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by Richard Speed on (#4AJDR)
Faint hopes of a Visual Studio 2019 treat dashed on the rocks of 'late 2019' A third preview of .NET Core 3 has hit, along with the news that, no, the framework isn't going to feature in the upcoming Visual Studio 2019 until the second half of this year at the earliest.…
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The Register
Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
Copyright | Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing |
Updated | 2025-09-10 23:45 |
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4AJDS)
Oof. Crop of vulns include remote code execution as root Cisco has published patches for a plethora of problems with its products, including vulns that could trigger denial-of-service conditions – and a sneaky one that "could allow an authenticated, remote attacker to execute arbitrary commands with root privileges".…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#4AJ9Y)
Big Red details 5G plans Vodafone played down 5G expectations as it elaborated on its own 5G plans today - and warned that interference over Huawei by Government would retard the UK’s mobile network leadership.…
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by Richard Currie on (#4AJ9Z)
Owner finds out the hard way after group of townsfolk decide venue is a 'house of ill repute' To the whimsically Arthurian-named town of Lostwithiel in Cornwall, England, where the owner of a wine bar has found himself defending his biz in the local media against claims that it looks more like a bordello.…
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by Tim Anderson on (#4AJ6S)
'I want to explain why it was necessary' Java has a problem – the language and platform is evolving faster than ever, but many developers are stuck on the five-year-old Java 8.…
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by Team Register on (#4AJ47)
Get deep on DevOps, Containers, CI/CD and more Events Serverless, containers, CI/CD and DevOps, are changing how software is developed and deployed, and you get an up close view of how this is happening in the real world at Continuous Lifecycle London in May.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4AJ48)
Something about calc.exe bugging you? Get in there and fix it Microsoft has slung the source code for the Windows Calculator onto GitHub under the MIT licence in the hope of building a community around it.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#4AJ1S)
Storage firms' disk drive developments diverge Seagate's next-generation HAMR disk drive will be a drop-in replacement while Western Digital's MAMR drive will not, The Register can reveal.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4AHZJ)
But ISP won't nuke nuisance without proof of ID TalkTalk has refused to delete a former customer's email address which was taken over by spammers – because the unfortunate person cancelled their contract eight years ago.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#4AHX1)
'Everything we do has a moral dimension ... we are responsible for the world we create with our technologies' RSA If you're looking to the US government to save your electronic privacy, don't hold your breath: Europe looks to be the real hero in this fight.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#4AHT6)
GOOD ENOUGH TO RECOGNIZE MUSIC VIA SHAZAM IF YOU TURN IT UP TO 11 It's not just the walls that have ears. It's also the hard drives.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#4AHQH)
Plus: Introverts' must-have Duplex – that restaurant robo-caller – served up to Pixels Google on Wednesday emitted a TensorFlow preview, finally put its Edge TPU hardware on sale, and rolled out its dreaded robo-caller Duplex – all amid its annual Tensorflow developer conference in Silicon Valley.…
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by Chris Williams on (#4AHKR)
Hardware maker asks Texas court to undo banishment of IT gear from federal networks Huawei is suing Uncle Sam to overturn a ban on its communications hardware from US federal government computer networks.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#4AH8A)
Top tip: Ask your vendor what it plans to do about adversarial examples RSA It’s trivial to trick neural networks into making completely incorrect decisions, just by feeding them dodgy input data, and there are no foolproof ways to avoid this, a Googler warned today.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#4AGX3)
Prosecutors mull complaint against the 'safety' driver, tho This month last year, one of Uber's self-driving cars operating in autonomous mode hit and killed Elaine Herzberg as she walked a bicycle across a road at night in Tempe, Arizona. The deadly crash is believed to be the first pedestrian death attributable to autonomous vehicle.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4AGGR)
Who'da thunk it? 3 out of 10 for repairability, must try harder While many spend their first few hours with a new phone setting it up, teardown crew iFixit prefers to rip 'em apart. Their latest victim? The Samsung Galaxy S10.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#4AGBF)
Oh, we'll let regulators know about it next time, promise The UK Ministry of Justice is mooting a rollout of biometric technology in prisons to cut down on visitors bringing in contraband, reporting that a "successful" recent trial had a deterrent effect.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4AG6E)
Beats the other big boys to region, Blobs go Premium, DevOps go on-prem, oh my With Premium Blobs, Azure DevOps Server and a new Africa Azure region, Microsoft has spaffed out cloudy goodness like a Roomba in reverse.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4AG0Z)
ManTech was using Lockheed Martin files illicitly, court told An American jury has awarded $1.5m to a former NASA engineer who was fired by his contractor ManTech in retaliation for his blowing the whistle over documents from Lockheed Martin.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#4AG10)
Could errors affect other applications? Dunno. When will new systems be online? Dunno The Home Office is making life-changing decisions using "incorrect data from systems that are not fit for purpose" and has not fixed the "appalling defects" identified during the Windrush scandal, MPs have said.…
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Google sells 'predictable' storage costs: $120k for a year before you get a foot in the door, though
by Chris Mellor on (#4AFWE)
Get the forecast right and you'll get a, er, discount Google has squeezed out a plan for what it calls "predictable" cloud storage pricing, locking customers into a year-long payment commitment.…
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by Richard Currie on (#4AFWG)
YEAH! SCIENCE Normally a headline like "The hipster effect: Why anti-conformists always end up looking the same" would elicit much rolling of eyes here at Vulture Towers.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4AFRH)
Some police keeping their feet on ground despite pleas from on high Six years after the UK government introduced its "Cloud First" policy, a load of police forces have continued to mostly keep their feet firmly planted on the ground, a survey has revealed.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#4AFN0)
Big Red puts name on $3m NSF project: Because academics love a good cloud credit, amirite? Oracle's battle to keep from being left behind by cloudy competitors AWS and Google has taken an academic twist – it has stuck its name to a project assessing how cloud computing can be used for research.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#4AFN2)
Networking, storage collab hitting a data centre near you Hitachi Vantara has taken a leaf out of the Cisco-NetApp FlexPod playbook by twinning Cisco servers and networking with its own storage in a converged infrastructure deal.…
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by Jude Karabus on (#4AFJA)
'There is no e-sound. It has to be invented' Now that electric cars officially sound as silent as a character from A Quiet Place in slippers walking on eggshell foam behind an office partition lined with blankets, makers of the post-petrol vehicles have been thinking up ways to ensure zombie pedestrians can hear them coming.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4AFJC)
And in Israel, a funny thing happened on the way to the Moon Space roundup Rebooting robots, lunar robot arms and a rocky path to Martian drilling joy. It's last week in Space.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#4AFFV)
It'll be big one day. But that day is not tomorrow Analysis If the industry had one job at Mobile World Congress last week, it was to tell the world that 5G – the biggest thing since "electricity or the automobile", according to Qualcomm's CEO* – was almost upon us.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#4AFDH)
Around 1,100 local management and grunts to be axed, customers forced to buy kit via resellers Exclusive Fujitsu is axing the entire local workforce in a bunch of regions – including most of Eastern Europe and certain countries in the Middle East, Africa, and Western Europe – with the loss of 1,100 jobs.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#4AFDK)
We'd call this blue-sky thinking but the sky is thick with swarms of drones RSA AI algorithms will in the future form and direct swarms of physical and virtual bots that will live among us... according to this chap speaking at 2019's RSA conference in San Francisco on Tuesday.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#4AF8X)
Throw another regulation on the barbie, says Australia In an effort to limit potential regulation in Australia, Google filed a reply to a preliminary Oz government report examining the impact of Facebook and Google on the country's media and business landscape.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4AF8Z)
Rather than talk about generic threats, go through some examples with people RSA When it comes to getting your users up to speed with cyber-security, the best approach is to give it to them straight. Practicalities over jargon. Specific examples of threats are very persuasive, rather than simply insisting people enable a firewall and malware scanner, check regularly for updates, and avoid clicking on any suspicious attachments and links.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#4AF6G)
Cosmic soap operas may explain why weird alien objects end up in our backyard Stars whizzing by planets can wreak havoc by knocking their orbits out of place or kicking them out of their systems entirely, according to a paper published in the Astrophysical Journal.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#4AF1D)
Reverse-engineering suite now available to download... and maybe run in a VM, eh? RSA The NSA has released its home-grown open-source reverse-engineering suite Ghidra that folks can use to poke around inside applications to hunt down security holes and other bugs.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4AEZG)
Wise Wardle waves wand, whacks wily worms which work without Windows RSA Infosec guru Patrick Wardle has found a novel way to attempt to detect and stop malware and vulnerability exploits on Macs – using Apple's own game engine.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#4AEVC)
Education, education, education is key to security RSA Despite multi-factor authentication being on hand to protect online accounts and other logins from hijackings by miscreants for more than a decade now, people still aren't using it. Today, a pair of academics revealed potential reasons why there is limited uptake.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#4AERM)
But really it's just the start of the latest surveillance chess game Special report The NSA may kill off a controversial mass surveillance program of Americans that was exposed by Edward Snowden, according to a Congressional staffer.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4AENK)
'Technology doesn't comprehend morality: An algorithm can protect data from theft or hold it for ransom' RSA McAfee – the infosec company, not that weird bloke – says rather than worry about ultra-smart AIs causing havoc all by themselves, we should instead focus on stopping the human element: the miscreants with their hands on the levers.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#4AEHD)
Just don't lose your hardware keys RSA At 2004's RSA Conference, then Microsoft chairman Bill Gates predicted the death of the password because passwords have problems and people are bad at managing them. And fifteen years on, as RSA USA 2019 gets underway in San Francisco this week, we still have passwords.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#4AED4)
'Espionage and criminal investigations ... almost all of which lead back to Beijing' RSA While Russian hackers, Kremlin-backed or otherwise, grab the headlines, China remains the biggest cyber-security threat to America, FBI director Christopher Wray warned today.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#4AE8H)
'If someone like me can't get in to give a keynote, perhaps it's time we rethink where we organize our events' RSA Adi Shamir, the S in the renowned RSA encryption system, didn't take his usual place on the Cryptographers' Panel at this year's RSA Conference in San Francisco – because he couldn't get a visa from the US government. And he's not alone.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4AE3H)
Plus: Reagan's model doesn't apply today, says US CSO Huawei execs insisted today that they have no problem with being shut out of certain countries' networks, even as their US CSO gently scorned a famous Ronald Reagan saying that heralded the end of the Cold War.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#4ADY7)
HMRC: How about a client-led dispute resolution process? Organisations hiring off-payroll contractors will be responsible for handling disputes over tax status and ultimately liable for missing tax payments once IR35 reforms hit the private sector, HMRC has said.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4ADSM)
Just nothing too recent, OK? Those keen to indulge in a bit of open-source Windows in the form of ReactOS will be delighted to learn that there is a raft of improvements in the latest version.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#4ADN3)
One pint of beer please, Mr Barman. I am 18 today, honest! Like teenagers lying about their age to get served in a pub, tech startups are lying about their AI technology or skills to get VC money.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#4ADG4)
MPs ask for specifics, get evasive umming and erring British civil servants and ministers have been slammed for a "Sir Humphrey"* performance when grilled by MPs on differences in attitudes to tech across government and progress moving off legacy systems.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4ADG6)
Ohhh, Torvalds! You are a card! Linus Torvalds has squeezed out version 5.0 of the Linux kernel and flung open the merge window for its follow-up, 5.1.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4ADBR)
About as welcome as a what in a spacesuit? It has been 50 years since NASA first shoved astronauts into a spacecraft that could not return to Earth: say hello to Spider.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4AD7K)
Consumer IoT PITA to secure but not impossible, report warns If you live in a smart home you may as well take all the locks off your doors and hang up a sign saying "burglars, free swag here". At least that's the thrust of a report by Trend Micro into the security threats posed by "complex IoT environments".…
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by Richard Speed on (#4AD7M)
Clear! Museum hopes to bring silicon back to life over next few weeks The Saints of Silicon at the Centre for Computing History have got hold of the original build of Sinclair's ZX Spectrum, courtesy of Kate and John Grant.…
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