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by Thomas Claburn on (#2C439)
Weak default settings attract data deletion attacks despite warnings Administrators of Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS) clusters have evidently not heeded warnings that surfaced last month about securing software with insecure default settings.…
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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 | 2026-04-04 01:30 |
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by Shaun Nichols on (#2C43A)
Ad watchdog hits out at telco's alternate facts Lying Comcast will no longer be able to advertise its cable internet service as the "fastest" following a decision from the US National Advertising Review Board.…
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by John Leyden on (#2C3YD)
Files spotted using Python code to infect Apple machines Hackers are menacing Apple Mac users with Word documents laced with malicious macros that install malware.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#2C3G1)
Stage set for Jimbo Wales vs Paul Dacre. Who will win? Welcome, Mr Dacre. Wikipedia editors have voted to put The Daily Mail in the sin bin – alongside The Register.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2C3BM)
*slow clap* Check this baby out.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2C34N)
Former VMAX product head finds refuge Fidelma Russo has been appointed CTO at data management firm Iron Mountain, Storage Newsletter reports.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2C32A)
Slowing market sparks ideas... but only in analysts' minds +Comment A poor year for Cray was rescued by its fourth 2017 quarter’s results.…
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by John E Dunn on (#2C2Y1)
Multilayered defence Promo Security professionals still talk about “antivirus defences,†but in the space of a handful of years what is meant by this term has undergone a dramatic shift.…
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by Tim Anderson on (#2C2QD)
Gaming, mixed reality, Cortana Skills on the agenda as MS continues to plug UWP Microsoft briefed developers on the updates to the Windows 10 platform at an online Developer Day in preparation for the Creators Update, set for release later this year.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#2C2JA)
Container wrangler can now shield your sensitive privates Secrets management can present problems for those working in containerized environments. Storing secrets – API keys, SSH keys, TLS certificates and other sensitive data used for authentication and authorization – within a container image may be the path of least resistance but doing so is insecure. Anyone with access to the container image will have access to the secrets within.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2C2C3)
Pre-crime snoops study spread of cruel chatter Cardiff University's Social Data Science Lab has been awarded a £250,000 grant to set up a centre to monitor “Brexit-related hate crime†on Twitter.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#2C29H)
Government kindly but firmly puts him back in his box A Liberal Democrat peer has suggested that the Internet of Things needs government regulation in the UK.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2C27W)
Forget WD – bigger stake in joint flash fab would make more sense Reuters is all over the Toshiba memory division 20 per cent stake sale, reporting incoming bids up to $3.6bn.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#2C21F)
American general wants rid of his Harriers tout suite The head of US Marine Corps aviation wants to buy more F-35Bs per year than the UK will receive in the next five.…
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by Scott Gilbertson on (#2C1XP)
Like GNU running in Windows – outrageous. And pointless Once the second biggest enemy of Linux (SCO Group takes top honours), Microsoft is positively giddy about not just supporting Linux but actually building tools that run Linux in Windows and about putting previously Windows-only software on Linux.…
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by Adam Fowler on (#2C1VK)
Four paws bad! Time to break the emotional attachment Microsoft, Amazon, Google, others all telling us to move server loads to the cloud. Most of us with on-premise servers haven't designed things in a cloud friendly way and - call us old sentimentalists - have heaped time, love and workloads on our tin.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2C1SQ)
Inspur and Diablo smash those datasets Analysis Chinese server vendor Inspur has cut Spark workload runtimes in half by bulking out DRAM with Diablo Technologies' Memory1 technology.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2C1QT)
Now your soaps can come on holiday, too European Union citizens will soon be able to carry their streaming video subscriptions across borders, without virtual private networks but not necessarily for free.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#2C1NW)
Whatever, you're just a sore loser, Fitbit fires back The bitter battle between Fitbit and Jawbone has picked up again, with Jawbone claiming in its latest court filing that its rival is under criminal investigation.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#2C1JT)
If $1,000 a month is cheap, sure Patent trolls are a growing problem, and Microsoft thinks that it has the solution – an affordable-ish protection scheme for Azure customers.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#2C1HN)
Plaintext passwords. In 2017 UK magazine publisher Future's FileSilo website has been raided by hackers, who have made off with, among other information, unencrypted user account passwords.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2C1DF)
Boffins challenged to make H.265 compression look flabby The International Telecommunications Union wants researchers to get busy on new video compression codecs, setting an ambitious target to double their squeezing compression power by 2020.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2C19C)
Turn off F5's 'Session Tickets' or patch the bug to survive 'Ticketbleed' There's a new branded bug in town, but thankfully it only hurts kit made by F5 Networks.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2C14E)
Carl Bass is not planning to spend time with family - he's not sure they want him around Carl Bass says quitting will mean people stop laughing at his jokes as we noted in passing yesterday, Autodesk's Carl Bass has stepped aside as CEO.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2C10Y)
Space Launch System and Orion undamaged, all personnel accounted for Video A tornado has totalled some priceless NASA artefacts.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2C0YQ)
But signup for higher speed tiers is flat-lining Australia's National Broadband Network is closing in on a million active fibre-to-the-premises users and topped AU$400 million for the first half of its 2017 financial year.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2C0WV)
No, seriously. This thing floats over your office and flashes when code pipelines go bad Application performance monitoring outfit Dynatrace is getting into the flying saucer business.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#2C0Q5)
Not just marketing – Software and Systems must work from city hubs, too Exclusive IBM is forcing more than just its US marketing staff to move to a handful of regional hubs. The crackdown on remote workers and smaller offices also hits engineers and other staffers in America and Europe.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#2C0GG)
Homeland Sec boss says he wants 'enhanced' digital vetting The new boss of the US Department of Homeland Security plans to dig deeper into the lives of some of those wishing to enter the Land of the Free – even going as far as demanding web passwords and banking records.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2C0EN)
US prosecutors list dossiers and code allegedly swiped Former Booz Allen Hamilton contractor Harold Thomas Martin III allegedly stole secret and top-secret software and documents from American intelligence agencies for up to 20 years. That's according to a federal grand jury indictment revealed today.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#2C0CA)
ACLU urges end to behavioral screening of travelers From 2007 through 2015, the US Transportation Security Administration (TSA) spent $1.5 billion trying to identify potentially dangerous travelers by observing their behavior through an ongoing program called SPOT.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#2C00B)
Hypocrisy is the new normal More tech companies have added their names to the legal brief against President Trump's immigration ban, but some big names – including Amazon, Google and Microsoft – are facing accusations of rampant hypocrisy for funding his inauguration.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#2BZVF)
Recycling center processing exploding batts itself explodes. How poetic The factory tasked with producing and later recycling the batteries for the self-detonating Samsung Note 7 has itself fallen victim to a fire.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2BZR6)
Need a 2/47 NAS disk? Mmm, maybe the MN series is just right Toshiba has a new desktop and low-end NAS disk drive, the MN series.…
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by John Leyden on (#2BZDJ)
*cough* Yahoo! *cough* What? No, I have a terrible cold US-based industrial computer supplier Logic Supply has reset user passwords following a suspected security breach.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#2BZ5H)
2.0 hits the Last Chance Saloon today Analysis After multiple delays, Google is finally launching Android Wear 2 today, nine months after revealing it to world+dog. This is Google's last chance to give Wear a purpose, in a market that's been savage to so many wearables. Otherwise, it's back to the drawing board.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#2BZ05)
What could possibly go wrong with this madcap scheme? Petty criminals in Britain will soon be found guilty and sentenced by computers, under new government plans.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2BYVJ)
New hyperconverged pair Cisco has announced two all-flash HyperFlex systems with an up to sixfold performance improvement.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#2BYRW)
Crackdown reaches Manchester, Wales and Liverpool UK copyright cops made their biggest sweep yet in the crackdown on preloaded Kodi TV streaming kit.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2BYQ8)
Three-week hearing expected, and yes, it is about the NSA's mass surveillance activities The future of the relationship between the European Union and President Trump's United States is being decided in a Dublin court hearing which is expected to continue for the next three weeks.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2BYMX)
From Isilon to Scality to OpenIO and ARM-powered nano-nodes Case study Paris-based Dailymotion is the world's second largest video sharing website after YouTube and its three-stage storage history has transitioned from a reliable scale-out filer, to a maturing object storage startup, to an even smaller firm in pursuit of scale and performance.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2BY8H)
Faster access to more data with gen-6 refresh Kaminario has more than doubled array capacity and speed with the sixth generation of its K2 all-flash array, mainly by using higher capacity SSDs and faster controller processors. It's also improved compression and its storage assurance program.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2BY72)
And MPs said workers were being treated without dignity or respect… Exclusive Sports Direct has left its 30,000-strong workforce in the dark over a data breach in the autumn when a hacker accessed internal systems containing staffers' personal information.…
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by John Leyden on (#2BY5G)
Flaw let users add malicious code to their profile pages Security researchers have discovered a significant security vulnerability in Steam, Valve's digital distribution platform for PC gaming.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#2BY0S)
This power browser has turned seriously useful Some time late last year, without most of us really noticing, the Vivaldi browser became genuinely, startingly useful.…
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Barclays Bank and KBC presented with fraudulent contracts Four men have been found guilty of conning Barclays Bank and Belgian banking group KBC out of £160m in a superfast broadband scam.…
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by John Leyden on (#2BXT0)
APT tactics deployed by mystery cybercrooks unveiled Cybercriminals have hit scores of enterprises in 40 countries using hidden malware.…
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by Team Register on (#2BXRT)
Don't forget, they'll also have to spend a lot to relocate
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