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Updated 2024-10-11 11:01
You've heard of HTTPS. Now get a load of HTTPA: Web services in verified remote trusted environments?
Intel duo propose fresh use of, yes, SGX but also Arm's TrustZone and similar TEEs Two Intel staffers believe web services can be made more secure by not only carrying out computations in remote trusted execution environments, or TEEs, but by also verifying for clients that this was done so.…
Allegations of favoring visa holders over US workers for jobs cost Facebook just 4 hours of annual profit
And that $14.25m is supposed to be some kind of record Facebook will hand over $14.25m to the US government and American workers to settle allegations of discriminatory hiring practices.…
Google Pixel 6, 6 Pro Android 12 smartphone launch marred by shopping cart crashes
Chocolate Factory talks up Tensor mobile SoC, Titan M2 security ... for those who can get them Google held a virtual event on Tuesday to introduce its latest Android phones, the Pixel 6 and 6 Pro, which are based on a Google-designed Tensor system-on-a-chip (SoC).…
BlackMatter ransomware gang will target agriculture for its next harvest – Uncle Sam
What was that about hackable tractors? The US CISA cybersecurity agency has warned that the Darkside ransomware gang, aka BlackMatter, has been targeting American food and agriculture businesses – and urges security pros to be on the lookout for indicators of compromise.…
It's heeere: Node.js 17 is out – but not for production use, says dev team
EcmaScript 6 modules will not stop growing use of Node, claims chair of Technical Steering Committee Node.js 17 is out, loaded with OpenSSL 3 and other new features, but it is not intended for use in production – and the promotion for Node.js 16 to an LTS release, expected soon, may be more important to most developers.…
Oracle-owned ERP outfit NetSuite fitted with banking and data warehouse features to keep accountants sane
It's about helping steer the business without so many spreadsheets, says analyst NetSuite, the ERP software aimed at medium-sized businesses, has launched new product features addressing integration with banking systems and business-facing analytics.…
Email phishing crapcannon operators TA505 are back from the dead, researchers warn
And they're packing a new dirty RAT as well A prolific email phishing threat actor – TA505 – is back from the dead, according to enterprise security software slinger Proofpoint.…
JumpCloud hooks investment from Atlassian Ventures and CrowdStrike Falcon Fund for $225m total funding round
Cloud directory start-up valued at $2.65bn JumpCloud, a provider of cloud directory services, has sucked up $66m from investors including Jira developer Atlassian.…
UK competition watchdog unveils principles to make a kinder antivirus business
Treat customers fairly when it comes to auto-renewal. Or else The UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has unveiled compliance principles to curb locally some of the sharper auto-renewal practices of antivirus software firms.…
HPE's Aruba adopts DPUs, but in a switch, not a server
Decides switches need help performing network functions, just like servers need their CPUs free for core workloads HPE's networking subsidiary Aruba has added data processing units to a switch.…
Windows 11 Paint: Oh look – rounded corners. And it is prettier.... but slightly worse
New iconography, minimalism, less text – and at least it is not Paint 3D Microsoft's redesigned user interface for Paint in Windows 11 is prettier but perhaps a little less useable than the previous version.…
Weeks after Red Bee Media's broadcast centre fell over, Channel 4 is still struggling with subtitles
Got a Disaster Recovery plan? Ever tested it? You probably should... Confusion continues to reign in the world of television, including UK national broadcaster Channel 4, weeks after a broadcast centre cockup wrought havoc upon servers.…
WTF? Value of Finnish open-source-as-a-service startup Aiven jumps $1.2bn in 7 months
Cloud data market heats up as company lures $60m in Series C funding Finnish open-source-as-a-service provider Aiven has attracted a $60m extension to its Series C funding which now values the firm at $2bn.…
UK's competition regulator announces market study into music streaming biz
Watchdog is getting comfortable with its new digital remit The UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said this morning it would be carrying out a market study into the music streaming industry.…
Northern Ireland Water ready to take the plunge with HR and finance software, prepares to flush Oracle R12.2
Utility biz has £28m to spend on replacement system Utility provider Northern Ireland Water (NIW) has set aside £28m to replace its current Oracle E-business Suite with a new HR and finance system.…
If your apps or gadgets break down on Sunday, this may be why: Gpsd bug to roll back clocks to 2002
Alternative headline: Yet another widely used project maintained thanklessly by 'some random person in Nebraska' Come Sunday, October 24, 2021, those using applications that rely on gpsd for handling time data may find that they're living 1,024 weeks – 19.6 years – in the past.…
Share your experience: How does your organization introduce new systems?
The answer is rarely obvious. Take part in our short poll and we'll find out together Reg Reader Survey The introduction of new systems into an organization is essential. If we stay still, if we continue to rely on legacy systems, if we fail to innovate – well, we (or, in reality, the company) will die. As business guru Sir John Harvey-Jones once put it: “If you are doing things the same way as two years ago, you are almost certainly doing them wrong.”…
These Rapoo webcams won't blow your mind, but they also won't break the bank
And they're almost certainly better than a laptop jowel-cam Review It has been a long 20 months since Lockdown 1.0, and despite the best efforts of Google and Zoom et al to filter out the worst effects of built-in laptop webcams, a replacement might be in order for the long haul ahead.…
It's one thing to have the world in your hands – what are you going to do with it?
Google won the patent battle against ART+COM, but we were left with little more than a toy Column I used to think technology could change the world. Google's vision is different: it just wants you to sort of play with the world. That's fun, but it's not as powerful as it could be.…
A Raspberry Pi HAT for the Lego Technic fan
Sneaking in programming under the guise of plastic bricks There is good news for the intersection of Lego and Raspberry Pi fans today, as a new HAT (the delightfully named Hardware Attached on Top) will be unveiled for the diminutive computer to control Technic motors and sensors.…
Reg scribe spends week being watched by government Bluetooth wristband, emerges to more surveillance
Home quarantine week was the price for an overseas trip, ongoing observation is the price of COVID-19 Feature My family and I recently returned to Singapore after an overseas trip that, for the first time in over a year, did not require the ordeal of two weeks of quarantine in a hotel room.…
Intel teases 'software-defined silicon' with Linux kernel contribution – and won't say why
It might enable activation of entirely new features on existing Xeon CPUs … or, you know, not Intel has teased a new tech it calls "Software Defined Silicon" (SDSi) but is saying almost nothing about it – and has told The Register it could amount to nothing.…
Chip manufacturers are going back to the future for automotive silicon
Where we're going, we don't need 5nm Analysis Cars are gaining momentum as computers on wheels, though chip manufacturers' auto focus isn't on making components using the latest and greatest fabrication nodes.…
Alibaba Cloud unveils home-spun 128-core Arm-powered server CPU
Also plans to open-source current XuanTie RISC-V cores and future designs Alibaba Cloud has revealed a home-grown CPU for servers, based on the Arm architecture, that it has already deployed powering its cloud services.…
Japanese messaging giant Line admits it mishandled user data, promises to do better
Sent user data to China without once thinking Beijing might decide to snoop, lied about server location Line, the Japan-based messaging and payments app with millions of users around Southeast Asia, has conceded that its data protection regimes had multiple shortcomings, and therefore put users' personal information at risk.…
Canon makes 'all-in-one' printers that refuse to scan when out of ink, lawsuit claims
We can't wait to see the logic gymnastics needed to justify this Canon USA has been accused of forcing customers to buy ink cartridges when they only want to scan and fax documents using the manufacturer's so-called All-In-One multi-function printers.…
Apple arms high-end MacBook Pro notebooks with M1 Pro, M1 Max processors
x86 is an eighty-sixed ex Apple on Monday announced 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pro models armed with Arm-compatible Apple Silicon chips, extending its platform architecture transition, and Intel exodus, for its high-end notebooks.…
US lawmakers give Amazon until November to prove it didn't lie to Congress
This better be a Prime delivery US House representatives say they are ready to call upon the Department of Justice to investigate whether Amazon executives, including ex-CEO Jeff Bezos, lied to Congress about whether the internet giant unfairly uses customer data to create and market its own products.…
Engineers investigating iffy solar array latch on NASA's Lucy as probe begins long journey to Trojan asteroids
Spacecraft otherwise stable and working well NASA's Lucy is on its way to the Trojan asteroids, but engineers have already spotted a problem with one of the probe's 7.3-metre solar arrays.…
Microsoft called out as big malware hoster – thanks to OneDrive and Office 365 abuse
Infosec pro: 'OneDrive abuse has been going on for years' Microsoft has been branded as "the world's best malware hoster for about a decade," thanks to abuse of the Office 365 and Live platform, as well as its slow response to reports by security researchers.…
Dishing up the goods: Square Kilometre Array moves out of the theoretical and into the contractual
Plus: Australian telescope precursor finds weird waves in the middle of the galaxy The governments of South Africa and Australia have signed agreements formalizing the construction and operation of the Square Kilometre Array Observatory (SKAO) telescopes by the Observatory's governing body.…
Amid drama at .NET Foundation, Microsoft's De Icaza reveals it was meant to be like GNOME Foundation
Which it isn't, as illustrated by exec director of the F# Foundation The troubled .NET Foundation was intended to "borrow as much as possible from the GNOME Foundation," according to Miguel de Icaza, co-founder of GNOME and now at Microsoft, who was involved in its original design.…
Arm puts virtual hardware in the cloud so you won't have to wait for the actual chips
Developers, start your engines Arm is putting virtual models of its chip designs in the cloud so developers can write and test applications before the physical hardware gets into their hands.…
Facebook posts job ad for 10,000 'high-skilled' roles to 'build the metaverse' – and they'll all be based in the EU
Announcement uses the phrase 'world-leading' without referring to UK once Brit political has-been and Facebook global affairs veep Nick Clegg fired off a missive over the weekend announcing that the antisocial network would be hiring 10,000 people from across the European Union to help "BUILD THE METAVERSE" (VERSE-VERSE-VERSE-VERSE).…
EasyJet flight loadsheet snafu caused by software 'code errors' says UK safety agency
System 'operating outside of the original design specification' said AAIB An EasyJet flight to Edinburgh Airport took off with wrongly loaded passengers and baggage because of IT network congestion causing computer systems to interact "in a manner which had neither been designed nor predicted."…
Microsoft admits to yet more printing problems in Windows as back-at-the-office folks asked for admin credentials
Saving the forests by making printing even harder Microsoft's brand new operating system, Windows 11, appears to be just as iffy when it comes to printing as its predecessors.…
Give us your biometric data to get your lunch in 5 seconds, UK schools tell children
Facial recognition for meal payment system works for kids, supplier says Updated Facial recognition technology is being employed in more UK schools to allow pupils to pay for their meals, according to reports today.…
There are 875 million good reasons why the paperless office won't happen soon
UK Cabinet Office organises latest print hardware and supplies mega framework The UK government has awarded a contract worth up to £875m for a range of printer hardware and multi-function devices in a move which again raises questions about whether the paperless office was a dream that has faded in the recesses of our collective memory.…
Ubuntu 21.10: Plan to do yourself an Indri? Here's what's inside... including a bit of GNOME schooling
Plus: Rounded corners make GNOME 40 look like Windows 11 Review Canonical has released Ubuntu 21.10, or "Impish Indri" as this one is known. This is the last major version before next year's long-term support release of Ubuntu 22.04, and serves as a good preview of some of the changes coming for those who stick with LTS releases.…
Heart FM's borkfast show – a fine way to start your day
Jamie and Amanda have a new co-presenter to contend with There can be few things worse than Microsoft Windows elbowing itself into a presenting partnership, as seen in this digital signage for the Heart breakfast show.…
Think your phone is snooping on you? Hold my beer, says basic physics
Information wants to be free, and it's making its escape Opinion Forget the Singularity. That modern myth where AI learns to improve itself in an exponential feedback loop towards evil godhood ain't gonna happen. Spacetime itself sets hard limits on how fast information can be gathered and processed, no matter how clever you are.…
[NSFW] What do you mean you gave the boss THAT version of the report? Oh, ****ing ****balls
Say what you mean NSFW Who, Me? Ever written that angry email and accidentally hit send instead of delete? Take a trip back to the 1990s equivalent with a slightly NSFW Who, Me?…
Chinese tech minister says he's 'dealt with' 73,000 sites that breached the law
Ongoing crackdown saw apps 1.83 million apps tested, 4,200 told to clean up their act, pop-up ads popped China's Minister of Industry and Information Technology, Xiao Yaqing, has given a rare interview in which he signalled the nation's crackdown on the internet and predatory companies will continue.…
Chinese developers rebel against long working hours with crowdsourced tell-all on employers
Despite modern labour laws, 72-hour work weeks are still common Chinese software developers have crowdsourced a spreadsheet that dishes the dirt on working conditions at hundreds of employers.…
US gov claims ransomware 'earned' $590m in the first half of 2021 alone – mostly in Bitcoin
Names and bars crypto exchange SUEX, warns paying ransoms could spell trouble Ransomware extracted at least $590 million for the miscreants who create and distribute it in the first half of 2021 alone – more than the $416 million tracked in all of 2020, according to the US government’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). Total ransomware-related financial activity may have reached $5.2 billion.…
Oops, they did it again – rogue Soyuz spurt gave ISS an attitude problem
Crew successfully de-orbited on Sunday carrying vital payload: footage for a movie shot in space The International Space Station has again had to compensate for unexpected thrusting by a Russian spacecraft.…
NFTs not annoying enough? Now they come with wallet-emptying malware
Plus rifle-toting robot dogs, but makers insist they're really dumb In brief Whether or not non-fungible tokens are a flash in the pan or forever, malware operators have been keen to weaponise the technology.…
Bank manager tricked into handing $35m to scammers using fake 'deep voice' tech
Plus: Microsoft Translator machine learning software now supports over 100 languages In brief Authorities in the United Arab Emirates have requested the US Department of Justice's help in probing a case involving a bank manager who was swindled into transferring $35m to criminals by someone using a fake AI-generated voice.…
Amazon textbook rental service scammed for $1.5m
Michigan man arrested for borrowing costly textbooks and selling them A 36-year-old man from Portage, Michigan, was arrested on Thursday for allegedly renting thousands of textbooks from Amazon and selling them rather than returning them.…
Computer scientists at University of Edinburgh contemplate courses without 'Alice' and 'Bob'
Academics advised to consider excluding certain terminology for the sake of inclusivity A working group in the School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland has proposed a series of steps to "decolonize" the Informatics curriculum, which includes trying "to avoid using predominantly Western names such as Alice/Bob (as is common in the computer security literature)."…
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