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Tag: MIT

  • Apple’s M1 Chip Has An Unpatchable Security Flaw

    Apple’s M1 Chip Has An Unpatchable Security Flaw

    Researchers at MIT have discovered an unpatchable security flaw in Apple’s M1 chip, a flaw that’s reminiscent of the Spectre and Meltdown flaws.

    Researcher’s at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) were investigating what would happen when software and hardware hacking techniques are combined. Traditionally, the two are often viewed as completely separate, with little research having been done on combining the two. The result was MIT’s PACMAN exploit, one that involves breaking a software security feature with a hardware attack.

    “That’s the heart of what PACMAN represents – a new way of thinking about how threat models converge in the Spectre era,” says MIT CSAIL PhD student Joseph Ravichandran, co-lead author of a new paper about PACMAN.

    The exploit attacks the M1’s “Pointer Authentication” feature, considered a last line of defense against software vulnerabilities. Essentially, the pointer authentication code (PAC) checks the state of a program to ensure it hasn’t been maliciously changed. The researchers’ attack guesses at all the possible values of the PAC, using a hardware side channel to confirm the validity of the guesses until it hits the right one. What’s more, because the guesses are done under speculative execution, there’s not trace left of the attack. Worst of all, because the attack is using a hardware mechanism, it can never be fixed with a software patch.

    Because pointer authentication is often used to ensure the integrity of an operating system (OS) kernel, and MIT’s researchers showed PACMAN could successfully compromise that security, the exploit could have profound implications for the security of the very core of an OS.

    “Massive implications for future security work on all ARM systems with pointer authentication enabled. Future CPU designers should take care to consider this attack when building the secure systems of tomorrow,” says Ravichandran. “Developers should take care to not solely rely on pointer authentication to protect their software.”

    The researchers point out that PACMAN doesn’t bypass all of the M1’s security features. It simply takes a bug that pointer authentication would otherwise protect against and opens the door for it to achieve its full potential.

    “The idea behind pointer authentication is that if all else has failed, you still can rely on it to prevent attackers from gaining control of your system. We’ve shown that pointer authentication as a last line of defense isn’t as absolute as we once thought it was,” adds Ravichandran. “When pointer authentication was introduced, a whole category of bugs suddenly became a lot harder to use for attacks. With PACMAN making these bugs more serious, the overall attack surface could be a lot larger.”

    Apple provided the following statement to TechCrunch in the aftermath of the report:

    “We want to thank the researchers for their collaboration as this proof of concept advances our understanding of these techniques. Based on our analysis as well as the details shared with us by the researchers, we have concluded this issue does not pose an immediate risk to our users and is insufficient to bypass operating system security protections on its own.”

    While the threat may not be grave, here’s to hoping Apple addresses it in upcoming M-series chips.

  • Coinbase Getting Into ‘Ill-Advised’ War With SEC

    Coinbase is calling out the SEC for what it believes is “sketchy” behavior, but TheStreet’s Jim Cramer is not a fan of its strategy.

    The issue involves Coinbase’s crypto lending program, called Lend. The service would allow individuals to lend their crypto assets and earn interest on the loans. Unfortunately, for Coinbase, the SEC seems to have an issue with Lend and has sent the company a Wells Notice.

    “Last Wednesday, after months of effort by Coinbase to engage productively, the SEC gave us what’s called a Wells notice about our planned Coinbase Lend program,” writes Paul Grewal, Chief Legal Officer, on the company’s blog. “A Wells notice is the official way a regulator tells a company that it intends to sue the company in court. As surprised as we were at the SEC’s threat to sue without ever telling us why, we want to be transparent with you about the course of events leading up to it.”

    CEO Brian Armstrong has gone even further, calling the SEC’s behavior “sketchy.”

    TheStreet’s Jim Cramer believes Armstrong and Coinbase are playing a dangerous game, especially since SEC chair Gary Gensler “taught crypto at MIT,” and has the full weight of a government agency backing him up on his already knowledgable position.

    “[Coinbase] is declaring war against a man who has unlimited firepower,” Cramer said.

  • TSMC and MIT Leapfrog IBM, Make 1nm Breakthrough

    TSMC and MIT Leapfrog IBM, Make 1nm Breakthrough

    TSMC and MIT have made a major advancement in semiconductor design, with a 1nm breakthrough.

    TSMC is a global leader in the semiconductor industry. The company makes chips for Apple, Qualcomm, AMD, NVIDIA, Alphabet, Huawei and Intel. Currently, TSMC uses 5nm chips. AMD is working to transition to 5nm and Intel is still struggling to move to 7nm. IBM made headlines when it announced it had made a breakthrough on 2nm chips, although they aren’t expected for another four years.

    MIT and TSMC have now one-upped IBM, according to Taiwan News, making a major breakthrough with 1nm chips. The discovery was initially made by MIT, although MIT’s researchers were using TSMC components.

    The announcement is further bad news for Intel. Once the leader in semiconductor design, Intel has increasingly faced supply and development issues, leading it to turn to TSMC to outsource some production. With TSMC now closing in on 1nm, the gap between the two companies will only continue to widen.

  • GM Signs Deal With SolidEnergy Systems to Improve EV Range

    GM Signs Deal With SolidEnergy Systems to Improve EV Range

    GM has partnered with MIT spinout SolidEnergy Systems to improve EV range, thanks to an innovative type of battery.

    SolidEnergy Systems has specialized in lithium metal (Li-Metal) batteries, instead of the current lithium-ion. By using Li-Metal, the batteries feature increased energy density. This allows similarly sized batteries to offer greater range. Alternately, smaller batteries could save space, while still providing the same range as existing, larger batteries.

    “Affordability and range are two major barriers to mass EV adoption,” said General Motors President Mark Reuss. “With this next-generation Ultium chemistry, we believe we’re on the cusp of a once-in-a-generation improvement in energy density and cost. There’s even more room to improve in both categories, and we intend to innovate faster than any other company in this space.”

    GM first invested in SolidEnergy Systems six years, and the company’s tech will form the basis of GM’s Ultium-based vehicles. GM first announced the Ultium Platfom, its next generation battery technology, a year ago.

    The company’s moves come amid its transition to EV vehicles, promising its light-duty vehicles will be all-electric by 2035.

  • Verily, Broad Institute and Microsoft Partner For Multi-Cloud Biomedical Research

    Verily, Broad Institute and Microsoft Partner For Multi-Cloud Biomedical Research

    Alphabet’s Verily and Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard have partnered with Microsoft to advance biomedical research.

    Alphabet’s Google and Microsoft may be major rivals in the cloud market, but Alphabet’s Verily — its life and sciences company — is working with Microsoft to help remove the technical barriers for biomedical researchers.

    But making use of these important datasets remains difficult for researchers who face huge, siloed data estates, disparate tools, fragmented systems and data standards, and varying governance and security policies.

    The new partnership aims to break through those barriers by bringing together Microsoft’s cloud, data and AI technologies, and global network of more than 168,000 health and life sciences partners to accelerate development of global biomedical research through the Terra platform, provide greater access and empower the open-source community. Building on the open-source foundation of Terra, the new collaboration will advance the ability of data scientists, biomedical researchers and clinicians around the world to collaborate in tackling some of the most complex and widespread diseases facing society today.

    Emphasizing the importance of a multi-cloud approach, a Verily spokesperson told VentureBeat that “Verily feels strongly that the open data ecosystem should be multi-cloud.”

    Biomedical research is more important than ever, especially as the world grapples with a global pandemic. Verily, the Broad Institute and Microsoft’s efforts should go a long way toward easing the technical challenges biomedical researchers face.

  • MIT Removes AI Training Dataset Over Racist Concerns

    MIT Removes AI Training Dataset Over Racist Concerns

    MIT has removed a massive dataset after finding it contained racist, misogynistic terms and offensive images.

    Artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) systems use datasets as training data. MIT created the Tiny Images dataset, which contained some 80 million images.

    In an open letter, Bill Freeman and Antonio Torralba, both professors at MIT, as well as NYU professor Rob Fergus, outlined issues they became aware of, and the steps they took to resolve them.

    “It has been brought to our attention that the Tiny Images dataset contains some derogatory terms as categories and offensive images,” write the professors. “This was a consequence of the automated data collection procedure that relied on nouns from WordNet. We are greatly concerned by this and apologize to those who may have been affected.

    “The dataset is too large (80 million images) and the images are so small (32 x 32 pixels) that it can be difficult for people to visually recognize its content. Therefore, manual inspection, even if feasible, will not guarantee that offensive images can be completely removed.

    “We therefore have decided to formally withdraw the dataset. It has been taken offline and it will not be put back online. We ask the community to refrain from using it in future and also delete any existing copies of the dataset that may have been downloaded.”

    This has been an ongoing issue with AI and ML training data, with some experts warning that it is far too easy for these systems to inadvertently develop biases based on the data. With their announcement, it appears MIT is certainly doing their share to try to rectify that issue.

  • Coronavirus: MIT Cancels Classes, Goes Online

    Coronavirus: MIT Cancels Classes, Goes Online

    MIT has informed students that classes will be cancelled the week of March 16, and all classes will transition online once spring break is over.

    In a letter to the MIT community, President L. Rafael Reif said that “state and federal public health officials advise that to slow a spreading virus like COVID-19, the right time for decisive action is before it is established on our campus.” President Reif said that although risk on campus remains low, the university is stepping up its response to keep its students and faculty safe, along with the community at large.

    The university’s measures are fourfold:

    “All classes are cancelled for the week of Monday, March 16 through Friday, March 20. Because the following week is spring break, this will allow faculty and instructors two weeks to organize a full transition to online instruction.

    “Online instruction, which some units are already experimenting with this week, will begin for all classes on Monday, March 30, and continue for the remainder of the semester.

    “Undergraduates should not return to campus after spring break. Undergraduates who live in an MIT residence or fraternity, sorority or independent living group (FSILG) must begin packing and departing this Saturday, March 14. We are requiring undergraduates to depart from campus residences no later than noon on Tuesday, March 17. Please see below for details on graduate students.

    “Classes will continue this week as we continue to prepare for this transition.”

    The lengths to which MIT is going illustrates the danger the coronavirus represents, and the measures companies and organizations are willing to take to help contain it.

  • U.S. Government Looks To Restrict Exports Of AI, Quantum Computing And Self-Driving Tech

    U.S. Government Looks To Restrict Exports Of AI, Quantum Computing And Self-Driving Tech

    According to The Washington Post, the Trump administration has floated a proposal that would limit high-tech exports to China.

    Under the proposal, artificial intelligence (AI), robots, quantum computing, image recognition and self-driving tech would all be prohibited from being exported to China. This would include the tech that drives smartphone assistants, such as Siri.

    “If you think about the range of products this potentially implicates, that’s massive. This is either the opening of a big negotiation with the industry and the public or a bit of a cry for help in scoping these regulations,” R. David Edelman, the director of the Project on Technology, the Economy, & National Security at MIT, told The Washington Post.

    At the very least, the administration seems intent on extending the restrictions to those countries that are already subject to U.S. arms embargoes, including China.

    Needless to say, industry experts are not happy with the proposal. In a separate report by The Washington Post, individuals with the National Venture Capital Association expressed concern about how effective these proposed restrictions would be, versus the damage they would cause.

    “Almost everything is using AI in one way or another,” said Jeff Farrah, NVCA’s general counsel. “So then is everything subject to export controls?”

    Farrah continued: “There’s not a lot of faith from people in the industry that the government will get this right.”

  • Alteryx Acquires Feature Labs, An MIT-Born Machine Learning Startup

    Alteryx Acquires Feature Labs, An MIT-Born Machine Learning Startup

    Data science is one of the fastest growing segments of the tech industry, and Alteryx, Inc. is front and center in the data revolution. The Alteryx Platform provides a collaborative, governed platform to quickly and efficiently search, analyze and use pertinent data.

    To continue accelerating innovation, Alteryx announced it has purchased a startup with roots in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Feature Labs “automates feature engineering for machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) applications.”

    Combining the two companies’ platforms and engineering will result in faster time-to-insight and time-to-value for data scientists and analysts. Feature Labs’ algorithms are designed to “optimize the manual, time-consuming and error-prone process required to build machine learning models.”

    Feature Labs makes its open-source libraries available to data scientists around the world. In what is no doubt welcome news, Alteryx has already committed to continued support of the open-source community.

    From the Press Release:

    “Feature Labs’ vision to help both data scientists and business analysts easily gain insight and understand the factors driving their business matches the Alteryx DNA. Together, we are helping customers address the skills gap by putting more powerful advanced analytic capabilities directly into the hands of those responsible for making faster decisions and accelerating results. We are excited to welcome the Feature Labs team and to add an engineering hub in Boston,” said Dean Stoecker, co-founder and CEO of Alteryx.

    “Alteryx maintains its leadership in the market by continuing to evolve its best-in-class, code-free and code-friendly platform to anticipate and meet the demands of the 54 million data workers worldwide2. With the addition of our unique capabilities, we expect to empower more businesses to build machine learning algorithms faster and operationalize data science,” said Max Kanter, co-founder and CEO of Feature Labs. “Feature engineering is often a time-consuming and manual process and we help companies automate this process and deploy impactful machine learning models.”

  • Twitter Is Funding A New MIT Lab For ‘Social Machines’

    The MIT Media Lab announced that it has secured a five-year, $10 million investment from Twitter, which will provide access to its real-time, public steam of tweets as well as the archive of every tweet all the way back to the beginning.

    This will be used for a new laboratory for social machines, which aims to solve complex social problems by developing collaborative technologies.

    MIT explains, “The new initiative, based at the Media Lab, will focus on the development of new technologies to make sense of semantic and social patterns across the broad span of public mass media, social media, data streams, and digital content. Pattern discovery and data visualization will be explored to reveal interaction patterns and shared interests in relevant social systems, while collaborative tools and mobile apps will be developed to enable new forms of public communication and social organization.”

    Twitter’s Mark Gillis discusses the endeavor on its engineering blog:

    This is an exciting step for all of us at Twitter as we continue to develop new ways to support the research community. Building on the success of the Twitter Data Grants program, which attracted more than 1,300 applications, we remain committed to making public Twitter data available to researchers, instructors and students. We’ve already seen Twitter data being used in everything from epidemiology to natural disaster response.

    The Laboratory for Social Machines anticipates using Twitter data to investigate the rapidly changing and intersecting worlds of news, government and collective action. The hope is that their research team will be able to understand how movements are started by better understanding how information spreads on Twitter.

    “The Laboratory for Social Machines will experiment in areas of public communication and social organization where humans and machines collaborate on problems that can’t be solved manually or through automation alone,” says Deb Roy, an associate professor at the Media Lab who will lead the LSM. “Social feedback loops based on analysis of public media and data can be an effective catalyst for increasing accountability and transparency — creating mutual visibility among institutions and individuals.”

    Roy also holds the title of Twitter’s chief media scientist.

    Twitter CEO Dick Costolo adds “With this investment, Twitter is seizing the opportunity to go deeper into research to understand the role Twitter and other platforms play in the way people communicate, the effect that rapid and fluid communication can have and apply those findings to complex societal issues.”

    The lab further discusses what it plans to build and deploy here.

    Image via MIT

  • Google’s Robots To Get Better At Squeezing Into Tight Places

    Last year, Google bought Boston Dynamics, the robot makers who created such nightmare-inducing machines as this:

    …and this:

    …and this:

    Now, the company is working with researchers from MIT to add some more flexibility into the mix (via 9to5 Google):

    I’ll let your imagination run wild on its own with that.

    So, just to be clear, they have robots that move like and resemble the shape of humans, robots that can run as fast as cheetahs, robots that can climb walls, and robots that can jump ridiculously high, just to name a few. Now they’re adding flexibility and squeezing into small places into the mix. Let’s just put it this way. People are already talking about Terminator 2’s T-1000 in relation to this.

    Image via YouTube

  • Mark Wahlberg: Micro-Brewery Reality Show Features MIT Students

    Mark Wahlberg and A&E have reached a deal for an upcoming reality TV show. Called The Big Brew Theory, Wahlberg will serve as producer. The show will follow four MIT graduate students who join an MIT undergrad and work on creating a micro-brewery. The show will be based in Boston.

    Wahlberg is already one of the producers of the reality show about his family’s restaurant business. Called Wahlburgers, the show and the restaurants share the same name. A&E must be pleased with Wahlburgers, with Mark Wahlberg, or possibly both for them to hand him the reins to another reality show. This makes the fourth show he has produced for the network.

    The Big Brew Theory (where do you suppose they got the name for this show?) features the aforementioned MIT students as they (the grad students) pool their life savings in an effort to create the micro-brewery of their dreams. They bring in the undergrad, who just happens to be female and sexy, to assist in their endeavors.

    The city of Boston must love Mark Wahlberg. The Big Brew Theory will provide yet another positive view of the city via reality TV. Wahlberg clearly loves Boston, too. He and his brothers grew up in Dorchester.

    Mark Wahlberg has achieved success as a producer in other facets of entertainment besides reality TV. He is one of the producers of The Fighter, Entourage, Boardwalk Empire, Prisoners, and Lone Survivor, among other film and TV productions. He will appear on the big screen in what is expected to be a summer blockbuster, too. Transformers: Age of Extinction premieres in U.S. theaters on June 27th.

    Will you be tuning in to The Big Brew Theory? Do you expect it to be more about the micro-brewery process or more about the young hot female undergrad?

    Image via Twitter

  • MIT Delivers ‘Transformers’ Technology

    MIT Delivers ‘Transformers’ Technology

    The days of watching Transformers on television and reveling in the movie franchise may soon find added real world joy. Researchers at MIT have created real world transformers.

    The Massachusetts Institution of Technology’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence laboratory has spearheaded the development of what is known as modular devices. They aren’t the first to do so; however, they have made significant gains in the functionality and efficiency of the devices.

    Within small cubes or M-Blocks, they have inserted a radio, a motor controller, a flywheel mechanism, brakes and additional electronics. These cubes can be comfortably held with two fingers. The M-Blocks remarkably have the power to work as separate or singular entities. They are currently controlled remotely via a radio Wi-fi system, but in the future, the team expects the robots will be programmed to move via internal workings whether they have been commanded to fuse together or separate. Due to their inner workings, they have the power to spin individually at quick speeds or jump.

    Each cube has 8 face magnets on each side of the cube which allow them to fuse to other cubes. They also have edge magnets which allows the cube to rotate. Due to the “chambering” of the edges on the cubes, they are able to create a strong bond. The bond allows for transformations to occur without cubes falling out of place or completely disassembling.

    The ability for modular robots to jump is fairly unheard of because it requires a large amount of energy, but the researchers at MIT have managed to get their M-Blocks to jump with great precision and ease.

    There’s no denying that this research will continue to pick up interest. Here’s to hoping we all are fortunate enough to have a run-in with a black and yellow Camaro that transforms into a highly intelligent robot, sooner than later.

    Image credit: mit.edu.

  • New Google Glass Planned For 2014 [Report]

    New Google Glass Planned For 2014 [Report]

    For the past year, Google Glass has been the sole plaything of developers and those rich enough to afford a pair. Starting next year, however, the technology will be put into the hands of everyday consumers. Those consumers will decide the fate of Google Glass, and Google knows it.

    During a talk at EmTech, Google X display division head Mary Lou Jepsen, talked about the creation of Glass and what they have planned for next year. In short, they’re now redesigning Google Glass to be more consumer friendly for when it launches.

    To be more specific, Jepsen compared the consumer version of Google Glass to the Model T Ford. Sure, there were other cars before Ford’s first automobile, but it was the Model T that really gained traction with consumers. Jepsen believes that the consumer version of Google Glass will have a similar effect as “it’s lightweight, it’s comfortable, it’s cool.”

    The cool factor is definitely something that Google needs to work on as almost every photo of somebody wearing Glass comes off as the exact opposite. Need I remind you of Robert Scoble’s infamous Google Glass shower pic?

    Even if Google Glass doesn’t immediately take off next year, Jepsen believes that wearable computing is here to stay. In fact, she believes that people will become addicted to the wearable computing experience once they realize that the tech lets them complete certain tasks much faster than before.

    Of course, the entire talk wasn’t solely devoted to Google Glass. Jepsen also took time to address the slowly emerging wearable computer market found in smart watches. While Google is rumored to be making its own smart watch, the company is remaining mum on the subject. All Jepsen would say is that smart watches need to be as diverse as the clothes we wear to make an impact. It could be just a simple bit of advice, or it could be a hint that Google is working on a wide range of styles for Google Glass and its rumored line of smart watches.

    [Image: Google Glass/YouTube]
    [h/t: Gizmodo UK]

  • Real Lightsaber: Science Has Made Star Wars Reality

    Thanks to scientific advancements, humans on a planet in a galaxy not so far away have developed a device that bears a striking resemblance to the famous lightsaber that everyone knows from the Star Wars film franchise. What used to be science fiction is now starting to become a reality, due to the hard work being done by professors at MIT and Harvard. The technology is still being developed, making it hard to tell exactly what these tools will be able to do, but they are sure to be very cool and will definitely excite all of the Star Wars fans out there.

    The new development was done by a scientist at MIT, helping to develop real life lightsaber molecules. He says the discovery could lead to amazing scientific advancements. The words scientist and lightsaber being used in the same sentence will certainly intrigue anyone who is a fan of the popular film franchise and we will all stay tuned to find out more. Vladan Vuleti, a physics professor at MIT said “We use laser beams and shine them in from 6 sides and these laser beams actually cool the atoms.” He has been able to bind together those light particles, or photons into a single molecule, according to CBS Boston.

    The scientists have in fact discovered a new form of matter that works just like the lightsabers in Star Wars. CNET states that, when the researchers fired a few photons into a vacuum chamber with a cloud of extremely cold rubidium atoms to take advantage of an effect called a Rydberg blockade, the photons started getting close together and even left the chamber together as the first “photonic molecule.” It is the bond between these two particles that creates the new matter. Mikhail Lukin, a physics professor at Harvard, says that “The physics of what’s happening in these molecules is similar to what we see in the movies.”

    There is no mention of turning this new tool into a weapon in comparison with the lightsaber in Star Wars, but Lukin also suggests the breakthrough could one day lead to technologies that allow for the creation of complex 3D structures, like crystals, made out of light.

    Star Wars geeks shall celebrate the victory, as lightsabers will no longer be simply a thing of science fiction.

    Image via Youtube

  • Stanford Tops Forbes List Of Top Universities

    For at least this year a west coast school can claim supremacy over what is usually viewed as eastern academic superiority. Stanford university in Palo Alto, CA has been named the top university in the country by a recent Forbes list.

    The list focused on the areas of Student Satisfaction, Post-Graduate Success, Graduation Rate, Nationally Competitive Awards, and Student Debt. Forbes editor Michael Noer made sure to emphasize that the areas being assessed not only deal with the experience offered by the institutions, but also their economic viability.

    “Our college rankings were created to inform consumers about the quality of the educational experience and our brand new financial health grades give insight into which schools will be around for the long-haul.”

    In claiming the number one spot Stanford dethroned Ivy League titan Princeton University, which fell to the third slot.

    Second place also went to a west coast institution in Pomona College. The private, liberal arts college is located in Clermont California and boasts a student population under two-thousand.

    The rest of the top ten is rounded out by Yale, Columbia, Swarthmore College, The United States Military Academy, Harvard, Williams College, and MIT.

    The issue, which will be released early next month, will also include rankings of the best public, private, and value schools. Forbes’ coverage will also include an interactive tool called “Find Your Top Colleges” that will allow students to find their best matches based upon their test scores, GPA, and other factors such as region.

  • MIT Now Has Their Own Super Fast Robot Cheetah

    In September of last year, Boston Dynamics introduced the world to a cheetah robot that you could never hope to outrun. With a max speed of 28.3 mph, the robot would even be able to catch a sprinting Usain Bolt. Now MIT has made their own robot cheetah that’s not quite as fast, but it’s fast enough to catch you.

    Of course, MIT’s cheetah isn’t just a carbon copy of last year’s robot from Boston Dynamics. The researchers have found that their robot can run much more efficiently by swapping out the pneumatics of the previous cheetah for motors. It may only be able to run at a speed of 13.7 mph at the moment, but it will be able to run for much longer periods of time. One day, it may also be able to carry its own battery.

    Let’s just hope MIT never decides to equip their robot with metal teeth and an insatiable bloodlust.

    [h/t: Engadget]

  • MIT Is Teaching Robots How To Learn From Their Mistakes

    MIT Is Teaching Robots How To Learn From Their Mistakes

    Students at MIT are teaching robots how to adapt, as discussed in this video. At the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, students will be presenting a pair of papers “showing how household robots could use little lateral thinking to compensate for their physical shortcomings,” as MIT explains.

    This particular video features MIT senior Annie Holladay demonstrating her algorithm that helps a robot adapt by using both arms instead of just one:

  • Young Black Hole May Have Been Formed in Rare Supernova

    Young Black Hole May Have Been Formed in Rare Supernova

    Astronomers have found evidence that suggests the youngest black hole in the Milky Way galaxy may reside in the remnants of a rare supernova.

    The remnant, named W49B, is only around 1,000 years old and only 26,000 light-years from Earth. Astronomers have called the object “rare” because of the way the supernova took place. Instead of explosively ejecting matter in all directions the way an supernova does, W49B is the result of a supernova that ejected material from a star’s poles at a higher speeds than other material, creating jets that shaped the remnant.

    A paper on the phenomenon is to be published in The Astrophysical Journal.

    “W49B is the first of its kind to be discovered in the galaxy,” said Laura Lopez, lead researcher on the study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). “It appears its parent star ended its life in a way that most others don’t.”

    The data used in the study was obtained using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory. W49B now glows brightly with X-rays, and Chandra was able to determine the distribution of elements in the remnant. The researchers found an uneven distribution of iron, matching predictions for asymmetric supernovae.

    Astronomers searched for X-ray or radio pulses from the remnant, which would provide evidence for a neutron star, but found none. This suggests that a new black hole could have been formed at the core of the supernova.

    “It’s a bit circumstantial, but we have intriguing evidence the W49B supernova also created a black hole,” said Daniel Castro, co-author of the paper. “If that is the case, we have a rare opportunity to study a supernova responsible for creating a young black hole.”

    (Image courtesy NASA/CXC/MIT/L.Lopez et al/Palomar/NSF/NRAO/VLA)

  • Anonymous Hacks MIT In Honor Of Aaron Swartz, Academics Protest With #PDFTribute

    As you are all probably aware of by now, noted online activist Aaron Swartz committed suicide this weekend. An investigation is underway, but his family and others are saying he did it to avoid a lengthy trial and possible prison sentence over his online publishing of academic journals from JSTOR and MIT. In honor of Swartz’ memory, Anonymous has hacked and defaced MIT’s Web site, the school where he allegedly harvested the journals from.

    As usual, the defaced Web site featured a message from Anonymous. In it, the hacktivist collective calls for a number of reforms in Internet law. Here’s the list courtesy of CNET:

    We call for this tragedy to be a basis for reform of computer crime laws, and the overzealous prosecutors who use them.

    We call for this tragedy to be a basis for reform of copyright and intellectual property law, returning it to the proper principles of common good to the many, rather than private gain to the few.

    We call for this tragedy to be a basis for greater recognition of the oppression and injustices heaped daily by certain persons and institutions of authority upon anyone who dares to stand up and be counted for their beliefs, and for greater solidarity and mutual aid in response.

    We call for this tragedy to be a basis for a renewed and unwavering commitment to a free and unfettered internet, spared from censorship with equality of access and franchise for all.

    Beyond Anonymous hacking MIT, another group has stood up in support of Swartz’ mission to make information free for all. A number of academics have been publishing studies online with the hashtag #PDFtribute. Most of these studies are copyright protected, but Swartz would likely have it no other way. He believed in freedom of information, especially when it came to academic studies. It’s hard to say if the publishers will prosecute authors uploading their own studies, but it would look really bad on those who do in the wake of Swartz’ death.

    Swartz was a well known and beloved member of the online activist community. It’s unlikely that Anonymous is going to stop with a simple hack or defacement. The group is going to continue to push for reform with this particular tragedy only serving to bolster their cause.

    [Image: okfn/flickr]

  • Look At These Potential Robot Muscles [Video]

    MIT researchers at the David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Researched have been working on a new material that they say could be used to drive artificial robotic muscles or generate enough electricity to power small electronics.

    The material, which is made from an interlocking network of two different polymers, changes its shape when it absorbs water vapor. “One forms a hard but flexible matrix that provides structural support while the other is a soft gel that swells when it absorbs water,” says the description of the video, which comes from MIT. “Together these polymers create a material that converts water vapor to energy without the use of an external energy source.”

    It makes you wonder what’s really possible, when you combine technology like this with stuff like this, this and this.

    [via reddit]