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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3WSCZ)
Devs reported performance issues then... Apple has pulled the latest beta of its iOS platform software after less than 24 hours in the wild, and without explanation.…
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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 | 2025-12-22 08:30 |
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by Gareth Corfield on (#3WS8Q)
Total Inability To Support User Perusals Swedish flat-pack furniture folk Ikea’s UK tentacle appears to be suffering a rather lengthy website backend outage stopping some customers from placing online orders.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3WS8R)
EE by gum, BT Group brand wins EE is being strongly challenged by rival networks that have improved their reliability, and in some cases their data performance too.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#3WS5Z)
Frankenfirm waves bye to App Services boss: Time to canter Klaus Mike Klaus, the boss of DXC Technology’s $4bn Applications Services business has left the building, sources have informed The Register.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3WS60)
For Skype Classic, not the sound of silence In a week when NASA flung a spacecraft into space to touch the Sun, Microsoft has brought darkness to Windows 10, given Skype Classic a mission extension, and continued its efforts to send SMB1 screaming into the heart of our nearest star.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3WS36)
Fourth time lucky? Hands On Platform rivals to the Apple’s WatchOS have been stagnating for years, with no new silicon from Qualcomm with which to take on the (now) all-conquering Apple smartwatch since 2016. Samsung isn’t dependent on San Diego for silicon though, and it has put the latest it can into its new wearables – and seriously revived the race.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3WS0V)
Report proposes tight conceptual DLT framework Poorly defined and inconsistent terminology for distributed ledger technology systems has led to misconceptions and unrealistic expectations, academics have said.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3WS0X)
'One and Done' attack patched in library's May 2018 release If you missed the OpenSSL update released in May, go back and get it: a Georgia Tech team recovered a 2048-bit RSA key from OpenSSL using smartphone processor radio emissions, in a single pass.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3WRYN)
Layer cake magic as flash capacity set to soar Flash Memory Summit The Flash Memory Summit saw two landmark capacity announcements centred on 96-layer QLC (4bits/cell) flash that seemingly herald a coming virtual abolition of workstation and server read-intensive flash capacity constraints.…
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by John Leyden on (#3WRW2)
McAfee: Patient monitoring systems open to hack attacks Hackers may be able to falsify patient vitals by messing with the traffic on hospital networks.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3WRW4)
Penguinistas mobilise against decision to support only EXT4 Linux users are calling on Dropbox to reverse a decision to trim its filesystem support to unencrypted EXT4 only.…
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by John Leyden on (#3WRTA)
20th Century tech causing problems in the 21st Video Corporations are open to hacking via a booby-trapped image data sent by fax, a hacker demo at DEF CON suggests.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#3WRTB)
Smash, bang, wallop what a planetary crust, The oldest rock formations on Earth were born when meteorites pummelled into the ground over four billion years ago, according to a Nature Geoscience paper published on Monday.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3WRR7)
Switchzilla issues update for authentication bypass flaw Cisco has pushed out an update for its internetwork operating system (IOS) and IOS XE firmware in advance of a Usenix presentation on circumventing cryptographic key protocol.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3WRM8)
Draconian new proposals on data privacy from Australia Australia's promised “not-a-backdoor†crypto-busting bill is out and the government has kept its word - it doesn't want a backdoor, just the keys to your front one.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3WRET)
Broadband-throttling bug finally gets a write-up and CVE More than 18 months after the design blunder was first brought to light, Intel is still working to iron out the creases in its Puma high-speed broadband modem chipsets.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#3WRCT)
AI can help speed up diagnosis and seldom gets it wrong AI can help ophthalmologists diagnose more than 50 common eye diseases from retinal scans, according to a paper published in Nature Medicine on Monday.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#3WRAF)
Now all you lot have to actually implement it An overhaul of a critical internet security protocol has been completed, with TLS 1.3 becoming an official standard late last week.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3WR73)
Feds can now stick Redmond clouds into on-prem hardware Microsoft has kicked out a build of its Azure Stack on-premise cloud for US government use.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#3WR0E)
Location, location, location! Google has admitted that its option to "pause" the gathering of your location data doesn’t apply to its Maps and Search apps – which will continue to track you even when you specifically choose to halt such monitoring.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#3WQWH)
Courage Foundation boss walks as pro-Jules trustees order Barrett Brown cut loose The director of whistleblower support outfit the Courage Foundation has quit after being told to pull support from Barrett Brown following some barbed comments he made about Julian Assange.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3WQGS)
The host with the most Google plans to allow Windows 10 to run on its budget Chromebooks, with the Chocolate Factory’s blessing.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3WRAH)
Cheaper SSDs could accelerate disk cannibalisation leading to Seagate downturn Flash Memory Summit A flash price crash is coming and should increase disk cannibalization rates as SSDs become more affordable.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3WQCF)
Cheaper SSDs could accelerate disk cannibalisation leading to Seagate downturn Flash Memory Summit A flash price crash is coming and should increase disk cannibalisation rates as SSDs become more affordable.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#3WQCH)
Pen and paper is still king in America election security DEF CON Hackers of all ages have been investigating America’s voting machine tech and the results aren’t great. One 11-year-old named Emmet managed to hack and alter a simulated Secretary of State election results webpage in 10 minutes.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#3WQ80)
Big Blue mouthpiece insists he's not going anywhere, though IBM’s top cloud and Watson AI man has reportedly been tapped up about moving to scandal-hit ad company WPP Group as chief executive.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3WQ81)
Thousands of discrepancies reported between two databases The government is facing another NHS IT scandal, as it scrambles to confirm whether discrepancies between two databases have affected patient care.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3WQ3V)
Quality, enterprise-friendly kit, but ... how much wonga? Hands On The new Samsung Galaxy Note still has a lot to prove after the last-but-one Note - 2016's Note 7 - kept bursting into flames.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3WQ3X)
Simon McDougall bags top innovation role at Information Commish The UK’s data protection watchdog has chosen the managing director of an IBM-owned risk management biz, Promontory, to lead its technology policy and innovation team.…
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by John Leyden on (#3WQ0F)
It's no (crypto)miner offence Cheap Android smartphones aren’t just bad for the environment because they’re destined for landfill - they might also cause problems because they come laced with ineffective but battery-life destroying crypto-mining crud.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3WQ0G)
Time to dab your wrists with a little eau de flash It took a globally and organically sourced supplier base to create the perfume de storage we set before you, distilled from everything worth knowing over the past seven days on this tech news beat.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#3WPY5)
Trade secrets are trumping personal liberty DEF CON American police and the judiciary are increasingly relying on software to catch, prosecute and sentence criminal suspects, but the code is untested, unavailable to suspects' defense teams, and in some cases provably biased.…
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by Team Register on (#3WPW9)
Sign up and start raising wonga now If you want to help some of the most vulnerable people in the country and bed down with some of the smartest, you’ve got seven weeks to sign up for the 2018 Byte Night sleepout.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3WPWB)
Staffer learns hard way: boss jokes don't mix well with infosec demos Who, Me? Welcome again to Who, Me?, where we invite Reg readers to begin the week crossing their fingers it will be better than those of our featured techies.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#3WPT9)
Carefully omits to mention the Land of the Free DEF CON Rob Joyce, the former head of the NSA’s Tailored Access Operations hacking team, has spilled the beans on which nations are getting up to mischief online.…
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by Team Register on (#3WPTB)
So what are we going to do about it? Anything? Reg Lectures Trolls, fake news, Russian bots, radicals – there's plenty to put you off going online.…
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by John Leyden on (#3WPRJ)
Police seek mentor-like techies to help talented kids UK police are looking to cybersecurity firms to help implement a strategy of steering youngsters away from a life in online crime.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#3WPPA)
How does that work for reinforcement learning? +1 for shrinking tumor, -1 for death? Machine-learning software has been trained to suggest the frequency and dosage of chemotherapy for patients suffering from glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#3WPMB)
Pension fund cries fraud over database giant's boasts about its off-prem biz performance Oracle has been sued by a pension fund that claims the database giant exaggerated its cloud business revenue.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#3WPJD)
Sick of kid spit, flying stripy sexless scum drink your cider, pick fight Britain's booze hooligans are back – and more obnoxious than possibly imagined.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3WNEF)
You just pass a law, apparently The Australian government has scheduled its “not-a-backdoor†crypto-busting bill to land in parliament in the spring session, and we still don't know what will be in it.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#3WM3W)
Your quick summary of AI news from this week Roundup Hello, here are a few bits of AI news for the weekend. You don't always need a ton of cash to buy a wad of GPUs to train your models super quickly. You can do it pretty cheaply on cloud platforms. There's also a robot that can play Where's Waldo (Wally in the UK), and Microsoft's computer that is trying to tell if you've found a joke funny.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3WM0Q)
New zero-day vendor opens up shop, and more in infosec this week Roundup This week, the infosec world descended on Las Vegas for BlackHat and DEF CON to share stories of bug hunting, malware neural nets, hefty payout offers, and more.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3WMP2)
Hard-partying tech baron (no, not that one) cuffed Broadcom billionaire cofounder Henry Nicholas was this week cuffed on suspicion of drug trafficking – after cops allegedly seized a huge stash of narcotics in his Las Vegas hotel suite.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3WKM1)
Hard-partying tech baron (no, not that one) cuffed Broadcom billionaire cofounder Henry Nicholas was this week cuffed on suspicion of drug trafficking – after cops allegedly seized a huge stash of narcotics in his Las Vegas hotel suite.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3WKJG)
Pentagon tech trial went so well, it's now a full-time op The Pentagon has upgraded to permanent status a previously temporary and experimental program that bankrolls technology startups.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#3WKAV)
Dive into a weird and wonderful 'feature' of Via's embedded hardware chips Black Hat A forgotten family of x86-compatible processors still used in specialist hardware, and touted for "military-grade security features," has a backdoor that malware and rogue users can exploit to completely hijack systems.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3WK84)
And revs up those daft Apple Car rumors Dan Field, Tesla's VP of engineering, and the man in charge of the Tesla Model 3 until May, is to rejoin Apple, the tech titan confirmed this week.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#3WK86)
Something to do with ripping you off and treating you like an a-hole while doing so You almost have to admire the US cable industry's absolute disregard for its own paying subscribers.…
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