Feed the-register The Register

The Register

Link https://www.theregister.com/
Feed http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom
Copyright Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing
Updated 2025-05-04 11:28
Leading Arch Linux derivative Manjaro puts out version 21.3
A simpler, easier remix sounds like a good thing, but glitches like these shouldn't be in a point release Version 21.3 of Manjaro - codenamed "Ruah" - is here, with kernel 5.15, but don't let its beginner-friendly billing fool you: you will need a clue with this one.…
Okta says Lapsus$ incident was actually a brilliant zero trust demonstration
Once former supplier Sitel coughed up its logs, it became apparent the attacker was hemmed in Okta has completed its analysis of the March 2022 incident that saw The Lapsus$ extortion crew get a glimpse at some customer information, and concluded that its implementation of zero trust techniques foiled the attack.…
Spain, Austria not convinced location data is personal information
Privacy group NOYB sues to get telcos to respect GDPR data access rights Some authorities in Europe insist that location data is not personal data as defined by the EU's General Data Protection Regulation.…
Mars Express orbiter to get code update after 19 years
And over millions of miles, too. Piece of cake!? The software on ESA's Mars Express spacecraft is to be upgraded after nearly two decades, giving the orbiter capabilities to hunt for water beneath the planet and study its larger moon, Phobos.…
Liftoff at last for South Korean space program
Satellite-deploying rocket finally launches – after a few setbacks South Korea's Aerospace Research Institute (KARI) yesterday succeeded in its endeavor to send the home-grown Nuri launcher into space, then place a working satellite in orbit.…
Tencent's WeChat wants no more talk of cryptocurrency and NFTs
In unrelated news, China's rollout of a central bank digital currency continues China's ban on cryptocurrency mining – and general dislike of any form of blockchain-based assets – has seen web giant Tencent clamp down on discussion of the subjects on its massive WeChat and Weixin messaging platforms.…
HCL to end all support for old versions of Notes and Domino in 2024
As if users needed any more reminders they’re stuck on a dying platform HCL has given users of versions 9.x and 10.x of its Domino groupware platform two years warning that they'll have to upgrade or live without support.…
AWS buys before it tries with quantum networking center
Fundamental problems of qubit physics aside, the cloud giant thinks it can help Nothing in the quantum hardware world is fully cooked yet, but quantum computing is quite a bit further along than quantum networking – an esoteric but potentially significant technology area, particularly for ultra-secure transactions. Amazon Web Services is among those working to bring quantum connectivity from the lab to the real world. …
Samsung invests in ML chip startup NeuReality
Coining the term hardware-based 'AI hypervisor' has to be worth several million, dontcha think? The venture capital arm of Samsung has cut a check to help Israeli inference chip designer NeuReality bring its silicon dreams a step closer to reality.…
Microsoft promises to tighten access to AI it now deems too risky for some devs
Deep-fake voices, face recognition, emotion, age and gender prediction ... A toolbox of theoretical tech tyranny Microsoft has pledged to clamp down on access to AI tools designed to predict emotions, gender, and age from images, and will restrict the usage of its facial recognition and generative audio models in Azure.…
For a few days earlier this year, rogue GitHub apps could have hijacked countless repos
A bit of a near-hit for the software engineering world A GitHub bug could have been exploited earlier this year by connected third-party apps to hijack victims' source-code repositories.…
Info on 1.5m people stolen from US bank in cyberattack
Time to rethink that cybersecurity strategy? A US bank has said at least the names and social security numbers of more than 1.5 million of its customers were stolen from its computers in December.…
Top chip foundries grow amid electronics spending slowdown. Except Samsung
Chaebol hit by lower demand for smartphones and TVs plus 4nm yield issues The demand for consumer electronics has slowed down in the face of inflation – but that didn't stop nine of the world's 10 largest contract chip manufacturers from growing in the first three months of the year.…
GitHub's AI code assistant Copilot takes flight. And that'll be $10 a month, please
You wanna bug fix and chill? Microsoft's GitHub on Tuesday released its Copilot AI programming assistance tool into the wild after a year-long free technical trial.…
Toyota wants 'closed loop' EV batteries in its future cars
Automaker wants to develop recycling, remanufacturing processes Toyota has ambitious plans for the future of its electric vehicles, and it's turning to a Tesla founder to make them happen.…
RISC OS: 35-year-old original Arm operating system is alive and well
1980s refugee, open source, and runs on modern kit RISC OS, the operating system of the original Arm computer, the Acorn Archimedes, is still very much alive – and doing relatively well for its age.…
Lenovo, Barcelona Supercomputing Center sign joint research deal
Collab to 'generate significant returns' for Europe in science, tech, economy Lenovo has inked an agreement with Spain's Barcelona Supercomputing Center for research and development work in various areas of supercomputer technology.…
Tesla lawsuit alleges unlawful layoffs at Nevada gigafactory
It's the second time a Musk-owned company has been accused of WARN Act violations Tesla is facing another lawsuit, and it's treading over old territory with this one. Fired Gigafactory workers are alleging that the electric car maker improperly terminated more than 500 people.…
AMD refreshes Ryzen Embedded line with R2000 series
The target? Thin clients and industrial devices – with new SoC family running up to 4 independent displays Embedded World AMD is bringing to market a new generation of Ryzen chips for embedded apps promising more CPU cores, enhanced built-in graphics and expanded I/O connectivity to drive kit such as IoT devices and thin clients.…
NASA tricks Artemis launch computer by masking data showing a leak
Plus it aborts ISS reboost. Not the greatest start to the week, was it? NASA engineers had to work fast to avoid another leak affecting the latest Artemis dry run, just hours after an attempt to reboost the International Space Station (ISS) via the Cygnus freighter was aborted following a few short seconds.…
Cloudflare explains how it managed to break the internet
'Network engineers walked over each other's changes' A large chunk of the web (including your own Vulture Central) fell off the internet this morning as content delivery network Cloudflare suffered a self-inflicted outage.…
HashiCorp tool sniffs out configuration drift
OK, which of those engineers tweaked the settings? When infrastructure shifts away from state defined by original code HashiConf HashiCorp has kicked off its Amsterdam conference with a raft of product announcements, including a worthwhile look into infrastructure drift and a private beta for HCP Waypoint.…
Investors start betting against Bitcoin with short-trade products
Some crypto-bros keep the faith in the face of market onslaught ProShares, the issuer of exchange-traded funds with around $65 billion under management, has launched the first short Bitcoin exchange-traded product in the US, offering a way for investors to make money from the ongoing crypto-currency meltdown.…
Microsoft pulls Windows 10/11 installation websites in Russia
Big Tech sanctions continue to roll in, Putin retaliates with counter sanctions Microsoft has blocked the installation of Windows 10 and 11 in Russia from the company's official website, Russian state media reported on Sunday.…
1Password's Insights tool to help admins monitor users' security practices
Find the clown who chose 'password' as a password and make things right 1Password, the Toronto-based maker of the identically named password manager, is adding a security analysis and advice tool called Insights from 1Password to its business-oriented product.…
Micron aims 1.5TB microSD card at video surveillance market
Ideal for corporate fleet dash cameras, smart home security, police bodycams, VSaaS and more, says chip giant Embedded World Chipmaker Micron is offering a microSD Card for embedded applications with an impressive 1.5TB capacity, enough to hold four months of continuously recorded security camera footage, according to the company.…
A great day for non-robots: iOS 16 will bypass CAPTCHAs
A bot says what? Apple relies on IETF standards to remove annoyance, citing privacy and accessibility Apple has introduced a game-changer into its upcoming iOS 16 for those who hate CAPTCHAs, in the form of a feature called Automatic Verification.…
Linux Foundation thinks it can get you interested in smartNICs
Step one: Make them easier to program The Linux Foundation wants to make data processing units (DPUs) easier to deploy, with the launch of the Open Programmable Infrastructure (OPI) project this week.…
UK's Post Office shells out for SAP software it thought it had
'Significantly under-licenced' but didn't factor in Customer Success Manager when dealing with reseller The Post Office, a UK government-owned company, has awarded SAP a contract worth up to £2 million for software services following a misunderstanding of its SAP licences and service bundles.…
Google, EFF back Cloudflare in row over pirate streams
Ban akin to 'ordering a telephone company to prevent a person from having conversations' over its lines Google, EFF, and the Computer and Communications Industry Association (CCIA) have filed court documents supporting Cloudflare after it was sued for refusing to block a streaming site.…
How refactoring code in Safari's WebKit resurrected 'zombie' security bug
Fixed in 2013, reinstated in 2016, exploited in the wild this year A security flaw in Apple's Safari web browser that was patched nine years ago was exploited in the wild again some months ago – a perfect example of a "zombie" vulnerability.…
Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio: Too edgy for comfort?
And perhaps too heavy, which is a weighty issue for a machine that turns into a tablet Desktop Tourism My 20-year-old son is an aspiring athlete who spends a lot of time in the gym and thinks nothing of lifting 100 kilograms in various directions. So I was a little surprised when I handed him Microsoft’s Surface Laptop Studio and he declared it uncomfortably heavy.…
End of the road for biz living off free G Suite legacy edition
Firms accustomed to freebies miffed that web giant's largess doesn't last After offering free G Suite apps for more than a decade, Google next week plans to discontinue its legacy service – which hasn't been offered to new customers since 2012 – and force business users to transition to a paid subscription for the service's successor, Google Workspace.…
CISA and friends raise alarm on critical flaws in industrial equipment, infrastructure
Nearly 60 holes found affecting 'more than 30,000' machines worldwide Fifty-six vulnerabilities – some deemed critical – have been found in industrial operational technology (OT) systems from ten global manufacturers including Honeywell, Ericsson, Motorola, and Siemens, putting more than 30,000 devices worldwide at risk, according to the US government's CISA and private security researchers. …
Voicemail phishing emails steal Microsoft credentials
As always, check that O365 login page is actually O365 Someone is trying to steal people's Microsoft 365 and Outlook credentials by sending them phishing emails disguised as voicemail notifications.…
AMD to end Threadripper Pro 5000 drought for non-Lenovo PCs
As the House of Zen kills off consumer-friendly non-Pro TR chips A drought of AMD's latest Threadripper workstation processors is finally coming to an end for PC makers who faced shortages earlier this year all while Hong Kong giant Lenovo enjoyed an exclusive supply of the chips.…
Workers win vote to form first-ever US Apple Store union
Results set to be ratified by labor board by end of the week Workers at an Apple Store in Towson, Maryland have voted to form a union, making them the first of the iGiant's retail staff to do so in the United States.…
If Twitter forgets your timeline preference, and you're using Safari, this is why
Privacy through amnesia not ideal for remembering user choice Apple's Intelligent Tracking Protection (ITP) in Safari has implemented privacy through forgetfulness, and the result is that users of Twitter may have to remind Safari of their preferences.…
DRAM prices to drop 3-8% due to Ukraine war, inflation
Wait, we’ll explain As the world continues to grapple with unrelenting inflation for many products and services, the trend of rising prices is expected to have the opposite impact on memory chips for PCs, servers, smartphones, graphics processors, and other devices.…
Intel demands $625m in interest from Europe on overturned antitrust fine
Chip giant still salty Having successfully appealed Europe's €1.06bn ($1.2bn) antitrust fine, Intel now wants €593m ($623.5m) in interest charges.…
Metaverse progress update: Some VR headset prototypes nowhere near shipping
But when it does work, bet you'll fall over yourselves to blow ten large on designer clobber for your avy Facebook owner Meta's pivot to the metaverse is drawing significant amounts of resources: not just billions in case, but time. The tech giant has demonstrated some prototype virtual-reality headsets that aren't close to shipping and highlight some of the challenges that must be overcome.…
Former AMD chip architect says it was wrong to can Arm project
Cancelled the K12 CPU? Big mistake. Huge, says Jim Keller Amid the renewed interest in Arm-based servers, it is easy to forget that one company with experience in building server platforms actually brought to market its own Arm-based processor before apparently losing interest: AMD.…
NASA's SOFIA aircraft preps for final flights ahead of mission end
With operations deadline in September, team eager to squeeze more data out of infrared observatory The SOFIA aircraft has returned to New Zealand for a final time ahead of the mission's conclusion later this year.…
Wi-Fi hotspots and Windows on Arm broken by Microsoft's latest patches
Only way to resolve is a rollback – but update included security fixes Microsoft's latest set of Windows patches are causing problems for users.…
If AI chatbots are sentient, they can be squirrels, too
Plus: FTC warns against using ML for automatic content moderation, and more In Brief No, AI chatbots are not sentient.…
Plot to defeat crypto meltdown: Solend votes to seize, liquidate whale account
95% of SOL deposits from 1 person, so margin selloffs could mean collapse Decentralized finance lending platform Solend tried to fend off the effects of the crypto meltdown at the weekend when 97.5 percent of its users voted to give it emergency powers to liquidate its largest customer account. A second vote held today reversed the first.…
US lawsuit alleges tool used by hospitals shares patient data with Meta
Booking appointments and other interactions with hospital portals can lead to some medical details being shared for advertising, class action claims Social media megacorp Meta is the target of a class action suit which claims potentially thousands of medical details of hospital patients were shared with its Facebook brand.…
Capital One: Convicted techie got in via 'misconfigured' AWS buckets
Assistant US attorney: 'She wanted data, she wanted money, and she wanted to brag' Updated A former Seattle tech worker has been convicted of wire fraud and computer intrusions in a US District Court.…
Atos CFO to follow CEO out the door following 'Evidian' split plans
Plus: Each of the new orgs gets its own finance officer, if the split goes ahead in second half of 2023 French IT services provider Atos has confirmed the departure of its chief financial officer, just days after the CEO resigned in apparent disagreement with a company-wide restructure proposed by the board.…
There are 24.6 billion sets of credentials up for sale on the dark web
Plus: Citrix ASM has some really bad bugs, and more In brief More than half of the 24.6 billion stolen credential pairs available for sale on the dark web were exposed in the past year, the Digital Shadows Research Team has found.…
...317318319320321322323324325326...