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by Connor Jones on (#74YA5)
Proposed law could lock down open source tools and give vendors fresh reasons to inspect print files California's proposed legislation to put the burden of blocking 3D-printed firearms onto printer manufacturers could effectively sideline open source tools and create new surveillance concerns, digital rights activists argue....
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The Register
| Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
| Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
| Copyright | Copyright © 2026, Situation Publishing |
| Updated | 2026-04-14 17:46 |
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by Tim Anderson on (#74YA6)
Long-familiar workflow lets developers split big code changes into smaller, easier-to-review chunks GitHub has unveiled Stacked PRs, a new feature aimed at making large pull requests easier to review, manage, and move through the pipeline faster....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#74YA7)
Paper says a single binary operator could replace a lot of scientific heavy lifting Every now and then, a researcher comes up with something that sounds either wrong or unoriginal to outsiders - yet carries just enough of a chance of being correct, novel, and consequential to demand a closer look....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#74Y6V)
Deal only comes with 24 operational sats, but also an Apple deal, spectrum licenses, and plenty of IP Amazon has agreed to pay more than $11.5 billion to expand its satellite constellation by about two dozen units with the acquisition of Globalstar. But it's more about the underlying technology that Amazon hopes will help it catch Elon Musk's Starlink....
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by Connor Jones on (#74Y3T)
Honey, the skids are fighting again Two rival ransomware gangs have locked horns after 0APT threatened to expose people affiliated with Krybit....
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by Richard Speed on (#74Y10)
Veterans think Congress may swat cuts again, but uncertainty could still do lasting damage As NASA's Artemis II mission headed for the Moon, the Trump administration unveiled another attempt to cut the agency's science budget. Yet some insiders, perhaps buoyed by deja vu and a little post-traumatic resilience, are less alarmed than you might expect....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#74Y11)
Didn't admit liability, will cough $17M, still fighting age discrimination cases IBM has become the first company to settle with the US government under the Trump administration's Civil Rights Fraud Initiative, a program aimed at ensuring diversity programs don't cross a line and result in discrimination....
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by Carly Page on (#74XYP)
Entry-level models jump by up to 220, mirroring steeper hikes in US Microsoft's memory squeeze has reached the shop floor, and Surface prices have been jacked up to match....
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by Connor Jones on (#74XYQ)
20-year-old Texan also allegedly planned to kill everyone inside the OpenAI office building The man accused of attacking Sam Altman's San Francisco home with a Molotov cocktail on April 10 now faces charges of attempted murder....
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by Dan Robinson on (#74XYR)
Contract kicks off design work, but SMRs unlikely to generate power before the mid-2030s The British government has signed a deal with RollsRoyce to carry out the design work on small modular reactors (SMRs)....
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by Richard Speed on (#74XWZ)
Mailbox access in stripped-down Android app ends on May 25 Having blocked new installations of Outlook Lite in October 2025, Microsoft will " complete the retirement" of the app on May 25....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#74XX0)
Already 1.3B over budget and 4 years late, NS&I could extend timetable beyond 8 years The UK's state-backed savings bank has set out options for finishing its disastrous transformation program, including busting the current timeline....
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by Tobias Mann on (#74XX1)
Local hero Rapidus is on track to begin production of 2nm semis next year, as TSMC expands its Japanese foothold When IBM PCs set the standard for personal computing and Madonna topped the charts, Japan led the semiconductor industry. But that 1980s dominance faded as the fabless design and foundry model evolved....
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by Avram Piltch on (#74XVR)
Microsoft punishes you for updating infrequently Opinion It's not the first time this has happened to me and it won't be the last. I pulled a laptop that I hadn't used for six months out of a drawer, then waited through three hours and four rounds of reboots for it to update Windows 11 completely....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#74XS1)
Tiny variation in temperature weakened a component and when a critical moment arrived, that mattered Japan's space exploration agency (JAXA) thinks a manufacturing process that didn't properly take into account the qualities of an adhesive caused the December 2025 failure of a satellite launch using its locally developed H3 rocket....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#74XPV)
Latest report from Stanford's AI boffins finds unsafe usage practices, widespread anxiety about impacts, and China catching up to the USA Artificial intelligence has achieved mass adoption faster than the personal computer or the internet, reaching 53 percent of the population in just three years. The number of harmful AI incidents has increased correspondingly. And both experts and laypeople believe the impact will be felt in two areas: Elections and relationships....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#74XN5)
One was patched almost 14 years ago Crooks are exploiting four Microsoft vulnerabilities - one patched 14 years ago and another tied to ransomware activity - according to America's lead cyber-defense agency, which on Monday gave federal agencies two weeks to patch them....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#74XJ8)
What, you think basic usability is improved just for your benefit, human? Cloudflare is rebuilding Wrangler's command-line tooling by adding commands for products and interfaces that still lack CLI support. And yes, AI agents are a big reason why....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#74XJ9)
Brief outage follows growing number of quality complaints Once the AI darling of programmers everywhere, Anthropic's Claude has been stumbling mightily, both in terms of cost and perceived quality. The service was down briefly on Monday with "a major outage," service trouble that only amplifies growing discontent from customers that even a bot can see....
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by O'Ryan Johnson on (#74XJA)
'AI is now infused in every package that we offer to our addressable market,' SVP John Aisien told us ServiceNow's latest product announcements show how hardcore the company has become about embedding AI across its go-to-market strategy....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#74XFN)
Google Sites lure leads to bogus root certificate Imagine getting asked to do something by a person in authority. An unknown malware slinger targeting open source software developers via Slack impersonated a real Linux Foundation official and used pages hosted on Google.com to steal developers' credentials and take over their systems....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#74XDJ)
GG noob, who cleared you to land? The Federal Aviation Administration continues to face an air traffic controller shortage, and it's hoping that a new demographic of potential applicants can fill the ranks: Video gamers....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#74XDK)
Advisers say fewer staff could mean slower answers and tougher renewals Oracle customers have been warned to watch for changes in support and pricing as Larry Ellison's company makes huge datacenter spending commitments to support its AI ambitions....
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by Tim Anderson on (#74XAH)
Dev reports suggest long sessions now burn through usage much faster Anthropic last month reduced the TTL (time to live) for the Claude Code prompt cache from one hour to five minutes for many requests, but said this should not increase costs despite users reporting faster depleting quotas....
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by Richard Speed on (#74XAJ)
AI gubbins still there, just tucked under 'Writing Tools' Copilot is on its way out of Notepad, but a return to the basic text editor is not on the cards....
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by Carly Page on (#74XAK)
Travel giant says names, contact details, dates, and hotel messages potentially exposed Booking.com is warning customers that their reservation details may have been exposed to unknown attackers, in the latest reminder that the travel giant still can't quite keep a lid on the data flowing through its platform....
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by Richard Speed on (#74XAM)
Controlled Feature Rollouts headed for the trash among other changes Microsoft is giving the Windows Insider program another makeover in the hope of making it less baffling....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#74X7R)
Department putting systems in place to manage 'restrictive licensing practices' A federal spending watchdog has found the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) faced "challenges" in understanding the correct number of licenses it should hold for the top five vendors in its $985 million annual software expenditure....
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by Dan Robinson on (#74X7S)
MoD plans rapid procurement of Cambridge Aerospace's Skyhammer system at home and abroad Britain is set to buy interceptors from a homegrown startup to counter Iranian Shahed-style attack drones, equipping both its own armed forces and allies in the Persian Gulf region....
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by Carly Page on (#74X5E)
Reader and Acrobat flaw let booby-trapped documents profile targets and hijack machines Adobe has released a fix for an Acrobat and Reader zero-day that attackers had been exploiting for months....
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by Connor Jones on (#74X5F)
Names, addresses, dates of birth, and bank details accessed, though not passwords Basic-Fit, Europe's largest gym chain, has confirmed data including the bank details of around a million customers was stolen from its systems....
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by Carly Page on (#74X5G)
Gang claims it accessed Snowflake metrics via third-party tool ShinyHunters is back, this time pinning Rockstar Games to its leak site and claiming it didn't so much hack its way in as walk through a door someone else left wide open....
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by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols on (#74X38)
Linux Foundation Europe boss predicts EU will run as fast as it can from US tech companies Opinion You want to know who's even sicker of President Donald Trump than American liberals? European governments and companies who are realizing that putting all their eggs in one US basket was a stupid move....
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by Carly Page on (#74X39)
Benchmarking contract lays groundwork for renegotiating 774M software agreement NHS England is spending 46,000 on "benchmarking" as it gears up for what looks like the next round of negotiations behind one of the UK public sector's biggest software deals....
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by Rupert Goodwins on (#74X3A)
Not viral as in cat videos. Viral as in we need a vaccine Opinion For a sector at the heart of US economic growth, AI claims and counter-claims remain curiously hard to reconcile. Models are improving at the speed of light, AI firms claim, yet the message from the codeface remains that benefits are still more than balanced by the downsides....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#74X1J)
Apres ca, le deluge, as plans call for move away from plenty more American software and hardware France's Interministerial Directorate for Digital Affairs (DINUM) will drop Windows desktops, and adopt Linux instead....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#74X1K)
Optimism is always risky, and defective hardware makes it indigestible Who, Me? The best part of the working day is lunchtime, but The Register tries to start Mondays in a pleasant fashion by bringing you a new installment of "Who, Me?" - the reader-contributed column in which you admit to your mistakes and detail your escapes....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#74WYG)
PLUS: Toyota wheels out basketball bot; Arm scores AI server win with SK Telecom; India ponders payment pauses to foil fraudsters; And more! Asia In Brief China's National Data Administration last Friday published its action plan for AI in education which calls for upskilling of the nation's citizens to ensure they can put the technology to work....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#74WWP)
Makes Rust support official, adds code for ancient Alpha and SPARC CPUs Linus Torvalds has released version 7.0 of the Linux kernel....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#74WWQ)
Or it's a bunch of pre-IPO hype. Either way, we're giving it the once-over on this week's episode Kettle Anthropic dropped a doozy on us this week with the launch of Mythos, an AI model it says is able to find and exploit zero-day vulnerabilities with a shocking level of ability....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#74WPM)
AI-assisted software development is transforming the industry, but you already knew that Vibe coding works. I wish it didn't. But it does, well enough. And barring some revolution that overturns the new world disorder, machine learning cannot be undone....
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by Tobias Mann on (#74WKB)
Most customers don't need the biggest baddest models, just ones that work, are cheap, and won't pirate their proprietary data FEATURE Spring has sprung and that means another wave of open weights AI models from the likes of Google, Microsoft, Alibaba, and Nvidia. But this time feels a bit different....
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by Connor Jones on (#74WH3)
Lock-screen keyboard no longer accepts haek in student's alphanumeric passcode A university student in the US is in data limbo after Apple removed a character from its Czech keyboard, preventing him from entering his iPhone passcode....
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by O'Ryan Johnson on (#74W6J)
Benioff banks on user engagement while McDermott wants to govern AI agents FEATURE Salesforce CEO and chief SaaSquatch" Mark Benioff boasted about the wins his company's ITSM product had last quarter in the terms a proud dad uses to talk about the art work his kids taped to the refrigerator....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#74W3G)
Time to start dropping SBOMs FEATURE Two supply chain attacks in March infected open source tools with malware and used this access to steal secrets from tens of thousands - if not more - organizations. We won't know the full blast radius for months....
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by Carly Page on (#74W2A)
Nearly 800 state logins surfaced in breach data, including defense and NATO-linked accounts Hungary's government has discovered the hard way that the biggest threat to national security might just be its own password choices....
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by O'Ryan Johnson on (#74VX5)
With access to great data comes great responsibility Snowflake is betting that the biggest bottleneck to building more and better AI agents isn't the models themselves but whether the data those agents depend on is clean, accessible, and governed, Snowflake's director of product management James Rowland-Jones told The Register....
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by Avram Piltch on (#74VV1)
Crew went farther from Earth than any humans we know about, now they're coming back! In a world wracked by wars, beset by difficult economic conditions, and struggling with exploding RAM costs, there's one piece of good news. NASA's Artemis II mission has been an unqualified success, having carried four astronauts farther from Earth than any humans before them....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#74VV2)
Hundreds of layoffs, but this smells of geopolitics, not downsizing Red Hat appears to have fired its entire engineering team in China, which it no longer thinks is a country it needs to prioritize. Most of the team will move to India....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#74VMC)
Firefox maker warns old web tactics are now shaping AI at the expense of user choice Firefox-maker Mozilla is calling out Microsoft after Redmond said it would scale back some Copilot features in Windows, arguing the rollback shows the company pushed AI too far without enough regard for user choice....
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