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by Thomas Claburn on (#69S0Q)
The man leaking vital data before it was fashionable Comment Daniel Ellsberg, an American former military analyst who became one of the most significant whistleblowers in US history, has made peace with death.…
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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 | 2025-05-15 20:30 |
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#69RXV)
10k delivery vehicles this year isn't going to cut it and upstart really needs the cash Electric van maker Rivian and Amazon are reportedly in talks to scrap part of a 2019 deal that made the retail giant Rivian's sole customer for its electric delivery vans.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#69RSK)
Remember the storage class memory that never took off? It's back Memory startup Intrinsic Semiconductor Technologies has scored funding aimed at bringing its Resistive RAM to market, which it grandly states will enable a new generation of smart devices and systems with embedded intelligence.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#69RMM)
Human lawyers: 'DoNotPay is not actually a robot, a lawyer, nor a law firm' "Robot lawyer" DoNotPay is headed back to court – and not to prove its merits as a legally inclined chatbot. It's being sued for practicing law in California without a license.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#69RJD)
Government supplier said to be valued at $2.5B The owners of UK-based Ark Data Centres Ltd are locked in negotiations with suitors interested in buying the rack and cloud provider in an agreement said to value the business at around $2.5 billion.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#69RFZ)
We don't need to trap customers to force loyalty, says boss A new ISP started by former BT execs claims to offer UK broadband customers a better deal with no contracts or installation fees, and "a Wi-Fi service that actually works."…
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by Jude Karabus on (#69RDX)
$2.9 trillion-asset globo corp's local subsidiary buys Silicon Roundabout fave Just three days ago, the Bank of England planned to apply to place Silicon Valley Bank UK into insolvency by Sunday night due to it having a "limited presence in the UK and no critical functions supporting the financial system."…
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by Richard Currie on (#69RBS)
Moon is real. Pictures of Moon are real. Phone uses lots of pictures of Moon to make your picture less crap Comment By now most in the Anglosphere must have seen that Samsung ad for the Galaxy S23 Ultra where a woman snaps a detailed photo of the Moon – craters and all – moving her telescope-toting neighbor to ask: "Mia, can you send me that?"…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#69RA2)
Also, the FBI just admitted to bypassing warrants by buying cellphone location data, and this week's actionable items in brief Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency's director Jen Easterly has been outspoken in her drive to bring more women into the security industry, and this year for International Women's Day her agency formalized that pledge by announcing a partnership with nonprofit Women in CyberSecurity (WiCyS).…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#69R89)
Standards that cut across technology could help avoid confusing industry, MPs hear The UK government should create laws common to autonomous vehicles to avoid a patchwork approach to specific technologies, according to industry figures speaking to MPs.…
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by Rupert Goodwins on (#69R6C)
Any sufficiently stupid technology is indistinguishable from magical thinking Opinion Around the world, a vital technology is failing. Just as massive solar flares fry satellites and climate-change superstorms overwhelm flood defences, so a new surge of ridiculous IT-related events is burning out irony meters across the globe.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#69R4F)
Hardware, software, kitchen sink: it's all in there The UK government has launched the tendering process for an agreement set to be worth up to £12 billion ($14 billion) for the tech suppliers that make it onto the contract.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#69R3F)
A missed migration mitigated the mistake Who, me? Why hello, Monday! You beastly harbinger of another week of work and associated woes, which The Register each week welcomes with an instalment of “Who, Me?”, our reader-contributed tales of techies who make mistakes and mostly mollify their masters.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#69R2B)
Consultation for the long-awaited Digital India Act is finally under way although the draft law's still not been revealed India's government has started to consult some proposed details of its long-awaited Digital India Act, including a declaration that the bill needed a dedicated adjudicatory tool for offenses committed online.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#69R15)
Some training in refreshed certification platform to be free, including short how-to vids Cisco will shortly open the doors of a new online training service called Cisco U.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#69R06)
Vietnam, Malyasia, and Singapore roll out the welcome mat The Biden Administration's efforts to starve China's domestic semiconductor industry have reached an inflection point as allied nations join the cause.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#69R07)
'I am the Chinese Communist Party. I will be with you forever' - Beijing's new propaganda vid says the quite part out loud The Cyberspace Administration of China has continued its drive to clean up the internet, on Sunday taking aim at the behaviours of independently operated content producing accounts on sites like Weibo and WeChat, known as “self-media.”…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#69QYW)
Plus: DuckDuckGo launches its own AI web search chatbot, and more In-brief GPT-4, the long-awaited successor to OpenAI's generative models will be unveiled next week, according to Microsoft.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#69QWJ)
‘Wouldn’t be profitable, or exist, if our products were 100% on AWS’ Singaporean search engine optimisation tools vendor Ahrefs has claimed that keeping its infrastructure on-premises, rather than using Amazon Web Services, will save it $400 million over three years.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#69QVD)
Feds say this won’t cost taxpayers a dime Customers of collapsed startup-centric Silicon Valley Bank will be able to access their deposits on Monday, US authorities announced on Sunday.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#69QRT)
PLUS: Singapore tests AWS quantum network; Honda bulks autonomous truck; India tightens crypto laws; and more Asia In Brief The president of Indian tech services giant Infosys has left to join rival Tech Mahindra as CEO.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#69Q75)
Luckily this rock is only about the size of the Arc de Triomphe, let alone the 600-to-1 chance Astronomers have another near-Earth object on their ones-to-watch lists: a newly discovered 50-metre-wide asteroid that could hit Earth on Valentine's Day ... in 2046. …
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by Thomas Claburn on (#69PQ5)
Caveats apply, your mileage may vary Python is among the one of the most popular programming languages, yet it's generally not the first choice when speed is required.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#69PK4)
Why do experiments and all that work when a model could just invent convincing data for you? Feature Generative AI poses interesting challenges for academic publishers tackling fraud in science papers as the technology shows the potential to fool human peer review.…
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by Liam Proven on (#69PFH)
Or how you'll spend your copious free time running CP/M on a cheap computer There's more to inexpensive single-board computers than the Raspberry Pi. Some DIY projects are just for fun, but others also have immediate practical value – like a low-power, self-updating desk calendar.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#69PCP)
Where there's disaffected twits there's potential revenue, and Facebook parent smells blood – er, profit Not content to sit on the sidelines while Twitter falters, Facebook parent Meta is working on a text-focused competitor, based on the decentralized bones of fediverse favorite Mastodon.…
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Stormy clouds ahead? Microsoft is bringing ChatGPT, with all its promises and shortcomings, to world-plus-dog as a cloud service in Azure.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#69PAM)
If your name's not on the entity list ... you're OK to do business with American companies The US is tightening the net on Chinese server maker Inspur after its addition to the entity list of proscribed businesses, taking aim at the company's affiliates that may not be explicitly covered by the ban.…
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by Richard Currie on (#69P84)
Your boss owns you AND your home – is this Texas utopia? Comment Remember Elon Musk's "extremely hardcore" edict for staff who hoped to stay on at Twitter after his takeover? To some, this extended to sleeping on the office floor – and even then it didn't save their jobs.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#69P68)
Building a watertight SoC? You'll have to go through IP-slinger now Rambus, perhaps best known for its patent litigation, has acquired the CryptoCell and CryptoIsland Root of Trust technology from Arm, and will be offering these as part of its own security IP portfolio in future.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#69P69)
File under cost of doing business Blackbaud has agreed to pay $3 million to settle charges that it made misleading disclosures about a 2020 ransomware infection in which crooks stole more than a million files on around 13,000 of the cloud software slinger's customers.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#69P4N)
2023, just like 2008 Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) was shut down on Friday by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation because it ran out of money.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#69P0D)
Gotta go fast! The growing popularity of generative AI and availability of smart features in virtualization platforms like VMware's vSphere will help to drive faster networking into enterprise servers in 2023.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#69NY4)
Singapore's central bank has a gloomy vision of the future According to the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), trade barriers between US and China have resulted in geoeconomic fragmentation and will likely result in slower global growth and higher inflation.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#69NSD)
No DUV for you The Dutch government has formally joined US efforts to deny China access to equipment and software essential to expanding the Middle Kingdom's semiconductor manufacturing capabilities.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#69NMH)
That's equivalent to 271 Big Blue workers IBM chairman and CEO Arvind Krishna's 2022 financial package was a healthy $16.58 million – equivalent to the median pay for 271 of his employees.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#69NHK)
IQE says collapse in smartphone sales may wipe one-third off revenue in first half of 2023 Plunging demand for semiconductors is taking an obvious toll on the chip sector, and Brit compound semiconductor wafer maker IQE is warning of a serious dent in sales.…
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by Liam Proven on (#69NFS)
Is Lenovo's fastest, thinnest, lightest flagship good at this sort of thing? Hands-on The Reg FOSS desk took Lenovo's new Alder Lake-powered executive laptop for a spin. It's a lovely machine… but with some significant limitations.…
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by Jude Karabus on (#69NBQ)
Industry upstart preferred... for now Register Debate This week, Register readers debated the motion Graph databases do not provide a significant advantage over well-architected relational databases for most of the same use cases.…
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by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols on (#69NA0)
Like so many of his promises, it's probably one he can't keep Opinion On February 21, Twitter god-king Elon Musk proclaimed "our algorithm is made open source next week." He added it wouldn't work well at first, "but it will improve rapidly!" That hasn't happened.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#69N8R)
Even a hundred-volt jolt couldn’t convince one of them that hardware was the problem On Call As Friday rolls around it's natural to feel a little low on energy. But this week's On-Call – The Register's weekly tale of tech support trauma – is positively crackling with electricity to pep you up before the weekend!…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#69N7F)
Now drink your space juice It looks likely that the water on Earth is older than the Sun and the stuff we drink today probably isn't all that different than it was over 4.6 billion years ago when our star formed.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#69N68)
It’s red, it’s fast, it packs 4th-gen Xeons and Nvidia RTX 6000s, and it looks like it’s been run over by a sports car Lenovo has updated its range of desktop workstations, given them fourth-gen Xeon CPUs, the ability to handle four Nvidia GPUs, and a grille designed by Aston Martin.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#69N58)
Local clouds reportedly offering surprisingly cheap access to their banned comrades Chinese companies named by the US as prohibited from acquiring certain technologies are reportedly renting them instead from local cloud providers.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#69N49)
Silicon Valley Bank sold billions in bonds as startups struggle, crypto-centric Silvergate Bank just gave up Two tech-centric financial services operations have hit trouble, giving confidence in the sector another kicking.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#69N3K)
Company CISO acknowledges compromise of a single customer's creds, says incident is contained The CISO of Swiss cybersecurity firm Acronis has acknowledged a breach of the company’s systems but stated the incident only impacted a single customer and that all other data remains safe.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#69N2S)
Religious non-profit allegedly hoovered up location data from dating apps to ID clerics A Catholic clergy conformance organization has reportedly been buying mobile app tracking data to identify gay priests, and providing that information to bishops around the US.…
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