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Updated 2025-12-11 06:47
Yahoo shutters email service in China
Purple! Palace! has! nothing! left! behind! the! Great! Firewall! – not! even! users’! mail! troves! Yahoo has stopped providing email services in China – a decision that means the venerable web company has ceased operations behind the Great Firewall.…
Good: People can spot a deepfake video. Bad: They're not so hot with text
Seeing isn't always believing Netizens are more likely to be duped by misinformation presented in text form compared to video clips created with the help of algorithms, according to a study.…
Toyota shutters 14 plants after probable cyberattack
Incident struck supplier day after officials warned of massive spike in efforts to launch Emotet malware Toyota has closed all 14 plants it operates in Japan due to what it has described as a “system failure” at Kojima Industries Corporation – and local media report the cause of the failure is a cyberattack.…
US chip stocks undeterred by export ban to Russia
Crackdown on Moscow won't hurt American semiconductor industry, SIA says If US chip makers are feeling the stress of semiconductor import sanctions on Russia, it isn't showing yet.…
Microsoft: Russia invasion of Ukraine ‘unlawful, unjustified’
Windows giant says it detected 'destructive cyberattacks', DDoS malware aimed at now occupied nation Microsoft is decrying what it calls the "tragic, unlawful and unjustified invasion of Ukraine" by Russia, and vowed to continue protecting the country from cyberattacks and state-sponsored disinformation campaigns.…
Quarter of a million lawyer disciplinary records leak
When it comes to the privacy of witnesses and attorneys, this Bar is set low Approximately 260,000 nonpublic disciplinary records stored on behalf of The State Bar of California were found to be exposed to the public and to have been republished on Judyrecords.com, a website that aggregates over 630 million public court records.…
Verizon expands network-as-a-service with VMware SD-WAN
If enterprise apps are going into the cloud, someone needs to provide the extra plumbing MWC Verizon Business is adding VMware's software-defined WAN (SD-WAN) offering to a lineup of managed services, the latest move by a major carrier to address the demand for more streamlined networking and security capabilities by increasingly distributed and cloud-centric enterprises.…
Ericsson report details how it paid off Islamic State
Staff sacked after bosses discovered terrorists received money for access to Iraq mobile market A leaked internal report details how Ericsson paid hundreds of millions of pounds to Islamic State terrorists in Iraq, substantiating earlier reports that the company was paying intermediaries to buy off ISIS on its behalf.…
Conti ransomware gang leak: 60,000 messages online
What looks like Jabber chat app files published after pro-Russia pledge Activists have reportedly leaked the contents of internal chats from the Russia-affiliated Conti ransomware gang as the Ukraine war continues.…
AlmaLinux 8.5 now includes a PowerPC edition
Backer of thriving RHEL rebuild also hires senior SUSE architect The AlmaLinux Foundation has announced the availability of a PowerPC version of its Red Hat Enterprise Linux rebuild for machines based on IBM's POWER architecture.…
Plans for UK rival to Silicon Valley ditched
Government said to be looking further north than the Oxford-Cambridge Arc UK efforts to create a high-tech research and development region designed to rival Silicon Valley seem dead in the water as government prioritises other initiatives.…
Web devs rally to challenge Apple App Store browser rules
Open Web Advocacy takes aim at Apple's walled garden On Monday, a group of software engineers plan to launch a group called "Open Web Advocacy" to help online apps compete with native apps and to encourage or compel Apple to relax its iOS browser restrictions.…
Intel selects German city for EU semiconductor plant
CPU giant was waiting to see contents of European Chips Act before making the decision, say analysts Intel has reportedly opted to build a new chip manufacturing mega-fab at a site in Magdeburg in eastern Germany, after considering locations in France, Belgium, Poland, and the Netherlands.…
A Snapdragon in a ThinkPad: Lenovo unveils the X13s
A shot in the arm for Windows on Arm – and Microsoft's Pluton security tech is along for the ride too MWC Vendors are rolling out their latest hardware at Mobile World Congress and among them is Lenovo, with its first Snapdragon ThinkPad.…
One decade, 46 million units: Happy birthday, Raspberry Pi
Eben Upton on RISC-V, supply chains, and what's next for the dinky computers Interview Today marks 10 years since the Raspberry Pi was made available to purchase. We spoke to Pi supremo Eben Upton about the last decade and what the future might hold.…
Govt suggests Brits should hand passports to social media companies
Block buttons would become mandatory under forthcoming Online Safety Bill, says DCMS The British government has suggested its citizens should hand their passports over to Facebook as a condition for using the service.…
UK internet pioneer Cliff Stanford has died
The entrepreneur that sold dial-up modems when no one else thought consumers would care Obituary British internet pioneer Cliff Stanford, founder of Demon Internet, died last week.…
Russia is the advanced persistent threat that just triggered. Ready?
Data security looks very different when your life depends on it Opinion Stress-testing security is the only way to be sure it works. Until then, the worst security looks much the same as the best. As events in Ukraine show, leaving the stress-testing of assumptions until a threat is actually attacking is expensively useless.…
IT advice fuelled by beer is the best IT advice of all, right?
Taking aim at the messenger Who, Me? Wave a cheery hello to Monday with a warning from a Register reader that advice given in a pub is perhaps better limited to which brew is better. Welcome to Who, Me?…
Apple seeks patent for 'innovation' resembling the ZX Spectrum, C64 and rPi 400
Cupertino seeks signoff on computer and keyboard in one unit – we've seen that somewhere before … Apple has filed a patent application for a device that – wait for it – has the computer and the keyboard all in one unit. Mind. Blowing. Except for one thing: isn't that what all computers used to look like?…
India binned made-in-Singapore app in latest round of China bans
Stock market wipeout followed, so island nation's government has complained India's latest round of bans on Chinese apps has taken down a Singaporean company's apps – and share price – reportedly leaving government officials asking some pointed questions.…
Clearview AI plans tech to ID faces as they age, seek big government deals
Plus: AI imparts brain surgery skills more effectively than human tutors In brief Controversial facial recognition startup Clearview AI plans to employ more staff in order to pursue big lucrative US government contracts worth many millions of dollars. …
Tech world's Ukraine response mixes evacuation efforts, ad bans, free phones, infosec FUD
And personal sorrow, as the horror of Russian invasion hits home As Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, the technology industry is trying to use its services to make a difference – and to keep those services available as the war makes it harder to operate.…
Linus Torvalds 'starting to get worried' as Linux kernel 5.17 rc6 lands
More by known regressions not being addressed by maintainers than Vladimir Putin’s ‘mental breakdown’ Linux kernel boss Linus Torvalds is "starting to be a bit worried" by lack of progress on version 5.17 of the project.…
This machine-learning model can pinpoint failing or hacked power grid components
Hello, Bayesian, our old friend Machine learning could one day help energy providers better pinpoint failing or compromised components in power grids, or better identify traffic congestion for local authorities, according to a study.…
Lost Ark: A pulpy Korean MMO-lite for idle hands
Approach with caution The RPG Greetings, traveller, and welcome to The Register Plays Games, our monthly gaming column. For this edition, we're back in MMO territory and, yes, Amazon is involved.…
Intel blasts Bitcoin mining, unveils own mining kit
Gelsinger believes his chip won't make quite a hash of the climate Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger just a few days ago raged against Bitcoin, calling it a "climate crisis."…
Nvidia probes cyberattack on internal systems
Also don't try to unlock your GPU cards with fake mining tool, and more In brief Nvidia is probing what may be a ransomware infection that caused outages within its internal network.…
This AI can detect DNA that unlocks backdoors in lab software
The 4D chess equivalent of a supply-chain attack How's this for a security threat? A backdoor hidden in lab software that is activated when fed a specially crafted digital DNA sample.…
IBM cannot kill this age-discrimination lawsuit linked to CEO
Scientist's claim that Arvind Krishna unfairly had him axed found plausible enough for trial hearing The judge overseeing an age-discrimination case against IBM has denied the IT giant's motion to dismiss the lawsuit, citing evidence supporting plaintiff Eugen Schenfeld's claim that CEO Arvind Krishna, then director of IBM research, made the decision to fire him.…
Techniques to fool AI with hidden triggers are outpacing defenses – study
Here's how to catch up with those poisoning machine-learning systems The increasingly wide use of deep neural networks (DNNs) for such computer vision tasks as facial recognition, medical imaging, object detection, and autonomous driving is going to, if not already, catch the attention of cybercriminals.…
Ukraine seeks volunteers to defend networks as Russian troops menace Kyiv
While Moscow tells its operators: Treat any infrastructure outage as a 'computer attack' As the Russian invasion of Ukraine continues, the latter's government is reportedly seeking cybersecurity volunteers to help defend itself. Meanwhile, Russia's CERT has warned critical infrastructure operators that any strange outages should be treated as "a computer attack."…
Canonical puts out last update to Ubuntu 20.04
Comes ahead of Jammy Jellyfish, another bug-squish for current LTS version Ubuntu has put out the latest point release of its stable version, or the fourth bugfix of 20.04.…
Fancy some new features? Try general-purpose Linux alternative Liquorix
Lock, stock and one smoking kernel: YMMV on performance boost, but either way, it's a bit of fun Friday FOSS Fest Looking for a little more desktop responsiveness? Liquorix provides current, easy-to-install desktop-performance-optimised kernels for Ubuntu, Mint, Debian and derivatives… and Arch and Red Hat users can get it, too.…
Dell PC backlog woes strike again amid component shortfall
Servers, storage parts challenges too, according to Q4 earnings call Just when Dell thought it was getting on top of the knotty PC supply chain, the outlook is deteriorating again with the backlog swelling and no relief from pressure due to freight charges – the same dynamics that are at play in its server and storage division.…
Intel targets edgy 5G and AI with new chips, software
Modern networks need programmable hardware, open software – a dip in the Ice Lake Intel has lifted the lid on new technologies for the edge and AI ahead of the Mobile World Congress conference including new Xeon D chips with integrated acceleration features and an updated OpenVINO toolkit for AI inferencing.…
Microsoft gives tablets some love in latest Windows 11 build
Not quite touch-first, but a bit more fondle-friendly Another test build of Windows 11 has emerged, this time with improvements aimed at tablet users.…
Fujitsu confirms end date for mainframe and Unix systems
Once Japanese giant's main squeezes, they're being ditched at end of decade Fujitsu has confirmed the end of the road for its mainframes and Unix server systems. It will cease to sell both by the end of this decade, with support services continuing for a further five years.…
UK Computer Misuse Act reformers visit Parliament
Cyberup campaign hasn't gone away, you know Infosec researcher Rob Dyke, best known to Reg readers for fending off legal threats from not-for-profit open-source foundation Apperta after finding a data breach, has visited Parliament to demand Computer Misuse Act reform.…
A tale of two dishwashers: Buy one, buy it again, and again
It's all the data's fault, of course… and it's my data so that means it's my fault Something for the Weekend Sorry about the noise: two of my dishwashers are going through their rinse cycle. Pass me your plate and I'll set off the third.…
Your app deleted all my files. And my wallpaper too!
The program is Fast, the sales team is Furious, and their data is definitely not Expendable On Call It's been a bit of a week hasn't it? Grab yourself a biscuit and settle down for another story from a brave Register reader who was only trying to help. Welcome to On Call.…
Network equipment lead times to remain painfully long into 2023: Gartner
Jump the queue by spending more with one player or thinking outside the box Gartner has asserted that lead times for new networking equipment will remain long until early in the year 2023, and thereafter display "slow incremental improvement over the course of months."…
India surpasses a billion active mobile subscriptions
Also has more than 100 million 2G subscribers, and a tiny PC market One billion Indian wireless services subscribers were active in December 2021 – the first time the nation has breached the nine-figure barrier. But that colossal number betrays a market that is still far from saturated by smartphones or ready for rich digital services.…
Ukraine invasion may hit chip supply chain – analysts
Noble gas price hike would be just what the world needs ... not Analysts have warned that Russia's invasion of Ukraine may cause trouble down the line for chipmakers, which are still now caught up in a component supply crunch that's affecting product shipments.…
For those whose time is valuable, GitHub puts prebuilt Codespaces into public beta
Bye bye, coffee break Microsoft's GitHub on Wednesday said customers using its Codespaces hosted development environments can now try out prebuilt systems in a public beta test.…
China makes using cryptocurrency a crime – again
In the Middle Kingdom DeFi is seen as defiance, not delightful disruption China has again cracked down on cryptocurrencies – this time with a Supreme People's Court ruling that paves the way for criminal prosecution of those who conduct cryptocurrency transactions.…
What is it with cloud status pages not reflecting reality?
Is AWS down? It depends who you ask Analysis Internet services in the US on Thursday were far more stable than those in Ukraine and Russia, but even so reports of problems surfaced.…
Cyberwarfare looms as Russia shells, invades Ukraine
And Player Three 'Iran' has entered the game? Russia's invasion of Ukraine could be followed by an escalation in cyberwarfare with the West, experts have warned.…
AI-designed drug to treat deadly disease now tested on humans
Software may find solution to terminal idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis The first phase of clinical trials testing an AI-designed drug to treat a chronic lung disease is now underway, according to biotech startup Insilico Medicine.…
Linux kernel edges closer to dropping ReiserFS
With developer in prison, it only seems just Linux kernel developer Matthew Wilcox has proposed removing ReiserFS from the Linux kernel – a relatively rare step.…
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