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Updated 2025-09-13 02:15
Apple: No currency mining for you in our App Store thank you
If you want to mine, do it in someone else's cloud Apple has revised its App Store rules to place restrictions on cryptocurrency mining, storage and payment across apps it distributes.…
Apple: No currency mining for you in our App Store thank you
If you want to mine, do it in someone else's cloud Apple has revised its App Store rules to place restrictions on cryptocurrency mining, storage and payment across apps it distributes.…
US tech companies sucked into Russian sanctions row
Embedi and ERPScan find themselves on blacklist Updated An expansion of sanctions on companies connected with Russian government cyberattacks has pulled in two US tech companies.…
Facebook and Snap jam Blackberry patent suit
Social networks move to invalidate design claims Facebook and Snap are pushing to have the patents behind Blackberry's massive infringement suit invalidated and thrown out.…
Facebook and Snap jam Blackberry patent suit
Social networks move to invalidate design claims Facebook and Snap are pushing to have the patents behind Blackberry's massive infringement suit invalidated and thrown out.…
Korean cryptocoin exchange $30m lighter after hacking attack
Coinrail theft send vapor-coin prices tumbling A weekend breach and theft at a Korean digital currency exchange is being blamed for a drop in the price of Bitcoin.…
Korean cryptocoin exchange $30m lighter after hacking attack
Coinrail theft send vapor-coin prices tumbling A weekend breach and theft at a Korean digital currency exchange is being blamed for a drop in the price of Bitcoin.…
So net neutrality has officially expired. Now what do we do?
More fighting of course! Six months after the FCC voted to kill off its net neutrality rules, today – Monday June 11 – it has finally happened.…
So net neutrality has officially expired. Now what do we do?
More fighting of course! Six months after the FCC voted to kill off its net neutrality rules, today – Monday June 11 – it has finally happened.…
Astroboffins trace mysterious noise from hard rock in space
Signs in the sky from diamonds The source of unusual faint pockets of microwave radiation found only in a few regions of the Milky Way has been traced back to tiny specks of nanodiamond dust.…
Astroboffins trace mysterious noise from hard rock in space
Signs in the sky from diamonds The source of unusual faint pockets of microwave radiation found only in a few regions of the Milky Way has been traced back to tiny specks of nanodiamond dust.…
Scammers ahoy! International police operation harpoons 74 email whaling suspects
Major win against business email compromise losses Police have carried out a worldwide wave of arrests that have seen 74 people detained and over $16m in purloined funds seized by suspected whalers, or business email compromise (BEC) fraudsters.…
Scammers ahoy! International police operation harpoons 74 email whaling suspects
Major win against business email compromise losses Police have carried out a worldwide wave of arrests that have seen 74 people detained and over $16m in purloined funds seized by suspected whalers, or business email compromise (BEC) fraudsters.…
Open Source Security hit with bill for defamation claim
Judge okays $260K in defense costs to Bruce Perens and lawyers under anti-SLAPP Open Source Security, maker of the grsecurity Linux kernel patches, has been directed to pay Bruce Perens and his legal team almost $260,000 following a failed defamation claim.…
HPE and Pure Storage all-flash array market shares decline
Rising 3PAR dragged down by not so nimble Nimble HPE's all-flash array market share slumped in the first 2018 quarter, and Pure Storage – something of a bellwether because of it was one of the original flash startups – saw its share shrink a tad too.…
Drinks are on Cohesity, which has been handed $250m from investors
Hi-ho, hi-ho, is it off to IPO? Secondary storage converger Cohesity has raised $250m in D-round funding.…
Hackers target payment transfer system at Chile's biggest bank
SWIFT-linked system was the target, claim infosec types Banco de Chile has become the latest victim in a string of cyber attacks targeting the payment transfer systems of banks.…
Shock: Google advises UK peers against more legislation
Ageing privileged geezers told: One does not simply 'regulate the internet' UK politicians have been warned to pick their legislative battles when it comes to regulating the internet, and focus on the underlying principles rather than obsess over the companies dominating the space.…
White box server makers flounder BUT big brands shine
Data centre spending explodes, fuelled by hyperscale cloud, on-prem refreshes, soaring DRAM Server spending is up by a third globally with purveyors of clouds buying up boxes to bulk out data centres, mid-sized enterprises refreshing their own estates and component shortages playing a part too.…
Every bloody gadget in the house is ringing. Thanks, EE
Smart numbers make UK debut "Do not think your house is a hide-out, it is a telephone," complained Ted Hughes in his poem Do Not Pick Up The Telephone, and EE is helping bring that dystopian vision to life.…
Bad news, mobile operators: Unlicensed IoT tech rocketing ahead of NB-IoT and LTE-M – report
Plus global mobe mobs name Sigfox top IoT tech lag Internet of Things connectivity tech firm Sigfox is the market daddy, having left competing mobile operator-backed techs for dust – so sayeth ABI Research.…
Done and dusted? Vast storm gobbles NASA's long-lived Mars robot
Opportunity survived 2007 gale, but this one's way worse As NASA's Opportunity rover nears its 15th birthday, engineers are worried the plucky little robot may not survive a worsening Martian dust storm.…
Xiaomi the money? OK, here's a one beeeeellion dollar loss ahead of IPO
There's more to them than phones. Like, er, scooters! Chinese tech darling Xiaomi made a loss of $1.2bn (¥7.7bn) on turnover of $5.4bn (¥34.4bn) in the first quarter of 2018.…
Actual control of Windows 10 updates (with a catch)... and more from Microsoft
The week that was... from Redmond to the world The Microsoft world was awash last week with the wailing and gnashing of teeth over what many of the more vocal in the development world regarded as the big bad corporate wolf chowing down on the fluffy sheep of open source as Redmond picked up GitHub.…
UK digital secretary throws cold water over bid for laws on kids' use of social media
If Matt Hancock says it's a bad idea, it's a really bad idea UK digi secretary Matt Hancock has rejected the idea of greater government intervention on kids' use of tech – just as The Daily Telegraph launched a campaign calling on politicians to take stronger action.…
IBM to GTS: We want you to 'rotate' clients every two years
What about trust and long-term relationships? ask Big Blue field engineers Exclusive IBM will ask Global Technology Services engineers to "rotate" from "existing assignments" every two years in a working model overhaul that some staff warned could weaken client relations.…
Nominet throws out US corp's attempt to seize Brit domain names
Forte-dot-co-dot-uk can still be yours for £15k-£20k A British domain name reseller has won an appeal against an American multinational that tried to have it stripped of a parked domain, having rebuffed an offer to sell the disputed moniker for up to £20,000.…
Security execs must prep for post-Brexit cyber challenges – report
Time to start planning now, people! Chief information security officers (CISOs) must prepare for the ending of intel and law enforcement agreements with the EU post-Brexit, a report from Forrester has warned.…
Tech rookie put decimal point in wrong place, cost insurer zillions
Colleagues kindly told him error had him marked for death by angry drug cartel Who, me? Welcome again to “Who, me?”, The Register’s Monday muck-up in which readers recount their worst mistakes.…
Worst. Birthday. Ever. IPv6's party falls flat
In this weeks networking news, switches surged, Riverbed monitored and the MEF standardised Roundup Last week saw celebration in the IPv6 community this week – not because adoption is finally really taking off, but because, umm, look, something must have happened, right?…
Google goes peacenik, chip wizardry and AI gets into art and drugs
It's the week's other AI news Roundup While we've already covered a lot of AI stories this week a few slipped under the radar so, as is traditional, here's the roundup of some news you may have missed.…
What got breached this week? Ticket portals, DNA sites, and Atlanta's police cameras
Also, Apple tightens up its certificate requirements Roundup This week brought new charges for Marcus Hutchins, a novel way to sneak malware into archives, and shady hotspots for World Cup fans.…
Dems push Ryan to vote on Net Neutrality measure
Deadline looms as Senators nudge House With the FCC's motion on ending net neutrality provisions set to be enacted in a matter of days, Senate Democrats want the House to put their resolution up for a last-minute vote.…
Have to use SMB 1.0? Windows 10 April 2018 Update says NO
Microsoft: For goodness' sake, cover yourselves up. Nobody wants to see that The Windows 10 April 2018 Update has been out for over a month now, and the rumbling of user dissatisfaction continues. This time it's networking problems for users still clinging to the venerable SMB1 protocol.…
Yahoo! Kills! The! Messenger!
Chat app won't be part of Purple Palace's Oath chapter Yahoo! is set to discontinue its Messenger app in just over a month's time.…
US regains supercomputer crown from Chinese, for now
America! FLOP yeah! The US is set to regain the crown for world's fastest computer – for the first time since 2012 – with the unveiling of the Summit supercomputer.…
Deck the halls with HALs: AI steals the show at Infosec Europe
A welcome break from GDPR and blockchain Artificial intelligence and machine learning - rather than Europe's General Data Protection Regulation – emerged as a key theme of the Infosecurity Europe Conference.…
Android users: Are you ready for the great unbundling?
EU mulls untangling giant vampire squid from your phone – report It's June, so it must be the season to fine Alphabet billions of euros. According to Reuters' sources, a second big fine will be imposed on Google's parent company next week by the European Commission, this time for abusing its dominance of smartphone platforms.…
England's top judge lashes out at 'Science Museum' grade court IT
Then says digitisation is working well... you sure, m'lud? England and Wales’ top judge has moaned that HM Courts and Tribunal Service’s (HMCTS) IT systems “more obviously belong in the Science Museum” than courtrooms across the land.…
PETA calls for fish friendly Swedish street signage
Fish Are Friends! exclaim animal huggers on World Ocean Day Today is World Ocean Day! To celebrate, PETA has asked Mayor of Stockholm, Karin Wanngård, to maybe change a street name to something a bit more fish-friendly.…
Hitachi Vantara injects Skylaking servers with Optane caching, GPU grunt
Builds out server rackery, hyperconverged and converged systems lines Hitachi Vantara has updated more servers with Skylake processors and added variants with Optane SSD caching and Nvidia GPU support.…
ICO smites Bible Society, well fines it £100k...
Vengeance for poor security sins in face of cyber attack The Information Commissioner's Office has not so much rained fire and brimstone down the British and Foreign Bible Society as drizzled it with a £100,000 fine - after the personal data of 417,000 supporters was put at risk due to a cyber attack.…
Motorola extends modular phone adventure for another year
Pimp my phone... for a price Motorola has extended its modular phone adventure for another year, with new devices compatible with its Mods expansion spec. Reports of cutbacks raised fears the ambitious initiative would be snuffed out.…
Russia appears to be 'live testing' cyber attacks – Former UK spy boss Robert Hannigan
Warns that nation state hacking threatens corporate networks InfoSec Europe Former GCHQ chief Robert Hannigan has warned that the emergence of a commodity marketplace for hacking has changed and escalated the threat.…
MCubed: Speaker lineup shows how to put ML and AI to work
Agenda revealed, blind bird tickets take flight We’re very very pleased to announce the speaker lineup for MCubed London 2018, our three-day machine learning, AI and data science extravaganza this October, and you can see it right here.…
Google plays cloud catch-up and moves into a place of its own
Don't like sharing? Have your very own spot in the ad-slinger's data centre. For a fee Google has signalled it is getting more serious about this whole cloud thing with the beta availability of sole-tenant nodes in Google Compute Engine.…
SAP: It’s all about cloud. Oh and blockchain, let's do that too
Sapphire Now announcements focus on fluffy stuff, tout innovation potential SAP has used its annual conference to announce plans to release a private cloud deployment with IBM Cloud, offer up blockchain-as-a-service and bolster its Leonardo tool kit.…
In defence of online ads: The 'net ain't free and you ain't paying
Selling England by the pound Something for the Weekend, Sir? It's about to get wet. Have some towels ready.…
BT announces Gavin Patterson to become ex-CEO
One more body on pile of 13,000 Hard pressed BT boss Gavin Patterson has agreed to leave the telco after five years in the role, with the group citing a "need for a change of leadership" following disappointing results and a flagging share price.…
British egg producers saddened by Google salad emoji update
Won't someone think of the chickens? British egg producers have expressed disappointment at the removal of the oval-shaped favourite from Google's salad emoji.…
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