

According to Windows Central’s sources, Microsoft will likely have a new version of the Surface Book 2-in-1 laptop soon, as well as the first Surface all-in-one desktop PC (or maybe 3 different models).

Continue reading Report: Next-gen Microsoft Surface products include new Surface Book, Surface all-in-one PCs at Liliputing.

Report: Next-gen Microsoft Surface products include new Surface Book, Surface all-in-one PCs

Microsoft has released new Surface products every year since the launch of the first Microsoft Surface tablet. So it should come as no surprise that the company is expected to unveil new Surface hardware soon.

But if you don’t feel like waiting for an official announcement, there’s always the rumor mill.

According to Windows Central’s sources, Microsoft will likely have a new version of the Surface Book 2-in-1 laptop soon, as well as the first Surface all-in-one desktop PC (or maybe 3 different models).

Continue reading Report: Next-gen Microsoft Surface products include new Surface Book, Surface all-in-one PCs at Liliputing.

Kansas couple sues IP mapping firm for turning their life into a “digital hell”

Company fixed the error, but it may be years before the issue is resolved.

(credit: Google Maps)

Ever since James and Theresa Arnold moved into their rented 623-acre farm in Butler County, Kansas, in March 2011, they have seen “countless” law enforcement officials and individuals turning up at their farm day and night looking for links to alleged theft and other supposed crime. All of these people are arriving because of a rounding error on a GPS location, which wrongly points people to their farm.

In their lawsuit filed against MaxMind, the IP mapping firm, the Arnolds allege:

The following events appeared to originate at the residence and brought trespassers and/or law enforcement to the plaintiffs’ home at all hours of the night and day: stolen cars, fraud related to tax returns and bitcoin, stolen credit cards, suicide calls, private investigators, stolen social media accounts, fund raising events, and numerous other events.

James Arnold has even been “reported as holding girls at the residence for the purpose of making pornographic films.”

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States win the right to limit municipal broadband, beating FCC in court

Major loss for Tom Wheeler in attempt to boost broadband competition.

(credit: FCC)

The Federal Communications Commission has lost in an attempt to preempt state laws that restrict the growth of municipal broadband networks.

The FCC in February 2015 voted to block laws in North Carolina and Tennessee that prevent municipal broadband providers from expanding outside their territories. The FCC, led by Chairman Tom Wheeler, claimed it could preempt the laws because Congress authorizes the commission to promote telecom competition by removing barriers to investment.

But this was a risky legal argument, as the FCC has no specific authority to overturn state laws. Officials in both states appealed the FCC decision, and today a three-judge panel of the US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit ruled in favor of the states (full text).

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Hydrogen molecule falls to quantum computer

Quantum computer calculates ground state of hydrogen with just two qubits.

(credit: Creon Levit/NASA Ames)

We are at the beginning of a revolution. I've been going on about quantum computing for as long as I've been writing, but it has always been in the future tense. Nothing useful could be done as researchers stepped through all the foothills on their way to the peaks, but now the summit is in view. Just two months ago, we reported on a quantum computer that mashed digital aspects of quantum computing together with analog aspects. In doing so, the researchers came up with a more robust architecture. While this is promising, it's not much more than what others have done with different types of quantum computers.

Now, the same device has been used to do real quantum chemistry calculations, and it seems scarily accurate.

Chemistry? I came here for physics

As any physicist will tell you, chemistry is just physics. And as any chemist will tell you, unsolvable equations are worthless when you're staring down the barrel of a synthesis that has gone wrong (I've paraphrased what a chemist would actually say, which Ars editorial standards would not allow me to print).

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Deals of the Day (8-10-2016)

The Lenovo IdeaPad 710S is a 13.3 inch laptop that measures 0.5 inches thick and weighs 2.6 pounds. Unveiled in January, the notebook went on sale this summer and you can currently pick one up from Lenovo for about $750 and up.
That entry-level price g…

Deals of the Day (8-10-2016)

The Lenovo IdeaPad 710S is a 13.3 inch laptop that measures 0.5 inches thick and weighs 2.6 pounds. Unveiled in January, the notebook went on sale this summer and you can currently pick one up from Lenovo for about $750 and up.

That entry-level price gets you a model with a Core i5 Skylake processor, a full HD display, 8GB of RAM, and 128GB of solid state storage.

But right now Adorama is selling a model for $50 more that features a faster processor and twice as much storage.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (8-10-2016) at Liliputing.

Sicherheitslücke im Forum: Daten von 1,9 Millionen Dota-2-Spielern kopiert

Wer im Dota-2-Forum aktiv ist, muss kreativ werden und sich ein neues Passwort ausdenken. Ein Fehler in der Datenbanksoftware ermöglichte den Zugriff auf die Datenbank. (Dota 2, Verschlüsselung)

Wer im Dota-2-Forum aktiv ist, muss kreativ werden und sich ein neues Passwort ausdenken. Ein Fehler in der Datenbanksoftware ermöglichte den Zugriff auf die Datenbank. (Dota 2, Verschlüsselung)

Predictive Policing: Berliner Polizei testet selbst entwickelte Prognosesoftware

Der Nutzen von Predictive Policing ist umstritten. Die Berliner Polizei hofft dennoch darauf, mit einer neuen Software Einbrüche besser bekämpfen zu können. (Data-Mining, Vorratsdatenspeicherung)

Der Nutzen von Predictive Policing ist umstritten. Die Berliner Polizei hofft dennoch darauf, mit einer neuen Software Einbrüche besser bekämpfen zu können. (Data-Mining, Vorratsdatenspeicherung)