|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TQ4W)
And possibly even more so if you don't start planning yours soon If the changes Broadcom brought to VMware have you thinking of a move to an alternative virtualization platform, expect a long, costly, and risky project - and perhaps a longer, costlier, and riskier one if you put off pondering the move....
|
The Register
| Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
| Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
| Copyright | Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing |
| Updated | 2025-12-20 18:16 |
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TQ27)
Geopolitical rumblings one day, geological rumblings the next Taiwan has experienced an earthquake so significant that chipmaking champ TSMC has shuttered plants....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TQ17)
US Digital Service re-named and told to audit government tech and work on data-sharing US President Donald Trump has re-named the US Digital Service the Department of Government Efficiency and given it a mission to modernize government technology....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TPZQ)
President Trump allows vid app to keep running for 75 days while he reviews security concerns and develops a policy Updated China appears to have softened its stance on the possible sale of TikTok's US operations and is now perhaps open to the idea....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#6TPXS)
Semantic indexing does some discreet rifling through local drawers of Insiders Windows Search is improved in the latest Dev Channel Windows Insider build, but you'll need a Snapdragon-powered Copilot+ PC to use it....
|
|
by Liam Proven on (#6TPVR)
Both the Ubuntu and Debian-based editions get Cinnamon 6.4 and other goodies It's a bit later than we were expecting, but the latest Mint is here and should start to be offered as an upgrade soon....
|
|
by Lindsay Clark on (#6TPSK)
Cloud giant explains its thinking behind support for Apache open table format AWS bet on the Apache Iceberg open table format (OTF) across its analytics, machine learning, and storage stack as a concerted response to demand from customers already using its popular S3 object storage....
|
|
by Iain Thomson on (#6TPQV)
Taipei invites infosec bods to come and play on its home turf Picture this: It's 2030 and China's furious with Taiwan after the island applies to the UN to be recognized as an independent state. After deciding on a full military invasion, China attempts to first cripple its rebellious neighbor's critical infrastructure....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#6TPQW)
Ready or not, here I come Microsoft has begun distributing Windows 11 24H2 to user devices as the company enters the next stage of the operating system's rollout....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#6TPK0)
Only one called exploding a rocket over the Caribbean 'entertainment' SpaceX is not the only company involved in a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) mishap inquiry. Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin has also come under scrutiny after losing its New Glenn rocket's first stage....
|
|
by Jude Karabus on (#6TPK1)
Crypto critics unhappy as BTC hits all-time high and Melania launches her own currency Donald Trump, US president again by the time many of you read this, launched his own cryptocurrency -$TRUMP - on the Solana blockchain network on Friday night. By the weekend, it had hit a market cap of nearly $15 billion, although by Sunday, that value dropped when First Lady Melania Trump launched her own meme coin....
|
|
by Rupert Goodwins on (#6TPG9)
Clear rules and guaranteed consequences concentrate the mind wonderfully. Just ask a Russian Opinion "As obsolete as warships in the Baltic" was a great pop lyric in Prefab Sprout's 1985 gem, Faron Young. Great, but ironically obsolete itself. Sweden has just deployed multiple warships in that selfsame sea to guard against the very modern menace of underwater cable cutting....
|
|
by Connor Jones on (#6TPEJ)
Students have work to complete at home in the meantime A UK high school will have to close for at least two days, today and tomorrow, after becoming the latest public-sector victim of ransomware criminals....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#6TPDC)
Your battery might be flat, but the Wi-Fi signal is going to be great UK telecom giant BT is pulling the plug on its EV charging ambitions after falling a long way short of the 60,000 street cabinets it reckoned could be repurposed....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TPC0)
A whole different kind of 'technical debt' turned into real-world trouble Who, Me? Accidents will happen, and every Monday The Register celebrates them - and your escape from the consequences - in a fresh instalment of Who, Me? It's the reader-contributed column that details the downside of working in tech....
|
|
by Thomas Claburn on (#6TPC1)
'Minor issue' with showing accounting customers 'unrelated business information' required repairs Sage Group plc has confirmed it temporarily suspended its Sage Copilot, an AI assistant for the UK-based business software maker's accounting tools, this month after it blurted customer information to other users....
|
|
by Tobias Mann on (#6TPAS)
While Microsoft pushes AI PC experiences, Nvidia is busy wooing developers Comment Nvidia is the uncontested champion of AI infrastructure - at least in the datacenter. In the emerging field of AI PCs, things aren't so clear cut....
|
|
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6TP9Q)
PLUS: Allstate sued for allegedly tracking drivers; Dutch DDoS; More fake jobs from Pyongyang; and more Infosec in brief Hogwarts doesn't teach an incantation that could have saved Harry Potter publisher Scholastic from feeling the power of an online magician who made off with millions of customer records - except perhaps the wizardry of multifactor authentication....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TP8Y)
PLUS: Salt Typhoon and IT worker scammers sanctioned; Alibaba Cloud's K8s go global; Amazon acquires Indian BNPL company Asia In Brief When food delivery superapps" started operations in Indonesia, users started putting on weight - and that's not an entirely bad thing....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TP87)
Incoming president promises to allow ongoing operations for 90 days just as made-in-China app started to go dark US president-elect Donald Trump appears to have proposed the government he will soon lead should acquire half of made-in-China social media service TikTok's stateside operations....
|
|
by Thomas Claburn on (#6TP49)
The S in LLM stands for Security OpenAI's ChatGPT crawler appears to be willing to initiate distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks on arbitrary websites, a reported vulnerability the tech giant has yet to acknowledge....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#6TNG8)
Security feature widens out to more Windows 11 users, including those at home Microsoft is trying a new way of enabling Administrator Protection in Windows 11. The latest Windows Insider Canary build adds a setting that removes the requirement for IT admins to activate the feature....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#6TNE6)
Gaia makes its final science observation The European Space Agency's (ESA) Milky Way mapper Gaia has completed the sky-scanning phase of its mission, racking up more than three trillion observations over the past decade....
|
|
by Liam Proven on (#6TNCC)
With added manga and snark. What's not to like? Opinion Windows 1 and 2 flopped almost as badly as OS/2 did. How did Microsoft stage one of the greatest comebacks ever with Windows 3?...
|
|
by Jessica Lyons on (#6TN9D)
Cyber agency too 'far off mission,' says incoming boss Kristi Noem America's lead cybersecurity agency on Friday made one final scream into the impending truth void about election security and the role CISA plays in maintaining it....
|
|
by Iain Thomson on (#6TN6J)
Third-party supplier blamed as folks left unable to access funds Capital One is still battling to fix whatever brought down its systems on Wednesday, which has left people unable to access their money....
|
|
by Jessica Lyons on (#6TN6K)
Plus: Uncle Sam is cross with this one Chinese biz over Salt Typhoon mega-snooping Decades-old legislation requiring American telcos to lock down their systems to prevent foreign snoops from intercepting communications isn't mere decoration on the pages of law books - it actually means carriers need to secure their networks, the FCC has huffed....
|
|
by Jessica Lyons on (#6TN4C)
Ransomware, AI, secure software, digital IDs - there's something for everyone in the presidential directive Analysis Joe Biden, in the final days of his US presidency, issued another cybersecurity order that is nearly as vast in scope as it is late in the game....
|
|
by Dan Robinson on (#6TN1V)
Beijing investigating claims of unfair competition in mature semiconductors The "chip wars" between the US and China show no sign of cooling off as Beijing prepares to examine whether America is unfairly subsidizing its own semiconductor companies. Meanwhile, Washington's latest export restrictions have angered even some of its allies....
|
|
by Connor Jones on (#6TN1W)
Competition hots up with Ivanti over who can have the worst start to a year Fortinet has confirmed that previous analyses of records leaked by the Belsen Group are indeed genuine FortiGate configs stolen during a zero-day raid in 2022....
|
|
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6TMYY)
With Biden reportedly planning to skirt enforcement and kick the can to Trump, this saga might still not be over Updated The US Supreme Court has upheld a law requiring TikTok to either divest from its Chinese parent ByteDance or face a ban in the United States. The decision eliminates the final legal obstacle to the federal government forcing a shutdown of the platform for US users on January 19....
|
|
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6TMYZ)
Commission insists the timing has nothing to do with Musk meddling in German politics ahead of election The European Commission is stepping up its ongoing investigation of Elon Musk's X with a request to examine recent changes made to the platform's recommendation algorithms....
|
|
by Liam Proven on (#6TMW2)
Turns out tool does both file transfers and security fixes fast Don't panic. Yes, there were a bunch of CVEs, affecting potentially hundreds of thousands of users, found in rsync in early December - and made public on Tuesday - but a fixed version came out the same day, and was further tweaked for better compatibility the following day....
|
|
by Tobias Mann on (#6TMS1)
15 million system to serve as testbed for larger Herder supercomputer coming in 2027 Hundreds of AMD APUs fired up on Thursday as Germany's High-Performance Computing Center (HLRS) at the University of Stuttgart announced the completion of its latest supercomputer dubbed Hunter....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#6TMS2)
Many users less than impressed by unexpected arrival of AI assistant in Word Copilot is coming to Microsoft 365 Personal and Family, and Vulture Central has had some hands-on experience with the generative AI assistant's attempts to be helpful....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#6TMQ1)
Summaries will return when Apple Intelligence has 'improved' Apple has released a new beta of iOS 18.3 and tacitly admitted that, yes, its AI-generated notification summaries need a bit more work....
|
|
by Lindsay Clark on (#6TMQ2)
With a near half-billion-pound price hike bringing contract value to 1.4B IBM has secured a deal with the UK Home Office to supply user services for the troubled Emergency Service Network (ESN) upgrade, providing voice and data communications after Motorola withdrew from the project....
|
|
by Connor Jones on (#6TMN8)
Pastes allegedly stolen documents on leak site with 600K demand Another year and yet another UK local authority has been pwned by a ransomware crew. This time it's Gateshead Council in North East England at the hands of the Medusa group....
|
|
by Paul Kunert on (#6TMKS)
Home Office, Department for Work and Pensions supplier in hands of FRP Advisory A self-described specialist supplier of "transformational data and AI solutions" to the UK government has called in the administrative receivers....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TMKT)
Fixed the problem anyway - with no approval for a purchase and no permission to use a device On Call When the weekend rolls around, nobody needs permission to do whatever they desire. Unless, of course, they're required to be available to support tech - a restriction we mark each week in On Call, the column that celebrates fine fixing feats achieved despite the footling of flummoxed fools....
|
|
by Thomas Claburn on (#6TMJ9)
If you want a picture of the future, imagine your infosec team stamping on software forever Microsoft brainiacs who probed the security of more than 100 of the software giant's own generative AI products came away with a sobering message: The models amplify existing security risks and create new ones....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TMJA)
Weirdly, this shows the weakness of hosted Windows with an admission about vidchats Amazon Web Services has flicked the switch on a pair of workstation-grade cloud desktops that, ironically, highlight a problem with the tech....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#6TMH9)
Test flight seven did better on the ground with a successful booster catch SpaceX has again lost a Starship, after the seventh test flight of the spacecraft ended with a rapid unscheduled disassembly", but is nonetheless celebrating the mission as it ended with the second successful catch of its Super Heavy booster....
|
|
by Tobias Mann and Simon Sharwood on (#6TMG3)
Some of you have apparently already botched chatbots or allowed shadow AI' to creep in Cisco and Nvidia have both recognized that as useful as today's AI may be, the technology can be equally unsafe and/or unreliable - and have delivered tools in an attempt to help address those weaknesses....
|
|
by Thomas Claburn on (#6TMF6)
We'll defo ask for permission next time, automaker tells FTC General Motors on Thursday said that it has reached a settlement with the FTC "to address privacy concerns about our now-discontinued Smart Driver program."...
|
|
by Iain Thomson on (#6TMBJ)
Welcome to a decade where the oligarchs are no longer silent in the shadows US President Joe Biden gave his final address to the nation on Wednesday, and said America was visibly sliding into an oligopoly aided by a flood of online disinformation....
|
|
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6TM9D)
Department of Transportation wants in on last-minute Biden administration action too The Department of Transportation has joined the flurry of last-minute actions by the Biden administration with a lawsuit accusing Southwest Airlines of operating chronically delayed flights....
|
|
by Jessica Lyons on (#6TM6A)
FSB cyberspies venture into a new app for espionage, Microsoft says Star Blizzard, a prolific phishing crew backed by the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), conducted a new campaign aiming to compromise WhatsApp accounts and gain access to their messages and data, according to Microsoft....
|
|
by Dan Robinson on (#6TM6B)
You've got to spend money - like $36 billion+ - to make, er, AI chips TSMC is bumping capital expenditure in 2025 to between $38 billion and $42 billion in anticipation of scooping up more chip manufacturing contracts in the field of AI processors....
|
|
by Connor Jones on (#6TM3D)
That's in addition to the $4.5M fine paid to three state AGs last year Enzo Biochem has settled a consolidated class-action lawsuit relating to its 2023 ransomware incident for $7.5 million....
|