Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Submission + - Airline Pilots Rely Too Much on Automation Says Safety Panel

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes: Nearly all people connected to the aviation industry agree that automation has helped to dramatically improve airline safety over the past 30 years but Tom Costello reports at NBC News that according to a new Federal Aviation Administration report commercial airline pilots rely too much on automation in the cockpit and are losing basic flying skills. Relying too heavily on computer-driven flight decks now pose the biggest threats to airliner safety world-wide, the study concluded. The results can range from degraded manual-flying skills to poor decision-making to possible erosion of confidence among some aviators when automation abruptly malfunctions or disconnects during an emergency. “Pilots sometimes rely too much on automated systems," says the report adding that some pilots “lack sufficient or in-depth knowledge and skills” to properly control their plane’s trajectory. Basic piloting errors are thought to have contributed to the crash of an Air France Airbus A330 plane over the Atlantic in 2009, which killed all 228 aboard, as well as a commuter plane crash in Buffalo, NY, that same year. Tom Casey, a retired airline pilot who flew the giant Boeing 777, said he once kept track of how rarely he had to touch the controls on an auto-pilot flight from New York to London. From takeoff to landing, he said he only had to touch the controls seven times. "There were seven moments when I actually touched the airplane — and the plane flew beautifully,” he said. “Now that is being in command of a system, of wonderful computers that do a great job — but that isn’t flying." Real flying is exemplified by Capt. Chesley Sullenberger, says Casey, who famously landed his US Airways plane without engines on the Hudson River and saved all the passengers in what came to be known as the “Miracle on the Hudson.” The new report calls for more manual flying by pilots — in the cockpit and in simulations. The FAA says the agency and industry representatives will work on next steps to make training programs stronger in the interest of safety.

Submission + - Wikimedia Sends Cease And Desist Letter to Firm Providing Paid Editing Services

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes: For months, Wikipedia has been battling a company called “Wiki-PR,” which purportedly sells paid editing services on Wikipedia and in October announced it had blocked or banned hundreds of Wiki-PR's sockpuppet accounts in response. Now Cyrus Farivar reports at Ars Technica that the Wikimedia Foundation (which runs Wikipedia) is escalating its game issuing a cease and desist letter to Wiki-PR, demanding that the company immediately halt editing Wikipedia “unless and until [Wiki-PR has] fully complied with the terms and conditions outlined by the Wikimedia Community.” The attorney representing the Wikimedia Foundation, Patrick Gunn, wrote that "you admitted that Wiki-PR has continued to actively market paid advocacy editing services despite the ban—consistent with evidence that we have discovered independently." "Should you fail to comply with the terms of this cease and desist letter, Wikimedia Foundation is prepared to take any necessary legal action to protect its rights."

Submission + - US Considering Mandate That New Cars Broadcast Location, Direction & Speed (cnsnews.com) 1

cold fjord writes: CNS News reports, "Before the end of this year, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration will decide whether or not to begin the rulemaking process to mandate that newly manufactured cars include what is being called “vehicle-to-vehicle” (V2V) communications technology that constantly broadcasts via radio wave the car’s location, direction, speed and, possibly, even the number of passengers it is carrying. ... NHTSA sees this technology as the first step on a “continuum” of automotive evolution that will ultimately lead to fully automated vehicles navigated by internal electronics linked to external infrastructure, communications and database systems. The upside of a government-mandated movement toward cars that are not controlled by the people riding in them is that it could make transportation safer, allow people to use time spent in a vehicle for work, rest or entertainment, and give people who are currently incapable of driving because of age or disability the opportunity to move as freely as those who can now drive. The downside is that such a transportation system would give the government at least the capability to exert increasing control over when, where, if — or for how much additional taxation — people are allowed to go places in individually owned vehicles. It could also give government the ability to track where people go and when. "

Submission + - Google, Microsoft blocks searches related to child abuse material online (latesttoptechnews.com)

An anonymous reader writes: At the request of UK's Prime Minister David Cameroun at an internet summit on child safety, Google and Microsoft have both decided to adjust their engines in such a way that search terms related child abuse materials will be blocked. Google said it has tweaked its search engine to block 100,000 search terms related to the topic.

Submission + - Microsoft's software contains NSA backdoor .. (theregister.co.uk)

An anonymous reader writes: “We know that Microsoft's software contains a backdoor do we provide for a specific patch against that backdoor, or is the parliament's network open to intrusion by the US government?”,

“the primary documents are in the public domain, that Microsoft is under a legal obligation to open that security hole every device in this building has been backdoored,”

Submission + - European Parliament considers decriminalization of File Sharing 1

pavlz writes: discussed to the European Parliament 12 November 2013, read below: We can not reform CopyRight, without guaranteeing free access to culture. Last year, in December a group of MEPs sent a letter to European Commission President, José Barroso, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/José_Manuel_Durão_Barroso that promoted a reform of CopyRight. The legislation in force in the EU, the Infosoc, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_Directive has more than 10 years and refers to a world profoundly changed, especially with regard to the Internet. In these last 12 months nothing has moved, and the signatories of the letter are tired of waiting. So, with an eye to next year's elections, on November 12, some of them have shown how they intend to reform the European copyright. The occasion was the event The Case of Text and Data Mining http://copyright4creativity.eu/2013/10/29/the-case-of-text-and-data-mining-12-nov-2013-european-parliament-brussels in closing which Members Amelia Andersdotter, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amelia_Andersdotter Marietje Schaake http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marietje_Schaake Pawel Zalewski http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pawe_Zalewski had the opportunity to present the proposal. "The Infosoc has created a horrible nightmare of licenses that nobody is able to penetrate. Those who use culture — file sharers, DJs, libraries, schools — are living in a state of constant uncertainty, "explained Amelia Andersdotter, and then continued: "It is really hard to understand what are the freedoms and rights. What is allowed and what is not? When you are in danger of being sued? The law should be clearer. " The Swedish MEP has clear in mind what are the priorities for CopyRight reform in Europe. "We want a reform that ensures greater legal certainty for those who use cultural works. We need more flexibility in the system to expand access to culture by libraries, archives online, researchers, people with poor eyesight and educators. " Another important point is the "decriminalization of file sharing. This would greatly decrease the negative pressure against the new online business models and non- commercial use of the works. " The idea behind the initiative is to create collaboration between all the MEPs who share the idea that a copyright reform is needed, in order to present a proposal at the beginning of the next term. "I am convinced that we must coordinate immediately to ensure greater legal certainty, and that the freer use of culture is protected by a rule. More than ever, in the history of the Internet, it is important to build a common and shared platform for cultural exchange and dialogue”. "Mrs. Amelia Andersdooter" on twitter: http://twitter.com/teirdes "Mrs. Marietje Schaake" on twitter https://twitter.com/MarietjeSchaake "Mr Pawel Zalewski" on twitter: http://twitter.com/ZalewskiPawel

Submission + - Ubuntu Wants to Enable SSD TRIM by Default (phoronix.com)

jones_supa writes: During the first day of the latest virtual Ubuntu Developer Summit, Canonical developers finally plotted out the enabling of TRIM/DISCARD support by default for solid-state drives on Ubuntu 14.04. Ubuntu developers aren't looking to enable discard at the file-system level since it can slow down delete operations, so instead they're wanting to have their own cron job that routinely runs fstrim for TRIMing the system. In the past there has been talk about the TRIM implementation being unoptimized in the kernel. Around when Linux 3.0 was released, OpenSUSE noted that the kernel performs TRIM to a single range, instead of vectorized list of TRIM ranges, which is what the specification calls for. In some scenarios this results to lowered performance.

Submission + - Critical flaws found in Aussie traffic systems ahead of G20 Summit (scmagazine.com.au)

mask.of.sanity writes: Two critical networks managing traffic systems of a major Australian capital city contain gaping holes that render it vulnerable to attack.

The flaws were found during penetration tests by the government a year ahead of the G20 Summit, the most significant gathering of world leaders ever held in Australia.

The tests found the agencies messed up security zoning, didn't remove staff logins as they resigned, and had inconsistent patching.

Submission + - Mikko Hyppönen Warns Parents Over Google ID Demands (yle.fi)

jones_supa writes: Google has started to close email accounts for children aged under-13 unless a parent sends a copy of their ID to Google in the United States. Online safety and security came into sharper focus when a 12-year-old received a notice from Google that warned her email account would be closed within a week. The only way she could prevent closure of the account, which she had used for more than a year, was to ask a parent to send a copy of their official ID to Google. Mikko Hyppönen, information security expert from F-Secure, is extremely cautious about the practice. 'I don’t recommend sending ID anywhere, in any way,' said Hyppönen. The age limit is not an insurmountable obstacle for internet-curious youngsters. Many children now receive an email address via their school, so they are able to communicate online without compromising data security by sending personal information on the internet.

Submission + - Australian Intelligence Auditing To Determine What Snowden May Have Taken (theguardian.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The Guardian reports, "Australia's top spy agency has expressed "great concern" over material leaked by the fugitive US intelligence worker Edward Snowden and has carried out an audit to ascertain what Australian information Snowden might have. Top-secret documents from the Defence Signals Directorate, now known as the Australian Signals Directorate (ASD), show Australian spies targeted the mobile phones of Indonesia's president, his wife and senior officials in 2009. The ASD slide, published by the ABC and Guardian Australia, has prompted Indonesia to recall its ambassador to Australia in protest. "Certain material that has been released by Snowden that is now in the public realm is of very great concern," the director general of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (Asio), David Irvine, told a Senate estimates hearing on Monday. ... Asio had conducted an audit of intelligence it has shared with foreign agencies to assess what sort of Australian material Snowden might have."

Submission + - Dropbox CEO: Email's creators would "cry" if they knew how little it would evolv (citeworld.com)

mattydread23 writes: At Dreamforce yesterday, Dropbox CEO Drew Houston talked about his company's acquisition of Mailbox, noting that email has barely changed since it first emerged — it's still a list of items. This is Dropbox's product philosophy: solve problems that hiding in plain sight. He also talked about what happened when he met Steve Jobs — the Apple founder said he'd build a competitor to Dropbox once he found out Houston wasn't interested in the sale.

Submission + - Affordable Blood Work In Four Hours Coming To Walgreens (singularityhub.com) 4

kkleiner writes: With the cost of healthcare services increasing, it's welcome news that a recent deal between Walgreens and Theranos will bring rapid, accurate, low-cost blood testing to the local pharmacy. A pinprick of blood from a finger is enough to run any number of a la carte diagnostic tests with results in four hours or less. The automation of blood testing in one convenient machine may mean that the demand for clinical technicians may decline, but the benefits of making blood analysis more accessible to everyone is enormous.

Submission + - Pee Analyzer and RFID to stop drunk drivers (darkdaily.com)

mspohr writes: A Singapore nightclub has installed devices in their urinals which test for drunk patrons. When a patron is over the limit, the device identifies him by the RFID card in his pocket and tags the card. It also displays a warning above the urinal. When he goes to pick up his car, the warning is displayed and there is another opportunity to take a cab.
Apparently they don't prevent claiming the car but about 2/3 of patrons decide to take a cab.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e2OdA7DUOAQ

Submission + - The ultimate open source gift guide for 2013

Lemeowski writes: From a 3D printer that carries the Free Software Foundation's Respect Your Freedom Certification to an open hardware kit that will let you build your own version of the classic game Simon Says, this open source gift guide highlights 20 of the coolest open source-related gifts for the holidays.

Submission + - Risk Calculator for Cholesterol Appears Flawed (nytimes.com)

g01d4 writes: From the NYT: "Last week, the nation’s leading heart organizations released a sweeping new set of guidelines for lowering cholesterol, along with an online calculator meant to help doctors assess risks and treatment options. But, in a major embarrassment to the health groups, the calculator appears to greatly overestimate risk, so much so that it could mistakenly suggest that millions more people are candidates for statin drugs. [It seems] the problem might have stemmed from the fact that the calculator uses as reference points data collected more than a decade ago, when more people smoked and had strokes and heart attacks earlier in life. For example, the guideline makers used data from studies in the 1990s to determine how various risk factors like cholesterol levels and blood pressure led to actual heart attacks and strokes over a decade of observation."

Slashdot Top Deals

If you want to put yourself on the map, publish your own map.

Working...