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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6CA41)
Geopolitics keeps CEO up at night, cashing on on EVs gets him up in the morning Foxconn chairman and CEO Young Liu believes the manufacturing megalith will be able to continue building components in China for use in electronics produced by US companies, despite testy relations between the nations' governments....
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The Register
Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
Copyright | Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing |
Updated | 2025-04-19 13:30 |
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6CA2G)
BlackCat attack sparks injunction preventing coverage of purloined docs An infosec incident at a major Australian law firm has sparked fear among the nation's governments, banks and businesses - and a free speech debate....
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6CA1J)
Singapore dollar snafu used to illustrate workaround SAP has admitted the cloudy cut of its S/4HANA service does not allow an organization to use currencies other than what a user's location suggests is appropriate....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6C9XJ)
Crypto villain's passports were as fake as his stablecoin Fugitive crypto villain Do Kwon has been jailed in Montenegro for falsifying documents....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6C9SA)
Mobile network IP a compelling reason to ask folks to be FRANDs Updated Chinese telecoms giant Huawei may be looking to put the squeeze on small to medium companies for license fees on its sizeable patent portfolio as its bottom line continues to be hit by US sanctions and other restrictions....
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by Richard Currie on (#6C9PR)
From 'we are not Elon' to 'Elon was right' in a matter of days Comment Reddit CEO Steve Huffman has come out and said what legions of redditors feared - that a business plan to turn a profit by increasing the price of API access has been "reaffirmed" by a look at the Book of Musk....
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by Dan Robinson on (#6C9NP)
Plus: Taiwan dangles investment in semiconductor production in EU - but there's a catch Intel has agreed a deal with the German government for 10 billion ($10.9 billion) in subsidies for a new chip plant in the country, despite Germany's finance minister saying just last week that it would not offer more cash....
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6C9JV)
Also: Hackers target security researchers, MaaS model flourishing, and this week's vulnerabilities Infosec in brief Remember earlier this year, when we found out that a bunch of baddies including at least one nation-state group broke into a US federal government agency's Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) web server by exploiting a critical three-year-old Telerik bug to achieve remote code execution?...
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by Jude Karabus on (#6C9HG)
Why were they so easy to lift during the pandemic but not now? America's network regulator wants to "better understand" why ISPs still cap consumers' data usage even though they need more and providers have shown they have the "technical ability to offer unlimited data plans."...
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by Dan Robinson on (#6C9DZ)
Web hosting company tells users to pay up or shift off, but users say they weren't warned in time Users of web hosting company 123 Reg are up in arms after it abruptly stopped supporting free email redirects and instead required customers to subscribe to a paid mailbox service or migrate to another service provider....
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by Rupert Goodwins on (#6C9C2)
If Jesus was my Copilot, what would he do? Opinion Open source. It's open. You can look. Mostly, you can use. There's a clue in the name. Not so fast, claims a class action brought against Microsoft, OpenAI and GitHub. Copilot, an in-IDE AI-powered and open source trained suggestion bot, works by offering lines of code to programmers - and that, the class action suit alleges, breaks the rules, and is being sneaky in trying to hide it. A judge has ruled that some of the claims deserve their day in court. Dear lord, not another copyright battle.…
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by Matthew JC Powell on (#6C9B6)
As the customers lined up with pitchforks and burning brands, the question in the cleanup meeting was 'Who, me?' Who, Me? Welcome once again, gentle readerfolk, to the comforting haven that is Who, Me? – in which Reg readers share tales that show we're all just human underneath.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6C9AG)
Digital Competition Conf wants rift in markets to allow new app-slingers to spawn Japan has joined the list of nations determined to bust the dominance of Apple and Google over app stores on their respective mobile operating systems.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6C99X)
Plans expanded fabs in boost to beleaguered PM and blow to protestors Israel's prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu announced on Sunday that Intel will invest $25 billion on semiconductor manufacturing facilities in the country.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#6C98Q)
PLUS: Nuance voice AI startup hit with privacy lawsuit in California, and why OpenAI urged Microsoft to hold off releasing Bing AI in brief Google has warned its own employees not to disclose confidential information or use the code generated by its AI chatbot, Bard.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6C97Q)
PLUS: Crypto just isn't cricket in India; China's budget smartphone surge; Jack Ma is back, again; and more Asia In Brief US-based memory-maker Micron on Friday informed investors it's still unsure how China intends to act after warning its products had failed a security review.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6C979)
Previous claims its own software updates were the issue remain almost, kinda, plausible In the murky world of political and corporate spin, announcing bad news on Friday afternoon – a time when few media outlets are watching, and audiences are at a low ebb – is called "taking out the trash." And that’s what Microsoft appears to have done last Friday.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#6C8V1)
Deal involving millions of domain names reportedly hits $180 million Google has sold off Google Domains – its side hustle selling and managing web domains – to Squarespace in a deal reportedly worth $180 million. The transfer means about ten million customer domain names will be looked after by Squarespace.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6C8DD)
$23 million set aside to compensate for leaking queries to websites Between October 25, 2006, and September 30, 2013, Google allegedly revealed searchers' personal information to third parties in violation of privacy promises.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6C7Y8)
But police are allowed to fly them for 'public safety' missions Illinois Governor JB Pritzker on Friday signed HB 3902, which allows the US state's law enforcement agencies to use drones at some public events – but prohibits equipping them with facial recognition software or weaponry, with some exceptions.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6C7Y9)
Millions of people's personal info swiped, Clop leaks begin with 'Shell's stolen data' Progress Software on Friday issued a fix for a third critical bug in its MOVEit file transfer suite, a vulnerability that had just been disclosed the day earlier.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#6C7YA)
Germany negotiations reportedly back on track for Magdeburg fab too Intel will spend up to $4.6 billion building an assembly and testing facility located outside Wroclaw, Poland.…
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by Jude Karabus on (#6C7YC)
Plus: Accused is innocent until proven guilty, but is known to be an Apple fan FBI agents have arrested a Russian man suspected of being part of the Lockbit ransomware gang. An unsealed complaint alleges the 20-year-old was an Apple fanboy, an online gambler, and scored 80 percent of at least one ransom payment given to the criminals.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#6C7YD)
It's not very nice being blacklisted for no apparent reason, is it? US memory maker Micron is set to invest millions of dollars into a factory in China, despite its products being recently sanctioned as a security risk by the Chinese authorities.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6C7YE)
Health acquisition freezes recruitment after $10 billion contract put on hold Oracle has launched a round of job cuts at its acquired Cerner health tech biz after one of its mega projects stalled.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6C7YF)
Customers also warned to look out for audits following M&As Inflationary pressures mean businesses have faced price increases of up to 24 percent from tech vendors attempting to claw back margins.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#6BY3J)
As next-gen storage gets hotter, designs are getting wacky Feature As the latest generation of M.2 SSDs have trickled out to consumer platforms we've seen some wild and wacky cooling solutions strapped to them: heat pipes, 20,000 rpm fans, even tiny liquid coolers.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6BY3K)
Phone-hugging code can record calls, read messages, track geolocation, access camera, other snooping The Android Predator spyware has more surveillance capabilities than previously suspected, according to analysis by Cisco Talos, with an assist from non-profit Citizen Lab in Canada.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6BY3M)
Python package pile prefers protecting programmer privacy PyPI, the Python Package Index, began evaluating ways to reduce the amount of identifying information that it stores even before the US Justice Department came asking for data on suspect users.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#6BY3N)
Hopefully this tech works better than his self-driving cars Neuralink, the brain-computer interface startup founded by tech billionaire Elon Musk, has said the US Food and Drug Administration has given permission for its first human clinical trials.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6BY3Q)
Uncle Sam confirms it's saying nothing The US International Trade Administration (ITA) has admitted it promotes the sale of American-approved commercial spyware to foreign governments, and won't answer questions about it, according to US Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR).…
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by Liam Proven on (#6BY3R)
New beta versions of Thunderbird (and Firefox, while we're at it) to help set you up It's beta season in Mozilla land and some cool shiny stuff is on the way. Versions 114 of both the Firefox browser and its distant cousin the Thunderbird email client are heading our way.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6BY3S)
'We accomplished the exact opposite of what we intended...' Firefox…
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by Liam Proven on (#6BVSV)
World's largest laptop vendor releases whizzy x86 - but we could do with a better Windows rescue party The Thinkpad Z13 is quite different from any other Lenovo machine that we have seen recently. It's a similar thin, ultra-light design to the Arm-based X13S, but this is not an unusual RISC computer: this is in some ways a relatively conventional X86 laptop.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#6BVSW)
Just a shade under the 25% threshold that would spark investigation, but he still doesn't want to take over, honest French telecoms billionaire Patrick Drahi has upped his ownership of the UK's BT Group to nearly a quarter yet he still insists he does not intend to make an offer for the entire company.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6BVSX)
Beware over promising benefits and underestimating complexity Opinion Around 20 years after the largest public sector technology disaster in UK history began a £12 billion contracting escapade, they're at it again.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6BVSY)
ERP giant losing points on execution and flexibility SAP's drive to move customers to cloud-hosted and SaaS systems is not being matched by its flexibility and operational sophistication, the user group representing the Americas has told The Register.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6BVSZ)
Complexity also a problem across 115 funding streams, watchdog says Great Britain needs to at least double its low carbon investment if it is to reach the ambition of achieving net zero by 2050.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6BVT0)
Homebrew Infrastructure Processing Unit virtualizes networks and storage to make Sapphire Rapids Xeons sing Google Cloud has given itself a significant upgrade by introducing its latest Infrastructure Processing Unit – the same kind of kit that others call SmartNICs or Data Processing Units – in its first instance type powered by Intel's fourth-gen Sapphire Rapids Xeon processors.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6BVT1)
FBI warns jobseekers to be very skeptical of working holidays in Cambodia The FBI has issued a warning about fake job ads that recruit workers into forced labor operations in Southeast Asia – some of which enslave visitors and force them to participate in cryptocurrency scams.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#6BVT2)
For $100 million it better beat an Nvidia A100 IBM plans spend $100 million to build a 100,000 qubit "quantum-centric supercomputer" allegedly capable of solving the world's most intractable problems by 2023 and it's tapped the Universities of Tokyo and Chicago for help.…
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by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols on (#6BPTM)
The road to hell is paved with good intentions Opinion We can all agree that securing our software is a good thing. Thanks to one security fiasco after another – the SolarWinds software supply chain attack, the perpetual Log4j vulnerability, and the npm maintainer protest code gone wrong – we know we must secure our code. But the European Union's proposed Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) goes way, way too far in trying to regulate software security.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6BPQ1)
In cloudy Yorkshire, a ray of light can become the enemy On call With Friday upon us once more, the weather forecast assumes outsized importance as we all hope for bright days that let readers make the most of their time off.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6BPQ2)
It's a familiar story: Legislation versus rapidly evolving technology A sweeping European Union-wide AI regulatory bill is one step closer to adoption, with the European Commission's Internal Market and Civil Liberties Committees voicing their approval by an overwhelming majority. Should the bill become law, it could lead to tough times for AI operators in the economic bloc.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#6BPNY)
But tribunal punts on whether data was intercepted in transit The UK's National Crime Agency has partially won an important legal battle in a case that challenged the warrants used to obtain messages from cyber crook hangout EncroChat.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6BPKR)
How complicated can cold fusion be, really? Fusion upstart Helion Energy has named Microsoft as its first customer, and claims the software giant should be able to use electricity made by mashing together helium atoms from 2028.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#6BPHT)
In a weird way, we can blame this on AI being a better bet than blockchain India's IT minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar will ask WhatsApp to explain what's up, after the Meta-owned messaging service experienced a dramatic increase in spam calls.…
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