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by Paul Kunert on (#2FDMP)
His own, that is... Following the heat of a courtroom battle a lawyer defending an alleged arsonist was reportedly forced to flee proceedings temporarily after his own pants* caught fire.…
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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 | 2026-04-03 23:45 |
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by Team Register on (#2FDHP)
Early bird tickets finish on Sunday Events It’s just a few days till we pull down the shutters on our Early Bird offer for Continuous Lifecycle London, our three-day spectacular spanning the best in DevOps, Containers, Agile and Continuous Delivery.…
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by John Leyden on (#2FDFD)
Patch, patch .. attention snatch WikiLeaks has promised to release software code of CIA hacking tools to tech firms.…
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by Alistair Dabbs on (#2FDD1)
Don’t stop thinking about tomorrow Something for the Weekend, Sir? My ring smarts.…
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by OUT-LAW.COM on (#2FDAV)
Preparing for the Internet of Things Germany's federal government plans to roll out a gigabit internet service across Germany by 2025, through a government and private consortium known as Netzallianz Digitales Deutschland.…
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by Rachel Willcox on (#2FD9H)
Forget computer vision and AI – why Ocado's on the money Predictions are rife about the millions of repetitive, administrative and operative roles set to be decimated by automation over the coming years.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#2FD7P)
Cracks early April Fool's Day joke...but changes really ARE due 1st of next month Exclusive An April Fool's Day joke has come early for Vodafone teleworkers, who are facing a clampdown on their own flexible working conditions from the start of next month.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2FD5V)
Smaller than Optane, but faster and perhaps a bit immortal too Non-volatile memory outfit Everspin's popped some of its Spin Torque MRAM onto a PCIe card in the hope system builders get excited about a new tier of memory. Or is it a new tier of storage?…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#2FD3B)
Ad-slinger pushes its very own version of Lambda, opens YouTube and AdWords data hose Google Next '17 Google has rolled out a slew of new additions to its Cloud platform, including public release of the Cloud Functions serverless code set.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2FD2K)
Same worker also thought Excel was a great app for making art ON-CALL Welcome again to On-Call, The Register's Friday foray into a mailbag stuffed full of readers' recollections of being asked to fix things that should never have broken.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#2FD0J)
Cybercrime even has its own religion in Ghana Spoofed email and malware hidden in attachments netted crooks in West Africa more than $3bn in three years from businesses.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#2FCZ2)
Nah, trust us, there is something to this Google-stablemate DeepMind is creating a blockchain-like system to show how sensitive medical data passing through its processors will be used, allowing healthcare professionals to check if data has been tampered with.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2FCVQ)
Wild boars in empty towns are nastily radioactive, but sadly remain normal size and lack atomic breath Radioactive wild boars have become a problem in the evacuation zone around Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#2FCTM)
Image archive torn offline after we raise alarm Next Tuesday, US Senators will hold a special hearing into America's ongoing military sex scandal. Archives of compromising snaps of female US Marine Corps fighters are being shared online, and the Senate Armed Services Committee wants answers.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2FCJ7)
Special Rapporteur calls for privacy as a right, but also for International Data Warrants The United Nations' Special Rapporteur on the right to privacy has heavily criticised new surveillance laws in France, Germany, the UK and the USA, saying they are “predicated on the … disproportionate though understandable fear that electorates may have in the face of the threat of terrorism†but are informed by “little or no evidence†of their “efficacy or … proportionalityâ€.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2FCCY)
DR upstart's board adds chap with data loss experience: Yahoo! CFO Ken Goldman Nutanix users protecting their data with Zerto software need to pay close attention to the latter's recently-released 5.0U2 as it fixes a problem that could cause data corruption.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2FC94)
Low-profile So.cl was an experiment, not a flop. Promise Microsoft will close So.cl, its very low-key social network, on March 15.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2FC52)
There's nothing for it but IPv6. And potentially new kit Verizon Wireless will soon stop issuing public static IPv4 addresses to its business customers “due to a shortage of available addresses.â€â€¦
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by Thomas Claburn on (#2FC1T)
Security flaws smash worthless privacy protection Analysis To protect mobile devices from being tracked as they move through Wi-Fi-rich environments, there's a technique known as MAC address randomization. This replaces the number that uniquely identifies a device's wireless hardware with randomly generated values.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#2FBVX)
US Senator touts legal tweak to give broadband giants free rein US Senator Jeff Flake (R-AZ) has suggested tweaking the law to permanently prevent America's comms watchdog, the FCC, from limiting what ISPs are allowed to do with your private information.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#2FBQM)
Discovers IRC, puts a suit on Hangouts, touts $5k whiteboard and more Google Next '17 Google hopes to further invade the worlds of teleconference and business chat with a set of new offerings.…
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by Chris Evans on (#2FBNR)
It's been a good 20 years. Time to move on? Comment This week, HPE offered to acquire Nimble Storage for around $1.09bn, plus another $200m in share options.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#2FBGM)
Make-or-break launch this month for Elon's upstart March is going to be a crunch month for SpaceX: it hopes to, for the first time ever, launch a commercial satellite into orbit using a previously used rocket.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#2FB8X)
AT&T's network last night was a fiasco – don't worry though, the FCC is on the case AT&T suffered an America-wide outage of 911 emergency calls Wednesday evening, sparking some degree of panic and a swift response from US comms regulator, the FCC.…
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by John Leyden on (#2FAPW)
Security experts poke holes in RAND vulnerability study A new study from RAND Corporation concluded that zero-day vulnerabilities – security flaws that developers haven't got around to patching or aren't aware of – have an average life expectancy of 6.9 years.…
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by John Leyden on (#2FAJJ)
But not before they were downloaded 1.5 million times Security researchers have discovered 13 new Instagram credential-stealing apps on Google Play.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2FA81)
HI! OUR RECORDS INDICATE YOU'VE BEEN IN A RO- *click* A Hampshire company behind millions of nuisance calls regarding road traffic accidents has been fined £270,000 by the Information Commissioner's Office.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2FA40)
Almaden researchers make breakthrough with Holmium Molecules are so yesterday – IBM boffins at Almaden have cracked atomic storage, magnetising a single atom and storing a bit of data on it.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2F9W4)
Eau de Humanity, amirite? Hot on the heels-emblazoned-with-Eugene's-face, Kaspersky has only gone and sent El Reg a range of branded toiletries, presumably meaning to imply we could brush up on personal hygiene.…
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by Kat Hall and John Leyden on (#2F9R8)
Code in 40% of financial apps subpar The rush to improve system functionality is leading developers to knock out subpar code, posing a threat the security of major systems around the world, according to an extensive report.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#2F9NF)
Home Office stepping up inspections of Tier 2 visa sponsors Exclusive The UK has suspended ZTE from the immigration scheme used by foreign companies to allow foreign nationals to work locally, The Register can exclusively reveal.…
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by Chris Tofts on (#2F9H2)
Port problem, captain: Microservices to the event horizon Legacy, or technical debt – call it what you will – has always been a major challenge to techies looking to move forward and never more so than now, as you're being asked to shift data centre software to the cloud.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#2F9FX)
HMS Forth, like the bridge The Royal Navy’s newest warship, offshore patrol vessel HMS Forth, has been formally named in a ceremony held in Scotland.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2F9DB)
Audit uncovers rows over what was required, deliverable An audit into Accenture and Police Scotland's disastrous attempts to develop a unified IT system has found that the project collapsed because Accenture underestimated the programme's complexity and the resources needed to develop it, alongside a breakdown in the two parties' relationship.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2F96R)
Aims to hit WD for six with new product for hyperscalers Seagate has announced a 12TB helium-filled data centre disk drive, catching up with WD's Ultrastar H12, and providing both SAS and SATA interfaces.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#2F93N)
Passes 100k mark and the MPs' sanity filter, unusually The BBC TV Licensing fee is set to be debated in Parliament in early May after a public petition passed the 100,000 signature mark.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2F91T)
On storage-class memory and leaving HP Labs Interview When "retired" HP Labs head Martin Fink surprisingly joined Western Digital as CTO we were interested how this memory-driven computing proponent would affect WD's solid state tech strategy.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2F8YX)
Who're you calling a Pointnext-er? Technology Services brand murdered With Enterprise Services about to become a past problem for HPE, the business has rebranded the remaining consultancy unit, killing off the Technology Services tag in favour of Pointnext.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2F8XX)
Cold Atom Laboratory slated for August SpaceX supply mission Plenty of readers will agree that the International Space Station would be a cool place to work, and it's getting cooler: a billionth of a degree above 0K (in a very small spot).…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2F8S0)
Just unplug them now before someone writes a botnet, okay? Get ready for the next camera-botnet: a Chinese generic wireless webcam sold under more than 1,200 brands from 354 vendors has a buggy and exploitable embedded web server.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2F8N5)
Airbus imagines podules that mate with rolling or flying engines, directed by AI Airbus and italdesign have offered the world a hybrid car/copter concept that they think can Make The World A Better Place™.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2F8HY)
Painting the boxes white Bowing to the inevitable, Arista has decided to risk cannibalising its hardware sales and is making its Extensible Operating System (EOS) available for container deployment as cEOS).…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2F8BF)
'Caught, sorry, will stop' looks like it's just the way Uber rolls Caught out over showing fake cars to anyone it suspected of being a cop or a regulator, Uber has announced it will end the practice.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2F84N)
Black hats testing remote code execution zero-day vulnerability Infosec researchers have found a “dire†zero-day in Apache Struts 2, and it's under active attack.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#2F81P)
Injecting arbitrary parameters into dynamic methods violates dev rules Apple has begun informing a limited number of developers using hot patching frameworks that doing so violates its rules.…
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by Chris Williams on (#2F7YC)
Redmond fires bullet into WinTel beast's belly Pic Microsoft today signaled more than half of its cloud data center capacity is set to be powered by 64-bit ARM servers.…
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