![]() |
Uncle Sam tells of crooks exploiting Pride Month The FTC is warning members of the LGBTQ+ community about online extortion via dating apps such as Grindr and Feeld.…
|
The Register
Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
Copyright | Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing |
Updated | 2025-05-04 08:30 |
![]() |
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60TMN)
Well, they did say from July, now they really mean from July 2023 America's aviation watchdog has said the rollout of 5G C-band coverage near US airports won't fully start until next year, delaying some travelers' access to better cellular broadband at crowded terminals.…
|
![]() |
by Thomas Claburn on (#60TMP)
Just days after being ordered to provide messages, Big Blue opts out of public trial Less than a week after IBM was ordered in an age discrimination lawsuit to produce internal emails in which its former CEO and former SVP of human resources discuss reducing the number of older workers, the IT giant chose to settle the case for an undisclosed sum rather than proceed to trial next month.…
|
![]() |
by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#60TGN)
Ad tracking poses a privacy and security risk in post-Roe America, lawmakers warn Democrat lawmakers want the FTC to investigate Apple and Google's online ad trackers, which they say amount to unfair and deceptive business practices and pose a privacy and security risk to people using the tech giants' mobile devices.…
|
![]() |
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60TE3)
Confuses rather than destroys unmanned aerials to better bring back intel, says Ukrainian designer What's said to be a Ukrainian-made long-range anti-drone rifle is one of the latest weapons to emerge from Russia's ongoing invasion of its neighbor.…
|
![]() |
by Dylan Martin on (#60TBN)
Fab frenemies: x86 giant set to give Taiwanese chipmaker more money as it revitalizes foundry business In yet another sign of how fortunes have changed in the semiconductor industry, Taiwanese foundry giant TSMC is expected to surpass Intel in quarterly revenue for the first time.…
|
![]() |
by Liam Proven on (#60TBP)
It's good to highlight some alternatives, but security issues are overblown Analysis A blog post calling for a boycott of the well-known 7-Zip compression app is attracting some discussion on Reddit.…
|
![]() |
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60T94)
Toyota says 'all of the hub bolts' can loosen even 'after low-mileage use' Toyota and Subaru are recalling several thousand electric vehicles that might spontaneously shed tires due to self-loosening hub bolts. …
|
![]() |
by Dan Robinson on (#60T95)
Company claims standard will improve performance in dense environments Alcatel-Lucent Enterprise is the latest networking outfit to add Wi-Fi 6E capability to its hardware, opening up access to the less congested 6GHz spectrum for business users.…
|
![]() |
by Tobias Mann on (#60T67)
Then again, why develop your own software à la HPE GreenLake when you can use someone else's? Analysis Lenovo fancies its TruScale anything-as-a-service (XaaS) platform as a more flexible competitor to HPE GreenLake or Dell Apex. Unlike its rivals, Lenovo doesn't believe it needs to mimic all aspects of the cloud to be successful.…
|
![]() |
by Tobias Mann on (#60T68)
What will it take to loosen the x86 giant's edge stranglehold? Analysis Supermicro launched a wave of edge appliances using Intel's newly refreshed Xeon-D processors last week. The launch itself was nothing to write home about, but a thought occurred: with all the hype surrounding the outer reaches of computing that we call the edge, you'd think there would be more competition from chipmakers in this arena.…
|
![]() |
by Richard Speed on (#60T36)
Launch window slides into 2023 or 2024 for asteroid-probing project Sadly for NASA's mission to take samples from the asteroid Psyche, software problems mean the spacecraft is going to miss its 2022 launch window.…
|
![]() |
by Dan Robinson on (#60T37)
National provider considering cost increase of 8%, which could be passed on to tech customers Taiwan's state-owned energy company is looking to raise prices for industrial users, a move likely to impact chipmakers such as TSMC, which may well have a knock-on effect on the semiconductor supply chain.…
|
![]() |
by Laura Dobberstein on (#60T0Z)
Some providing out-of-state medical expenses, others spout general pro-choice statements Several US tech companies have taken a stance or issued statements promising healthcare-related support for employees following the Supreme Court's ruling to overturn Roe v Wade last Friday.…
|
![]() |
by Simon Sharwood on (#60T10)
Gives cloudy email a kicking, too – but VDI should be safe in its bastions Cloudflare has added the ability to access private networks to its browser isolation service, and suggests the combo represents an alternative to virtual desktop infrastructure.…
|
![]() |
by Lindsay Clark on (#60SZD)
Evosys bags £2m in bid to replace SAP at Borough of Waltham Forest Oracle and systems integrator Evosys have won contracts to implement a new Oracle Fusion ERP system for the London Borough of Waltham Forest as part of a project which expects £12 million capex over three years.…
|
![]() |
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60SXN)
Also, Chrome add-ons are great for fingerprinting, and hacked hot tubs splurge details In brief A Japanese contractor working in the city of Amagasaki, near Osaka, reportedly mislaid a USB drive containing personal data on the metropolis's 460,000 residents.…
|
![]() |
by Rupert Goodwins on (#60SVZ)
Don't push me 'cos I'm close to the edge. And the edge is safer if you can take a step back Opinion Edge is terribly trendy. Move cloudy workloads as close to the user as possible, the thinking goes, and latency goes down, as do core network and data center pressures. It's true – until the routing sleight-of-hand breaks that diverts user requests from the site they think they're getting to the copies in the edge server. …
|
![]() |
by Richard Speed on (#60STM)
But I was only following the procedures! Who, Me? Monday is here, and with it a warning that steadfast determination to ignore instructions might not be such a silly thing after all. Welcome to Who, Me?…
|
![]() |
by Simon Sharwood on (#60SSM)
Live and work in Bali, pay tax at home The government of Indonesia has once again raised the idea of creating a "digital nomad visa" that would allow foreign workers to live and work in the tropical paradise of Bali, tax free, for five years.…
|
![]() |
by Simon Sharwood on (#60SRE)
VMware-powered sovereign cloud not going to challenge hyperscalers, but probably won't be the last such venture Hitachi has taken a modest step towards becoming a public cloud provider, with the launch of a VMware-powered cloud in Japan that The Register understands may not be its only such venture.…
|
![]() |
by Laura Dobberstein on (#60SQ7)
It's easy to see why – the question is, why now? China's internet regulator has launched an investigation into the security regime protecting academic journal database China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), citing national security concerns.…
|
![]() |
by Katyanna Quach on (#60SPE)
Plus: Yandex releases 100-billion-parameter language model for free, and more In brief US hardware startup Cerebras claims to have trained the largest AI model on a single device powered by the world's largest Wafer Scale Engine 2 chip the size of a plate.…
|
![]() |
by Simon Sharwood on (#60SMY)
Private offer 34 percent above share price is just the thing to change minds Customer service as-a-service vendor Zendesk has announced it will allow itself to be acquired for $10.2 billion by a group of investors led by private equity firm Hellman & Friedman, investment company Permira, and a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority.…
|
![]() |
by Laura Dobberstein on (#60SKQ)
But welcomes fast cross-border payments in central bank digital currencies In the same week that it welcomed the launch of a local center of excellence focused on crypto-inspired central bank digital currencies, Singapore's Monetary Authority (MAS) has warned crypto cowboys they face a rough ride in the island nation.…
|
![]() |
by Dylan Martin on (#60S9A)
Startup EdgeQ believes pay-for-what-you-use model will make 5G transition more cost-effective Interview While the IT industry waits to see if and when Intel will introduce software-defined silicon in Xeon CPUs, one startup us is moving ahead with plans to bring a pay-for-what-you-use pricing model to the telecom market with its "base station-on-a-chip" later this year.…
|
![]() |
by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#60RFX)
Why screw around with cryptography and keys when just stealing the info is good enough Feature US and European cops, prosecutors, and NGOs recently convened a two-day workshop in the Hague to discuss how to respond to the growing scourge of ransomware.…
|
![]() |
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60REF)
We're going hybrid or off-prem to retain and lure staff, say polled managers For bosses suffering the effects of the Great Resignation, IT decision makers taking part in this survey have a suggestion: go remote and you won't have any trouble hiring people.…
|
![]() |
by Katyanna Quach on (#60RA1)
NASA probe reveals strange hole created by suspected Chinese junk Pic When space junk crashed into the Moon earlier this year, it made not one but two craters on the lunar surface, judging from images revealed by NASA on Friday.…
|
![]() |
by Thomas Claburn on (#60R8Q)
Those town hall meetings that go off the rails? That's the internet all day, every day The two US senators behind a proposed law to bring order to cryptocurrency finance have published their legislation to Microsoft's GitHub to obtain input from the unruly public.…
|
![]() |
by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#60R6N)
We asked what they will do to prevent cases being built against women. So far: Nothing Period- and fertility-tracking apps have become weapons in Friday's post-Roe America.…
|
![]() |
by Thomas Claburn on (#60R5A)
'A humbling and unfortunate reminder' that monsters lurk under bridges Blockchain venture Harmony offers bridge services for transferring crypto coins across different blockchains, but something has gone badly wrong.…
|
![]() |
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60R41)
First steps by humans to recapture planet's natural satellite NASA is finally ready to launch its unmanned Orion spacecraft and put it in the orbit of the Moon. Lift-off from Earth is now expected in late August using a Space Launch System (SLS) rocket.…
|
![]() |
by Richard Speed on (#60QVP)
Because data flows into the United States, not because of that user interface Another kicking has been leveled at American tech giants by EU regulators as Italy's data protection authority ruled against transfers of data to the US using Google Analytics.…
|
![]() |
by Lindsay Clark on (#60QSJ)
Hopes of securing London listing for UK chip designer may be in vain Arm is most likely to list on the US stock exchange Nasdaq, according to Masayoshi Son, chief executive of SoftBank Group, which bought the chip designer in 2016 for $32 billion.…
|
![]() |
by Liam Proven on (#60QSK)
In grayscale, though. Optimistic plans for daylight-readable display and long-life laptop E-paper display startup Modos wants to make laptops, but is starting out with a standalone high-refresh-rate monitor first.…
|
![]() |
by Richard Speed on (#60QPV)
Meanwhile, 'search highlights' will tell you 'what's special about each day' Microsoft has dropped a preview of its next batch of Windows fixes, slipping a resolution for broken Wi-Fi hotspots in among the goodies.…
|
![]() |
by Dan Robinson on (#60QKX)
Arm ecosystem elbowing its way into third largest server vendor in the world China-based server maker Inspur has joined the Arm server ecosystem, unveiling a rackmount system using Arm-based chips.…
|
![]() |
by Lindsay Clark on (#60QKY)
As industry and governments push to get workers crammed into commuter trains, glass box edifices, tech boss says: 'Why?' Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff has doubled down on his company's stance on working from home and flexible working, that great pandemic debate.…
|
![]() |
by Dan Robinson on (#60QGY)
Record revenues buoyed by surge in demand over the last couple of years, but nothing lasts forever The semiconductor market is flattening out after a period of record revenues, according to research outfit Omdia.…
|
![]() |
by Richard Speed on (#60QEM)
More support engineers needed to keep the email flowing, it seems Microsoft has added a certification to augment the tired eyes and haunted expressions of Exchange support engineers.…
|
![]() |
by Richard Speed on (#60QCS)
A virtual world at your fingertips with the idea that you feel something gripping your hand Virtual reality is all well and good, but decent haptics and a bit of force feedback are essential for it to be truly immersive. The Register donned the Teslasuit Glove at the Goodwood Festival of Speed this week.…
|
![]() |
by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#60QCT)
Watching people's every move and collecting their info – not on our watch, says web ads giant Spyware developed by Italian firm RCS Labs was used to target cellphones in Italy and Kazakhstan — in some cases with an assist from the victims' cellular network providers, according to Google's Threat Analysis Group (TAG).…
|
![]() |
by Alistair Dabbs on (#60QAX)
I have decided to become a double-spaced, three-word sentenced, humble-bragtastic genius Something for the Weekend "I have just read your profile. Have you ever thought about becoming a real estate agent?"…
|
![]() |
by Richard Speed on (#60Q94)
And we would have gotten away with it, if it hadn't been for you meddling geeks! On Call A tale of theft, fraud and understanding the meaning of "Delete" to end your working week. Welcome to a legally questionable episode of On Call.…
|
![]() |
by Simon Sharwood on (#60Q7H)
Congrats, AWS, you’ve boldly gone where the Raspberry Pi has already been Amazon Web Services has proudly revealed that the first completely private expedition to the International Space Station carried one of its Snowcone storge appliances, and that the device worked as advertised.…
|
![]() |
by Dan Robinson on (#60Q7J)
Still no closer to releasing timeline for its '128 exaflops' AI super, though – and no one's tested the chips yet Tachyum, the outfit aiming to develop a "universal processor" for HPC and artificial intelligence workloads, has joined the European Technology Platform for High Performance Computing (ETP4HPC), a think-tank promoting European HPC research and innovation.…
|
![]() |
by Laura Dobberstein on (#60Q5V)
They're not lying when they say 'We stole your data' – the lie is about which data they lifted A state-sponsored Chinese threat actor has used ransomware as a distraction to help it conduct electronic espionage, according to security software vendor Secureworks.…
|
![]() |
by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#60Q4F)
And it's like, what ... 12, 13,000 total targets a year max, exec says NSO Group told European lawmakers this week that "under 50" customers use its notorious Pegasus spyware, though these customers include "more than five" European Union member states.…
|
![]() |
by Simon Sharwood on (#60Q4G)
Networking titan to shutter Russia and Belarus presence, after previously stopping operations Cisco has decided it's time to leave Russia and Belarus, almost four months after stopping operations in response to Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine.…
|