Feed the-register The Register

The Register

Link https://www.theregister.com/
Feed http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom
Copyright Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing
Updated 2025-11-05 04:00
Facebook to ban deepfake videos in posts and ads, sort of: Vids must be believable, made by AI, and not be parody
All that other made-up crap? That's still fine, it seems Facebook has vowed to delete at least some fake videos that appear to have been manipulated by machine-learning algorithms to crack down on the spread of disinformation.…
That Pulse Secure VPN you're using to protect your data? Better get it patched – or it's going to be ransomware time
Plug this security bypass... if you can even find the boxes running it Hackers are taking advantage of unpatched enterprise VPN setups ‒ specifically, a long-known bug in Pulse Secure's code ‒ to spread ransomware and other nasties.…
AMD rips covers off 64-core Threadripper desktop monster, plus laptop chips, leaving Intel gesturing vaguely at 2021
This top-end Ryzen costs four thousand bucks, mind CES AMD this week touted a bunch of new laptop and desktop silicon that put main rival Intel to shame.…
Yeah, says Google Project Zero, when you think about it, going public with exploit deets immediately after a patch is emitted isn't such a great idea
The Chocolate Factory's bug hunters revise 90-day disclosure rules Patting itself on its back for motivating software makers to fix 97.7 per cent of the vulnerabilities it identifies within its 90-day disclosure deadline, Google's bug-hunting unit Project Zero has decided to ease up on those racing to patch their flawed products.…
UK government review of IR35 tax reforms? Like a broken pencil, say contractors groups – it'll be utterly pointless
Hold onto your hats, people: HMRC to run webinars, workshops... introduction date still set for 6 April, though The British government has met its election pledge to review new off-payroll working rules for contractors in the UK private sector – though it largely appears to be a fruitless exercise as the roll-out date is seemingly immovable.…
Accenture pays for CSS injection from Symantec parent Broadcom: Yep, it bought its cybersecurity arm
Price tag undisclosed but we're guessing it won't have made seller rich Symantec’s parent Broadcom has offloaded its Cyber Security Services (CSS) operation to Accenture for an undisclosed sum.…
Lenovo intros choose-your-own-adventure Yoga Slim 7: Ryzen spend $360 less on shiny or take a dip in Intel's Ice Lake?
AMD Ryzen 4000 and Intel configs both available CES Lenovo has always been a bit of an aberration, as far as PC manufacturers go. While its rivals have pushed consumers towards one-size-fits-all boxes, Lenovo has steadfastly offered punters a choice of configurations. The new Lenovo Yoga Slim 7, just unveiled at the CES trade show in Las Vegas, embodies that philosophy, touting both Intel Ice-Lake and AMD Ryzen 4000 variants.…
Reusing software 'interfaces' is fine, Google tells Supreme Court, pleads: Think of the devs!
You wouldn't want to 'upend the computer software industry', eh? Google last night strode into the last-chance saloon of the US Supreme Court, warning judges (PDF) that if they did not overturn a Federal Circuit ruling in Oracle's favour over its use of Java code in the Android mobile operating system, this could "upend ... the computer software industry."…
Cloudflare buys browser isolation biz S2 Systems in bid to realize Sun's network computing vision at long last
Infrastructure protector looks to defend people and devices Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince, like his colleagues, has come to hate his company's virtual private network, used to connect securely to corporate servers from afar.…
Wheelie bad end to 2019 for Canyon Bicycles as hackers puncture IT systems
CEO confirms servers, software locked by perps German cycle-maker Canyon Bicycles GmbG has confirmed it was the victim of a security break-in over the holiday period that has all the hallmarks of a ransomware attack with parts of the infrastructure padlocked by the perpetrators.…
No horrific butterfly keys on this keyboard, just you and your big, dumb fingers
Samsung demos keyboardless keyboard in Vegas CES Despite roughly 15 years of innovation, virtual keyboards – like those found on a tablet or smartphone – are still truly hateful to write on, particularly when it comes to penning lengthy passages of text. Samsung's solution is something called SelfieType, which sees you type upon an invisible keyboard, with your phone's camera tracking your movements and turning it into text.…
I'm the queen of Gibraltar and will never get a traffic ticket... just two of the things anyone could have written into country's laws thanks to unsanitised SQL input vuln
Run sqlmap, edit online statutes, gain immunity for life? Exclusive A SQL injection vulnerability on the Government of Gibraltar's website paved the way for any old Joe to rewrite official web versions of the British Overseas Territory's laws.…
Thought 5G marketing was bad? Cable industry sticks with ridiculous 10G branding as another year rolls around
What started as a joke slowly blends into potential fiber reality CES It started out as a joke, a way to repeat the hype-success of “5G” mobile technology for the cable industry. And yet “10G” – standing for 10 gigabit-a-second broadband fiber speeds – may be here to stay.…
ICANN extracts $20m signing fee for $1bn dot-com price increases – and guess who's going to pay for it?
Sorry, meant to say Verisign contributes to 'security threat' education Comment Operator of the dot-com registry, Verisign, has decided to pay DNS overseer ICANN $4m a year for the next five years in order to “educate the wider ICANN community about security threats.”…
Tragedy: CES squeeze forces frequent flier hotshots into economy hell
But... but... I have Preferred Status! CES Annual trade shindig the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) is a big deal. For one insane week, nearly 200,000 nerds and industry hotshots flock to the neon-lit tundra of Las Vegas to gawk upon tech that might end up being picked apart for precious metals by a West African child labourer. And most of those passengers likely had an utterly miserable flight.…
Finally, a good use for AI: Machine-learning tool guesstimates how well your code will run on a CPU core
MIT eggheads devise a better way to predict application performance MIT boffins have devised a software-based tool for predicting how processors will perform when executing code for specific applications.…
Here we go again: Software nasties slip into Google Play, exploit make-me-root Android flaw for maximum pwnage
Apps spotted abusing use-after-free() bug seven months before patch At least three malicious apps with device-hijacking exploits have made it onto the Google Play Store in recent weeks.…
Is there alien life on Earth? Maybe, says Brit 'naut. Well, where did they come from? How about this far-away cluster. Or this 'Godzilla' galaxy...
Infinite diversity in infinite combinations... symbolizing the elements that create truth and beauty. Astronomers have discovered the most-distant cluster of galaxies yet seen – and, separately, what could be the largest galaxy in the observable universe yet.…
Beset by lawsuits over poor security protections, Ring rolls out 'privacy dashboard' for its creepy surveillance cams, immediately takes heat
Platform makeover declared a 'total joke' by internet activists CES With criticism mounting, Amazon's Ring revealed a web dashboard of privacy controls it hopes will slash the number of horror stories coming from customers.…
I spy, with my little satellite AI, something beginning with 'North American image-analysis code embargo'
Vendors will have to apply for permission to sell tools to customers outside of the US and Canada The US government has placed software designed to train neural networks to analyse satellite images under new export controls in a bid to prevent foreign adversaries using said code.…
Having trouble finding a job in your 40s? Study shows some bosses like job applicants... up until they see dates of birth
Employers should de-emphasize face-to-face interviews, research suggests Age discrimination is a top topic in Silicon Valley, and now there's more proof that age may hinder hiring chances.…
Pair charged with murder, manslaughter after IBM Aspera boffin killed in New Year's Eve laptop theft struggle
Byron Reed, Javon Lee in court in Oakland over Shuo Zeng’s death Two men have been charged over the death of IBM engineer Shuo Zeng, who died on his birthday, on New Year's Eve, after his laptop was snatched while in a cafe.…
Cyber-warnings, cyber-speculation over cyber-Iran's cyber-retaliation cyber-plans post-Soleimani assassination
Experts reckon regional infrastructure is in the cross-hairs With tensions soaring between America and Iran following the drone strike that killed top Persian general Qassem Soleimani, experts are weighing in on what the US could face should the Mid-East nation fully mobilize its cyber resources.…
Long-term Linux Mint: 19.3 release unchains the Gimp, adds HiDPI, is kind to your older, less-beefy kit
We run through updates to popular lightweight open-source distro Hands on Linux Mint 19.3 was completed late last year and is a long-term support release with support until 2023, so we decided to put it through its paces.…
GCHQ: A cyber-what-now? Rumours of our probe into London Stock Exchange 'cyberattack' have been greatly exaggerated
Despite 'people familiar with matter' claiming otherwise to US news GCHQ and its cyber-defence offshoot NCSC have both denied that they are investigating a cyber-attack on the London Stock Exchange, contrary to reports.…
Intel teases NUC-leheads with new desktop-class graphics systems and a fast i9 CPU
Deep-pocketed gamers stare into Ghost Canyon at consumer show CES At this year's overstuffed Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Intel teased its upcoming NUC (Next Unit of Computing) desktop — the NUC 9 Extreme, codenamed Ghost Canyon.…
Xerox grabs $24bn from banking titans to fund hostile takeover of HP Ink
CEO and co-chair Visentin writes to HP board to say: Let's get this thing done Xerox has climbed a financial hurdle in efforts to snaffle HP Inc by convincing three banking giants to stump up the greenbacks to partly fund the $33bn hostile takeover bid.…
HP's Elite Dragonfly lappie to let Tile gadget-trackers stalk it till they're Blue in the tooth
Or find it under a crap-pile in your pigsty of a desk... let's be real, that is what you'd use it for HP and Tile plan to hook up some of their kit, with the the latter's gadget-tracking tech shoved into the upcoming HP Elite Dragonfly laptops.…
Linux in 2020: 27.8 million lines of code in the kernel, 1.3 million in whole system
Systemd? It's the proper technical solution, says kernel maintainer The Linux kernel has around 27.8 million lines of code in its Git repository, up from 26.1 million a year ago, while systemd now has nearly 1.3 million lines of code, according to GitHub stats analysed by Michael Larabel at Phoronix.…
Autonomy did count some hardware sales as marketing costs, ex-finance bod tells High Court
HP bad, Deloitte and Lynch and Hussain good, says current Invoke Capital bod Autonomy trial A witness who worked on the Autonomy finance team told London's High Court during the long-running Autonomy trial that the firm had indeed been accounting for some hardware sales as marketing expenses in its annual accounts.…
From Soviet to science fiction icon, the weird life of Isaac Asimov 100 years on
Not perfect, but pretty damn good Comment As the New Year’s festivities wound down a lot of science and science fiction fans toasted the 100th anniversary of the birth of Isaac Asimov, one of the titans of the profession.…
Tune in this month: What every small-to-medium biz can do to fend off cyber-crooks
Watch online and find out how to strengthen your arsenal of security measures with F-Secure Webcast Miscreants are constantly on the lookout for new ways to get at your data, becoming more dangerous all the time as a result.…
EA boots Linux gamers out of multiplayer Battlefield V, Penguinistas respond by demanding crippling boycott
We're not sure if Electronic Arts has even noticed Linux gamers have found yet again that their ubiquitous operating system remains unwelcome in the context of mainstream entertainment.…
A Notepad nightmare leaves sysadmin with something totally unprintable
When curiosity killed the print job. All the print jobs Who, Me? Welcome to another entry on the Who, Me? naughty list, filled with the confessions from techies who were perhaps a little silly, maybe somewhat devious, and yet still escaped with careers intact.…
Rowhammer rides again as FPGA attack, RSA again reportedly up for sale, anti-theft kit to nuke laptops, etc
Including: Tesla and a town hit hard by spear-phish bridge scammers Roundup Welcome to the New Year: here are some security headlines that may have slipped past you during the gorging season.…
IT exec sets up fake biz, uses it to bill his bosses $6m for phantom gear, gets caught by Microsoft Word metadata
And now he faces up to 20 years in the slammer A now-former senior IT exec has admitted conning his employer out of $6m – by setting up a fake tech services biz that billed his bosses for bogus services.…
Late $440m Christmas present for HP: Judge triples damages windfall from Quanta in CD-ROM drive price-fix showdown
Thanks to America's antitrust laws A US judge on Friday tripled the damages Quanta Storage owes HP Inc to $439m for unlawfully hiking the price of optical disc drives.…
Bruce Perens quits Open Source Initiative amid row over new data-sharing crypto license: 'We've gone the wrong way with licensing'
Distributed app platform's proposed agreement 'isn't freedom respecting,' he says Special report Last year, lawyer Van Lindberg drafted a software license called the Cryptographic Autonomy License (CAL) on behalf of distributed development platform Holo – and submitted it to the Open Source Initiative (OSI) for approval as an Open Source Definition-compliant (OSD) license.…
New year, new critical Cisco patches to install – this time for a dirty dozen of bugs that can be exploited to sidestep auth, inject commands, etc
Data Center Network Manager bugapalooza with three must-fix flaws Cisco is kicking off 2020 with the release of a crop of patches for its Data Center Network Manager.…
Samsung leads 5G early birds after shipping 6.7m phones to snatch over half of the market
But that's minuscule compared to handsets flogged in Q3 2019 5G is in its infancy and yet Samsung has managed to carve out an impressive slice of the market, shipping more than 6.7 million Galaxy 5G devices during 2019.…
Brit banking sector hasn't gone a single day of 2020 without something breaking
Yorkshire and Clydesdale latest to join ongoing game of TITSUP*manship Updated It appears the UK banking system is playing a fiscal game of Top Trumps as both Yorkshire and Clydesdale Bank followed yesterday's example set by Lloyds by not processing payments into customer accounts.…
Train-knackering software design blunder discovered after lightning sparked Thameslink megadelay
Official reports reveal 'as designed but not intended' snafu Updated British electricity providers are paying £10.5m after a 2019 outage revealed a train-bricking software design flaw.…
NASA's monster rocket inches towards testing while India plots return to the Moon
Chandrayaan-3 to be a bit less crashy this time around NASA is making preparations to ship the first core stage of its monstrous Space Launch System (SLS) rocket to a Stennis test stand ahead of firing it up.…
Don't Xiaomi pics of other people's places! Chinese kitmaker fingers dodgy Boxing Day cache update after Google banishes it from Home
Redditor finds security camera capturing stills from strangers' cribs Xiaomi has blamed some post-Christmas cache digestion problems after finding itself plonked on the naughty step by Google – which blocked the Chinese tech conglomerate's devices from its Nest Hub and Assistant last night.…
Watch live online this month: Find out how to mine valuable business insights from mountains of data
Tune to hear from NetApp on how to home in the information you need whenever you need it Webcast More business data than ever before is being created all the time by companies’ users, computer systems, and devices.…
We live so fast I can't even finish this sent...
And she wore Pantone 19-4052 TPG Velvet Something for the Weekend, Sir? Call me an idiot* but I have no idea what you are talking about, why you're saying it or indeed what's going on any more.…
SanDisk's iXpand Wireless Charger is the unholy lovechild of a Qi mat and a flash drive
iXpand? Sounds about right for the holiday season aftermath Review If you spend more than £400 on a mobile phone, odds are high it will include wireless charging, which allows you to replenish your device's battery simply by placing it on a flat surface – no cables required. Predictably, the market is flush with charging pads, some costing as little as a tenner. But what happens if you spend a bit more?…
It's always DNS, especially when you're on holiday with nothing but a phone on GPRS
The time a reader found himself in an awful BIND On Call Did your phone ring over the New Year? No? Then spare a thought for those unfortunates who remain answerable day or night to the dread trill of a panicked On Call.…
Snakes on a wane: Python 2 development is finally frozen in time, version 3 slithers on
I'm not quite dead, mutters 2.7 as rigor mortis sets in With the arrival of 2020, the Python Clock has stopped ticking, marking the end of development for the Python 2 programming language.…
This page is currency unavailable... Travelex scrubs UK homepage, kills services, knackers other sites amid 'software virus' infection
Systems still toast since NYE compromise, manual processing only Foreign currency mega-exchange Travelex said on Thursday it was forced offline by a "software virus" infection, bring down a number of currency-exchange websites with it.…
...664665666667668669670671672673...