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Updated 2025-05-22 10:01
Colombian tech minister quits, heads off to overseas job as aborted .co contract sale triggers in-depth probe
Drama surrounds trendy lucrative top-level domain Analysis Colombia’s startup-friendly .co has erupted in controversy again following the resignation of the government minister responsible for putting the domain registry out for tender last year.…
Proof-of-concept open-source app can cut'n'paste from reality straight into Photoshop using a neural network
Code available if you want to toy with similar camera-grabbing projects Video We've written a lot about academic research, startups, and internet giants making use of artificial intelligence. Sometimes source code is shared, and sometimes it isn't, which can be frustrating – we feel that pain.…
Hyperconverged darling Nutanix to furlough at least a quarter of its staff – 1,465 – for two weeks this year
Cites uncertain business conditions and they sure are - even tilers working for Microsoft have felt the crunch Nutanix will send at least a quarter of its staff home for two weeks on no pay this year.…
More Salt in their wounds: DigiCert hit as hackers wriggle through (patched) holes in buggy config tool
Miscreants too busy mining for crypto to notice the gold lying around them? DigiCert, slinger of SSL/TLS certificates, has warned that it too has suffered at the hands of Salty miscreants as a key used for Signed Certificate Timestamps (SCT) was potentially compromised.…
UK finds itself almost alone with centralized virus contact-tracing app that probably won't work well, asks for your location, may be illegal
Herd immunity all over again Comment Britain is sleepwalking into another coronavirus disaster by failing to listen to global consensus and expert analysis with the release of the NHS COVID-19 contact-tracking app.…
Microsoft puts dual-screen devices and Windows 10X in the too-hard basket
Windows 10’s billion users want comfort food and Redmond’s ready to ladle it out as better Bluetooth Microsoft has repurposed Windows 10X, the new cut of its OS introduced in October 2019 to run on dual-screen devices.…
Tune in and watch online tomorrow: How to keep your developers safe in the cloud
Sign up now to learn how to turn your programmers into self-aware secure nodes Webcast There’s still time to sign up for tomorrow’s webcast, and find out how to make developer teams safe, aware, and front-line members of your cloud security operation.…
Microsoft teases more hybrid VMware-on-Azure action
For now, you get a preview of the official Azure VMware Solution to play with and a promise of availability in H2 2020 Microsoft has fired up the first previews of its VMware-on-Azure service and hinted at an expanded hybrid offering.…
Apple-Google COVID-19 virus contact-tracing API to bar location-tracking access
Renamed 'ExposureNotification' will only only one app per nation Apple and Google will ban location-tracking by apps using their new coronavirus contract-tracing API, newly renamed ExposureNotification.…
Contact-tracing is basically CRM so we think we've got it sorted, says Salesforce
Coming real soon now as-a-service. Details on data collection and price? Coming soon, promise Salesforce has created a contact-tracing as-a-service product and promised it’s coming real soon now.…
Nvidia's multi-billion-dollar buying spree continues as it slurps up Cumulus soon after swallowing Mellanox
Side effects may include rapid HPC and large AI workloads GPU biz Nvidia on Monday said it plans to buy network software maker Cumulus Networks, just days after closing its $6.9bn deal to acquire Mellanox, another networking-oriented business.…
Caltech to Apple, Broadcom: You know that $1.1bn you owe for ripping off Wi-Fi patents? Double it, hotshots
US uni goes full honey badger on iPhone giant and its chip sidekick Months after they were found to have ripped off The California Institute of Technology's Wi-Fi patents, Apple and Broadcom remain locked in a legal battle over a damages bill running potentially to billions of dollars.…
OK, so you've air-gapped that PC. Cut the speakers. Covered the LEDs. Disconnected the monitor. Now, about the data-leaking power supply unit...
I have no mouth, and I must scream Video Israeli cyber-security side-channel expert Mordechai Guri has devised a way to pilfer data from devices that have been air-gapped and silenced.…
That awful Butterfly has finally fluttered off: Apple touts 13-inch MacBook Pro with proper keyboard, Escape key
The end of an exruciatig seres of ucky keyoards Ding dong, the godawful Butterfly keyboard is dead. With today's launch of the refreshed 13-inch MacBook Pro, Apple's loathed keyboard tech is finally gone — although it'll no doubt linger in the form of refurbished and second-hand units.…
Sweet TCAS! We can make airliners go up-diddly-up whenever we want, say infosec researchers
Pen Test Partners probes auto collision avoidance system Not only can malicious people make airliners climb and dive without pilot input – they can also control where and when they do so, research from Pen Test Partners (PTP) has found.…
Salesforce chief Marc Benioff gets clear view of pandemic, 'new balance' from guru pal
Be. Nice. To. People Comment "Imagine no possessions," John Lennon sang a few years after meeting a guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. The Beatles' path to India followed in the footsteps of numerous intellectuals and beatniks, including Herman Hesse and Allen Ginsberg. In the billionaire software elite, the journey is less common, although not unknown.…
Comms giant Telefonica confirms O2 in talks to merge with Virgin Media
Brrrring brrrring... Yep it's American cable guy Liberty Global It's official: mobile networks operator O2 is negotiating a merger with Virgin Media. Should the deal — details of which are not yet known — complete, it would see the creation of the UK's largest entertainment and telco provider, spanning mobile, fixed-line telecommunications, broadband, and pay TV.…
UK COVID-19 contact-tracing app data may be kept for 'research' after crisis ends, MPs told
Want to opt out of that part? No chance, says NHSX chief Britons will not be able to ask NHS admins to delete their COVID-19 contact-tracking data from government servers, digital arm NHSX's chief exec Matthew Gould admitted to MPs this afternoon.…
'VPs shouldn't go publicly rogue'... XML co-author Tim Bray quits AWS after Amazon fires COVID-19 whistleblowers
'I'm sad, but I'm breathing more freely' says former exec Tim Bray, a co-author of the original specifications for XML, has ended his time as a VP and distinguished engineer at Amazon Web Services in outspoken fashion, quitting in dismay at the treatment of Amazon's warehouse workers.…
The Great British anti-5G fruitcake Bakeoff: Group hugs, no guns, and David Icke
Homebaked conspiracy fans are really adding some local flair Comment This is one of those that should fall under the title of unlikely things to awaken Brits' patriotic spirit: a gaggle of anti-5G protestors in the UK's capital.…
Just one more thing: Windows 10 May 2020 Update hits Release Preview
Also: new toys for Your Phone and The Windows That Microsoft Wants To Forget drops to single digits Round Up The finishing line for Windows 10 20H1 hoved into view, YourPhone got audio toys and differential sync was finally rolled out for OneDrive. Here is a collation of events you may have missed from Microsoft.…
Latvian drone wrests control from human overlords and shuts down entire nation's skies
Please phone us if you see our missing 26kg aircraft, say authorities Latvia’s skies have been closed to long distance flights because a military-grade drone is “uncontrolled and lost” somewhere above the eastern European nation – and nobody knows where it has gone.…
Gmail and Outlook sitting in a tree, not t-a-l-k-i-n-g to me or thee
Thunderbird also affected as legacy email authentication enjoys a Monday wobble Nobody likes Mondays, least of all Google's Gmail, the POP3 and IMAP services of which fell over this morning to deprive Monday morning mailers their start-of-week fix.…
AsSalt-ed at the weekend: Miscreants roast Ghost, LineageOS totters as Salt bug bites
Ah oh, SaltStack's frightnin' (with apologies to Howlin' Wolf) If your kit is affected, don't wait: unpatched vulnerabilities in Salt claimed two high profile victims over the weekend in the form of popular Google-free Android-based LineageOS and online publisher Ghost.…
You like to Moovit? Intel tipped to slurp Israeli mobility startup for $1bn
Autonomous cars: hardware helps but you can't beat data Intel is being linked with the takeover of Israeli public transit startup Moovit for a cool $1bn, in order to beef up its portfolio in the mobility and transportation markets.…
Xiaomi emits phone browser updates after almighty row over web activity it harvested even in incognito mode
Plus: Other infosec news from around the internet Roundup Congratulations, everyone. We made it through April. Here's a handy mop-up of bits and bytes of security news beyond what we covered in The Reg.…
UK IT contractors slipping back into old ways of working now IR35 tax reforms delayed
And employers that banned personal service companies no longer seem to care. At least not yet, say sources Since chief secretary to the Treasury Steve Barclay confirmed a delay to the introduction of IR35, Brit contractors are opting out of the rules in droves – and many employers no longer care.…
What does £55 get you in the noise-cancelling headphones world? Something like the Taotronics SoundSurge 85
Lalalalala, I can still hear you A few unlikely things have come into fashion during lockdown. Shonky home haircuts are one. Not showering for several days is another. And who can forget sweatpants, which are worn for several days at a time, as humankind descends into its natural Stig of the Dump state.…
It looks like you want a storage appliance for your data centre. Maybe you'd prefer a smart card reader?
Beware the dead hand of the product categorisation bot Bork!Bork!Bork! Welcome to another in The Register's series of computers behaving badly. Today's instalment is a little different to the usual run of blue, and may reassure those concerned that the machines will one day rule the world.…
NASA signs deals to put a rocket under Artemis flights until 2029
Orders 18 RS-25 core-stage engines from Aerojet Rocketdyne NASA has picked an engine supplier for its controversial Space Launch System (SLS) program weeks after an audit chastised the space agency for blowing its budget.…
India makes contact-tracing app compulsory in viral hot zones despite most local phones not being smart
Tech minister says app is 'foolproof'! We imagine Black Hats probably don't agree. And some may have time on their hands at present India has made use of a COVID-19 contact-tracing app compulsory in some parts of the nation.…
Britain has no idea how close it came to ATMs flooding the streets with free money thanks to some crap code, 1970s style
But a rather purple tester put paid to that inflation-baiting bug Who, Me? Welcome to the start of another working week and a tale to take us back to the orange and brown hues of the 1970s courtesy of The Register's Who, Me? thread.…
India’s colosso-carrier Jio sells a thin slice of itself to private equiteer Silver Lake
A fortnight after selling a hefty bite to Facebook, which got in when 380-million strong mobile network was cheap Jio Platforms – which operates India’s most-used mobile network - has sold a slice of itself to US private equiteer Silver Lake.…
Facebook's mega-chatbot has 'a persona, discusses nearly any topic, shows empathy.' Perfect for CEO version 2
Plus: OpenAI's music-making software isn't half bad ... and Banjo boss's KKK shame Roundup Welcome to another summary of AI-related news beyond what we've already covered.…
Microsoft reveals it’s rolled its own QUIC and is testing it on Microsoft 365 and in .NET Core 5.0
The sequel to Pac-Man was Ms. Pac-Man. And Microsoft’s version of the Google-spawned TCP-killer QUIC is called MsQuic Microsoft’s revealed it’s a user of QUIC – the TCP successor that’s integral to HTTP3 but hasn’t quite excited too many folk beyond Google and Cloudflare.…
Singapore to require smartphone check-ins at all businesses and will log visitors' national identity numbers
Even parks and train stations encouraged to use QR codes. Which may show the limits of Bluetooth contact-tracing! Singapore will from May 12th require all businesses to adopt a system that checks visitors into and out of their premises using their smartphones, and has already made using the system compulsory before entering some venues.…
Google Australia says government pulled pin on content-for-cash talks, hands in its homework anyway
And fires back with 'we do for free what meatspace distributors charge for' argument Google’s Australian tentacle has hit back at Australia’s plan to plan to make web giants pay publishers for content shared on their networks.…
As Brit cyber-spies drop 'whitelist' and 'blacklist', tech boss says: If you’re thinking about getting in touch saying this is political correctness gone mad, don’t bother
Whitehat and blackhat next? The British government's computer security gurus have announced they will stop using the terms whitelisting and blacklisting in their online documentation.…
Oracle faces claims of unequal pay from 4,000+ women after judge upgrades gender gap lawsuit to class action
IT giant accused of paying women less than men doing exact same roles A lawsuit filed against Oracle on behalf of six women seeking to be paid as much as their male colleagues has been certified as a class action – a legal milestone that will allow thousands of women a chance to have their gender discrimination claims heard.…
Bye, Russia: NASA wheels out astronauts, describes plan for first all-American manned launch into orbit since 2011
Demo-2 mission to send SpaceX capsule, rocket from Florida to the International Space Station this month NASA today introduced to the world the American astronauts set to ride an American rocket into low-Earth orbit from American soil, a journey that will be the first of its kind since the final Space Shuttle launch in 2011.…
Spyware slinger NSO to Facebook: Pretty funny you're suing us in California when we have no US presence and use no American IT services...
Malware maker urges judge to dump lawsuit over WhatsApp phone snooping Israeli spyware maker NSO Group has rubbished Facebook's claim it can be sued in California because it allegedly uses American IT services and has a business presence in the US.…
Amazon settles for $11m with workers in unpaid bag-search wait lawsuit
Puts to rest claims staff should've been paid for time spent in security lines Amazon yesterday settled for $11m with staff at its California warehouses who'd sued it over uncompensated wait times for security checks as they began and ended shifts.…
Smartphone shipments plummet in Q1 as users, er, lock down their spending
Coronavirus + entity lists + people not keen to upgrade = 13% dive Early forecasts of the Q1 smartphone sector made for grim reading, with appetite expected to be severely suppressed thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic. Subsequent analysis from Canalys shows those forecasts were bang-on, with worldwide shipments into the channel falling by 13 per cent year-on-year, to just over 272 million units.…
Browse mode: We're not goofing off on the Sidebar of Shame and online shopping sites, says UK's Ministry of Defence
Its servers merely record more HTTPS requests to Mail Online and Amazon than anywhere else Civil servants at the UK's Ministry of Defence are spending a large part of their surfing time gazing at online shopping and news websites, the red-faced government department has admitted.…
Xiaomi what you're working with: Chinese mobe-flinger proffers two Redmi Note phablets for UK market
IR blasters and headphone jacks, likely south of £350? Oh my Chinese phone-maker Xiaomi's onslaught into the UK market continues with two more phones: the MediaTek Helio G85-powered Redmi Note 9, and the more upmarket Redmi Note 9 Pro, which uses the Qualcomm 720G platform.…
Brit magistrates' courts turn to video conferencing to keep wheels of justice turning
It's not just Skype and Zoom cashing in on remote-working boom Britain's courts are moving to their own video-conferencing platform – for criminal trials rather than business meetings.…
Bezos to the Moon: Blue Origin joins SpaceX and Dynetics in a three-horse lunar lander race
NASA selects three contenders for flag-in-Moon prize With a scant few years remaining until the agency's 2024 boots-on-the-Moon goal, NASA has named the three US companies that will be dealing with the tricky human landing bit of the mission.…
$31bn spent on cloudy infrastructure in Q1 on back of employees' mass migration to home working
Digital gold rush spurred by global pandemic: Big 4 bag 62% of market Cloud infrastructure providers are making bank following the mass migration of millions of workers from their offices to their homes, with spending on services leaping by 34.5 per cent in Q1 to $31bn.…
Microsoft! Please, put down the rebrandogun. No one else needs to get hurt... But it's too late for Visual Studio Online
Now 'Visual Studio Codespaces': Prices sliced, but won't somebody think of the branded swag? Barely six months on from its grand unveiling, Microsoft is renaming its browser-based code botherer, Visual Studio Online and, more importantly, is trimming its prices.…
Ride now, ride! Ride for ruin and the world's ending! Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord is here at last! Kind of
Crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of your partner The RPG Greetings, traveller, and welcome back to The Register Plays Games, our monthly gaming column. This one has been intensely anticipated by myself and thousands of others for eight long years. We had abandoned all hope, but now it's here and it's not even finished yet. So without further ado...…
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