Thursday, June 11, 2026

Defining Autonomy for Wellness Robots in Senior Care


<img src="https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/dreamface-technologies-llc-logo-with-abstract-silver-face-and-circles-on-teal-background.png?id=66892687&width=980"/><br/><br/><p>An examination of how socially assistive wellness robots could support the seven dimensions of senior wellness, and how a framework can measure their autonomy.</p><p>What Attendees will Learn</p><ol><li><span>Why the senior care crisis exceeds incremental automation. Demographic pressure, workforce shortages, and a daily wellness-programming gap all strain traditional care models.</span></li><li><span>What defines a wellness robot as a category. The seven ICAA wellness dimensions and eight properties separate these robots from companion and medical devices.</span></li><li><span>How autonomy can be measured with CRAS. This six-level scale, modeled on the SAEJ3016 driving standard, evaluates four care dimensions.</span></li><li><span>What maps the road to full autonomy. The paper examines technical capabilities, clinical evidence, and a three-phase roadmap toward the early 2030s.</span></li></ol><div><span><a href="https://content.knowledgehub.wiley.com/wellness-robots-and-the-path-to-full-autonomy-a-new-paradigm-in-ai-powered-senior-care/" target="_blank">Download this free whitepaper now!</a></span></div> Reference: https://ift.tt/Lm5B7Rl

Why Orbital Data Centers Are Harder Than Silicon Valley Thinks


<img src="https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/globe-surrounded-by-zeroes-and-ones-on-a-blue-background.png?id=66895710&width=1245&height=700&coordinates=0%2C95%2C0%2C96"/><br/><br/><p><strong>“Space computing, the final</strong> frontier, has arrived,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang <a href="https://nvidianews.nvidia.com/news/space-computing" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">declared</a> at the <a href="https://www.nvidia.com/gtc/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Nvidia GTC</a> conference in March.</p><p>Indeed, the idea of data centers in orbit has gone from science fiction to a serious spending category. Elon Musk’s <a href="https://www.spacex.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">SpaceX</a> has <a href="https://x.ai/news/xai-joins-spacex" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">acquired</a> <a href="https://x.ai/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">xAI</a> (also Musk’s) and is <a href="https://spacenews.com/spacex-offers-details-on-orbital-data-center-satellites/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">planning</a> a constellation of space-based data centers. <a href="https://research.google/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Google</a>, not to be outdone, announced <a href="https://research.google/blog/exploring-a-space-based-scalable-ai-infrastructure-system-design/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Project Suncatcher</a> in partnership with <a href="https://www.planet.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Planet</a>, planning to launch two satellites equipped with Google Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) AI chips by early 2027. Startup <a href="https://www.starcloud.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Starcloud</a> has already <a href="https://www.pcmag.com/news/data-center-space-race-heats-up-as-starcloud-startup-requests-88000-satellites?test_uuid=04IpBmWGZleS0I0J3epvMrC&test_variant=B" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">filed</a> a proposal with the Federal Communications Commission for an 88,000-satellite constellation for orbital data centers. As Starcloud’s filing suggests, these companies are all proposing fleets of satellites numbering in the thousands, each housing a rack or multiple racks of AI-grade GPUs, interconnected with each other through free-space optical links and communicating back to Earth via microwave links, either directly or through other satellites.</p><p>Proponents <a href="https://x.com/patrick_oshag/status/1998440819078898140" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">tout</a> the many wonders of computing in space: abundant solar energy, free cooling, and freedom from Earth-based disturbances like earthquakes, floods, and protesters. But a sober look at the physics of space-based computing paints a much more nuanced picture.</p><p>Free cooling is perhaps the biggest misconception. Space is cold, but it also has no atmosphere. That means the best heat-removal mechanisms, conduction and convection, are off the table. The only option is radiation. To prevent a chip from overheating in space, a large, costly surface area is required to dissipate the energy and then radiate it.</p><p>Solar energy is abundant, but collecting it with functional solar panels that maintain perfect alignment toward the sun is a complex task requiring extensive <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/satellite-refueling-heats-up" target="_self">attitude control systems</a>. On top of that, ionizing radiation in space from cosmic rays and other sources poses a unique challenge, degrading the solar panels, the radiative coolers, and the chips themselves. Because regular maintenance in space is difficult, redundancy has to be built in at launch, and cost estimates have to account for efficiency degradation over time.</p><p>At <a href="https://www.abiresearch.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">ABI Research</a>, where I work as an aerospace analyst, we did a rough total-cost-of-ownership comparison between a data center on Earth and one in space. It showed that the cost to launch and run a GPU in space for a year is at least an order of magnitude higher than the same feat in a terrestrial data center. Our model was simple, assuming an Nvidia H100 server rack launched with the requisite-size solar panel and radiator on a spacecraft akin to Starcloud’s <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/nvidia-h100-space" target="_self">pilot launch</a>. We assumed SpaceX’s Starship was used at a highly optimistic launch cost per kilogram of US $44, and a terrestrial energy cost of $0.20 per kilowatt hour. This is a simple back-of-the-envelope calculation, but it does signal something real.</p><p>From our perspective, the cost of delivery and space hardening of the payload makes general-purpose space-based data centers difficult to justify economically today, despite the fact that data-center builders in many regions are scrambling for electric power. However, there are niche applications where the much higher costs of computing in space could be justified. Examples include preprocessing data from Earth-observation satellites, real-time detection and tracking of hypersonic missiles, and active collision avoidance in the increasingly crowded low Earth orbit. Even for these, though, contending with fundamental physics will still be a demanding challenge. And a technologically compelling one, too.</p><h2>The Cooling Challenge in Space</h2><p>Cooling is where physics separates the science from the fiction. The governing equation for radiative cooling, the only type of cooling available in space, is known as the Stefan-Boltzmann Law. It states that the amount of power you can radiate is proportional to the area of the radiator times its temperature to the fourth power. For a space systems architect, the implications of this law are brutal. In orbit, the only variable we can control is area. This restriction creates a geometric penalty, or a “physics tax,” for cooling in space: The more power you need to reject, the bigger the area of the radiator you need to bring along from Earth.</p><h3></h3><br/><div class="flourish-embed flourish-chart" data-src="visualisation/28633310?602891"><script src="https://public.flourish.studio/resources/embed.js"></script><noscript><img alt="chart visualization" src="https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/28633310/thumbnail" width="100%"/></noscript></div><p class="caption">The only cooling method available in space is radiation, and the radiator area required is derived using the Stephan-Boltzmann law. For a single chip drawing 700 watts, like Nvidia’s popular H100 GPU, the area required to keep it at 20 °C is just under 3 square meters, and it goes down to 1 square meter for an operating temperature of 85 °C. However, as the radiator surface is exposed to ionizing radiation, its emissivity decreases, and after 5 years in space the required area increases by about 40 percent. </p><h3></h3><br/><p>To understand how big this baseline area is in practice, I used the Stefan-Boltzmann law to model the heat-rejection area needed to keep a single chip that draws 700 watts of power—such as the H100 GPU chip, an AI stalwart—at a constant 60 °C, usually considered the sweet spot for GPU longevity and stability. I further assumed that the radiator is perfectly facing deep space, at a chilly background temperature of 3 kelvins. By this calculation, a single chip would require 1.4 square meters of radiator surface.</p><p>To put this into perspective, consider that a common AI rack can hold approximately 32 GPUs (four H100 server boards). With CPUs, memory, and networking equipment, this rack would draw around 40 kilowatts of power. This single rack includes 2.5 terabytes of memory—enough capacity to serve over 20,000 concurrent users or run 16 simultaneous instances of Llama 3, an open-source AI model. But to cool this thermal load in a vacuum, that single rack would require an 80-square-meter radiator, roughly the size of a pickleball court. For an aggregate 100-megawatt data center, you’d need at least 2,500 of those radiators.</p><p>And that’s the best-case scenario. Additional problems are hidden in the low Earth orbit environment itself. Space exposes radiators and their coatings to a chemically hostile brew of ultraviolet light and atomic oxygen, quite the opposite of a clean-room environment. Over a LEO satellite’s typical 5-year lifespan, these elements degrade the radiator’s surface properties and lower its ability to shed heat.</p><p>Including this degradation in the model reveals that as the radiator degrades from a “fresh” state to an “end-of-life” state, the physics demands a further penalty. To maintain that same 60 °C operating temperature for the GPU chips, the required surface area jumps from about 1.4 square meters per chip to nearly 2.0 square meters. In other words, the physics tax rises by 40 percent. Therefore, you must launch at least 40 percent more radiator mass, endure higher atmospheric drag, and sacrifice valuable launch volume just to survive the degradation of the thermal coating. This increase adds significantly to the launch cost and further erodes the economics of a space-based data center.</p><h2>The Silicon Challenge in Space</h2><p><strong></strong>Solving the heat problem is only part of the battle. The other significant challenge in low Earth orbit is ionizing radiation, which affects the computing hardware itself. Today’s satellites typically use radiation-hardened processors, which are very reliable but also much more expensive, and they perform poorly compared to commercial off-the-shelf <a href="https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/11068401" target="_blank">processors</a>.</p><p>A standard rad-hard chip doesn’t have the processing power to run a modern large language model (LLM). As a result, satellite operators aspiring to launch a data center have no choice but to make a risky compromise: to use hardware meant for terrestrial use. In order to achieve the necessary compute density, orbital data centers must use the same Nvidia H100s or Google TPUs found in terrestrial server farms. The problem is that these chips are “soft” targets in space. High-energy particles can flip bits in memory or cause “latch-ups” in logic that fry the circuit.</p><p>One possible option is to shield the computers from radiation with thick, absorbent panels. However, the shielding would add significantly to the already heavy satellites. The other option is to compensate for the radiation damage with redundancy. Indeed, edge computing architects are moving toward software-defined resilience, where instead of one perfectly hardened computer, operators fly a cluster of imperfect, commercial ones whose total cost could be as low as one-tenth to one-hundredth that of the rad-hard model.</p><p>This redundant approach is used in many spacecraft, including <a href="https://cacm.acm.org/news/how-nasa-built-artemis-iis-fault-tolerant-computer/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Artemis II</a>, which recently carried astronauts around the moon, as well as SpaceX’s flight computers and the Hewlett Packard Enterprise edge servers for the International Space Station. By running three (or more) instances of the same calculation on three different nodes and comparing the answers, the system can detect a corrupted processor. If a node fails, the “orchestrator” reboots it while the others continue the mission. While this ensures resiliency, it also means that some fraction of the compute capacity is dedicated to redundancy, further increasing the costs.</p><h2>The Energy Challenge in Space</h2><p>An often-touted advantage of space-based data centers is the seemingly unlimited supply of free, clean energy from the sun. Solar energy in orbit is indeed abundant, at 1,361 watts per square meter. Of course, capturing that free energy is made possible only by the very costly launching of large solar panels into orbit. And those solar panels also degrade over time due to radiation exposure, typically losing 1 to 3 percent efficiency per year.</p><p>Let’s say a solar array collects 1 MW of power to run an AI cluster. The laws of physics demand that the satellite must eventually radiate 1 MW of waste heat. Because the square area needed to generate the solar power—<a href="https://www.energydawnice.com/solar-panel-output-per-square-meter/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">around 400 W/m2</a>—and to reject the heat—around 450 W/m2—are nearly equivalent, every square meter of power generation now demands approximately another square meter of cooling. The radiator needs to be a structural equal, not merely a passive coating on a surface used for something else.</p><p>As Elon Musk recently <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IgifEgm1-e0" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">noted</a> in Davos, the most efficient radiator is one that never sees the sun. By orienting the spacecraft so the solar panels face the sun and the radiators face the deep vacuum of space, efficiency skyrockets for both. But there’s a catch: Maintaining this perfect three-way alignment—panels to sun, radiator to the void, antennas to Earth—requires complex, high-torque attitude control systems. So this configuration means more payload and more computing power. Plus, these control systems are complex components with many failure modes, which is not optimal in a situation where maintenance is difficult.</p><h2>The Killer Apps for Computing in Space</h2><p>Given all these challenges of deploying massive radiators for satellites in the hostile environment of space, why build data centers in space at all?</p><p>While training or inference on LLMs in space doesn’t seem economical today, there are other, very compelling applications for computing in space. Here are two: solving the downlink bottleneck from Earth-observation satellites and enabling collision-preventing maneuvers in the increasingly crowded low Earth orbit.</p><p>The latest Earth-observation satellites, equipped with hyperspectral and synthetic aperture radar sensors, are used for a range of important reconnaissance missions, such as battlefield intelligence, tracking the global shadow fleet of ships carrying contraband, and assessing earthquakes or infrastructure failures down to the millimeter. These systems can generate hundreds of terabytes of raw data per day that must be transmitted to Earth. However, the radio-frequency “pipes” used to downlink the data are congested, and the ground infrastructure cannot absorb the sheer volume of raw data.</p><p>Another immediate, mission-critical application for in-space computation is protecting the orbital environment. With over 17,000 satellites in orbit, the overwhelming majority of which are in low Earth orbit, avoiding collisions between these satellites is crucial. As NASA astrophysicist <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_J._Kessler" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Donald Kessler</a> pointed out back in 1978, a <em>single</em> space collision could cause a cascading effect that renders the entirety of LEO unusable.</p><p class="ieee-inbody-related">RELATED: <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/kessler-syndrome-space-debris" target="_self">Have We Reached a Space-Junk Tipping Point?</a></p><p>According to SpaceX’s recent annual report, the Starlink constellation executes a collision avoidance maneuver every 2 minutes on average. Each maneuver already <a href="https://spacexstock.com/25000-collision-avoidance-maneuvers-lessons-from-starlink/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">relies</a> on onboard AI systems but still requires most of the processing to happen on the ground.</p><h3></h3><br/><img alt="A rendering of the Starlink satellite system depicted as bright dots surrounding the Earth." class="rm-shortcode" data-rm-shortcode-id="413f7488561cf1957b75df3d60150db8" data-rm-shortcode-name="rebelmouse-image" id="ff99a" loading="lazy" src="https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/a-rendering-of-the-starlink-satellite-system-depicted-as-bright-dots-surrounding-the-earth.png?id=66879236&width=980"/><h3></h3><br/><p>As low Earth orbit gets increasingly populated, collision avoidance will have to break the traditional ground-loop model. In the megaconstellation era of space, the OODA (observe, orient, decide, act) loop must happen onboard, thereby reducing the analysis turnaround from minutes to milliseconds.</p><p>The problem is that the flight computers standard on satellites are not built for this level of processing. The complex probability models required for maneuvering cannot currently be implemented by onboard computers in conjunction with their navigation systems. Clearly, more powerful computers are needed.</p><p>This is the true economic justification for moving compute to space: to move insight generation there. By placing high-performance computing adjacent to the sensors, we can process terabytes of data in orbit and downlink only the relevant data in real time, and we can do the computations necessary to avoid satellite collisions in real time.</p><h2>The Future of Computing in Space</h2><p><strong></strong>So, assuming that some form of computing is inevitable in low Earth orbit in the foreseeable future, how will the heat be handled? The industry is currently experimenting with two main classes of solutions to cope with the Stefan-Boltzmann law.</p><p>One creative option is to use<strong> origami-inspired radiators,</strong> the kind used for the James Webb telescope. Companies are developing flexible, high-conductivity composite radiators that fold into a tight cube for launch and unfurl into enormous yet lightweight thermal wings in orbit.</p><p>Another possibility is to use<strong> liquid-droplet radiators.</strong> This concept proposes removing the rigid radiator structure completely and instead spraying a stream of coolant oil directly into the vacuum of space. The fluid travels through an open loop, exposed to the near-absolute zero of the void, maximizing radiative surface area before being caught by a collector and pumped back into the ship. It sounds like science fiction, but as the heat loads climb into the megawatts, liquid-droplet cooling may be the only way to cheat the mass limits of this exponential reality.</p><h3>Options for Future Radiator Design</h3><br/><img alt="Diagram of droplet-based heat exchanger system with labeled components and web-like graphs." class="rm-shortcode" data-rm-shortcode-id="a07a5b1926272e2c747f1de69ea6eda8" data-rm-shortcode-name="rebelmouse-image" id="ca3f4" loading="lazy" src="https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/diagram-of-droplet-based-heat-exchanger-system-with-labeled-components-and-web-like-graphs.png?id=66895778&width=980"/><p><strong> </strong>Our rough total-cost-of-ownership model uses optimistic versions of current numbers, such as launch cost, chip cost, and power use. A critic might point out that future technology will improve, both in efficiency, purpose-built designs, and costs.</p><p> Sure, the technology is bound to improve. But the critical factor isn’t just launch cost; it’s the computing power per unit mass and electric-power economics. Radiators and solar arrays can consume 65 to 70 percent of total satellite mass, and space-grade photovoltaics run orders of magnitude more expensive than terrestrial equivalents.</p><p class="shortcode-media shortcode-media-rebelmouse-image rm-float-left rm-resized-container rm-resized-container-25" data-rm-resized-container="25%" style="float: left;"> <img alt="Spiral polygonal grid resembling a twisted spiderweb on a light background" class="rm-shortcode" data-rm-shortcode-id="0809489b27553697e7814fdf4e3009ed" data-rm-shortcode-name="rebelmouse-image" id="e2ced" loading="lazy" src="https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/spiral-polygonal-grid-resembling-a-twisted-spiderweb-on-a-light-background.gif?id=66895750&width=980"/> <small class="image-media media-photo-credit" placeholder="Add Photo Credit...">Chris Philpot</small></p><p>Even as launch costs fall, the mass and cost burden of power generation and thermal management will remain a fundamental problem.</p><p> Current space-grade solar panels rely on germanium substrates, whose supply is concentrated in China. It will be extremely difficult to scale up availability of these substrates. A transition to radiation-tolerant perovskite solar panels or a similar alternative could change the economics significantly, but that possibility is five years away or more. The technology will get cheaper, but the bottlenecks of power and thermal architecture will remain.</p><p><strong> </strong>Recognizing the thermal reality of cooling in space forces us to shift how we view satellite operations. We are moving away from the “launch and forget” era toward an era of “autonomous logistics.” As our thermal model demonstrated, the harsh environment of space steadily attacks the hardware. UV radiation degrades thermal coatings; cosmic rays degrade silicon. In a traditional satellite model, when the radiator degrades or the memory fails, the satellite becomes space junk. For a multimillion-dollar data center, that disposal model is potentially ruinous.</p><p> To make the economics of orbital computation work, the infrastructure must be serviceable and the rockets to launch them reusable. The orbital domain will require automated servicing vehicles capable of swapping out degraded radiator panels and upgrading fried servers. In these ways, the future of the orbital data centers is dependent on the innovations of an emergent in-space economy.</p><p> There’s a good argument to be made that the need for space-based computation is less of a hype cycle and more of an enabler for the new space economy. Look no further than SpaceX’s recent regulatory filings proposing a constellation of up to a million satellites in low Earth orbit. At such a scale, routing all raw data back to Earth is physically impossible; the network itself must become the data center.</p><p> However, the winners in this sector will be determined by the systems architects who most cleverly accommodate the thermodynamics and the companies with sufficient vertical integration to take on the massive costs of operating data centers in orbit. Ultimately, the physics tax is universal. Whether managing heat rejection in the vacuum of low Earth orbit or managing power density in a hyperscale facility in Northern Virginia, the constraint is never the silicon. It’s the thermodynamics. <span class="ieee-end-mark"></span></p> Reference: https://ift.tt/FPw0KgT

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

EPICS in IEEE’s Awards Honor Outstanding Students and Faculty


<img src="https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/four-men-tinkering-with-iot-parts-on-an-outdoor-table.jpg?id=66858524&width=1245&height=700&coordinates=0%2C469%2C0%2C469"/><br/><br/><p>The <a href="https://epics.ieee.org/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">EPICS (Engineering Projects in Community Service) in IEEE</a> program, administered by <a href="https://ea.ieee.org/ea-programs" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">IEEE Educational Activities</a>, has launched the <a href="https://epics.ieee.org/excellent-epics-in-ieee-contributor-awards/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Excellent EPICS in IEEE Contributor Awards</a>. The recognitions honor the program’s outstanding students and faculty volunteers in Excellent Team Leader and Excellent Faculty Advisor categories.</p><p>The awards recognize individuals whose leadership, mentorship, and commitment have meaningfully advanced the impact of <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/epics-in-ieee-student-projects" target="_self">EPICS projects</a>. Candidates must demonstrate clear, measurable contributions that elevate both the student experience and the outcomes delivered to community partners. Reviewers also consider other awards, publications, presentations, and professional achievements that reinforce the nominee’s credibility and leadership.</p><p>Recipients must demonstrate outstanding project management and documentation, strong mentoring and collaboration, and high-quality outcomes.</p><p>Here are this year’s recipients.</p><h2>Team Leader Award</h2><p><a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/DXfFA5LEQQR/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Surattana Kakay</a> is a computer engineering student at <a href="https://www.eng.rmutt.ac.th/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Rajamangala University of Technology Thanyaburi (RMUTT)</a>, located in IEEE Region 10 (Asia Pacific). Kakay, an IEEE student member, was honored for guiding her team in the design, development, and implementation of the <a href="https://epics.ieee.org/24-environmental-project-stories/testing-the-waters/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Automatic Water Level Control System project</a>, which aids rice farmers in Thailand.</p><p>As the team leader, Kakay played a pivotal role in transforming the student initiative into an operational, community‑centered solution. Her inspiration was purpose-driven, she says.</p><p>“My motivation was to apply engineering to real agricultural challenges, like water scarcity and <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/topic/climate-tech/" target="_self">climate change</a>,” she says. “I wanted to bridge advanced technology with the tangible needs of local farmers.”</p><p>She managed the project end to end—coordinating workflow, assigning tasks based on team members’ strengths, and ensuring each phase of development aligned with the technical road map she created. She served as the primary liaison between the student team, the <a href="https://ptt-rrc.ricethailand.go.th/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Pathum Thani Rice Research Center</a>, and farmers to make sure the system was practical and user‑friendly, and that it addressed community needs.</p><p class="pull-quote">“Watching students grow as they design solutions that improve lives has been both inspiring and deeply humbling.” <strong>—Elizabeth Vidal-Duarte</strong></p><p>Under her leadership, the team developed a low‑cost IoT‑based alternate wetting and drying (AWD) system that lets farmers remotely monitor and control water levels in rice paddies using smartphones. Kakay oversaw the integration of noncontact laser time‑of‑flight sensors to withstand harsh field conditions, and she championed the use of long-range technology connected to a free community Wi‑Fi network to eliminate Internet service fees.</p><p>The results were transformative, Kakay says.</p><p>“Our AWD system reduces water consumption by 63 percent and methane emissions by 7 percent annually,” she says. “Turning an<a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/hands-on-projects-career-advice" target="_self"> academic assignment into a real‑world solution</a> that delivers measurable, sustainable results has been incredibly meaningful.”</p><p>Her achievements advanced sustainability for Thailand’s most water‑intensive crop while demonstrating the potential of accessible engineering solutions.</p><p>Beyond technical innovation, Kakay cultivated a culture of learning, continuity, and empowerment within her team. She introduced a mentorship framework to support future student cohorts. She and her team produced academic papers, visual media, and presentations to communicate the project’s value to scientific audiences as well as the general public.</p><p>“Surattana Kakay is a pivotal figure in turning innovation into reality and delivering tangible benefits to the community,” says IEEE Member <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/thanasin-bunnam/" target="_blank">Thanasin Bunnam</a>, her faculty advisor and an assistant professor at RMUTT.</p><p>Kakay’s leadership journey became a personal milestone, she says: “Leading this project transformed me from a student into a team leader. As a female engineer, it empowered me to advocate for women in engineering and show that gender is no barrier to technical excellence.”</p><p>Through her guidance, the AWD project evolved from a classroom assignment into a solution that illustrates IEEE’s mission of advancing technology for humanity.</p><h2>Faculty Advisor Awards</h2><p><a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/nshaghaghi/" target="_blank">Navid Shaghaghi</a>, a lecturer and researcher at <a href="https://www.scu.edu/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Santa Clara University</a>, in California, was recognized for his dedication to integrating <a href="https://www.edutopia.org/blog/what-heck-service-learning-heather-wolpert-gawron" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">service learning</a> into engineering education and fostering student innovation that benefits underserved communities in <a href="https://ieee-region6.org/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">IEEE Region 6</a> (Western USA).</p><p>During his more than six years of engagement with EPICS in IEEE, Shaghaghi, an IEEE senior member, has demonstrated exceptional leadership in advancing sustainable, human‑centered engineering through the long‑running <a href="https://epics.ieee.org/project/hydration-automation-ha-us/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Hydration Automation (HA) project</a> and the <a href="https://www.scu.edu/engineering/faculty/shaghaghi-navid/epic-lab/hivespy/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">HiveSpy initiative</a>. They are part of Santa Clara University’s <a href="https://www.scu.edu/engineering/labs--research/labs/frugal-innovation-hub/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Frugal Innovation Hub</a> and <a href="https://www.scu.edu/engineering/faculty/shaghaghi-navid/epic-lab/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">EPIC Research Laboratory</a>.</p><p>Since 2019, Shaghaghi has served as principal investigator for the HA project, guiding its evolution from prototype to a robust, field‑tested irrigation automation system that supports small ranches and community farms in California.</p><p>The HA project is a low‑cost system that helps reduce water waste by monitoring soil moisture and automating watering. By combining ultrasonic tank sensing, soil sensors, and ongoing technical support, the project improves efficiency, lowers operational costs, and promotes more sustainable urban agriculture.</p><p>Under Shaghaghi’s guidance, more than 30 undergraduate and graduate students have gained hands-on experience in IoT development, field deployment, testing, and client collaboration.</p><p>His commitment to frugal innovation and human‑centric design has resulted in solutions that are minimalist, affordable, sustainable, portable, and rugged—often challenging conventional approaches to agricultural technology.</p><p class="pull-quote">“Turning an academic assignment into a real‑world solution that delivers measurable, sustainable results has been incredibly meaningful.” <strong>—Surattana Kakay</strong></p><p>The HA project has produced new research publications and earned recognition, including a third-place finish by Shaghaghi’s graduate students at this year’s <a href="https://ieee-risingstars.org/2026/project-showcase/" target="_blank">IEEE Rising Stars Project Showcase</a>. During the annual event, students and young professionals present their technical innovations to industry leaders and peers.</p><p>The HiveSpy project is a low‑cost, frame‑level IoT monitoring system that helps beekeepers automate labor‑intensive tasks and prevent hive swarming by tracking production yield in real time. By collecting frame‑weight data and generating optimized harvest schedules, the system reduces manual workload while improving the hive’s health and boosting honey output.</p><p>Shaghaghi says his mentorship has been shaped by the realities of student turnover, a challenge he embraces with optimism and adaptability.</p><p>“The transient nature of student teams is a challenge but one you must embrace, bear‑hug style,” he says. “By energizing your student community and welcoming new contributors, you’ll be amazed by the brilliant solutions they bring.”</p><p>His philosophy has allowed him to cultivate a thriving pipeline of student innovators, he says, and he has strengthened his own professional practice as well.</p><p>“I’ve been mentoring EPICS in IEEE students since 2019,” he says. “It has taught me resilience and how to operate on a tight budget while still delivering real‑world results.”</p><p>Beyond the technical achievements, Shaghaghi’s work reflects a commitment to humanitarian technology and service learning. As the founder and director of the EPIC (Ethical, Pragmatic, and Intelligent Computer) lab, he has built a diverse, interdisciplinary community dedicated to innovation for the benefit of humanity.</p><p>For him, he says, the EPICS in IEEE award carries profound meaning: “Receiving this award validates my deepest conviction in humanitarian technology research and strengthens my commitment to service‑learning education.”</p><p>His students echo those sentiments. One team member said “Professor Shaghaghi is an engine of progress who keeps forging ahead.”</p><p>Through his leadership, Shaghaghi has created an enduring model of <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/advice-leading-mentoring-greater-innovation" target="_self">mentorship</a>, innovation, and community partnership that is helping to shape the next generation of socially responsible engineers.</p><p><a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/elizabeth-vidal-duarte/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Elizabeth Vidal-Duarte</a> is celebrated for her impactful mentorship and leadership in expanding EPICS in IEEE engagement across Peru and IEEE Region 9 (Latin America and Caribbean). Vidal-Duarte, a research professor at <a href="https://www.unsa.edu.pe/en/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">San Agustin National University Arequipa</a>, in Peru, is a faculty advisor and technical mentor for two EPICS in IEEE projects. She encouraged students to apply to the EPICS program, helped them identify community needs, and supported them in crafting proposals grounded in service‑learning principles.</p><p>Under her leadership, the students developed a functional <a href="https://epics.ieee.org/project/soft-robotic-glove-for-fine-motor-rehabilitation-and-task-specific-training-peru/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">soft robotic glove</a> used at <a href="https://clinicalima.sanjuandedios.pe/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Clínica San Juan de Dios</a> to help patients improve their fine-motor skills. The clinic’s therapists use the device to measure the range of motion of joints at the beginning and end of each patient’s therapy session to improve their assessments. Compared with traditional manual measurements using a <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/en:protractor?mobile-app=true&theme=false%29" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">goniometer</a>, the glove significantly reduces evaluation time and enables digitally recorded data, improving clinical efficiency and decision-making.</p><p>The second project is an <a href="https://epics.ieee.org/project/assistance-system-for-emotion-detection-for-visually-impaired-people/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">emotion‑recognition system</a> for people with visual impairment. The AI‑powered wearable helps recognize a person’s emotions through real‑time facial‑expression detection and haptic feedback.</p><p>The project has resulted in the “Emotion-Aware Assistive System With Wearable Haptic Feedback for Visual Impairment” research paper, which is to be presented at the <a href="https://2026.cbms-conference.org/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">IEEE International Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems</a>, to be held from 3 to 5 June in Limassol, Cyprus.</p><p>Vidal-Duarte’s mentorship extends beyond the classroom. She visits rehabilitation centers and clinics to find people with visual impairments to ensure that the technologies she is helping to develop meet their needs.</p><p>“EPICS in IEEE has moved me beyond teaching concepts to truly living engineering as a tool for human impact,” Vidal-Duarte says. “Watching students grow as they design solutions that improve lives has been both inspiring and deeply humbling.”</p><p>Throughout the development of both projects, Vidal-Duarte provided sustained technical and organizational guidance, helping students define requirements, structure work plans, and overcome challenges in prototyping, testing, and validation.</p><p>Reflecting on the broader impact of EPICS, she says the program has given her “more than methodologies and tools—it has given me perspective, purpose, and a global community that constantly challenges me to grow as a mentor and as a human being.”</p><p>Her mentorship fostered not only technical excellence but also empathy, ethical awareness, and professional maturity among her students, she says. She guided them in preparing articles for submission to IEEE conferences, interdisciplinary collaboration, and hands-on fieldwork that bridged theory and real‑world constraints.</p><p>“Her constant support, her belief in each student’s potential, and her commitment to developing leaders who make a difference define [her] as a faculty advisor,” says Valentina Chabilla, an EPICS in IEEE student team member.</p><p>The EPICS recognition reflects her passion for teaching, her dedication to the community, and her impact on projects and students. Her commitment to accessible, sustainable innovation strengthened partnerships between the university and community groups, benefiting underserved populations.</p><p>“Receiving this award is both an honor and a responsibility,” she says. “It reminds me of the real impact engineering can have on people’s lives and strengthens my commitment to guiding students in creating meaningful change.”</p><p>Her leadership continues to inspire students to view engineering not just as a discipline but also as a powerful force for inclusion, dignity, and social impact.</p><h2>Advancing the mission</h2><p>The Excellent Contributor Award recipients exemplify the best of EPICS in IEEE. Through their leadership, they have strengthened the bridge between engineering education and community service, inspiring students to use their skills to create sustainable, real‑world impacts.</p><p>As EPICS continues to expand its global reach, the contributions of Kakay, Shaghaghi, and Vidal-Duarte serve as powerful reminders of what is possible when educators, volunteers, and students work together to improve the lives of others through engineering.</p> Reference: https://ift.tt/tgMwaid

We Are Crowd-Sourcing the Panopticon


<img src="https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/an-illustration-of-a-phone-with-an-eye-on-it-and-several-rings-of-snake-ouroboros.jpg?id=66820296&width=1245&height=700&coordinates=0%2C313%2C0%2C313"/><br/><br/><p>A man raises his phone as police move into a crowd. The video is shaky, loud, immediate. Within minutes, it is online. Within hours, it is everywhere. This is how accountability works now. Something happens, someone records it, and that footage can show what really happened, sometimes contradicting official accounts. It can empower citizens and create consequences for officials.</p><p>But the footage’s life cycle does not end there.</p><p>In recent months, civil liberties groups have <a href="https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/aclu-and-75-organizations-sound-alarm-on-metas-plans-to-add-facial-recognition-technology-to-ray-ban-and-oakley-eyeglasses" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">warned</a> that adding facial recognition to consumer smart glasses could turn everyday recording into something more troubling: real-time <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/facial-recognition-gone-wrong" target="_self">facial identification</a>. It reflects a broader shift already underway, where <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/capitol-riot-prosecutions-technology" target="_self">images and videos captured for one purpose can later be searched</a>, matched, and used for another.</p><p>An ouroboros is an ancient Egyptian symbol, a snake or dragon eating its own tail. As I began to see patterns in my broader research on surveillance corporatism and governance lag, I began using the term “surveillance ouroboros” to describe this recursive pattern of observations intended to hold power accountable becoming new input for the same surveillance infrastructure.</p><h2>Facial recognition changes accountability</h2><p>During the George Floyd protests in 2020, people filmed police in real time. Phones were pointed at officers, not at each other. The goal was simple: to show what the state was doing. That footage spread quickly and became part of a much larger pool of public data.</p><p>At the same time, reporting from outlets including <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/18/technology/clearview-privacy-facial-recognition.html" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank"><em>The New York Times</em></a> and <a href="https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanmac/clearview-ai-local-police-facial-recognition" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">BuzzFeed News</a> showed that law enforcement agencies were using facial recognition tools, including systems built by Clearview AI. Those systems were built from billions of images scraped from across the internet, including publicly available photos and videos. </p><p>The basic approach is now routine: People record the state, or anything else—as in <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/capitol-riot-prosecutions-technology" target="_self">the January 6 attack</a> on the U.S. Capitol—and the state compiles that footage and data into a searchable environment, which may later be used to identify some of the same people who made the footage.</p><p class="pull-quote">Facial-recognition systems used by law enforcement are increasingly outpacing the legal safeguards.</p><p>A 2024 Government Accountability Office <a href="https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-24-107372" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">review</a> found that federal law enforcement agencies continued to expand their use of facial-recognition systems for criminal investigations despite ongoing concerns around training, privacy protections, civil-liberties safeguards, and oversight. Earlier GAO findings showed that agencies had conducted roughly 60,000 facial-recognition searches before formal training requirements were put in place for personnel using the systems. </p><p>The American Civil Liberties Union and other groups have <a href="https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/aclu-and-75-organizations-sound-alarm-on-metas-plans-to-add-facial-recognition-technology-to-ray-ban-and-oakley-eyeglasses" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">warned</a> that these tools could be used to identify people from images shared online, including protest-related footage. Concerns about facial recognition led some <a href="https://stateofsurveillance.org/articles/government/facial-recognition-bans-us/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">U.S. states and cities</a>, including San Francisco and Boston, to restrict or ban government use of the technology, while federal agencies have continued to face <a href="https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-25-107302" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">scrutiny</a> over how such systems are tested, deployed, and audited. A 2024 analysis published in <a href="https://policyreview.info/articles/analysis/data-governance-risks-facial-recognition" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank"><em>Internet Policy Review</em></a> warned that facial-recognition systems used by law enforcement are increasingly outpacing the legal safeguards meant to govern them, creating growing tensions around data protection, oversight, and proportional use.</p><h2>The spy network that built itself</h2><p>Surveillance used to require infrastructure. Cameras had to be installed and data had to be collected deliberately. That is no longer the case. People carry cameras everywhere. They record constantly and upload in real time. Events are documented from multiple angles without planning or coordination. The cumulative result is a continuous stream of usable data: faces, locations, timestamps, and interactions. The Internet of Things also waits all around us, gathering information and releasing it when people least expect it, as <a href="https://www.law.gwu.edu/andrew-guthrie-ferguson" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Andrew Guthrie Ferguson</a> describes in a recent <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/digital-surveillance" target="_self">excerpt</a> of his book <em>Your Data Will Be Used Against </em><em>You</em>.</p><p class="ieee-inbody-related">RELATED: <a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/digital-surveillance" target="_blank">“Sensorveillance” Turns Ordinary Life Into Evidence</a></p><p>Similar dynamics are emerging globally. A recent analysis in the <a href="https://academic.oup.com/ijlit/article/doi/10.1093/ijlit/eaaf022/8460644" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank"><em>International Journal of Law and Information Technology</em></a> examined how facial-recognition systems in China and Japan are expanding faster than the legal frameworks governing them. Reporting by <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2026/mar/12/invasive-ai-led-mass-surveillance-in-africa-violating-freedoms-warn-experts" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank"><em>The Guardian</em></a> described the limited legal protections around the rapid deployment of AI-assisted surveillance infrastructure across parts of Africa.</p><p>There used to be a clear distinction between surveillance and accountability. Surveillance meant the powerful watching the people; authorities tended not to share their imagery except under <a href="https://www.wired.com/2015/05/the-body-cam-hacker-who-schooled-the-police/" target="_blank">duress or a court order</a> and usually after a long delay. Accountability meant the people watching the powerful, and often publishing imagery immediately to head off or counteract official mischief. That distinction <a href="https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0539018419884410" target="_blank">no longer holds</a>. The same footage can serve both roles. A recording meant to expose misconduct can later be used to identify someone else entirely.</p><p class="pull-quote">Surveillance ouroboros is not a future risk. It is already here.</p><p>This dynamic persists because people still need to record. In many places, it is one of the only tools available when formal accountability breaks down. When oversight institutions weaken or fail, public documentation becomes a substitute. In that environment, people turn to visibility. But that visibility comes with a cost. The more people that document, the more data that exists. The more data that exists, the easier it is to search, match, and store. Every video feeds the ouroboros. People are not feeding the system because they trust it. They are feeding it because the alternative is silence.</p><p>Most of the people in these videos are not the focus. They are in the background, passing by or standing nearby. But that distinction does not matter once the footage enters a system. Today’s facial recognition can identify even a face that passed through the corner of a frame. Someone who did nothing can still become part of a dataset without ever knowing it. As recognition systems improve, older footage becomes more useful, and invasive. </p><p>No single decision created this outcome. It emerged gradually through more cameras, better recognition, larger datasets, and easier integration. Each step made sense on its own. Together, they changed what recording means.</p><p>Public recording is still necessary. Without it, many forms of abuse would remain hidden. But recording is no longer just exposure. It is also contribution. If you published imagery or video last year, you may already have contributed to a system you have never seen, but the ouroboros has.</p><p>Surveillance ouroboros is not a future risk. It is already here. Every time someone presses publish, they are doing two things at once. They are exposing power, and they are helping build the system that the powerful will later use to track the less powerful.</p> Reference: https://ift.tt/VcO93es

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Locked in heated rivalry with researcher, Microsoft fixes 0-day they disclosed


<p>Microsoft on Tuesday released fixes for two high-severity zero-days that were disclosed by a researcher who has been locked in a testy beef with the software giant.</p> <p>Nightmare Eclipse, the pseudonym the researcher goes by, released a handful of high-severity vulnerabilities in recent months, making them zero-days that had the potential to be exploited in the wild. The researcher has said the disclosures, which included proof-of-concept code, came after Microsoft reneged on an arrangement the two made regarding vulnerabilities they had discussed.</p> <h2>Disclosure drama</h2> <p>“But someone violated our agreement and left me homeless with nothing,” Nightmare Eclipse <a href="https://deadeclipse666.blogspot.com/2026/03/">wrote</a> in March. “They knew this will happen and they still stabbed me in the back anyways, this is their decision not mine.”</p><p><a href="https://arstechnica.com/security/2026/06/locked-in-heated-rivalry-with-researcher-microsoft-fixes-0-day-they-disclosed/">Read full article</a></p> <p><a href="https://arstechnica.com/security/2026/06/locked-in-heated-rivalry-with-researcher-microsoft-fixes-0-day-they-disclosed/#comments">Comments</a></p> Reference : https://ift.tt/s8EFjQ6

The Computer Science Degree Isn’t Dead


<img src="https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/an-illustration-of-stylized-people-wearing-business-casual-clothing.webp?id=65257424&width=1200&height=800&coordinates=0%2C50%2C0%2C50"/><br/><br/><h1></h1><p><em>This article is crossposted from </em>IEEE Spectrum<em>’s careers newsletter. <a href="https://engage.ieee.org/Career-Alert-Sign-Up.html" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank"><em>Sign up now</em></a><em> to get insider tips, expert advice, and practical strategies, <em><em>written i<em>n partnership with tech career development company <a href="https://www.parsity.io/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Parsity</a> and </em></em></em>delivered to your inbox for free!</em></em></p><h1>The CS Degree Isn’t Dead. The Entry-Level Pipeline Is</h1><p>There is no shortage of people telling recent engineering graduates that their degree was a mistake and that AI is coming for their jobs before they even land one. I respectfully disagree.</p><p>I have been a software engineer for 12 years, done well over 100 interviews on both sides of the table, and run Parsity, an AI engineering program. A few patterns emerge consistently in who actually breaks through in today’s job market. Here’s why I think the job market isn’t as dire as it looks, and what I would do if I were looking for my first tech job.</p><h2>The Numbers Need Context</h2><p>The Federal Reserve Bank of New York recently placed unemployment for recent CS graduates in the United States at 6.1 percent, with computer engineering graduates at 7.5 percent. Compared to philosophy majors at 3.2 percent and art history graduates at 3.0 percent, those figures look alarming. They require more context than most headlines provide.</p><p>When researchers factor in underemployment (graduates working jobs that don’t require a college degree), then engineers are doing relatively well, coming in <a href="https://e.vnexpress.net/news/tech/tech-news/us-s-computer-science-grads-face-5th-highest-unemployment-rate-5048578.html" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">below 20 percent, against a 42 percent average</a> across all recent graduates. Many majors reporting lower unemployment are achieving that figure by accepting work entirely unrelated to their field. Scored across unemployment, underemployment, and early-career earnings together, CS and computer engineering <a href="https://www.encoura.org/resources/wake-up-call/the-labor-market-for-recent-college-graduates-part-2-labor-market-tradeoffs/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">still rank among the top fields</a> for overall labor market outcomes.</p><p>The degree is not the problem. The hiring pipeline is. Job postings labeled “entry-level software engineer” <a href="https://www.nucamp.co/blog/the-junior-developer-hiring-crisis-in-2026-how-to-get-your-first-full-stack-job" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">grew roughly 47 percent</a> between late 2023 and late 2024, while actual hiring into those roles <a href="https://ravio.com/blog/tech-hiring-trends" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">dropped approximately 73 percent</a> in the same window. So-called “ghost jobs,” used to create an illusion of company growth, are everywhere. This makes the front door harder to find, but it exists.</p><h2>Here Is What To Do About It</h2><p><strong>Do a broad search of your (real-life) network.</strong> Roughly <a href="https://www.codesmith.io/blog/tech-hiring-trends-2025" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">26 percent of job offers</a> come through referrals. Look at your actual network—classmates, professors, past internship contacts, relatives—and identify people at companies that might be hiring. The goal is a warm introduction to someone who is or knows a decision maker. One introduction carries more weight than a hundred cold applications through a portal.</p><p><strong>Find symmetric risk.</strong> A junior engineer is a risky hire by definition. A startup carries a matching risk profile, meaning potentially lower compensation, no certainty of longevity, and higher performance expectations. But that shared risk creates mutual interest. The learning curve is steep, the exposure is broad, and the track record transfers directly. For engineers whose longer-term goal is a large organization, a startup is not a detour. It can be how you build the experience those organizations eventually want to see. The first job is for validation and learning. It is not a life sentence.</p><p><strong>Manufacture experience rather than waiting for it.</strong> Employers want experience but will not hire you to get it. The way through is to create it: a deployed project, an open-source contribution, building something real for a small business or family member. Recruiters are skeptical of toy projects. A deployed application solving a real problem, combined with the ability to talk clearly about the decisions you made and why, still moves the needle.</p><p><strong>Gain practical AI engineering skills, not just AI tool fluency.</strong> Using Cursor or Copilot is now a baseline expectation. What differentiates candidates is going one level deeper. Most working engineers, including senior ones, have not built a RAG pipeline or designed a multi-agent system. Understanding how to chunk documents, generate embeddings, store and query them from a vector database, and wire it into a production application puts a candidate ahead of a significant portion of the market on a skill in rapidly growing demand. AI and data science roles <a href="https://www.roberthalf.com/us/en/insights/research/data-reveals-which-technology-roles-are-in-highest-demand" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">grew 163 percent</a> in job postings in 2025. The engineers who understand how these systems actually work, not just how to prompt them, are in the shortest supply.</p><p><strong>Stop optimizing around conditions you cannot predict.</strong> Nobody anticipated the 2021 hiring boom. Nobody predicted this correction. Build durable skills. The demand for engineers who can reason clearly about systems is not going away. Where you start is not where you end.</p><p>—Brian</p><h2><a href="https://theconversation.com/meta-and-microsoft-have-joined-the-tech-layoff-tsunami-is-ai-really-to-blame-281436" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Meta and Microsoft have joined the layoff tsunami. Is AI really to blame?</a></h2><p>More major workforce reductions are on the horizon at Big Tech companies: Meta announced it will cut 10 percent of its workforce, or about 8,000 employees, and Microsoft plans to offer buyouts for 7 percent of its U.S. employees in a voluntary retirement program. The cuts are understood by many to be linked to AI. But is AI really to blame? For <em><em>The Conversation</em></em>, two academics at the University of Sydney give their two cents.</p><p><a href="https://theconversation.com/meta-and-microsoft-have-joined-the-tech-layoff-tsunami-is-ai-really-to-blame-281436" target="_blank">Read more here. </a></p><h2><a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/roboticist-turned-teacher-eniac-replica" target="_self">This Roboticist-Turned-Teacher Built a Life-Size Replica of ENIAC</a></h2><p>Tom Burick got his start as a roboticist. But when a financial downturn forced him to close his robotics business, he thought of the effect teachers had on his life and decided to pay it forward. Burick now works as a technology instructor at a school for students with autism, where he recently led a project building a full-scale replica of ENIAC, an historic computer celebrating its 80th anniversary this year. </p><p><a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/roboticist-turned-teacher-eniac-replica" target="_blank">Read more here. </a></p><h2><a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/chinese-robots-us-ban" target="_self">Proposed Chinese Robot Ban is Latest U.S. Tech Sovereignty Move</a></h2><p>Across several industries, the United States has been moving toward limiting the use of sensitive technology made in China. Now, legislation has been introduced to extend the trend to ground robots, including humanoids, dogs, and crawlers. This could benefit some U.S.-based robotics firms—but many of these companies still rely on Chinese-made components. “The U.S. robotics industry is in a pickle,” writes <em><em>Spectrum </em></em>tech policy editor Lucas Laursen. </p><p><a href="https://spectrum.ieee.org/chinese-robots-us-ban" target="_blank">Read more here. </a></p> Reference: https://ift.tt/kRJH4s3

High-severity vulnerability in Linux caused by a single errant character


<p>Researchers have analyzed a high-severity vulnerability in Linux that’s able to escalate untrusted users to root by exploiting a bug you don't often see: a single errant character inside the kernel.</p> <p>The vulnerability, tracked as <a href="https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2026-23111">CVE-2026-23111</a>, is located in nf_tables, a subsystem of the Linux kernel that provides packet filtering capabilities. It’s used to manage firewall rules and replaces older subsystems such as iptables, ip6tables, arptables, and ebtables.</p> <h2>!!!WTF!!!</h2> <p>The presence of a single mis-issued exclamation point in code implementing nf_tables introduced a use-after-free, a class of vulnerability that corrupts memory by placing malicious code at memory addresses that haven’t been properly freed of their previous contents. CVE-2026-23111 can be exploited by an unprivileged user or process to elevate system rights to root.</p><p><a href="https://arstechnica.com/security/2026/06/a-single-errant-character-in-the-linux-kernel-allows-attacker-to-gain-root/">Read full article</a></p> <p><a href="https://arstechnica.com/security/2026/06/a-single-errant-character-in-the-linux-kernel-allows-attacker-to-gain-root/#comments">Comments</a></p> Reference : https://ift.tt/wmiASWa

Defining Autonomy for Wellness Robots in Senior Care

<img src="https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/dreamface-technologies-llc-logo-with-abstract-silver-face-and-circles-on-teal-bac...