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Updated 2025-05-23 08:46
Google Cloud ushers in the rise of the machine... images. You know, to capture and recreate VM snapshots?
Handy for capturing multi-disk VMs but limited restoration capabilities Google Cloud Platform already has the ability to store custom images, which you can configure with pre-installed applications. A custom image is just a disk image, though, whereas its new Machine Images - a feature now in beta - also include all the configuration metadata including permissions.…
Yelp finally gets its chance to tell US Congress how Google screws its listings service every minute of every day
Testimony claims search engine giant favours own products and services, even when they're rubbish For years, Yelp's senior VP of public policy, Luther Lowe, has been complaining on Twitter about how every minute of every day Google screws his company by inserting its own listings instead of Yelp's when people use its search engine – even when Google's version is minimal.…
Good luck pitching a tent on exoplanet WASP-76b, the bloody raindrops here are made out of molten iron
Raining irooooon, from a lacerated sky The weather is very strange on WASP-76b. Liquid iron rains down on one side of the exoplanet, every night.…
Budget 2020 in tech: UK.gov splashes cash on broadband and R&D while trying to limit impact of COVID-19 outbreak
But a 2% digital services tax may rankle giants across the pond The UK government has announced a multibillion-pound package of measures designed to boost investment in computing, digital services and science.…
Find out how to manage detection and response for better cyber security
Draw together disparate systems and spread your infosec skills wider with Open Systems Webcast While a prevention layer around your network is important, don't forget you need detection and response practices to deal with threats once they’re in your systems – and to mitigate their effects quickly and thoroughly.…
Capita hops on UK's years-late, billions-over-budget Emergency Services Network to keep legacy system alive
What could go wrong? Capita has won a contract to ensure existing Airwave emergency radios can work with the UK's Emergency Services Network (ESN), should the 4G pipe dream ever get switched on.…
'Up to 300' UK heads to roll at Brit IT services firm Allvotec, with 200 jobs offshored to Bulgaria in cost-cutting drive
Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer, do... British IT services provider Allvotec will cut "up to 300" jobs from the UK, offshoring some to Bulgaria in a push to reduce costs.…
Gaming hot ticket E3 2020 looks like it's the latest tech event fragged by coronavirus
Here's some advice that should come naturally to gamers: Stop going outside The organisers of video gaming expo E3 are expected to cancel this year's edition later today over coronavirus concerns.…
Boots on Moon? Well, the boot part is right: Audit of NASA's Space Launch System reveals more delays, cost overruns
Stop us if you'd heard this one before The NASA Office of Inspector General (OIG) has pulled on the hobnailed boots to deliver an almighty kicking to the US space agency over its Space Launch System (SLS).…
Secret-sharing app Whisper shared secrets like last known location and actual password tokens in exposed database
900 million records detailing country, interests and more left in full view Whisper, a mobile app for sharing those thoughts you'd rather not make public, turns out to be better at sharing secrets than keeping them, spilling a whopping 90 metadata fields associated with users in an exposed database.…
Google to appeal against €7m fine from Swedish watchdog for failing to remove search results under GDPR
Right to be forgotten? We forgot... Google is to appeal against a €7m fine from Sweden for failing to follow Europe's General Data Protection Regulation.…
Corporate VPN huffing and puffing while everyone works from home over COVID-19? You're not alone, admins
Microsoft and others take steps to handle remote staffer crunch With the COVID-19 outbreak pushing many companies to keep workers at home, admins are finding themselves having to deal with a crunch of traffic on VPNs and network appliances suddenly overwhelmed with remote connections.…
Amazon teases Bottlerocket, its take on Linux specifically for running containers
Rust and dual-partition sets for security, efficiency, and automated updates Amazon Web Services has begun previewing Bottlerocket, a new open-source Linux distribution designed for running containers.…
US telcos tossed yet another extension to keep going with Huawei kit despite America's 'security threat' concerns
It's clearly not a pressing issue – this is the fourth time now The United States Department of Commerce has granted yet another extension – the fourth – to telcos using Huawei kit to run their networks.…
AI startup accuses Facebook of stealing code designed to speed up machine learning models on ordinary CPUs
Neural Magic claims algos in social network's open-source compiler on GitHub look awfully familiar An AI startup is suing Facebook and one of its employees for allegedly stealing proprietary software that allows machine learning workloads to run faster on standard processors, eliminating the need for more expensive custom hardware.…
The Reg produces exhibit A1: A UK court IT system running Windows XP
Plus thousands of laptops on unloved Windows OS used by Ministry of Justice, it admits Exclusive A critical crown court IT system and thousands of laptops used by the UK's Ministry of Justice run on Microsoft's obsolete and unsupported Windows XP operating system, The Register can reveal.…
Google: You know we said that Chrome tracker contained no personally identifiable info? Forget we ever said that
Chocolate Factory clarifies its header for monitoring browser field trials following The Register report Google has stopped claiming that an identifier it uses internally to track experimental features and variations in its Chrome browser contains no personally identifiable information.…
From DevOps Essentials to WebAssembly, Kubernetes and Prometheus, Continuous Lifecycle has you covered
But those early bird tickets will be gone on Monday night... Event Whether you need a grounding in DevOps basics, or need to dive deep into Kubernetes, MLOps or serverless, you should join us at Continuous Lifecycle London 2020 this May.…
The Internet of Things is a security nightmare reveals latest real-world analysis: unencrypted traffic, network crossover, vulnerable OSes
And the best part of it? Hospitals are most at risk No less than 98 per cent of traffic sent by internet-of-things (IoT) devices is unencrypted, exposing huge quantities of personal and confidential data to potential attackers, fresh analysis has revealed.…
Stuck at home? Need something to keep busy with? Microsoft has 115 ideas – including an awful SMBv3 security hole to worry about
Hefty Patch Tuesday covers critical Word, Dynamics bugs, and more Microsoft has emitted more than 100 fixes in its March batch of security updates.…
That LVI CPU hole wasn't the only Intel fix: Dozens of flaws patched to stop chips turning into potatoes
Monthly batch of updates covers FPGAs, graphics drivers, and more Intel has posted a fresh crop of firmware updates for security flaws in its chipsets.…
Core blimey, that's edgy: HPE makes a play for next-gen 5G market
No need to be an also-RAN HPE is entering the 5G game with a new 5G core network software stack that aims at wooing telcos away from the large network equipment providers, such as Huawei, Nokia, and Ericsson.…
Welcome to Superbork: Where high-street fashion meets high-strung Windows
Recovery might be easier than fixing the UK's retail sector Bork!Bork!Bork! We take a break from crashed cashpoints in today's instalment of The Register's occasional series of unhappy computers to bring you the latest from fashion sensation Superdry.…
Have you ever seen one of these, son? Ricoh spins off 360° camera boffins to debut neuralyzer-shaped snapper
Hopefully more memorable than the Men In Black gizmo Japanese imaging specialist Ricoh has spun off its 360° camera team into a new company called Vecnos.…
California tech industry gets its first big coronavirus hit: RSA Conference attendee infected, in serious condition
NASA also struck, more conferences cancelled, WISPA is moving ahead Updated The deadly novel coronavirus has reached California’s tech sector with the news that an engineer who attended the RSA Conference in San Francisco last month has now tested positive for COVID-19 – and is in a serious condition.…
No-no-no-notarised: Apple gives Microsoft's Visual Studio Code the all-clear for Mac devs
Don't cry for me, Catalina! Don't scream when firing up the open-source editor ♬ Microsoft's open-source code editor is now notarised by Apple so the nagging of macOS Catalina should be a thing of the past with the February release of Visual Studio Code.…
You can't hold black horse down: Brit bank Lloyds goes full multi-cloud, signs up with Google as well as Microsoft
Spirited equine gambols from vendor to vendor UK finance giant Lloyds Banking Group is to slice off a portion of its £3bn digital transformation investment and feed it to Google as part of a five-year agreement.…
Post Office burned £100m in UK taxpayer cash on Horizon IT scandal legal fees, MPs told
Sub-postmasters testified about impact of scandal on their lives The "disgusting" Post Office acted as "judge, jury and executioner" before blowing more than £100m of taxpayers' money on legal bills, former sub-postmasters told Parliament today.…
You only LVI twice: Meltdown The Sequel strikes Intel chips – and full mitigation against data-meddling flaw will cost you 50%+ of performance
Chipzilla's silicon will surrender secrets if properly probed Computer security researchers involved in the discovery of the Meltdown and Spectre vulnerabilities affecting many modern processors have developed a related attack technique called Load Value Injection (LVI).…
UK.gov tells rebel MPs to go Huawei – but 5G Telecoms Security Bill was the price
Narrow House of Commons victory sees fresh wave of counter-Chinese comms pledges MPs have narrowly voted down a Parliamentary amendment that would have banned Huawei altogether from the UK's 5G networks.…
Docker disguises itself as a development pipeline service as it stalks the IT world for its elusive target – profit
Look upon my works, ye mighty, and subscribe! On Tuesday, Docker will reveal how it hopes to make some serious money, which has been something of a mystery ever since the VC-fueled biz took shape in 2010 under the name dotCloud.…
Amazon launches itself into retail IT with 'all the necessary technologies'. Not saying which, but you know...
We have to Just Walk Out of that shop, right? Oh... with products You know how it is: you start by selling books online, then take over the world of ecommerce, and almost by accident end up dominating the multibillion-dollar cloud computing market. After that, you just can't help yourself.…
Kubernetes is 'still hard' so VMware has gone all-in on container-related tech with expanded Tanzu, vSphere 7
The K8s on-ramp you didn't realise you need, or so Virtzilla hopes VMware has followed through on its promise to make vSphere capable of managing both virtual machines and Kubernetes (K8s) clusters by announcing version 7 of vSphere and a plethora of other container-related tech it hopes will give developers a consistent layer of services to let them go crazy with containers.…
Xilinx's high-end Versal FPGA is like a designer handbag. If you need to ask the price, you probably can't afford it
Premium chip is 7nm, 4 Arm CPU cores, up to 7.4 million logic cells, multi-Tbps networking and crypto Xilinx will today announce an FPGA that is a little bananas: the Versal Premium, aimed at cloud builders and telcos.…
Astroboffin Kurtz ends 40-year quest to find a predicted one-sided vibrating star that was never seen – until now
I love the smell of plasma in the morning. It smells like ...victory Astronomers have discovered for the first time a bizarre star floating in space some 1,500 light years from Earth that seems to only pulsate on one side.…
Rocket Lab wants to break free, hopes next mission is more 'A Kind Of Magic' than 'Another One Bites The Dust'
Plus: Last hurrah for v1 Dragon and Boeing is in trouble Roundup SpaceX hit the big five-oh as Boeing continued shuffling its feet and staring at the ground in this week's Queen-infused rundown of rocketry.…
IBM's outgoing boss Rometty awarded $20m+ in 2019 for growing revenue 0.1%
Oh, she also took 'industry-leading role in AI' and found someone to replace her Ginni Rometty was awarded $20.16m for her final full year as CEO, president and chairman at IBM as the organisation reported a gargantuan revenue rise of 0.1 per cent.…
Hello, support? What do I click if I want some cash?
Look! We've cleared the Windows 7 warning and replaced it with... oh dear... Bork!Bork!Bork! UK banking giant Barclays has become the McDonald's of bork as its ATMs continued their parade of Windows-based shame.…
There's gold in your biz's processes and mining them is the future, says bloke behind topic's first practical guide
El Reg speaks to Siemen's Lars Reinkemeyer Interview Ignoring process mining could leave money on the table or set application upgrades up for failure. A new vendor-neutral book offers guidance from people who walk the talk at BMW, Bayer and Uber. The Register spoke to its editor.…
Moving home with Office 365? Avoid smashed crockery and cracked mirrors
Make tenant-to-tenant migration woes a thing of the past with the help of Quadrotech Webcast There’s loads to celebrate when a company merger or acquisition has gone through. It marks the first step into a bigger, expanded business landscape, and the chance to add talent, techniques, and budget to your next big idea. As a founder, the big, fat payout alone is obviously reason to quite literally pull out the champagne.…
House of Lords push internet legend on greater openness and transparency from Google. Nope, says Vint Cerf
And he tells peers: 'I'm not sure showing you a neural network would be helpful' The reverence in the House of Lords was palpable as Vint Cerf, a Google grandee and one of the, er, elders of the internet, was described during a committee meeting as technology's answer to Sir David Attenborough.…
Think your smartwatch is good for warning of a heart attack? Turns out it's surprisingly easy to fool its AI
Better ask the human doc in the room Neural networks that analyse electrocardiograms can be easily fooled, mistaking your normal heartbeat reading as irregular or vice versa, researchers warn in a paper published in Nature Medicine.…
Four months, $1bn... and ICANN still hasn’t decided whether to approve .org sale with just 11 days left to go
Internet community expresses frustration during virtual conference In 11 days, DNS overseer ICANN is supposed to rule on the $1.13bn purchase of a critical piece of the internet – the .org registry with its 10 million domain names. But ICANN has yet to even decide what criteria it will use decide whether to green-light the takeover.…
Avast's AntiTrack promised to protect your privacy. Instead, it opened you to miscreant-in-the-middle snooping
HTTPS traffic could be intercepted, manipulated, thanks to sloppy proxy You'd think HTTPS certificate checking would be a cinch for a computer security toolkit – but no so for Avast's AntiTrack privacy tool.…
AMD, boffins clash over chip data-leak claims: New side-channel holes in decade of cores, CPU maker disagrees
Maybe don't be quite so smug, security researchers warn AMD processors sold between 2011 and 2019 are vulnerable to two side-channel attacks that can extract kernel data and secrets, according to a new research paper.…
US data centre giant Vertiv winds back Q1 forecast as China factories remain shut for coronavirus outbreak
Still a record year for hardware orders US data centre power biz Vertiv has cut its financial forecasts for the next quarter in response to the impact of the coronavirus outbreak on its supply lines.…
NSO Group fires back at Facebook: You lied to the court, claims spyware slinger, and we've got the proof
Israeli biz says Social Network didn't properly serve legal docs Facebook has been accused of lying to a US court in its ongoing legal battle against government malware maker NSO Group.…
Months-long trial of alleged CIA Vault 7 exploit leaker ends with hung jury: Ex-sysadmin guilty of contempt, lying to FBI
Mystery still surrounds saga of top-secret tools spillage The extraordinary trial of a former CIA sysadmin accusing of leaking top-secret hacking tools to WikiLeaks has ended in a mistrial.…
Clearview said to be chasing every mugshot taken in the US over the last 15 years to paste into its facial-recog system
And more creepy surveillance AI news Roundup If you're sick of hearing about the coronavirus outbreak, you can take a breather here. There will be no further mention of the disease, just loads facial recognition misuse and a few other bits and bobs.…
UK Defence Committee probe into national security threat of Huawei sure to uncover lots of new and original insights
Are they? Aren't they? Will they? Won't they? Yes, no, kind of, a bit UK Parliament's Defence Committee is to open an investigation into 5G and Huawei with a special focus on national security concerns.…
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