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Updated 2024-10-15 10:45
Dell breaks out the checkbook and $7m later, US discrimination claims go away
IT giant agrees to payout package that settles cases with Department of Labor The US Department of Labor says it has struck a deal with Dell that will see the end to 20 different wage discrimination claims against the technology biz.…
Landmark US net neutrality decision reveals that both sides won and lost out
After brief hiatus, it’s back to fighting over internet access The Washington DC appeals court has upheld the decision by federal regulator FCC to reverse net neutrality rules but said it does not have the right to stop US states from adopting their own rules.…
Former! Yahoo! engineer! admits! to! hacking! user! emails! for! smutty! snaps!
Yahooligan accessed about 6,000 accounts to hunt for revealing photos and videos Former Yahoo! software engineer Reyes Daniel Ruiz has pleaded guilty in a California federal court to one count of computer intrusion after breaking into customers' Yahoo! emails and accounts at other service providers to obtain private data, mainly sexual images and videos of account holders.…
vBulletin zero-day KOs Comodo user forums – that's 245,000 accounts at risk of compromise
We told you! We told you to patch! Did you listen? Security plaftorm vendor Comodo has 'fessed up to a digital break-in affecting 245,000 users – after it ignored line one in the first chapter of the "How to do Basic Security" book about timely patching of software.…
Hate Verilog? Detest VHDL? You're not the only one. Xilinx rolls out easier-to-use free FPGA programming tools after developer outcry
Vitis toolkit for the rest of us, coming soon, allegedly If you hate writing Verilog, VHDL, and other hardware design languages, used to craft computer chips and configure FPGAs, you're far from the only one.…
BBC said it'll pull radio streams from TuneIn to slurp more of your data but nobody noticed till Amazon put its foot in it
Hell hath no fury like a licence payer scorned The BBC has once again drawn ire from the loyal TV licence-paying public by pulling its live radio streams from third-party services.…
IR35 blame game: Barclays to halt off-payroll contractors, goes directly to PAYE
No bailout for tech freelancers. Bank moves to avoid potential liability for tax, NI contributions UK bank Barclays is to call time on all off-payroll working and shift its entire contractor base to the Pay As You Earn (PAYE) system to swerve potential financial implications of private-sector IR35 legislation.…
If your org hasn't had a security incident in the last year: Good for you, you're in the minority
C-suite bods quietly 'fess up to oopsies in survey Nearly seven in eight CTOs and CIOs have admitted to their businesses suffering a data breach, according to a survey.…
Remember Windows 8? Microsoft is still trying to reunify the API it split for the touchy OS's benefit
Old meets new in WinRT API Packs Microsoft has released "WinRT API Packs" for Windows desktop developers, letting you call on platform functions previously restricted to UWP apps, as well as a preview Windows Forms designer for .NET Core 3.0 desktop applications.…
HMRC 'disciplined' almost 100 employees for computer misuse over 24 months
Email, social media and telecomms kit abused at the tax collector Almost 100 staff at UK tax collector HMRC faced disciplinary action for computer misuse in the previous two full financial years.…
Rocket Lab crows about launch, SpaceX zipwires, and a monster mock-up arrives at Kennedy
Also: Artemis looks to pull on Apollo's boots as sustainability starts slipping Roundup While shy and retiring Elon Musk may have made a big noise with his big rocket, there was plenty other news for space fans to chew over in the last week.…
Chinese sleaseball's 17-year game of hide-and-seek ends after drone finds him on mountain
Back to jail for people trafficker Chinese cops have found a use case for drones that doesn't involve shutting airports, arming them with an assortment of lethal weapons or generally being a nuisance.…
Percona packages PostgreSQL alongside existing MySQL and MongoDB products
Free should mean free, says open-source DB biz Interview PostgreSQL is among the most popular database management systems, but market share is a slippery thing to measure, depending on whether you mean revenue, developer activity, or actual deployed databases.…
In 21st-century tech dystopia, smart TV watches you, warns Princeton privacy prof
You make de-legitimising targeted advertising as a business model sound easy "TVs are going down the same road that turned the web & smartphone apps into a cesspit of surveillance."…
You and me baby ain't nothing but mammals, so let's watch for tech sales VAT weirdness through the channel
Ignorance is no defence. Just ask HMRC Feature Missing Trader Intra-Community (MTIC) fraud, or Value Added Tax (VAT) fraud more generally, has been evident in tech channels since the early '90s and remains a real headache for UK tax authority HMRC and businesses that may unwittingly find themselves involved in it.…
Brighton perv cops community service for 'hacking' women's Facebook accounts
Guilty plea to Computer Misuse Act crimes A man who hacked women's Facebook accounts to steal their intimate images has been ordered to carry out 200 hours' unpaid work after admitting three criminal charges under the Computer Misuse Act.…
The mod firing squad: Stack Exchange embroiled in 'he said, she said, they said' row
Pending pronoun policing piques political protest In the past month or so, about 20 volunteer moderators out of about 600 have distanced themselves from Stack Exchange, the online network of Q&A communities, to protest corporate policy changes and the removal of a moderator, Monica Cellio, over alleged violations of as-yet unpublished Code of Conduct changes.…
A new US-UK data agreement is worrisome but it won’t give access to encrypted comms
CLOUD Act details surfacing in a fog of confusion A new treaty between the US and UK will require social media companies like Facebook to hand over private messages but, contrary to recent reports, will not break end-to-end encryption or force them to add backdoors to their software.…
Dive deep into the world of cyber attackers at the CyberThreat Summit
Find everything you need to know to stay one step ahead with SANS next month Promo Hosted by the UK government’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) and training specialist SANS Institute, the two-day CyberThreat Summit 2019 in London this autumn is a highly informative technical event bringing together security practitioners from the UK and Europe.…
Why build your own cancer-sniffing neural network when this 1.3 exaflop supercomputer can do if for you?
Small poblem - you need 9,216 CPUs and 27,648 GPUs The world’s fastest deep learning supercomputer is being used to develop algorithms that can help researchers automatically design neural networks for cancer research, according to the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.…
WeWork, but We don't IPO: Self-styled techie boarding house calls off cursed stock offering
The worst thing to happen to them since the last thing Techie real estate upstart and VC cash furnace WeWork has called off its IPO amidst mounting corporate disasters.…
Stop us if you've heard this one before: Yet another critical flaw threatens Exim servers
Remote code flaw sparks calls for major updates Admins of Linux and Unix boxes running Exim would be well-advised to update the software following the disclosure of another critical security flaw.…
Ever own a Galaxy S4? Congrats, you’re $10 richer as Samsung agrees payout over dodgy speed tests
The good news? It can’t do it again for three years Samsung has agreed to pay purchasers of its Galaxy S4 roughly $10 each for over alleged cheating on benchmark tests. And in case you’re wondering: yes, that’s the S4 that came out in 2013.…
Holy smokes! Ex-IT admin gets two years prison for trashing Army chaplains' servers
Let's hope that 'take this job and shove it' moment was worth it A former system admin for a US Army contractor has been sentenced to two years behind bars for trashing his employer's network on his way out the door.…
Planes, boats and autocrats: US Treasury Dept. slaps more sanctions on accused Russian troll funder
US wants to take St. Vitamin, the yacht of Yevgeniy Prigozhin On Monday, the US Department of the Treasury (DoT) expanded its sanctions against entities associated with the Internet Research Agency (IRA), the Russian organization accused of meddling with US elections in 2016 and 2018.…
Edge, Internet Explorer users Czech their settings after MSN 'forgot' their language
Surfers faced with challenging feeds on a new tab Something funny happened to the dwindling population of Edge users this morning as their browser began bleating at them in a variety of languages.…
An unbearable itch to migrate your OS to the cloud? You might have a case of Windows VD
Place to be for multi-session Windows 10 and life support for Windows 7 Microsoft has released Windows Virtual Desktop (WVD) while reminding users that Windows 7 is inching ever closer to the end of support.…
600 armed German cops storm Cyberbunker hosting biz on illegal darknet market claims
Look, it's CB3ROB – remember them? Cops have seized the physical premises and servers of the Dutch-German ISP that once hosted The Pirate Bay – after storming the hosting biz's ex-NATO bunker hideout with 600 gunmen.…
Thanks-thanks to TalkTalk teen hacker: UK cops' first auction of ill-gotten Bitcoin nets £240k
Cryptocoin from selling hacking services, ppldeets online helps fund crimefighters British cops have raised £240,000 in their first ever UK-based auction of cryptocurrencies understood to have been seized from former TalkTalk hacker Elliot Gunton , who'd "earned" it selling hacking services and flogging people's stolen personal details online.…
How to lose a UK contractor in 10 days: Make them commit after upcoming IR35 tax upheaval, apparently
Survey warns of 'brain drain' A survey of UK freelancers has found that changes to IR35 tax rules mean some are considering moving to another client if their current client tries to push them into a permanent position.…
Gears of law say Gears of War character Cole Train is not based on ex-American football player
Microsoft's motion for summary judgement granted Gears of War's Augustus "Cole Train" Cole is not Lenwood "Hard Rock" Hamilton, according to a Pennsylvania federal court.…
'Six' in the city: Kiwi sportswear shop telly beamed X-rated flicks for hours over weekend
Asics confirms it was hacked A New Zealand plimsoll emporium has apologised for inadvertently playing smut on its promo screens for nine hours over the weekend.…
Computer says no: An expression-analysing AI has been picking out job candidates for Unilever
One day you may find yourself having to impress software A US firm is flogging facial-expression software to analyse job candidates' performance in video interviews and make initial selections for companies including Unilever.…
Windows 10 May 2019 Update declared safe at last, which bodes well for upcoming 19H2 build
Also: Azure, SQL Server and keeping the Windows 2008 R2 lights on Roundup As the faithful attempted to stir up excitement for this week's hardware event, Microsoft has continued its efforts to ship the next version of Windows while also flinging out updates for Azure and SQL Server.…
NASA Administrator upends the scorn bucket on Elon Musk's Starship spurtings
Mars, Moon and shiny steel is all well and good. But how about sending a crew to the ISS without anything exploding, hmm? SpaceX CEO Elon Musk braved the wind to give the faithful an update on the progress of the Starship and Super Heavy program from the company's Boca Chica facility in Texas.…
Facial recognition at festivals, stupid shoplifting algorithms, Google shares data to kill off deepfakes
Also, is AI as good as doctors? Roundup Let's catch you up on recent AI news happenings.…
Careful now, UK court ruling says email signature blocks can sign binding contracts
Which cost Lake District land seller £25,000 Your work email signature block can be used to form a binding and legal contract, the Manchester County Court has ruled – costing an unfortunate land seller £25,000 from her hoped-for sale price.…
IT workers: Speaking truth to douchebags since 1977
When boot messages go bad Who, Me? Welcome to The Register's weekly leap into the guilty, and not-so-guilty confessions of readers in our Who, Me? column.…
Microsoft changes encryption, another D-Link bug, phishing dangers, and more
Plus, Baltimore's disastrous ransomware infection and worse IT practices Roundup Let's look at some of the latest security news you may have missed this week.…
TAG, you're s*!t: Internet advertising industry bods admit self-policing approach is a sham
Meanwhile: Trustworthy Accountability Group CEO dismisses ax-grinding critics Special report The Trustworthy Accountability Group, or TAG, was formed in 2015 to "eradicate digital advertising fraud, malware, ad-supported piracy, and to increase transparency across the digital advertising supply chain."…
Astroboffins spy the most ancient protocluster of galaxies yet found post Big Bang
The giant group of 12 galaxies formed when the universe was just 800 million years old The oldest protocluster of galaxies found to date began clumping together some 13 billion years ago, when the universe was just 6 per cent of its current age.…
Margin mugs: A bank paid how much for a 2m Ethernet cable? WTF!
El Reg brings you the hall of shame A bank paid a rapacious reseller more than £40 for a two-metre Ethernet cable that cost just 32 pence at trade price or retailed for £4 on a popular online store, in the latest survey of UK margin mugging.…
Now that's integrity: Bloke sinks 7 beers, turns himself in. Cops weren't looking for him
But that didn't stop them arresting him for being drunk We all like to think that we generally try to do the right thing. However, sometimes doing the right thing is not doing anything at all.…
SPARCs fly as Oracle recharges Arm server processor designer Ampere with $40m
Ohm my God On Friday Oracle said it had invested $40m in Ampere Computing, a designer of 64-bit Arm server-class processors, run by Renée James, who coincidentally also holds a seat on Oracle's board of directors.…
Got a pre-A12 iPhone? Love jailbreaks? Happy Friday! 'Unpatchable tethered Boot ROM exploit' released
Coder claims iThings older than two years can be unlocked from Apple's clutches A programmer claims to have found a way to execute arbitrary code on recent-ish iPhones and iPads, paving the way for full-blown tethered jailbreaks.…
What's that smell? Perfume merchant senses the scent of a digital burglary
Fragrance Direct discovers 'malicious code' that led to leakage of customer data Online merchant fragrancedirect.co.uk has confirmed a miscreant broke into its systems and made off with a raft of customers’ personal data, including payment card details.…
Analyse this: IBM punts off algorithm risk biz
Financial specialist picks up part of Big Blue that eyes up quants' models, trades and more Financial specialist SS&C is buying a bunch of IBM's risk algorithm assets as Big Blue continues to offload areas of the business it deems to be non-core.…
What is this, 2016? A rummage around in 7th-gen iPad innards shows repurposed tech within
Bigger case means we can use even more glue! Apple's new iPad is a magical machine, able to take a user back to 2016, the year of the iPhone 7. Screwdriver demons iFixit have ripped one apart to find out just how retro the thing really is.…
Hey, it's Google's birthday! Remember when they were the good guys?
Reg greybeards (whispered, stage left): We remember Google is celebrating its 21st birthday today – old enough to buy its own celebratory pint in many states in the US.…
Amazon, maker of racist and sexist facial recog, to suggest regulations for facial recog systems
Now we're really scared Amazon is drafting proposals for the regulation of facial recognition technology.…
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