Asia Mobile Banking Apps Riddled With Malware

Posted April 15th, 2016 at 10:55 am (UTC-5)
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A woman shows a banking app on her mobile phone in central Bangkok, Thailand, Jan. 5, 2016.  Malware targeting banking and payment apps is more prevalent in Asia than any other region. (Reuters)

A woman shows a banking app on her mobile phone in central Bangkok, Thailand, Jan. 5, 2016. Malware targeting banking and payment apps is more prevalent in Asia than in any other region. (Reuters)

Mobile users are more likely to fall victim to cyberattacks in Asia than in any other region, in part because the continent’s Android mobile banking system is riddled with malware, thanks to a lack of awareness and the proliferation of third-party software.

While cybercriminals are likely to attack wherever they can get a foothold, the percentage of attacked users is noticeably higher in China, Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia. But South Korea gets the lion’s share of the relatively large number of mobile banking Trojans in the region, according to Kaspersky Lab’s Aleks Gostev, Chief Security Expert for Global research and Analysis.

“This country is number one in the world among the countries most often attacked by banking Trojans,” said Gostev. “A substantial portion of mobile banking attacks in South Korea were caused by representatives of the Trojan-Banker.AndroidOS.Wroba family … designed to steal mobile bank accounts from the largest Korean banks.”

In some countries, the threat is not confined to mobile platforms. Singapore leads the world with the number of users suffering from mobile malware attacks and the number of PCs infected by banking Trojans.

“Among all Kaspersky Lab users attacked by malware in Singapore, 11.6 percent were targeted at least once by banking Trojans throughout the year,” said Gostev. “Austria and Switzerland were next in line at 10.6 percent while Hong Kong, the only other country in the Asia Pacific region, stood in the 8th position at nine percent.”

On the other hand, Western countries like Russia and the United States, for example, either landed toward the bottom of the list of banking malware targets or didn’t make the list at all.

Asia is a particularly attractive target because of its mobile SMS payment modules, popular in China’s highly-competitive gaming market for in-game purchases. The system is besieged by Adware, Trojans and RiskTools applications – legitimate programs with functions that can cause damage if exploited by malicious users.

This graph, made available courtesy of Kaspersky Lab, shows the different types of malicious mobile apps attackers use to target their victims.

This graph, made available courtesy of Kaspersky Lab, shows the different types of malicious mobile apps attackers use to target their victims.

“Because the games in question are popular, the number of RiskTool applications is constantly increasing,” said Gostev. “… Although AdWare and RiskTool programs do not cause direct harm to users, they can be very irritating, while RiskTool programs installed on mobile devices can lead to financial loss if used carelessly or manipulated by a cybercriminal.”

Through the looking glass

Graphite Software, a company that provides secure banking services, reported similar results. While its researchers found “zero malware” in North American and European banking apps in the Google Play Store, the Asia findings were markedly different, according to Robert Grapes, Vice President of Marketing and Operations.

Working with Coolpad, a Chinese telecommunications equipment company, Graphite created a secure banking space to host a set of curated banking and payment apps. The apps were then processed through a “very stringent process” to ensure that they are free of malware.

What we found … is a significant issue with malware in apps, but most importantly with financial apps, those being the banking apps, the investment apps, the payment apps,” said Grapes.

A “full 32 percent” of those apps failed the security tests. “So we weren’t able to put them up in the store,” he added. “And these are actually fairly recognizable apps in China – you know, from leading banks.”

The failure constitutes multiple vulnerabilities. Infected apps running on a single Android device can share data and memory processes with whatever else is installed and give hackers access to the entire system.

Graphite is working with the affected parties to raise awareness and help them resolve the issue. But Grapes believes the malware distribution is an inadvertent result of app developers using third-party code libraries – sources of widgets and reusable components that let developers add particular functions to their apps and expedite product packaging and distribution.

Grapes argues that those libraries “are potentially inclusive of malware” and that developers using their resources are “totally unsuspecting, unaware that that even exists.” But he dismissed the notion that banking app developers are “maliciously creating Trojans or backdoors” to compromise their apps.

And since the libraries are not vetted for malware, some of which might not even be created by Asian developers, those who plant the malicious software in the library get access to all sorts of information once their code is executed.

Grapes said vetting the libraries for malware would be a great process to put in place as standard procedure before any app is released into the public domain.

“To me,” he added, “it comes back to a testing exercise, a quality assurance exercise either from the developer of the app itself, or from the store that is posting those apps for public consumption.”

Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.

Encrypting the Entire Web; Facebook’s New Plan to Connect the World

Posted April 14th, 2016 at 11:35 am (UTC-5)
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Today’s Tech Sightings:

FILE - A lock icon signifying an encrypted Internet connection is seen on an Internet browser in a photo illustration in Paris, France, April 15, 2014. The HTTPS web protocol is more secure than its HTTP predecessor. (Reuters)

FILE – A lock icon signifying an encrypted Internet connection is seen on an Internet browser in a photo illustration in Paris, France, April 15, 2014. The HTTPS web standard (Top) is more secure than its HTTP predecessor. (Reuters)

A Scheme to Encrypt the Entire Web Is Actually Working

Encryption is slowly becoming the enemy, so to speak, as lawmakers, at least in the U.S., rush to enact legislation that would either add back doors to mobile devices or force tech companies to comply with government requests to unlock certain smartphones. But the San Francisco-based Internet Security Research Group aims to change that with a new initiative called Let’s Encrypt. The idea is to help switch millions of websites still using the old, insecure HTTP web standard to HTTPS, which encrypts browsing and guards against surveillance.

The Tech Community Is Mobilizing Against Burr-Feinstein Encryption Bill

Two influential members of the U.S. Congress are pushing a bill that would effectively require all tech companies to add back doors to their encryption technology or give up encryption altogether. The move has little support following the standoff between Apple and U.S. law enforcement agencies over a court order to unlock an iPhone belonging to a California mass shooter.

Facebook to Facilitate Global Internet Connectivity With ‘Terragraph’

Facebook is using new millimeter wave technology to provide low-cost Internet access and potentially replace Google’s Fiber project in remote areas. The new project is called “Terragraph” and is currently being tested at the company’s headquarters in Menlo Park, California. Millimeter waves can travel faster than Wi-Fi signals, and Facebook claims they will make Internet speed 10 times faster.

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Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.

Robot Joins Search for Loch Ness Monster; Facebook’s Bots Are Coming

Posted April 13th, 2016 at 12:57 pm (UTC-5)
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Today’s Tech Sightings:

Munin, an intelligent marine robot, explores Loch Ness in Scotland, Britain, April 13, 2016. Loch Ness has long long been said to be home to a fabled monster. (Reuters)

Munin, an intelligent marine robot, explores Loch Ness in Scotland, Britain, April 13, 2016. Loch Ness has long been said to be home to a fabled monster. (Reuters)

Robot Finds ‘Monster’ Film Prop In Loch Ness

Munin, an underwater robot, has been making an in-depth exploration of Scotland’s famous Loch Ness. Scientists undertook the mission to investigate an underwater trench said to house the nest of the fabled Loch Ness monster. So far, it has managed to find some film equipment. But the leader of the Loch Ness Project, Adrian Shine, said no trench – or monster lair – were found. Scientists, however, are eager to see what else Munin will discover in the murky depths of Loch Ness.

Facebook’s Zuckerberg Outlines Shift to Messenger Bots, VR

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg used the company’s F8 annual developer conference to outline a 10-year plan to take online social interaction to the next level. The plan includes letting users interact with artificially intelligent bots on Messenger to get services and news. Zuckerberg also envisions a future where users can interact with virtual representations of people and objects.

Third of Stalking Victims in Britain Are Harassed Online

A survey in Britain of more than 4,000 adults reports that 18.1 percent of British women and eight per cent of British men have been stalked. More than one in three stalking victims are also harassed online.

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Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.

IBM’s Watson Joins Cancer War; Google to Train 1 Million Africans

Posted April 12th, 2016 at 11:33 am (UTC-5)
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Today’s Tech Sightings:

FILE - A photo taken by Feature Photo Service for IBM shows Leanne LeBlanc, IBM Watson project manager, looking at analytics of healthcare data at Watson headquarters in New York City, April 13, 2015. (AP)

FILE – A photo taken by Feature Photo Service for IBM shows Leanne LeBlanc, IBM Watson project manager, looking at analytics of healthcare data at Watson headquarters in New York City, April 13, 2015. (AP)

IBM Watson Enlists in War on Cancer

IBM’s artificial intelligence system, also known as Watson, is being fed nearly 14,000 pages of all kinds of cancer topics to create a mobile app that can offer personalized advice to cancer patients. The effort is a partnership between IBM and the American Cancer Society.

Google to Give Training to 1 Million Africans to Boost Jobs

Google’s training programs will target one million Africans next year in a push to improve digital skills. A company statement said 300,000 will be trained in South Africa, where 35 percent of young people aged 15-34 are unemployed. Another 400,000 will be trained in Nigeria, 200,000 in Kenya, and 100,000 from other Sub-Saharan African countries.

Microsoft’s Blue Screen of Death Is Getting an Update

How many times have you seen it? You’re happily typing away when you are suddenly greeted by the notorious Blue Screen of Death that effectively tells you your computer just had a heart attack. Well, now Microsoft is updating this charming feature this summer with code you can scan to get more information and a tech support page for help.

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Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.

VR Aids Therapy, but What Happens to Your Brain?

Posted April 8th, 2016 at 9:05 am (UTC-5)
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Virtual reality (VR) is finally becoming a reality for consumers, thanks to a new generation of affordable gear that could expand its use beyond travel and entertainment to medicine. But what you might not know is that VR is already in use for therapy and has been for the past 20 years, although its long-term effects remain a mystery.

At California’s Virtual Reality Medical Center, the technology has been treating phobias like fear of flying, driving, heights or public speaking, post-traumatic stress and war-related trauma since the early 1990s. “We call it VR-enhanced Cognitive Behavioral Therapy,” said Brenda Wiederhold, Executive Vice President of the center.

Coupled with traditional techniques like diaphragmatic breathing and cognitive reframing, virtual reality gives patients “a nice, sweet spot in-between imagination and real world” – a virtual setting where they learn to use their coping skills to deal with the experience.

Therapists guide their patients through worlds created by 200 clinically-validated virtual reality software packages and monitor their heart rate, breathing, sweat gland activity, and physiology in real time.

“We don’t want to move them through the world too fast and re-traumatize them, nor have them have a panic attack,” said Wiederhold. “And we also don’t want to put them in the world and have no response because we have to have a little bit of activation of the subjective anxiety, the suggestive stress, as well as the physiological stress or anxiety.”

The VR environment also awakens memories the patient might not be aware of.

“We want to solidify, consolidate those fragmented memories they still might have about that trauma and then have them move through that memory, through the emotional processing that is necessary to them to desensitize or overcome that traumatic memory.”

The treatment has been relatively successful – 92 percent for phobias and 80 percent for war-related traumas. The rates could go higher with better equipment.

As more accessible and more immersive equipment becomes available, Wiederhold believes virtual reality will become more prominent in cognitive therapy for diagnosing, assessing and rehabilitating pre-dementia, for example, or to help stroke victims with brain injuries.

We used to sit around and say ‘what if, what if.’ Well, the technology has caught up with the imagination … and it really is limitless now.

Side effects

However, some VR headsets are known to cause nausea, motion sickness, flashbacks and other effects. About two percent of the center’s patients, who are only exposed to virtual reality for 30 minutes at a time, suffer from motion sickness or queasiness.

But Wiederhold believes the technology does not have long-lasting effects. She cited flight simulators that have been training pilots since the 1960s as an example. “Those individuals have not suffered any long-term effects. We don’t think there will be long-term effects.”

Neurophysicist Mayank Mehta of the University of California, Los Angeles, is not so sure. After all, virtual reality is unlike any other media that came before it

Virtual reality reacts to the subject’s actions … on a millisecond-to-millisecond basis. … Watching television is not different than looking outside your window … It does not react to what you do.

This is important because up to 99 percent of brain activity takes place behind the scenes. “You don’t perceive it,” he said, “but it is going on. And then it can do something many years later. Then you notice it.”

The nature of the brain is such that whatever people experience changes it or gets stored in it. “When it gets stored somewhere, it means that the brain has to change,” said Mehta. “It means the brain is very plastic.”

Brain on VR

So what happens when the brain is exposed to virtual reality?

A courtesy picture shows UCLA's rat in the virtual reality environment. (UCLA's W. M. Keck Center for Neurophysics)

A courtesy picture shows UCLA’s rat in the virtual reality environment. (Mayank Mehta/UCLA)

To find out, Mehta and his fellow scientists created a virtual 3×3-meter room – simple and empty – and placed a rat in it.

As the rat paced around, not tasked with any activity, researchers studied the Hippocampus – a part of the brain crucial for spatial mapping, learning, memory and emotions. It also figures prominently in neurological diseases like epilepsy, Alzheimer’s, PTSD and others.

The results were surprising.

First, 60 percent of the neurons shut down; and scientists don’t know if that is good or bad. “That’s a massive shutdown,” said Mehta. “Why did they shut down? We think it’s because the virtual world is not real.”

Secondly, researchers found that the Hippocampus generates a distinct rhythm “crucial for learning and memory.” It is found in humans and rats. “We can’t feel the rhythm,” he said. “You can’t see the rhythm, but it’s there.”

Any disruption in this rhythm leaves long-lasting effects on the subject’s learning and memory processes. And that was the second surprising finding for Mehta.

The rhythms too were actually significantly altered just because the rat was in the virtual world.

The team then turned its attention to the remaining active neurons and found that “the spatial map containing these neurons was also severely disrupted in virtual reality and also in very sophisticated ways.”

“These are pretty major effects … that no scientists, including us or others, had expected,” he said.

Festival goers experience Samsung Gear VR at The Samsung Studio at SXSW 2016 on March 12, 2016 in Austin, Texas. (AFP)

Festival goers experience Samsung Gear VR at The Samsung Studio at SXSW 2016 on March 12, 2016 in Austin, Texas. (AFP)

It is unclear if these observations have long-term positive or negative effects. That’s why Mehta believes longitudinal studies on the same rats are needed to find out if the Hippocampus activity pattern is normal in virtual reality, and whether or not it leads to long-term changes.

There might exist a virtual reality system that does not cause these things, but Mehta said no one has shown that so far. “I don’t want to either raise an alarm or say we should ignore it. We should definitely study this.”

Mehta’s message is for people to wake up before millions start using this technology for hours at a time.

“These rats are doing it for only 10 minutes to half an hour a day,” he said. ‘What are the long-term consequences that need to be measured? It’s not the same old television. And that’s all we want – the message to go across.”

Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.

Philippines Suffers Massive Breach; Your Next Car Needs a Firewall

Posted April 7th, 2016 at 12:01 pm (UTC-5)
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Today’s Tech Sightings:

Before revelations of this recent voter database breach,  millions of funds stolen from Bangladesh were diverted online to accounts in the Philippines. (L-R) Lorenzo Tan, President of Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation, Mohammad Abdur Rab, Joint Director, Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit, John Gomes, Bangladeshi Ambassador to the Philippines, Jaker Hossain, Bank of Bangladesh Deputy General Manager, Accounts and Budgeting Department listen during a Philippine Senate probe into the missing funds, April 5, 2016, Manila.

Before revelations of the voter database breach, millions of funds stolen from Bangladesh were diverted online to accounts in the Philippines. (L-R) Lorenzo Tan, President of Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation, Mohammad Abdur Rab, Joint Director, Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit, John Gomes, Bangladeshi Ambassador to the Philippines, Jaker Hossain, Bank of Bangladesh Deputy General Manager, Accounts and Budgeting Department listen during a Senate probe into the missing funds in Manila, April 5, 2016.

Megabreach Leaves 55 Million Philippine Voters Exposed

The database of the Philippines’ Commission on Elections has been compromised in what could be the biggest government-related breach ever. Researchers at cybersecurity firm Trend Micro found sensitive information, including passport and fingerprint data, among the compromised files. Officials played down the incident, saying sensitive information was not compromised.

‘Malicious’ Twitter Posts Blamed for Fanning Run on Kenya Bank

The Governor of the Central Bank of Kenya Patrick Njoroge is blaming social media users for “malicious” comments that sparked a run on deposits at Chase Bank Kenya Ltd. This, in turn, prompted regulators to place the bank under creditor protection. Njoroge blamed #KOT or Kenyans on Twitter for spreading reckless rumors leading up to the frenzy.

Your Next Car Will Need a Firewall

Welcome to the age of ubiquitous connectivity where your car is as connected as your smartphone and desktop. The only difference is that your firewall-protected PC probably has a bunch of utilities that help protect it from viruses and other malicious software. Now, there are calls to equip connected cars with the same level of protection against hackers.

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Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.

3-D Printing Recreates Rembrandt; The Woman Behind Microsoft’s Tay

Posted April 6th, 2016 at 11:28 am (UTC-5)
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Today’s Tech Sightings:

Computer, 3-D Printer Create Perfect Rembrandt Painting

‘The Next Rembrandt’ – a collaboration between historians, software developers, scientists, engineers and analysts – has recreated the work of Dutch painter Rembrandt using a computer and a 3-D printer. The team spent months studying the master’s works in order to create an algorithm that would allow the computer to recreate his works as faithfully as possible. The information was then fed to a 3-D printer. The result, revealed in the Netherlands, was perfect.

The Woman Looking to Put More Humanity Into Microsoft’s Bots

Remember Tay, Microsoft’s teen artificial intelligence chatbot that was abused and taught all kinds of racist speech by Internet users? Well, Microsoft researcher Lili Cheng and her team, who have been working on Tay for months, have learned a lesson or two from the experience. Cheng says more thought needs to go into the way humans use chatbots and that a lot of experimentation is still needed.

How Mini-PCs and External Graphics Cards Could Herald Rise of the Modular Desktop

The modular PC – and modular cellphone – are a work in progress undertaken by quite a few of the big technology players. But that vision is yet to materialize. Now, two new developments – bare-bone machines and external graphics cards – could give the modular movement renewed momentum.

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Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.

AI Helps Blind Navigate Facebook; China’s Panama Papers Scramble

Posted April 5th, 2016 at 11:54 am (UTC-5)
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Today’s Tech Sightings:

File -  The icon of a Facebook app for iPhones is shown in New York. The app, which rolls out on April 5, 2016, uses artificial intelligence to describe photos, faces and objects for blind and viually-impaired users. (AP)

File – The icon of a Facebook app for iPhones is shown in New York. A new feature of the app which Facebook rolled out April 5, 2016, uses artificial intelligence to describe photos, faces and objects for blind and visually-impaired users. (AP)

Facebook Using Artificial Intelligence to Help Visually Impaired

Most of Facebook’s one billion users scroll through their timelines unhindered and unaware that there are many others who cannot see what they see because of visual impairment. Facebook has been working to remedy the situation with a tool powered by artificial intelligence that guides blind users with a mechanical voice and identifies for them the visual elements contained on the Facebook page they are visiting.

Chinese Censors Scramble to Delete All Mentions of Panama Papers on Weibo

Chinese censors are scrambling a day after the so-called Panama Papers Leak, which compromised 11 million internal documents of the law firm Mossack Fonseca. The documents reportedly reveal secret offshore holdings that can be used for tax evasion. The Chinese government has been working to remove any information from the country’s Weibo social media service and any data that could incriminate its top leadership.

Open Source Initiative Taps Analytics to Solve Asia’s Traffic Jams

OpenTraffic is an open source platform that provides city planners and traffic management agencies in the Philippines with the data they need to limit congestion and bolster traffic safety in Cebu and Manila. The platform is the result of a big data partnership between Grab, The World Bank, and the Philippines’ Department of Transportation and Communications

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Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.

Palmyra Triumphal Arch Comes to Life in 3-D-printed Display

Posted April 1st, 2016 at 10:55 am (UTC-5)
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A machine recreates a section of Palmyra's 2000-year-old Triumphal Arch as part of an venture to display the completed replica of the structure in multiple locations around the world on April 19 to mark World Heritage Day 2016. (AP)

A machine recreates a section of Palmyra’s 2000-year-old Triumphal Arch as part of a venture to display the completed replica of the structure in multiple locations around the world on April 19 to mark World Heritage Day 2016. (Institute for Digital Archeology)

The Triumphal Arch of the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra – destroyed by Islamic State (IS) militants last October – is being resurrected, thanks to digital technology and 3-D printing. The replicated structure is going on display around the world on April 19 in a fitting tribute to the city’s recent liberation from IS control.

Reconstructing the 2000-year-old Triumphal Arch to mark UNESCO’s World Heritage Day 2016, is the UK-based Institute for Digital Archeology (IDA), a joint venture between Harvard University, Oxford University, and Dubai’s Museum of the Future. The arch will be displayed in London, New York and Dubai.

IDA teams will be first on the ground in the liberated Palmyra and hope to be part of its reconstruction. “As soon as our teams are given access to the Palmyra site, our first step will be to consult with local stakeholders to learn of their priorities,” Roger Michel, IDA’s founder and Executive Director, said in an email.

The team will then build a large-scale 3-D printing grid near the site of the reconstruction.

“This will dramatically reduce cost and allow local stakeholders to participate in the building process,” he said. “After rough-printing the reconstruction, the next step is to provide surface finishes that match the appearance and texture of the original objects or architecture.”

The reconstructions are based on 3-D renderings created from IDA’s Million Image Database and other resources. The Million Image Database is an international collaboration to document heritage sites in the Middle East and North Africa that are endangered due to conflict or vandalism.

Using digital fabrication technologies, including 3-D printing and 3-D machining, the reconstruction process will create artificial stone for the surfaces of the structures. All that is needed is local stone or sand and water. The 3-D printing process helps the teams work quickly.

“3-D printing opens up the potential for cost-efficient monumental scale reconstructions while machining techniques provide the highest level of surface resolutions,” said Oxford researcher and IDA Field Director Ben Altshuler in a press release.

Used in tandem, Altshuler said the two techniques “provide a powerful and practical tool for constructing accurate, large-scale recreations of heritage material.”

The display serves to showcase digital technology solutions that are advancing the study, conservation and reconstruction of heritage sites, including 3-D printing, which Michel believes has great future potential in this field.

The choice of London, which was reconstructed after World War 2, “is proof of concept” for IDA’s plans for on-site reconstruction in the Middle East, Africa and Central Europe.

The replicated arch will also emphasize the importance of physical structures in society and history and bring history to a wider audience. Michel hopes the experience will channel “positive dialogue about things that unite people in the West with people in the Middle East” and help enlist new volunteers to assist in historical study and preservation.

“We also view this work as an important gesture of friendship and solidarity with people in the regions of conflict – people with whom we share a common history that is represented by the very artifacts and monuments we seek to protect and preserve,” he said.

Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.

Mayo Clinic Takes on VR Sickness; China Challenges Google’s AlphaGo

Posted March 31st, 2016 at 11:30 am (UTC-5)
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Today’s Tech Sightings:

Mayo Clinic Cure Said to Alleviate VR Motion Sickness

Some, but not all virtual reality (VR) headgear cause wearers to experience nausea and motion sickness even with higher frame rates and lower latency. But according to Fast Company, the Mayo Clinic hospital has developed algorithms that can trick the VR user’s brain into split-second synchronization between physical stimulation and the virtual environment.

Survey Says: Shut Down the Dark Web

One-third of 24,143 people surveyed in 24 countries strongly believe the anonymous online network, the Dark Web, should be shut down. Another 35 percent were inclined to agree even after being told that the network, accessible only with the Tor web browser, protects the identity of dissidents and political and human rights activists. The report, conducted by Ipsos, was commissioned by the Center for International Governance Innovation.

Chinese AI Team Plans to Challenge Google’s AlphaGo

A Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) team is getting ready to take on Google’s AlphaGo, the AI program that recently defeated South Korean Go champion Lee Sedol. Go is a complex, ancient Chinese board game that involves strategy and intuition. According to China’s state-owned Shanghai Securities News, scientists from the country’s Computer Go team will issue a challenge to AlphaGo by the end of the year.

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Aida Akl
Aida Akl is a journalist working on VOA's English Webdesk. She has written on a wide range of topics, although her more recent contributions have focused on technology. She has covered both domestic and international events since the mid-1980s as a VOA reporter and international broadcaster.