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by Rebecca Hill on (#3T44D)
Analytics firm aims to raise $193m on Nasdaq Data analytics biz Domo is to go public today with the aim of raising just under $200m, which if realised would value the company at less than a quarter of estimates in previous funding rounds.…
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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 15:31 |
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by Paul Kunert on (#3T44E)
Currency fluctuation and rising component costs fingered If there is something missing on this sunny Friday, it could well be a collective yearning among Reg readers to know how HP Ink Inc is faring in the UK. Fear not, for we have the latest financials.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3T42H)
Consumers attempt to block chip flinger's attempt to block sale of devices without their kit Consumers have come to the rescue of plucky little Apple in its ongoing stand-off with Qualcomm over patent infringements.…
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by John Leyden on (#3T42J)
Three stripes and you're out Adidas warned late on Thursday that hackers may have lifted customer data from its US website.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3T40N)
Surgical investment pays off for performance in three UK cities Vodafone earned a fine for its rotten customer service, but it can now claim bragging rights as the best data network in three cities, as well as the lowest overall latency and ping rates on 4G.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3T40Q)
MPs: Fraudsters still damaging public purse and businesses The UK taxman has been told to crack down on online traders that aren't paying their fair share of VAT when they sell on sites like Amazon and eBay.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3T3Z5)
DeepMind's 'Demis Hassabis is an individual' – Ministry of Fun Google is not advising the British government on AI, the Ministry of Fun assured this week, following the appointment of Google's Demis Hassabis as an advisor on AI.…
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by Alistair Dabbs on (#3T3Z7)
Standing on a dusty highway, waving my nozzle in the breeze Something for the Weekend, Sir? Mi dispiace, non parlo italiano.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3T3XP)
Tell us, what should the source shack be called post-Redmondisation? Poll In all the furore around the acquisition of GitHub by Microsoft, no one has asked the obvious question: what should the service be called after its Redmondisation?…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3T3XR)
Um, which hardware would that be, then? Analysis The EU has declared its intention to build exascale computing capability "on mainly European hardware".…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#3T3W6)
The cybercriminal's cash cow and the marketer's machine Special report Digital ad fraud is potentially lucrative, difficult to detect, and getting worse.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3T3W8)
If someone asks you why you’re working in a secure area, get your answer straight! On-Call Welcome once more to On-Call, The Register’s Friday foolishness in which readers recount tales of tech support jobs that went pear-shaped.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#3T3TX)
Angry, irascible, but oh so talented New Wave author Obit Harlan Ellison, the legendary science fiction author who kickstarted the 1970s "New Wave" of science fiction has died in his sleep at the age of 84 at his home in Los Angeles.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#3T3TZ)
Blood-scanning radar could be built into a smartwatch AI may help people with diabetes monitor their blood sugar levels without puncturing their own skin, according to a research from the University of Waterloo.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3T3V1)
'We’re removable SSDs now’, says SD Association The SD Association, the industry body behind the SD card memory spec, has announced a new version 7.0 spec for its tech that makes the postage-stamp sized memory cards rather more interesting.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#3T3ST)
Private tabs squeezed through anonymizing network taste like actual privacy Brave Software has updated its web browser so that its private mode actually supports privacy, or nearly – a few lingering technical issues still need to get ironed out.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3T3SW)
Seven years after AWS S3, but just in time for serverless Microsoft’s Azure Storage service has added an option to host static websites comprised of not much more than HTML, JavaScript and other client-side goodies.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#3T3RN)
Шифтинг то а Ñепарате бут еqуал ÑÑ‹Ñтем ит Ñ†Ð»Ð°Ð¸Ð¼Ñ The internet registry operator for Europe's .eu domains will forcibly dump yet more internet addresses, with a decision to kill off any domains in the Cyrillic language.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3T3QN)
Officials gather up previous canned statements, adds contents page... er... Analysis The Uk government's lightweight biometrics strategy has failed to make any serious policy recommendations – and instead reiterated a series of already announced promises and promising further consultation on governance.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3T3QQ)
Recently-litigious Citrix sinks competitive FUD docs. Why might that be? References to F5 Networks have vanished from Citrix’s web page, and The Register understands a possible lawsuit is the motivation for the deletions.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3T3MP)
Conniving crypto creeps caught covertly concealing coin-crafting computer crime code Cryptocurrency-mining malware writers are dialing back their use of your compute cycles in order to avoid detection.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3T3K1)
If you downloaded anything from project's hub repos, consider it compromised If you have fetched anything from Gentoo's GitHub-hosted repositories today, dump those files – because hackers have meddled with the open-source project's data.…
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by John Leyden on (#3T3K2)
Compromised payment cards detected in April, JavaScript code meddling revealed in June Online bank Monzo said it warned Ticketmaster that something weird was going on in early April, two months before the ticket-slinging giant revealed its payment pages had been hacked.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#3T3FV)
Deutsche Telekom and others go with subscriber-focused lightweight approach Despite a decade of efforts, the rollout of IPv6 is still stubbornly sat at less than 25 per cent, in terms of internet traffic, with recent reports suggesting adoption may actually be leveling off.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3T3ED)
Infosec bod shops NameTests, claims leaky code exposes info Facebook has forked out an $8,000 reward after a security researcher flagged up a third-party web app that potentially exposed up to 120 million people's personal information from their Facebook profiles.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3T3CD)
Security researcher shops NameTests app as leaky javascript exposes user info Facebook has paid out $8,000 after a security researcher reported an app blabbing users’ info in what is possibly the first cash payment under the platform’s new data abuse bug bounty programme.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#3T3CE)
Presumably, you're all typing on it wrong Apple's butterfly keyboards can be thwarted by little more than a speck of sand.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3T3AH)
Credit agency promises eight US states it will boost cyber security measures, escapes fine A former Equifax software engineering manager was today charged with insider trading – and has promised to pay back his alleged ill-gotten gains.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3T3AK)
Cue raised eyebrows – Cohesity and SUSE enter IDC has cast its eyes over object storage suppliers, and ejected DDN from its marketscape, brought in Cohesity and Cloudian, and shuffled around a few suppliers.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3T34G)
Perm Sec declines to confirm if review will be published as planned next month The Home Office's massive project to replace the UK's radio infrastructure with a 4G network has shed 70 staffers and plans to expunge another 130, officials have said.…
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by John Leyden on (#3T34H)
FoI request reveals extent of attacks on UK healthcare NHS trusts across England experienced more than 1,300 hours of downtime in the last three years, according to results from a Freedom of Information request (FoI).…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3T34J)
Virty disk software quadruples max raw capacity per server Microsoft has quadrupled Storage Spaces capacity and made other improvements for IoT edge use.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3T31K)
Networking, storage get some love in the latest drop of code The Kubernetes team has unloaded a new version – 1.11 – of the container orchestration platform.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3T2YR)
Dell EMC, Nutanix rule the roost Why go for plain old converged systems when you can hyper the hell out of your infrastructure? That seems to be the question that more and more customers are asking.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3T2YS)
A collaborator worthy of London's finest entrepreneurs. Wait, what? Muralwatch Keen fans of Crap Murals were seen heading to Shoreditch this morning, as a new artwork celebrating "two of history's greatest minds" was unveiled.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3T2WD)
'I really hope Microsoft can keep them totally neutral.' Haha So it's official – Google was also keen on acquiring GitHub before Microsoft swooped in with its $7.5bn purchase.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3T2WE)
But Department for Education admits historic data will be retained Schools have been told not to suck up information on kids' nationalities or country of birth – but historic data will not be deleted.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3T2SX)
The great feature phone revival rolls on The Linux formerly known as Firefox OS has become the fastest-growing phone platform in 2018, and is expected to be in around 100 million devices by the end of the year. Now KaiOS has received a huge boost from Google.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#3T2RK)
Our Vault Ltd fined £70k and Horizon Windows scolded over unsolicited marketing calls Two nuisance callers were today named and shamed – only one was fined – by the UK's data watchdog for illegal marketing activities.…
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by Richard Speed on (#3T2RM)
Maybe next time Microsoft dropped another Insider build of Windows 10 last night. Hidden away among the long list of tweaks in build 17704 was news that the anticipated Sets function is unlikely to see the light of day.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3T2Q8)
Array maker survived a whole year after IPO Tintri has laid off 80 per cent of its staff, including its top sales bod, leaving just 40 to 50 staff behind, however it still expects to run out of cash on June 30.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#3T2Q9)
Cheaper than Amazon's Elastic File System, but that's hardly a stretch Google has opened a beta programme offering managed file storage for apps running in its cloud platform.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3T2NX)
Well done for finally drawing up a contingency plan, though Plans to implement a new customs system for Brexit are still fraught with risk and the taxman has yet to fully engage with users and traders who rely on them, the UK's spending watchdog has said.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#3T2MF)
Leaked missive insists 'no selfies, no bathroom run-ins or elevator pitches' with Rometty Marketing folk in IBM's offices in Austin, Texas, were treated to a visit by CEO Ginni Rometty this week – but not before they were handed a list of things not to do in her presence, including taking selfies or using the loo at the same time.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3T2MG)
And now all four big clouds have a rugged FedExNet data upload option IBM and Google have each announced a competitor for Amazon Web Services’s “Snowballâ€.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#3T2K3)
Or Oumuamua could just be a weird tail-less comet Pic Oumuamua, the odd elongated cigar-shaped interstellar object zipping through the Solar System, continues to flummox scientists.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3T2K5)
Behold, the new, faster version 3.7, with nanosecond timing, data classes and docs in more (human) languages Version 3.7 of anything probably doesn’t seem that notable, but stick with us here because Python 3.7, released on June 27th, 2018, is the programming language’s first big update in 18 months and adds plenty of new features.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#3T2HG)
You say either and I say either. You say ne1th1er and I crash Neural-network-based language translators can be tricked into deleting words from sentences or dramatically changing the meaning of a phrase, by strategically inserting typos and numbers.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3T2GQ)
And more are being debated – all in the name of standardising language The world’s just been given two new definitions of Edge Computing, in the service of making it easier to talk about the topic. But another debate is already considering more definitions for the term!…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3T2FH)
'Exceptional access' is a really bad idea, says standards-setter, but one-off malware is cool The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) has joined the ranks of objectors to proposed law enforcement measures that would compromise access to strong cryptography.…
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