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

Anonymous Looks to Obsolete Pastebin for Leaks With AnonPaste

The Anonymous hactivist collective has seen a tool arise from amidst its ranks that seeks to replace the use of Pastebin for releasing manifestos, articles of leaked data, and evidence of past exploits (often criminal or sensitive in nature.) This project, called “AnonPaste” has been announced in a joint statement between Anonymous and a yet-unknown ...

Glasgow University Chemists See 3D Printers as Innovative for “Printing” Pharmaceuticals

Researchers at Glasgow University have started looking into 3D printer technology for producing reaction vessels and reactants that can synthesize chemicals in predictable ways. As a result, a 3D printer could be used in a pharmacy (or even in the home) in order to produce pharmaceuticals on the spot from reactants and chemicals allowing for ...

U.S. and Chinese Militaries Practice Cyberwar and Play House

As the Internet breaks down borders between nations and begins to bound the economy, we’re looking at brand new forms of political and economic pressure and the advent of cyber warfare. On Monday, The Guardian reported that the United States and Chinese militaries have been secretly engaged in practice cyberwar games in an attempt to thwart ...

Canada’s Mint Chip Digital Currency Cannot Supplant Bitcoin

Digital currencies such as Bitcoin have become such a talking point across the Internet that even governments are starting to look at alternatives to paper and coin fiat money. The Royal Canadian Mint is planning to get into the mix with their own digital currency called Mint Chip—possibly right on the heels of removing pennies ...

Anonymous Hacker Havittaja Slams DDoS Into CIA, US Department of Justice Websites

In the wake of DDoS attacks against the UK Home Office, and the CIA, the International Business Times brings us the news that Anonymous cells have continued to disrupt government websites across the globe by washing away the US Department of Justice Website with a DDoS attack. The initial salvo against the cia.gov and justice.gov (the DOJ ...

FBI Staying “Abreast” of Hacker Case Leads to Capture

For anyone who watches TV shows about mystery or criminality, we usually realize that it only takes one mistake to take down a would-be criminal. In the hacker world it can work exactly the same way, however that mistake is often something entirely mundane such as bragging in a chat room, or not obfuscating the ...

Intel’s Jim Blakley Looks to the Future of Private Cloud and IT Growth

Dave Vellante and John Furrier in theCUBE at EMCVSPEX in San Francisco, CA brought in Jim Blakley, Director of Intel Architecture Systems Integration Division, to speak about the trends in IT towards cloud and big data. They asked questions relating to how the IT industry may approach the costs of going into the cloud, how ...

Flashback Trojan Estimate Drops as Security Experts Flay Apple for Slow Response

I grew up with the Mac vs. PC debate in full swing with a strange sort of sectarian dichotomy between the fans of Apple and everyone else. One of the biggest things that would be brought up, especially by the proponents of Macintosh was the general dearth of malware and viruses that could affect Apple ...

CISPA May Not be SOPA but It’s Got That Itching, Burning Sensation

Right now, there’s a lot of talk going around about HR 3523, a bill called CISPA (for Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act) and while it’s good that Congress is looking into this country’s failing vision on national cybersecurity, it’s also becoming obvious that CISPA is not the answer. Already, the Electronic Frontier Foundation has ...

Kinect Used to Operate Four-Story High Pipe Organ in Australia

Melbourne, Australia is the home of an extravagant and beautiful four-story high pipe organ called the Town Hall Grand Organ—installed in 1872, the organ was almost entirely rebuilt in 1905 and still stands today. Originally built and installed by William Hill and Son of London and it took nine months to complete.  It is an ...