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Updated 2025-09-10 23:45
Just a reminder: We're still bad at securing industrial controllers
Moxa boxes caught using plain text passwords and insecure web apps Bug hunters have discovered yet another set of flaws in industrial control systems used by electric utilities, oil and gas companies, and shipping and transportation providers.…
It sounds like a new train line, but no: Compute Express Link is PCIe 5.0 server CPU-accelerator glue from Intel and pals
Oh, compute, not commute. Got it. Version 1.0 of spec ratified, available shortly Big-name tech companies will together unveil yet another interconnect, this one dubbed Compute Express Link or CXL, which is aimed at plugging data-center CPUs into accelerator chips.…
Microsoft tweaks Windows 10 on Arm64 to play nicely with KVM
Put away the glue and duct tape, and luxuriate in virtualised goodness A funny thing has happened on the way to 19H1: an Azure OS kernel engineer tweaked Windows 10 to make the operating system considerably more KVM-friendly.…
TalkTalk returns to the email hall of shame as Pipex accounts throw weekend-long wobbly
All fine now, insists telco after Total Inability ToTalkTalk to Server Upsets Pipex peeps* TalkTalk is back in the spotlight over its email services after ageing Pipex mail addresses stopped working abruptly on Saturday.…
UK Ministry of Fun seeks deputy director for IT as it edges away from Cabinet Office shared services
DCMS wants to quintuple in-house IT staffers... that'll take it to 10 The Ministry of Fun is creating a position for a deputy director of IT to expand the department’s internal tech team and wean itself off the Cabinet Office’s shared services programme.…
What do Microsoft, Intel, Xilinx and now Nvidia have in common? They are all courting Mellanox
GPU powerhouse reportedly throws down $7bn for networker Ethernet and InfiniBand networker Mellanox has reportedly received a $7bn acquisition bid from GPU powerhouse Nvidia.…
Radio gaga: Techies fear EU directive to stop RF device tinkering will do more harm than good
Industry and free software folk alike condemn proposals EU plans to ban the sale of user-moddable radio frequency devices – like phones and routers – have provoked widespread condemnation from across the political bloc.…
ICO, forgive me – it has been three weeks since I discovered my breach
Businesses slow to detect, report data leaks pre-GDPR Businesses waited an average of three weeks after discovering a data breach to report it to the watchdog before GDPR came into force, with many waiting until the end of week to 'fess up.…
Packet switching pickle prompts potential pecuniary problems
Techie's 'oops' moment goes unnoticed due to massive bills Who, Me? Our warmest of wishes to you all on this fine Monday. Let us provide you with some of El Reg’s finest word sustenance, with this week’s Who, Me?…
Remember the OpenAI text spewer that was too dangerous to release? Fear not, boffins have built a BS detector for it
BS as in 'behavior sequenced', or 'bland speech'... If you were terrified by the news that "Elon Musk-backed scientists created an AI text generator that was too dangerous to release" then here’s something that may soothe your fears.…
Freelance devs: Oh, you wanted the app to be secure? The job spec didn't mention that
Boffins find pros-for-hire no better at writing secure code than compsci beginners Freelance developers hired to implement password-based security systems do so about as effectively as computer science students, which is to say not very well at all.…
Racist self-driving car scare debunked, inside AI black boxes, Google helps folks go with the TensorFlow...
...and AI worker quits over killer robot plans Roundup Hello, here's a quick recap on all the latest AI-related news beyond what we've already reported this week.…
'It's like painting with atoms'... Watch how boffins form armies of simple micron-sized bots from a silicon wafer
And they may be injected into your body one day Video Millions of tiny moving robots, each as small as the width of an average human hair, can be crafted from a four-inch silicon wafer, according to new research.…
FBI warns of SIM-swap scams, IBM finds holes in visitor software, 13-year-old girl charged over JavaScript prank...
Tired: Booth babes. Wired: Floof babes. Expired: Conference hall carpets Roundup This week we had an NSA reverse-engineering toolkit released at the RSA Conference, a buffer bashed aboard British Airways, big trouble brewing for Citrix, plus much more.…
Biker sues Google Fiber: I broke my leg, borked my ankle in trench dug to lay ad giant's pipe
Sum of a ditch! Bloke demands $75,000 after road prang Installing broadband fiber is a complex and expensive activity, though it may have got a little bit more so, for Google at least, following a lawsuit in America.…
UK peers suggest one big 'Digital Authority' to watch the tech watchers, tighten up regulation
Another quango? Really? 'It's deliberately not that,' says Lord The world's tech titans have been warned that none are too big nor too international to be regulated on UK soil – though, Blighty's government must stop taking a piecemeal approach and ensure existing laws are effectively enforced.…
Liz Warren: I'll smash up Amazon, Google, and Facebook – if you elect me to the White House
'They’ve bulldozed rivals, used our private info for profit' ... yes, yes, but could she actually tackle giants as prez? Analysis US presidential contender Elizabeth Warren has vowed that if elected she would break up Amazon, Google, and Facebook, accusing the internet giants of abusing their market power.…
That marketing email database that exposed 809 million contact records? Maybe make that two-BILLION-plus
'This is a gigantic amalgamation of data all in one place' expert tells El Reg An unprotected MongoDB database belonging to a marketing tech company exposed up to 809 million email addresses, phone numbers, business leads, and bits of personal information to the public internet, it emerged yesterday.…
Iranian-backed hackers ransacked Citrix, swiped 6TB+ of emails, docs, secrets, claims cyber-biz
Remote-desktop giant 'among more than 200 govt agencies, oil, gas, tech corps' hit by gang Updated Citrix today warned its customers that foreign hackers romped through its internal company network and stole corporate secrets.…
Thought you'd seen everything there is to Ultima Thule? Check this out: IN STEREO!
3D glasses required... or you can try squinting at the screen The New Horizons scientists have released a fresh 3D image of the Kuiper Belt object 2014 MU69 – also known as Ultima Thule.…
Ubuntu 14.04 LTS media released with APT fix as end of support nears
Canonical will keep Trusty Tahr fixes flowing... for a fee Canonical has made good on its promise to keep on patching the venerable 14.04 Long Term Support (LTS) version of the Ubuntu operating system as it emitted updated installation media.…
IDC: SANs and filers still alive and kicking... and cloud providers have capacity-stuffed tummies, apparently
Latest storage tracker's out The latest quarterly storage systems tracker from industry analyst IDC revealed that hyperconverged uptake did not dent SAN and filer sales, although overall revenue for the sector saw a decent uptick.…
Nah, National Cyber Security Centre doesn't need its own minister, UK.gov tells Parliament
And you don't need to know what we're spending your billions on. Got that? The British government has rejected Parliamentary calls for greater ministerial control over the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), an arm of secretive spy agency GCHQ.…
You can't spell 'financial' without 'a' and 'i' – and you can't build next-gen financial data systems without AI, either...
...As NetApp is all too happy to explain Sponsored AI is perhaps more important to the financial services sector than any other. As an industry built on data, where the right information at the right time can potentially make or lose millions, any extra analytical edge that a bank, insurance or investment company can gain is highly valuable.…
Champagne corks undocked as SpaceX brings the Crew Dragon back to Earth
Cuddly Earth to stay in orbit. For now. SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft safely returned to the Earth today, dropping into the Atlantic Ocean following a successful mission to the International Space Station (ISS).…
Still fewer Windows 10 devices out there than Instagrammer Kylie Jenner has dollars
Microsoft now only 200 million short of that tricky first billion Microsoft has confirmed that the company is still quite some way shy of its first billion Windows 10 users.…
BNP Paribas systems 'tombés à l'eau' in France for over 24hrs
Outage hits websites, apps, international payments French bank BNP Paribas's systems have been down for more than 24 hours in its home nation, with customers complaining they can't transfer money or access the website or app.…
No guns or lockpicks needed to nick modern cars if they're fitted with hackable 'smart' alarms
Vulnerable kit can immobilise motors and even unlock doors Researchers have discovered that "smart" alarms can allow thieves to remotely kill your engine at speed, unlock car doors and even tamper with cruise control speed.…
Skype for Web arrives to bring the world together. As long as the world is on Chrome and... Edge?
Hello? Is this thing on? Good news, everyone! Now you can shout "Hello? Can you hear me?" at Skype on the web just as if you were using the app.…
Dear Britain's mast-fearing Nimbys: Do you want your phone to work or not?
Building to nowhere Analysis The UK's four big mobile network operators dropped in on Whitehall yesterday to plead their case for taller masts and other policy tweaks. With the public thirsting for better data, but derailing attempts to improve it, they're treading a delicate line.…
Is this the way the cookie wall crumbles? Dutch data watchdog says nee to take-it-or-leave-it consent
Stern words to sites that deny access if users reject trackers Take-it-or-leave-it cookie walls don't comply with the General Data Protection Regulation, the Dutch data protection authority has said.…
Buffer overflow flaw in British Airways in-flight entertainment systems will affect other airlines, but why try it in the air?
Researcher's stumbling on bug was risky to say the least A cybersecurity professor has insisted he was not hunting for a vulnerability when he found a denial-of-service bug on an in-flight entertainment screen during a long-haul flight. His findings could affect a number of airliners running Thales-made equipment.…
Oracle UK tweaks financial reporting, sees revenues rise
Ah, nice move, Big Red – but what's the plan for next year? Oracle's UK tentacle has reported a 103 per cent increase in revenues after making tweaks to its financial reporting – a much needed boost following a slump in the previous year.…
What happens when security devices are insecure? Choose the nuclear option
Confuse those cyber attacks by placing a bucket of water on every floor Something for the Weekend, Sir? It's important – and responsible – to use adequate protection. My own helmet, for example, is wrapped in tin foil.…
Sure, we've got a problem but we don't really want to spend any money on the tech guy you're sending to fix it
Chap does a lot of travel, zero work for penny-pinching customer On Call Gather round, readers, as we have a good root in our On Call mailbag for this week’s tale, fresh from one of your fellow techies.…
Guess who's addicted to GitHub, busy on Slack, stuck in 2015? No, not another hipster: It's the Slub backdoor malware
Panic, flee, cry – or just update Windows for fsck's sake A new malware strain tapped into GitHub posts and Slack channels to siphon precious data from infected Windows PCs, it is claimed.…
You've been dying to know. Here's the answer: The Milky Way tips the cosmic scales at '1.5tr' times mass of the Sun
Still looks slim thank to Spanx-like dark matter NASA and the European Space Agency have teamed up to attempt to answer what seems like an impossible question: what is the mass of the Milky Way?…
Resistance is... new style: Samsung says it's now shipping resistive eMRAM for IoT chips
Wham bam, thank you, MRAM Samsung this week claimed it is mass-producing and commercially shipping embedded magnetic RAM (eMRAM) to replace EEPROM, SRAM, and NAND memories in embedded electronics.…
Tech security at Equifax was so diabolical, senators want to pass US laws making its incompetence illegal
Now Homeland Security committee sticks the boot in Credit-rating monitor Equifax ignored years of warnings and red flags before it was thoroughly ransacked in 2017 by hackers, who made off with the personal information of roughly 150 million Americans, Brits, and Canadians, according to another congressional probe.…
IT guy at US govt fraud watchdog stole 16 computers from... US govt fraud watchdog
How agents tracked down half-inched Surface Pro slabtops to eBay store An IT contractor for a US government fraud and abuse watchdog pleaded guilty on Thursday to stealing 16 US government computers.…
Transcript leak: Inside Facebook's secret crisis meeting, where Zuck and Sheryl race to save social network's rep
Privacy, encryption, vaccines, fake news, er, Messenger themes, uh, emojis? We have obtained a transcript of a secret crisis meeting held last week between top executives at Facebook, including CEO Mark Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg, hammering out a corporate response to the social network's non-stop rollercoaster of scandals. We present it here unedited.…
Tired of smashing your face into the brick wall that is US net neutrality? Too bad. There's a long way to go yet, friends
Democrats launch new legislation that won't pass, but will cause months of argument Analysis Here we go again. As promised, Congressional Democrats introduced legislation that would restore America's net neutrality rules, which were overturned by Ajit Pai's FCC, claiming the proposed law would "save the internet."…
While this CEO may be stiff, his customers are rather stuffed: Quadriga wallets finally cracked open – nothing inside
This is the crypto-exchange that said only dead boss could unlock $137m in wallets When Gerald Cotten, CEO of Canadian cryptocurrency exchange QuadrigaCX, died late last year, we were told no one at his company knew how to access the offline digital wallets storing his customers' digital dosh.…
God DRAM, that's a big price drop: Memory down 30 per cent, claim industry watchers
Plummeting chip prices are collateral damage from ongoing Intel CPU shortage The cost of DRAM chips has seen its largest decline in nearly eight years, as global prices fell by nearly 30 per cent.…
Put down the cat, coffee, beer pint, martini, whatever you're holding, and make sure you've updated Chrome (unless you enjoy being hacked)
Plus: Security sandbox escape vuln in 32-bit Windows 7 boxes exploited Updated If Google Chrome is bugging you to update it right now, please stop what you're doing, and get that upgrade.…
Raspberry Pi 3 Model A+ support to arrive in Linux 5.1
Bonzer Arm update SoCs it to 'em Raspberry Pi fans rejoice! Support for another of the diminutive computers has been added to the next version of Linux Kernel, 5.1.…
Veritas inhales cross-cloud infrastructure analyser Aptare
Makes a nice change from restructuring and layoffs Veritas has said it will buy privately held analytics biz Aptare for an undisclosed amount.…
UK's ICO event on targeted ads opens floor to the adtech industry: Anybody? No? Speak for 10 minutes. Hello?
How to wind up your opponents 101: Refuse to engage The adtech industry was unable to muster even a single speaker to fill a 10-minute slot to discuss the security implications of programmatic advertising at a much-anticipated event yesterday.…
Meizu ditched hole-free phone because it was 'just the marketing team messing about', not because no one really gave a toss
OK, whatever you say China's Meizu has disowned its crowdfunded project to create a button-less and port-less smartphone as a daft publicity stunt.…
Tim Apple. Larry Oracle. Ginni Layoffs: It works so why the heck not?
At last: a Trump innovation we can all get behind Comment US prez Donald J Trump may not leave a wholesome legacy behind him, but one of POTUS's more useful innovations was showcased yesterday: the revival of the occupational surname.…
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