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Updated 2024-10-07 19:46
Meatbag mishaps more menacing than malware? CISOs think so
Company boards, on the other hand, aren't letting cybersecurity disturb their sleep as much Chief information security officers (or CISOs) see human error as the most significant risk to data protection compared to other UK board directors....
Newport Wafer Fab blames UK government over 100 redundancies plan
Forced sale of Britian's biggest semiconductor component maker creating uncertainty over its future Newport Wafer Fab (NWF), Britain's biggest producer of semiconductor components, has pointed the finger of blame at government restrictions for its decision to chop 100 employees amid uncertainty over future ownership....
Intel NUCs find fresh life in Asus, but rights are 'non-exclusive'
As Asrock adds an AMD-powered 4"x4" not-NUC to its industrial lineup Those mourning the discontinuation of Intel's quirky little Next Unit of Compute (NUC) mini-PCs can rest easy - Asus has officially taken over development of the product line. It's not exclusive, though, and already there's competition....
SAP user group calls for support deadline reprieve amid hospital billing worries
Schedule is unrealistic... it takes 2 years just to tender, protests board member The German-speaking SAP user group has called on the European software giant to extend support for a specialist industry solution based on its ageing ECC platform amid fears of disruption to hospital billing processes in Germany, Switzerland and Austria....
Home Office asylum system from '90s misses EOL deadline, no new timetable in place
Replacement due more than a decade ago, Casework Information Database soldiers on as case backlog hits record highs Exclusive The UK's Home Office has failed to meet its own deadline for the retirement of a decades-old immigration database in a program vital to cutting the backlog of asylum claims, currently at historic highs....
India's Chandrayaan-3 Moon mission hibernates to see out a long lunar night
Spacecraft scheduled to snooze until September 22 when it's hoped machines return to duty India's Chandrayaan-3 Moon mission has ended its first phase of operations, with the Pragyan rover and Vikram lander entering sleep mode to see out a long, long lunar night....
Google rebrands 'android' as 'Android' to remove any doubt about its affiliations
'Bugdroid' goes a bit 'Village People' to become 'as dynamic as Android itself' LOGOWATCH Google may have felt that 12,000 of its workers were surplus to requirements, but the search and ads giant has clearly kept plenty of designers on staff - someone at the Big G has found time to redesign logos for the Android operating system and associated frippery....
Microsoft tells partners unbundling Teams is a 'compromise' with the EU
Meanwhile, Zoom boss calls on US authorities to consider adopting Europe's breakout policy Microsoft has told its partner community that unbundling Teams from its Microsoft 365 and Office 365 suites was a compromise - an alteration to the language it used when announcing the change....
ASEAN bloc starts work on Digital Economy Framework
Who needs India or China when ten booming economies form a gang? The Association of South East Asian Nations - the ten-country trade bloc that houses over 600 million people and accounts for around 6.5 percent of global economic activity - has started work on a Digital Economy Framework Agreement (DEFA) it hopes will result in seamless trade and data flows....
Mozilla calls cars from 25 automakers 'data privacy nightmares on wheels'
Does your vehicle really need to know about your bedroom antics? Privacy-invading data harvesting by smartphones, wearable devices, smart doorbells, and reproductive health apps are well known, but the Mozilla Foundation has found the worst threat to your privacy may be parked in your driveway....
Google Chrome pushes ahead with targeted ads based on your browser history
YMMV, based on where you are Google has been gradually rolling out Chrome's "Enhanced Ad Privacy." That's the technology that, unless switched off, allows websites to target the user with adverts tuned to their online activities and interests based on their browser histories....
US AGs: We need law to purge the web of AI-drawn child sex abuse material
Deepfakes of underage girls set off alarm bells for legal eagles The National Association of Attorneys General, the body that all US states and territories use to collaboratively address legal issues, has urged Congress to pass legislation prohibiting the use of AI to generate child sex abuse images....
You patched yet? Years-old Microsoft security holes still hot targets for cyber-crooks
We're number one! We're number one! We're... It's generally accepted that security flaws in Microsoft's products are a top magnet for crooks and fraudsters: its sprawling empire of hardware and software is a target-rich ecosystem in that there is a wide range of bugs to exploit, and a huge number of vulnerable organizations and users....
The Anti Defamation League is Musk's latest excuse for Twitter's tanking ad revenue
There's something very familiar about all this Deja vu time: Elon Musk is threatening to sue another civil rights group for losing him money....
AI coding is 'inescapable' and here to stay, says GitLab
Getting strong FOMO vibes from devs - tho how ML is actually used among engineers may surprise you Almost a quarter of organizations are already using AI to augment human software development, and over two-thirds of them are planning to use such systems, according to a survey from GitLab....
After failed takeover, Intel and Tower Semi aren't giving up on the relationship
Meanwhile, Arm suffers IPO financial muscle loss with low valuation Intel's bid to acquire Israeli foundry operator Tower Semiconductor may have collapsed, but that doesn't mean they can't still set up shop together in the US....
Big Tech has failed to police Russian disinformation, EC study concludes
In Putin's Russia, the planet hacks you The power of the EU's Digital Services Act (DSA) to actually police the world's very large online platforms (VLOPs) has been tested in a new study focused on Russian social media disinformation....
Europe's Ariane 6 takes rocket science seriously by testing patience before engines
Four seconds of fire and fury to be followed by eight minutes then... a launch in 2024? Arianespace's delayed Ariane 6 rocket is scheduled to take its next step toward launch today with a brief firing of the main stage Vulcain 2.1 engine....
Fedora and Asahi Linux pals revamp installation process
Switch to Calamares aims to make setup simpler The forthcoming Asahi/Fedora distro for Arm64 Macs will use the Calamares installer - but the mainstream Fedora 39 might get a new, simpler installation program too....
Freecycle gives users the gift of a security breach notice
Change your passwords. And maybe give the recycling a miss this time Freecycle, the charity aimed at recycling detritus that would otherwise be headed for landfill, has become the latest organization to suffer at the hands of cyber attackers and admit to a breach....
Largest local government body in Europe goes under amid Oracle disaster
Authority effectively bankrupt as ERP car crash adds to equal pay liability Birmingham City Council, the largest local authority in Europe, has declared itself in financial distress after troubled Oracle project costs ballooned from 20 million to around 100 million ($125.5 million)....
Vodafone and Amazon shoot for the stars while Kuiper satellites remain grounded
Bezo birds to provide a mobile backhaul. When they finally launch Vodafone has linked arms with Amazon's Project Kuiper to extend 4G and 5G services to more regions in Europe and Africa, despite Jeff Bezos' satellite constellation still lacking any spacecraft in orbit....
Northern Ireland top cop quits in wake of data breach and disciplinary controversy
Simon Byrne faced backlash over FoI blunder, plus claims officers were 'punished' to appease Sinn Fein Northern Ireland's police chief, Simon Byrne, resigned last night after an emergency meeting of the Policing Board amid discontent in the rank and file over a data breach that exposed serving officers' info, as well as news he was considering appealing a court ruling linked to the Troubles....
CrowView: A clamp-on, portable second laptop display
Elecrow's dual-screen peripheral is more versatile and cheaper than the old Lenovo version CrowView is a 14-inch USB-C monitor with a cunning folding stand-cum-clamp system which allows it to attach to most sizes of laptop for some more pixels on the move....
Three years after setting off, Bus Open Data Service wants consultants to help it on its journey
UK tender hopes to boost beleaguered local bus services The UK's Department for Transport is promising a 24 million ($30 million) contract to a tech biz that can help set up a wide range of data services to provide information on local bus services....
Snowflake's Instacart protestations hint at challenges for poster child of the data cloud
If customers can slash bills by 'optimizing,' what does that mean for revenue? Opinion Snowflake should have been enjoying positive results at the end of last month. Revenue for the second for the quarter was $674.0 million, a 36 percent leap on the same period last year, albeit with an operating loss of $285.4 million, up from $207.7 million on Q2 2022....
IBM Cloud to 'uplift' prices by up to 29 percent
All PaaS, including RedShift, gets a three-point bump. IaaS users outside the US get the nastiest numbers IBM has announced price rises for its cloud services, effective January 1, 2024....
Guild behind actors' strike fears video game workers also at risk from AI
Authorizes strike for voice and motion capture talent at major game studios The Screen Actors Guild - American Federation of Television and Radio Artists has authorized its members employed in the interactive media industry at giant games studios - including Activision, Epic Games, and Electronic Arts - to strike....
AWS shuts down its first-gen compute and network infrastructure
The legacy lives on even though EC2-Classic and its flat network are no more Amazon Web Services has made good on its 2021 promise to retire EC2-Classic - the networking construct that underpinned its initial compute infrastructure-as-a-service offering....
Want tunes with that? India-made POS terminal includes a speaker
You read that right: a speaker. Because merchants like music, electronic payments, and $8.50 hardware Indian payments outfit Paytm has launched a point-of-sale unit that incorporates, of all things, a speaker....
The only thing launched for Amazon's Project Kuiper is a lawsuit
Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk... not the bestest of buddies? An Amazon shareholder has filed a lawsuit on the company alleging it didn't do its due diligence when it awarded launch contracts for the company's Project Kuiper satellite constellation to Blue Origin and others....
Microsoft billing 3 cents a minute to revisit tedious Teams meetings via API
One more reason to keep them short and sweet Microsoft has announced billing in public preview for Teams recording and transcription APIs, with pricing starting at 3 cents per minute for recordings....
Attackers accessed UK military data through high-security fencing firm's Windows 7 rig
Irony, not barbed wire, cuts the deepest The risk of running obsolete code and hardware was highlighted after attackers exfiltrated data from a UK supplier of high-security fencing for military bases. The initial entry point? A Windows 7 PC....
Microsoft calls time on ancient TLS in Windows, breaking own stuff in the process
Hold onto your SQL Server, enterprise admins Microsoft has reminded users that TLS 1.0 and 1.1 will soon be disabled by default in Windows....
ArcaOS 5.1 gives vintage OS/2 a UEFI facelift for the 21st century
When your '90s nostalgia craves a modern touch In the OS/2 world, ArcaOS 5.1 is a long-awaited release which enables this 32-bit OS from the late 20th century to run on modern PC hardware....
Northern Irish cops release 2 men after Terrorism Act arrests linked to data breach
Came in wake of the force publishing their own people's data in botched FoI Nearly four weeks after the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) published data on 10,000 employees in a botched response to a Freedom of Information request, another two men, aged 21 and 22, have been released on bail after being arrested under the Terrorism Act....
X may train its AI models on your social media posts
Plus: AI luminary Douglas Lenat passed away, and US newspaper chain halts publishing of AI-generated articles AI In brief X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, updated its privacy policy this week stating that it may train its AI models on user posts....
So you want to save energy? Ditch web apps and go native, boffins say
Take up less CPU time and memory? What amazing tech is this?! Eggheads at Vrije Universiteit (VU) in the Netherlands recommend that people with Android devices use native apps rather than web apps when viewing popular sites like ESPN, Pinterest, Spotify, and YouTube because native apps are more energy efficient....
IT needs more brains, so why is it being such a zombie about getting them?
Open-book exams aren't nearly open enough Opinion Knowing when the universe is trying to tell you something is a core competency for many paths through life. You can't pass an exam in that, sadly, but perhaps we should consider what links these three stories: Microsoft moving to open-book exams for certification, ChatGPT passing law and other exams, and people are tearing their hair out trying to recruit an IT skilled workforce. Could it be that the way qualifications work doesn't pass muster?...
Out with Tech Services 3 and in with Tech Services 4 – UK govt's £12B shopping spree
Could be among the first to come under new procurement rules next year The UK government has begun laying the groundwork for new technology buying arrangements which could become the vehicle for up to 12 billion ($15.12 billion) in spending....
Sure, give the new kid and his MCSE power over the AS/400. What could possibly go wrong?
All he did was follow the example of the boss. And fail to foresee obvious consequences Who, Me? Dear reader, is that you? Can it be? Why, that can only mean one thing: that yet again it is Monday, and therefore time for an instalment of Who, Me? - the column in which Reg readers confess the times they really didn't get things quite right....
Microsoft admits slim staff and broken automation contributed to Azure outage
Just three people were on duty in Australia when 'power sag' struck and software failures left them blind Microsoft's preliminary analysis of an incident that took out its Australia East cloud region last week - and which appears also to have caused trouble for Oracle - attributes the incident in part to insufficient staff numbers on site, slowing recovery efforts....
2023 World Solar Challenge entrant welcomes clouds – not the fluffy white ones
Solar roller on Australia-spanning race packs an Nvidia Jetson, radio link to an AWS edge box, and Starlink uplink Special Projects Bureau Revisited Long-time Reg readers may recall that in 2011 and 2013 The Register's Special Projects Bureau followed the World Solar Challenge - an event that sees solar-powered cars cross Australia from north to south over 3,000km of roads and some of the planet's least welcoming environments....
Farewell WordPad, we hardly knew ye
Microsoft ends development of free basic word processor bundled with Windows Microsoft has quietly deprecated WordPad, the bare bones word processor it's offered at no additional cost to users ever since including it with Windows 95....
Apple opens annual applications for free hackable iPhones
ALSO: Brazilian stalkerware database ripped by the short hairs, a fast fashion breach, and this week's critical vulns Infosec in brief The latest round of Apple's Security Research Device (SRD) program is open, giving security researchers a chance to get their hands on an unlocked device - and Apple's blessing to attack it and test its security capabilities....
Samsung teases 1TB DDR5 modules with launch of 32Gb die
PLUS: China allows first wave of chatbots, India's sun-spotter soars; ASUS smacks down speculation it will quit smartphones Asia in Brief Samsung last Friday announced it has developed a 32-gigabit DDR5 DRAM die using its 12 nanometer-class process technology....
The world seems so loopy. But at least someone's written a memory-safe sudo in Rust
Turns out we can have nice things? The sudo command-line tool has been implemented in the Rust programming language to hopefully rid it of any exploitable memory-safety bugs....
Cops drill into chat apps, sink plot to smuggle tons of coke into Europe
Big blow to blighters' blow-by-the-boatload blueprint Video Efforts by cops to seize and shut down encrypted messaging apps favored by criminals, and then mine their conversations for evidence, appear to have led to more arrests - plus the seizure of about 2.7 tonnes of cocaine....
Los Alamos finishes installing Crossroads super to test nukes without a big bang
Memory-optimized beast prioritizes weapon-sim perf over flashy FLOPS figs After months of work unpacking, installing, and deploying the various subsystems and supporting infrastructure, Los Alamos National Laboratory's (LANL) latest super, the Crossroads system, has been installed....
Rapidus ramps as construction begins on 2nm wafer fab
Japanese foundry startup also shipping engineers off to US to study IBM chip tech Japan's Rapidus broke ground on its IIM-1 plant in Hokkaido on Friday, kicking off a flurry of hiring as the foundry upstart races to bring its 2nm wafer fab online by 2025....
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