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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3V30W)
Chairman Rich Templeton will return to CEO role Former Texas Instruments CEO Rich Templeton will return to the role after a six-week break, because his replacement has been dumped for breaching the company's code of conduct.…
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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 13:45 |
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3V2ZK)
Bandwidth is better, down where it's wetter, take it from me! Google has announced its first private trans-Atlantic cable, with landings at Virginia Beach in the US and on the French Atlantic coast.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3V2XK)
They’ll run on the Snowball Edge data transfer device, which packs a Xeon D In a major departure from its usual cloud-only stance, Amazon Web Services has announced it’s now possible to run EC2 instances with on-premises hardware – but only its own Snowball Edge devices.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3V2TX)
US medical testing giant says no evidence of data theft after alarms triggered Medical biz LabCorp shut down some of its systems last week after it detected "suspicious activity" on its network.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#3V2QN)
Nabla Containers promises reduced attack surface through fewer system calls IBM researchers have developed a new flavor of software container in an effort to create code that's more secure than Docker and similar shared kernel container systems.…
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by David Gordon on (#3V2QP)
Health regime for your Windows 10 devices Promo Windows Analytics is a cloud-based suite of solutions that provides proactive insights into the current state of a Windows environment.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3V2QQ)
Man admits to selling remote access malware used by morons for spying A US software developer has admitted to selling and supporting spyware after originally claiming his remote access tool was legitimate admin software.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#3V2J1)
Now it has 79 satellites, and one is a tiny 'oddball' Jupiter already had the most moons in the Solar System, but now scientists have discovered twelve new ones bringing the total up to 79.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#3V2QR)
Expect this one to be argued all the way to the Supremes In a victory for those supporting open access to technical specifications, the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Tuesday vacated injunctions [PDF] that prohibited Public.Resource.Org (PRO) from publishing copyrighted technical standards online.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#3V2J2)
Expect this one to be argued all the way to the Supremes In a victory for those supporting open access to technical specifications, the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Tuesday vacated injunctions [PDF] that prohibited Public.Resource.Org (PRO) from publishing copyrighted technical standards online.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3V2E4)
ES&S admits a handful of systems were shipped with PCAnywhere tool Updated A US voting machine manufacturer has admitted some of its systems sold in the early 2000s had a remote access tool installed.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3V2E5)
Positive outcome from activist investor involvement Just three months after activist investor Elliott Management invaded Commvault’s board-level considerations, the company has announced a radical simplification of its product strategy, shoehorning 20 individual products into four master ones and pumping improvements into its channel program.…
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by John Leyden on (#3V260)
Temporary file during update shuffled off to quarantine A Windows operating system library was wrongly identified as malware by Sophos's antivirus scanner for some users on Tuesday.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3V21K)
Or: How I learned to stop worrying about infrastructure and love the cloud From the department of "things punted to public preview before they're totally ready" comes Azure Service Fabric Mesh.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3V21N)
Seized servers, 'disappointing' offers, stolen laptops – it ain't easy being CA's administrator Administrators dealing with the group of firms affiliated with Cambridge Analytica were offered a pound for the now infamous brand – but didn't accept.…
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by John Leyden on (#3V1WK)
By design, though, not... er, general rubbishness Russia's vulnerability database is much thinner than its US or Chinese counterparts – but it does contain a surprisingly high percentage of security bugs exploited by its cyber-spies.…
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by Team Register on (#3V1QK)
Back in black UK comms provider TalkTalk grew its customer base by a net 80,000 in the first quarter of FY19, the company said in a trading update today. 2.1 million subscribers are now on fixed-price plans.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3V1JS)
First they came for your cars. Now they're coming for your beers Denmark-based brewing giant Carlsberg has reported good progress in its attempts to turn Microsoft's Azure AI into a robot beer sniffer.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3V1DZ)
Business accounts worth their weight in gold to scammers Business email accounts remain a lucrative way for scammers to get into companies and turn a quick buck.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3V1E1)
Techies told to patch: ICO probes error that let pupils link to the wrong parents Updated Capita has admitted a bug in an information management system used by 21,000 UK schools could have incorrectly linked contact details to the wrong pupils – an incident with huge implications for pupils' data protection.…
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by John Leyden on (#3V1A1)
Thanks for Putin that out there Security experts have poured scorn on plans by US president Donald Trump to work more closely with Russia on cybersecurity.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3V1A2)
Big Red brags bank backing for blockchain biz Oracle confirmed a bunch of firms in financial services - traditionally a conservative sector - were among the first to test its blockchain platform that today was made generally available to all and sundry.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3V16S)
You will learn to love version 8, whether you like it or not Windows users still clinging onto to the halcyon days of Skype 7 (aka "Classic") were warned last night to move to version 8 or face the service dying from September 1.…
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by Chris Williams on (#3V145)
We're switching up how the site looks – and we need your feedback Here at El Reg towers, our backroom boffins have been toiling away improving our proudly Perl-based homegrown online publishing system.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3V11Y)
Plus: Guess how much it costs.... oh, go on - have a guess! Review Samsung's giant rival for 50 years, LG, has gone toe-to-toe with the bigger chaebol throughout the smartphone era. Three years ago, LG was firing all cylinders. Its 2014 flagship had introduced the first QHD+ panel; and its successor offered great design (custom leatherbacks) while retaining the removable battery Samsung discarded as it tried to emulate the clean glass lines of the iPhone.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3V0ZD)
Consortium possibly looking to flex Arm muscle, too Analysis The European Union's consortium to develop European microprocessors for future supercomputers has taken a few more steps towards its goal of delivering a locally made exascale chip by 2025.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3V0ZE)
Changes to add ‘more of the skills that you actually need to be successful’ Microsoft has admitted that the certifications it created for Azure admins aren’t very good.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#3V0X9)
Alternative proposed to sending server names in cleartext Over the weekend, at the IETF Hackathon in Montreal, Canada, software engineers from Apple, Cloudflare, Fastly and Mozilla made some progress toward closing a privacy gap affecting network communications.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3V0XB)
Adobe-spawn feels 'more tangible and credible' for government crusties The UK’s Government Digital Service (GDS) has revealed it’s working on a tool that will export its web pages as PDFs.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3V0V3)
‘USENET was a pretty clear warning’ of things to come, says new draft IETF standard A new Internet Engineering Task Force draft proposes to apologise for social media.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3V0V4)
Singaporeans boffins offer Spectre-protector as Fortinet ponders Android inoculation Black hats haven't yet found a way to mass-exploit the Spectre vulnerability – but mitigations are already arriving.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3V0RW)
Malaysia plant faces axe in 2019 while biz powers up more flash drive assembly lines Western Digital will close its hard disk drive factory in Petaling Jaya, near the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, blaming lack of demand for the gear.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3V0PS)
Switchzilla's kit is programmable now, so anything Bezos does it army of developers can replicate As we reported yesterday, the idea that Amazon might make its own switches into some kind of a captive gateway between on-premises data centres and the AWS cloud sent shivers through investors in traditional networking vendors – and none so much as Cisco.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3V0NG)
The bits on land don't expect to get salty, and that's 1,100 Internet pieces of internet infrastructure in the US alone University of Wisconsin-Madison boffins have warned submarine cable owners that their landing stations and onshore cables are at risk from rising sea levels.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3V0M5)
The tech’s almost grown up so they’ll be sleeping in separate rooms under one roof Intel and Micron Technology will dissolve the partnership that gave the world 3D XPoint storage-class memory.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3V0JJ)
And that’s one reason why The Register has been denied access to the final document The final report into the two major failures of HPE 3Par storage area networks at the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) would likely lead to “further negative publicity†for the vendor – which is one reason the ATO has decided not to release the document.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#3V0GG)
The same day Bezos becomes the richest man in the world Amazon's 36-hour "Prime Day" marketing jamboree has kicked off with more than a few hiccups.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3V0GH)
And tech industry doesn't get off lightly in civil rights probe The world's most powerful governments are today accused of bankrolling surveillance kit and training for smaller and dubious nations – and the tech industry stands to benefit.…
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by John Leyden on (#3V0E3)
And noone wants to fix it Login passwords for tens of thousands of Dahua digital video recorder devices have been cached by ZoomEye, an IoT search engine, and published on the web so that even the dumbest hacker could crack unpatched kit.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3V0A5)
Bloke extradited to New York to face charges of serving as drug cyber-mart's tech support US prosecutors have extradited an Irish man to America, where he will face charges of allegedly overseeing the infamous Silk Road drugs e-souk.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#3V06B)
Not enough for a proper atomic weapon but the right stuff for a dirty bomb Analysis While staying at a Marriott hotel in San Antonio, Texas, US government staffers left nuclear material, recovered from a non-profit research lab, in a rented SUV overnight.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3V06D)
Eggheads reveal designs for causing navigation mischief for folks unsure of surroundings Researchers have developed kit that masquerades as GPS satellites to deceive nearby GPS receivers and thus potentially trick drivers into heading off in the wrong direction.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3TZXP)
Quarterly revenues and bookings up a fifth – again Data protecting deduper to disk Exagrid notched up yet another quarter of over 20 per cent revenue growth for its 2018 second quarter.…
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by John Leyden on (#3TZMZ)
Fancy that! APT28 fingered for Italian job Researchers have claimed the infamous APT28 Kremlin-linked hacking group was behind a new cyber-espionage campaign they believe was targeted at the Italian military.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3TZN0)
It does cloud, it does AI, it does analytics - how many more boxes d'ya wanna tick? Salesforce has slurped up Israeli cloudy artificial intelligence biz Datorama for a reported $800m.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3TZGG)
Plus peers told not to hand excess power to big biz Three major internet service providers have said they would back a regulator to oversee rules for web giants – but warned lawmakers not to forget smaller firms or the bigger picture.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3TZBK)
Cloud strategy pays off for investors. Hardware fanboys, not so much It’s Monday and Microsoft’s Partners are already winging their way to Las Vegas for Inspire. That means it must be time for a news round-up.…
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by Team Register on (#3TZBN)
Tell us your views on responsibilities, skills and tools in the modern delivery process Study In the early years of software development, you would often design it, build it, and only then think about how to secure it.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3TZ6X)
Everyone seems to know the score... backups, benchmarks and more Quite a few things happened in the land of storage this past week. When it came to hardware, there were a raft of substitutions in the second half, and we also saw the appearance of a new benchmark that hopes to punt real-world workloads past the goalie. There was also, of course, an attempt to win back precious possession of, er, Tintri. Clear away the beer cans and get ready to rack up some wins with a week in the world of mad flash and spinning rust.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3TZ2R)
Teardown drills into new design Apple has applied a prophylactic to its butterfly MacBook Pro keyboard, teardown specialist iFixit discovered after taking apart a model from the refreshed line.…
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