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Updated 2025-05-22 10:01
We could have pwned Microsoft Teams with a GIF, claims Israeli infosec outfit
Proof-of-concept vuln patched a week ago A vulnerability existed in Microsoft's Slack for Suits tool, Teams, that could have let a remote attacker take over accounts by simply sending a malicious GIF, infosec researchers claim.…
Apple and Google tweak key bits of contact-tracing privacy plan
As European nations back decentralised plan that leaves data on the device until users call in sick Apple and Google have revealed a little more about their plans to support COVID-19 contact-tracing apps and changed up some of their security plans.…
Dumpster diving to revive a crashing NetWare server? It was acceptable in the '90s
Broken pencil + ball of stolen Blu Tack = IT joy Who, Me? Today is Monday the 58th of March 2020. As a service to stop the days blurring into one, take a moment to enjoy a tale of NetWare, Blu Tack and a broken pencil in today's Who, Me? reader confession.…
FTP is crusty and mostly dead, right? AWS just started supporting it anyway
Somebody’s got to help you run legacy apps with dignity AWS has just launched a cloudy FTP service.…
Wi-Fi management is still more rubbish than it ought to be – here’s how AI can help
Extra intelligence for end-to-end means less fuzzy video calls. Infradata reveals more Webcast While the traditional methods of “unified communications” have started to fall by the wayside as analogue phone lines have shifted to VoIP, and fax machines move to museums, there’s been concern among the connected working population that the same kind of care and attention that would go into making traditional comms networks flourish hasn’t always been leveled at convincing overburdened office Wi-Fi connections do similar.…
Chinese carmaker behind Volvo and Lotus ships first two satellites for planned IoT ‘OmniCloud’
Plans to connect and observe all the things as-a-service, from low-Earth orbit, while building 500 sats a year Chinese industrial conglomerate The Geely Group has completed work on the first two satellites of a planned constellation designed to help power self-driving cars and other services…
India launches e-government platform for 125,000 villages and drone land surveys to put them on the map
Hello, expanded tax base and access to capital! Farewell, land ownership disputes India has launched a new e-government platform for rural villages and hopes it will advance their development and help increase the nation’s tax base.…
Rabobank security cert expires and gives its Australian Android app a case of internet-blindness
Needs bank staff to sort things out, but a certain virus means the contact centre is rather busy right now Rabobank’s Australian outpost has messed up its Android app, leaving an unknown number of users unable to access their bank accounts on mobile devices.…
Australia’s contact-tracing app regulation avoids ‘woolly' principles in comparable cyber-laws, say lawyers
COVIDSafe application lands for Android, iOS – sans source code Australia has released its promised COVID-19 contact-tracing app.…
Sophos XG firewalls hacked, hotfix ready. Texts wreck Apple iThings. Yup, business as usual in infosec world
Plus Office 2016, 2019 patches – and a barn-load of other security bits and bytes Roundup It's time to dig in to another Register security roundup.…
Facebook, AWS team up to produce open-source PyTorch AI libraries, grad student says he successfully used GPT-2 to write his homework....
...Nvidia CEO to unveil new tech on YouTube, and more from machine-learning world Roundup Hello El Reg readers. If you're stuck inside, and need some AI news to soothe your soul, here's our weekly machine-learning roundup.…
Wake up, Neo: Microsoft mulls using your brain waves or body heat to mine crypto-currency while viewing ads
So this is how the world ends – as a Matrix fanfic A Microsoft US patent application published last month describes a way to use body activity like brain waves as proof-of-work in a cryptocurrency system.…
Spyware maker NSO can't claim immunity, Facebook lawyers insist – it's time to face the music
Software developers aren't nation states, antisocial giant points out Attorneys for Facebook and its WhatsApp subsidiary have challenged a plea from spyware maker NSO Group to dismiss the high-level hacking case the two are fighting out, arguing it has immunity from prosecution.…
Amazon pushes the button on Keyspaces: Cassandra lookalike to boost its NoSQL credentials
Serverless NoSQL DB to come up against open source sister Amazon has announced the general availability of a serverless NoSQL database in Amazon Keyspaces, with more than a passing resemblance to the open-source Apache Cassandra.…
We're in a timeline where Dettol maker has to beg folks not to inject cleaning fluid into their veins. Thanks, Trump
Meanwhile, lawyer wanders beaches dressed as the Reaper... it has been a long week. Happy Friday, folks Video Reckitt Benckiser Plc, the British maker of disinfectants Lysol and Dettol, had to hastily issue a statement this morning telling people not to ingest or inject their cleaning products in the hopes of fending off coronavirus.…
Billionaires showered with wealth as experts say global economy set for long and deep recession
New study shows pandemic drove up profits for some... The word “unprecedented” is getting banded about so much these days that it is losing its meaning. It is worth remembering, then, that even seasoned commentators have been left slack-jawed by the continuing economic poo-narmi.…
Famously flawed, it is 30 years since the Hubble Space Telescope was launched
The Register takes a look at the most famous of the Great Observatories A collaboration between NASA and ESA, and carried to orbit by Space Shuttle Discovery, the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) is entering its fourth decade of service.…
Where the hell Huawei? It should be a bit easier to tell now the AppGallery has its first proper navigation app
Courtesy of mapping underdog Here WeGo Huawei is in a fraught battle to narrow the app gap between its homegrown AppGallery and the ubiquitous Google Play Store. Progress has been steady, signing up the likes of Snapchat, Microsoft and, most recently, navigation tool Here WeGo.…
Android 11 Developer Preview 3 allows your mobe to become a router via USB Ethernet – if you can get a decent signal
Plus: Multitasking and other functions rejigged, but no promises they'll stick Google's third developer preview (DP3) of the Android 11 operating system is an enticing look at the future of the platform, where new features and UI tweaks abound.…
API hubs multiplying? SoftwareAG touts AppMesh control pane to wrangle service mesh mess
DevOps, IT crew - time to get to know each other... Oracle has an API hub, SAP has one and so does Infor. WorkDay and Salesforce? Well…you get the idea. RESTful and SOAP APIs have become so widespread that even the loci developed to help manage application interfaces are a bit of a mess.…
Royal Navy nuclear submarine captain rapped for letting crew throw shoreside BBQ party
They'd been at sea for months – before coronavirus, even A Royal Navy submarine captain is in hot water after returning from a months-long deployment and allowing his crew to have a dockside barbecue to celebrate their return.…
The Adobe Flash Farewell Tour 2020: LibreOffice to axe export support for .SWF in version 7
Another one bites the dust LibreOffice has joined the rest of the industry to hammer another nail in the coffin of Adobe's Flash technology with the removal of an export filter from the suite.…
Nineteen mysterious invaders from another Solar System spotted hanging around the outside edge of ours
Plus astroboffins confirm 'masked' asteroid heading Earthwards Astronomers have discovered a new population of foreign asteroids that have been quietly orbiting the Sun on the outskirts of our Solar System.…
Looking to get a new tech gig? We've got some fresh job listings for you
We've got your back while you hunt for work during lockdown Job Alert Welcome to week four of our mini pandemic response – free job ads for techies. We're trying to keep our readers, their sisters, brothers, friends and relatives in work by providing the industry with free job listings.…
Forget tabs – the new war is commas versus spaces: Web heads urged by browser devs to embrace modern CSS
Comma, comma, comma, comma, comma coloring ban. You come and go, you come and go... The web is being reworked to display a rainbow of previously unavailable colors, but part of the transition demands abandoning commas for spaces when coding CSS color-space parameters.…
Keen to go _ExtInt? LLVM Clang compiler adds support for custom width integers
'Standard C integer types are incredibly wasteful' for certain types of programming Erich Keane, a compiler frontend engineer at Intel, has committed a patch to the LLVM Clang project that enables custom width integers - such as 31 bit, 3 bit or 512 bit.…
Infor feels the lure of Azure as ERP underdog's customers in retail express reservations about Amazon's cloud
Platform is 'tightly' integrated with AWS S3, but now an alternative is needed Few CEOs are upstaged by their own kitchens but, watching Infor supremo Kevin Samuelson drone on about industry disruption, the spotless gleam of his chrome and white backdrop spoke more to viewers of this week's Infor Inspire virtual conference than he did.…
'Non-commercial use only'? Oopsie. You can't get much more commercial than a huge digital billboard over Piccadilly
2012: The London Olympics, Baumgartner jumping from a balloon, and TeamViewer revealing someone wasn't using the right licence Bork!Bork!Bork! Welcome to a special edition of The Register's occasional look at sickly screens with some historical hijinks in today's Bork to the Future.…
Elevating cost-cutting to a whole new level with million-dollar bar bills
The curse of RS-232 strikes again in part two of our serial series On Call While the days may seem to be blurring a little at the moment, we can assure you that it is Friday, which means it is time for another in The Register's series of reader experiences at the hands of the On Call telephone.…
Citrix goes up the down escalator and doesn't just issue guidance – it's increased 2020 targets
We were made for these times, says remote app-slinger, but we’re staying off planes The coronavirus plague has seen plenty of vendors tell investors they just can’t predict what’s going to happen this year, but Citrix has not just issued new guidance but increased the ceiling of its revenue expectations.…
Is your company data in the firing line of America's wide-reaching CLOUD Act?
Tune to find out from IONOS exactly how safe your information is from Uncle Sam's prying eyes Webcast When Microsoft loudly and publicly challenges the US government on remote data access, you can bet the Feds and lawmakers won't just sit still and take it.…
Cisco UCS servers slugged by 'This SSD will self-destruct in 40,000 hours' firmware farrago
As Firepower kit hit by rare and ridiculous ‘silkscreen ID flaw’ A Friday challenge for netadmins: solve a silkscreen ID bug in a Cisco Firepower appliance.…
Taiwan’s tech production went boom! in March
Possibly picking up China's slack. Fingers crossed for more than that! Taiwan’s posted its monthly Industrial Production Indexes for March 2020 and they contain some nice-looking numbers.…
Want to put a satellite into orbit for US comms? Whoa, says Uncle Sam: Where's your space crash risk assessment?
FCC emits rules to tackle danger of orbital debris Satellite communications companies beaming signals to and from America will need to convince the nation's comms watchdog that any new sats put into orbit won't collide with others and spam space with debris.…
Microsoft admits pandemic caused Azure ‘constraints’ and backlog of customer quota requests
Warehoused servers were ready, but then the world discovered Teams Microsoft has admitted that some Azure regions have experienced coronavirus-triggered capacity constraints, and customers haven’t been able to get all the cloud they want.…
Kerching! Intel PC chip shortage over just in time for everyone to buy computers for pandemic home working
Sales, profit soar in first three months of 2020 as coronavirus helps Chipzilla print money Intel today reported a bumper first quarter of the year, with a big shift to homeworking worldwide partially fueling double-digit growth of its PC processor sales.…
Canada's .ca overlord rolls out free privacy-protecting DNS-over-HTTPS service for folks in Great White North
L’ACEI lance le Bouclier canadien dans le but de protéger gratuitement la vie privée et la sécurité des Canadiens en ligne The organization that oversees .CA domains, among other important internet functions, is rolling out a free Canada-wide DNS-over-HTTPS service to protect people's privacy.…
Google says no more shady anonymous web ads – if you want your billboard up, you've got to show us some valid ID
Um, it wasn't doing this already? That explains a lot On Thursday Google said it will require all advertisers on its platforms to verify their identities, an initiative that aims to make online advertising more transparent by allowing people to see who paid for internet pitches.…
The rumor that just won't die: Apple to keep Intel at Arm's length in 2021 with launch of 'A14-powered laptops'
Homegrown chip to shift away from Chipzilla? Hey, it could work Apple will reportedly release its own Arm-powered Mac computers next year, marking the biggest component change since Cupertino ditched IBM's PowerPC chips in 2005 for Intel's x86 line.…
Move fast and break stuff, Windows Terminal style: Final update before release will nix your carefully crafted settings
Users advised to move file out of folder, let a new one be generated, then copy it back over – if you want to keep them The last major update for Windows Terminal prior to version 1.0 dropped last night but be warned: there are some breaking settings changes.…
LCD woes and coronavirus help to send LG Display spiralling into its fifth consecutive quarter of loss
World slows down its smartphone buying for a bit LG Display has reported its fifth consecutive loss-making quarter.…
European programmers take an extended lunch break as GitHub goes TITSUP* again
All fixed now so get back to work Big sack o' source GitHub is having a hellish week as the Microsoft tentacle suffered wobbles aplenty even as it tipped the scorn bucket over the emissions of the US administration.…
Google Cloud CEO says Istio will be handed to a foundation. The Reg: But what about..? Google: That will be all.
When? Which foundation? What about Knative? Analysis Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian has stated that Istio, a key component in the Kubernetes platform, will be donated to a foundation, despite previous strong hints that the firm would never do so.…
Cortana, why are you still here? Microsoft makes the long-suffering assistant chattier for more countries with new Windows 10 build
Also: Remember that whole 'final build' thing? Here's a patch Microsoft began the run up to the weekend with a pair of new Insider builds for Windows 10 and the return of an old friend.…
Brit IT infrastructure giant Computacenter hits pause on shareholder dividends after furloughing 10% of staff
Engineers, consultants can't visit client sites so home they go Computacenter has suspended dividend payments to shareholders after furloughing one in ten workers, the lion's share of which include engineers, project managers and consultants unable to visit customers on site.…
Work from home surge may work in Wi-Fi 6's favour, reckons analyst house
Research ponders whether lockdown may lead folk to update dusty networking kit for sitting room setups The COVID-19 pandemic looks set to have both short and long-term implications for the tech industry, themselves a reflection of changes in the established working culture. A new white paper from ABI Research highlights the growing need for modern home Wi-Fi kit to cope with an increasingly remote workforce.…
Realme's X50m is a decently specced 5G phone – for the price of a 1995 Nissan Micra
So future-proofing your handset might not have to break the bank The prices of 5G handsets are plummeting as demonstrated by the Realme X50m 5G, announced earlier today. This blower, from the sister company of industry giants OPPO and OnePlus, retails at ¥1,999 — about £230 — and comes with a surprisingly decent array of specs.…
Welcome to life in the Fossa lane: Ubuntu 20.04 let out of cage and Shuttleworth claims Canonical now 'commercially self sustaining'
WireGuard VPN, more Snap, and hints about a GUI for WSL Canonical has unleashed Ubuntu 20.04, the first LTS (Long term support) release since 18.04, Bionic Beaver, two years ago, and its CEO and Ubuntu desktop chief have spoken a bit about what's under the lid.…
Geoboffins reckon extreme rainfall might help some volcanoes pop off
Pressure after surrounding porous rock sopped up water was at a 50-year high before 2018 Kīlauea eruption For those of us who spent no small part of our childhoods avoiding certain bits of carpet because they were lava, boffins reckon they might have an idea why volcanoes erupt in the first place.…
GCC 10 gets security bug trap. And look what just fell into it: OpenSSL and a prod-of-death flaw in servers and apps
Static analyzer proves its worth with discovery of null-pointer error A static analysis feature set to appear in GCC 10, which will catch common programming errors that can lead to security vulnerabilities, has scored an early win – it snared an exploitable flaw in OpenSSL.…
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