Kyt Dotson

Kyt Dotson is a Senior Editor at SiliconAngle and works to cover beats surrounding DevOps, security, gaming, and cutting edge technology. Before joining SiliconAngle, Kyt worked as a software engineer starting at Motorola in Q&A to eventually settle at Pets911.com where he helped build a vast database for pet adoption and a lost and found system. Kyt is a published author who writes science fiction and fantasy works that incorporate ideas from modern-day technological innovation and explore the outcome of living with those technologies.

Latest from Kyt Dotson

Paypal’s Abandonment of Major Cyberlockers May Become Bitcoin’s Big Win

Paypal is now well known for a sort of sanctimonious attitude towards sites that they feel will damage their ability to make money and now that cyberlockers are under fire from copyright conglomerates such as the RIAA, MPAA, and BRIEN. This comes during the long-burn of Megaupload by the U.S. government at the behest of ...

Populating the World with Virtual People: How Augmented Reality Can Amplify Us

We essentially have wearable computers, an Android smartphone of sufficient power can do a great deal of computing and if it can’t succeed all on its own it can have a cloud-computer do the heavy lifting and beam the answer back over the Internet. The next step is bringing that projection out of the screens ...

Lockheed Martin’s Cyber Security VP Curt Aubley Talks About Cloud Security at Intel Forecast 2012

The adoption of cloud in the consumer market and especially the high-profile enterprise market has seen some inhibition, especially surrounding security. John Furrier brought Curt Aubley, Lockheed Martin VP & CTO Cyber Security & NexGen Innovation, into TheCube at Intel Forecast 2012 to speaks about cloud and its intersection with security. They interview was amazing ...

Bittorrent Traffic a Rising Tide After Dutch ISP’s Block The Pirate Bay

Because the Internet, much like the universe, is fueled by irony it looks as if attempts by UK courts to stifle Bittorrent traffic have backfired. This week, the anti-piracy group BREIN succeeded in getting The Pirate Bay blocked from 90% of Dutch Internet users—however, much like the adage “the Internet sees censorship as damage and ...

The Queen’s Peace of the 21st Century Brought by Big Data to Los Angeles

The realm of justice and crime is a vast arena that contains a great deal of actors and how to approach it is a problem for law enforcement and governments worldwide. In many cases, the better informed law enforcement is the more likely they can act to prevent crime rather than having to hunt down ...

To Nobody’s Surprise, After Buying Gaikai Sony Drops OnLive Support

It’s the battle of the cloud-streaming gaming services with Gaikai and OnLive staring head-to-head in the marketplace and the exclusive manufacturer effects are coming in. Sony has gotten the jump on the market by buying Gaikai—this came after the cloud gaming outfit went trolling for a buyer—and that likely means that they’re going to snub ...

Twitter Transparency Reports Reveals Huge Leap in Government Demands for Data

On Monday, commonly tight-lipped Twitter released their first-ever transparency report revealing how often and who of governments make requests of the social media microblogging platform. From the report, it looks like not only are requests somewhat common; but their incidence is increasing to the extent that January to June 2012 saw twice as many requests ...

Google’s Nexus Q Rolls Into the Living Room with 5 Potential Future Hacks

Last week at Google I/O 2012, the Nexus Q was unveiled to a spellbound public. This interesting living-room device arrives with a price tag of $299 and boasts the capability of being extremely hackable with an Android OS and a micro-USB port to provide access to developers and Makers. No doubt, Google already has some ...

Ubisoft Accidentally Leaks Hundreds of Customer E-mail Addresses in Watch Dogs Marketing Snafu

The video game Watch Dogs—a beautiful-looking technoir thriller about Big Data and paranoia—has gotten its publisher, Ubisoft, into hot water when it comes to the very same sort of sentiment portrayed in the game: accidental breach of privacy. In their marketing, the publisher accidentally exposed numerous fan e-mails to the public. Ubisoft decided to run ...

Facebook Testing “Want” Button: A Preemptive Strike Against Amazon and Pinterest Wishlists?

Facebook is developing a new functionality into its SDK to allow users to “Want” something with much the same functionality as they could use to “Like” something. Developer Tom Waddington says that he discovered the functionality in Facebook’s JavaScript SDK under the tag that reads “<fb:wants>,” and it looks like it can be displayed, but ...