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by Connor Jones on (#6J9AP)
Evidence mounts of an exploit gatekept within Russia's borders Security researchers believe the Akira ransomware group could be exploiting a nearly four-year-old Cisco vulnerability and using it as an entry point into organizations' systems....
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The Register
Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
Copyright | Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing |
Updated | 2025-05-20 16:46 |
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6J9AQ)
This isn't going to end well Volt Typhoon, the Chinese government-backed cyberspies whose infrastructure was at least partially disrupted by Uncle Sam, has been homing in on other US energy, satellite and telecommunications systems, according to Robert Lee, CEO of security shop Dragos....
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by Richard Speed on (#6J97M)
Embrace, extend, and ... port? Microsoft's adoption of Rust continues apace if a posting on the IT titan's careers website is anything to go by....
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by Connor Jones on (#6J97N)
Many versions still without fixes while sophisticated attackers bypass mitigations Ivanti has finally released the first round of patches for vulnerability-stricken Connect Secure and Policy Secure gateways, but in doing so has also found two additional zero-days, one of which is under active exploitation....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6J94E)
Next generation of devices are going to be packed with it - requiring lots and lots of memory Samsung Electronics' is betting that demand for generative AI will equate to a busy year for memory sales....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6J94F)
Yep, you guessed it - at least some of them swapped investments out for gen AI Quantum companies received 50 percent less venture cap funding last year as investors switched to generative AI or shied away from risky bets on Silicon Valley startups. Progress in quantum computing is being made, but practical applications of the technology are still likely years away....
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by Richard Speed on (#6J94G)
Forecast worries or AI fatigue kicking in? Redmond has an important 12 months ahead Microsoft's Q2 results failed to impress the markets yesterday, as the company's stock dropped despite some impressive numbers and the usual quantities of AI bluster....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6J91F)
Retrieving electronic records takes 45 minutes and staff say they don't have time to use systems An award-winning IT rollout at one of the UK's largest hospitals trusts is beset with problems that prevent staff from accessing the data they need, creating inconsistent and insecure electronic patient records....
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by Richard Currie on (#6J91G)
Frame rate would be even worse than the original, though. MUCH worse From teletext to pregnancy tests and even tractors, Doom has long been a target of hackers trying to get the seminal 1993 shooter running in the strangest of places. But this one frags them all....
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by Richard Speed on (#6J8ZC)
As if by magic, multiple IPv4s may be reduced to just one UK ISP Zen Internet has warned subscribers that their IP addresses will shortly change, with some facing a reduction in their address count down to one....
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by Richard Currie on (#6J8XR)
Dialect study a mixed bag when it comes to droids speaking highbrow German In a world where talking toasters and chatting cars are moving from sci-fi into real life, the University of Potsdam has thrown a linguistic curveball. Yes, the future is here, and it's asking: "Sprechen Sie Dialect?"...
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6J8XS)
Still, there's hope for actual browser competition on iPhones Web developers worry that Apple's commitments to meet Europe's Digital Markets Act will complicate web application support, even as some remain hopeful something positive will come from the revision of Apple's iOS platform rules....
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by Katyanna Quach on (#6J8WD)
'Tha e comasach inneal spreadhaidh dachaigh a' thogail le stuthan taighe' The safety guardrails preventing OpenAI's GPT-4 from spewing harmful text can be easily bypassed by translating prompts into uncommon languages - such as Zulu, Scots Gaelic, or Hmong....
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by Liam Proven on (#6J8WE)
Lightweight rivals, both based on Crunchbang, OpenBox, and Debian Crunchbang++ and Bunsen Labs each aim to continue the tradition of the very lightweight Crunchbang Linux, although both distros have thickened around the waist a bit over the years....
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6J8V5)
Don't have to deal with sanctions if you build it yourself China has given itself a goal to become a world-leading source of AI infrastructure by 2027, the country's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) announced in a policy document released on Monday....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6J8V6)
Made-in-China social network allegedly made lowball licensing offer and abused its platform power Multinational music giant Universal Music Group - home to Taylor Swift, Elton John, Bob Dylan, Bilie Eilish and plenty of other prominent musicians - has accused made-in-China social network TikTok of abusing its market power using tactics including promoting music created by AI....
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6J8V7)
Infrastructure Delivery Engineering team to help build datacenters, data team to create new services Amid widespread tech layoffs, Oracle is hiring for two new teams to help it build more cloud facilities, and services....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6J8T5)
Q4 results reveal AI is the answer to - or the reason for - everything: a cloud profit, wobbly ads, boosting subscriptions Google's parent company, Alphabet, has revealed it banked $3.0 billion by extending the working life of its hardware....
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by Tobias Mann on (#6J8RV)
Chip biz aims to sell $3.5 billion worth of its Instinct GPUs and APUs in 2024 alone AMD is depending on its newly launched MI300 accelerators and continued AI demand to offset an otherwise challenging start to 2024....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6J8QB)
No longer willing to be a friend with benefits - perhaps thanks to Big B killing OEM licenses? Updated Dell has terminated its distribution deal for VMware products....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6J8MX)
$423K luxury motor makes the Spirit of Ecstasy want to fly away Mere months after launch, Rolls-Royce's Spectre EV is being recalled due to a faulty ground connection cable that could make the vehicle very hot stuff....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6J8MY)
More human than human, eh? Computer scientists have found that misinformation generated by large language models (LLMs) is more difficult to detect than artisanal false claims hand-crafted by humans....
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by Tobias Mann on (#6J8HY)
AI and the chips that power it are at the center of the equation Artificial intelligence and the chips that fuel its evolution have given rise to a new arms race between the US and China....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6J8HZ)
What goes together better than Redmond and respecting people's preferences? Everything, really Updated Windows users, take notice: Microsoft's Edge browser is said to be actively importing open Chrome tabs and slurping other data from Google's browser without permission and even if the "feature" that makes that happen is disabled....
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6J8F3)
Invaders inveigle infrastructure The US Justice Department and FBI may have scored a win over Chinese state-sponsored snoops trying to break into American critical infrastructure....
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by Connor Jones on (#6J8C4)
Multiple publicly available exploits have since been published for the critical flaw The number of public-facing installs of Jenkins servers vulnerable to a recently disclosed critical vulnerability is in the tens of thousands....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6J8C5)
Limited-time offer may reduce cost of migration by up to 50% SAP is rolling out an incentive package to encourage users to adopt its cloud transformation programs, RISE with SAP and GROW with SAP....
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by Richard Speed on (#6J890)
It's all in the software The European Space Agency (ESA) has celebrated the Galileo satellite navigation system meeting civil aviation standards governing flight phases from take-off to landing and explained how the feat was done....
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by Connor Jones on (#6J891)
Vendor gets tangled in its own web of undisclosed vulnerabilities Juniper Networks has disclosed separate vulnerabilities it was previously accused of concealing, and apologized to customers for the error in communication....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6J892)
Bing hasn't much benefited from its AI infusion but Google's rivals sense an opening Feature Ask Google's Bard chatbot about the future of search and you'll get a summary of trends that suggest there's more to search than finding keywords in an index of documents....
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by Richard Speed on (#6J861)
Bankers appointed, but CEO insists nothing will change while he's in charge The Raspberry Pi company is again preparing the ground for an initial public offering (IPO), appointing bankers Peel Hunt and Jefferies ahead of a planned listing on the London Stock Exchange....
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by Richard Speed on (#6J862)
Remember making Windows and DOS talk to a network? You could go back to the future with this assignment If you were thinking about forcing an AI to write a job ad for an administrator of an obsolete operating system, it looks like somebody has beaten you to it with a vacancy for a Windows 3.11 techie....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6J833)
Lords warn Home Secretary there is nothing to regulate wider trawl of large populations A UK committee in its upper house has written to Home Secretary James Cleverly to warn of the lack of legal basis for the use of live facial recognition by police....
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by Richard Speed on (#6J834)
You can get Ceefax via a Pi, but behold it in its most exotic of habitats Got an old BBC computer in the loft, a spare Raspberry Pi gathering dust in a drawer, and a yearning to return to the days when Teletext was a neat thing?...
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6J81D)
'Primary focus' is 'welfare of our staff as we resolve any errors,' says UK council after rollout of 30M SAP replacement Exclusive After schools in Surrey went live on a new 30 million HR, payroll and finance system, the responsible county council is being forced to prioritize support calls for problems that are delaying staff pay....
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by Liam Proven on (#6J81E)
Miss hardware QWERTY? Warm up your soldering iron and 3D printer Hardware hacker's non-trivial project to weld a Blackberry keyboard to an Android fondleslab is being updated with an off-the-shelf PCB....
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by Connor Jones on (#6J81F)
Questionable institutional change and myriad IT issues pervade the governance landscape The farewell report written by the UK's biometrics and surveillance commissioner highlights a litany of failings in the Home Office's approach to governing the technology....
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by Iain Thomson on (#6J803)
It's not just you - things really are getting worse Opinion An apocryphal tale regarding the late, great footballer George Best being interviewed by a reporter just after getting suspended from Manchester United offers an apt description of today's tech industry right now....
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by Katyanna Quach on (#6J7YG)
Fakers gonna fake, fake, fake, fake, fake ... time to fake it off Fake sexually explicit AI-generated viral images of pop royalty Taylor Swift have struck a nerve, leading fans, Microsoft's boss, and even the White House to call for immediate action to tackle deepfakes....
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6J7YH)
Controling prostheses? Elon imagines an app for that Elon Musk's brain-computer interface implant company Neuralink has begun its first human clinical trial....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6J7X3)
SKAMPI was made in China, driven by Docker, located in South Africa, and aimed at the stars Reg In Space One of the radio telescope designs to be used by the Square Kilometre Array has achieved first light....
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6J7T4)
Hiring for regional and global execs to help it find new spots for bit barns, and make sure they get built right Microsoft has signaled significant expansion of its datacenter footprint in the Asia Pacific region....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6J7R5)
You're free to choose your own adventure, from options that involve Copilot and OpenAI Comment If the future of work is a choice and "not a predetermined destiny" - as Microsoft puts it in a recent report - it would be nice to know why Redmond is so intent on shoving its version of that future down our throats....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6J7R6)
Legacy OS and app holdouts get three more years of paid support, also on versions 10.0 and 11.3 Oracle has quietly extended paid support and upgrades for Solaris 11.4 to 2037 - three years past its previous deadline - and did the same for earlier versions of the OS last year....
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6J7KJ)
18,000 customers, including the Pentagon and Microsoft, may have other thoughts SolarWinds - whose network monitoring software was backdoored by Russian spies so that the biz's customers could be spied upon - has accused America's financial watchdog of seeking to "revictimise the victim" after the agency sued it over the 2020 attack....
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by Tobias Mann on (#6J7KK)
Angstrom age is right around the corner - for state-of-the-art chips, anyway Comment With 3nm production reaching maturity and 2nm on the way, TSMC is reportedly laying the groundwork for the next logical step, a 1nm fab....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6J7GJ)
Businesses can at long last submit digital docs to government agencies Japan is saying sayonara to the floppy disk, which until now was a required medium for submitting some 1,900 official documents to the government....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6J7GK)
Distributed system makes a grab for Oracle, Db2 features CockroachDB has released its 23.2 iteration containing new features designed to tempt mainframe and other legacy database users to shift workloads to its distributed cloud-based system....
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by Richard Currie on (#6J7DD)
Maybe those Twitter cuts ran too deep, huh? Not long after it emerged that X, formerly Twitter, cut 1 in 3 Trust and Safety employees after Elon Musk's takeover in October 2022, the social media platform now claims it's ready to hire 100 full-time content moderators at a new office in Austin, Texas....
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by Richard Speed on (#6J7DE)
Winter Night is coming Japan's Moon lander has woken up on the lunar surface and begun transmitting data back to controllers at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA.)...
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