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Updated 2024-10-14 00:00
You wait ages for a mid-air collision spoofing attack and along come two at once: More boffins take a crack at hoodwinking TCAS
Easy to fool safety system, in theory – in practice, well... Traffic Collision Avoidance Systems (TCAS) are used in aircraft to avoid hitting other aircraft in flight. And like many electronic systems, they weren't designed for security.…
India bans 59 apps it says have privacy, national security problems. In a massive coincidence, they’re all Chinese
They may have a point with some of them, though India has banned the use of 59 smartphone apps it says violate its citizens’ privacy and threaten national security. In a massive coincidence they come from China, and just weeks after border skirmishes between the two nations.…
Apple: We're defending your privacy by nixing 16 browser APIs. Rivals: You mean defending your bottom line
iGiant accused of holding back web progress to protect its 30% app cut Apple has said it has decided not to implement 16 web APIs in its Safari browser's WebKit engine in part because they pose a privacy threat. Critics of the iGiant, including competitors like Google, see Apple's stance as a defense against a competitive threat.…
Google Cloud partially evaporates for hours amid power supply failure: Two US East Coast zones rattled
Networking, Kubernetes, storage, virtual machine systems hit by outage Google Cloud is having a wobbly Monday. Its Kubernetes platform and networking services were partially unavailable for hours today, and its virtual-machine hosting and in-memory storage systems had a limited outage.…
Oracle opens second Indian cloud region in bid to keep pace in make-or-break market
Big Red's share continues to border on irrelevance compared to big dogs Oracle is opening its second cloud data centre in India due to "increasing demand for secure and stable" cloud services in the world's largest democracy.…
Poetry in lockdown: hiQ to Supremes / Please leave LinkedIn scrape ruling / well enough alone
Data science firm won previous ruling over pulling data from jobseekers' network Data science startup hiQ Labs has responded [PDF] to a Supreme Court petition from LinkedIn, urging justices to avoid revisiting the earlier Ninth Circuit appeal court ruling that stated web scraping doesn't contravene federal hacking legislation.…
University of California San Francisco pays ransomware gang $1.14m as BBC publishes 'dark web negotiations'
Publicity-hungry crims find new way of pressuring victims A California university which is dedicated solely to public health research has paid a $1.14m ransom to a criminal gang in the hopes of regaining access to its data.…
Spare some change, guv? UK's CCTV regulator pitches for £100k budget increase
8-strong national body asks government for cash to hire 2 more "A consistent refrain I recite at the many conference speeches, media interviews and workshops I attend is the importance of transparency and openness in the use of public space surveillance," said Surveillance Camera Commissioner (SCC) Tony Porter in his most recent annual report.…
Come glide with me: Virgin Galactic gives Unity some fresh air, looks forward to rocket-powered flight
Plus: On-orbit battery replacement and scrub-a-dub-dub, my launch is a dud? In brief Spaceport America took another tentative step toward actually being a spaceport last week as Virgin Galactic took its SpaceShipTwo for another glide back to the runway.…
Microsoft has a cure for data nuked by fat fingers if you're not afraid of the command line
Plus: Windows Forms on Arm64 in .NET 5, Live Events to live on In brief While not able to undelete Microsoft's shuttered stores, accidentally borked files stand a chance at redemption thanks to the Windows File Recovery tool.…
Apple said to be removing charger, headphones from upcoming iPhone 12 series
Trying to reduce waste or funnelling punters into investing in AirPods? There's no such thing as a free lunch or, indeed, a free power adapter if the latest reports from famed Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo are correct.…
Yes, Prime Minister, rewrite the Computer Misuse Act: Brit infosec outfits urge reform
Out-of-date law prevents Britain from fully developing its cybersecurity industry, say campaigners British infosec businesses are celebrating the 30th birthday of the Computer Misuse Act 1990 by writing to Prime Minister Boris Johnson urging reform of the elderly cybercrime law.…
Imagination Technologies sued over £27m Russian SoC contract invoice brouhaha
IMGworks' new owner Sondrel demands £1.4m handed over tout suite Imagination Technologies is being sued by the buyer of its IMGworks division after allegedly failing to pay an invoice in a £27m contract for Russian customer Elvees RnD Center.…
Finding SAP hard to swallow? ERP giant says it's working on something more bite-sized
The PowerPoint presentation is nice and all, but the proof is in the eating SAP is striving to rid itself of its reputation as a provider of monolithic ERP systems that are highly embedded in the business but difficult to change, plus costly and time-consuming to upgrade.…
Now that's a train delay Upminster with which London travellers shall not put
Who are we kidding? TfL's prisoners will just resign selves to 20 hour wait Bork!Bork!Bork! Welcome to another in the The Register's inexplicably long-running series of sickly signage and distressed displays.…
UKCloud latest to sign Memorandum of Understanding with UK.gov ahead of cloud mega framework
Google, Microsoft already on board. AWS not far behind. Sources say plucky Brit upstart vows never to practise tax avoidance UKCloud has agreed specified discounts on a range of fluffy white services - public, private and hybrid - under a framework agreement with Crown Commercial Services (CCS), the procurement agency acting on behalf of British government.…
Continuous Lifecycle Online: Just like our London conference – but in your own home. Grab tickets now
Containerization, DevOps, compliance, service meshes – there’s so much to discuss in just one day Event The need to say it seems almost moot but, no, The Register’s Continuous Lifecycle London conference isn’t happening in-person in 2020. Instead, we’ve taken all that scheduled goodness and packed it into one of the busiest and most content-filled one-day virtual events you’re likely to find – and tickets are on sale right now.…
Finally, a wafer-thin server... Only a tiny little thin one. Oh all right. Just the one...
The UPS gets its revenge in a tale of fire, fury and farming Who, Me? Monday is here once more, bringing with it the promise of a clean slate, a fresh week and a mailbox full of problems. Put all that to one side and take solace in another Reg reader's misadventures courtesy of Who, Me?…
CyberX, CyberX, does whatever a CyberX does. Locks IoT, machines too, Microsoft got it, so will you
Plus: DDoS'er jailed, and more In Brief Redmond is bulking up the security around its AzureStack hardware-to-cloud bundle by acquiring infosec firm CyberX.…
Dems take a crack at banning Feds from using facial-recog tech. Congress will put it on todo list after 'learn Klingon'
Plus: Amazon buys self-driving startup, and more In brief A handful of Democrat Senators and House reps say they will introduce legislation that would stop the Feds and cops in the US from using facial-recognition surveillance gear.…
Here's a headline we'll run this century, mark our words: Alien invaders' AI found on Mars searching for signs of life
World will marvel at tiny electronic brain made of sand taught to think NASA is developing a Mars rover AI system designed to sift through sensor data for signs of life on the Red Planet and send back relevant readings to its Earth base all by itself.…
Macs, iPhones, iPads to get encrypted DNS – how'd you like them Apples?
Cupertino idiot-tax corp is fashionably late to the party WWDC Apple this year will boldly go where its peers have gone before by implementing support for encrypted DNS in iOS and macOS.…
Let's roll the 3d6 dice on today's security drama: Ah, 15, that's LG allegedly hacked, source code stolen by Maze ransomware gang
Crooks threaten to leak swiped software blueprints Maze ransomware masterminds claim to have stolen source code from LG after hacking into the electronics giant.…
Fintech biz Wirecard folds into insolvency like two pair against a flush. Good luck accessing your chip stack
Regulators freeze funds, stop affiliated finance apps from functioning German electronic payment whizzkids Wirecard AG has filed for bankruptcy, three days after the arrest of ex-CEO Markus Braun on fraud charges – and the company's admission that €1.9bn in assets ($2.1bn) were missing and may never have existed.…
Tune in and watch live: Email encryption doesn’t have to be an all-or-nothing deal
Next week: Explore how keeping email safe can be part of a wider corporate strategy Webcast Leaked emails are the IT security mishap that just keeps on giving. From salacious tabloid headlines to lost elections to international security crises, a hacked or misfired email is the ultimate piece of first-hand evidence to light up a scandal, or ruin a reputation.…
Unfortunately for SAP, major ERP upgrade projects are the last thing customers want to think about right now
Orgs still fixated on getting remote working right, says user group chief SAP customers are hanging fire on major migrations and upgrades as the COVID-19 pandemic draws companies' attention away from their long-term enterprise application strategy, according to the Americas' SAP User Group (ASUG).…
Brit plod's use of facial-recognition tech is lawful, no need to question us, cops' lawyer tells Court of Appeal
Plus: Home Office urges judges to leave lax legal framework as is South Wales Police and the UK Home Office "fundamentally disagree" that automated facial recognition (AFR) software is as intrusive as collecting fingerprints or DNA, a barrister for the force told the Court of Appeal yesterday.…
It's now safe to turn off your computer shop: Microsoft to shutter its bricks-and-mortar retail locations worldwide
'Reimagined' flagships to endure, but that place you used to go to when the Apple Store was too busy is going away Microsoft has a new approach to retail. One, it appears, that does not involve its physical store locations.…
It's National Cream Tea Day and this time we end the age-old debate once and for all: How do you eat yours?
The question that not even quantum computing can solve It's that time of year again when National Cream Tea Day asks the age-old question: cream then jam or jam then cream?…
An unfortunate bit of product placement for Microsoft as Liverpool celebrates winning some silverware
Never mind the ball-based shenanigans – how about some love for Windows Activation? Bork!Bork!Bork! There has been a tinge of Scouse to our bork column this week, which culminates in a football win for Liverpool - it won the English Premier League yesterday - and a pleading for activation from Windows.…
White elephants in the mist: Google's upcoming Pixel 4A may ship without Soli motion recognition, per FCC filing
Stripping radar-based tech would cut price and allow phone's sale in markets where 60GHz spectrum is restricted A new filing by the US Federal Communications Commission suggests the upcoming Google Pixel 4A phone will ditch the Soli gesture-recognition system that featured on its flagship predecessor.…
Lockdown team building: Actualise the potentiality of your workforce... through the power of video games
Human: Fall Flat, Left 4 Dead 2, Embr, Sea of Thieves – goodness, we've been having a blast The RPG Greetings, traveller, and welcome back to The Register Plays Games, our monthly gaming column. Since lockdown, a handful of vultures have been trying to fill the social-distancing void by playing video games together, and, hey, if you don't hate your colleagues' guts, maybe there's something here you could introduce to them in lieu of the pub.…
When one open-source package riddled with vulns pulls in dozens of others, what's a dev to do?
Snyk survey puts cross-site scripting top of the list for security holes – but watch out for prototype pollution too Open-source security specialist Snyk has released a new survey combining data on vulnerabilities in available packages with responses from developers and DevOps teams about how they handle the challenge this poses.…
Huawei wins approval to plonk £1bn optical comms R&D facility in UK's leafy Cambridgeshire
'We want to promote UK tech on a global scale' – aw, nice of you Chinese comms bogeyman Huawei has won approval to build a £1bn optoelectronics R&D facility in South Cambridgeshire, UK, near the leafy village of Sawston.…
Russia returns to space tourism and offers a first citizen spacewalk
As Japan's virtual space tourism rig is readied for bolt-on to ISS Russia's space agency Roscosmos has re-entered the space tourism market and this time will offer one person the chance to spacewalk.…
Beware the fresh Windows XP install: Failure awaits you all with nasty, big, pointy teeth
There's a rat in my system, what am I gonna do? On Call It's Friday! That time of the week when thoughts turn to the weekend, a well-earned rest, and a vermin-infested tale from The Register's On Call archives.…
After three leisurely years, Citrix releases second long-term-service hypervisor
Version 8.2 supports bigger hosts, improves network security and bins old Windows versions as guests In around 2013 Citrix stopped trying to keep up with VMware and Microsoft in the server virtualisation market. The company therefore slowed development of its XenServer hypervisor, but kept it alive and suggested it as a fine underpinning for its own products –especially for virtual desktops - but not as the foundations of a private cloud.…
NASA mulls going all steam-punk with a fleet of jumping robots to explore Saturn's mysterious moons
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe... NASA is mulling sending a fleet of steam-powered robots capable of hopping large distances to Europa, Enceladus, or Titan – Saturn's moons that may harbor hidden liquid oceans.…
After 84 years, Japan's Olympus shutters its camera biz, flogs it to private equity – smartphones are just too good
Oh, snap Japanese optics manufacturer Olympus is winding down its 84-year-old camera division and selling it off to private-equity firm Japan Industrial Partners (JIP).…
CompSci student bitten by fox after feeding it McNuggets
Umm, kid: us computer folks are supposed to be the smart ones An Australian university may euthanise campus foxes after they bit computing students.…
Singapore awards 5G licences – and winning carriers pick anyone but Huawei for nationwide network
Bid that proposed using Chinese vendor’s kit scores only limited network access Singapore has named two carriers as having won the right to build nationwide 5G networks, and both promptly named tech providers other than Huawei as their network providers of choice.…
Google to 'surface' friendly banks' business loans through Pay app
To help Indian small businesses cope with COVID crunch Google’s Indian outpost will soon help small businesses to find loans.…
Wanted – DRAM or alive: US Feds bag arrest warrants for three Taiwanese accused of stealing Micron's mem secrets
Former employees missed court appearence, maybe because a Taiwan court already found two of them guilty The US Justice Department has been granted arrest warrants for three Taiwanese nationals charged with stealing semiconductor secrets from US-based Micron Technologies.…
Talk about the fox guarding the hen house. Comcast to handle DNS-over-HTTPS for Firefox-using subscribers
Last November: These ISPs know too much! June: God bless the ISPs Comcast has agreed to be the first home broadband internet provider to handle secure DNS-over-HTTPS queries for Firefox browser users in the US, Mozilla has announced.…
US govt: Julian Assange tried to recruit hacker to steal hush-hush dirt and we should know – the hacker was an informant
WikiLeaker accused of tapping up LulzSec's Sabu as a source Prosecutors in the US have upgraded their case against Julian Assange with a second superseding indictment claiming he sought out the services of a notorious hacker who, unbeknownst to the WikiLeaks boss, was secretly working with the Feds.…
Apple gives Boot Camp the boot, banishes native Windows support from Arm-compatible Macs
Virtualization an option, Rosetta x86 Windows emulation doubtful Apple has confirmed its forthcoming Mac hardware using Arm-compatible Apple-designed processors will do away with Boot Camp, the iGiant's tool for booting Microsoft Windows directly on Macs.…
Databricks buys analytics biz, donates MLflow to Linux Foundation, opens up Delta Engine to boffins
Time to trawl through some data lakes In a busy 24 hours Databricks has handed over MLflow – a machine learning management tool – to the Linux Foundation, bought an analytics biz and moved the status of its Delta Engine to General Availability.…
We're no longer helping UK Post Office persecute postal workers with our shonky system, says Fujitsu
Too little, too late – but the inquiry is rolling Fujitsu has told UK Parliament it is no longer supplying evidence to the Post Office to convict sub-postmasters of criminal offences invented by the firm's Horizon IT system.…
OpenJDK lands on Windows 10 for Arm: Not 100% there yet but enough to start tinkering
Port will handle SPEC's SERT and Java suites, with more features soon While Apple's foray into the Arm world snagged much of the limelight this week, Microsoft quietly announced that the first phase of its port of OpenJDK for Windows 10 on Arm was complete.…
Honeypot behind sold-off IP subnet shows Cyberbunker biz hosted all kinds of filth, says SANS Institute
Botnet C2, denial-of-service, phishing – and that's after filtering Web traffic to the servers of the notorious Dutch-German Cyberbunker hosting biz was filled with all kinds of badness, including apparent botnet command-and-control and denial-of-service traffic, says SANS Institute.…
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