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by Carly Page on (#73ZB5)
Telecoms coalition wants to avoid another 5G-style vendor scramble with early security guardrails A group of Western governments has launched a fresh bid to shape 6G before it's even standardized, unveiling a set of security and resilience principles to bake supply chain controls and cyber safeguards into the next generation of mobile networks....
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The Register
| Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
| Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
| Copyright | Copyright © 2026, Situation Publishing |
| Updated | 2026-03-03 15:15 |
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by Dan Robinson on (#73ZB6)
Risk management? Continuity plan if our provider disappears? We've heard of these things AI adoption is moving too rapidly say senior tech leaders, as the pressure to deploy clashes with risk management and compliance concerns....
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by Tim Anderson on (#73ZB7)
AI-first editors and agent-driven tooling intensify competition in the IDE market The Open VSX registry, used for installing extensions in editors compatible with Visual Studio Code (VS Code), will run on Amazon Web Services (AWS) infrastructure in Europe as part of a "strategic investment" from the cloud giant....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#73ZB8)
AI browsing agent left local files open for the taking If you wanted to steal local files from someone using Perplexity's Comet browser, until last month you could just schedule the theft by sending your victim a calendar event....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#73Z8Q)
Deputy governor tells MPs central bank now has in-house skills and IP to maintain revamped RTGS As the last Accenture employee clocked off from supporting the Bank of England's 431 million Real-Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) system, the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street was assured it would no longer depend on the global consultancy....
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by Connor Jones on (#73Z8R)
Heidi Richards paid more than $5M for certificate of authenticity labels in five years A Florida woman will spend nearly two years behind bars after being found guilty of fraudulently acquiring Microsoft certificate of authenticity (COA) labels and selling them in bulk....
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by Richard Speed on (#73Z8S)
Redmond wants a monthly cut from every digital worker on your payroll. Agents don't need dental, they will need a SKU Microsoft is reportedly planning to license AI agents like employees - and charge accordingly....
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by Carly Page on (#73Z6E)
High-severity flaw let malicious add-ons access system via browser's embedded AI feature Security boffins have discovered a high-severity bug in Google Chrome that allowed malicious extensions to hijack its Gemini Live AI panel and inherit privileges they were never meant to have....
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by Connor Jones on (#73Z6F)
Third-party software supplier breached leading to leak of notes Around 15.8 million administrative files were stolen after attackers breached a software supplier to France's health ministry....
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by Dan Robinson on (#73Z6G)
From Bavarian Alps to Congo basin and other places where laying cable is a PITA Vodafone has signed a deal with Amazon Leo to use its satellites as a backhaul connection for cellular base stations in remote areas of Europe and Africa, saving it from having to cable them up to its core network....
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by Carly Page on (#73Z52)
Analysis claims 500 per EV could secure local production and cut reliance on foreign supply chains Europe's EV battery cost gap with China - currently around 90 percent - could shrink to roughly 30 percent by 2030 if Brussels is willing to pay what campaigners call a "sovereignty premium."...
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by Simon Sharwood on (#73Z2R)
Slow disclosure and odd reassurance that exposing names and contact details won't be a problem isn't going down well Gamers are ready to unleash their mightiest virtual weapons and point them at British games studio Cloud Imperium, after it sat on news of a data breach and then announced it without fanfare....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#73Z2S)
Developers ponder the horror of having to actually write code Anthropic's AI service Claude is having artificially intelligent hiccups and availability problems across its basic chat service, API, and Claude Code offering....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#73Z06)
Claims it can build and deploy them fast, whether they run at speed is another matter As the AI boom rages, investors and buyers have thrown cash at anyone that even looks capable of selling them hardware capable of crunching tokens at speed. And now they have a new option: China's Huawei....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#73YY4)
Crims hope for payday from malicious payloads rather than stealing access tokens Microsoft has warned organizations about ongoing OAuth abuse scams that use phishing emails and URL redirects to infect victims' machines with malware and take over their devices....
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by Tobias Mann on (#73YY5)
Coherent, Lumentum each walk away with $2B in cash and a multi-billion purchase commitment Nvidia is dipping into its war chest once again this week, investing $2 billion each in Coherent and Lumentum to lock in supply of the vendors' respective silicon photonics technologies....
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by O'Ryan Johnson on (#73YW6)
Markets in the Middle East will be affected first and worst The war against Iran is causing an air and shipping jam, but it will likely have little effect on the global technology market unless the conflict widens significantly, according to analysts....
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by Tobias Mann on (#73YST)
Multiple zones Middle East in UAE disrupted, with water damage complicating recovery UPDATED Multiple Amazon Web Services (AWS) availability zones in the Middle East are experiencing outages or degraded connectivity after objects struck a UAE facility, as Iranian retaliatory missile and drone attacks hit targets across the Gulf....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#73YSV)
'Expect elevated activity for the foreseeable future' Iranian hackers have launched spying expeditions, digital probes, and distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks in the wake of the US and Israel launching missile strikes over the weekend, and security researchers urge organizations to expect more cyber intrusions as the war continues....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#73YSW)
Iranian worshippers got notifications saying 'help has arrived' Imagine your favorite app encouraging you to surrender during a war. That's happening right now in Iran....
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by Richard Speed on (#73YQA)
Don't expect to see compatible hardware before 2027 GrapheneOS is headed to Motorola smartphones in 2027, pending hardware from the Lenovo-owned brand that satisfies the privacy-focused Android fork's requirements....
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by Dan Robinson on (#73YQB)
Iran's own technology reverse engineered and used against it. The Pentagon has confirmed that US forces struck Iranian targets using weapons that are copies of Iran's own Shahed 136 suicide drones....
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by Carly Page on (#73YQC)
NCSC urges all to review posture as escalating tensions increase risk of indirect digital spillover The UK's cybersecurity agency is warning British organizations to brace for potential digital blowback as the Middle East conflict spills further into the online world....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#73YQD)
Meanwhile, formal 6G specs are still in the works It seems like just yesterday that the 5G rollout started. Now, at Mobile World Congress, major companies are already talking about commercializing 6G. Never mind that binding 6G standards haven't been nailed down yet....
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by Dan Robinson on (#73YMR)
Saves real estate by putting the power on the water Datacenters increasingly want dedicated power, and Singapore has a unique solution. Bridge Data Centres (BDC) and Concord New Energy (CNE) are working to put hydrogen power generators on barges, saying that this arrangement is particularly suited to the local environment....
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by Tim Anderson on (#73YMS)
Approved proposal reverses earlier stance, even as survey highlights bigger frustrations The Go team has approved generic methods, reversing a longstanding position in the language's FAQ. The proposal, from Go co-designer Robert Griesemer, now moves to implementation....
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by Liam Proven on (#73YHK)
Trick uses a simple configuration profile to convince your Mac that upgrading is against policy. Averse to "liquid glass"? Are you happy enough with your Mac as it is? Try this local policy and banish those upgrade nag screens for a few months....
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by Richard Speed on (#73YHM)
Artemis III now to follow in Apollo 9's footsteps, 2028 landing still planned for Artemis IV NASA has reshuffled its Artemis program, pushing the first crewed lunar landing in more than half a century back to Artemis IV, with Artemis III performing a check-out of the lunar lander in Earth orbit....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#73YEC)
A joint venture from 2008 led to years of claims and counter-claims between the data whizzkids Data warehousing and analytics biz Teradata and SAP have ended their long-running legal dispute after the German ERP vendor agreed to cough up $480 million to bring the fighting to a close....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#73YED)
We can remember it for you wholesale, and sell it back to you for big bucks Web scraping bots are increasing the pressure on the tech supply chain by scouring sites for DRAM, so their minders can snap up increasingly scarce inventory and resell it for a quick profit....
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by Connor Jones on (#73YEE)
Vulnerable citizens targeted by criminals purporting to represent fake police crisis department Scammers targeted Dubai citizens mere hours after missiles struck the city, attempting to gain access to their bank accounts, police have warned....
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by Richard Speed on (#73YC4)
More than a fifth of servers still on Windows Server 2016 Windows 11 has leapt ahead of Windows 10 in market share, according to the latest Statcounter figures....
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by Liam Proven on (#73YC5)
A handy feature you can already try in recent versions The new beta of the next version of Firefox lets you view two web pages side by side, with a split you can drag with your mouse....
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by Carly Page on (#73YA6)
Official monitoring shows connectivity collapsing to near-zero Iran's internet has plunged into a near-total blackout, with traffic down to around 1 percent of normal levels and connectivity described as "close to zero" as authorities curb access amid widening regional conflict....
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by Rupert Goodwins on (#73YA7)
Soon turned out, we had a heart of glass Opinion There is more joy in heaven over a single report of genuinely new technology than in a thousand desperate AI marketing pitches. What the angels will make of Microsoft's Project Silica, a mixture of the two, is less clear....
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by Liam Proven on (#73YA8)
Browser-based version back on the menu, reopening questions about TDF's relationship with Collabora The Document Foundation (TDF) has pulled LibreOffice Online out of its "attic" - its term for retired projects - and is resuming development....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#73Y7P)
Oh, the contortions required to debug strange errors! Who, Me? A weekend of unwinding is behind us, so The Register returns to work on Monday with a fresh installment of "Who, Me?" - the reader-contributed column that reveals how you got in a tangle, and then extricated yourself....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#73Y62)
Signs a deal with Washington anyway, says he's kept control of killer robots by allowing only cloudy AI, with guardrails OpenAI has signed a deal with the United States Department of War (DoW) that allows use of its advanced AI systems in classified environments, and urged the Pentagon to make the same terms available to its rivals....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#73Y50)
PLUS: Firefox adds XSS protection; Leadership turnover at CISA; FTC exempts some data collection Infosec In Brief DNS vulnerabilities are being addressed 84 percent faster in the UK public sector thanks to an automated vulnerability scanning system established as part of a program kicked off early last year....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#73Y36)
Went from triumph at having busted tax dodgers to embarrassment at losing the proceeds South Korea's National Tax Service has apologized after it leaked passwords to a stash of stolen crypto, which parties unknown used to make off with the digi-cash....
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by Avram Piltch on (#73Y1T)
New ThinkPads also come in blue, get perfect fixability score If you own a desktop computer, you're used to swapping parts and peripherals around, but most laptops are closed boxes with few ways to modify them. Lenovo's new ThinkBook Modular AI PC concept shows what happens when you can remove a screen, a keyboard, and even blocks of ports from a mobile PC....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#73XZX)
PLUS: AI claims 2,000 jobs at Australia's WiseTech; Samsung wants humanoid robots for autonomous factories; Micron opens India plant; And more! Asia In brief One of Amazon Web Services' availability zones in the United Arab Emirates is offline after the facility was hit by unknown objects....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#73XP2)
A smaller, security-conscious take on the viral AI agent platform Interview Ideally, you shouldn't have to defend yourself against your own AI agent. But we don't live in an ideal world and an unrestrained agent can cause a ton of damage....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#73XM5)
Lost among the investor froth, someone has to do all the boring stuff. And they'll probably be around for the next spin of the hype cycle Opinion Say goodbye to the SaaS-pocalypse theory, which posits that advances in AI will bring the software-as-a-service market to its knees. Say hello to "a feedback loop with no natural brake." Or doomster porn, as others would have it....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#73X6C)
Jake Braun thinks hackers need to create a 'Digital arsenal of democracy' to defend us all Interview Hackers - especially Jake Braun - are "fed up with government."...
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by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols on (#73X41)
Careless big-time users are treating FOSS repos like content delivery networks Opinion I'm at the Linux Foundation Members Summit, and Sonatype's CTO Brian Fox introduced me to a new open source problem. I wouldn't have thought that was possible, but here I am....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#73WZ0)
Credential and cryptocurrency theft, live surveillance, ransomware - an attacker's Swiss Army knife A new remote access trojan (RAT) being sold on cybercrime networks enables double extortion attacks on Windows machines by bundling ransomware and data theft, along with credential and cryptocurrency stealers, live surveillance, and a whole host of other illicit capabilities, all controllable from a centralized dashboard....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#73WZ1)
Without a single 'You're Fired' joke updated President Trump has escalated Anthropic's dispute with the Defense Department with a social media post ordering the entire federal government purge the company's software from its systems....
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by O'Ryan Johnson on (#73WWE)
'This is perhaps the biggest challenge the industry has faced since its inception' The next wave of smartphones and PCs will have less memory and fewer capabilities, yet are likely to cost consumers 14 percent more as AI ambitions eat all available memory supplies, according to researchers at IDC....
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Amazon and Nvidia open their wallets to lock in OpenAI's business while SoftBank keeps the lights on
by Tobias Mann on (#73WT9)
ChatGPT maker announces $110B in new investment amid flurry of self-serving deals The headlines say OpenAI on Friday announced $110 billion in new investment from Amazon, Nvidia, and SoftBank at a $730 billion pre-money valuation, though terms and conditions apply....
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