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Updated 2024-10-13 22:15
Nvidia may be mulling lopping Arm off Softbank: GPU goliath said to have shown interest in acquiring CPU design house
Well, when the chips are down... Nvidia is reportedly pondering snapping up Arm, going as far as approaching the Softbank-owned microprocessor designer to talk about a potential takeover.…
SpaceX pulls off an incredible catch, netting both halves of its Falcon fairing as they fell Earthwards after latest launch
Fair(ing) play, engineers SpaceX has pulled off another remarkable feat of space rocket recycling, capturing both pieces of a nose cone shield from its most recent launch, using giant nets suspended over the back of two boats in its fleet.…
Sick of AI engines scraping your pics for facial recognition? Here's a way to Fawkes them right up
Cloaking code contaminates snapshots so they're useless for face matching Researchers at the University of Chicago's Sand Lab have developed a technique for tweaking photos of people so that they sabotage facial-recognition systems.…
Microsoft pulls dust covers off Dataflex: Low-code data access from Teams
New, or just a rebrand of Common Data Service? A bit of both Microsoft has announced Dataflex, a "low code data platform for Teams," showing off the relational database management technology to its partners at its virtual Inspire event.…
Mexican cave relics suggest humans were populating the Americas up to 17,000 years earlier than thought
Immigrants crossing Bering land bridge would have found folk already there Humans are likely to have occupied the Americas from 30,000 years ago, which is much earlier than previously thought.…
After banning Chinese comms bogeyman, UK asks: Huawei in this mess? It was a failure of capitalism, MPs told
Commons tech committee does some soul-searching as costs mount Excising Huawei from the UK's 5G networks promises to be an expensive task that has ramifications for the nationwide rollout of 5G.…
Only EU can help us, pleads Slack as it slings competition complaint against Microsoft Teams
Behold the ghost of Browser Wars past Updated From the department of "if you can't beat 'em..." comes the inevitable sueball slung by Slack over Microsoft's bundling of Teams into its Office behemoth.…
About ready to POP3: Day 6 of email wobbles at UK2 after services provider Tucows suffers 'service failure'
15% of customers affected as Canadian partner promises 'full mailbox services' today Customers of UK2 hosted email services have been complaining of missing emails from clients, as the platform heads into a sixth day of wobbles. Problems appear to have begun on Friday for users connecting via IMAP and POP3 and were said to be due to "a service failure" at the UK company's Canadian service partner Tucows.…
New Google rules mandate Android 'Poundland' Edition, Go, for sub-2GB RAM phones once Android 11 is out
Chocolate Factory actively pushing lightweight OS on less powerful devices Google will reportedly make Android Go the default for low-RAM devices once the 11th major version of the mobile OS is released.…
Feeling unInspired? We can't help much with that, but there is a new .NET 5 preview and an Azure DevOps roadmap
One more to go until Satya Claus delivers the first RC, children! Slipping under the (un)Inspire radar this week was an update to .NET 5 and a peek at where Microsoft plans to take Azure DevOps.…
Capita's bespoke British Army recruiting IT cost military 25k applicants after switch-on
Taxpayers shelled out £1.3bn for this 'abysmal' flop Capita's 2017 decision to implement bespoke IT systems on a £1.3bn British Army recruiting contract led to nearly 25,000 fewer applications to join the military in the following year, new figures have revealed.…
Tune in online this week: How to pull off IT modernization in these uncertain times
Move your legacy apps to the cloud in just a matter of days Webcast As your business-critical systems get old, operating costs explode and the risk of breakdowns increases dramatically.…
Nominet shakes up system for expiring .uk domains, just happens to choose one that will make it £millions. Again
Brit registry is the cash cow that keeps on giving. Whether it wants to or not Analysis UK internet registry operator Nominet has decided to reform the way in which expired .uk domains are released and, to no one's surprise, has decided that the best solution is one that will result in it receiving millions of pounds in profit.…
Arm hopes AWS, FOSS, cloud-native combo will wrestle you onto its architecture
Still cheap to run. Now also running the code you prefer, wherever you need it, and with cloudy sandboxes for tests Interview Arm thinks its architecture is primed to win enterprise workloads thanks to a combination of AWS, cloud-native development and open-source software.…
Only surprise for OnePlus fans with firm's latest tilt at the mid-market is a sub-€400 price tag
Heavily leaked Nord is a smartphone, not an incontinent Scandinavian Apple's foray into the smartphone market middle ground presents a major threat to phone makers like OnePlus, which yesterday countered with its own sub-€400 effort: the OnePlus Nord.…
Twitter Qracks down on QAnon and its Qooky Qonspiracies
Gives itself a job to ‘protect the public conversation’ Twitter has decided to crack down on QAnon, the bizarre conspiracy theory that suggests US president Donald Trump is working to expose a cabal of deep-state Satanist paedophiles that secretly runs the world.…
We've heard of littering but this is ridiculous: Asteroid dumps up to 50 quadrillion kg of space dirt on Earth, Moon
Sadly, missing all of us by 800 million years A massive asteroid broke apart within the inner Solar System and showered the Earth and Moon with up to fifty quadrillion kilograms of meteoroids, say a trio of Japanese scientists. That's approximately 30 to 60 times more cosmic material than the Chicxulub prang that thoroughly ruined the dinosaurs' day.…
Microsoft quietly extends Azure reserved instances to five-year term
But only for one HPC-oriented instance type, with steeper exit charges and deeper discounts Microsoft has quietly added a five-year term to Azure reserved instances, the commit-for-years-and-score-deep-discounts option in its cloud.…
The W3C steers the way the World Wide Web works. Yet it is reluctant to record crucial meetings – and its minutes are incomplete
Ability to debate frankly in private versus right of netizens to know what exactly is discussed Since October 2019, people participating in discussions about the way the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) builds web standards have been unable to decide whether meetings held by the standard's body's various groups should be recorded or not.…
When those new servers you ordered aren't delivered, you probably won't order any more servers - and that's why India's market has shriveled
Except for IBM’s non-x86 boxes which have posted modest growth India’s server market is shriveling, says analyst firm IDC.…
Pakistan bans one Chinese app and gives TikTok a final warning to clean up its act
Objects to obscene content, not data leakage Pakistan’s Telecommunications Authority has banned one Chinese-owned social video-streaming app Bigo and given TikTok a final warning that it needs to get its house in order or also face expulsion.…
SEC drags Silicon Valley AI upstart to court over claims of made-up revenues, investors swindled out of $11m
No, surely not, no way, we're utterly shocked America's financial watchdog has taken a Silicon Valley AI startup and its CEO to court for allegedly swindling $11m from investors by forging fake bank statements to lie about its revenues.…
Twilio: Someone broke into our unsecured AWS S3 silo, added 'non-malicious' code to our JavaScript SDK
API dev kit remained modified for hours, says source Exclusive Twilio today confirmed one or more miscreants sneaked into its unsecured cloud storage systems and modified a copy of the JavaScript SDK used by its customers.…
Don't strain yourself, Zuck, only democracy at stake... Facebook makes half-hearted effort to flag election lies by President Trump
Here, have a link to something vaguely related +Comment Faced with an obvious falsehood pushed on its platform by a politician seeking re-election, Facebook has finally taken action... in the most grudging, useless way imaginable.…
Ex-boss of ICANN shifts from 'advisor' to co-CEO of private equity biz that tried to buy .org for $1bn+
Chehade paved the way for domain price cap removal, now shows up at Ethos Capital Analysis The former head of DNS regulator ICANN has been named as co-CEO of a company that launched a controversial attempt to purchase the .org internet registry earlier this year. The news has again raised concerns over the revolving doors between regulators and those who need regulation.…
It's July 2020, and your PC or Mac can be pwned by a dodgy Photoshop file – Adobe emits critical patch batch
Major fixes for Bridge and Prelude, too, plus Reader Android updated A week after July's Patch Tuesday, Adobe has released out-of-band security updates for vulnerabilities in four of its products – and most of them are considered to be critical in severity.…
Bad: US govt says Chinese duo hacked, stole blueprints from just about everyone. Also bad: They extorted cash
Including COVID-19 research, it is claimed. And they'll almost certainly never face an American court On Tuesday, the US Department of Justice charged two Chinese nationals with allegedly hacking hundreds of organizations and individuals in America and elsewhere to steal confidential corporate secrets on behalf of Beijing for more than a decade.…
Don'tcha just LOVE meetings? Microsoft does, too, so here are some new Teams features, you lucky, lucky people
Plus: Security tweaks for Microsoft 365 Inspire Because its customers apparently can't get enough of meetings, Microsoft has added some new Teams capabilities in the form of Standard and Premium Microsoft Teams Rooms.…
Uncle Sam adds fresh group of 11 Chinese firms to Entity List over human rights abuses
Two tech suppliers on list, just a week after America 'restricted' visas for Huawei and pals' foreign staffers The US Department of Commerce has sanctioned an additional 11 Chinese firms, including a major Apple supplier, over allegations that the companies are complicit in human rights violations in China's Xinjiang province.…
Stick that in your named pipe and smoke it: Flaw in Citrix Workspace could let remote attacker pwn host machine
Patch out for Pen Test Partners-spotted vuln – you know what to do Research outfit Pen Test Partners has uncovered a vulnerability in Citrix Workspace potentially allowing a privilege escalation to lead to full remote compromise of the host machine.…
Windows Server spotted behind cloudy curtain as Microsoft unveils the next generation of Azure Stack HCI
Use your old-school skills while having native Azure integration Inspire Microsoft has announced an update to Azure Stack HCI as it continues to aim at customers who do not fancy a wholesale jump to the public cloud.…
UK intel committee on Russia: Social media firms should remove state disinformation. What was that, MI5? ████████?
Also (yikes): A 'complicated wiring diagram of responsibilities amongst ministers' in the event of cyber attack An influential UK Parliamentary committee has called on social media companies to remove covert hostile state material and said the government must "name and shame" those that fail to act. It also said that there was a "complicated wiring diagram of responsibilities amongst ministers" who might have to act in the event of a major state cyber attack.…
Predictably grim Q2 for mobe sales, but iPhone SE proves pretty moreish as gateway drug for Android defectors
Samsung suffered least as pandemic battered US market The US smartphone market took a battering in the second quarter of 2020 as the coronavirus disrupted all facets of American life and prompted states to shut down their economies.…
960 LinkedIn employees will be let go... If only there was some kind of 'social network for suits' to assist job hunts
It looks like your CV needs updating. Would you like help? Microsoft's social-media-for-suits platform, LinkedIn, is to axe 960 roles as it makes "strategic changes" to "accelerate the vision of the company".…
My life as a criminal cookie clearer: Register vulture writes Chrome extension, realizes it probably breaks US law
Could paywall-dodging browser aid fall foul of DMCA rules? We ask the experts Code dive Over the weekend, I created my first Chrome extension and prepared to publish the project to GitHub until I realized it was possibly illegal under America's Digital Millennium Copyright Act.…
Apple was the only Fortune 50 company to foresee COVID-19 pandemic risk and properly insure against it – Forrester
Nugget nestled in report on how outbreak will change the tech biz Apple was alone among corporate giants in foreseeing the pandemic risk in the run-up to the global COVID-19 outbreak, according to analysis by research firm Forrester.…
Brit telcos deliberately killed Phones 4u, claim admins in £1bn UK High Court sueball
One-time retailer has a problem: Key evidence is on a lost fondleslab Administrators of UK mobile retailer Phones 4u claim that the company was deliberately collapsed by a cartel of British telcos – although an iPad with key evidence "cannot now be found", according to the High Court.…
Did you see that ludicrous display last night? Bork pays a visit to London's Silicon Roundabout
Ramen, katsu curry and a side of finest BSOD Bork!Bork!Bork! Amid the table football, beanbags and overpriced coffee, London's silicon roundabout also plays host to that most modern of afflictions: the BSOD bork.…
Motorola Moto G 5G Plus: It won't blow your mind, but at £300 we're struggling to find much to grumble about
Conservative, competent entry-level blower for the next-gen networks Review The Motorola Moto G 5G Plus sits among the inaugural sub-£300 5G handsets. While the Lenovo-owned phonemaker is happy to tread that unfamiliar ground, the handset doggedly sticks to the tried-and-tested Motorola playbook, with decent performance and photography alongside a pristine stock Android experience.…
Linux Foundation starts new group to build pandemic-popping software
Decentralised contact-tracing apps from Ireland and Canada are first off the rank The Linux Foundation has announced a new Public Health initiative (LFPH) that “builds, secures, and sustains open source software to help public health authorities (PHAs) combat COVID-19 and future epidemics.”…
It's a process: Nokia pushes out its first private 5G standalone product, eyes industrial types
Fancy integrating next-gen tech into your IoT, cameras, sensors, and robots? Well do you? Telecoms giant Nokia has lifted the lid on a fast, low-latency cellular connection for industrial kit – its private 5G SA (standalone) product, with some of it to be plumbed into a test mine near the Finnish city of Tampere.…
Networking boffins detect wide abuse of IPv4 addresses bought on secondary market
Suggests poorly-regulated address-marts are favorites of folks who want ‘clean’ addresses that give botnets a break Malicious actors are abusing the secondary market for IPv4 addresses, according to Lancaster University lecturer Vasileios Giotsas, University College London research and teaching assistant and postdoctoral fellow Ioana Livadariu from Norway's Simula Metropolitan Center for Digital Engineering.…
UK formally abandons Europe’s Unified Patent Court, Germany plans to move forward nevertheless
But will the UPC will be legal – or even worthwhile – without Britain? Analysis The UK has formally ditched the Unified Patent Court (UPC), a project to create a single pan-European patent system that would fix the confusing mess of contradictory laws currently in place.…
IBM CEO and Indian prime minister talk about yoga … and unspecified further investment
Big Blue may have an in on new healthcare plans IBM’s new CEO Shri Arvind Krishna has chatted over a video conference with Indian prime minister Narendra Modi and pledged further investment in the nation.…
The volcanoes on Venus aren't dead, say astroboffins, they're merely resting, pining for the planet's lava fjords
We may not know the answer until the 2030s, though The volcanoes on Venus, thought to have been long extinct, are actually still alive, at least in some cases, and are just having a quiet spell before reshaping the planet's surface once again. That's according to a paper published in Nature Geoscience on Monday.…
Alibaba's financial arm, Ant, files for monster IPO ahead of march on the world's merchants and shoppers
Payments giant could be worth $200 billion Alibaba's financial services arm, Ant Group, will seek an initial public offering in both Shanghai and Hong Kong as it looks to expands its operations into the European and American markets.…
India drops the bar on e-commerce seller's listings: You want to sell it? Tell us where it came from from then
Inform people in case they go Chinese and ignore self-sufficiency drive India’s Department of Consumer Affairs has detailed new rules for e-commerce operators, including a requirement to reveal a product’s place of origin.…
World Health Organisation AI chatbot goes deaf when asked for the latest COVID-19 figures for Taiwan, Hong Kong
Funny that! The World Health Organisation’s Facebook Messenger chatbot refuses to break out the latest numbers of COVID-19 cornavirus cases and deaths for Taiwan and Hong Kong.…
IBM profits cratered 46% last quarter. But its share price is up ~5% because Wall Street expected that to be worse
Execs peg Big Blue's big blues to global pandemic recovery IBM's net income felt the full brunt of the economic downturn last quarter, falling 46 per cent on the year-ago period, though impressing Wall Street.…
If you can read this, your Windows 10 2004 PC really is connected to the internet no matter what the OS claims
May 2020 build warns of no internet connection when, er, there is Microsoft is probing a bug in Windows 10 version 2004 that wrongly warns folks that their machines have no internet connection.…
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