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Updated 2024-10-11 21:30
Do you have a grip on the lifecycle security of your AWS-deployed applications?
Learn how to manage the risks of cloud native environments with Aqua and AWS Promo There’s no doubt that adopting DevOps methodologies and CI/CD pipelines, and extending cloud native technologies like containerization can massively accelerate your application development and deployment.…
'This is the worst I've seen it' says Arista boss as entire network hardware sector battles component shortages, doubled lead times for semiconductors
Campus, routing, switching, and data centre kit all affected Semiconductor lead times are running at up to 60 weeks or twice the pre-pandemic norms, according to networking biz Arista.…
WireGuard VPN gets native port to the Windows kernel
'This project is a big deal to me' says protocol's creator WireGuard, a high performance and easily configured VPN protocol, is getting a native port from Linux to the Windows kernel, and the code has been published as experimental work in progress.…
UK's Ministry of Defence coughs up bug bounties for crowdsourced pentesting
Small steps could lead to bigger strides The Ministry of Defence has paid out the first bug bounties to ethical computer hackers who probed web-accessible systems for vulnerabilities, according to a cheery missive from HackerOne.…
Salesforce follows application rivals into the RPA market with Servicetrace purchase
Replacing swivel-chair integration is not a market that independent vendors will get to themselves Salesforce-owned application integration biz Mulesoft has gobbled up Servicetrace, a robotic process automation vendor.…
UK chancellor: Getting back to the altar of corporate dreams (the office) will boost young folks' careers
Look at what hanging around the water cooler did for me, says son-in-law of billionaire Infosys founder Getting back into the office after a pandemic spent home working and on video calls would be "really beneficial" to young people's careers, the UK's Chancellor of the Exchequer has said.…
Customers warn Gartner of AWS's high-pressure sales tactics in latest verdict on public cloud providers
Top three no surprise but users offer some sharp comments Gartner has published its latest Magic Quadrant report on public cloud providers, reporting that customers are facing "unexpected pressure from AWS Sales" and that Microsoft still has reliability challenges.…
Shopping for execs: ID management biz Okta poaches Google's veep of engineering to run product dev activities
Head techie for Chocolate Factory's search ad biz departs Mountain View Identity-as-a-service slinger Okta has poached Google veep of engineering Sagnik Nandy to become its president and chief tech officer.…
'Prophetic' Steve Jobs autograph telling kid to 'go change the world!' among Apple memorabilia at auction
The kid went on to work for IBM. Awks Wealthy people continue to assign inordinate value to items associated with the rich and/or famous so here's yet another auction of relics touched by our lord and saviour Steve Jobs (peace be upon him).…
Leeds City Council swallows the Gartner glossary and orders up 'post-modern' ERP in £44m SAP replacement
When do we get avant-garde ERP? Leeds City Council is huntig down a replacement for its SAP HR and finance system in a bid to leap onto the SaaSy bandwagon.…
Vivo X60 Pro: Branding was plastered all over the Euros, but does the phone perform better than the English team?
We reckon it'd snatch it in extra time thanks to camera Review As England made it way to the final of the Euro 2020 footie tournament, fans of the beautiful game could hardly have failed to notice adverts for Vivo flashing up during matches. The company's X60 Pro phone is in play but is it any good?…
Amazon sets the date for televised return to Middle Earth: September 2022
Big tech gets busy in New Zealand as LoTR TV show wraps filming the same day Google opens Auckland office Amazon Studios, Jeff Bezos' filmed entertainment outfit, said its much-anticipated Lord of the Rings television series will debut on Amazon Prime Video on Friday, September 2, 2022.…
Tesla battery fire finally flamed out after four-day conflagration
Only one Megapack went up, adjacent containers mostly kept their cool The fire in a large battery using Tesla kit in Australia is out – four days after it started.…
IBM Cloud took the evening off – 23 services were hard to provision for eight hours
Similar problem hit over the weekend, and Google has also had severe recent wobbles IBM cloud has experienced a significant Severity One outage – the rating Big Blue uses to denote the most serious incidents that make resources in its cloud unavailable to customers.…
Ever wondered how much data web giants generate? Singaporean super-app Grab says 1.7MB per user per day
Reports record Q1 sales and advances plans for SPAC-ulative IPO Singapore-based mega-app Grab has revealed that it generates 40TB of data a day, meaning each of its 23.8 million users can put their names to around 1.7MB every 24 hours. All that data is clearly valuable: Grab has also announced record profits.…
Research finds cyber-snoops working for 'Chinese state interests' lurking in SE Asian telco networks since 2017
Handy way to keep tabs on 'activists, politicians, business leaders, and more' Attack protection specialist Cybereason has fingered threat actors working on behalf of "Chinese state interests" as being behind attacks on telcos operating in Southeast Asia – with some having been prowling the penetrated networks for information on high-value targets since 2017.…
Microsoft's Cloud PCs debut – priced between $20 and $158 a month
We tried 'em on Windows, iOS and Android, and can't say they're very exciting First Look Microsoft has revealed the full range of options and pricing for its Windows 365 Cloud PCs, and The Register is not impressed – on price or performance.…
US govt calmly but firmly tells Blue Origin it already has a ride to the Moon's surface with SpaceX, thanks
Hit us up next time you're free, though SpaceX is clear to build a lander with NASA to put the first woman and another man on the Moon – after Uncle Sam dismissed complaints that the $2.94bn contract was awarded unfairly.…
Google says Pixel 6, 6 Pro coming this year with custom AI acceleration
For now, tedious Apple-grade teasing Google today said the latest iteration of its Android smartphones, the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro, are coming this fall.…
Credit-card-stealing, backdoored packages found in Python's PyPI library hub
Plus: SolarWinds cyber-spies hit US prosecutors' email systems, and more In brief Malicious libraries capable of lifting credit card numbers and opening backdoors on infected machines have been found in PyPI, the official third-party software repository for Python.…
Mid-range storage shouldn’t be about revolution, but it shouldn’t be revolting either
Cast off your chains with this webcast Webcast Even the smallest organisation knows its data is precious. Unlocking the value of your data is crucial to future growth, while protecting it is central to your very survival.…
Redpilled Microsoft does away with flashing icons on taskbar as Windows 11 hits Beta
Also: Why new OS looks this way, and easier install for Linux subsystem Microsoft has added Windows 11 to the Beta channel of its Insider preview scheme and issued a new build which replaces flashing taskbar icons - indicating attention is required - with what it calls a "red pill."…
Nuisance call-blocking firm fined £170,000 for making almost 200,000 nuisance calls
Irony, thy name is Yes Consumer Solutions Ltd A firm that sells nuisance call-blocking systems is itself nursing a £170,000 fine from the UK's data watchdog, ironically for cold calling almost 200,000 people registered with the Telephone Preference Service (TPS).…
Chromebooks fighting for mind share at PC makers with higher-margin Windows 11 machines in the lead, says IDC
Colour us surprised PC makers are starting to prioritise production lines in favour of more profitable Windows PCs at the expense of Chromebooks, or so warns IDC.…
Following Torvalds' nudge, Paragon's NTFS driver for Linux is on track for kernel
Also: 5.14 rc4 is out, with Linus saying 'nothing to see here' Paragon Software, in response to a nudge from Linux Torvalds, said it will submit a pull request for its NTFS driver for Linux.…
PwnedPiper vulns have potential to turn Swisslog's PTS hospital products into Swiss cheese, says Armis
Hardcoded passwords, unencrypted connections and unauthenticated firmware updates... patches released Security specialist Armis has discovered vulnerabilities, collectively dubbed PwnedPiper, in pneumatic tube control systems used in thousands of hospitals worldwide – including 80 per cent of the major hospitals found in the US.…
NHS England's £200m ERP replacement misses another deadline as procurement runs 2 years behind schedule
Delivery of project to manage £110bn spending 'appears to be unachievable' says UK government's own watchdog NHS England has missed the latest deadline in the procurement of a £200m replacement ERP system responsible for managing the UK's annual health spending of £110bn and is now more than two years late.…
Right to repair shouldn't exist – not because it's wrong but because it's so obviously right
Gatekeeper capitalism at its most odious Column There is much that people of breeding and taste can and should despise in gaming. Some of it comes from the angry undertow of sullen boyish aggression that pervades the over-muscled, over-weaponised first-person-shooter end of the market, where it is impossible to pick up the controller without hearing your mother tell you to tidy your room. Then there's the regrettable aesthetics of the custom gaming PC sector, a curious amalgam of macho metal vibe and sugar-rush amphetamine-acid LED colour cycling.…
Undebug my heart: Using Cisco's IOS to take down capitalism – accidentally
Two little letters is all it takes Who, Me? Welcome to another edition of Who, Me? where this week a typo manages to send a hub of rampant capitalism into meltdown.…
Twitter uses HackerOne bounties to find biases in its image-cropping AI model
Claims it's the first algorithmic bias bounty competition Twitter's saliency algorithm – otherwise known as its automated image cropping tool – has a problem with gender and race bias. The micro-blogging service is hoping to fix it by offering what it reckons is the industry's first algorithmic bias bounty competition.…
Australian court rules an AI can be considered an inventor on patent filings
IP lawyer says decision is bad because the last thing we need is robot patent trolls An Australian Court has decided that an artificial intelligence can be recognised as an inventor in a patent submission.…
Huawei to America: You're not taking cyber-security seriously until you let China vouch for us
Slams Biden's Executive Order on improving infosec, calls for multilateral trust framework Huawei has decided to school America on cyber-security, and its lesson is to co-operate with China so its vendors – including Huawei – can be trusted around the world.…
Zoom agrees to pay subscribers $25 to put its security SNAFUs behind it
Zoombombing class action offers US$85m in payments, meaning even free accounts get a few bucks US-based Zoom users may have a little cash coming their way after the video meeting outfit lodged a preliminary settlement in a class action related to some of its less-than-brilliant security and data protection practices.…
AWS adds browser access to its cloudy WorkSpaces desktops – but not for Linux
Microsoft's Windows 365 will do much the same when it launches Amazon Web Services has stolen a march on Microsoft's cloud desktop plans by adding browser access to its WorkSpaces desktop-as-a-service offering.…
Wanna use your Nvidia GPU for acceleration but put off by CUDA? OpenAI has a Python-based alternative
Plus: Software-detected gunshot withdrawn as evidence from trial In brief If you’ve always wanted to program your Nvidia GPU to accelerate machine learning, image processing, and other workloads, but find Nv's CUDA too daunting or too much of a faff to learn, you’re in luck.…
Jack Dorsey's side hustle – payments outfit Square – acquires buy now pay later darling Afterpay for $29bn
Plans to make partial payments for almost anything the new normal Square, the credit card processing company run by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey, has announced plans to acquire Australian buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) outfit Afterpay for $29 billion.…
Tech spec experts seek allies to tear down ISO standards paywall
Open letter drafted against what's seen as unjustified profiteering Many of the almost 24,000 technical standards maintained by the International Standards Organization (ISO) are subject to copyright restrictions and are not freely available.…
Sysadmins: Why not simply verify there's no backdoor in every program you install, and thus avoid any cyber-drama?
Just 'validate third-party code before using it', says Euro body Half of publicly reported supply chain attacks were carried out by "well known APT groups", according to an analysis by EU infosec agency ENISA, which warned such digital assaults need to drive "new protective methods."…
Euro watchdog will try to extract $900m from Amazon for breaking data privacy laws
You miss every shot you don't take, we guess Amazon says a European Union privacy watchdog has mustered the temerity to demand a $885m fine for failing to comply with data privacy rules.…
Russia says software malfunction caused Nauka module to unexpectedly fire thrusters, tilt space station
You call this a glitch? Russia said a "software failure" caused its Nauka module to suddenly and unexpectedly fire its thrusters after docking with the International Space Station this week.…
HP Inc slurps Teradici to get better at delivering remote PCs
Apparently quite a few people haven't been in the office as much lately HP Inc has acquired remote PC specialist Teradici.…
'$6 in every $10' spent on cloud infrastructure is with AWS, Microsoft, or Google
Fewer and fewer orgs want to run their own data centre Spending on cloud infrastructure services shot up by more than a third again as workload migration and cloud native applications development sped up, according to the latest research from Canalys.…
Here's 30 servers Russian intelligence uses to fling malware at the West, beams RiskIQ
Biden-Putin summit went well, then Details of 30 servers thought to be used by Russia's SVR spy agency (aka APT29) as part of its ongoing campaigns to steal Western intellectual property were made public today by RiskIQ.…
Google picked as yet another 'strategic partner' for SAP's RISE but Microsoft still lingers on the scene
German software giant's relationships are anything but exclusive SAP has linked arms with Google in the latest dosey doe with the cloud infrastructure market.…
UK regulator waves through SK Hynix's $9bn acquisition of Intel's NAND and SSD biz
Number of 'strong remaining competitors' within the market planning expansions of their own, says CMA The UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has given the thumbs-up to SK Hynix's agreed $9bn purchase of Intel's NAND and SSD businesses, ruling that the buyout would have no negative impact on local purchasers.…
Happy 60th, Sinclair Radionics: We'll remember you for your revolutionary calculators and crap watches
ZX Spectrum was pretty cool too It is 60 years since the founding of Sinclair Radionics, a forerunner of Sinclair Research and responsible for some nifty calculators and a not-so-nifty watch.…
Telefónica's cloud limb slurps Cancom's UK&I biz to cash in on Brit enterprise tech market
There's a tasty NHS contract in there Telefónica Tech – the cybersecurity and cloud wing of the Spanish-owned telecoms giant – has forked out €398m (£340m) to German outfit Cancom Group's UK and Ireland operations.…
Contractors argue umbrella companies need improved regulation, not outright ban
Trades Union Congress proposals miss the point, say campaigners Contractors have described a UK union's call to ban umbrella companies as unworkable, leading to a greater void in the under-regulated market and making outsourced workers vulnerable.…
On this most auspicious of days, we ask: How many sysadmins does it take to change a lightbulb?
Protip: Don't treat the IT department like this if you value your life Today is System Administrator Appreciation Day so enjoy this Reg reader's story of just what these brave individuals have to put up with.…
London class-action sueball against Google is a lot like Epic's case except fandroids might win enough for a pint
Hundreds of millions in damages, Play Store in the sights etc. etc. Yet another anti-Big Tech group litigation lawsuit has been launched in London. This time it's targeting Google, claims to be on behalf of 19 million Android users, seeks up to £920m in damages, and pretty much mirrors Epic Games' lawsuit against the Chocolate Factory over app store charges.…
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