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Updated 2025-08-25 09:58
For Foxit's sake: Windows and Mac users alike urged to patch PhantomPDF over use-after-free vulns
US CIST points spotlight at PDF reader 'n' creator suite Windows and Mac users running Foxit's popular PhantomPDF reader should update their installations to the latest version after the US CISA cybersecurity agency warned of a handful of high-severity product vulnerabilities.…
Shots fired! WordPress's Matt claims Jamstack's marketing is 'not intellectually honest' in debate with Netlify's Matt
End of the WordPress era? No, we're aiming for 50% of web, says founder WordPress founder Matt Mullenweg has engaged in a war of words with the Jamstack community on the merits of the latter's emerging new architecture for web applications.…
You can ditch the printer and go entirely paperless, but does that really make your work comms any more secure?
Tune in and learn how to reinvigorate your digital transformation Webcast It’s easy to say you want to kick off a digital transformation. It’s often harder to say what this should look like in practice, or what the benefits for your organisation will be. Just junking the printer and saying “we’re paperless now” isn’t a strategy, and certainly isn’t a plan. But moving to secure paperless communications is certainly a start.…
Open Invention Network adds Microsoft's exFAT to Linux System Definition, Satan spotted throwing snowballs
AOSP 10 also popped into patent non-aggression pact The Open Invention Network (OIN) has expanded the scope of its Linux System Definition to include the likes of exFAT and Android AOSP 10.…
Morgan Stanley hit with $60m penalty for failing to properly decommission old kit hosting 'wealth management' data
Banking giant rapped over management of two US bit barns Banking giant Morgan Stanley has been ordered to pay a $60m civil penalty over allegations it failed to properly decommission hardware from two of its US data centres in 2016.…
Oh! What a lovely lockdown: Lenovo enjoys soaraway sales for Q3 2020 as PC shipments jump – Dell, not so much
HP is top dog stateside Research org Gartner has chimed in with earlier reports from Canalys that, yup, the PC industry is enjoying a bonzer pandemic, even if Dell is a bit in the doldrums.…
Facebook doesn't know its onions: Seeds ad banned after machine-learning algo found vegetable pic 'overtly sexual'
Plus: Waymo risks driverless car trial, ML papers now include code, and AI will write your dev CV for you In brief Facebook's computer-vision algorithm flagged an innocuous advert for onions posted on its social media platform for being "overtly sexual."…
Hackers hack Hackney: Local government cries 'cyberattack' while UK infosec officials rush to figure out what happened
Check bank accounts, don't open council emails, you know how this goes Hackney Council in East London has declared that it was hit by a "cyberattack" – but both the authority and officials from the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) remain tight-lipped about what actually happened.…
Samsung Galaxy S20 FE goes from 'nearly dead' to full in an hour, but you might not be a 'Fan' of some of the shortcuts
Scratchier touchscreen, less impressive snapper Samsung hasn't made many "Fan Edition" phones. When it has, the rationale was always borne out of necessity. The first (and, until recently, only) device to carry the "FE" name was a Korea-only version of the Note 7, minus the exploding batteries that made an otherwise excellent phone an unmitigated commercial disaster.…
German-speaking SAP user survey sees S4/HANA upgrade projects either sink or swim as coronavirus cuts into revenue
'Train has left the station' for more than half, while 43% delayed indefinitely SAP users from German-speaking countries are seeing sharp declines in corporate revenue as a result of COVID-19 – but half are still pushing forward with projects to roll out S/4HANA, the ERP vendor's core platform upgrade.…
We won't leave you hanging any longer: Tool strips freeze-inducing bugs from Java bytecode while in production
Nothing like servicing an engine mid-flight, huh? Boffins from North Carolina State University and IBM Research have devised a software framework that can automatically repair a majority of the common code patterns that cause Java programs to hang.…
UK taxman waves through £168.8m Fujitsu contract because no one else can hold up 30-year-old infrastructure
What's another three years amid project delays and Brexit uncertainty? UK tax collector HMRC has awarded Fujitsu a £168.8m contract without competition to ensure critical applications keep running as projects to replace them are delayed and Brexit pressures mount.…
Visual Studio Code 1.50 goes hard on extensions support, but tackling add-on bloat is becoming more onerous
Also new: WebView sidebars, rich JavaScript debugging, accessible settings Microsoft has released version 1.50 of the word's most popular code editor, Visual Studio Code, with enhancements to core features, richer extension support, accessibility improvements, and not forgetting a build that runs on Raspberry Pi.…
BBC Micro:bit with boosted specs and onboard mic to go on sale from next month
16KB RAM becomes 128KB as the Beeb gets down with the kids again As the nights draw in, Auntie Beeb has given schoolkids and hobbyists a much-needed something to look forward to in the next few weeks – an updated BBC Micro:bit.…
Imagination touts next series of GPU cores aimed at cloud server acceleration ...and cars, mobile, IoT
If no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire... The B-Team Imagination will today launch its latest line of graphics processor cores, including one we're told is destined for cloud hardware.…
[NSFW] UK ad encouraging re-skilling for cyber jobs implodes spectacularly
Minister disowns 'crass' spot that shows American woman as Brit ballerina and seemingly belittles beleaguered arts sector Slightly NSFW The UK government has pulled an ad campaign that encouraged retraining for a job in cyber-security.…
Does the cloud provide all the infrastructure you want yet never enough time to secure it? Let's help fix that
AWS shows you how to fit a week of cloud security learning into just four hours Promo How does the cloud threat landscape look to you? As if security teams weren’t hard pushed already, chances are you’ve heard how bad actors have been taking advantage of 2020’s headlong rush to remote working.…
IBM Cloud catches up to AWS and Azure – at least for refunds after major availability FAILs
Adds 100 percent cashback tier if availability dips below 95 percent, removes reference to POWER8 servers IBM has issued a new Cloud Service Description, the formal document that explains what Big Blue considers to be a cloud and how it’s effort will behave.…
Contract to run .eu domain-name registry is up for grabs as Brussels tries to avoid a .co-style debacle
Five-year deal to oversee 3.6 million web addresses ... but does anyone actually want it? The European Union has opened up the .eu internet registry for a new owner, offering a five-year contract to oversee its 3.6 million domain names from October 2022.…
Indonesia’s black-market phone prevention plan bricks a whole bunch of handsets
Database recording legit handsets appears to have exceeded capacity Indonesia’s cellphone registration scheme – an effort to protect local manufacturers, boost the tax base, and ensure consumers don’t end up with dodgy products – appears to have run aground.…
Supermassive black hole turns unlucky star into spaghetti
Pasta la vista, baby Astronomers have watched a star be destroyed by the process of spaghettification, a rare event triggered when a sun strays too close to a black hole.…
Google won’t let Australia have shiny new toys unless it picks apart pay-for-news plan
Pauses News Showcase rollout while it awaits government capitulation Google has paused the rollout of its News Showcase product in Australia, because it says it could be unworkable under the nation’s proposed pay-for-news plan.…
India to build home-grown supercomputers, from the motherboards up
Minister says more supers will advance society. So why wait to develop silicon, networks, storage and more? India’s “Atmanirbhar Bharat” program – a national drive for self sufficiency in just about everything – has added building a supercomputing hardware stack to its to-do list.…
Yahoo! Groups! to! shut! down! completely! on! December! 15!... Tens! mourn!
After nearly 20 years, it's time to say goodbye to venerable messageboard Yahoo! is finally killing off Groups at the end of this year, after having launched it almost two decades ago.…
California outlaws wording, webpage buttons designed to hoodwink people into handing over their personal data
Sorry not sorry, Facebook California’s Attorney General has updated the state's data privacy regulations to outlaw shady semantics designed to confuse folks into handing over their data.…
The seven deadly sins letting hackers hijack America's govt networks: These unpatched bugs leave systems open
'Unauthorized access to elections support systems' detected tho 'no evidence to date that integrity of elections data has been compromised' If you're wondering which bugs in particular miscreants are exploiting to break into, or attempt to break into, US government networks, wonder no more. And then make sure you've patched them.…
Backdoorer the Xplora: Kids' smart-watches can secretly take pics, record audio on command by encrypted texts
It was just code left over from a prototype, says hardware maker The Xplora 4 smartwatch, made by Chinese outfit Qihoo 360 Technology Co, and marketed to children under the Xplora brand in the US and Europe, can covertly take photos and record audio when activated by an encrypted SMS message, says Norwegian security firm Mnemonic.…
Mark Zuckerberg, 36, decides that having people on his website deny the deaths of six million Jews is a bad thing
And so Facebook takes belated principled stance on, um, Nazi genocide Facebook will block posts that deny the Holocaust after CEO Mark Zuckerberg, aged 36, announced on Monday that his “thinking has evolved.”…
Eight release candidates later and it's out: New hardware and more AMD in Linux 5.9
Time to get cracking on 5.10 Linux 5.9 has been declared stable, with Linus Torvalds observing "there doesn't really seem to be anything particularly scary in here" despite the number of tweaks in the last week.…
Microsoft and chums use US trademark law to trash Trickbot malware network
Multinational operation is part of election protection effort Microsoft and other global infosec companies have mounted a joint operation to sabotage command-and-control (C2) infrastructure used by the Trickbot malware to inject, among other things, ransomware into victims' PCs.…
Amazon-like megacorps dominating various online sectors could become norm for pandemic-stricken planet
Certain business models work better than others when most people avoid human contact Shifts in consumer behaviour could see a handful of companies come to dominate the online food, education and leisure industries, as Amazon has in e-commerce, according to research.…
So, what exactly are you planning to do with this new PC? Windows Insiders face new questions during OOBE
Also: Getting Edgy in the holidays, AtHoc and Teams, and Azure updates In Brief Microsoft's army of unpaid testers have received their weekly dose of love from the Windows Insider team in the form of Dev Channel build 20231.…
'You've got the old cheeky Corona': Ireland's pandemic advice SMS service can be spoofed, warns researcher
Get cell broadcast tech in, urges onetime Lulzsec white hat Ireland's efforts to keep residents informed about coronavirus has fallen foul of the same basic SMS vulnerability that one of their British neighbours experienced back in March.…
Need next-gen connectivity but don't want to break the bank? Samsung's Galaxy A42 5G is a bin-raking £349
Now, just to wait for some signal... 5G is no longer the preserve of the pricey. Samsung's Galaxy A42 5G is priced at £349 and competes with similarly entry-level devices from the likes of Xiaomi and OnePlus.…
Comms API merchant Twilio spanks $3.2bn in stock to gobble data slurper Segment
Spending spree continues in the 'customer engagement' space as online sales segment grows and grows Cloud communications outfit Twilio has found a way to spend some of its lockdown money, snapping up "customer data" specialist Segment in a cash-free deal worth approximately $3.2bn.…
Arm has 11 months to hire 490 UK techies. Good thing there isn't a pandemic on. Or, say, Brexit
But chip biz is 'confident it will hit that target' in time It's crunch time at Arm as the chip designer races to meet a legally binding recruitment goal by September 2021 made during its 2016 acquisition by Softbank.…
AWS cooks up Extensions API for Lambda serverless platform: Useful for monitoring, alerting
Cloud Functions rival flings out preview that enables custom code to handle lifecycle events Cloud computing behemoth Amazon Web Services, has pushed out an Extensions API for its Lambda serverless platform that lets developers write custom code to handle lifecycle events – such as when the environment starts, invokes functions, and shuts down.…
BBK mixed-grill realness: Realme's pair of 7s are two more reasons not to spend over £300 on a smartphone
Not a steak, but if you're going midrange there's enough to chew on Review You get a lot of phone for less than £300 these days. Just look at the Realme 7 and 7 Pro, which recently splashed down in Europe. These devices are the OPPO sister brand's latest bid for the middle-tier mobile market. They don't push any envelopes, but they are excellent value for money.…
Laptops are on fire! In a good way (if you're selling). PC sales race to highest growth rate since 2011
Response to pandemic elevates simple laptop to centre of universe... Dell only vendor to shrink, says Canalys Canalys Forum 2020 Fuelled by the pandemic, demand for notebooks continued to go through the roof in Q3 as the PC industry grew at its fastest pace in almost nine years - Dell was the only major top five player to report declines.…
Beware, drone fliers, of Scotland's black-headed gulls. For they will tear your craft from Mother Nature's skies
Innocent survey UAS brutally smashed into roof by Stranraer seabird An innocent drone has crashed after being attacked by an aggressive Scottish black-headed gull.…
One year after server hackers left NordVPN red-faced, firm's first colocated setup is online
Plus: Bunch of Cisco fixes for Patch Tuesday week, Fitbit kit hit, RAT malware written in Golang, and more In brief NordVPN has hit the go-live button for the first of its colocated server setups.…
Remember the days when signs were signs and operating systems didn't need constant patching?
The signage may be borked, but the Swedish meatballs are steaming Bork!Bork!Bork! Windows 10 likes an update. Goodness me it likes an update, as any user who has found a workday cruelly interrupted while the operating system treats itself to a jolly good patching can confirm.…
Britannia should rule the (cyber) waves, minister tells Singapore event in bid to drum up Commonwealth support
Rhetoric for the post-Brexit era but will actions follow words? Comment A UK government minister has called for the country to "shape the standards of new technology" in a speech aimed at drumming up Commonwealth support for a cyber "leadership" role for post-Brexit Britain.…
Microsoft tells staff work-from-home is now ‘standard’ – with caveats galore
Boss has to agree, home time not to exceed 50 percent and let’s talk about salary if you leave town Microsoft has decided its 150,000-plus staff can work from anywhere, anytime, most of the time.…
Excel is for amateurs. To properly screw things up, those same amateurs need a copy of Access
Beware the wrong tool in the wrong hands Who, Me? If there is one Microsoft product guaranteed to send a shiver down the spine of an IT pro more than Excel shoehorned into the wrong place, it's Access inserted into any place. Welcome to Who, Me?…
AWS makes its own Arm CPUs the default for ElastiCache in-memory data store service
Bills home-brewed silicon as the upgrade path to better Redis or memcached Amazon Web Services has made its home-brewed Arm-powered Graviton2 CPUs the default for its ElastiCache service.…
Interested in the practical side of machine learning? Tune into our smashing AI conference MCubed this week
Top advice and info from an extraordinary lineup of speakers Event Learn from industry practitioners about model deployment pipelines, testing & monitoring for machine learning, and how to bake explainability into your process…
As China trials its Digital Yuan with a giveaway, seven big central banks outline response
Bank of England and US Reserve among those pondering own digital dollars China has announced a significant new trial of its digital currency, co-incidentally on the same day influential central banks laid out their plans for a similar effort.…
Pakistan bans TikTok because of its users not its owners
Warnings to clean up its act went unheeded, but door remains open for a return Pakistan has banned TikTok, citing the service’s slew of salaciousness as insupportable.…
Five Eyes nations plus Japan and India call for Big Tech to bake backdoors into everything
Or as they put it: ‘Embed the safety of the public in system designs … facilitating the investigation and prosecution of offences’ The nations of the Five Eyes security alliance – Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the USA and the UK – plus Japan and India, have called on technology companies to design their products so they offer access to encrypted messages and content.…
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