Friday, September 9, 2011

Supercomputer predicts revolution

Feeding a supercomputer with news stories could help predict major world events, according to US research.

A study, based on millions of articles, charted deteriorating national sentiment ahead of the recent revolutions in Libya and Egypt.

While the analysis was carried out retrospectively, scientists say the same processes could be used to anticipate upcoming conflict.

The system also picked up early clues about Osama Bin Laden's location.

Kalev Leetaru, from the University of Illinois' Institute for Computing in the Humanities, Arts and Social Science, presented his findings in the journal First Monday.

Mood and location

The study's information was taken from a range of sources including the US government-run Open Source Centre, and the Summary of World Broadcasts (now known as BBC Monitoring), both of which monitor local media output around the world.

News outlets which published online versions were also analysed, as was the New York Times' archive, going back to 1945.

In total, Mr Leetaru gathered more than 100 million articles.

Reports were analysed for two main types of information: mood - whether the article represented good news or bad news, and location - where events were happening and the location of other participants in the story.

Mood detection, or "automated sentiment mining" searched for words such as "terrible", "horrific" or "nice".

Location, or "geocoding" took mentions of specific places, such as "Cairo" and converted them in to coordinates that could be plotted on a map.

Analysis of story elements was used to create an interconnected web of 100 trillion relationships.

Predicting trouble

Data was fed into an SGI Altix supercomputer, known as Nautilus, based at the University of Tennessee.

The machine's 1024 Intel Nehalem cores have a total processing power of 8.2 teraflops (trillion floating point operations per second).

Based on specific queries, Nautilus generated graphs for different countries which experienced the "Arab Spring".

In each case, the aggregated results of thousands of news stories showed a notable dip in sentiment ahead of time - both inside the country, and as reported from outside.

For Egypt, the tone of media coverage in the month before President Hosni Mubarak's resignation had fallen to a low only seen twice before in the preceding 30 years.

Previous dips coincided with the 1991 US aerial bombardment of Iraqi troops in Kuwait and the 2003 US invasion of Iraq.

Mr Leetaru said that his system appeared to generate better intelligence than the US government was working with at the time.

"Start Quote

If you look at this tonal curve it would tell you the world is darkening so fast and so strongly against him that it doesn't seem possible he could survive."

End Quote Kalev Leetaru University of Illinois

"The mere fact that the US President stood in support of Mubarak suggests very strongly that that even the highest level analysis suggested that Mubarak was going to stay there," he told BBC News.

"That is likely because you have these area experts who have been studying Egypt for 30 years, and in 30 years nothing has happened to Mubarak.

The Egypt graph, said Mr Leetaru, suggested that something unprecedented was happening this time.

"If you look at this tonal curve it would tell you the world is darkening so fast and so strongly against him that it doesn't seem possible he could survive."

Similar drops were seen ahead of the revolution in Libya and the Balkans conflicts of the 1990s.

Saudi Arabia, which has thus far resisted a popular uprising, had experienced fluctuations, but not to the same extent as some other states where leaders were eventually overthrown.

Mapping Bin Laden

In his report, Mr Leetaru suggests that analysis of global media reports about Osama Bin Laden would have yielded important clues about his location.

While many believed the Al Qaeda leader to be hiding in Afghanistan, geographic information extracted from media reports consistently identified him with Northern Pakistan.

Only one report mentioned the town of Abbottabad prior to Bin Laden's capture in April 2011.

However, the geo-analysis narrowed him down to within 200km, said Mr Leetaru.

Real time analysis

The computer event analysis model appears to give forewarning of major events, based on deteriorating sentiment.

However, in the case of this study, its analysis is applied to things that have already happened.

According to Kalev Leetaru, such a system could easily be adapted to work in real time, giving an element of foresight.

"That's the next stage," said Mr Leetaru, who is already working on developing the technology.

"It looks like a stock ticker in many regards and you know what direction it has been heading the last few minutes and you want to know where it is heading in the next few.

"It is very similar to what economic forecasting algorithms do."

Mr Leetaru said he also hoped to improve the resolution of analysis, especially in relation to geographic location.

"The next iteration is going to city level and beyond and looking at individual groups and how they interact.

"I liken it to weather forecasting. It's never perfect, but we do better than random guessing."



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German court upholds Samsung ban

A German court has upheld a ban on the sale of Samsung's Galaxy Tab, saying it did infringe Apple patents.

It was asked to reconsider a previous ruling that elements of the tablet's design were copied from the iPad.

That decision led to a Europe-wide ban, which was later lifted amid concerns about the court's power to impose such a broad embargo.

The latest hearing went in Apple's favour and means the Galaxy Tab 10.1 is again banned from sale across Germany.

Dusseldorf regional court judge Johanna Brueckner-Hoffmann said that the "minimalist, modern form" of the two products gave a "clear impression of similarity".

In the early stages of the dispute, Apple had won the right for the ban to be imposed continent-wide. However, that was lifted following a challenge by Samsung.

Its re-imposition, albeit only within one country, marks yet another round in the ongoing patent battle between Apple and Samsung.

The two electronics giants currently face each other in courtrooms in Australia, North America and Asia.

Apple has also been successful in winning a sales ban of several Samsung phones across Europe following court action in the Netherlands.



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Mozilla calls for security checks

Web certificate authorities have been told to audit their security or risk being dumped from Firefox by the browser's developer Mozilla.

The demand follows a breach at Dutch certificate issuer DigiNotar which lead to scores of bogus authentications being created.

Belgian security firm GlobalSign also stopped issuing new certificates amid fears it too may have been compromised.

Mozilla wants proof that other companies have protected their systems.

Attack pattern

Security certificate issuers have been given until 16 September to demonstrate to Mozilla that their internal networks have not been compromised.

It also wants to know what steps the issuers take when certificates are issued to make sure fakes are not being generated.

The security certificates issued by DigiNotar and many others act as an identity guarantee so people can be sure that the site or service they are connecting to is what it claims to be.

Typically users will notice that a certificate is being used by the appearance of a padlock icon, or the https prefix.

By penetrating DigiNotar's network and issuing fake certificates, hackers could pose as anyone they want and get at confidential messages or steal saleable data.

The attack on DigiNotar seems to have originated in Iran and put at risk about 300,000 people who use Gmail in that country, according to an interim report into the breach.

The hacker who carried out the DigiNotar attack, plus one on another security certificate firm, Comodo, earlier in 2011, bragged that he had access to four other CAs. This led to security checks at GlobalSign, one firm mentioned in the message.

In issuing its demand for audits, Mozilla said it reserved the right to revoke certificates recognised by Firefox.

Kathleen Wilson, head of Mozilla's security certificate group, said that working with Firefox was at its "sole discretion".

"We will take whatever steps are necessary to keep our users safe," wrote Ms Wilson.

If a certificate issuer is boycotted it could mean many users see pop-up warnings when trying to securely buy goods online or send messages.

Mozilla has already issued updates for Firefox to revoke DigiNotar certificates. Microsoft and Google have taken similar action with Chrome. Apple has yet to issue an update for Safari.

Google has also moved to contact those who may have had their email communications spied upon as a result of the DigiNotar hack.



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Microsoft services hit by outage

Millions of Microsoft users were left unable to access some online services overnight because of a major service outage.

Hotmail, Office 365 and Skydrive were among the services affected.

Microsoft was still analysing the cause of the problem on Friday morning, but said it appeared to be related to the internet's DNS address system.

Such a major failure is likely to raise questions about the reliability of cloud computing versus local storage.

Especially embarrassing is the temporary loss of Office 365, the company's alternative to Google's suite of online apps.

The service also went offline briefly in mid-August, less than two months after it launched.



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Waterstone's to launch e-reader

Waterstone's is to launch a digital e-reader to rival Amazon's Kindle next year.

The company's managing director, James Daunt, told the BBC he had been inspired by Barnes & Noble's successful Nook device.

The US bookseller is one of the few high street retailers to have challenged Amazon's growing dominance in both physical and electronic sales.

Amazon customers now buy more Kindle titles than paper versions.

Waterstone's is currently in the midst of a shake-up after being bought from HMV Group by Russian businessman Alexander Mamut.

James Daunt was brought in by the new owner in an attempt to reverse its declining sales.

Entering the hardware market would be an ambitious move for Waterstone's and likely involve it partnering with a major electronics company.

Barnes & Noble teamed-up with Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn - best known for making the iPhone - in 2009 to create the Nook.

The American retailer predicted last month that it would sell around $1.8bn (�1.1bn) in Nook e-books by the end of the financial year.

Amazon does not provide a detailed breakdown of e-book sales and has never revealed the number of Kindle devices sold, other than to say it is in the millions.

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However, Mr Daunt believes that Barnes and Noble has managed to claw back market share from its online rival by linking the electronic product with its high street stores.

Nook owners are allowed to read for free in Barnes and Noble stores for up to one hour each day.

"We in Waterstone's need to offer you a digital reader which is at least as good, and preferably substantially better, than that of our internet rival, and you will have a much better buying experience purchasing your books through us," Mr Daunt told BBC Radio 4's You and Yours programme.

Waterstone's e-reader project was "well down the planning line", according to Mr Daunt, and would launch in Spring 2012.



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