#BionicManDiary, entry 001: the story of how a chip was implanted into my body
I woke up to find a Band-Aid on my hand. It was covering a small wound between the thumb and the index finger. That was when I had a WTF moment.
28 articles
I woke up to find a Band-Aid on my hand. It was covering a small wound between the thumb and the index finger. That was when I had a WTF moment.
Have you ever wondered how a typical office would look like in a decade or so? The first things to come to your mind is likely to be some pseudo
eBay user passwords compromised in data breach; another Internet Explorer zero-day for Microsoft; Samsung eyes iris authentication; and patches from Chrome.
Passwords, the de facto authenticators, represent a serious security weakness for a number of reasons: chief among those is that humans quite simply tend to create bad passwords in order
Apple strengthens user protection in their new flagship smartphone, meaning biometric identification might finally go mainstream. Is it good or bad, and what are the potential consequences? First, we’ll try
Everyday millions of computers solve the same problem; these machines try to check if you are actually you and not some other person. The most popular tool to do that
Computers have advanced in the last 20 years from building-sized mainframes to smartphones that can fit in your pocket (and have become infinitely more capable, to boot), yet we use