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Updated 2025-04-07 17:45
Co-founder of Yandex – Russia's Google clone – denounces war on Ukraine
Arkady Volozh is working with refugee engineers, of which there are plenty Arkady Volozh, co-founder of Russian Google analog Yandex, has denounced Russia's invasion of Ukraine....
Zoom's new London hub – where 'remote work' meets 'we need you back in the office'
Collaboration, cohesion, and irony all under one roof Zoom is underscoring its mandated return to the physical workplace by opening a London "engagement hub" that it reckons will cater for the needs of hybrid, office and remote workers....
Lock-in to legacy code is a thing. Being locked in by legacy code is another thing entirely
Welcome to the coding couch. We hope you sleep well On Call As Friday rolls around and the prospect of fleeing the office looms, The Register brings you another instalment of On Call, our weekly reader-contributed stories in which techies are asked to help - but too often end up needing to help themselves....
Think International Space Station dust is obviously free of bad chemicals? Wrong
No one's in danger but we may need to rethink some cabin materials The International Space Station has perhaps a bit of a housekeeping issue on its hands. Analysis of dust samples from its air filters suggest astronauts are likely exposed to higher levels of dangerous chemicals than those of us stuck on Earth, on average....
US Cyber Command boss says China's spooky cyber skills still behind
Paul Nakasone rates the Middle Kingdom a 'pacing challenge' The boss of US Cyber Command has opined that China's cyber and surveillance capabilities are not ahead of, or even comparable to, to those of the United States....
Oracle shrinks its on-prem cloud into a single rack
Big Red rigs start at 552 fourth-gen EPYC cores and 150TB storage, can scale to 6,624 cores and 3.4PB Oracle has squeezed the on-prem version of its cloud into a version that fits into a single datacenter rack if required....
Alibaba says demand for cloud has dipped – which improved its profits
What? How? Chinese tech giant Alibaba has reported tiny revenue growth, but a 106 percent surge in earnings for its cloud services, despite a marked slowdown in demand....
New Zealand supermarket's recipe-generating AI takes toxic output to a new level
Some of its suggestions are poison. Others - like banana and tomato tea - might as well be An AI recipe generation bot released by New Zealand discount supermarket chain Pak'nSave has raised eyebrows for recommending home cooks whip up chlorine gas cocktails, bleach rice, and combine ....
Chinese web giants go on $5B Nvidia shopping spree to fuel AI ambitions
In the ML arms race, GPUs are the ammunition China's largest web and cloud providers are lining up to buy as many Nvidia GPUs as they can while they still can get their hands on them....
Infosec imposter syndrome is real. Here's something that can help
Talk about an insider threat Black Hat Imposter syndrome plagues people across all professions - including the cybersecurity industry - and it's not going to get any better until individuals are willing to share their struggles and find tools to help overcome these feelings of inadequacy....
CISA boss says US alliance with Ukraine over past year is closer than Five Eyes
And America should stop worrying about balloons and focus on what's important Black Hat The head of the US government's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has extolled the ongoing relationship between America and Ukraine barely a year into a crucial security information sharing pact....
Don't shoot! DARPA wants to capture future spy balloons in one piece
Being blasted with a missile and plummeting 60,000 feet can do a real number on hardware, it turns out DARPA wants to be ready the next time a foreign spy balloon does a tour of the US, so it's launching a program to figure out how to capture one and its payload instead of simply shooting it out of the sky....
Microsoft OneDrive a willing and eager 'ransomware double agent'
No one will suspect such a trustworthy executable Black Hat There's a rather serious ransomware vulnerability in Microsoft's desktop operating system, according to research out this week. It's nigh undetectable, uses a fully legitimate workflow to encrypt files, and comes pre-installed on all new Windows systems: OneDrive....
There's a good chance your VPN is vulnerable to privacy-menacing TunnelCrack attack
Especially on Apple gear, uni team says A couple of techniques collectively known as TunnelCrack can, in the right circumstances, be used by snoops to force victims' network traffic to go outside their encrypted VPNs, it was demonstrated this week....
Viasat probe into ailing $700M satellite casts shadow over Q1 results
'We understand the risks involved in space systems, and have insurance' Satellite operator Viasat says problems with its first ViaSat-3 deployment have created unanticipated biz challenges that may disrupt commercial prospects in the short term....
Epic snub by Supreme Court in battle to escape Apple App Store payment prison
This fight over IAP is getting, dare we say, unreal Apple gets to maintain its App Store monopoly, at least for now, after the US Supreme Court rejected a bid from Epic Games to lift a court-ordered stay that would force Apple to let devs go outside the App Store for processing in-app purchases (IAPs)....
Microsoft 365 guest accounts + Power Apps = security nightmare
A login, a PA trial license, and some good old hacking are all that's needed to nab SQL databases Black Hat Microsoft 365 guest accounts aren't nearly as secure as Redmond would lead customers to believe, as low-code security expert Michael Bargury demonstrated at Black Hat....
Shifting to two-factor auth is hard to do. GitHub recommends the long game
Slow and steady wins this race with users Black Hat Getting people to use multi-factor authentication is surprisingly tough - or unsurprisingly, depending on your opinion of IT users. In any case, GitHub is managing it by playing the long game....
NASA to test potential 400Mbps laser link for Mars
High bandwidth comms experiment to fly with Psyche asteroid mission in October NASA hopes to launch a near-infrared laser transceiver to test a system that could one day be used to communicate with astronauts on Mars....
Google AI red team lead says this is how criminals will likely use ML for evil
Prompt injection, data poisoning just to name a couple DEF CON Artificial intelligence is an equalizer of sorts between security defenders and attackers....
Have you ever suspected your colleague doesn't hope this email finds you well?*
Grrrrrrr.... Why are you sending 15 bloody messages in 10 seconds? Stop pressing return Poll It was international coworking day this week, which quite a few corporates used to get people excited about coming into the office again....
GNOME 45 beta: Less buggy, more colorful, and still not your grandma's desktop
Codenamed Riga after the venue for this year's GUADEC conference GNOME 45 has just graduated from alpha test to beta, and will see final release late next month. Here is what to expect....
Get your staff's consent before you monitor them, tech inquiry warns
Plus: British government's push to reform data protection is working against the cause Companies that monitor their employees should only do so after they consult with and get consent from the staffers they are watching or tracking....
Larry Ellison a major contributor to Blair Institute vaccine database plan
A relationship forged in UK government IT continues to blossom Software magnate Larry Ellison is a leading contributor to the policy institute built by former UK prime minister Tony Blair....
Infosys launches 'sonic identity' – an aural logo to 'reinforce brand purpose'
It's a 'digital metaphor' that signals the sound of opportunity, apparently LogoWatch Indian tech services giant Infosys has launched a "sonic identity" that The Register's irregular marketing column Logo Watch feels compelled to cover because the outfit has described it as the "auditory equivalent of its blue visual identity and logo."...
Most distant observed star is blue – and it isn't alone
Light from Earendel takes 12.9 billion years to reach Earth, and it's serendipitous the JWST can see it at all It was a little more than a year ago that NASA's Hubble Space Telescope spotted the most distant star ever observed: the 12.9 billion light-years-away Earendel....
Biden administration restricts US investment in tech China's military might employ
Venture capital is helping Beijing arm and Washington wants that to stop US president Joe Biden on Wednesday issued an executive order restricting stateside investors from sinking their funds into Chinese firms developing certain technologies, as part of an effort to prevent such products being used by China's military....
India launches contest to build homegrown web browser
Almost certainly based on a FOSS engine, but with tweaks for the nation's particular needs India's government has decided the nation needs an indigenous web browser and has launched the Indian Web Browser Development Challenge (IWBDC) to make it happen....
Lawsuit: We've got the stats to prove Twitter ax fell unfairly on older, female engineers
Seven ex-tweeps bring the receipts, as the kids say Twitter has been sued by seven former employees who allege they were discriminated against on the basis of sex, age, race, and/or for taking medical leave....
Ukraine's Victor Zhora: Russia's cyber 'war crimes' will continue after ground invasion ends
International laws needed 'to bring accountability' govt chief tells The Reg Black Hat Ukraine's cybersecurity boss Victor Zhora says he expects Russia's online attacks against his country - including cyber "war crimes" - will continue long after the physical war ends unless increased international pressure is applied....
Never mind room temperature, LK-99 slammed as 'not a superconductor at all'
It may actually be the anti-superconductor, quips one research team Enthusiasm over the purported room temperature superconductor LK-99 is waning further as more research teams are unable to reproduce the original findings. In fact, one at a US university has concluded it is not a superconductor at all....
Nearly every AMD CPU since 2017 vulnerable to Inception data-leak attacks
It's like a nesting doll of security flaws AMD processor users, you have another data-leaking vulnerability to deal with: like Zenbleed, this latest hole can be to steal sensitive data from a running vulnerable machine....
US Supreme Court allows 'ghost guns' to fall under federal purview
3D printers beware, Biden's on the Build-Your-Own-Blunderbuss beat The Biden administration's crackdown on 3D-printed gun parts can be allowed to be enforced, at least temporarily, after the US Supreme Court voted to let the rule to stand....
CLI-beautifying ANSI escape sequences can also make your log files a security threat
When you can't even cat your telemetry safely, who can you trust? Black Hat Spend much time working in a command-line terminal and you're likely to have at least a passing familiarity with ANSI escape sequences. Those are the codes that can add color and other highlights to text, among performing other tasks, making your screen a little more easily readable....
X tries to win back advertisers with brand safety promises
Meanwhile, platform keeps paying creators a share of ad revenue, but without similar safety features The site formerly known as Twitter is trying yet again to lure advertisers back, this time with a series of brand safety concessions that allow the source of most the company's revenues to "curate the context" in which their ads appear....
DARPA tells AI world: Make a model that secures software, there's $25M in it for you
If you're so smart, prove it by safeguarding our infrastructure Black Hat In a surprise announcement at the opening Black Hat keynote today, DARPA unveiled what it's calling an AI Cyber Challenge (AIxCC). That's a two-year competition to build protective machine-learning systems that can safeguard software and thus critical infrastructure....
Say hello to Downfall, another data-leaking security hole in several years of Intel chips
It is with a heavy heart that we must announce that the boffins are at it again Black Hat Googlers have lately found not one but two more security vulnerabilities in Intel and AMD processors that can be exploited to steal sensitive data from a vulnerable computer's memory....
Researchers discover algorithm to create shapes that roll down pre-determined paths
Lopsided solids promise applications in quantum mechanics and medicine Researchers have developed a method to construct solid objects that roll down pre-determined paths, which they reckon could have applications in quantum mechanics and medicine....
Rapid7 prepares to toss 18% of workforce to cut costs
Operating expenses almost as high as actual turnover in latest quarterly numbers Rapid7 is initiating a restructuring process that will involve shedding 18 percent of its workforce after net losses widened over the most recent quarter....
Pope goes fire and brimstone on the dangers of AI
We hope the World Peace Day statement was not written by ChatGPT Artificial intelligence is so overhyped right now that even the Catholic Church is wagging a finger....
Can 'Mad Libs for incident response' prevent the next MOVEit?
IBM X-Force lead says yes Black Hat While MOVEit is just the latest example of a managed file transfer (MFT) tool being exploited by criminals to maximize the amount of data - and money -- they can grab, these types of attacks aren't going to stop anytime soon. From the miscreant perspective, they represent the perfect crime....
Northern Ireland police may have endangered its own officers by posting details online in error
At least it was a blunder and not a hostile attack, unlike what happened to another UK public body this week A spreadsheet containing details of serving Northern Ireland police officers was mistakenly posted online yesterday, potentially endangering the safety of officers, given the volatile politics of the region....
Sparkling fresh updates to Ubuntu, Mint and Zorin on way
What's new in the world of Irish Ubuntu derivatives It seems to be kernel update season out there. The current Ubuntu LTS gets a new kernel, Zorin OS 17 gets a new point release - and Mint announces two updated editions, coming really soon now....
It's that time of the year again: the trinity of infosec conferences
A quick guide to Hacker Summer Camp Black Hat Another year, another Hacker Summer Camp - the collective phrase for BSidesLV, Black Hat, and DEF CON, the infosec conference trinity that traditionally takes place around about this time of the year in Las Vegas....
Google teases Project IDX, an AI-infused code editing thing
Rival to CoPilot and CodeWhisperer sees the Big G join the error-ridden robo-coding market Google on Tuesday announced Project IDX, an AI-infused cloud-based integrated development environment....
Palantir lobbied UK pensions department for its software to tackle fraud
Approach follows successful contracts in the health sector US spy-tech firm Palantir launched a direct lobbying campaign targeting UK government departments, including the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP)....
Apple, Samsung, and Intel to invest in Arm IPO, and emerge with some control: report
SoftBank CFO says news of float is imminent, suggests firm will keep a solid chunk UK-based chip designer Arm will be floated in September, and its biggest licensees will be among those bidding for big shareholdings on day one....
TSMC and pals chip in for €10B German fab
NXP, Infineon, Bosch each nab 10% stake in joint venture What does 5 billion of German taxpayer funding buy you? Certainly not domestic production of TSMC's leading-edge process tech....
IBM gives z/OS an AI infusion in major upgrade aimed in part at easing admin chores
Big Blue bakes in brainbox tech to get models running - because kids these days don't want a career in big iron IBM has, as promised, announced an imminent upgrade to z/OS, the operating system for its Z-series mainframes, and promised an infusion of AI enablers....
Verizon to 'sunset' Blue Jeans vidconf platform
Also-ran service done in by changing market conditions in a post-pandemic landscape' Verizon has decided to send its BlueJeans video collaboration platform riding off into the sunset, as it were....
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