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by Simon Sharwood on (#6VBMN)
Devices containing crypto wallets tracked online, then in the real world Indian authorities seize loot from BitConnect crypto-Ponzi scheme Devices containing crypto wallets tracked online, then in the real world India's Directorate of Enforcement has found and seized over $200 million of loot it says are the proceeds of the BitConnect crypto-fraud scheme....
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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 | 2025-02-18 06:01 |
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6VBKQ)
Nation also orders thousands of GPUs to advance local AI smarts South Korea suspends DeepSeek, which vows to return in better shape Nation also orders enough GPUs to train many more LLMs South Korea's Personal Information Protection Commission has suspended local availability of apps from Chinese LLM-and-chatbot developer DeepSeek....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6VBHN)
Penguin Emperor's weekly State Of The Kernel Post went astray Next time autocomplete takes over and you accidentally send an email to the wrong person or group, perhaps it will be a little solace to know that one of the world's most accomplished technologists - Linux kernel boss Linus Torvalds - just made that same mistake....
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by Tobias Mann on (#6VBEN)
EnCharge claims 150 TOPS/watt, a 20x performance-per-watt edge Interview AI chip startup EnCharge claims its analog artificial intelligence accelerators could rival desktop GPUs while using just a fraction of the power. Impressive - on paper, at least. Now comes the hard part: Proving it in the real world....
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by Richard Speed on (#6VBB1)
If MS-DOS could play Doom, surely a battleship gray button was a possibility? Veteran Microsoft engineer Raymond Chen has responded to suggestions that the Windows 95 setup was overly complicated. People wanted to know: Why not just do that whole thing in MS-DOS?...
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by Dan Robinson on (#6VBB2)
Flaky demand for PCs and smartphones blamed NAND flash prices are expected to slide due to oversupply, forcing memory chipmakers to cut production to match lower-than-expected orders from PC and smartphone manufacturers....
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by Richard Speed on (#6VB8M)
Very unlikely, but could make for a neat light show if it does There is a chance, albeit slim, that asteroid 2024 YR4 could hit the Moon, creating a new crater and an explosion that might just be visible from Earth....
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by Connor Jones on (#6VB6J)
Known for popping zero-days of yesteryear, Microsoft puts Apple devs on high alert Microsoft says there's a new variant of XCSSET on the prowl for Mac users - the first new iteration of the malware since 2022....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6VB6K)
'Satisfied' the risk to national security is 'a real and significant one' that should not be 'prolonged' The High Court of Justice in the UK has rejected a plea from a China-owned operation for a temporary injunction on a government order requiring it to sell its stake in a Scottish chip design business....
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by Liam Proven on (#6VB4J)
A 'synthesizer for websites' lets you experiment and improvize your way to CSS Interview Loken is a new type of tool which aims to let website designers feel their way towards a design in the same sort of way as musicians do with a software synthesizer....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6VB37)
Old Lady of Threadneedle Street to pay millions for 'amended implementation methodology' The Bank of England has nearly doubled the money it is dedicating to partner spending for an Oracle cloud transformation, which it began imagining in 2020....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6VB38)
Trade body wants recommendations fast-tracked and fabs designated critical national infrastructure Almost two years after the British government published its National Semiconductor Strategy, calls are growing for bolder action and a faster implementation of its recommendations to deliver on its stated goals....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6VB20)
When asked to offer honest feedback, maybe pause to ponder how well you play office politics Who, Me? Welcome to a fresh Monday, and therefore a new installment of "Who, Me?", our reader-contributed column that shares your stories of making workplace mistakes and scraping your way to safety afterwards....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6VB17)
Shhh. Don't tell Hock Tan about those Xeons that unlock functions when you pay a fee Broadcom is reportedly contemplating a play for Intel....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6VB18)
DevOps team did the dirty on a database Data management vendor Veeam has admitted to an embarrassing oopsie: messing up a restoration job and erasing data....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6VAZG)
PLUS: DOGE web design disappoints; FBI stops crypto scams; Zacks attacked again; and more! Infosec In Brief A security researcher has found that Google could leak the email addresses of YouTube channels, which wasn't good because the search and ads giant promised not to do that....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6VAXM)
PLUS: Pacific islands targeted by Chinese APT; China's new rocket soars; DeepSeek puts Korea in a pickle; and more Asia In Brief The head of Fujitsu's North American operations has warned that the Trump administration's tariff plans will be bad for business....
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by Tobias Mann on (#6VAV9)
El Reg shows you how to run Zyphra's speech-replicating AI on your own box Hands on Palo Alto-based AI startup Zyphra unveiled a pair of open text-to-speech (TTS) models this week said to be capable of cloning your voice with as little as five seconds of sample audio. In our testing, we generated realistic results with less than half a minute of recorded speech....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6VAP0)
What's next, Crysis-in-a-CSV? First came Tetris, then Doom - and now a bare-bones Linux instance that boots inside a PDF....
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by Richard Speed on (#6VAK7)
Overworked, under pressure, and subjected to abuse - is it really worth it? State Of Open Recent events have brought the plight of open source maintainers front and center, but the problems were brewing for many years....
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by Iain Thomson on (#6VAAG)
'In 50 years, I think we'll view these business practices like we view sweatshops today' Interview It has been nearly a decade since famed cryptographer and privacy expert Bruce Schneier released the book Data and Goliath: The Hidden Battles to Collect Your Data and Control Your World - an examination of how government agencies and tech giants exploit personal data. Today, his predictions feel eerily accurate....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6VA7W)
Anyone remember when Volkswagen rigged its emissions results? Oh... AI model makers love to flex their benchmarks scores. But how trustworthy are these numbers? What if the tests themselves are rigged, biased, or just plain meaningless?...
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6VA5Q)
Plus: Keep calm and plug Anthropic's Claude into public services Comment The UK government on Friday said its AI Safety Institute will henceforth be known as its AI Security Institute, a rebranding that attests to a change in regulatory ambition from ensuring AI models get made with wholesome content - to one that primarily punishes AI-abetted crime....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#6VA1R)
Roses aren't cheap, violets are dear, now all your access token are belong to Vladimir Digital thieves - quite possibly Kremlin-linked baddies - have been emailing out bogus Microsoft Teams meeting invites to trick victims in key government and business sectors into handing over their authentication tokens, granting access to emails, cloud data, and other sensitive information....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#6VA07)
Roses are red, violets are blue, CVE-2024-53704 is sweet for a ransomware crew Miscreants are actively abusing a high-severity authentication bypass bug in unpatched internet-facing SonicWall firewalls following the public release of proof-of-concept exploit code....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6V9VX)
And it's not just datacenters driving the need for 3,500 TWh of new energy generation by 2027 The world is going to need a lot of new electricity generation in the next three years to keep up with an "unprecedented" spike in demand, says the International Energy Agency (IEA) - and it's going to be a tough goal to meet....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6V9S0)
Cloud-based revival should come with 'a corresponding discount scale,' customers say SAP users have asked for transparent discounting and commercial arrangements following the business app giant's relaunch of Business Suite and extended alliance with Databricks....
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by Tobias Mann on (#6V9S1)
Dominion Energy already eyeing another 26 GW worth of datacenter demand Demand for electricity from datacenters in Virginia nearly doubled in the second half of 2024, power supplier Dominion Energy said of the region, which is home to "Datacenter Alley"....
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by Liam Proven on (#6V9P2)
The hurdles are higher than you might imagine FOSDEM 2025 Getting involved with open source projects is a great way to build experience in development, documentation, internationalization, and more - but it's not as easy as it should be....
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by Connor Jones on (#6V9K9)
High-complexity bug unearthed by infoseccers, as Rapid7 probes exploit further A high-severity SQL injection bug in the PostgreSQL interactive tool was exploited alongside the zero-day used to break into the US Treasury in December, researchers say....
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by Richard Speed on (#6V9KA)
The Cupola continues to offer the best views in the universe It has been 15 years since the ultimate selfie booth, the Cupola, was attached to the International Space Station (ISS)....
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by Paul Kunert on (#6V9H5)
... weeks after US titan was outvoted by other members to let Microsoft join the Euro cloud trade association Amazon's Web Services wing has exited the board of CISPE (cloud infrastructure service providers in Europe), following a recent update to the Articles of Association that means only corporations based in the region can serve....
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by Connor Jones on (#6V9H6)
Officer says mistakenly published police details were shared 'a considerable amount of times' Two suspected New IRA members were arrested on Tuesday and charged under the Terrorism Act 2000 after they were found in possession of spreadsheets containing details of staff that the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) mistakenly published online....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6V9FF)
Union estimates up to 1,600 job on the line Vodafone and Three have detailed the exec line-up taking the reins of post-merger UK biz, yet there is no word on when the deal will close, what name it will take, or how many staff face the chop to cut role duplication....
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by Jude Karabus on (#6V9FG)
Germany's Federal Cartel Office voices concerns iPhone maker may be breaking competition law Apple is feeling the heat over its acclaimed iPhone privacy policy after a German regulator's review of iOS tracking consent alleged that the tech giant exempted itself from the rules it enforces on third-party developers....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6V9DV)
Outsourcing is not supposed to involve taking clients' hardware out of their building to your house On Call If it's Friday, it's time for another edition of On Call, our reader-contributed column in which you tell tales of crimes against tech support....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6V9CD)
Analyst argues stopping the deal benefits Switchzilla by preventing rise of strong challenger for AI networks HPE has fired back at the US Department of Justice's objection to its takeover of Juniper Networks, with arguments that include an assertion that blocking the deal will benefit Huawei and therefore have national security implications....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6V9AS)
New Deep Search' thinking and planning bot to go up against peoples' champion DeepSeek Chinese AI continued to march onto the world stage this week, with Alibaba and Baidu both taking major strides....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6V99J)
Talk about court red-handed Demonstrating yet again that uncritically trusting the output of generative AI is dangerous, attorneys involved in a product liability lawsuit have apologized to the presiding judge for submitting documents that cite non-existent legal cases....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#6V98M)
Some employees steal sticky notes, others 'borrow' malicious code A crew identified as a Chinese government-backed espionage group appears to have started moonlighting as a ransomware player - further evidence that lines are blurring between nation-state cyberspies and financially motivated cybercriminals....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6V95Q)
I fought the Torv and ... the Torv won Hector Martin, project lead of Asahi Linux, resigned from that effort early Friday, Japan Standard Time, citing developer burnout, demanding users, and Linus Torvalds's handling of the integration of Rust code into the open source kernel....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6V937)
User numbers fall short, triggering investor sell-off Reddit's first year as a public company delivered solid results by most earnings metrics, but try telling that to Wall Street: Falling short on one key growth target sent shares tumbling despite an otherwise upbeat year-end report....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#6V90C)
Networks in US and beyond compromised by Beijing's super-snoops pulling off priv-esc attacks China's Salt Typhoon spy crew exploited vulnerabilities in Cisco devices to compromise at least seven devices linked to global telecom providers and other orgs, in addition to its previous victim count....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6V90D)
The little database company with big users gaining fans as it adds consistency to speed and scale With its 8.0 release, distributed multi-model database Aerospike has added ACID transactions to support large-scale online transaction processing (OLTP) applications in a move it claims is an industry first....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6V8XG)
Senator, Congressman tell DNI to threaten infosec agreements if Blighty won't back down US lawmakers want newly confirmed Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard to back up her tough talk on backdoors. They're urging her to push back on the UK government's reported order for Apple to weaken iCloud security for government access....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6V8T5)
With drivemaker poised to become 2 publicly traded companies, judge says he has 'concerns' over restructuring Western Digital has less than a week to file a bond or stump up the $553 million it owes in a patent infringement case, after a federal judge on Tuesday denied the company a stay of execution while it tries to get the ruling overturned....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6V8Q8)
User can still push for perpetual licenses despite vendor's craving for subscription deals In the sizeable global ERP market, SAP's biggest threat is not some other software giant like Oracle. It is its own legacy software supported by other vendors....
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by Paul Kunert on (#6V8Q9)
Global tech corps wrestle with policy disparity on either side of the Atlantic Google may be the latest big tech corporation to scale back diversity, equity, and inclusion programs - but Arm, HPE, and Apple are going against the current direction of travel in their hiring and training policies....
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by Connor Jones on (#6V8MW)
Yet another cash grab from Kim's cronies and an intel update from Microsoft North Korea has changed tack: its latest campaign targets the NPM registry and owners of Exodus and Atomic cryptocurrency wallets....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6V8MX)
Student shows 'Uniform hashing is optimal' was just wishful thinking It isn't often that a decades-old assumption underpinning modern technology is overturned, but a recent paper based on the work of an undergraduate and his two co-authors has done just that....
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