by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#607D7)
'Performing live forensics on an infected machine may not turn anything up' warn researchers Intezer security researcher Joakim Kennedy and the BlackBerry Threat Research and Intelligence Team have analyzed an unusual piece of Linux malware they say is unlike most seen before - it isn't a standalone executable file.…
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The Register
Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
Copyright | Copyright © 2024, Situation Publishing |
Updated | 2024-10-10 07:01 |
by Richard Speed on (#607A5)
New Insider build adds a few toys, but leaves Pro X users reaching for the power button Microsoft has treated some of the courageous Dev Channel crew of Windows Insiders to the long-awaited tabbed File Explorer.…
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by Richard Currie on (#6076X)
The truth is out there, and the space agency intends to find it – scientifically Over recent years, Uncle Sam has loosened its tight-lipped if not dismissive stance on UFOs, or "unidentified aerial phenomena", lest anyone think we're talking about aliens. Now, NASA is the latest body to get in on the act.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#6076Y)
Strategy says 50 of the most frequently used digital services will be upgraded at the same time The UK government has committed to ending its reliance on legacy applications, or at least those it deems the highest priority, by 2025.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#6074N)
Fresh out of jail on corruption charges, the company's leader goes shopping Samsung vice chairman Lee Jae-yong is said to be courting Dutch chipmaker NXP on a visit to Europe to bolster the company's position in the automotive semiconductor market.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6072G)
MIT CSAIL boffins devise PACMAN attack to let existing exploits avoid pointer authentication Apple's M1 chip has been found to contain a hardware vulnerability that can be abused to disable one of its defense mechanisms against memory corruption exploits, giving such attacks a greater chance of success.…
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by Alistair Dabbs on (#60712)
Don’t cross the streams! Why? It would be bad. What do you mean 'bad'? Something for the Weekend Which do you prefer: sweat or green slime? Both are being touted as clean sources of energy to drive electronic devices.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#606ZG)
Pre-configured units can be delivered to customers in 12 weeks Schneider Electric has revamped its modular datacenters, and announced an update for the EcoStruxure IT management software to cover the hybrid infrastructure scenarios that now characterise the modern world of IT.…
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by Richard Speed on (#606Y3)
Oh my word, do you remember MacWrite? It just works, right? On Call Sometimes it just works. Sometimes it just doesn't. And sometimes users do the most curious of things. Welcome to an Apple-tastic episode of On Call.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#606WG)
Wave of replacements needed as Samsung and Microsoft team to stream Xbox games to smart displays and tellies Microsoft and Samsung have teamed to stream Xbox games on the Korean giant's smart televisions and monitors.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#606T0)
Researcher spots it targeting Asian government and telco targets, probably with Beijing's approval Threat researcher Joey Chen of Sentinel Labs says he's spotted a decade worth of cyber attacks he's happy to attribute to a single Chinese gang.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#606QS)
Countries that accept US infosec help told they could pay a price too Russia and China have each warned the United States that the offensive cyber-ops it ran to support Ukraine were acts of aggression that invite reprisal.…
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by Dylan Martin on (#606Q5)
Epyc future ahead, along with Instinct, Ryzen, Radeon and custom chip push After taking serious CPU market share from Intel over the last few years, AMD has revealed larger ambitions in AI, datacenters and other areas with an expanded roadmap of CPUs, GPUs and other kinds of chips for the near future.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#606M2)
The next wave of security maturity is measuring effectiveness, she told The Register RSA Conference When Sandra Joyce, EVP of Mandiant Intelligence, describes the current threat landscape, it sounds like the perfect storm. …
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by Dan Robinson on (#606JM)
Buyer beware, say analysts, technical debt will catch up with you eventually AWS is trying to help organizations migrate their mainframe-based workloads to the cloud and potentially transform them into modern cloud-native services.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#606JN)
Meanwhile, NFT Cloud pilot will allow companies to mint, manage, and sell the controversial web tokens Salesforce has previewed a bunch of updates to its Customer 360 platform promising close integration with external data sources including Google ads, ecommerce marketplaces and social media.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#606GB)
Flying horses, gonna pwn me away... RSA Conference Living off the land is so 2021. These days, cybercriminals are living off the cloud, according to Katie Nickels, director of intelligence for Red Canary and a SANS Certified Instructor.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#606GC)
Up for debate is whether Autopilot, or humans behaving badly, is the reason for Tesla's iffy safety record An investigation into the safety of Tesla's autopilot system has been upgraded from a preliminary peek to a formal engineering analysis, a step that could put the Musk-owned motor company on the path to a recall of nearly one million vehicles. …
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by Thomas Claburn on (#606DM)
Judge finds security is not a central feature of iDevices A California District Court judge has dismissed a proposed class action complaint against Apple for allegedly selling iPhones and iPads containing Arm-based chips with known flaws.…
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by Liam Proven on (#606DN)
Penguin fans will be able to use Rosetta 2 to run x86 binaries in forthcoming update Apple is extending support for its Rosetta 2 x86-64-to-Arm binary translator to Linux VMs running under the forthcoming macOS 13, codenamed Ventura.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#606B4)
Parents claim Chinese retailer is liable for their son's tragic death Alibaba is being sued in the US by the parents of a man, who bought a 3D printer from the Chinese e-commerce giant, and died in an accident after the device allegedly malfunctioned and caught fire.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6068X)
Inflation, Apple M2, PC market shrink: Could the timing have been worse? Intel's PC chip division is the latest team caught in the current tide of economic uncertainty, as the company freezes hiring in the group. …
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60669)
Hundreds of millions of stolen credentials and a cool $59 million An ongoing phishing campaign targeting Facebook users may have already netted hundreds of millions of credentials and a claimed $59 million, and it's only getting bigger.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#6062Z)
Best hedge against a slowing PC market? Take some design tips from Apple Dell has pulled the lid off the latest pair of laptops in its XPS 13 line, in the hopes the new designs, refreshed internals, and an unmistakably Apple-like aesthetic of its 2-in-1 approach can give them a boost in a sputtering PC market. …
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by Dylan Martin on (#60605)
Chip price hikes keeping sector healthy but new fabs could lead to 'overcapacity' The global economy may be in a tenuous situation right now, but the semiconductor industry is likely to walk away from 2022 with a "healthy" boost in revenues, according to analysts at IDC. But beware oversupply, the analyst firm warns.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60606)
Impact at the end of May bad enough to garble data, but NASA isn't worried The James Webb Space Telescope has barely had a chance to get to work, and it's already taken a micrometeoroid to its sensitive primary mirror.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#605WT)
320 million units forecast, still well above pre-pandemic, but boom is over for now Orders for PCs are forecast to shrink in 2022 as consumers confront rising inflation, the war in Ukraine, and lockdowns in parts of the world critical to the supply chain, all of which continue.…
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by Richard Currie on (#605WV)
Twitter sprays mogul's team with 'firehose' of data as unending saga continues Twitter has reportedly thrown its $44 billion buyout by Elon Musk to a shareholder vote, which could take place around late July or early August.…
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by Richard Speed on (#605SJ)
Zero day? Yeah, we'll get to it. Running Windows 11 on old CPUs? OMG WE MUST FIX THIS NOW! Microsoft has accidentally turned off its controversial hardware compatibility check, thus offering Windows 11 to computers not on the list.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#605SK)
CRM slinger set to be challenged on lack of progress at investor meeting A shareholder activist group has found that tech sector workers from minority ethnic backgrounds are more than twice as likely to have experienced explicit racism than employees in other sectors.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#605PX)
'Having to go buy paper is very painful' for customers, says CEO. Let's just say the profit margins aren't HP Inc is piloting a paper delivery service for Instant Ink subscribers as it looks to increase the amount of profit it can wring from customers.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#605MR)
MOOC dropouts, boot camp avoiders, and college-averse students sought Developers in the US with $11,000 to spend, three spare nights a week, and a desire to level up to become an engineering manager or architect have a new education provider to consider: Indian company Scaler, which has made America its first overseas destination.…
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by Richard Speed on (#605K1)
Multiple accounts, local storage, calendars, and feeds make it worth the wait Browser maker Vivaldi's email client has finally hit version 1.0, seven years after it was first announced.…
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by Liam Proven on (#605K2)
Team lead Clement Lefebvre takes over maintaining backup tool from UMix creator The Linux Mint XApps suite of cross-desktop accessories has a new member – the Timeshift backup tool.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#605H3)
More evidence of where that half-a-billion-a-year cost of Emergency Services Network delay is going The UK's police service is set to spend up to £50 million ($62.7 million) buying hardware and software for a legacy communication network that was planned to become obsolete in 2019.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#605FK)
Claims world record run took 157 days, 23 hours … and just one Debian server Google has put its cloud to work calculating the value of Pi all the way out to 100 trillion digits, and claimed that's a world record for Pi-crunching.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#605FM)
Bins non-competes and promises salary transparency Microsoft has announced changes to labour relations policy for its US workforce that touch on noncompete clauses, confidentiality agreements and pay transparency.…
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by Liam Proven on (#605E4)
It may sound like a trivial feature, but this sort of thing matters, and not only to gamers In a sign of how display handling is evolving, the GNOME desktop's 3D-compositing Mutter window manager is gaining support for variable refresh rate (VRR, also known as Adaptive Sync) displays.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#605E5)
Search fail added to list of embarrassing issues since debut Infosys celebrated the first anniversary of the e-filing portal it built for India's tax authorities fixing another prominent glitch – this time a search functionality error.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#605CE)
To find dark matter and early galaxies, Morpheus could be The One Scientists around the world are gearing up to study the first images taken by the James Webb Space Telescope, which are to be released on July 12.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#605CF)
Bot was booted for being bothersome A prankster researcher has trained an AI chatbot on over 134 million posts to notoriously freewheeling internet forum 4chan, then set it live on the site before it was swiftly banned.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#605BG)
Crims have weaponized tech and certain States let them launder the proceeds Australian Federal Police (AFP) commissioner Reece Kershaw has accused un-named nations of helping organized criminals to use technology to commit and launder the proceeds of crime, and called for international collaboration to developer technologies that counter the threats that behaviour creates.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#6059K)
Takes on global players with data sourced from customers, plus paid contributions from delivery drivers Singapore's Uber equivalent, Grab, has decided to offer its homegrown maps as a service and asserts it will offer faster and more accurate spatial services than the likes of Google and HERE Technologies.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#60592)
Do you know all of your software dependencies? Spoiler alert: hardly anybody is on top of it RSA Conference Major supply-chain attacks of recent years – we're talking about SolarWinds, Kaseya and Log4j to name a few – are "just the tip of the iceberg at this point," according to Aanchal Gupta, who leads Microsoft's Security Response Center.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#60589)
Gartner advises renegotiating subscriptions now to avoid ‘dramatic’ and ‘extraordinary’ price rises Analyst firms S&P Global Market Intelligence and Gartner have both offered negative evaluations of Broadcom's takeover of VMware.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#6055Z)
No AR/VR glasses but at least RoomPlan will let you make rapid 3D room maps WWDC Apple this week at its Worldwide Developer Conference delivered software development kits (SDKs) for beta versions of its iOS 16, iPadOS 16, macOS 13, tvOS 16, and watchOS 9 platforms.…
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