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by Jude Karabus on (#5ZHKC)
Notorious selfie-scraper must pay $9.43 million – less than half of predicted fine – says data regulator Updated The UK's data protection body today made good on its threat to fine controversial facial recognition company Clearview AI, ordering it to stop scraping the personal data of residents from the internet, delete what it already has, and pay a £7.5 million ($9.43 million) fine.…
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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 | 2025-05-04 21:45 |
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by Liam Proven on (#5ZHHR)
<movietrailer voice>The world was not ready for this gift. It is still not ready for this gift. Coming soon to a Gopherspace near you An announcement about a new handheld games console a few days ago caused confusion, because it was online but not on the web. It was published on Gopher.…
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by Rupert Goodwins on (#5ZHG7)
With web apps, Apple insists on taking the pith helmet Opinion It has been 14 years since Apple opened its App Store with its shiny shopfront of tempting toys and gloomy back office of rules and rentier revenues, but only now has the proposed EU Digital Markets Act threatened to end Apple's web browser engine monopoly. …
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by Richard Speed on (#5ZHEJ)
Not so much process privilege rings, more circles of hell Who, Me? Be careful what humorous messages you leave in your app, for you never know who might see them. Welcome to Who, Me?…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#5ZHD8)
Security engineer outlines self-help strategy for keeping software supply chain safe Following the recent disclosure of a technique for hijacking certain NPM packages, security engineer Danish Tariq has proposed a defensive strategy for those looking to assess whether their web apps include dependencies tied to subvertable email domains.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5ZHD9)
Survives all manner of indiginities in Reg tests but may stuggle to cross over from boots to suits If you drop Dell's Latitude 5430 laptop from hip height onto vinyl flooring that covers a concrete slab, it lands with a sharp crack, bounces a little, then skitters to a halt. Drop it two meters onto sodden grass and it lands with a meaty squish on its long rear edge. The impact pushes a spray of water and flecks of mud through the crack between the screen and keyboard, with a spot or two of each making it onto the keyboard's ASDF row.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#5ZHBP)
Redmond claims the numbers are scary, but won't release them Microsoft has sounded the alarm on DDoS malware called XorDdos that targets Linux endpoints and servers.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5ZHBQ)
AM5 socket to bring desktop CPUs to life in late 2022, mid-range laptop CPU to follow AMD has revealed more details of its Zen 4 processor architecture, a desktop CPU that puts it to work, and a socket to house that product.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#5ZHA6)
Less than two weeks into his new gig, Yoon cozies up to Biden as China and DPRK loom US president Biden and South Korea's new president Yoon Suk Yeol have pledged further co-operation in many technologies, including joint efforts to combat North Korea.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5ZH7S)
Michael Dell could be the key to any deal Broadcom is in early talks to buy VMware, according to The New York Times, Bloomberg, and Reuters.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5ZH73)
Adds 'feature activation' for Intel silicon, but Chipzilla still isn't saying what that means Linus Torvalds has released version 5.18 of the Linux kernel.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#5ZGTN)
Big OEMs hogging production and COVID causing supply issues The system-on-chip (SoC) side of the semiconductor industry is poised for growth between now and 2026, when it's predicted to be worth $6.85 billion, according to an analyst's report. …
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by Katyanna Quach on (#5ZGPV)
Plus: Next PyTorch release will support Apple GPUs so devs can train neural networks on their own laptops In brief Miscreants can easily steal someone else's identity by tricking live facial recognition software using deepfakes, according to a new report.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#5ZG53)
How? Founder tells The Register 'Robots… lots of robots' Imagine a future where racks of computer servers hum quietly in darkness below the surface of the Moon.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#5ZG15)
Also, Chinese IT admin jailed for deleting database, and the NSA promises no more backdoors In brief The notorious Russian-aligned Conti ransomware gang has upped the ante in its attack against Costa Rica, threatening to overthrow the government if it doesn't pay a $20 million ransom. …
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#5ZFK2)
Because Beijing isn't above covert ops to accomplish its five-year goals Chinese cyberspies targeted two Russian defense institutes and possibly another research facility in Belarus, according to Check Point Research.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#5ZFGZ)
Trade watchdog, and President, reminds that COPPA can ban ya The US Federal Trade Commission on Thursday said it intends to take action against educational technology companies that unlawfully collect data from children using online educational services.…
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by Dylan Martin on (#5ZFEX)
Chinese joint venture's ousted CEO tries to hang on - who will get control? The saga surrounding Arm's joint venture in China just took another intriguing turn: a mysterious firm named Lotcap Group claims it has signed a letter of intent to buy a 51 percent stake in Arm China from existing investors in the country.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#5ZFC8)
High pricing, lack of software make smartNICs a tough sell, despite offload potential SmartNICs have the potential to accelerate enterprise workloads, but don't expect to see them bring hyperscale-class efficiency to most datacenters anytime soon, ZK Research's Zeus Kerravala told The Register.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#5ZF9Z)
China refuses to share benchmarks, US sharpens focus on developing optimized software The US is racing to catch up with China in supercomputing performance amid fears that the country may widen its lead in exascale computers over the next decade, according to reports.…
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by Liam Proven on (#5ZF7G)
With any other portable, this would be bad news for existing owners Laptop vendor Framework Computer has launched new faster models. Unlike in the case of any other laptop maker, if you already have one, this is good news.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5ZF4D)
A couple of thruster failures shouldn't affect the Calamity Capsule's second attempt at reaching space station Two and a half years after its first disastrous launch, Boeing has once again fired its CST-100 Starliner capsule at the International Space Station.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#5ZF4E)
Factory is a model for one the company has planned in Texas US president Joe Biden kicked off his first Asian tour since taking office in South Korea, where he visited a Samsung semiconductor fab said to be the model for the company's planned plant in Taylor, Texas.…
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by Richard Currie on (#5ZF1B)
How to make a free messaging platform bought for $22 billion profitable At Meta's first Conversations keynote yesterday, the company announced the WhatsApp Cloud API, aimed at improving the customer service experience for businesses of all sizes.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5ZF1C)
May 10 update addressed serious vulns but also had problems of its own Microsoft has released an out-of-band patch to deal with an authentication issue that was introduced in the May 10 Windows update.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#5ZEYR)
Customers at other Sungard datacenters are not affected UK customers of datacenter and colo service provider Sungard Availability Services are to be transferred to Daisy Corporate Services, part of the Daisy Group, months after Sungard went into administration.…
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by Liam Proven on (#5ZEWE)
The granddaddy of FOSS UNIX just keeps on trucking – and is a lot easier to install this time round The latest version of FreeBSD, 13.1, was released this week for both 32 and 64-bit forms of x86, Arm, POWER – and 64-bit RISC-V.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#5ZETK)
Research claims it fails to autofill certain names in Han characters, Microsoft says it's technical error Updated Microsoft search engine Bing censors terms deemed sensitive in China from its autosuggestion feature internationally, according to research from Citizen Lab.…
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by Alistair Dabbs on (#5ZERW)
Hopefully an end to '... and you'll never guess what happened next!' Something for the Weekend Another coffee, please. Yes, I know we're about to start. There is always time for one more coffee. It's good for your brain. Thanks.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5ZEQ1)
Network? What's that when it's at home? On Call This week we bring you a shocking incident for a Register reader who was party to an electrical engineer's earthly delights.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5ZEKV)
Gitee apologises but won't explain why this is happening China’s approved GitHub clone, Gitee, has warned users that it will make all existing repositories private pending a mysterious review of their content.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#5ZEKW)
Browser makers line up for Google's extension system but complaints persist Mozilla on Wednesday launched a Developer Preview program to solicit feedback on Firefox extensions that implement Manifest v3, a Google-backed revision of browser extension architecture.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#5ZEJM)
Ban on shopping from September, rip and replace order with 2024 deadline The Canadian government has joined many of its allies and banned the use of Huawei and ZTE tech in its 5G networks, as part of a new telecommunications security framework.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5ZEHD)
But also makes it plain that offshore entities must comply India has slightly softened its controversial new reporting requirements for information security incidents and made it plain they apply to multinational companies.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5ZEFT)
Two becomes one as ThinkPad P16 stands alone and HX replaces mobile Xeon Lenovo has halved its range of portable workstations.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#5ZEDN)
Well, that clears things up? Maybe not. The US Justice Department has directed prosecutors not to charge "good-faith security researchers" with violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) if their reasons for hacking are ethical — things like bug hunting, responsible vulnerability disclosure, or above-board penetration testing.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#5ZECA)
AI chips are sucking down 600W+ and the solution could be to drown them. Intel this week unveiled a $700 million sustainability initiative to try innovative liquid and immersion cooling technologies to the datacenter.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#5ZE7E)
Swiss banks cough up around half of the proceeds of crime The US government has recovered over $15 million in proceeds from the 3ve digital advertising fraud operation that cost businesses more than $29 million for ads that were never viewed.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#5ZE5G)
Running ad auctions while also buying and selling ads may be outlawed for large firms A bipartisan group of US lawmakers has proposed legislation that would likely force Alphabet's Google, Meta's Facebook, and Amazon to divest portions of their ad businesses.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#5ZE5H)
Cupertino's 51% control is why NA market grew while the world shrunk, says Canalys Smartphone markets the world over are in decline, but that news doesn't appear to have reached North America, where the market grew by 4 percent in the first quarter of 2022.…
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by Dylan Martin on (#5ZE3A)
With few options, Russia will look to half-fast chips from Chinese maker With Russia cut off from foreign processor makers Intel and AMD, the country has been scrambling to switch to more local CPUs and components.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5ZE0Q)
MS's TPM tip finally gets a grip – but shh – don't mention the Chromebooks You can imagine the sighs of relief all round in Redmond, Washington this week as Acer launched its new TravelMate range, which has Microsoft's Pluton silicon built-in.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#5ZDXQ)
Working to compete with Intel as FastConnect comes to AMD-processor-powered PCs AMD and Qualcomm have rolled out a joint effort that brings remote management capabilities over Wi-Fi for AMD business systems, potentially boosting their appeal for corporate IT departments.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#5ZDTH)
CDN biz hopes merger will add a new way to use its edge services Updated Content delivery network Fastly is purchasing Glitch, the company behind the web-based IDE of the same name.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5ZDTJ)
If you're on Windows 10, and meet requirements, it's ready to rumble... and 22H2 is waiting in the wings Microsoft has quietly updated its release health dashboard and declared Windows 11 "designated for broad deployment."…
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by Dan Robinson on (#5ZDR4)
Just because companies are publicly decreasing carbon footprints doesn't mean their cash isn't doing the opposite Many large corporations are taking measures to reduce their carbon footprints, but a new report claims that for some, the greatest source of emissions is actually from investments being made with their wealth, and this is undermining their own environmental efforts.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#5ZDR5)
They're using the invasion 'to take aim at the usual adversaries,' Mandiant told The Reg Pro-Beijing and Iran miscreants are using the war in Ukraine to spread disinformation that supports these countries' political interests — namely, advancing anti-Western narratives – according to threat-intel experts at Mandiant.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5ZDMZ)
Attempt to be interactive meets cries of 'Someone dumped a text box right in the center of my desktop!' Microsoft has rolled out an Insider Build threatening "interactive content on the Windows desktop."…
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by Paul Kunert on (#5ZDN0)
Share price collapses 19% as COVID-19 policy hits supply chain Cisco Systems surprised Wall Street by warning investors that the Shanghai lockdown and the war in Ukraine will eradicate any revenue growth prospects in its current – and final – quarter of 2022.…
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