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Tesco tablets have data reset flaw

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 16 Agustus 2014 | 23.52

15 August 2014 Last updated at 00:07 By Mark Ward Technology correspondent, BBC News

Hiding data by using a factory reset option does little to delete potentially sensitive information, suggest researchers.

Three separate investigations of Android's data deleting systems found it was possible to recover information.

In some cases, a reset just removed the list of where data was stored and deleted nothing else.

In particular, Tesco's Hudl tablet was found to have a flaw that let attackers get at data saved to onboard memory.

All the investigations used second-hand devices sold via auction sites such as eBay.

The BBC worked with security expert Ken Munro from security firm Pen Test Partners to get 10 Hudl tablets from the auction site and see how easy it was to recover information from them.

The Hudl was vulnerable, said Mr Munro, because of a known bug in the Rockchip processor at its heart.

All modern gadgets can be flipped into a "flash mode" so the onboard firmware can be updated and data written to the device.

"There's a flaw in the firmware, which allows you to read from it as well as write," he explained.

Using a freely available software tool, Mr Munro was able to easily read data from Hudl tablets to which the factory reset facility had been applied.

Continue reading the main story

What people think is that when they hit erase or factory reset it's deleting the underlying source data but it's not"

End Quote Jude McColgan Avast

Getting access was the work of minutes but reading and analysing all the data typically took a couple of hours, he said.

Via this route Mr Munro was able to extract Pin codes to unlock devices as well as wi-fi keys, cookies and other browsing data that could be used to sign in to a website and masquerade oneself as the tablet's original owner.

In response, a Tesco spokesperson said: "Customers should always ensure all personal information is removed prior to giving away or selling any mobile device. To guarantee this, customers should use a data wipe program."

The spokesperson added that any tablets returned to Tesco would have all personal data wiped. They also recommended that people get further information about how to remove personal data from smartphones via the government's Get Safe Online website.

Google said anyone selling a used gadget should follow several steps to protect information.

"If you sell or dispose of your device, we recommend you enable encryption on your device and apply a factory reset beforehand," said a spokesman.

Data encryption systems have been available on Android for years, he added.

The next release of Android is expected to enable encryption by default. Currently it is up to owners to enable it for themselves.

Naked photos

While Hudl tablets were particularly vulnerable, other work has shown how straightforward it is to retrieve data from many Android devices.

The largest study was carried out by security company Avast, which recovered an "astonishing" amount of personal data from 20 second-hand Android phones.

The company recovered tens of thousands of images, including naked selfies as well as emails and text messages plus contact names and addresses.

"What people think is that when they hit erase or factory reset it's deleting the underlying source data but it's not," said Jude McColgan, head of mobile at Avast.

Independently, Marc Rogers, principal researcher at mobile security firm Lookout, has been cataloguing what happens to data saved on the main memory of Android phones and tablets when they are reset.

"There's an Android function to wipe data and most manufacturers are using that," he said.

"But all that does is remove the index of where data is and does not delete data at all."

A secure wipe would both remove that index and overwrite onboard memory with zeroes so it could not be recovered, he added.

"As a security professional it blows my mind that people do not do this to get rid of the data."

While it was not "completely straightforward" to recover data on those reset gadgets it was possible for a motivated attacker and the tools to do it were widely available, said Mr Rogers.

Motivation could come from the amount of cash stolen smartphones command, he explained.

Figures shared with Lookout by police forces suggest a street price for a smartphone with data on it can exceed $1,000 (£600).

The potential profit partly arises from the cache of personal, recoverable information people leave on these devices, Mr Rogers said.

In London, about 200 phones are stolen every day according to statistics from the Metropolitan police.

Apple exploit

Recent work by computer forensics expert Jonathan Zdziarski suggests that data held on Apple's iPhones is also vulnerable to recovery.

Mr Zdziarski found that some undisclosed features in the iOS operating system bypass the data encryption system running on the device. This meant, he said, that if an iPhone was caught at the right time it becomes possible to extract information.

With effort, said Mr Zdziarski, using these undocumented features would let an attacker get at "privileged personal information that the device even protects from its own users from accessing".

Mr Zdziarski's work has subsequently been independently confirmed by the security firm Stroz Friedberg.

In reaction, Apple has made changes to its mobile operating system that will be fully implemented in iOS 8. These should disable some aspects of the services he identified in order to limit their ability to export information.

Mr Zdziarski welcomed the "progress" Apple had made but said it needed to go further to fix the "significant security threat" faced.


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Date for Warcraft expansion decided

15 August 2014 Last updated at 12:01

Warlords of Draenor, the next expansion for video game World of Warcraft (WoW), will be released on 13 November.

It introduces a new continent to adventure on, allows game characters to become more powerful and lets players build their own fortresses.

In addition it will overhaul the graphics and animations used for player characters.

The expansion could help creator Activision Blizzard stem a long-term slide in players for its flagship game.

Steady fall

The new territory in Warlords is the continent of Draenor, which players will reach by travelling through a portal that sends them back in time to stop an invasion led by legendary orc warchief Garrosh Hellscream.

The expansion lets players take their characters up to level 100 to boost their offensive abilities and skills further. Players will also be able to instantly boost a character to level 90 so they can quickly make use of the game's new content.

Financial results released by Activision Blizzard this month revealed that WoW now has about 6.8 million subscribers - far fewer than the 12 million at its peak in late 2010.

It also revealed that the game had lost about a million subscribers this year between February and August. It said the decline was similar to that seen in 2012 before the launch of the last expansion, Mists of Pandaria.

The gamemaker added that more than 1.5 million people had already pre-purchased the Warlords expansion, which should help shore up player numbers.

Warlords also signals the start of more frequent expansions of the game, which are now expected to arrive yearly.

Preparations are also being made to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Warcraft in the game and the real world in November.


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Jackson video premiered on Twitter

14 August 2014 Last updated at 12:09

Epic Records has premiered a video for a new Michael Jackson single on Twitter - a coup for the social network, which is more commonly used to provide links to others' material.

To promote the event, Twitter created a map showing the late singer's top-tweeted songs in different countries.

The release comes in the same week that the firm declared its goal was to bring "more video into our users' timelines".

It added that it sought to make money by charging for "promoted" slots.

"We now offer advertisers the ability to run ads with a new cost per view (CPV) ad buying model," David Regan, senior product manager, TV and Video wrote on its advertising news page.

"This means advertisers only get charged when a user starts playing the video.

"Additionally, advertisers using Promoted Video have access to robust video analytics, including completion percentage and a breakout of organic versus paid video views."

Twitter began experimenting with video in 2012 when it allowed users to embed YouTube links into tweets.

At the start of 2013, it launched the Vine app, which allowed the creation of six second videos designed to play on a loop in newsfeeds.

A few months later it rolled out its Amplify program, which allows advertisers to pay for short pre-roll sponsorship clips that run before videos posted by a select number of organisations, including Warner Music, the Vevo music service, Conde Nast, the BBC and the US National Basketball Association.

Video ads have already proved to be a big revenue generator for Twitter's rival Facebook.

But unlike Mark Zuckerberg's company, Twitter's ads will not auto-play when they appear, at least at this stage.

"Both Twitter and Facebook are both integrating video much more deeply into the overall user experience, and people's tolerance and expectation of seeing video is also going up," commented Mark Mulligan, editor of the Music Industry Blog.

"While undoubtedly, given the choice, people would not have their Facebook experience full of ads, it's done nothing to dent the social network's continued growth and usage.

"With Twitter there's a lower amount of consumer attention time to play around with - it will not be able to put 30-second pre-roll ads, like you see on YouTube. It will have to come out with a set of formats that are unique to its audience."

The song, A Place with no Name, comes from a recently released posthumous album that features previously unreleased tracks recorded by Michael Jackson between 1983 and 1999.

The album topped the UK chart in May.


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Data jams as net hardware bug bites

14 August 2014 Last updated at 13:05 By Mark Ward Technology correspondent, BBC News

Browsing speeds could slow over the next week as old hardware is upgraded to handle the net's growth, says networking giant Cisco.

Some older kit has hit an upper memory limit in the number of routes it can use to despatch data around the world.

In the last few days the number of possible routes breached that upper limit which might mean those routers start to struggle.

Already some firms are reporting users are having problems.

Global issue

The problem has emerged as the number of connections between the different networks that make up the internet has continued to grow, wrote Omar Santos from Cisco in a blogpost.

Routers, which send data around the net, keep track of all the ways data can travel via an internal log known as a routing table. This list is constantly updated according to the ebbs and flow of internet traffic.

This week the number of entries on that global routing table went past more than 524,000. That represents a growing problem, said Mr Santos, because five separate devices Cisco makes can only handle a routing table of 524,288 entries.

As more and more routers around the world have to support 512K entries and beyond, the potential problems will grow, said Jim Cowie from internet monitoring firm Renesys.

"512K is right around the corner for everyone on Earth, as early as next week," he wrote in a blog post, adding, "this situation is more of an annoyance than a real internet-wide threat."

Routers that hit the memory limit could slow down, lose data or crash.

So far, said Mr Cowie, there was little evidence that the 512K problem was bringing about any more disruption than Renesys normally sees.

However, hosting firm LiquidWeb blamed the 512K bug for service disruption that hit it on Tuesday and it is also thought to be instrumental in causing problems for eBay, Comcast and Time-Warner.

Paul Lettington, network architect at UK ISP Andrews and Arnold, said workarounds did exist for the bug that should help older kit cope. Cisco has also published advice for owners of vulnerable hardware.

Andrews and Arnold had only seen indirect evidence of the 512K bug starting to bite, said Mr Lettington.

"We have seen anomalies with other networks on the internet which could have been caused by it, and these may have had an effect on our customers accessing those other networks," he said.

He added; "It is unlikely that any network operators will step forward and say that they were affected by it, as it would require admitting that they are running older, less capable hardware and are not on top of managing the maintenance of it."

Roland Dobbins, a senior analyst at Arbor Networks, said the too-many-routes problem had emerged twice before when the number of routes surpassed 128K and then 256K.

At both times unskilled and smaller organisations were caught out as hardware struggled to cope. A similar situation may recur this time, he said, because skilled engineers who know about the limitations of ageing network hardware were still rare.

"This may come as a surprise to non-specialists who view the internet as a high-tech affair comparable to the bridge of the USS Enterprise of Star Trek fame," he said. "In actuality, the internet is more akin to an 18th century Royal Navy frigate, with a lot of running about, climbing, shouting, and tugging on ropes required to maintain the desired course and speed."


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Ask.fm sold after cyberbullying row

14 August 2014 Last updated at 14:30 By Joe Miller Technology reporter
Doug Leeds

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Ask.com boss Doug Leeds says he wants to "eliminate" bullying from Ask.fm

The controversial social network Ask.fm has been bought by the owners of Tinder and Ask.com for an undisclosed fee.

The site, where members answer questions posed by others, has been linked to teenage suicides in the UK and elsewhere and has been criticised for not doing enough to prevent cyberbullying.

IAC, the US company behind the deal, said it would invest "millions" into improving safety on the site.

Ask.fm's founders will leave the firm.

The New York state attorney general, Eric Schneiderman, announced a safety agreement with the new owners.

"Under the terms of the agreement, Ask.fm will revamp its safety policies and procedures," his office said in a statement.

It said Ask.fm had committed to dealing with user complaints within 24 hours and removing users that have been the subject of multiple complaints.

"An independent safety and security examiner will be appointed to examine the changes and report on compliance to the Attorney General's Office for three years," the statement added.

Public criticism

The company was started in 2010 by two Latvian brothers, Ilja and Mark Terebin. It now boasts 180 million monthly users - almost two-thirds the size of rivals Twitter - with roughly 700 posts made each second.

The site, which is very popular among young adults, came under fire last summer following the suicide of 14-year-old Hannah Smith, when it was claimed that abusive comments seen on Ask.fm had contributed to her death.

Similar stories soon surfaced, and the Riga-based firm was heavily criticised for not adequately policing its site. It has also been denounced for hosting pages belonging to Islamic extremists fighting in Syria and Iraq, who had used Ask.fm as a recruiting tool.

Continue reading the main story

INTERACTIVE

  • ×

    Ask.fm is set up by brothers Ilja and Mark Terebin as a rival to question and answer based social network Formspring.

  • ×

    Privacy settings introduced to Ask.fm, including the option to disable anonymous questions.

  • ×

    Ciara Pugsley, 15, is found dead in woodland near her home in County Leitrim, Ireland. This was the first of several teen suicides linked to abuse via ask fm.

  • ×

    Hannah Smith, 14, is found hanged at her home in Lutterworth, Leicestershire. It is believed she killed herself after she was bullied on the site.

  • ×

    Prime Minister David Cameron urges people to boycott sites which do not 'step up to the plate' and tackle online abuse. He said that after the 'absolutely tragic' death of Hannah Smith, those running the websites had to 'clean up their act'.

  • ×

    Changes made to make Ask.fm safer in the wake of online bullying cases. It said it would view all reports within 24 hours, make the report button more visible, and include bullying and harassment as a category for a report.

  • ×

    In the 2013 Annual Cyberbullying Survey by charity Ditch the Label, Ask.fm is named as one of the three most likely places teenagers experience cyberbullying, alongside Facebook and Twitter.

  • ×

    Ask.fm launches a 'Safety Center' containing advice and guidance for users of the site and their parents.

The network's new owners, IAC, say they are committed to improving child safety and will pour millions of dollars into hiring more moderators and installing better detection systems.

"We wouldn't be getting involved if we didn't think we could make it safer," said Doug Leeds, chief executive of Ask.com, the IAC subsidiary behind the deal.

Analysis, Rory Cellan-Jones, technology correspondent

Why would anyone want to buy a brand as toxic as Ask.fm?

It's probably best known - among adults at least - as the social network that David Cameron wanted to see boycotted over cyberbullying.

I understand that Ask.com first got interested in the site when it started legal action to protect its own brand from contamination.

Then the US firm and its parent group saw just how big and engaged an audience the Latvia-based network had, and began to wonder about a different course of action.

Now the new owners need to move quickly to prove they can to make Ask.fm a safe place for its young users without annoying them so much that they head elsewhere.

What they have is the financial firepower which the buccaneering Latvian founders lacked - it's just that much easier to build and grow a web business in the United States than in Europe.

Mr Leeds added that under new leadership, Ask.fm would pledge to deal with safety complaints within 24 hours.

The site would do so by expanding the existing team of 60 staff, he said.

IAC has also recruited Annie Mullins, a member of the UK government's task force on child protection on the internet, to help improve safety at Ask.fm, as well as Catherine Davis Teitelbaum, who previously worked on safety policy at Yahoo.

Ask.com, known as Ask Jeeves in the UK, is owned by the New York firm InterActiveCorp, also known as IAC.

IAC owns several popular internet brands, including:

  • About.com
  • CollegeHumor
  • Dictionary.com
  • Investopedia
  • Match
  • OkCupid
  • The Daily Beast
  • Tinder
  • Urbanspoon
  • Vimeo

In making the deal, Ask.com has joined forces with the venture capitalists (VCs) behind Ask.fm, who retain a minority stake in the firm.

"Our intentions for the company aligned with the VC's," said Mr Leeds.

The founders, who operated under what Mr Leeds terms a "philosophy that's different than ours" have been effectively bought out, and will no longer be involved with Ask.fm

"They had a laissez-faire, libertarian attitude," Mr Leeds added, emphasising that under the new regime, threats of violence and other distressing content would "not be welcome".


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Queue jumping charge for calls to EE

14 August 2014 Last updated at 15:48

Mobile phone company EE has introduced a charge for jumping the queue on customer service calls.

Callers are invited by an automated message to use the priority service for a flat fee of 50 pence.

Some customers, especially those who have been with the company for years, are unhappy that calls are not treated equally.

But EE said that they had set high standards for their customer service operations.

One customer - Andrew Griffiths - told BBC Radio 4's You and Yours that he would consider switching if EE was the only firm to do this.

It added that the "small charges" for certain services contributed to the investment in this side of the business.

'Bad idea'

The priority answering system is similar in some ways to queue jumping charges at airports and theme parks.

The service has been available for a week to customers on pay monthly on Sim-only plans.

"I thought it was a bad idea for a company to offer to provide what really ought to be a standard level of customer service for a fee," he said.

"It makes you think that perhaps they might not be trying too hard to answer the non-prioritised calls."


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Apple bans toxins from assembly line

14 August 2014 Last updated at 17:49 By Joe Miller Technology reporter

Apple has banned two potentially hazardous chemicals from being used in the final assembly process at 22 of its iPhone and iPad production plants.

Benzene, which is a carcinogen, and n-Hexane, which can cause nerve damage, will no longer be used in cleaning agents or degreasers at the facilities, the firm said.

The move follows a campaign urging the tech giant to scrap the substances.

One campaign group said Apple needed to "look deeper into its supply chain".

Apple's environmental director, Lisa Jackson, announced the commitment in a statement, saying the company launched an investigation after questions were asked about whether the chemicals were used at its factories.

The firm said it found "no evidence of workers' health being put at risk" at any of the 22 plants visited, although four of the facilities were found to have traces of benzene or n-hexane.

As a result, Ms Jackson added: "We've updated our tight restrictions on benzene and n-hexane to explicitly prohibit their use in final assembly processes."

The iPhone maker also released its "regulated substances specification" - the guidelines that govern Apple supply chains, which have previously been confidential.

While benzene and n-hexane are commonly found in many household products, as well as in gasoline and paint thinners, prolonged exposure to the chemicals can cause adverse health effects.

'Widespread disregard'

The 22 sites concerned, most of which are located in China, collectively employ nearly 500,000 people.

However they represent only the "first tier" of Apple suppliers, as there are hundreds of smaller firms that also work on the firm's products in the country.

China Labor Watch, the New York-based non-profit organisation which campaigns for Apple to improve its safety standards, told the BBC it welcomed the commitment, but emphasised that the true test would be in its implementation.

Executive director Li Quang said: "Apple has for years had commitments to labour standards like working hours, overtime wages and temporary worker regulations, but there is often widespread disregarding of these codes of conduct."

Mr Li added he was also concerned about "Apple's ability to monitor whether implementation is taking place".

In a statement on its website, environmental campaign group Green America urged Apple to go further to ensure the safety of workers in its supply chain.

"Beyond benzene and n-hexane, there are thousands of chemicals used in the manufacturing of electronics - some of which are largely untested - and many chemicals used by Apple suppliers remain undisclosed," it said.

The charity added that Apple needed to "look deeper into its supply chain, to the second and third tier suppliers, where chemical usage and safety procedures are less controlled".


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Premier League warns fans about Vines

By Mike Williams Newsbeat Reporter

15 August 2014 Last updated at 06:09

Mario Gotze celebrating a goal
Videos of Mario Gotze's World Cup winning goal were put online within minutes of him scoring

The Premier League has told Newsbeat they're going to clamp down on fans posting unofficial videos of goals online.

Thousands of goal Vines were posted on social media during the World Cup.

With the new football season starting tomorrow the trend was expected to continue.

However the Premier League has said that tweeting copyrighted material is illegal and are warning supporters not to do it.

Thumb hovering over a phone screen
Uploading unofficial goal videos on social media has become more popular

Being able to pause and rewind live TV has made it easier for anyone to film footage from a match.

If you missed a goal at this year's World Cup it didn't really matter.

Vines were uploaded onto social media within moments, allowing fans to watch and share them over and over again.

Dan Johnson
Dan Johnson from the Premier League says posting goal Vines online is illegal

But many supporters don't realise by sharing the videos on websites like Twitter they're breaking copyright laws.

In an interview with Newsbeat, Dan Johnson, director of communications at the Premier League, said: "You can understand that fans see something, they can capture it, they can share it, but ultimately it is against the law."

TV companies pay millions to have the rights to show teams like champions Man City play every week.
TV companies pay millions to have the rights to show teams, like current champions Man City, play every week

"It's a breach of copyright and we would discourage fans from doing it, we're developing technologies like gif crawlers, Vine crawlers, working with Twitter to look to curtail this kind of activity."

He added: "I know it sounds as if we're killjoys but we have to protect our intellectual property."

Sky Sports and BT Sport paid a record £3bn pounds to show three seasons' worth of live Premier League football.

The Sun and The Times bought the online rights and they don't want people to be able to see the action for free.

Dean Scoggins from The Sun. It costs users £7 a month to use their goals app.
Dean Scoggins from The Sun. It costs users £7 a month to use their goals app

It costs £8 a month to subscribe to Sun+ which features Premier League goals.

They try to get the videos online within two minutes of the ball hitting the back of the net.

Dean Scoggins, deputy head of sport at the newspaper, said: "It's important to underline that it's illegal to do this, we've obviously signed a very big deal with the Premier League to be a rights holder and to show it, we've got legal teams talking with them about what we can do."

Still from an unofficial video showing a football match
The quality of the unofficial videos can be pretty poor, but are free to watch.

The most popular football Vine accounts online have hundreds of thousands of followers.

Nick puts goal Vines on social media before the TV companies have even finished showing the replays.

"At the end of the day, if I don't do it someone else will," he told Newsbeat.

"There's enough out there, if you just search on Twitter, if Gareth Bale scores and you just search within seconds of the goals going in there'll l be four, five up.

"Within another minute they'll be 10 maybe so if I'm not doing it someone else is."

Twitter said: "Vine users may not post content that violates the rights of a third party."

Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube


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Robot swarm shuffles into formation

Engineers in the US have built a swarm of 1,000 little robots that can shuffle into specific formations on command.

Each of the identical robots is given a picture of the required shape, and then they work together to make it happen.

It takes up to 12 hours, but then this is the biggest throng of robots ever built and studied in this way.

Inspired by biological examples, like cells forming organs or ants building bridges, the work could help develop self-assembling tools and structures.

"Each robot is identical and we give them all the exact same program," explained Dr Michael Rubenstein, the first author of the study, which is published in Science.

"The only thing they have to go on, to make decisions, is what their neighbours are doing."

Robots

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Watch how the "Kilobots" collaborate

The robots are 3cm across and cylindrical - about the size of a sushi roll. Dr Rubenstein and his colleagues at Harvard University dubbed them "Kilobots" and built 1,024 of them altogether: the same as the number of bytes in a kilobyte.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

Actually watching the experiment run is like watching paint dry"

End Quote Dr Michael Rubenstein Harvard University

Each Kilobot shuffles on three straight, spindly legs, chosen because they are cheaper than wheels. The robots' arena is a large wooden square, about the size of a tournament snooker table, complete with edges to stop them waddling off the edge.

Blinking lights

At the start of an experiment, the whole bristling crowd is bunched up together on one side.

Overhead hangs an infrared light, which can communicate with the swarm thanks to an infrared sensor nestled on each robot's underside. That light only sends one command, however: "go".

When that happens, all the robots start their program. The same program.

A random selection will start first, if they are in a position to move: inching slowly around the table and flashing their own infra-red lights to broadcast information to the other Kilobots nearby.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

Increasingly, we're going to see large numbers of robots working together"

End Quote Prof Radhika Nagpal Harvard University

So that they know where to start the shape they've been programmed to make, four "seed" robots have already been placed in a suitable position by one of the scientists. The seed robots kick off a coordinate system, which spreads through the swarm via those infrared lights, bouncing off the table from any transmitting robot to anyone "listening" within 10cm.

"Each robot looks at its current state - so, what have I done in the past - and also looks at what its neighbours are doing, based on communication. And it makes its own decisions," Dr Rubenstein told the BBC.

"Running this identical program, all the robots are capable of taking turns to join the shape."

Slow going

Individually, the Kilobots have very limited capabilities and they also make mistakes. But the algorithm made specially to govern their behaviour is able to overcome these limitations.

In designing their robotic swarm, the researchers drew inspiration particularly from ants. Masses of army ants, Dr Rubenstein explained, also assemble themselves into structures (like nests and rafts) that defy the limitations of an individual six-legged specimen.

"The structures that ants form are relatively different from the structure that we were able to form, but it's the same type of principle," he said.

The whole process is also incredibly time consuming.

Dr Rubenstein said he hasn't taken his Kilobot show on the road anywhere, and doesn't even tidy the robots away when they're finished: "We just leave them sitting on the table. It would take a couple of hours to pack them into a box."

Even watching the programmed images take shape, over six to 12 hours, is far from a spectator sport.

"It wasn't very exciting," said Dr Rubenstein, who "usually stuck around" to take notes, in case of a mishap. "Actually watching the experiment run is like watching paint dry."

Nonetheless, the Kilobots have attracted considerable interest since the team first unveiled them at a conference in 2012. All the code involved is open-source, and a company is selling the robots for around $100 each.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

This goes well beyond the state of the art in robotics, as the algorithm copes with huge numbers of robots even in the presence of failure"

End Quote Dr Roderich Gross University of Sheffield
Tipping point

The potential applications go much further than throwing very slow shapes on a very big table.

Prof Radhika Nagpal runs the lab where the experiments were done. "Increasingly, we're going to see large numbers of robots working together," she said, "whether its hundreds of robots cooperating to achieve environmental cleanup or a quick disaster response, or millions of self-driving cars on our highways.

"Understanding how to design 'good' systems at that scale will be critical."

Researchers in the UK are also impressed.

"Performing self-assembly with a thousand-robot swarm is a remarkable feat," said Dr Sabine Hauert, a robotics lecturer at the University of Bristol, "[especially] given the advances needed to build hardware that is affordable and easy to use, and design algorithms that scale to large numbers of unreliable robots."

She told BBC News the study shows we are reaching a "tipping point" in swarm engineering, where computing and hardware can both be scaled up to big experiments like these.

Dr Roderich Gross, a robotics engineer at the University of Sheffield, is a paid-up fan. His laboratory has acquired 900 of the robots, to run their own tests.

"The Harvard Kilobot system is not only the largest swarm of robots in the world, but also an excellent test-bed allowing us to validate distributed algorithms in practice," he said.

"The Kilobot swarms are able to attain an arbitrary shape. This goes well beyond the state of the art in robotics, as the algorithm copes with huge numbers of robots even in the presence of failure."

Meanwhile, Prof William Harwin, who studies cybernetics at the University of Reading, was most taken by the scale of the project and the manual labour involved. "The most impressive thing is that they built 1,000 robots," he said.

Figuring out how to transfer this sort of new technology rapidly to the production line, Prof Hardwin noted, would be "the game-changer".

Follow Jonathan on Twitter


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World's first 'smartphone' turns 20

15 August 2014 Last updated at 13:17

Never judge a phone by its cover. This chunky, black box was in fact the world's first 'smartphone'.

The IBM Simon went on sale to the public on 16 August 1994 and combined mobile phone technology with a wide range of computing features.

To mark the 20th anniversary, London's Science Museum is putting it on display in its new Information Age gallery.

"The Simon wasn't called a smartphone back then," said curator Charlotte Connelly.

"But it had a lot of the features we see today. It had a calendar, it could take notes and send emails and messages and combined all of this with a cell phone."

Weighing in at 500g (1.1lb), the Simon was not exactly pocket-sized. However, Ms Connelly insisted the design was ahead of its time.

Continue reading the main story

It only had one hour's battery life - so it wasn't very successful"

End Quote Charlotte Connelly Exhibition content developer

"It looks like a grey block but it's not as big as you'd imagine," she said. "It had a stylus and a green LCD screen, which is similar in size to the iPhone 4. In fact, it's not a bad looking thing."

Price tag

IBM's pioneering product was also the first mobile phone to feature software apps and could be linked up to a fax machine.

It was only available to customers in the United States, operating within a 15 state network and sold around 50,000 models.

The device was particularly popular with members of the business community, who craved a transportable phone that doubled up as a mini-computer.

However, a hefty price tag and limited battery life contributed to its eventual disappearance from the market around two years after its launch.

"It only had an hour's battery, it was $899 and there was no mobile internet at the time. So it wasn't very successful," said Ms Connelly.

The Simon will go on display this October as part of the Information Age exhibition - the first permanent gallery in the UK dedicated to the history of communication and information technology.

More than 800 objects will be on display, illustrating how far communication has come over the past 200 years.

Ms Connelly said the exhibition also acts as a reminder of a different era, free from constant connectivity.

"It does remind us of that time. I definitely enjoy getting away from things and deliberately disconnecting myself," she said. "There's something quite nice about that."


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