Tag Archive for: Researchers

Researchers sound alarm about the role of any and all phone sounds in distracted driving

You say you don’t answer your phone and wouldn’t dream of texting while driving?

Not good enough, say researchers from Florida State University, as the mere presence of that cacophonous device in a moving motor vehicle is enough to dangerously distract a driver:

Whether you are alerted to an incoming phone call or text by a trendy ringtone, an alarm bell or a quiet vibration, just receiving a notification on your cell phone can cause enough of a distraction to impair your ability to focus on a given task, according to a new Florida State University study.

In fact, the distraction caused by a simple notification — whether it is a sound or a vibration — is comparable to the effects seen when users actively use their cell phones to make calls or send text messages, the researchers found.

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Network World Paul McNamara

Researchers craft network attack to “hack” surgical robot (sort of)

As part of a series of experiments, a group of researchers at the University of Washington’s BioRobotics Lab launched denial-of-service attacks against a remotely operated surgical robot, causing it to become difficult to control. The goal was to help design systems that could correct for such attacks and filter them out by identifying legitimate commands from the operator.

The robot used in the test was an experimental system, however, and it used a different networking approach from existing FDA-approved surgical robots. The researchers admitted that mounting such an attack on current surgical robots would be much more difficult. Rather than finding security flaws in existing robots, the researchers focused on finding ways to secure future “telerobots” that might use public network infrastructure not just for surgery but for other life-saving tasks such as fire fighting, explosive ordnance disposal, and searching collapsed buildings after earthquakes.

Today, the vast majority of robotic surgeries are carried out over hardwired, dedicated local networks in hospitals. But there have been a number of cases where physicians have remotely performed surgery via robot—most notably during the war in Iraq. New surgical robots could potentially be applied to assist people with life-threatening conditions in the wake of disasters since they reduce the complications that could be caused by transporting patients to distant hospitals.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Researchers Link Regin to Malware Disclosed in Recent Snowden Documents – Threatpost


Computerworld

Researchers Link Regin to Malware Disclosed in Recent Snowden Documents
Threatpost
The Regin malware platform was disclosed in late November by Kaspersky Lab and it was quickly labeled one of the most advanced espionage malware platforms ever studied, surpassing even Stuxnet and Flame in complexity. The platform is used to steal …
Researchers link QWERTY keylogger code to NSA and Five Eye's Regin Network World

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flame malware – read more

Researchers pair augmented reality, connected car to kill the traffic light

One of the potential ripple effects of the connected, and even driverless, car is the future of the traditional traffic light. The consensus seems to be that it doesn’t have a very hopeful one.

Full adoption of the fully driverless car – say, everyone in America travels in cars that drive themselves in every situation – would make the old-school traffic light obsolete. Part of what makes these cars’ autonomous is their ability to communicate with one another so they don’t collide. In this scenario, driverless cars should theoretically be able to pass seamlessly through crowded intersections one-at-a-time without stopping to wait, saving both time and energy in the process.

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Network World Colin Neagle