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Updated 2025-10-20 21:00
Google agrees to pause AI workloads to protect the grid when power demand spikes
On hot summer days, air conditioning is rather more important than search summaries Google will pause non-essential AI workloads to protect power grids, the advertising giant announced on Monday....
SonicWall investigates 'cyber incidents,' including ransomware targeting suspected 0-day
Bypassing MFA and deploying ransomware...sounds like something that rhymes with 'schmero-day' SonicWall on Monday confirmed that it's investigating a rash of ransomware activity targeting its firewall devices, following multiple reports of a zero-day bug under active exploit in its VPNs....
Perplexity AI accused of scraping content against websites’ will with unlisted IP ranges
Cloudflare finds AI search biz ignoring crawl prohibitions and trying to hide its spiders Perplexity, an AI search startup, has been spotted trying to disguise its content-scraping bots while flouting websites' no-crawl directives....
Forget the Space Force! Trump needs to create a Cyber Force, says think tank
One new military branch per term would have to be some sort of record The US Space Force won't be the only new military branch Donald Trump has created if forthcoming recommendations from a group of retired military and civilian leadership end up being adopted. They want the President to form a US "Cyber Force" too....
AI going critical: Hyundai to help build nuclear-powered datacenter in Texas
Fermi America will also have 4GW of gas generators for the Amarillo 'HyperGrid' Nuclear power is enjoying something of a second renaissance in the US as hyperscalers grapple with AI's seemingly insatiable appetite for power....
Python-powered malware snags hundreds of credit cards, 200K passwords, and 4M cookies
PXA Stealer pilfers data from nearly 40 browsers, including Chrome More than 4,000 victims across 62 countries have been infected by stealthy infostealers pilfering people's passwords, credit card numbers, and browser cookies, which are then sold to other criminals on Telegram-based marketplaces....
IT firing spree: Shrinking job market looks even worse after BLS revisions
The payroll growth we thought we experienced in May and June? Gone, like tears in the rain The US IT jobs market hasn't exactly been robust thus far in 2025, and downward revisions to May and June's Bureau of Labor Statistics data mean IT jobs lost in July are part of an even deeper sector slowdown than previously believed....
Mars says hello as NASA's Europa Clipper warms up radar
Instrument works fine. Now, about those transistors NASA's Europa Clipper probe checked out its radar as the spacecraft hurtled past Mars on the way to Jupiter's moon Europa....
Mozilla flags phishing wave aimed at hijacking trusted Firefox add-ons
Devs told to exercise 'extreme caution' with emails disguised as account update prompts Mozilla is warning of an ongoing phishing campaign targeting developers of Firefox add-ons....
Study finds radical nutjobs targeting gamers via Discord, Twitch, Steam
'Hyper-masculine' first-person shooter fandoms are prime targets Researchers from Anglia Ruskin University have sounded the alarm on "gaming-adjacent platforms" including Discord, Twitch, and Steam being used as "digital playgrounds" to funnel new recruits into far-right and other extremist ideologies - with a focus on those showing interest in "hyper-masculine gaming titles."...
Windows 11 leads as October looms, but millions still cling to Windows 10
With just over two months left, enterprises look to Extended Security Updates as a stay of execution Windows 11 is maintaining its lead over Windows 10, but millions of PCs are still running Microsoft's legacy operating system with less than three months until support ends....
Tony Blair Institute: UK needs bit barns to lead in AI deployment, not training
Let US and China compete in the AI development arms race, says former Brit PM's non-profit org Britain should not try to compete with America and China in the race to build cutting-edge AI models and focus instead on widespread AI adoption, but even this will require a boost local compute capacity....
Project Banana ripens into a pre-alpha for KDE Linux, and you can test it
Desktop project's in-house distro is impressively ambitious, but nowhere near ready The former "Project Banana" now has a more sober name, albeit one a bit trickier to search for....
Untangling the Jeff Bezos web: Who pays for the billionaire's space lust?
Blue Origin and Amazon's Kuiper satellite program are an arm's length apart In the beginning there was Jeff Bezos. He created Amazon in 1994 and became filthy rich in the decades that followed, reaching a net worth exceeding $241 billion in 2025....
German phone repair biz collapses following 2023 ransomware attack
Founder miffed over prosecutors holding onto its Bitcoin The founder of a German mobile phone repair and insurance biz has begun insolvency proceedings for some operations in his company after struggling financially following a costly ransomware attack in 2023....
When hyperscalers can’t safeguard one nation’s data from another, dark clouds are ahead
If it's not on-prem, it's on the menu Opinion The details of cloud data regionalization are rarely the stuff of great drama. When they've reached the level of an exe admitting to the Senate that a foreign power can help itself to that nations data, no matter where it lives, things get interesting....
Millions of age checks performed as UK Online Safey Act gets rolling
But it's OK, claims Brit government, no personal data stored 'unless absolutely necessary' The UK government has reported that an additional five million age checks are being made daily as UK-based internet users seek to access age-restricted sites following the implementation of the Online Safety Act."...
Legendary OpenPrinting architect looking for new role
Canonical lays off one of its old hands - a longstanding FOSS developer - after nearly two decades Till Kamppeter, the lead developer of the OpenPrinting subsystem for Linux, has been laid off by Canonical after 19 years....
Tech bro denied dev's hard-earned bonus for bug that overcharged a little old lady
Startups aren't good at testing software, or respecting contracts Who, Me? Welcome to the opening day of another working week, an occasion The Register always celebrates with a new installment of Who, Me? It's the Monday column that revisits readers' worst moments at work, and celebrates your ability to rebound and reinvent in their wake....
China’s botched Great Firewall upgrade invites attacks on its censorship infrastructure
Attempts to censor QUIC traffic create chance to block access to offshore DNS resolvers China's attempts to censor traffic carried using Quick UDP Internet Connections (QUIC) are imperfect and have left the country at risk of attacks that degrade its censorship apparatus, or even cut access to offshore DNS resolvers....
Microsoft briefly turned off Indian company’s cloud, perhaps due to EU sanctions on Russia
Oh, the irony of Europe demonstrating the importance of the sovereign cloud it craves Microsoft disconnected Indian company Nayara Energy from its cloudy resources last week, before restoring access ahead of a court clash....
China's IPv6 adoption takes a decent leap forward, especially on fixed networks
PLUS: Nightmare insect found in Australia; Arista makes more stuff in India; Atlassian job cuts; And more! Asia In Brief China's Cyberspace Administration last week reported increased uptake of IPv6....
Lazarus Group rises again, this time with malware-laden fake FOSS
PLUS: Slow MFA rollout costs Canucks $5m; Lawmakers ponder Stingray ban; MSFT tightens Teams; And more! Infosec In Brief North Korea's Lazarus Group has changed tactics and is now creating malware-laden open source software....
Silent Push CEO on cybercrime takedowns: 'It's an ongoing cat-and-mouse game'
Plus: why takedowns aren't in threat-intel analysts' best interest interview It started out small: One US financial services company wanted to stop unknown crooks from spoofing their trading app, tricking customers into giving the digital thieves their login credentials and account information, thus allowing them to drain their accounts....
Capacity planning a rising concern for datacenter operators as AI grows
New Uptime survey flags cost, power, outages Being able to forecast future capacity requirements is a growing concern for datacenter operators as they face conflicting factors such as rising costs, power constraints, and meeting the demands of AI workloads....
Long live the nub: ThinkPad designer David Hill spills secrets, designs that never made it
We almost got more butterfly keyboards and foldable workstations Interview Launched in 1992, the boxy black ThinkPad with its little red nub remains the quintessential business productivity notebook. Unlike commercial offerings from competitors such as Dell and HP, Lenovo's laptop has a following of people who collect old models and celebrate each new innovation....
Reddit is people! Which means its search might not be so damaged by AI slop
Community content site aims to profit from real conversation Reddit has found that trafficking in human-authored content pays well in the AI era....
CISA roasts unnamed critical national infrastructure body for shoddy security hygiene
Plaintext passwords, shared admin accounts, and insufficient logging rampant at mystery org CISA is using the findings from a recent probe of an unidentified critical infrastructure organization to warn about the dangers of getting cybersecurity seriously wrong....
Florida jury throws huge fine at Tesla in Autopilot crash
Plaintiffs argued that the company massively oversold the assisted-driving capabilities of its cars After two weeks of testimony, a Florida jury has found Tesla partially responsible for the death of one person and causing serious injuries to another in a crash where the driver was using the company's much-touted Autopilot system....
Rampant emoji use suggests crypto-stealing NPM package was written by AI
Kodane code was either machine-generated or done by a teenager An NPM package packed with cryptocurrency-stealing malware appears to have been largely AI-generated, as evidenced by its liberal use of emojis and other telltale signs....
OpenAI removes ChatGPT self-doxing option
Checkbox to make chatbot conversations appear in search engines deemed a footgun OpenAI has removed the option to make ChatGPT interactions indexable by search engines to prevent users from unwittingly exposing sensitive information....
$10 billion, 10 year US Army contract elevates Palantir to defense contracting royalty
Crashes the multibillion-dollar DoD party alongside Boeing, Lockheed, and Raytheon There are no official criteria for what constitutes membership in the upper echelon of the US military industrial complex, but a $10 billion deal that consolidates dozens of contracts under a single blanket purchase agreement sure makes it seem like Palantir has earned entry....
Gadget geeks aghast at guru's geriatric GPU
Paramount Penguin Linus Torvalds still uses a 2017 graphics card As work picks up on the forthcoming Linux 6.17, many joystick-wigglers are shocked by its millionaire dev's positively ancient AMD graphics card....
Tested: Microsoft Recall can still capture credit cards and passwords, a treasure trove for crooks
Our tests have shown there are ways to get around the promised security improvements exclusive Microsoft Recall, the AI app that takes screenshots of what you do on your PC so you can search for it later, has a filter that's supposed to prevent it from screenshotting sensitive info like credit card numbers. But a The Register test shows that it still fails in many cases, creating a potential treasure trove for thieves....
China says US spies exploited Microsoft Exchange zero-day to steal military info
Spy vs. spy China has accused US intelligence agencies of exploiting a Microsoft Exchange zero-day exploit to steal defense-related data and take over more than 50 devices belonging to a "major Chinese military enterprise" for nearly a year....
Court upholds Epic win in Google Play Store antitrust battle
Appeals panel says Chocolate Factory abused its dominance in Android app distribution A panel of judges has dismissed Google's appeal against an antitrust verdict over its Play Store business practices....
Microsoft gives in to Chromebook bullies and drops Windows 11 SE
Budget educational computing is now Google's game to lose Microsoft is discontinuing support for its Windows 11 SE variant meant to compete with ChromeOS in the education space, leaving schools that chose Microsoft over Google in the lurch just four years after the cloud-based Windows variant was released....
Another one bites the dust as KubeSphere kills open source edition
Company blames license violations and infrastructure changes for abrupt move KubeSphere has become the latest service to abruptly yank an open source edition of a product, triggering outcry from users....
ISS is still leaking air after latest repair efforts fail
Russian boffins searching for root cause in their segment of the outpost, former cosmonaut says The International Space Station (ISS) is still leaking air from the Russian segment of the outpost despite efforts to eliminate the losses....
Florida prison email blunder exposes visitor contact info to inmates
Victims fear leak at Everglades Correctional Institution could lead to violent extortion A data breach at a Florida prison has inmates' families concerned for their welfare after their contact details were allegedly leaked to convicted criminals....
Virgin Media scraps wholesale network rival to Openreach
NetCo is a no-go amid ongoing 'strategic review' by co-parent Telefonica Virgin Media has ditched plans to use its network infrastructure to create a UK national fixed line operator to rival BT's Openreach just 18 months after the project was made public....
Oracle offers workaround to Windows boot issue in the cloud instead of fix
Kludge causing production outages Oracle has come under fire for failing to fix a known issue with Windows instances on its cloud infrastructure (OCI)....
Enterprise software giants weaponize AI to kill discounts and deepen lock-in
Oracle, SAP, Salesforce et al are tightening the screws, Forrester warns The largest enterprise application vendors are using their entrenched positions among customers to end discounting and push high-margin AI products, an analysis by Forrester Research has warned....
Wasp nest at US nuclear site tests ten times over safe radiation limit
Everything's fine, says Department of Energy report A wasp nest positively glowing with radiation was found at a Cold War-era nuclear weapons site near Aiken, South Carolina....
Cybercrooks attached Raspberry Pi to bank network and drained ATM cash
Criminals used undocumented techniques and well-placed insiders to remotely withdraw money A ring of cybercriminals managed to physically implant a Raspberry Pi on a bank's network to steal cash from an Indonesian ATM....
Windows 10 @ 10: How Microsoft led developers round in circles
From one platform to rule them all to a carousel of half-baked visions Comment It is July 2015. Microsoft has just released Windows 10. Developers, weary from the false trail of Windows 8 and being urged to make "Metro style" apps, are now being pitched a new vision from Microsoft: the Universal Windows Platform (UWP)....
Servers hated Mondays until techie quit quaffing coffee in their company
Unix boxes needed a hotfix to survive early morning cold boots On Call Mornings are hard, and Friday mornings doubly so. Which is why The Register gives readers a little kick along on the last day of the working week in the form of a new installment of On Call, the reader-contributed column that tells your tales of tech support treachery and triumph....
Top spy says LinkedIn profiles that list defence work 'recklessly invite attention of foreign intelligence services'
Workers on joint US/UK/Australia nuclear submarine program are painting a target on themselves The Director-General of Security at the Australian Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO) has lamented the fact that many people list their work in the intelligence community or on sensitive military projects in their LinkedIn profiles....
Panic buying ahead of Trump tariffs added $825 million to Apple's sales last quarter
iBiz warns import imposts set to rise World War Fee The USA's evolving tariff policy wasn't all bad news for Apple, which manufactures most of its products overseas....
US lowers tariffs on major tech exporting nations - but buyers will still pay more
Malaysia's attitude of 'This could be worse and our neighbours are copping it too' is a typical response World War Fee US President Donald Trump on Thursday announced new tariff rates that reduce the import duties on goods from several major tech-producing nations....
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