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Updated 2025-04-19 11:45
Meta's Oversight Board wants a prime minister banned from Facebook and Instagram
Overrules decision that Cambodian leader Hun Sen's threats of political violence were newsworthy Meta's Oversight Board - the quasi-independent body the social networking giant established to review content moderation decisions - has recommended a national leader be banned from Facebook and Instagram for six months for promoting political violence. It has overridden a decision not to take down videos in which Cambodian prime minister Hun Sen threatened his political opponents....
Fujitsu admits it fluffed the fix for Japan’s flaky ID card scheme
Yet another snafu for digital services push Fujitsu Japan is in the spotlight again for all the wrong reasons, after fumbling its attempt to fix the nation's troubled ID card scheme....
Crook who stole $23m+ in YouTube song royalties gets five years behind bars
Claims he wants to stay in the music biz after time in a Sing Sing One of the two men who admitted stealing more than $23 million in royalty payments for songs played on YouTube has been sentenced to nearly six years behind bars for his role in what prosecutors called "one of the largest music-royalty frauds ever."...
Forget these apps and AI, where's my flying car? Ah, here's one with an FAA license
Also: No comment on that choice of name for a wee leccy chopper America's Federal Aviation Administration has granted limited flight licenses to not one but two companies working on electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) craft, one of which could even be considered an actual flying car....
Virgin Galactic finally gets its first paying customers to edge of space
It only took nearly 20 years and one death to get there Video Virgin Galactic today sent six people to the edge of space in its first-ever commercial flight....
Google accused of ripping off advertisers with video ads no one saw. Now, the expert view
Web giant also hits back ... right as YouTube steps up war on advert blockers Analysis Google is accused of misrepresenting the placement of YouTube video ads by playing them on low-quality third-party websites where they may never have been viewed. If so, that means Google has been taking millions if not billions of dollars from advertisers for video ads that perhaps no one actually watched....
It's 2023 and memory overwrite bugs are not just a thing, they're still number one
Cough, cough, use Rust. Plus: Eight more exploited bugs added to CISA's must-patch list The most dangerous type of software bug is the out-of-bounds write, according to MITRE this week. This type of flaw is responsible for 70 CVE-tagged holes in the US government's list of known vulnerabilities that are under active attack and need to be patched, we note....
This Windows update is snarling up some endpoint security tools
Malwarebytes and Trellix upgrades to the rescue Some Windows users are still feeling the fallout from apparent conflicts between recent OS updates and certain antimalware and antivirus software....
Chinese balloon that US shot down was 'crammed' with American hardware
Blasted from the sky in February, device never transmitted photos, videos, or radar data it collected, officials say It's been months since "spy balloon" fever gripped the United States, but the headline-grabbing flying object -alleged to have been deployed by China - is back in the news. Preliminary findings from the US inspection of its wreckage show a whole bunch of commercially available hardware made in the States....
Databricks puts cards on the table format as Snowflake looks for more players
Enterprises want a single data platform for data lakes and warehouse, but tech's not there yet, say analysts Analysis With confirmation of support for table formats Apache Iceberg and Hudi this week, Databricks is striving to broaden the appeal of its approach to data lakes, strengthening its dominance in machine learning to branch out to data warehouse-type workloads....
Mummy and Daddy Musk think Elon's cage fight against Zuck is a terrible idea
Bizarrely, there's been no suggestion that the bout won't happen How many CEOs in their 50s require their parents to step in when they're being a little shit?...
Memory chipmaker Micron's sales down 57% as market bottoms out
Company eyes return to memory growth, but warns life on the China ban-list could be hard US memory chipmaker Micron is still experiencing revenue way below last year's highs, but the company believes the industry has bottomed out, meaning prices for buyers are likely to rise again as demand picks up....
Linux Mint cuts slice of 'Victoria' as 21.2 beta lands with dash of fresh Cinnamon
Desktop Ubuntu, but without the nonsense It's been a while coming, but the beta of Linux Mint 21.2, codenamed "Victoria", is here with a new version of the Cinnamon desktop among other updated features to enjoy....
Bosses face losing 'key' workers after forcing a return to office
Survey says most would prefer a gentle request A recent report covering 9,500 employers and 6,650 employees across 17 global markets found that those who forced workers to come back to office buildings are paying a price, with 42 percent saying they'd subsequently lost more employees than expected....
Europe's largest city council runs parallel systems to cover Oracle rollout mess
Decision to adapt software now subject of an independent management investigation Birmingham City Council is running parallel systems to compensate for the troubled implementation of an Oracle system which will suck in 46.5 million ($58.81 million) in additional spending in the current financial year....
UK's dream of fusion power by 2040s will need GPUs
Boffins plan 'digital twin' to help hit deadline, recruit heavy-hitting partners The UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) has recruited Intel and the University of Cambridge for the compute resources it needs to develop Britain's prototype nuclear fusion reactor - including building a "digital twin" of the design to help with testing....
Apple joins the opposition to encryption-bypassing 'spy clause' in UK internet law
Not the iPhone maker's first think-of-the-children rodeo Apple has joined the rapidly growing chorus of tech organizations calling on British lawmakers to revise the nation's Online Safety Bill - which for now is in the hands of the House of Lords - so that it safeguards strong end-to-end encryption....
Google uses India to test ‘deliver to the house near the post office’ feature
Ads and search giant also open sources offensive stereotype database, and gives Amazon a poke Google's Indian operation will test a feature that would offer navigation based on mentions of landmarks - kind of the way people do....
Samsung to start mass producing 2nm silicon in 2025, first for mobile devices
Forms a packaging posse to do the chiplet thing Samsung Electronics will commence mass production of a 2-nanometer silicon manufacturing process in 2025, the chaebol announced on Wednesday at its annual Foundry Forum....
Oracle certifies its database for Arm architecture on-prem and in cloud
Only for Ampere - but with a licencing twist that means Intel and AMD can't relax Oracle has certified its flagship Database 19c Enterprise Edition database for the Arm architecture, in the cloud or on-prem - provided it runs on an Ampere processor....
Network security guy in extradition tug of war between US and Russia
Group-IB spinout confirms Kislitsin is wanted by both Washington and Moscow A Russian network security specialist and former editor of Hacker magazine who is wanted by the US and Russia on cybercrime charges has been detained in Kazakhstan as the two governments seek his extradition....
Guess who's quietly bankrolling a legal fight against Montana's TikTok ban. Why yes, it's TikTok
Psst, some American user data still stored in China, too Five TikTok users who sued to overturn Montana's state-wide public ban on the video-sharing app have been getting secret support for their case from an unsurprising source: TikTok itself....
Microsoft, OpenAI sued for $3B after allegedly trampling privacy with ChatGPT
Where did they get the idea this bot was potentially spitting out personal info? Oh, from The Register Microsoft and OpenAI were sued on Wednesday by sixteen pseudonymous individuals who claim the companies' AI products based on ChatGPT collected and divulged their personal information without adequate notice or consent....
The death of the sysadmin has been predicted for years – we're not holding our breath
We'd sure like to see a bot unpick a failed update or handle users struggling to find the 'any' key Register Kettle We've seen a slew of claims lately once again predicting dire times ahead for IT system administrators: if they're not under threat from AI and outsourcing, they face an increasingly demanding work atmosphere....
Microsoft's GitHub under fire for DDoSing crucial open source project website
A tale of emergency firewalling, a little bit of victim blaming, and workflow scripts gone berserk This month you may have noticed the servers used by the GMP project - an open source arithmetic library at the heart of GCC and other programs - slowed to a crawl. It was due to a deluge of network traffic, the source of which is quite surprising....
It's time to mark six decades of computer networking
As we yearn for a return to a truly decentralized internet Systems Approach Next week I am heading to Edinburgh University, where I did my PhD back in the 1980s, to give a lecture as part of the events celebrating 60 years of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence at Edinburgh....
SAE says yes to making Tesla EV chargers an American standard
Another win for Musk: Ford, GM, Rivian and Volvo have already announced plans to dump CCS The winds of EV charging standards change continue to favor Elon Musk, as the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) has confirmed plans to standardize Tesla's in-house car charging hardware....
California man jailed after manure-to-methane scheme revealed as bull
Fraudulent cash cow milked investors for almost $9M The Eastern District of California has serious beef with a bloke whose cow manure green energy scheme turned out to be udder bull....
US mulls tightening ban on AI chips to China
To protect against weapons or economic interests - either way, it's bad news for some vendors Washington is understood to be considering further restrictions on the export to China of advanced chips used for AI processing, moves which could dent the sales of companies including Nvidia and AMD....
Rocky Linux claims to have found 'path forward' from CentOS source purge
Ripples rebounding and reflecting from Red Hat's rebuff of RHEL rebuilds The backlash against Red Hat's decision to stop distributing the source code of RHEL for free to non-customers continues to widen....
Comms watchdog to probe errors that left Brits unable to make emergency calls
Police reported backlog of 999 calls after unspecified technical error Britain's communications watchdog is investigating former state telco BT over a "UK-wide disruption" that prevented some calls connecting with emergency services on 25 June....
EU launches 4 testbeds to put AI tech through its paces before it goes to market
The labs will look at AI and robotics for manufacturing, healthcare, agriculture, and cities European officials - who reached political agreement on the EU's new Data Act last night -have launched four labs to test AI applications before they're released to the general public....
Fire-resistant drones promise to help rescuers in a hot spot
NASA space suits provide inspiration to Swiss and Brit boffins Drones built to withstand extreme temperatures have passed initial testing in an effort to reduce risks to rescuers in fire emergencies....
Metaverses are flopping – hard – says Gartner
Clunky, costly, literally sickening data silos just aren't better than the real world Businesses are not rushing to adopt the metaverse, according to analyst firm Gartner - because it's just not very good or useful....
Adversarial audio samples generated by AI can trick authentication systems
Proof-of-concept study shows it's possible to bypass high levels of security The rise of off-the-shelf AI tools that can clone human voices has forced developers of voice authentication software to build an extra layer of security to detect whether an audio sample appears to be human or machine-generated....
Five billion phones are dead in drawers – carriers want to mine them
There's gold in them thar mobes. Also copper, silver and cobalt The GSM Association (GSMA) and a dozen carriers have announced a plan to make a modest dent in the number of mobile phones that languish, unused, unloved, and unrecycled....
Microsoft postpones death date for personally licensed Teams Rooms hardware
The 'upgrade' is free, yet an amnesty is needed despite months of warning Microsoft's bid to have customers of Teams Rooms hardware acquire corporate licenses is going so well - not! - that the software giant has extended the deadline to sign up by 90 days, even though the move involves price reductions....
Canada plans brain drain of H-1B visa holders, with no-job, no-worries work permits
They're vetted, almost acculturated, and will be booted from the US if they lose their gig Canada has launched a bid to attract techies working in the USA on the notorious H-1B visa, by offering them the chance to move north....
Microsoft's Activision fight with FTC turned up a Blizzard of docs: Here's your summary
Windows PCs in the cloud, spending Sony out of business, mobile woes, and more - and the files to read Microsoft's US legal battle to acquire gaming giant Activision Blizzard continued on Tuesday with courtroom testimony from Jim Ryan, CEO of Sony Interactive Entertainment, a company likely to be seriously affected if the deal goes through....
Cisco buys SamKnows to give ThousandEyes a look at millions of endpoints
Packets you make at home or on mobile devices are in Switchzilla's sights, to make hybrid workers happy On the heels of Cisco's Accedian acquisition last week, the network giant has snapped up SamKnows to extend its ThousandEyes network performance monitoring (NPM) stack to remote and hybrid workers....
Think of our cafes and dry cleaners, says Ohio as budget slashes WFH for govt workers
These expensive office buildings aren't for decoration - and that goes for the rest of ya, too Government employees of the US state of Ohio are in for a rude awakening - and commute - if the state's budget bill for the next year passes, as it includes an amendment that will limit those workers to one day a week of working from home....
Miscreants leak texts and info siphoned by Android stalkerware app LetMeSpy
Just as America's Supremes set a high bar for cyberstalking It's bad enough there's some Android stalkerware out there with the not-at-all-creepy moniker LetMeSpy. Now someone's got hold of the information the app collects - such as victims' text messages and call logs - as well as the email addresses of those who sought out the software, and leaked it all....
Cops' total pwnage of 'secure' EncroChat nets 6,500+ arrests, €740m in funds – so far
Or so the Europlod says Police breaking into and snooping on the EncroChat encrypted messaging network has led to 6,558 arrests worldwide and nearly 740 million seized in criminal funds, according to cops in France and the Netherlands....
Warning: JavaScript registry npm vulnerable to 'manifest confusion' abuse
Failure to match metadata with packaged files is perfect for supply chain attacks The npm Public Registry, a database of JavaScript packages, fails to compare npm package manifest data with the archive of files that data describes, creating an opportunity for the installation and execution of malicious files....
NIST boffins shrink atomic beam clock to the size of a postage stamp
It's not the most accurate atomic clock in the world, but the NIST team behind it believes they can fix that There's a new atomic clock on the block over at the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and while it's not as accurate as its predecessors it does have one big advantage: it's small enough to stick in your pocket....
AWS to expand Ohio bit barns to the tune of $7.8B
Still the most profitable arm of Bezos's biz Amazon Web Services (AWS) is set to spend $7.8 billion between now and 2030 expanding its datacenter operations in the US state of Ohio....
Snowflake's finding NeMo to train custom AI models
Submerge an Nvidia LLM 20,000 leagues under the data lake Snowflake Summit Nvidia and cloud data warehouse company Snowflake have teamed up to help organizations build and train their own custom AI models using data they have stored within Snowflake's platform....
One year after Roe v Wade overturned and 'uterus surveillance' looks grim
Data sales 'can do real harm' Analysis The US Supreme Court's decision a year ago to overturn Roe v Wade has shone a light on the amount of personal, sensitive data that tech companies collect every day -and how that information can be used for nefarious purposes....
AMD says its FPGA is ready to emulate your biggest chips
But can it run Crysis? The flexibility of field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) makes them ideal for all kinds of applications ranging from smartNICs, telecom networks, and even for emulating retro game consoles....
First pushback against EU's Digital Services Act and it's not Google
Who are you calling a VLOP? asks German web fashionista Pick two massive platforms you'd think would be first to bring the fight to the EU lawmakers over the Digital Services Act... then forget both of them. Because it was German fashion retailer Zalando that filed a lawsuit today....
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