by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6FP7K)
Time to close those active sessions Updated Bad news for anyone using Citrix NetScaler ADC and NetScaler Gateway appliances: miscreants have been exploiting a critical information disclosure bug in these devices since late August - almost two months before a patch was issued....
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The Register
Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
Copyright | Copyright © 2024, Situation Publishing |
Updated | 2024-10-07 13:01 |
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6FP4H)
Spending needs to double to $600B by 2030 if we want to stay within 2C warming Renewable energy investments continue to rise, but a key component of our planned zero-carbon future is being ignored, and could endanger the future of Earth: Energy grids....
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by Paul Kunert on (#6FP4J)
Games developer latest to row back on WFH flexibility. 'Zoom fatigue is real,' says bigwig The CEO at gaming biz Roblox Corporation has given employees two stark choices: haul their asses to the company's HQ offices three days a week, which means relocation for some, or find a new employer....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6FP1A)
And it's going to suck... up more power too Total capacity of hyperscale datacenters is set to grow almost threefold over the next six years on the back of AI demand, substantially increasing the amount of power required by those facilities....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FP1B)
A space station, Venus, and Mars also on the cards but the budget is TBD Flushed with robotic lunar success, India says it has plans to send a crew to the Moon by 2040....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FNXN)
Time to rethink Windows 10 support cycle then? Windows 11 is consistently failing to capture hearts and devices, if recent figures are to be believed....
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by Connor Jones on (#6FNXP)
Who knew 3 million actually means 700 in cybercrime forum lingo? D-Link has confirmed suspicions that it was successfully targeted by cyber criminals, but is talking down the scale of the impact....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6FNXQ)
Over a million licenses for office software to be used by corporate and frontline workers Amazon has reportedly taken out more than a million licenses for Microsoft's 365 productivity suite....
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by Richard Currie on (#6FNT9)
Actually it might give you a brief edge on those weird morning people If on waking your first instinct is to smash that snooze button, new research may encourage you to let sleeping dogs lie....
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by Connor Jones on (#6FNTA)
Musk's mega-app-in-waiting goes from chopping headlines to profile URLs An ethical hacker has exploited a bug in the way X truncates URLs to take over a CIA Telegram channel used to receive intelligence....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6FNTB)
It was a gas while it lasted but 'no public policy' to replace natural gas for heating The UK should abandon its efforts to replace gas boilers for heating homes with hydrogen systems, an independent advisory commission says....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FNR0)
Allege that 'greed and hubris' led Mike Lynch and co to 'pretend Autonomy thrived' The lengthy legal story of Autonomy co-founder Mike Lynch took another turn this weekend as prosecutors snapped back at attempts to have criminal charges thrown out of court....
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6FNR1)
Singapore summit hears how private sector's constant security sins create risk for sovereigns Senior politicians gathered at Singapore International Cyber Week (SICW) this week to discuss the current state of cybersecurity have articulated their discomfort with finding themselves dependent on Big Tech....
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6FNP3)
Spies come in from the cold for their first public chinwag Intelligence chiefs of the Five Eyes alliance today warned that Chinese government spies stealing IP and other sensitive data from private companies pose an "unprecedented" threat to national security....
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by Connor Jones on (#6FNP4)
Researchers say ransomware could be on the horizon if success continues An uptick in cybercriminals masking malicious downloads as fake browser updates is being spotted by security researchers....
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by Paul Kunert on (#6FNMF)
They never do tell you about the unexpected costs and overly complex implementations Three in every five software purchases are regretted by IT departments for a variety of reasons, including unforeseen costs....
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by Tobias Mann on (#6FNMG)
AI Platform Alliance probably has Jensen Huang in tears...of laughter History is full of examples of smaller players coming together to take on larger competitors. With the launch of the AI Platform Alliance this week, Arm CPU vendor Ampere aims to do just that in a bid to challenge Nvidia's hegemony....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6FNJX)
Lack of local clouds and inflexible offers see users depart. Maybe the new Compass' developer experience tool will be more to their liking The Register's Monday story about Atlassian's looming end-of-support deadline for its on-prem server products has turned up a nasty dilemma for UK users who need local data residency, because Atlassian doesn't offer it and may not do so before support expires....
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6FNJY)
'Afeela' packs Qualcomm kit, screens galore, runs Android and will have an app ecosystem Video Sony and Honda have unveiled Afeela - a software-defined vehicle the two present as a Qualcomm-powered entertainment system on wheels. Or you could use it for transport....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6FNHA)
It's also shorter, lousy under pressure, and needs a dongle on the cheapest iPad Apple has found another reason to embrace USB-C - it's allowed the iCompany to make a cheaper digital pencil....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6FNGC)
Annual fee won't be profitable, will require registration of phone number X, the social network formerly known as Twitter, has started a trial $1 fee for new users to cut down on bots Elon Musk blames for many of the platform's woes....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6FNF0)
Wear OS is basically Android, so this effort may do some heavy lifting to evade Arm SoCs in future phones Qualcomm has announced it will develop a platform to power devices running Google's Wear OS, based on the permissibly licensed RISC-V instruction set architecture....
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by Iain Thomson on (#6FND3)
Chips cunningly designed to be less powerful and evade sanctions look to be in trouble The US Department of Commerce has extended sanctions against China - and now other countries - in its bid to block advanced semiconductors making it to the Middle Kingdom....
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by Tobias Mann on (#6FND4)
Foundry giant now searching for new home for high-end fab site Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) will abandon plans to build an advanced chip fab in northern Taiwan after residents opposed the project....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6FNAG)
Hey, we're still safer than human drivers, says GM outfit The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has launched an investigation of General Motors' Cruise driverless robo-taxis after a pair of recent pedestrian injuries....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6FN7N)
A little optimistic, given Blue Origin can't even deliver it themselves yet Bezos-backed space firm Blue Origin has unveiled plans to construct a multi-mission, multi-orbit "space mobility platform," and claims it only needs until 2025 to get the structure in space....
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6FN7P)
Good news: there's a free scanner to check your kit. Bad news: still no fix Remember that critical zero-day bug Cisco disclosed yesterday? Well, it gets worse....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FN4H)
OTA software update to deal with misbehaving sensor Got a Tesla Model X built between 2021 and 2023? The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has said Tesla will recall almost 55,000 vehicles over a brake fluid warning sensor....
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by Jude Karabus on (#6FN4J)
An AI may be able to botch a closing argument, but can it sing Killing Me Softly? Former Fugee, Prakazrel "Pras" Michel, who was convicted of criminal conspiracy charges over attempts to influence the administrations of two US presidents, wants a new trial because he believes his lawyer used AI to craft closing arguments, among other things....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6FN1K)
Bill in New York aims to stop spread of ghost guns, but fails to address existing kit or private sales A bill introduced in the New York state assembly last week aims to combat the spread of 3D printed "ghost guns" by requiring a criminal background check for anyone buying a 3D printer....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6FN1M)
Perfect antidote to range anxiety ... if it works and they can sort compatibility Researchers in Japan are preparing to test out technology that enables electric vehicles to charge wirelessly while still moving, which could lead to drivers not needing to plug in and charge up as frequently, as well as lighter vehicles with fewer batteries....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FMY1)
Jez and friend's Excel-lent Adventure Today is Spreadsheet Day, an auspicious occasion to celebrate the release of VisiCalc and its descendants. So enjoy a bonus On Call story on us regarding Microsoft's finest, Excel....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FMY2)
If all goes well, production to start 'before the end of the year' Amazon's Project Kuiper has continued to make progress as its pair of prototype satellites get ready to route internet data....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6FMTC)
Watch out, 'macroeconomic uncertainty' is at it again as network operators slow deployments Sweden's Ericsson has posted a loss for its third quarter of 2023, blaming "macroeconomic uncertainty" in the market and claimed the situation is so volatile that it can't give guidance beyond the end of this year....
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by Connor Jones on (#6FMTD)
Do it now, no ifs or buts, says advisory US authorities have issued an urgent plea to network admins to patch the critical vulnerability in Atlassian Confluence Data Center and Server amid ongoing nation-state exploitation....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FMTE)
Account holders reach for telephone as mobile and web services crash Online services with UK-based Barclays Bank have taken a nosedive....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6FMTF)
System aims to clean mess of high-performance analytics cluttering the modern data stack Flush from securing a $34 million VC investment for his fledgling database company, TileDB CEO, Stavros Papadopoulos, is not planning on returning to the well any time soon....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6FMR4)
US spy-tech vendor's tactic deemed 'contrary to the principles of public procurement' The UK's chief commercial officer is warning a government contract with Palantir was awarded against public procurement principles after the US spy-tech biz got a toe-hold in the Homes for Ukraine scheme via a free six-month trial period....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FMR5)
A Weekend at Burn-ins Apple's flagship iPhone 15 Pro Max is having OLED burn-in issues, according to owners of the new smartphone....
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by Liam Proven on (#6FMP9)
Indie C++ Unix-like OS project now has an indie Javascript-capable browser, too A small project with a hobby of defying expectations found a new one to defy, by making its home-grown browser cross-platform....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FMPA)
Is SpaceX psyching out the competition? There were sighs of relief all round as NASA's Psyche mission finally lifted off late last week. However, the launch highlights more Earthly worries around launch provider competition....
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by Richard Speed on (#6FMMH)
How does the device fare as a daily driver, and is cooling really optional? We've used a pair of Raspberry Pi 5s as daily drivers and have some hot takes. Some really hot takes....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6FMMJ)
Domestic jets can use 'municipal solid waste' to fly the friendly skies Sustainable aviation fuels (SAFs) made from sources other than fossil fuels have the potential to reduce emissions by up to 80 percent, UK researchers have found....
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by Tobias Mann on (#6FMK4)
Cites 'increased operational costs' but whatever they are US gamers aren't impacted Nvidia will increase the price of its GeForce Now game streaming services across much of Canada, Europe, and the UK, effective November 1....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6FMK5)
Puts Datacenter-ready Secure Control Modules to work in boxen built by Lenovo Cloudflare has joined the ranks of operators that believe baseboard management controllers (BMCs) no longer belong on server motherboards....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6FMHN)
In 2027 a quarter of PCs won't use x86, and Redmond wants its ecosystem ready Microsoft has announced an Arm Advisory Service for developers" that it hopes will help coders to develop native software for the version of Windows written for the processor architecture....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6FMHP)
Beijing appears to have lifted its ban on Loongson processors reaching Moscow If you have an enormous appetite for risk, we have just the hardware for you, from Russian outfit Norsi-Trans, powered by China's Loongson....
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6FMG1)
Beijing set big targets for next-gen networks, but adoption stats suggest it's falling short China has issued an edict requiring all new Wi-Fi hardware to be IPv6 enabled, and enable the protocol by default from the moment it's first switched on....
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by Iain Thomson on (#6FMEK)
Epic redundancies as new owner Songtradr wields the knife Many staff at audio marketplace Bandcamp aren't singing a happy tune after the platform's new owner, Songtradr, laid off around 50 percent of employees....
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6FMCY)
We'd say 'Hurry up and patch' but it hasn't written one yet. While you wait, disable HTTP Cisco users' weeks have started badly with a warning that a critical zero-day bug in the networking giant's IOS XE software that allows criminals to hijack devices has been exploited in the wild....
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