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Updated 2025-05-21 15:16
Google India says Play store policy, not geopolitics, behind removal of Chinese-app-deleting app
And we’d do it anywhere else, anytime, says veep Google India has explained why it yanked an app called Remove China Apps from its “Play” digital souk.…
Hooray, space boffins have finally got InSight lander's heat probe back into Martian ground again
The beloved mole hasn't been able to dig into the Red Planet's regolith for ages NASA’s Insight lander is back in business after the agency reported that its "mole," a digging probe designed to burrow into the martian soil, is now back in action after suffering months of mishaps.…
Amazon warehouse workers sue over safety concerns as several contract COVID-19
One employee went on to infect her cousin, who later died Amazon.com employees have sued the e-commerce giant for failing to protect them against the coronavirus, after they contracted COVID-19 and infected their relatives or partners.…
VMware beefs up security chops with Lastline acquisition, reportedly drops 40 per cent of staff
Security firm's swallowing may leave many staff out in the cold VMware is acquiring antimalware company Lastline to boost its network security offerings.…
We have Huawei to make the internet more secure: Dump TCP/IP to make folks safer says Chinese mobe slinger
Chinese telecom companies and authorities want more network control to keep everyone...uh, safe online Chinese telecom companies and the Middle Kingdom government contend that the TCP/IP protocol stack is ill-suited for future networking needs and have proposed reworking the internet's technical architecture with new, more secure internet protocols.…
Have I Been Pwned breach report email pwned entire firm's helldesk ticket system
That's one way of making people check for updates A hapless IT bod found the Have I Been Pwned service (HIBP) answering its own question in a way he really didn’t want – after a breach report including a SQL string KO’d his company’s helpdesk ticket system.…
Is the speed and resilience of your storage up to scratch? We’d love to hear your thoughts
Fill out our questionnaire, and we’ll share the report once we’ve collated the data Reader survey Some company directors respond well when you wave a pie chart in their face to get what you want, and we’re offering you an opportunity – if you work in database storage and workloads – to help create that kind of budget-relocating study yourself.…
Brit MP demands answers from Fujitsu about Horizon IT system after Post Office staff jailed over accounting errors
Biz committee chairman asks whether firm accepts software had issues A senior Brit MP has written to Fujitsu demanding answers from the company over its role in the Horizon IT system scandal that has rocked the nation's Post Office.…
Astroboffins peering back in time with Hubble find stars may have been flickering into life even earlier than thought
We need to look further to glimpse Population III fireballs – where's that James Webb Telescope? European astronomers, using data from the veteran Hubble Space Telescope, have suggested the formation of the first stars and galaxies in the early universe happened earlier than thought.…
Legal complaint lodged with UK data watchdog over claims coronavirus Test and Trace programme flouts GDPR
'Government is moving too fast, and breaking things as a result' Open Rights Group has instructed lawyers to lodge a complaint with the UK's data watchdog over the rollout of the Test and Trace system because it says the system breaches the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).…
Sophos puts 100 at risk of redundancy as future of Naked Security blog hangs in balance
Firm denies shutdown of marketing organ but heads may well roll Exclusive Sophos has placed 100 staff at risk of redundancy and is said to be shutting down its Naked Security blog, sources have told The Register - although the private equity-owned biz denied this.…
There's always a coronavirus angle these days: Honor intros new smartphone with built-in temperature sensor
Be the hero who carries a thermometer around in their mobe Niche, China-exclusive smartphones seldom get a nod in The Reg's pages, but allow us to make an exception for Honor's latest flagship, the Play4 Pro.…
Hey Mister Prime Minister ... Scott! Can you get off my lawn please, mate?
Aussie homeowner moves press conference off freshly seeded grass In these dark times, at least we still have the no-nonsense attitude of Australians to lift the mood – though the country's prime minister found himself at the pointy end of it this morning.…
Namesco email 'scripting error' has last bastion of Demon Internet holdouts scratching their heads
Let's play 'That's Not My Subdomain' There was another twist in the long-running Demon subdomain saga yesterday as Namesco accidentally mixed up some customers due to a "scripting error."…
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Hydrogen clouds in a far-away star system glowing from a supernova's last gasp
Exploding sun's shock wave may have sparked light from interstellar gas More than 20 years ago a huge wave of energized interstellar gas was detected passing through the Big Dipper – or The Plough as it's known in the UK. Now astrophysicists think they've figured out the cause of the cosmic commotion: a ripple from a massive supernova explosion passing through the Milky Way.…
Is a global crisis the right time to invest in some kind of data platform? If the boss isn't making cuts to all things IT, why not?
Forget Industry 4.0 – we're on Data 4.0 now, if Informatica is to believed Web 2.0, Analytics 3.0, Industry 4.0. A world-weary tech worker would be minded to add TotalBull 5.0 to the list. Tech industry vendors are prone to promote grand visions that on close examination turn out to be a mishmash of concepts and technologies congregating only to shift more units.…
Global bean-counting behemoth PWC tells vendors: Now would be a great time to audit your customers
A little more short-term revenue never hurt any.. er, well.. You know how it is: the economy is in meltdown; half the company is working from home and the other half is furloughed. What is there to look forward to? Software audits, that's what.…
Repair store faces hefty legal bill after losing David and Goliath fight with Apple over replacement iPhone screens
Top court rules iGiant's trademark infringed by components In a setback for the right-to-repair movement, Norway's Supreme Court has upheld a decision that a repair shop's use of unauthorized iPhone screens violated Apple's trademark.…
Creeps give away money to harass recipients with abusive transaction descriptions on bank statements
'Serious threats' and references to family violence as payment descriptors turned into virtual messaging service Creeps in Australia have given away money in order to harass people with abusive transaction descriptions that appear in online banking records.…
GSMA suggests mobile carriers bake contact-tracing into their own apps – if governments ask for it
Working group already probing Bluetooth performance on myriad devices to help developers The GSM Association, the body that represents mobile carriers and influences the development of standards, has suggested its members bake virus contact-tracing functionality into their own bundled software.…
Barmy ban on businesses, Brits based in Blighty bearing or buying .eu domains is back: Cut-off date is Jan 1, 2021
If you're not registered somewhere in the union, you can't use the TLD Any Brit based in the UK, and not in the EU, will have their .eu domain taken away from them on January 1, 2021, according to the latest iteration of rules published by the TLD's operator EURid.…
Keep it clean you lot: Samsung's created a hand-washing app for its wearables
Complete with nagware and wash-tracking features Users of Samsung’s wearable devices can now get their hands on a hand-washing app that runs on their wrists.…
No more installing Microsoft's Chromium-centered Edge by hand: Windows 10 will do it for you automatically
Something something pushing us over the Edge Microsoft warned late last year that it was making plans to distribute the Chromium-based version of its Edge browser in Windows 10 updates. It began doing so earlier this year, although manual installation was required, but now Redmond has taken the distribution of Edge via Windows Update a step further by initiating installation.…
IBM to power down Power-powered virtual private cloud, GPU-accelerated options
Customers given 80 days before instance deletion and the suggested replacement doesn't yet support Linux IBM has given users of its IBM Cloud Virtual Servers for VPC on Power 80 days to find a new home.…
Update Firefox: Mozilla just patched three hijack-me holes and a bunch of other flaws
Plus: Zoom fixes code-execution security bugs Mozilla has emitted security updates for Firefox to address eight CVE-listed security flaws, five of them considered to be high-risk vulnerabilities.…
SpaceX is about to launch its first Starlink internet satellite sporting a sun visor following complaints by astronomers
Star light, star bright, you're being blocked out by these satellites Updated After complaints from astroboffins, a SpaceX Starlink internet satellite is set to launch tonight with a deployable visor designed to stop sunlight reflecting off its metallic body.…
Anatomy of a business email scam: FBI dossier details how fraudster pocketed $500k+ by redirecting payments
Electrolux, construction biz fooled into handing over money funneled out of the US to South Africa A fraudster has admitted he tricked two suppliers into paying him more than $500,000 by impersonating staff at a subcontractor and a retail outlet via email.…
California emits fine-print of its GDPR-ish digital privacy law, complete with Google and Facebook-sized holes
Sure, companies will probably just ignore its most important component, but what you gonna do? The final rules for California’s digital privacy law have been published and they are… full of holes.…
Not just its VCS console that's MIA, Atari is a no-show in court, too: Reborn biz ignores hardware architect's lawsuit over unpaid wages
12,000 people waiting for hardware, 500 might get it this month. Might Atari is on track to lose by default in a lawsuit brought by the architect of its much-delayed VCS games console over unpaid wages.…
It's nice y'all like our chips but half our data-center sales are from cloud giants, FYI, says Nvidia's chief beancounter
Hyperscalers snap up GPUs for AI inference Sales to hyperscalers now account for half of all Nvidia’s data-center revenues, the graphics giant’s chief financial officer Colette Kress said during a speech at the Bank of America Securities 2020 Global Technology Conference.…
Smartphones, PCs, and now wearables... Coronavirus wrecks another corner of tech
17% growth pre-pandemic now a measly 5% Sales of wearable tech are estimated to slow in 2020 as consumers slam the brakes on non-essential spending. ABI Research is expecting 27 million fewer units sold against earlier forecasts, for a total of 254 million.…
$5bn+ sueball bounces into Google's court over claims it continues to track netizens in 'private browsing mode'
You've not heard this one before but it does sound familiar Google has been sued for billions of dollars in a proposed class action alleging the adtech company identified and tracked users who adopted its browser's incognito mode to avoid such tracking.…
Xiaomi has such Huawei with words: Our two new phones have 'easy access' to Google apps... unlike that other guy
Who's in China and not involved in the deployment of 5G, eh? We are! Xiaomi has formally launched its latest phones for the UK market, the Redmi Note 9 Series, with an interesting dig at fellow corporate citizen Huawei as it bids to become the successor to that company in the West.…
Google signs agreement to offer discounts on cloud services through UK govt's Digital Marketplace
Microsoft already at the trough, IBM and AWS said to be en route Google has joined Microsoft in signing a framework agreement, or Memorandum of Understanding, with the UK government's centralised procurement agency to set discounts on a range of cloud services.…
Amateur astroboffins spot young brown dwarf playing with planet-forming hula hoop just 102 parsecs from Earth
Closest example yet of substellar object Disk Detective-using researchers have spotted a brown dwarf, plus protoplanetary disk, 332 light years from home.…
Defending critical national infrastructure... hmm. Does Zoom count as critical now?
All the old lines are getting pretty darn blurred, say security experts at Euro online confab Infosec Europe Does your IT security model take into account things like pacemakers? According to Dr Victoria Baines, speaking at Infosec Europe, "we also perhaps neglect the idea that critical infrastructure might be inside people" as well as merely carried in their pockets.…
How many? 2.8 million fewer PCs and tablets to find a home in 2020
Factory closures, surge in remote working and weakened economy all fed into forecasting formula Seven is lucky for some, but maybe not PC and tab makers in 2020 if research house Canalys has got its forecasts right: manufacturers will ship 367.8 million of those boxes, 27.8 million fewer than the prior 12 months, and down - you guessed it - 7 per cent.…
Devuan Beowulf 3.0 release continues to resist the Debian fork's Grendel – systemd
Minimalist distro aims to be the go-to for systemd-free Linux installations The Devuan team has released Beowulf 3.0.0, based on Debian Buster, but with the systemd init system - now standard in Debian - removed.…
The UK's favourite lockdown cheese is Big and Red but doesn't require a stinking great audit after consumption
Curd is the word as bored Brits search options for cheese and wine nights in With National Cheese Day looming, turophiles have been stocking up, according to a fresh top 10 of searches for the UK's favourite lockdown cheeses.…
Hoverbikes, Hyperloops and sub-orbital hijinks: Yes, the '3rd, 4th and 5th Dimensions of Travel' are coming soon
And you thought getting from the sofa to the laptop was a challenge Bored of just two dimensions of travel? The third, fourth and fifth are on the way, according to a new report.…
We spent billions building atom smashers – and now boffins think nature's doing the same thing for free?
The universe is weird, we want a refund The cores of massive binary neutron stars are crushed under such immense gravitational pressures, the particles inside split apart to create a hot soup of quark matter, according to a study published in Nature Astronomy this month.…
The Edinburgh Fringe festival isn't happening this year, but that won't stop a digital sign doing its own comedy routine
Cowgate calamity befalls Windows-powered signage Bork!Bork!Bork! What to do in Edinburgh when there is no impending Fringe? The answer is obvious, at least to us – go hunting through streets normally thronged with tourists in search of bork.…
Spending watchdog doubts UK is capable of managing Brexit and coronavirus info campaigns at the same time
Yeah, you and the entire country The government that spaffed £46m on an ineffective "Get Ready For Brexit" campaign is ill-prepared for managing public information about COVID-19 and the UK's departure from the EU at the same time, according to a committee of MPs.…
Indian app that deleted Chinese apps from Androids deleted from Play Store
Consumer boycott clicktivism at a time of border tensions? There was, briefly, a million-download app for that Google has removed an app called "Remove China Apps" from its Android Play Store.…
'5G for Five Eyes!' US senator tells Parliamentarians the world would be better without Huawei
Same chap who wants to ban F-35 fighter jets from Britain American spy agencies may reduce their "ability to share the most sensitive types of intelligence" with the UK if Huawei continues to be a major presence in British telcos' networks, a US senator warned Parliament.…
DevOps from above! US Air Force says upcoming B-21 stealth bomber will run Kubernetes
Google staff who protested drone AI effort could be quite interested in this An assistant secretary of the United States Air Force appears to have revealed that its forthcoming B-21 stealth bomber will use container-orchestration tool Kubernetes.…
Tor soups up onion sites with bountiful browser bump: No more tears trying to find the secure sites you want
Latest Tor Browser iteration makes the dark web a bit more memorable The Tor Project this week rolled out an update to its browser that attempts to make the anonymity-protecting onion routing scheme more approachable.…
BBC voice assistant promises to summon streams even if you're just a little bit Brahms and Liszt
Would you Adam and Eve it? Your words will end up teaching Microsoft AI to speak proper English The BBC has launched a beta version of a Windows-only voice assistant that can only play the broadcaster's content – though it can understand strong British accents, we're told.…
Watch live online this week: Learn how to better manage your Office 365 licences
Find out more on optimizing your business – and stop bleeding cash Webcast How costly is poor Office 365 license management? We all suspect we either have too many licenses, or those Office 365 licenses are being underused. Either way, it’s the same problem: we’re wasting money. IT spending will go under the microscope in 2020, and Office 365 costs are a great place to start.…
The little CubeSat that could: Launched from space station, ASTERIA is smallest satellite to detect an exoplanet
Let's head that way. Doesn't matter if there's no intelligent life on it – there's none here, either The ASTERIA CubeSat, launched from the International Space Station into low-Earth orbit in 2017, has become the smallest satellite to successfully detect an exoplanet.…
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