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Updated 2025-05-18 17:45
US Government Accountability Office dumps sack of coal on NASA's desk over Moon mission naughtiness
It'll be fine, just keep giving Boeing money Those within NASA hoping for some festive treats were in for disappointment this week as the US Government Accountability Office (GAO) administered a kicking over the agency's beleaguered Artemis programme.…
GitHub will no longer present a cookie notification banner – because it's scrapping non-essential cookies
Privacy turns out to be fairly easy GitHub on Thursday said it has removed all cookie banners from its website, a decision the company is making in the interest of privacy, despite the claimed popularity of its disclosure interface.…
Hey Presto! Teradata admits its vision is dead by hooking QueryGrid analytics platform up to rival data warehouses
Snowflake? We can query that Enterprise data warehouse stalwart Teradata has capped a difficult year with an update to Teradata QueryGrid, which promises to connect customers to a vast array of new data sources – a decidedly underwhelming move, according to some.…
AWS Location Service aims to rescue devs from lock-in with 'business and programming models of a single provider'
Those bitten by Google Maps price rises in 2018 will welcome alternative – but will the data be good enough? AWS has claimed its upcoming Amazon Location Service for developers building mapping and geographic features into applications is "priced at a fraction of common alternatives," presumably aiming squarely at a company whose name rhymes with schmoogle.…
Stony-faced Google drags Android Things behind the cowshed. Two shots ring out
No new hobbyist projects from January, everything deleted the following year Google is discontinuing its Android Things IoT platform for non-commercial users. The Chocolate Factory will not allow the creation of new projects after 5 January and the entire platform will be nuked the following year.…
Microsoft giveth and Microsoft taketh away: Certification renewals to be free ... but annual
'Rigorous' exam first, then take a freebie assessment once a year from home Microsoft is updating its certification system to one that requires an annual renewal as it eyes the rapidly changing tech landscape.…
UK ISP TalkTalk ready to go PrivatePrivate, says yes to £1.1bn takeover offer
A special Dunstone-friendly deal, how about that? TalkTalk has agreed to a £1.1bn takeover from Toscafund, its second-largest existing shareholder after company founder Sir Charles Dunstone and private equity fund Penta Capital.…
Whistleblowers have come to us alleging spy agency wrongdoing, says UK auditor IPCO
And police are backsliding on vital legal paperwork, warns body Three UK law enforcement agents blew the whistle about unlawful state surveillance to the Investigatory Powers Commissioner’s office – and one of those incidents was bad enough for the investigation to still be ongoing today.…
So lemme get this straight. UK.gov ministries are getting better value from AWS... by spending more on AWS?
One Government Value Agreement working as intended, we see The UK's Home Office has handed AWS a fresh four-year hosting contract worth up to £120m under the One Government Value Agreement, just weeks after the Department for Work and Pensions renewed its vows with the US cloud biz.…
HP bows to pressure, reinstates free monthly ink plan... for existing customers
Is this the spirit of Xmas we've heard of? Well, new customers will have to pay to print 15 pages per month In a classic reverse ferret, HP is going to honour a previous commitment to Instant Ink customers meaning they will, after all, be able to print up to 15 pages per month for free over the lifetime of the printer.…
UK Home Office chucks US firm Leidos £30m for help snooping on comms data
Er, we mean fighting terrorism and organised crime! The UK's Home Office has handed a £30m contract to engineering and IT outfit Leidos to help government agencies access and analyse communications data for combatting terrorism and organised crime.…
Passwords begone: GitHub will ban them next year for authenticating Git operations
Prepare for two brownouts in July when things get tested properly Microsoft's GitHub plans to stop accepting account passwords as a way to authenticate Git operations, starting August 13, 2021, following a test period without passwords two-weeks earlier.…
China's Chang'e 5 probe lands Moon rocks in Mongolia
A small steppe for probe, giant leaps await science ... and propaganda China has landed its Chang'e 5's probe and its precious payload of Moon rocks.…
Dutch officials say Donald Trump really did protect his Twitter account with MAGA2020! password
And no, we’re not going to prosecute the bloke who found out Dutch prosecutors have confirmed what many already suspected about President Donald Trump: that he’s an idiot. At least when it comes to choosing passwords.…
Raspberry Pi to anoint ‘Design Partners’ it will recommend for industrial applications
You’ll need to be more than a solo shop and have proven Pi prowess to score a listing The Raspberry Pi Foundation has decided to offer more support for industrial customers by creating a program that offers them help to build Pis into products.…
IBM CEO Arvind Krishna needs new business cards already after appointment as board chair
Ginni Rometty’s retirement confirmed tho Big Blue’s keeping her on as a part-time $20k/day consultant IBM has announced that recently appointed CEO Arvind Krishna has been elected as chairman of the company’s board.…
Samsung supremo suggests Note phablet will be scattered throughout the Galaxy... though not black-holed
Hints at more AI-infused personalisation and automobile integrations in 2021's smartmobes Updated The president and head of Samsung Electronics’ mobile comms business appears to have acknowledged that the Galaxy Note is no more - at least as a unique product.…
Alibaba Cloud sets its VMware partnership snowballing with hybrid storage appliances
Reveals on-prem storage offerings and new push to have consultants sell ‘em As Amazon Web Services’ re:Invent gabfest kicked off a couple of weeks back, Alibaba Cloud told the world it had “revamped” its hybrid cloud offering with a couple of new appliances – but didn’t reveal any details about the devices.…
SolarWinds’ shares drop 22 per cent. But what’s this? $286m in stock sales just before hack announced?
VC firms say they weren't aware Orion code had been backdoored Two Silicon Valley VC firms, Silver Lake and Thoma Bravo, sold hundreds of millions of dollars in SolarWinds shares just days before the software biz emerged at the center of a massive hacking campaign.…
In this week’s episode of Texas Attorney General: Google faces lawsuit accusing it of crushing ad-tech rivals
Antitrust legal challenge also claims web giant accessed encrypted WhatsApp messages Google is set to be at the end of another antitrust lawsuit, with Texas’ Attorney General Ken Paxton announcing on Wednesday he will sue the internet giant for damaging competition in the ad-tech market.…
Facebook rolls out full-page ads, website complaining Apple is forcing it to get consent before tracking you
Small-biz campaign tugs at heart strings, inadvertently promotes how iGiant is improving privacy Facebook is running full-page ads in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Washington Post today stating that Apple's privacy permissions overhaul in iOS 14 will be allegedly "devastating to small businesses."…
What's that coming over the hill? Is it native Office? Microsoft's flagship arrives on Apple Silicon, but you'll have to wait for Teams
From preview to release Microsoft is rolling out native Apple silicon versions of its office apps while browser maker Mozilla does the same with its Firefox browser.…
MariaDB courts Microsoft Power BI users with a taste of its query adapter
Could this be another sign of more openness from Redmond? MariaDB is cosying up to Microsoft and its army of Power BI platform users with the offer of a query adapter.…
Log right in, the water's fine, whispers Microsoft as it adds autofill to Authenticator app
Great, another password manager Microsoft has opened up the public preview of password autofill via its Authenticator app for iOS and Android.…
It's not just for science: Did you know that supercomputing really can mean business?
Join us online next month to open the secrets of SuperPOD with DDN Webcast Supercomputers are one of the wonders of the modern age, offering unparalleled power which can be used to crack the thorniest of problems.…
Google Mail outage: Did you see that error message last night? Why the 'account does not exist' response is a worry
Error message leads to cancelled emails, unverified accounts, potential email loss A Google Mail outage yesterday saw the cloud giant's server respond with the message "the email account that you tried to reach does not exist," potentially causing the sending server to give up, or remove the email address from lists, rather than trying again later.…
AWS catches up to Azure and GCP with CloudShell, adds deliberate injection of chaos
Plus: Managed Grafana service for observability re:Invent Amazon Web Services CTO Dr Werner Vogels has opened up on CloudShell, a Linux environment accessed through the browser which gives users a command-line and scripting environment for all AWS services.…
What a difference 6 months makes: UK retailer Dixons Carphone returns to profitability on the back of high online sales
Revenue from web biz surges 145% A surge in online sales helped push Dixons Carphone into profitability during the first half of 2020 as it reported its results [PDF] for the six months ended 31 October 2020.…
US aviation regulator issues safety bulletins over flaws in software updates for Boeing 747, 777, 787 airliners
Autothrottle cuts to idle and flight computers fail after latest updates, warns FAA Software updates to Boeing's Jumbo Jet, Dreamliner, and 777 introduced flaws that degraded flight safety and caused the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to publish warnings to aviators.…
As UK breaks away from Europe, Facebook tells Brits: You'll all be Californians soon
Boris can’t manage a US trade deal, so antisocial media giant has done it for him As Brits wake up to Brexit next month, most will no longer find themselves stuck on an island in the Atlantic but ensconced in sunny California, courtesy of Facebook.…
They were not the cloud you were looking for, insists Amazon Web Services in unsealed JEDI protest
President Donald Trump ████ AWS in the ████ by ████ ████ to ████ A heavily redacted version of Amazon Web Services' latest protest against Microsoft getting the lucrative Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) cloud computing contract has been unsealed. Unsurprisingly, AWS reckons the decision is total ███.…
UK proposes new powers for comms regulator to legally unleash avenging hordes on security-breached telcos
Suffered 'loss or damage' as a customer? Get Ofcom's permission and sue away Britain's Telecommunications Security Bill will allow anyone to sue their telco if they suffer "loss or damage" as a result of a system breach – but only if they get Ofcom's permission.…
Overpriced, underpowered, and over here: Microsoft to bring the Surface Duo to British shores in early 2021
Dual-screen Android phone released from period of US exclusivity Microsoft will give the Surface Duo an international release, bringing the dual-screen phone to the UK, Canada, France, and Germany in "early 2021".…
Tableau 2020.4 crams pretty chart chops into browser so you can evict chunky client from storage real estate
Regularised linear and Gaussian process regression thrown into predictive models too Data visualisation big fish Tableau is promising users the ability to get their hands dirty without having to download its seriously weighty desktop client.…
Your ship comms app is 'secured' with a Flash interface, doesn't sanitise SQL inputs and leaks user data, you say?
One? Two? Nope. Six CVEs patched after being found in Dualog Communications Suite A software suite intended to let merchant ships’ crews digitally communicate with the world ashore was riddled with security vulnerabilities including undocumented admin accounts with hardcoded passwords and widespread use of Adobe Flash.…
We take a look at proposed Big Tech regulations in the UK: Heavy on possible fines, light on enforcement
Online Harms draft gets most things right, still gives Facebook and friends too much leeway Analysis Tech giants face massive fines of up to 10 per cent of their annual revenue if they fail to follow new rules aimed at reducing the amount of harmful content on their platforms, the UK government has decided.…
How to leak data via Wi-Fi when there's no Wi-Fi chip: Boffin turns memory bus into covert data transmitter
Another nail in the coffin of assuming that airgapped means secure Mordechai Guri, an Israeli cyber security researcher who focuses on covert side channel attacks, has devised yet another way to undermine air gapping – the practice of keeping computers disconnected from any external network for the sake of security.…
Australia sues Facebook for slurping user data from Onavo Protect VPN app
Promised it was free and safe, but Facebook’s promises about privacy aren’t worth the mouse you click ‘em with Australia’s competition and consumer commission (ACCC) has hauled Facebook into the nation’s Federal Court for alleged false, misleading or deceptive conduct.…
CEO of China’s largest chipmaker 'possibly' resigns over hiring of Taiwanese rival's production guru
SMIC in turmoil as TCMS legend reportedly elevated beyond non-exec role China’s largest chipmaker, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), has advised investors that its co-CEO has “possibly” resigned.…
Google told BGP to forget its Euro-cloud – after first writing bad access control lists
84-minute brownout and eight-hour VPN vanishment caused by update that left systems unable to access config files Google has explained how it took a big slab of its Euro-cloud offline last week, and as usual the problem was of its own making.…
Top Chinese policy think tank’s new 15-year ‘smart economy’ plan admits US sanctions have hurt Huawei
Predicts massive data centre builds to add 50 million petabytes of capacity by 2025 as 60 percent of workloads run in clouds A key Chinese policy think tank has delivered its full vision for how the nation can build a “smart economy” by the year 2035.…
We're not saying this is how SolarWinds was backdoored, but its FTP password 'leaked on GitHub in plaintext'
'solarwinds123' won't inspire confidence, if true Updated SolarWinds, the maker of the Orion network management software that was subverted to distribute backdoored updates that led to the compromise of multiple US government bodies, was apparently told last year that credentials for its software update server had been exposed in a public GitHub repo.…
Cloudflare, Dropbox, Reddit and friends launch Section 230 compromise coalition as change seems inevitable
De-FAAMG'd tech outfits fear being steamrolled The second tier of tech giants have formed a new coalition focused on making sure changes coming to platform liability don’t squash them.…
Larry Ellison says he's not following Oracle to Texas, prefers his private Hawaii pad
It's great being king Last week, Larry Ellison wished staff well as his IT giant Oracle prepares to move its headquarters from Silicon Valley, California, to Austin, Texas... though he apparently will be going in the opposite direction, to Hawaii.…
Twitter scores a first for big tech after being fined €450,000 by Ireland's data watchdog for violating the EU's GDPR
Fellow industry giants shuffle feet nervously Ireland's Data Protection Commission (DPC) has fined Twitter €450,000 after ruling a bug in the firm's Android app that allowed users private messages to be publicly viewed infringed the EU's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).…
There's nothing AI and automation can't solve – except bias and inequality in the workplace, says report
Nope, it just makes them worse RoTM AI and automation in the workplace risk creating new forms of bias and unfairness, worsening inequalities in the world of work, according to a UK think tank report published today.…
Rocky has competition as more CentOS alternatives step into the ring: Project Lenix, Oracle Linux vie for attention
Big Red: This is not some gimmick so that you buy support from us In the wake of Red Hat's decision to end support for CentOS Linux comes a raft of alternatives to fill the void, including Project Lenix - an offshoot of Cloud Linux - and Oracle's free Linux, which Big Red is heavily promoting.…
UK comms regulator: Could we interest sir in a bespoke broadband speed estimate?
New Ofcom rules require ISPs to give more personalised measures New Ofcom rules will require ISPs to provide prospective customers with personalised speed estimates specific to their premises, rather than guesses derived from properties with similar characteristics.…
Data worries keeping you awake at night? Tune in next month – we've got just the thing to calm your nerves
The cloud can make life easier. Here’s how... Webcast Keeping track of your data is always a worry, whether it’s a question of where it is, or, more existentially, what it is.…
Taiwanese manufacturer Wistron pegs damage from iPhone factory riot at $7m
Down from original estimate of $60m, and Apple is investigating if supplier guidelines were breached On Saturday workers at an iPhone production facility in India rioted over a pay dispute, smashing windows and damaging equipment. The damage has since been valued at about $7m, according to the facility's Taiwanese owner, Wistron.…
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