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Updated 2024-10-09 05:01
Apple lets devs charge up to $10,000 per app
Tim still wants his third, natch Apple on Tuesday announced the "biggest upgrade to App Store pricing," where "upgrade" means concession agreed to as part of a legal settlement.…
Uber fined $14m for lying to get customers to ditch cabs
Australian app let you book actual taxis – at inflated prices Australia's Federal Court has fined Uber AU$21 million ($14 million) for engaging in misleading and deceptive conduct.…
Amnesty International Canada claims attack by China-backed forces
Threat actors allegedly looking for contacts and monitoring org's future plans The Canadian branch of Amnesty International was the target of an attack it has pinned on a Chinese state-sponsored actor.…
South Pacific vacations may be wrecked by ransomware
New Zealand government reels, Vanuatu’s spent weeks entirely offline New Zealand's Privacy Commission has signalled it may open an investigation into local managed services provider Mercury IT, which serves many government agencies and businesses and has been hit by ransomware.…
Equinix to cut costs by cranking up the heat in its datacenters
Dude, not cool In the hopes of cutting its power bills, Equinix says it's turning the thermostat up in its datacenters.…
Neuralink reportedly under investigation by Uncle Sam for 'animal welfare violations'
Rushed 'hack job' surgeries cause monkeys, pigs to needless die, staffers claim Neuralink is reportedly being investigated by the US government for possibly mistreating animals in lab experiments as the company rushes to build an implantable brain chip.…
Women sue Apple claiming AirTags helped their stalkers
Pair say they were harassed and followed using trackers described in the media as 'stalker-proof' Apple is being sued on behalf of two women who allege that the company's AirTag tracking devices violated their privacy by allowing them to be stalked.…
Rackspace confirms ransomware attack behind days-long email outage
Hope the name Hackspace doesn't stick Updated Rackspace has admitted a ransomware infection was to blame for the days-long email outage that disrupted services for customers. …
Apple broke the law fighting Atlanta union, says NLRB
Hey Siri, is it illegal to pressure employees until they abandon organizing votes? US labor law enforcers say they've found merit to allegations that Apple's response to unionization attempts in Atlanta violated the National Labor Relations Act.…
Lumen to double size of US network with six million extra miles of fiber
Big expansion of 400Gbps networking as it plays catch-up on speeds and feeds Lumen Technologies Tuesday said it would double the size of its US intercity network to 12 million fiber miles by the end of 2026. When complete, the telco says the network will connect 50 major cities across the United States at data rates of up to 400Gbps.…
NASA's COLDArm robot limb can handle seriously cool science
Bofffins claim lunar manipulator is tougher than a Terminator NASA is testing a new robotic arm that could revolutionize exoplanetary science for a reason most of us have probably never even considered: It doesn't need to be kept warm in order to work. …
TSMC triples spending on Arizona advanced chip site with extra 3nm fab
Biden thinks it's a big deal, but TSMC's Taiwan output will still dwarf US fabs Analysis TSMC has confirmed it will build not one, but two advanced chip manufacturing plants in Arizona, more than tripling the Asian foundry giant's original investment to $40 billion, even though the company has complained about the US project becoming a major headache for multiple reasons.…
SpaceX chases government cash with Starshield satellites
If Starshield smells like Space-BACN, that's because it probably is SpaceX is developing a new satellite fleet designed for government use.…
Samsung, Korean IT giant Naver to build AI hyperscale chip
Meanwhile, Samsung appoints its first female president Korean electronics-maker Samsung is teaming up with domestic internet search giant Naver to develop AI chips for hyperscale computing, the duo said today.…
You get the internet you deserve
The race to the bottom is on and the IoS is about to get S'ier Comment To see where this dumptruck is heading, let's first follow the trail of debris.…
Want to detect Cobalt Strike on the network? Look to process memory
Security analysts have tools to spot hard-to-find threat, Unit 42 says Enterprise security pros can detect malware samples in environments that incorporate the highly evasive Cobalt Strike attack code by analyzing artifacts in process memory, according to researchers with Palo Alto Networks' Unit 42 threat intelligence unit.…
SAP still struggling to convert ECC customers to S/4HANA, says Gartner
Latest platform software has not been licensed by two-thirds of legacy users, despite strong growth New data from Gartner suggests that SAP is continuing to struggle to get users from its legacy ERP platform ECC onto the latest version: S/4HANA, launched in 2015.…
KmsdBot botnet is down after operator sends typo in command
Cashdollar: 'It’s not often we get this kind of story in security' Somewhere out there, a botnet operator is kicking themselves and probably hoping no one noticed the typo they transmitted in a command that crashed their whole operation. …
Not all vendors' Arm-powered kit is created equally, benchmark fan finds
Shiny silicon plus Rusty drivers will eventually equal openly saucy happiness Arm-powered laptops and desktops are appearing on the market, but external appearances are deceptive. These are very different from familiar x86-based PCs, as the accounts of those experimenting with them reveal.…
Durham Uni and Dell co-design systems to help model the universe
A particle physicist, an astronomer and a cosmologist meet in a bar. You what, COSMA8? The James Webb Space Telescope has served up impressive views of the cosmos since the first images were revealed back in July, but it is also providing data to other scientific endeavors, including cosmology projects such as those at Durham University in the northeast of England.…
Rights groups threaten legal action over NHS data pilot based on Palantir tech
'Acute and justifiable fear' in the way patient data is set to be processed, campaigners warn An NHS pilot to upload patient data in a data analytics system based on tech from Palantir is the subject of a legal threat from campaign groups who claim it appears to circumvent data protection and procurement laws.…
How do you solve the problem that is Twitter?
Technically and leadership-wise what site needs is stability Opinion It's a toss-up between Elon Musk's management misadventures and Twitter's technical troubles as to which will cause the most damage. …
Woman fakes pregnancy to smuggle hundreds of CPUs, iPhones into China
Now that's what we call Intel Inside If you think you can fool customs officials into believing you are pregnant and not, in fact, smuggling hundreds of Intel processors and iPhones in a prosthetic strapped to your belly, think again.…
Boeing swipes at Starlink as it finishes two internet slinging satellites
5,000 redirectable beams in each bird Boeing has delivered a pair of O3b mPOWER satellites to telecom network provider SES – and had a dig at rival space broadband technologies along the way.…
Cisco wriggles out from $2 billion bill for ‘willful and egregious’ patent infringements
Supreme Court won’t revisit case after agreeing conflict of interest trumped tech Cisco has managed to avoid a $2-plus billion payment for patent infringement on a technicality that has nothing to do with the patents.…
FTX Japan would let customers withdraw funds … if only anyone could log in
Add a busted tech platform to the list of the company's sins FTX's Japanese outpost has teased good news for investors in the collapsed and disgraced trading platform – then dashed their hopes.…
Meta threatens to stop sharing news in USA to protest publisher payment plan
Good luck with that, Zuck – remember how it worked out in Australia? Meta, the social media conglomerate formerly known as Facebook, has threatened to remove news from its platforms if the US adopts a law that would force it to negotiate with publishers to pay them for allowing links to their content.…
China regulates use of motion detection to trigger smartphone ads
'Shake to jump' technique nixed a year after top apps put it to work China's Telecommunication Terminal Industry Forum Association (TAF) has issued a raft of new regulations – including one that sets rules for when motion sensors can trigger smartphones to display ads or open websites.…
Industrial robots in China push people out of jobs, slash wages
Exposed to 'droids? Symptoms may include indifference, unemployment, lower pay, along with a bit of depopulation Exposure to industrial robots in the workplace leads to less participation in the labor force, less employment, and less pay, according to economics researchers.…
TSA to expand facial recognition across America
System is optional, for the moment America's Transport Security Administration, better known as the TSA, has been testing facial recognition software to automatically screen passengers flying across the country in 16 airports. And now it's looking into rolling it out nationwide next year.…
Four suspects cuffed, face extradition over tax refund scam plot
RDP servers allegedly raided in hunt for personal info to exploit Four men suspected of plotting to commit wire fraud and identity theft have been arrested and now face extradition to America.…
Adobe to sell AI-generated images on its stock photo platform
Contributors will have to disclose whether their work was made using AI, and are not allowed rip off artists Adobe will sell AI-generated images on its stock image platform, despite concerns the technology raises potential copyright issues, the company announced on Monday. …
Gunfire at electrical grid kills power for 45,000 in North Carolina
You don't have to be a coder to cut off the juice when blunt tools are around Officials in Moore County, North Carolina, declared a state of emergency on Sunday after gunfire damaged an electrical substation and left 45,000 homes and businesses without power in near freezing temperatures.…
Google warns stolen Android keys used to sign info-stealing malware
OEMs including Samsung, LG and Mediatek named and shamed Compromised Android platform certificate keys from device makers including Samsung, LG and Mediatek are being used to sign malware and deploy spyware, among other software nasties.…
Stack Overflow bans ChatGPT as 'substantially harmful' for coding issues
High error rates mean thousands of AI answers need checking by humans OpenAI's question-answering bot, ChatGPT, isn't smart enough for the team at Stack Overflow, who today announced a temporary ban on answers generated by the AI bot because of how frequently it's wrong.…
GlobalFoundries plans up to 800 layoffs despite reporting record profits
Record income? Tick. CHIPS Act subsidies coming? Tick. Yet chipmaker tries to make Wall Stret happier still US contract chipmaker GlobalFoundries plans to lay off as many as 800 employees, proving that job security is not a foregone conclusion for a company that just reported record profits.…
US could save billions in health costs if it changed wind energy strategy
Socio-economic disparities between who benefits from new plants still remain, say MIT researchers The health benefits of replacing fossil fuel-burning power plants with wind energy are quantifiable, says the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, but if the US got more choosy about which plants it switches off in favor of wind, those benefits could quadruple.…
Fancy some fresh Linux Mint? 21.1 enters beta, should be here by Christmas
If you like the flavor of Cinnamon, good news: you'll get a new version The first beta version of Mint 21.1 is now available for download, and the flagship Cinnamon desktop edition contains the biggest change, with a new version of the desktop.…
Yandex signs up Putin ally to help with restructuring
Alexei Kudrin, former head of Russia's Audit Chamber, to advise on corporate development Ten days after Yandex confirmed a review of its operations that include moving IP out of Russia and selling much of the remainder locals, it has hired an ally of President Vladimir Putin to help out with the restructure.…
You're getting warmer: NASA's thermal mole reveals active mantle plume on Mars
Discovery shows 'astrobiological potential of subsurface habitable environments' Researchers have discovered a driver for volcanic activity on Mars, a red planet once thought to have no active seismic geology.…
Working Apple-1 'Byte Shop' computer expected to fetch $375k+
What do you mean, you don't think historic handwriting is worth it? A "clean and unused" prototype Apple-1 that actually works has been put up for auction by purveyor of Cupertino relics RR Auctions.…
Windows 11 still not winning the OS popularity contest
Microsoft releases out of box experience update to simplify and speed up migrations Microsoft has released an out-of-band update to nudge laggards toward Windows 11 amid a migration pace that company executives would undoubtedly prefer is rather faster.…
Startup raises $30 million for wireless power delivery system
Not the first company in the game to chase cable-free charging dragon A wireless power startup has secured $30 million in funding to help develop its technology, with which it aims to "do for power what Wi-Fi has done for data."…
Quantum computing is a different kind of computing, says AWS
The intersection of computer science and physics RE:INVENT "It's very early days in quantum computing," Simone Severini, director of Quantum Computing at AWS tells The Reg.…
Tech contractor who uses an umbrella company? UK tax is coming after them
Britain's wallet-checkers suspect VAT avoidance from some of them – to the tune of 10,000-case tribunal backlog Britain's tax collection agency is clamping down on umbrella companies used by contractors to pay their dues, with 10,000 outstanding tribunal cases waiting to be heard.…
A brand new Linux DRM display driver – for a 1992 computer
680x0: the CPU architecture that just will not die Feature A patch to add a new display driver for Linux is being reviewed. What's unusual is that it's for a machine released 30 years ago.…
Killing trees with lasers isn’t cool, says Epson. So why are inkjets any better?
Imagine there's no printer drivers. It's easy if you can... Long-term dot matrix printer maker Epson has just announced it is ending its 35 year long experiment in selling laser-powered printer hardware. From 2026, the company says it'll be inkjet only – although it will probably still sell you a new dot-matrix if you ask nicely.…
Square Kilometre Array Observatory construction commences
World's biggest radio telescope to have first parts up and running by 2024 After thirty years of development, the Square Kilometre Array Observatory (SKAO) announced Monday it has commenced construction of its radio telescopes in both South Africa and Australia.…
Programming error created billion-dollar mistake that made the coder ... a hero?
No crypto needed, just a project with a tough deadline that nobody minded missing who, me? Ah, dear readers, welcome once again to Who, Me? in which Reg readers confess the times their reach exceeded their grasp, technology-wise-speaking.…
Remuneration coming for TrustCor customers impacted by CA revocation
Also, a Capone henchman lands behind bars, while nearly 9/10 DoD contract firms fail security standards In brief Certificate Authority TrustCor responded to its ejection from Mozilla and Microsoft's browsers by offering refunds for some customers, while leaving others to pick up the mess on their own.…
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