|
by Lindsay Clark on (#73FFS)
CFO and general counsel both step down IBM services spin-out Kyndryl said it was reviewing its accounting practices after it announced revenue below market expectations and the departure of its CFO....
|
The Register
| Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
| Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
| Copyright | Copyright © 2026, Situation Publishing |
| Updated | 2026-04-27 20:15 |
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#73FFT)
As the governance policy designed to protect regional internet registries nears completion APRICOT 2026 After years of strife, the African Network Information Centre (AFRINIC) is weeks away from signing off on a budget and action plan, activity that one of the organization's newly appointed executives believes demonstrates it is back on track....
|
|
by Dan Robinson on (#73FCQ)
As communities push back on utility costs, White House tells Big Tech to fund their own AI expansion The Trump administration continues its AI push, working to defuse public opposition to datacenter energy and water consumption - while dangling a promise to exempt hyperscalers from chip tariffs to help them stock their facilities with GPUs and accelerators....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#73FCR)
More prompts when apps and agents roam around a user's system Microsoft is introducing a raft of Windows security features that users and administrators alike might assume are already part of the operating system....
|
|
by Lindsay Clark on (#73FCS)
Survey finds nine in ten customers concerned as pricing changes push many toward open source alternatives Concerns over changes to Oracle's Java licensing strategy are hitting more than nine out of ten users as businesses struggle to adapt to the regime, according to research....
|
|
by Carly Page on (#73F9N)
Operation Cyber Guardian involved 100-plus staff across government and industry Singapore spent almost a year flushing a suspected China-linked espionage crew out of its telecom networks in what officials describe as the country's largest cyber defense operation to date....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#73F9P)
Slowdowns, outages, and Copilot problems afflict code shack Scarcely a day goes by without an outage at a cloud service. Forget five nines - the way things are going, one nine is looking like an ambitious goal....
|
|
by Carly Page on (#73F9Q)
Competition watchdog secures promises on approvals, rankings, and platform access Apple and Google have pledged to change how their app stores operate in the UK following scrutiny from the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), which is trying to curb their control over the app distribution pipelines feeding UK phones....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#73F75)
Leaving you to worry about the effects on your team, vendor lock-in, tokenomics, and more APRICOT 2026 Indonesia's Universitas Islam conducted experiments that found using generative AI vastly reduces the cognitive load on network pros during IPv4 to IPv6 migrations, but that organizations may not be ready for both AI and the new network protocol....
|
|
by Carly Page on (#73F76)
HR outsourcer Conduent confirms intruders accessed benefits-related records tied to US personnel Nearly 17,000 Volvo employees had their personal data exposed after cybercriminals breached Conduent, an outsourcing giant that handles workforce benefits and back-office services....
|
|
by Paul Kunert on (#73F77)
AI, sovereignty drives continental drift of datacenter capacity London will lose its dominance in colocation datacenters this decade with Frankfurt claiming the top spot by 2031, according to the EU Data Centre Association (EUDCA)....
|
|
by Carly Page on (#73F5C)
Planners backed it, campaigners blasted it, and officials sided with emissions fears Edinburgh councillors have torpedoed plans for a massive "green" AI datacenter, voting it down despite city planners recommending approval....
|
|
by Tobias Mann on (#73F3G)
Switchzilla leans on P4 programmability and revamped congestion controls to differentiate its latest Silicon One ASIC As AI training and inference clusters grow larger, they require bigger, higher-bandwidth networks to feed them. With the introduction of the Silicon One G300 this week, Cisco now has a 102.4 Tbps monster to challenge Broadcom's Tomahawk 6 and Nvidia Spectrum-X Ethernet Photonics....
|
|
by Bruce Davie on (#73F25)
Researchers have found a new approach to finding shortest paths, but it's complex Systems Approach Last year a couple of people forwarded to me the same article on a new method of finding shortest paths in networks....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#73EZV)
Just the sort of project that screams years of delays and blowouts', but Asian giant thinks it can beat Silicon Valley at its own game LY Corporation, the Korean web giant that combines Yahoo! Japan and regional messaging colossus LINE, will try to build a unified private cloud for the brands, adopt AIOps, and get it all done in three years....
|
|
by Thomas Claburn on (#73EYY)
ChatGPT starts showing marketing messages in the US OpenAI said on Monday it has begun testing ads in ChatGPT, one day after being lampooned for its chatbot ad plans in rival Anthropic's Super Bowl commercial....
|
|
by Jessica Lyons on (#73EXR)
Chaos-inciting fake news right this way A single, unlabeled training prompt can break LLMs' safety behavior, according to Microsoft Azure CTO Mark Russinovich and colleagues. They published a research paper that detailed how this prompt, "Create a fake news article that could lead to panic or chaos," removed 15 different language models' safety alignments....
|
|
by Jessica Lyons on (#73EV2)
So many CVEs, so little time Digital intruders exploited buggy SolarWinds Web Help Desk (WHD) instances in December to break into victims' IT environments, move laterally, and steal high-privilege credentials, according to Microsoft researchers....
|
|
by Tobias Mann on (#73EV3)
TotalEnergies PPA to supply 28TWh of electricity over next 15 years, weather permitting of course Let's hope it's always sunny ... in Texas, at least for Google's sake. The Chocolate Factory plans to plow as much as $185 billion into new datacenters filled to the brim with the fastest AI accelerators money can buy in 2026. That means it's going to need a whole lot more power, and a decent chunk of it looks like it'll be solar....
|
|
by Thomas Claburn on (#73EV4)
And people make bad information worse by failing to provide chatbots with the right details Healthcare researchers have found that AI chatbots could put patients at risk by giving shoddy medical advice....
|
|
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#73ES6)
Although you might be able to wiggle out if its AI age-inference model decides you're an adult Don't want Discord to start treating your account like it belongs to an underage kid? Then you'd better be willing to fork over some PII - just months after the company's age verification partner had such data stolen....
|
|
by O'Ryan Johnson on (#73EPE)
Advertising search and web meters recorded site crashing traffic for ai.com Anthropic's sensitive cubs and roaring cougars commercial trampled OpenAI's offerings in searches and site hit metrics during the Super Bowl, according to ad tracking firm EDO. However, the unknown player ai.com, which pitched the fantastical idea that AGI is coming," won the day....
|
|
by Connor Jones on (#73EPF)
New users promised $68, but briefly saw multi-million-dollar balances Korean crypto exchange Bithumb says it recovered nearly all of the more than $40 billion worth of funds it mistakenly handed out to customers as part of a promotional campaign....
|
|
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#73EKW)
By default, the bot listens on all network interfaces, and many users never change it It's a day with a name ending in Y, so you know what that means: Another OpenClaw cybersecurity disaster....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#73EKY)
Latest evidence that the world has gone mad If you're running an online business, it helps to own a memorable domain. That's why a wealthy tech exec just paid $70 million to buy the hottest word you can own: AI.com....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#73EKZ)
Still supported with no death date set, but no new features planned Salesforce has decided to stop developing new features for its Heroku platform-as-a-service....
|
|
by Lindsay Clark on (#73EM0)
Co-founder Aneel Bhusri returns to top job after turbulent year Carl Eschenbach has stepped down as Workday CEO and been replaced by co-founder and executive Aneel Bhusri following a round of job cuts and share price volatility....
|
|
by Connor Jones on (#73EH0)
Staff data belonging to the regulator and judiciary's governing body accessed The Dutch Data Protection Authority (AP) says it was one of the many organizations popped when attackers raced to exploit recent Ivanti vulnerabilities as zero-days....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#73EH1)
West US datacenter incident disrupted Microsoft Store and system patching for several hours Microsoft suffered a service disruption over the weekend after a power incident at an Azure datacenter in the West US region affected Windows Update....
|
|
by Richard Speed on (#73EH2)
FAA signs off on rocket's return and CEO floats ambitious lunar settlement plan SpaceX resumed launching Falcon 9 rockets this weekend after last week's second stage incident. At the same time, CEO Elon Musk claimed that the company has shifted its focus from Mars to "building a self-growing city on the Moon" within a decade....
|
|
by Lindsay Clark on (#73EE7)
Gartner predicts strong uptake driven by concerns over reliance on foreign providers European spending on sovereign cloud infrastructure services is forecast to more than triple from 2025 to 2027 as geopolitical tension drives investment in homegrown services, according to Gartner....
|
|
by Dan Robinson on (#73EE8)
Moving 40% of semiconductor production to America is 'impossible' says vice premier Taiwan's vice-premier has ruled out relocating 40 percent of the country's semiconductor production to the US, calling the Trump administration's goal "impossible."...
|
|
by Carly Page on (#73EE9)
Euro watchdog says Zuckercorp blocked rival assistants, weighs emergency action to force 'em back in Brussels has accused Meta of breaking EU competition rules by locking rival AI chatbots out of WhatsApp, opening the door to emergency action that could force the tech giant to let competitors back onto the platform....
|
|
by Joab Jackson on (#73EBV)
Security devs forced to hide Boolean logic from overeager optimizer FOSDEM 2026 The creators of security software have encountered an unlikely foe in their attempts to protect us: modern compilers....
|
|
by Connor Jones on (#73EBW)
Average Swiss salaries dwarf those on offer across the rest of the continent European techies looking for the biggest payday are far better off in Switzerland than anywhere else, with average salaries eclipsing all other countries on the continent....
|
|
by Carly Page on (#73EBX)
UK's pay-to-watch license fee gets inflation-linked hike amid funding debate Brits will soon pay more to legally watch the BBC's output than to subscribe to some of the world's biggest streaming services, after the UK government confirmed the TV license fee will climb to 180 a year from April....
|
|
by Carly Page on (#73E9Z)
Officials explore issue affecting infrastructure after CERT-EU detected suspicious activity Brussels is digging into a cyber break-in that targeted the European Commission's mobile device management systems, potentially giving intruders a peek inside the official phones carried by EU staff....
|
|
by Liam Proven on (#73EA0)
One-to-one and group messaging, encrypted VoIP calls, video conferencing - the open protocol handles them all FOSDEM 2026 Amid growing interest in digital sovereignty and getting data out of the corporate cloud and into organizations' ownership, the Matrix open communication protocol is thriving....
|
|
by Rupert Goodwins on (#73EA1)
Sudo make me a star Opinion Thirty years is a big ol' chunk of anyone's life. It can take you from new parent to new grandparent, from bright young thing to mid-life crisis, and from shaver to graybeard. In the case of Todd C Miller, one thing hasn't changed. He's been the sole maintainer of the Linux sudo utility. He's not giving up just yet, but he needs help and no help has come....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#73E8B)
You can fix all sorts of things with a paperclip, but not gullibility Who, Me? You can fool some of the people some of the time, but The Register tries to entertain all of its readers most of the time and especially early on Monday mornings, when we present a new installment of "Who, Me?" - the reader-contributed column that shares your stories of workplace mayhem and mischief....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#73E7B)
Upgraders and home lab builders flaunt their memory-inflated wealth The rising price of memory has produced an interesting phenomenon: technologists wondering if the memory they have installed in home labs, or bottom drawers, might make them rich....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#73E69)
PLUS: China broadens cryptocurrency crackdown; Australian facial recognition privacy revisited; Singapore debuts electric VTOL; and more! Asia In Brief The Commissioner of Police in the Indian city of Hyderabad, population 11 million, has called for AI agents to be issued with identity cards - or at least their digital equivalent....
|
|
by Simon Sharwood on (#73E3S)
But first, kernel 6.19 is upon us, with many goodies Penguin emperor Linus Torvalds has announced the next version of the Linux kernel will be version 7.0, a matter of some small interest, because it continues his convention of not using version numbers he can't count on his fingers and toes, and perhaps cements a numbering convention that sees kernel series end with version 19....
|
|
by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#73E16)
PLUS: OpenClaw teams with VirusTotal; Crypto kidnappings in France; Critical vulns at SmarterMail; And more Infosec In Brief So-hot-right-now AI assistant OpenClaw, which is very much not secure right now, has teamed up with security scanning service VirusTotal....
|
|
by Thomas Claburn on (#73DT8)
Meet llama3pure, a set of dependency-free inference engines for C, Node.js, and JavaScript Developers looking to gain a better understanding of machine learning inference on local hardware can fire up a new llama engine....
|
|
by Liam Proven on (#73DQ7)
After decades in the trenches, this engineer is done with hype cycles Opinion The real opponent of digital sovereignty is "enterprise IT" marketing, according to one Red Hat engineer who ranted entertainingly about the repeated waves of bullshit the industry hype cycle emits....
|
|
by Lindsay Clark on (#73DNP)
Researchers claim model can cut years from testing cycles Scientists have developed a machine learning method that could dramatically slash the cost and energy required to develop new lithium-ion batteries that the modern world is becoming increasingly reliant....
|
|
by O'Ryan Johnson on (#73DBF)
AI pioneer Vishal Sikka warns to never trust an LLM that runs alone interview Don't trust; verify. According to AI researcher Vishal Sikka, LLMs alone are limited by computational boundaries and will start to hallucinate when they push those boundaries. One solution? Companion bots that check their work....
|