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Atomic clocks will tell you when your Waymo is late The British government is to pour 180 million into ensuring the UK keeps up with the times....
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www.theregister.com - Articles
| Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
| Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
| Updated | 2026-05-29 23:15 |
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by Lindsay Clark on (#743S3)
Gargantuan ERP and HR overhaul has committed around 1.7B and affects nearly half a million public workers Opinion On the eve of its fifth birthday, the UK's Shared Services Strategy for Government got a couple of presents. With around 1.7 billion already committed to tech suppliers and a 2028 deadline looming, the 450,000 civil servants and military personnel set to depend on these systems might wonder what was in store....
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by Dan Robinson on (#743S4)
Britain's Ministry of Defence wants a counter-drone system designed, contracted, and delivered within weeks Britain's Royal Navy is urgently seeking a ship-based counter-drone system and recent world events likely explain why....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#743PR)
Ignorance really was the way to achieve bliss Who, Me? Welcome to another working week, and another installment of "Who, Me?" - a weekly reader-contributed column that unearths your errors and reveals how you rebounded afterwards....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#743NG)
Tech-adjacent Dyson, Epson, and Whoop also have a crack World War Fee Tech companies have started suing the US government to seek repayment of tariffs that the Supreme Court recently declared unconstitutional....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#743NH)
You gotta start somewhere, and in this case astroboffins would have been nowhere without help from intrepid volunteers NASA has published new analysis of its 2022 planetary defense test that suggests the mission slowed down the target asteroids, albeit infinitesimally....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#743KM)
Cyber is no longer the hush-hush thing it used to be, as team Trump invades Iran with hackers taking the lead Kettle Unlike previous military conflicts, the cyber domain has been front and center since the Trump administration invaded Iran, upending the traditionally quiet role played by hackers in military conflicts....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#743KN)
PLUS: Indonesia joins kids social media ban; China frets about AI job impacts; India's PC market fails to launch, again; And more China's Ministry of Commerce has warned of further disruption to the global semiconductor supply chain after Dutch chipmaker Nexperia cut access to some of its systems for Chinese staff....
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by Jessica Lyons and Connor Jones on (#743JD)
PLUS: Europol takes down two crime gangs; LastPass users phished (again); Crooks increase crypto hauls; And more Infosec In Brief The FBI is investigating a breach of its systems which reportedly affected systems related to wiretapping and surveillance....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#74372)
Crims 'will do what gets them their objective easiest and fastest,' Microsoft threat intel boss tells The Reg interview AI agents allow cybercriminals and nation-state hackers to outsource the "janitorial-type work" needed to plan and carry out cyberattacks, according to Sherrod DeGrippo, Microsoft's GM of global threat intelligence. North Korea is taking advantage....
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by Carly Page on (#7435Q)
What hath science wrought? A clump of living human brain cells wired into a silicon chip has answered the internet's most important computing question: yes, it can run Doom....
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by Tobias Mann on (#742QW)
Inference at scale is much more complex than more GPUs, more tokens, more profits feature By now you've probably heard AI datacenters called factories. It's an apt description: power goes in and tokens come out....
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by SA Mathieson on (#742PA)
'There's a naive techno-utopianism in Whitehall' Brits are worried that AI will dehumanize public services, leading to less human contact and oversight as well as job losses, according to people questioned by pollster Ipsos....
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by Richard Speed on (#742NE)
Remembering the day the Venera 3 impacted Venus It is 60 years since humanity first got up close and personal with another planet, with the impact of the Soviet Union's Venera 3....
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by Tobias Mann on (#742HR)
Meta supposedly considering untapped capacity in deal brokered by Nvidia OpenAI and compute partner Oracle have reportedly abandoned a planned expansion of their flagship Stargate datacenter, after negotiations were stalled by financing and Sam Altman's apparent fear of commitment....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#742GS)
It's the end of the world as we know it, and AI feels fine Anthropic economists Maxim Massenkoff and Peter McCrory report that AI is not eliminating as many jobs as experts have predicted....
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by O'Ryan Johnson on (#742GT)
US unemployment ticked up to 4.4% The US economy shed 92,000 jobs in February, a dramatic downturn from analyst expectations that it would add about 50,000 jobs. The shortfall stoked growing fears that AI could be contributing to higher unemployment....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#742CV)
Now if only device makers would deliver higher quality components Thanks to Anthropic's AI and its bug-detecting abilities, Firefox users can now enjoy stronger security. Unfortunately, if browser crashes rather than security flaws are the problem, Claude probably can't help....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#742AX)
Steals SMS messages, location data, contacts ... and delivers it to Hamas-linked crew Hamas-linked attackers are dropping spyware disguised as an emergency-alert app on Israelis' smartphones via SMS messages, according to security researchers....
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by Liam Proven on (#74254)
Bad legislation, but an especially big headache for FOSS Many web sites, social media services, and other platforms require age verification on the theory that it will protect kids from seeing inappropriate content. But now some US states want to require the operating system itself to check your age and that could cause big headaches for FOSS vendors....
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by Carly Page on (#74255)
Switchzilla says flaws could allow file overwrites or privilege escalation Just when network admins thought the Cisco SD-WAN patch queue might finally be shrinking, Switchzilla has confirmed miscreants are exploiting more vulnerabilities in its SD-WAN management software....
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by Connor Jones on (#74256)
Brands Trump administration decision 'legally unsound' and has 'no choice but to challenge it in court' AI giant Anthropic says that it has "no choice" but to sue the US government after being officially designated a supply chain risk to national security....
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by Richard Speed on (#74257)
Humanity and its neighbor safe from this menace at least Scientists have ruled out the possibility that the near-Earth asteroid 2024 YR4 might hit the Moon on December 22, 2032....
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by Dan Robinson on (#7422K)
Draft rules could force Nvidia and AMD to seek government approval before selling abroad The Trump administration is reportedly planning new restrictions on GPU exports, aimed not only at controlling who gets them, but at driving AI investment back into the US....
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by Carly Page on (#7422M)
Crooks tweak familiar copy-paste ruse so that victims run malicious commands themselves A new twist on the long-running ClickFix scam is now tricking Windows users into launching Windows Terminal and pasting malware into it themselves - handing the credential-stealing Lumma infostealer the keys to their browser vault....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#7422N)
House of Lords committee says ministers must not trade a 124B sector for promises of future tech growth Britain's creative industries will face significant damage unless the government strengthens AI copyright law, according to a House of Lords committee....
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by Richard Speed on (#74207)
Admins get another year before migration pressure ramps up Microsoft has delayed the opt-out phase for the new enterprise version of Outlook to 2027, giving administrators another 12 months to get ready for migration....
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by Connor Jones on (#74208)
FBI and French GIGN swoop on Saint Martin, John Daghita in cuffs The son of a government contractor was arrested in the Caribbean after allegedly stealing more than $46 million in seized cryptocurrency from the US Marshals Service, the FBI says....
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by Liam Proven on (#74209)
Its aim is wide, covering everything from social networks to GenAI Norway's Forbrukerradet consumer council is taking aim at the creeping enshittification of modern life in a 100-page report - and a splendid four-minute video which we highly recommend....
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Microsoft finally gets around to fixing Windows 10 Recovery Environment after breaking it in October
by Richard Speed on (#7420A)
Released from the curse of the update bork fairy Microsoft has finally fixed a Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE) bug it introduced in Windows 10's final update....
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by Lindsay Clark on (#7420B)
It promised 1.15B... but finance ministry yet to show 'formal commitment' to adopt Workday SaaS, watchdog says The UK's Treasury is yet to fully commit to joining a multi-billion pound ERP and HR shared services program it has agreed to fund, potentially slashing any resulting savings, according to a report from the National Audit Office....
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by Carly Page on (#741YC)
Attackers accessed systems holding data tied to millions of Oyster and contactless users Transport for London has confirmed that a 2024 breach exposed the data of more than 7 million people - a far larger crowd than the few thousand customers originally warned that their details might be at risk....
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by Connor Jones on (#741YD)
Seven-year Freedom of Information battle heads to tribunal Exclusive The UK's Department for Transport (DfT) is assembling government lawyers to fight the Information Commissioner's decision that it must release a document summarizing the lessons from the 2018 Gatwick drone chaos....
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by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols on (#741WS)
OpenAI CEO's principles lasted about 12 hours before $200M check arrived Opinion A week ago today, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said he'd draw the same lines as Anthropic. By that night, he'd signed a Department of Defense deal that included no such AI protections. What's going on here?...
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by Simon Sharwood on (#741WT)
Discovering, and explaining, the bizarre cause was harder than the job he was sent to do On Call Welcome to another instalment of On Call, The Register's weekly reader-contributed column that tells tales of times when tech support turned troublesome....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#741T4)
focusgroup' has nothing to do with market research, offers devs faster coding and faster websites for everyone Microsoft has started a preview of technology that eases the task of developing websites with complex navigation elements that don't need a pointing device to operate....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#741RR)
Remember: Truth is the first casualty of war Iranian publisher Fars News Agency, which is aligned with the country's government, has claimed the drone strikes on Amazon Web Services' Middle East datacenters were deliberate and had strategic significance....
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by Simon Sharwood on (#741QW)
Call to do better with chips and put AI everywhere is more than rhetoric because China's scientists are sprinting ahead China's government has again made reducing reliance on imported digital technology a major goal....
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by Thomas Claburn on (#741QX)
Alarm bells are ringing in the open source community, but commercial licensing is also at risk Earlier this week, Dan Blanchard, maintainer of a Python character encoding detection library called chardet, released a new version of the library under a new software license....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#741P6)
Of the 90 zero-days GTIG tracked in 2025, 43 hit enterprise tech Zero-day exploitation targeting enterprise tech products reached an all-time high last year, with China-linked cyber-espionage groups remaining the most prolific state-backed users, according to Google....
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by O'Ryan Johnson on (#741M0)
It's ok, Todd. You're only paranoid if you're wrong. Okta chairman and CEO Todd McKinnon said he believes it would be difficult for an LLM alone to replicate the quality of SaaS applications his company provides, but that doesn't stop him from worrying about competition from bots....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#741H5)
Don't flip the switch until the NRC says you can, okay? Bill Gates-backed nuclear outfit TerraPower finally has approval to build its Natrium reactor. However, it may still face issues finding a steady fuel supply. And, oh yeah, it hasn't built any reactors like this before....
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by Jessica Lyons on (#741E4)
MOIS-linked MuddyWater crew has a new, custom implant An Iranian cyber crew believed to be part of the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) has been embedded in multiple US companies' networks - including a bank, software firm, and airport, among others - since the beginning of February, with more activity in the days following the US and Israeli military strikes, according to security researchers....
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by Dan Robinson on (#741E5)
Bit tricky enforcing this. What's the penalty if they go up anyway? Seven of the top US AI companies and hyperscalers have officially agreed to protect American consumers from price hikes due to datacenter energy and infrastructure increases caused by the AI build boom....
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#741E6)
You made a time machine vapemobile ... out of a Delorean G-Wiz? The world would be a better place if all of us were as willing to upcycle as aggressively as YouTuber Chris Doel, who has demonstrated that batteries from 500 disposable vapes can actually power one of the UK's most famous electric vehicles....
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by Carly Page on (#741E7)
LibreOffice steward says Commish undermines its own standards by asking for feedback via Excel spreadsheet The Document Foundation has taken a swipe at the European Commission over its consultation on guidance for the EU's Cyber Resilience Act - because the feedback template is only available as a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet....
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by Richard Speed on (#741BC)
Authorization Act seeks to keep lights on until commercial stations are ready The NASA Authorization Act of 2026 has been approved, and alongside a directive for NASA to establish a permanent Moon base, the legislation includes language extending the International Space Station to 2032....
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by Liam Proven on (#74180)
Euro productivity suite appears to be hosted Nextcloud and Collabora Online In the battle of the online office suites, a new contender has entered the ring... but under the wrestler's mask, we think there may be a familiar face....
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by Dan Robinson on (#74181)
FCC not pleased about EU space tech reqs to enter Common market, among other things Updated The US government is consulting with the telecoms industry about "reciprocity" in satellite services, in a move that could see another dispute erupt with the European Union over regulations....
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by Tim Anderson on (#74157)
Project initiated by Nuxt lead Daniel Roe attracts wide support thanks to multiple issues with the official interface A new browser for the npm registry has launched in alpha, following grassroots demand for an alternative to the official npmjs.com interface....
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