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by Jude Karabus on (#681KN)
Tis the extended season for layoffs The same day Google is allowing staffers to work from home while they process the news that it's firing 12,000 of them, fintech biz Capital One has cut over 1,000 roles in its Technology segment.…
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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 | 2025-05-14 13:00 |
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by Dan Robinson on (#681HZ)
Oh, snap... next gen networks suddenly not a must-have in this economic climate Sweden's Ericsson missed earnings estimates for the last quarter after telco customers reined in spending on 5G network expansion amid uncertainty about the future direction of the economy.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#681DW)
You’ve got 6 months to get into compliance, it tells yak-yak app Ireland's data protection authority has fined WhatsApp Ireland €5.5 million for breaches of the GDPR relating to its service and told it comply with data processing laws within six months.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#681BD)
What is this... the Eurovision chip contest? Intel appears to be casting doubt on previous proposals to build a chip factory in Italy, as the company plays off European countries against each other for the privilege of hosting its production facilities.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#6815Z)
Spare a thought for the workers who read the worst content scraped from the internet to keep you safe OpenAI reportedly hired workers in Kenya – screening tens of thousands of text samples for sexist, racist, violent and pornographic content – to help make its ChatGPT model less toxic.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#68142)
Some potential good news for those unhappy with pandemic-era lead times, prices After surging 28 percent in 2022, foundry revenues are set to plunge over the next 12 months as wafer demand slows, inventory consumption slumps, and geopolitical conflict drives chip designers out of China, according to Trendforce.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#6812A)
CEO says folks can work from home while they absorb the news, and 'dramatic' headcount growth in pandemic no longer matches 'economic reality' Google is to lay off 12,000 employees amid something of a pandemic reckoning for technology companies that recruited heavily in recent years and are now facing harsh realities of a cooling economy.…
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by Liam Proven on (#680YB)
RWAP Software owner Rich Mellor talks ZX81 sound cards and linking USB printers to parallel ports Retro Tech Week RWAP Software has been offering parts and upgrades for Sinclair Research computers since the mid-1980s. Owner Rich Mellor talked to El Reg about what got him into the business, what's kept him interested, as well as his new product – which is a very different beast.…
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by Richard Currie on (#680X0)
Surely there are quicker and more effective ways to end your co-workers Every office has one – the inexplicably cheerful, kind and generous co-worker who brings in cake and/or biscuits and leaves them somewhere for their weight-sensitive colleagues to graze on.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#680VZ)
Pet consultant took down the datacenter in attempt to find other people's errors On Call As the old saying goes, there are few certainties in life beyond death and taxes. But in this week's On-Call – The Register's regular reader-contributed tales of techies being asked to rescue the ridiculous – we shall consider another: new managers who needlessly change systems that work perfectly well.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#680TF)
No principles or virtues, people accepting everything it says – this bot is perfect for political life OpenAI's conversational language model ChatGPT has a lot to say, but is likely to lead you astray if you ask it for moral guidance.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#680TG)
Reed Hastings steps down as joint boss to become board chair The co-founder of vid-streamer Netflix, Reed Hastings, has announced he will step down as co-CEO.…
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Thanks for putting all your data in one basket As enterprises around the world continue to move to the cloud, cybercriminals are following right behind them.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#680S8)
Censors are on the lookout for showering under a waterfall of money, overeating, and more conventional sins The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) has preempted celebrations for Lunar New Year – the Year of the Rabbit* commences on January 22 – by warning citizens to keep evidence of seasonal overindulgence off the internet.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#680NV)
Google says don't worry, EFF warns of 'potentially horrific outcome' At least nine online pharmacies that sell abortion pills share information with Google and other third parties, such as search history and geolocation, that can be used to identify the websites' users, according to a ProPublica probe.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#680MY)
Sixth snafu in five years? Crooks have this useless carrier on speed dial T-Mobile US today said someone abused an API to download the personal information of 37 million subscribers.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#680KS)
Meanwhile, layoffs continue at Twitter, Meta, WeWork, many others Amazon on Wednesday emailed staff to explain what's said to be the largest layoff in the mega-corp's history.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#680JE)
That passwordless option is looking really good right about now The personal information of 35,000 PayPal users was exposed in December, according to a notification letter sent to the online payment company's customers this week.…
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Near 50% drop in extorted dosh ... or so it says here The amount of money paid to ransomware attackers dropped significantly in 2022, and not because the number of attacks fell.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#680CH)
Investors use up all their continues, game over A California judge has tossed out a lawsuit filed by Activision Blizzard shareholders against the company's leadership accusing them of breaching fiduciary duties by allowing a hostile environment to develop that top brass tried to hide from the public.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#680AN)
That'll definitely teach them to look out for their workers Amazon has been hit with a trio of citations from US safety inspectors who say their investigations found "serious violations" of the Occupational Safety and Health Act at warehouses in New York, Illinois and Florida.…
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by Liam Proven on (#6808C)
Lewis Rosenthal talks about why some companies still need to run OS/2 today – including on UEFI and GPT hardware Retro Tech Week Although the creator of OS/2 now owns Red Hat and has other fish to try, OS/2 lives on. The Reg spoke with Arca Noae's Lewis Rosenthal about the issues of updating OS/2 Warp for modern PCs in 2023 – and beyond.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#6805D)
Hit up Cumulus Data if you want your racks running on low-cost, zero-carbon energy US-based Cumulus Data says it is constructing a datacenter campus adjacent to a nuclear power station in order to directly obtain low-cost, zero-carbon energy for prospective tenants.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#6802X)
Bunfight over support for proprietary Unix operating system ends with a confidential whimper HPE and Oracle have settled their long-running legal case over alleged copyright infringement regarding Solaris software updates for HPE customers, but it looks like the nature of the settlement is going to remain under wraps.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6800A)
Great, now staff and students can stop scrolling and get back to work Faculty and students at the University of Texas at Austin (UT) this week became the latest members of a public US university to lose access to Chinese video app TikTok via campus networks.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#67ZXM)
Controversial policy change forces chief product officer to speak out Adobe chief product officer Scott Belsky has responded to criticism of the company's content analysis policies by saying it has never used customers' creations to train generative AI models.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#67ZVG)
Social engineering helped intruders break into customers' inboxes again Email marketing service Mailchimp has confirmed intruders have gained access to more than 100 customer accounts after successfully deploying a social engineering attack.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#67ZRZ)
Hey Siri, did you know know that swatting is a bug, not a feature? An Australian personal trainer's Apple Watch inadvertently summoned 15 police to a suspected shooting that was nothing of the sort.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#67ZS0)
Bit factory giants see growth slimming in economically challenged times, but party still far from over Research from tech services membership and standards body The Uptime Institute is showing slowing growth in the major cloud providers, suggesting that the era of hyper-expansion is drawing to a close.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#67ZPX)
Simulates the Sun's atmosphere, peers deep into Earth's interior, and can probably run Crysis Finland's LUMI supercomputer has hit a new milestone, successfully completing the pilot phase of its GPU partition that extends the processing power of the system.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#67ZN2)
Get your eyepatch out: Cyber attacks on the high seas are trending A Norwegian maritime risk management business is getting a lesson in that very area, after a ransomware attack forced its ShipManager software offline and left 1,000 ships without a connection to on-shore servers. …
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by Tobias Mann on (#67ZK8)
Server silos didn't see today's watt-gobbling, space-heater chips coming In pursuit of ever-higher compute density, chipmakers are juicing their chips with more and more power, and according to the Uptime Institute, this could spell trouble for many legacy datacenters ill equipped to handle new, higher wattage systems.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#67ZHN)
More stock is NOT wanted as phone shipments plunge to lowest point in decade, Apple floats to top Against a backdrop of rising inflation and a less than certain economy in various parts of the world, the volume of global phones shipments is at the lowest rate in a decade.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#67ZGT)
Companies want their data near them, but that doesn't mean they are going back on prem Businesses are moving IT infrastructure closer to their offices and therefore working with many local clouds and colocation facilities, but are not going back to on-prem, according to Acronis CEO Patrick Pulvermueller.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#67ZF3)
History tells us it will flop. But success might not be the real goal, so much as poking Big Tech Analysis India's government has reportedly teamed with academia and startups to create its own mobile operating system dubbed IndOS, in the name of competition.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#67ZDX)
It’s not Google's plan. There’s no way it’s Google's plan. It was Google's plan Google has begun broadly enabling case randomization in domain queries sent to authoritative name servers, in an effort to make cache poisoning attacks less effective.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#67ZCR)
Worse still, human editors appear not to have caught the mistakes Consumer tech outlet CNET is reviewing all articles it published that were written with the help of AI, after it was found some contained incorrect information.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#67ZBJ)
Private services smeared for 'disorderly expansion and data security problems' China's government has announced it's built its own rideshare and transport-as-a-service platform.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#67ZAM)
Meanwhile SBF proclaims he's both innocent and solvent Liquidators at bankrupt crypto exchange FTX say they've thus far located $5.5 billion in assets, and confirmed that $415 million stolen in a November hack is still missing. …
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#67Z9E)
Damages and security improvements? Or maybe settle for a neon bird light A Twitter user has sued the troubled social media platform over an alleged data leak that exposed more than 200 million account users' information.…
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Want to access Office tools? Don’t try to go back in time Users running the latest versions of Windows 11 are losing some Microsoft apps after running System Restore.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#67Z68)
As hundreds of staff axed this week More than 4,000 public-facing Sophos firewalls remain vulnerable to a critical remote code execution bug disclosed last year and patched months later, according to security researchers.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#67Z4E)
Warrantless surveillance branded illegal, said to unfairly target the poor, immigrants, minorities US government investigators have been demanding and receiving millions of money-transfer records from Western Union and similar outfits. Now US Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) wants an investigation into this bulk financial surveillance.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#67Z2D)
x86 giant wants to sub [spending], 10 * 1000 * 1000 * 1000 Nearly two years after taking over as CEO, Pat Gelsinger's master plan to reinvent Intel is on uncertain footing as the chipmaker struggles financially and fights for government subsidies it says are necessary to keep its foundry expansion on track.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#67Z0P)
Elon should stick to throwing rocks at his truck windows Allegations that Tesla staged a 2016 video demonstrating full self driving have resurfaced, and this time it's not an anonymous source making the claims – it's testimony from Tesla's own director of Autopilot software, Ashok Elluswamy.…
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by Liam Proven on (#67YYX)
What is dead may never die, and it's all thanks to Jim Hall Retro Tech Week The last mainstream DOS-based OS was Windows ME, which went out of support 20 years ago. And yet, thanks to free software, DOS lives on. We spoke to FreeDOS founder Jim Hall about how the project started and how it's progressing.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#67YWB)
And no more geofencing around health clinics either A bill proposed by Washingston state lawmakers would make it illegal for period-tracking apps, Google or any other website to sell consumers' health data while also making it harder for them to collect and share this personal information.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#67YSW)
Study says this would give old power units years of useful life once unsuitable for cars EV batteries could help meet short-term electricity grid storage demand by as early as 2030 in most parts of the world, scientists are claiming.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#67YQA)
But tech research giant Gartner says spending still rosy despite job loss clouds Some enterprise tech CEOs suffered a degree of over-optimism in their hiring strategies during and coming out of the pandemic, according to a senior Gartner soothsayer.…
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