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by Katyanna Quach on (#5WDV4)
But hey, new rules on deleting your selfies America's Internal Revenue Service has confirmed taxpayers will not be forced to use facial recognition to verify their identity. The agency also set out rules for which images will be deleted.…
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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 | 2025-05-06 06:16 |
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5WDS8)
Plus: Rogue CEO's outfit could derail public listing Allen Wu, chairman and CEO of Arm's Chinese joint-venture Arm China, thinks the collapse of Nvidia’s attempt to buy Arm will be better for the worldwide technology industry – and for China.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#5WDRJ)
Academics found TrustZone-level code could not be trusted to keep secrets Academics at Tel Aviv University in Israel have found that recent Android-based Samsung phones shipped with design flaws that allow the extraction of secret cryptographic keys.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#5WDP0)
Get ready for robot lobbyists to persuade robot lawmakers to pass robot-friendly laws? AI algorithms cannot copyright the digital artwork they generate, the US Copyright Office has insisted.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#5WDGM)
Checks checks your privilege privileges Google's in-house incubator Area 120 has introduced a service called Checks to help mobile app developers understand how their applications handle data and automate privacy compliance.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#5WD85)
25,000 GitHub stars since its introduction in 2017 Hasura, which provides tools for the GraphQL data language, has pulled in $100m funding that gives it a nominal valuation of $1bn.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5WD5D)
Affected users: Is this a not-so-subtle hint from the boss? Slack has fallen over for a subset of users, as the messaging platform admitted that "something's not quite right" with a number of its critical services.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5WD2M)
What do we want? Static typing! The State of JavaScript 2021 survey has arrived, a little later than planned (no jokes about language performance, please) and in the wake of a somewhat embarrassing data leak.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5WD2N)
HPE and Qualcomm did likewise last week, because vanilla x86 isn’t going to cut it on the edge Dell and Marvell have linked arms to create an accelerator card for servers used in 5G networks.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#5WD00)
Challenges to blanket bans on PSCs could face long road to redemption IT contractors who have faced blanket bans on employment via their personal services companies (PSCs) could face years trying to challenge the decision, according to officials from the UK's tax collector.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#5WCW7)
Open source + public key generation = no alerts, says infosec startup An infosec startup says it has built an Apple Airtag clone that bypasses anti-stalking protection features while running on Apple's Find My protocol.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#5WCTD)
Good luck finding public support for that one Lawyers for EncroChat encrypted phone users have begged the EU to halt court cases using evidence from the compromised mobile network, saying evidence disclosure breaches the political bloc's laws.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5WCS0)
Something for the school holidays? A group of The Register's writers (only just) escaped The National Museum of Computing's Escape Room Experience after learning a bit about cryptography and testing the patience of the museum's volunteers.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5WCQX)
But local services remain spotty after volcanic eruption The Kingdom of Tonga's sole submarine cable connection to the world has been restored.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5WCNT)
Shifting to measuring results of its trademark workflows, not just building 'em. And it comes with a 'bat-phone' ServiceNow will soon release mobile apps that allow real-time tracking of metrics, so business leaders can see the progress of digital transformation initiatives.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5WCK7)
'Singularity' uses novel scheduling to wring more work out of infrastructure Microsoft has revealed it operates a planet-scale distributed scheduling service for AI workloads that it has modestly dubbed "Singularity".…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5WCJ5)
Wants latency-tolerant apps moved to new datacenters in remote western regions, other workloads out of big cities China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has outlined plans for a massive migration of computing resources to more efficient facilities.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#5WC1X)
Business demand creates double whammy on recruitment pressure Skills-related issues have hit a quarter of SAP users, in some cases putting projects on hold, according to a survey of companies in the Americas.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5WC00)
Windows giant promises 20 more years on 20th anniversary of the tech Microsoft says the first preview of .NET 7 is on its way.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#5WBY8)
Data centre workloads going up, so US govt agency gives $$ for better thermal architecture With ever more compute power needed all over the world, Bell Labs has been tasked by the US Department of Energy (DoE) to develop ways of making data centres more energy efficient.…
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by Rupert Goodwins on (#5WBWN)
Feisty indies that do too well don't stay indie for long Opinion The one thing AWS can't offer is not being AWS. Google and Microsoft can, but then you're stuck with Google and Microsoft. Each of these cloud infrastructure options – AWS, GCP and Azure – are big, centralised components of bigger organisations with other things on their minds, and a deep aversion to sharing customers.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#5WBVA)
Redundancy may not be a bad idea after damage to sister links Construction has begun on a 19,200km submarine cable running from Singapore to France, Singaporean telco Singtel said on Monday.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5WBSR)
Back online after a week, but users not impressed with tech refresh Users have complained of missing data and trouble logging in after the UK government updated its old probate search service.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#5WBRM)
Plus advice for Cisco admins from the NSA and blurring's not the best In brief If you're using the UpdraftPlus WordPress plugin to back up your systems, you'll need it patched – or else risk sharing your backups with strangers.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5WBQ9)
'If it works already, why pay' says the boss... because of course he does Who, Me? Time bombs and shareware feature in today's edition of Who, Me? as a boss's big spendy vehicle leaves a coder out of pocket.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5WBMT)
Alleges Middle Kingdom's courts make it impossible to chase manufacturers who won't respect IP rights The European Union has signaled its intention to file a dispute with the World Trade Organization (WTO) over China's treatment of intellectual property used in mobile phones.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#5WBMV)
The uncanny valley has become shallow and short Humans can no longer reliably tell the difference between a real human face and an image of a face generated by artificial intelligence, according to a pair of researchers.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5WBJW)
DoJ also creates two teams to prevent abuse of cryptocurrency – who knew that happens? The United States Department of Justice (DoJ) has revealed new policies that may see it undertake pre-emptive action against cyber threats.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5WBHA)
Maybe they've been spooked by new government scheme to expose VPN users' IP addresses? India has revealed the identities of companies that have applied to build semiconductor manufacturing facilities on its soil under a $10 billion subsidy scheme – and none are substantial chipmakers.…
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by Liam Proven on (#5WA76)
Try it in your browser Almost exactly a year after we last covered it, an experimental version of LibreOffice compiled to WebAssembly (nicknamed LOWA) has appeared.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#5WA1G)
Or you could think of them as a superuser password reset function The snap-confine tool in the Linux world's Snap software packaging system can be potentially exploited by ordinary users to gain root powers, says Qualys.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#5W9T1)
Agency quiet on the selection criteria but at least the price is right The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency (CISA) has published a web catalog of free cybersecurity resources in the hope that those overseeing critical infrastructure can use the tools to better secure their systems.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#5W9T2)
As sanctioned Russian infosec firm says it has working exploit code Adobe has put out a warning about another critical security bug affecting its Magento/Adobe Commerce product – and IT pros need to install a second patch after an initial update earlier this week failed to fully plug the first one.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#5W9QP)
Signs that interest in the market is ramping up Quantum computing startup Classiq has raised $33m in a Series B funding round from investors including HPE and Samsung, a sign that interest in the emerging market may be stirring.…
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by Liam Proven on (#5W9N6)
RIP. You brought hardware-accelerated 3D to many Linux programs The GNOME Project has announced that it's retiring the Clutter library, the tool that bought OpenGL-based hardware rendering to Linux in 2006.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#5W9J7)
Sanctions already in place, blockade set to be rolled into telecoms law Updated The British government has started a consultation to find ways to legally remove the equipment of telecoms giant Huawei from its 5G networks by the end of 2027.…
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Reg writers and readers wrangle over rights and realities Register Debate Can you have a debate on privacy without mentioning Orwell and 1984 or Bentham's Panopticon?…
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by Dan Robinson on (#5W9DA)
Pair aim to deliver the industry's first fully optimised vDU HPE continues edge into telecoms, and is now working with Qualcomm to on hardware for 5G networks, specifically a next generation of 5G distributed units based on HPE servers and Qualcomm's 5G RAN (radio access network) accelerator cards to support high capacity and low-latency workloads.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#5W9AN)
It shouldn't affect costs, but it will, says software asset management intel org Analysis Both the UK and the US have recorded the highest inflation figures for decades. With inflation in the Eurozone hitting similar levels, the news is set to mark the end of more than a decade of ultra-low interest rates in the West.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5W98C)
No more local accounts on bleeding-edge build, and you need a Microsoft account too Microsoft has slapped an internet connectivity requirement on the Dev Channel version of Windows 11 Pro setup and warned that a Microsoft account will be required for future builds in the Insider programme.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#5W96G)
Pandemic-induced supply chain imbalance did it PC OEMs are holding 10 weeks or more of DRAM inventory thanks to hesitancy of procurement departments to stock memory chips, says market intelligence firm TrendForce.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#5W96H)
All right stop, collaborate and listen, 'soft is back with some theft protection Microsoft has some advice on how to defend against "ice phishing" and other novel attacks that aim to empty cryptocurrency wallets, for those not already abstaining.…
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by Alistair Dabbs on (#5W94T)
Quality time with human beings? Nah. Gimme some free Monster Munch Something for the Weekend How is your Great Resignation coming along? Still toying with that CV/résumé? Me too!…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#5W93B)
Institution also relies on German vendor for data warehouse software City, University of London is sizing up the market for a new SaaS ERP system set to replace its SAP ECC software in a contract worth up to £17m.…
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by Richard Speed on (#5W91Y)
He followed the instructions... blindly On Call Welcome to another edition of On Call in which minnows get munched and a Register reader recalls the headaches caused by the file extension shenanigans of a certain tech giant.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5W8Z9)
See? Not everything old from IBM is being ignored The free open source web browser Otter – which uses the Chromium browser engine at the heart of Google's Chrome and Microsoft's Edge – is being ported to OS/2.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#5W8YJ)
Trade watchdog admits China is #1 ... at cranking out counterfeit products, sometimes with forced labor An updated US Trade Representative's Office register of online and physical markets that reportedly sell or facilitate fake goods has added AliExpress and WeChat to its already China-heavy list.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#5W8WX)
Financial allegations could make nice change from accusations of being Beijing's eavesdropping machine The Indian Government's Income Tax Department has raided the local offices of Chinese telecoms giant Huawei as part of an investigation into whether or not the controversial company has met its local taxation obligations.…
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