Computerworld

The Upload: Your tech news briefing for Monday, May 11

China's smartphone market slows...IBM's latest Power8 servers do cloud work...Facebook tests in-app search
Smartphones are displayed at an electronics show in Beijing

Smartphones are displayed at an electronics show in Beijing

China's smartphone market slows down

The world's largest smartphone market may be losing its appetite: first quarter shipments of the devices in China dropped by 4 percent year over year, according to IDC. It's the first time in six years that China's smartphone market has contracted.

IBM's slimmed down Power servers aim at cloud, in-memory database

IBM has brought out another round of Power8 servers, targeting private, public and hybrid clouds as well as in-memory database applications and analytics. The multipurpose servers include the four-socket Power E850 and the more powerful Power E880.

Facebook tests in-app search engine

Some iOS users on Facebook are seeing a new option to "add a link" which takes them to an in-app keyword search engine that the social network is apparently testing, TechCrunch reports. The feature lets users enter a query, and returns lists of links which can be previewed and added to their Facebook status.

Smart grid protocol is full of security holes

More than four million smart energy meters worldwide use the Open Smart Grid Protocol, but security researchers have discovered that it is riddled with security problems, Threatpost writes. Two researchers, from universities in Germany and Portugal, have exposed encryption vulnerabilities in the protocol that leave it open to a number of attacks.

After building its own data centers, Zynga shutters them and returns to AWS

Mobile games powerhouse Zynga is shutting down data centers it spent $100 million to build several years ago and is returning to Amazon Web Services, the Wall Street Journal reports. CEO Mark Pincus said that running data centers was not an area where it was "strategic for us to have scale," and added, "We're going to let Amazon do that."

Another revenge porn site operator goes down

One of the sleaziest corners of the web is getting swept out: another revenge porn operator has been put out of business as an Oklahoma man pleaded no contest last week to extortion and conspiracy charges related to the site he operated. Typically, offenders post nude photos and other explicit content and then blackmail the subjects for payment to take the material down. In April, a California man was sentenced to 18 years in prison for extortion and identity theft for operating a revenge porn site.

Amazon's drones may come looking for you

Amazon is straddling that fine line between super-convenient and kind of creepy. GeekWire reports that the e-commerce giant has filed a patent application for technology that will let its planned-for-the-future delivery drones track an order recipient's location via their smartphone in order to bring the package to them wherever they are.

Watch now

This 3D printer is designed to be used in space, no gravity required. Because even Amazon's drones may not find you in the International Space Station if you need a spare part.

One last thing

What happened to Russia's attempt to build its own Silicon Valley? Foreign Policy charts the rise and fall of the Skolkovo tech incubator.