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Updated 2024-10-08 20:17
US sanctions fail to stop Russia connecting with Cisco hardware
Grey market resellers provide backdoors into China, too US sanctions are doing little to stem the flow of controlled technologies, with Cisco network gear still making it to Russia, and Intel CPUs and Nvidia GPUs still on sale in China.…
APNIC election sparks move for rapid rule changes to prevent council stacking
Some of the actors involved in AFRINIC's recent controversies want to reform Asia's regional registry The imminent elections for executive council members at the Asia Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC) – the non-profit organization that distributes and manages IP addresses and AS numbers in 56 nations – has sparked calls for a rapid rewrite of the organization's bylaws to ensure no single entity can dominate its governance.…
Russian crook made $90M exploiting stolen info on Tesla, Roku, Avnet, Snap, more
Undisclosed earnings reports swiped, exploited A Russian national with ties to the Kremlin exploited stolen upcoming financial filings belonging to hundreds of companies to help him and his associates net more than $90 million.…
IBM demands $500,000 from boss after she jumps ship
Big bill from Big Blue for Accenture move IBM is taking the former head of its Thailand operation, Patama Chantaruck, to court to claw back $470,000 in benefits it believes she owes after going to work for a rival and – allegedly – breaking the terms of a non-compete clause.…
Wow, so they actually let AI fly an F-16 fighter jet
You can be my Bing man anytime Pentagon boffins have for the first time used AI algorithms to automatically control a real F-16 fighter jet mid-flight. Well, OK, at least for the first time they can talk about.…
Microsoft delivers 75-count box of patches for Valentine's Day
Adobe, SAP, Intel, AMD, Android also show up with bouquet of fixes Patch Tuesday Happy Patch Tuesday for February, 2023, which falls on Valentine's Day.…
TSMC injects a bonus $3.5B into Arizona chip fabs
Roses are rad, violets are lame, Taiwan's playing a very long game In spite of slowing semiconductor demand, particularly at the high end and for leading edge nodes, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) plans to plow an additional $3.5 billion into its Arizona fab sites.…
Record-breaking number of record-breaking DDoS attacks confirmed
And growing abuse of cloud – because using hijacked Brazilian cable modems to down sites is so 2013 Dozens of companies over the weekend were hit by distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, including the largest one yet recorded, or so Cloudflare says.…
Happy Valentine's Day: Here's the final nail in Internet Explorer's coffin
Browser finally gone, but its memory, engine, wails of user and dev torment live on until at least 2029 This Valentine's day, Microsoft is quietly giving users the final gift of no more Internet Explorer by rolling out an Edge patch to most versions of Windows 10, finally killing the browser in all but IE mode.…
AWS dragged over lengthy downtime to migrate PostgreSQL DBaaS
Aurora needs a break to get users off 11.x, says cloud giant AWS database downtime necessary to execute a migration has been described as "an embarrassingly low bar" for a managed service after the cloud giant announced plans for getting off PostgreSQL 11.x.…
Google lets a few Android devices into its Privacy Sandbox
Chocolate Factory's ad tech renovation is moving ahead, like it or not Google on Tuesday began rolling out a beta test of its Privacy Sandbox software for a small portion of Android 13 devices to learn how its purportedly privacy-protecting ad tech actually performs.…
Not satisfied with Virgin Media and O2 merger, Liberty Global takes 5% Vodafone stake
Looks financially driven, says analyst, but don't rule out bigger moves in future Liberty Global has acquired a stake in British telecoms outfit Vodafone, but denied it has plans for a takeover bid. The US-based group is the parent company of Virgin Media, which merged with UK telco O2 in 2021.…
Musk's view count antics are perfect cover for Twitter's paid API failure
Quickly, Elon: Distract everyone from fact the platform can't support a single new thing you force on it Opinion As another potential revenue stream for Twitter is held up, Elon Musk still seems to be more concerned with his tweet view count, confirming Monday that he'd undone every block he ever placed on his account.…
Europe begins deeper probe into Viasat, Inmarsat merger
How competitive will in-flight Wi-Fi be? Prices, quality among major headaches The European Commission is to probe more deeply Vista's proposed $7.3 billion buy of fellow satellite maker Inmarsat on the back of worries about the potential reduction of competition for in-flight Wi-Fi connectivity.…
Taking notes from AWS, Google prepares custom Arm server chips of its own
Aim of the game is to match Intel and AMD on performance Google is understood to be developing its own custom Arm server processors, following in the footsteps of cloud rival AWS.…
Make Linux safer… or die trying
The OS family isn't broken – so why are so many companies trying to fix it? Part 1 Some Linux veterans are irritated by some of the new tech: Snap, Flatpak, Btrfs, ZFS, and so forth. Doesn't the old stuff work? Well, yes, it does – but not well enough.…
Microsoft's AI Bing also factually wrong, fabricated text during launch demo
Redmond's hype box and Google's Bard just as bad as each other Microsoft's new AI-powered Bing search engine generated false information on products, places, and could not accurately summarize financial documents, according to the company's promo video used to launch the product last week.…
Uber strikes deals with Google and Oracle to cut datacenter dependence
Ride-hailing biz 'modernizes infrastructure' by using someone else's computer Ride-hailing platform Uber has struck agreements with Oracle and Google to shift workloads off its own datacenters and into the cloud.…
ChromeOS now runs on top of Linux and, er, Zephyr ...
Google's finest via the what now? Plus: RISC-V-powered Chromebook isn't out of the question Column You probably knew Google's ChromeOS is a Linux distribution. But, now, it's running on more than Linux under the hood. I didn't, and I've been covering Chrome OS like paint since the day it arrived. Today, your newer Chromebook also depends on the open-source Zephyr Project Real-Time Operating System (RTOS). Here's Chrome OS's history and where Zephyr comes in. …
Zoox blurs line between workers and crash test dummies in robo-taxi trial
Amazon-owned biz puts its staff first Amazon's robo-taxi division Zoox will be using employees as guinea pigs after the company completed the first trials of its driverless vehicle on public roads.…
Akamai to expand Linode into a cloud so good you’ll want your data to leave it
Promises tiny egress costs and a better way to do distributed microservices Akamai plans to turn Linode, the junior cloud it acquire for $900 million, into the platform of choice for developers of distributed Kubernetes applications, and those who have come to fear cloud egress charges.…
Chipmakers threaten to defect to US, EU if UK doesn't get its semiconductor plans sorted
Where's the Brexit bonus? UK chipmakers are threatening to move their operations to the US or Europe if the British government doesn't get its act together and release its long-awaited semiconductor strategy.…
China's tech giants and Beijing – the city – rush to build AI chatbots
Bootleg ChatGPT mini-apps are already testing the limits of OpenAI's policies Beijing Municipal Bureau of Economy and Information Technology said on Monday it will support enterprises in building large AI models that compare to ChatGPT, as China's tech giants rush to deliver their own generative AI chatbots.…
Crypto mixer Sinbad looks uncannily like a remix of North Korea's notorious Blender
Lazarus Group’s favorite digi-dollar launderer may have risen again Notorious cryptocurrency anonymization service Blender, which the US Department of the Treasury last year sanctioned for helping to launder hundreds of millions of dollars in digital assets stolen by the North Korean-linked gang Lazarus Group, appears to have relaunched..…
US defence forces no match for the unstoppable fiend known as Reply-All
As 13,000 officers managed their inboxes, a certain Chinese balloon floated across Montana … Thirteen thousand members of the United States Army were reportedly caught up in a Reply-All email storm in early February.…
Thunderbird email client is Go for new plumage in July
Supernova will prove open source project is not dead – just pining for a complete overhaul The Thunderbird email client – once Mozilla's most prominent project other than the Firefox browser – is being completely overhauled ahead of a major July release 115, dubbed "Supernova".…
Smile! South Korea's moon orbiter sends back first snaps of Earth
Danuri probe is ready to spend its planned year testing space internet, spotting radiation and/or water South Korea's Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter, Danuri, which launched in August 2022, has sent back its first images of Earth's sole natural satellite, plus some shots of our home planet as seen from lunar orbit.…
Romance scam targets security researcher, hilarity ensues
Happy Valentine's Day! Now don't get fooled It sounds like the plot of a somewhat far-fetched romcom-slash-thriller Netflix series, maybe billed as You meets Your Place or Mine, dropping just in time for Valentine's Day.…
Second Soyuz springs a leak, astronauts stuck on ISS for an extra month
Trust us tovarishch, we're just going to do a few more checks Russia's space agency will hold off returning three astronauts from the International Space Station as it works with NASA to investigate a coolant leak issue that impacted an uncrewed freighter spacecraft last weekend.…
Pepsi Bottling Ventures says info-stealing malware swiped sensitive data
That's not what I like Crooks have breached Pepsi Bottling Ventures' network and, after deploying info-stealing malware, made off with sensitive personal and financial information according to a notification sent to consumers.…
Microsoft promises smaller Windows 11 updates with UUP – but there's a catch
A beefy 10GB one-time download that arrives in March Next month Microsoft will start offering on-prem Unified Update Platform (UUP), which promises to deliver smaller and faster uploads of Windows updates.…
Twilio axes roughly 1 in 5 staff in fresh round of layoffs
Already decimated staff in September Twilio on Monday said it plans to cut 17 percent of its workforce and close additional office locations, having previously shed office staff in 2022.…
Language, schmanguage: NASA's generative AI builds spaceships
Or their parts, at least, which look decidedly skeletal for satellite struts When NASA's balloon-borne exoplanet-observing telescope EXoplanet Climate Infrared TElescope (EXCITE) takes to the skies this fall it'll be doing so with a scaffold and support struts with a unique feature: they were designed by an artificial intelligence algorithm.…
The Pentagon is shockingly bad at managing its employee smartphones
Officials are using government-issued devices much like a teenager would – and that has security implications The US Department of Defense has been rapped by the Pentagon's Office of the Inspector General for what amounts to pretty pisspoor management of government-issued smartphones.…
Quantum of solace: Rigetti to cut workforce as it faces Nasdaq delisting
Appoints new CFO, CTO, chops 1 in 4 staffers Quantum startup Rigetti is to shed about 28 percent of the workforce as part of an updated business plan that includes revising its technology roadmap and focusing on nearer-term strategic priorities. The move follows earlier warnings that the company was in danger of being delisted from the Nasdaq stock exchange due to a slump in its stock price.…
Creator of Linux virtual assistant blames 'patent troll' for project's death
Kickstarter backers left empty-handed Mycroft AI, creator of a Linux-based virtual assistant, announced on Friday it would not be able to fulfill rewards for its Mark II Kickstarter campaign.…
Google miscalculates severance payments for some Googlers
Double counting share units led to mistake, 'we have corrected' the error, says ad search titan Google staff already reeling from the shock of mass layoffs now have another bitter pill to swallow: the shares due as part of their severance terms will, in some cases, be much lower than first thought.…
Namecheap admits 'unauthorized emails' pwning its customers
Blames 'third-party provider' as phishers drain Ethereum wallets Domain registrar Namecheap blamed a "third-party provider" that sends its newsletters after customers complained of receiving phishing emails from Namecheap's system.…
US military spends weekend shooting down Useless Floating Objects
You wait years for unidentified aerial phenomena then three turn up at once It was a busy weekend in the skies over North America, with the US Air Force shooting unidentified aircraft out of the air on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.…
Arm China lays off staff amid chip war and licensing concerns
R&D engineers given marching orders in 14% headcount reduction Arm may be doing well, but its China-based joint venture has reportedly laid off a significant number of staff in the face of a challenging business outlook.…
UK prepares to go it alone on post-Brexit science plan
Still no deal as new Science and Tech dept head claims Britain has 'global-facing alternative' in the wings Among her public first acts since becoming UK science minister, Michelle Donelan has said Britain is prepared to go it alone on scientific research as it struggles to reach an agreement with the EU on the UK's association with the lucrative Horizon programme.…
LockBit's Royal Mail ransom deadline flies by. No data released
Also: Russian wiper malware authors turn to data theft, plus this week's critical vulns in brief The notorious LockBit ransomware gang has taken credit for an attack on the Royal Mail – but a deadline it gave for payment has come and gone with nothing exposed to the web except the group's claims.…
Spotted in the wild: Chimera – a Linux that isn't GNU/Linux
It's not yet reached alpha, but it's already breaking new ground FOSDEM Chimera Linux is a new distro under construction that is not only systemd-free, it's GNU-free as well. Its creator hopes to reach alpha testing this spring.…
Google's $100b bad day demo may be worth the price
Bad AI is bad, bad search is worse Opinion "The pleasure is fleeting, the position ridiculous, and the expense damnable." Famously about sex but more probably about golf, this quote is now most accurately ascribable to AI-enhanced search engines. …
Atos tossed €20m to build Max Planck Society supercomputer
Unnamed platform boasts three times the application performance of its predecessor, Cobra Atos is building a new supercomputer for the Max Planck Society, an organization conducting research into the natural sciences, life sciences, and humanities, in a contract valued at €20 million ($21.3 million).…
Learn the art of malicious compliance: doing exactly what you were asked, even when it's wrong
Smart-alec worker found a way to avoid nasty, boring jobs – by doing what he was told Who, Me? Ah, gentle reader, welcome back once again to the comfortable backwater of The Register we call Who, Me? in which readers' tales of not-quite-rightness are immortalized for the ages.…
Four top euro carriers will use phone numbers to target ads and annoy Google & Facebook
European Commission satisfied joint venture won't create competitive problems for locals In a world saturated with digital ads, four of Europe's mightiest telcos will soon ask citizens if they're willing to volunteer their phone numbers to a startup that promises to deliver targeted ads while also observing European privacy regulations.…
China's spy balloon barrage earns six of its companies a spot on US entity list
US Commerce Department can't just let red balloons go by The US Department of Commerce added six more entities to its blacklist on Friday on grounds of national security after an errant Chinese surveillance balloon was shot down over the US last week.…
'Private cloud server' Jira upgraded for wider teams, dragged into culture wars
Atlassian wants it used more widely … but probably not for reporting misinformation to social networks Atlassian's Jira tool last Friday received significant upgrades aimed at encouraging its use beyond development teams, a day after it was cast in a sinister role in the USA's culture wars.…
Linus Torvalds releases probably unnecessary release candidate eight for Linux 6.2
Emperor Penguin promised a relaxed seasonal development cycle and has delivered Work on version 6.2 of the Linux kernel will stretch into an eighth release candidate, despite emperor penguin Linus Torvalds now saying it isn't really necessary.…
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