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 2025-07-09 10:46
Happy Thursday! 770 MEEELLLION email addresses and passwords found in yuge data breach
Now is a good time to get a password manager app Infosec researcher Troy Hunt has revealed that more than 700 million email addresses have been floating around “a popular hacker forum” - along with a very large number of plain text passwords.…
Diplomat warns that tech industry has become a pawn as politicos fight dirty
They see AI, cybersecurity as 'battle fronts' - and rising populism will make it worse - former UN official Oracle OpenWorld Technology and cyber security will be the "battle fronts" of global competition, and artificial intelligence will become crucial to the US-China trade war, a former UN official has said.…
Most munificent Apple killed itself with kindness. Oh. Really?
Why the battery story doesn't add up Analysis Apple’s iPhone slump may be down to the company’s generosity and kindness - according to Apple-friendly blogger Jon Gruber.…
Having AI assistants ruling our future lives? That's so sad. Alexa play Despacito
It's Amazon how quickly these monopolies begin Column At the annual spectacular of crap that we optimistically term the Consumer Electronics Show, I found myself locked into a room with Alexa.…
South Korea says mystery hackers cracked advanced weapons servers
No idea who could have been behind this one... The South Korea Ministry of National Defense says 10 of its internal PCs have been compromised by North Korea unknown hackers .…
Three quarters of US Facebook users unaware their online behavior gets tracked
You mean they are collecting our opinions to sell ads? Who would have guessed it? Most Facebook users have no idea that the ad biz compiles data profiles of their online activities and interests, according to research conducted by the non-profit Pew Research Center.…
Do you feel 'lucky', well, do you, punk? Google faces down magic button patent claim
Israeli company was 'feeling lucky' but lost out Google has won a patent dispute over its famous "I'm feeling lucky" button that immediately connects a user to its top-raking search link with a single click.…
$24m in fun bux stolen from crypto-mogul. Now he fires off huge fraud charge. Like, RICO, say?
Lawsuit claims coin thief was part of a gang targeting crypto whales The victim of a $24m cryptocurrency heist is suing his assailants in what is believed to be the first ever RICO claim involving digital currency.…
RIP 2019-2019: The first plant to grow on the Moon? Yeah, it's dead already, Chinese admit
The poor cotton seedling froze to death as temperatures plunged during the lunar night The budding cotton seed hailed as the first plant to ever grow on the Moon, has, erm, died.…
Extra life! Unity tries to undo disunity caused by Improbable cloud gaming toolkit ban
Community outcry over exile of cloud networking biz leads to terms of service revision Game engine maker Unity Technologies has reversed its excommunication of cloud service provider Improbable with a revision of its Terms of Service that allows game developers to work with unapproved technology providers.…
US comms watchdog's industry-friendly 5G rules challenged by fresh legislation
California Congresswoman claims FCC 'failed to listen to reasonable input' America's comms watchdog – the FCC – has controversially forced local governments to charge a flat fee for 5G cell towers. It's a move opposed by everyone except the mobile operators, and has been challenged by new legislation.…
Lowjax city: Researchers crack open notorious Fancy Bear rootkit
UEFI malware has been in the wild for more than two years The Fancy Bear hacking group's Lojax rootkit is far from a one-off tool, and may have been active in the wild for years before it was first reported.…
There's gold in them thar clouds as Infor guzzles $1.5bn from Koch and Golden Gate
IPO? Maybe 2019. Perhaps 2020. Depends, OK? Enterprise cloud botherer Infor announced today that shareholders were tipping the best part of $1.5bn into its coffers ahead of a potential IPO.…
Huawei’s elusive Mr Ren: We’re just a 'sesame seed' in a superpower spat
Trump, communism and 5G - a rare glimpse into the founder's past and present Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei does not give interviews, so the two-hour audience the firm granted to US media on Monday was a landmark - and perhaps a recognition of the crisis enveloping the company. Huawei faces a rising tide of headlines about its trustworthiness as a corporate supplier.…
Licence to chill: Shrinking data warehouse biz Teradata hires insider CEO
The subscriber you have dialled is no longer available... Legacy data warehouser Teradata has appointed an insider as its CEO, and will be hoping his cloud and subscriptions strategy will get its growth mojo back.…
Iran satellite fails: ICBM test drive or microsat test? Opinion is divided...
Third stage failure means atmospheric fireworks show Warned by the US and Israel not to launch a satellite, Iran went ahead and launched one anyway, but the payload didn't make it to orbit.…
Epic's Fortnite fail: Ancient UT2004 server used for login-stealing proof-of-concept
A tale of XSS, SQL injection and OAuth implementation Crafty infosec bods exploited XSS vulns on dusty corners of Epic Games’ web infrastructure to steal Fortnite gamers’ login tokens and compromise their accounts – using a genuine Epic Games URL to phish their marks.…
Microsoft sends a raft of Windows 10 patches out into the Windows Update ocean
Whoa - is that an Access 97 iceberg dead ahead? Microsoft has released a second raft of fixes for Windows 10 following the monthly Patch Tuesday excitement last week. It has also issued some fixes for its latest Windows Insider build.…
IBM to kill off Watson... Workspace from end of February
Not even using the founder's brand could save Big Blue's Slack for suits IBM is killing off its collaboration-plus-AI tool Watson Workspace from the close of next month due to crappy customer demand.…
Veeam. Veeam. Veeeeeeeam. What was that? Oh, just the sound of half a billion bucks hitting backup biz's bucket
Privately owned firm, er, changes its growth strategy +Comment Backup firm Veeam, privately owned and headquartered in Switzerland, has taken on $500m in surprise funding.…
Outlook Mobile heads to the White House, passes infosec clearance for federal sector
Need to email an order for a s*$tload of hamburgers from your smartphone? Microsoft has an app for that The US government may be enduring its longest shutdown in history, but federal workers can at least console themselves with Microsoft’s Outlook mobile app that has been given security clearance for use.…
Cray will realise 'substantial' loss. But Shasta minute, folks, big iron market will pick up
And... stock-botherers seem happy with that Supercomputing remains a tough place to do business, with Cray warning investors that it expects to report a siginificant net loss for both 2018 and this financial year.…
McKinsey’s blockchain warning irks crypto hipsters
Reverse ferret by reassuringly expensive consultant Blockchain companies are upset with management consultant McKinsey for pointing out the technology is stubbornly stuck at base camp after years of hype.…
The DevOps Salary Report is in, and is great news for American men
Want some more cash? Get some more skills. And perhaps a moving truck DevOps darlings Puppet has emitted some juicy salary data from its annual DevOps survey, showing that the US is still the place to go for an impressive IT paycheck.…
The Large Hadron Collider is small beer. Give us billions more for bigger kit, say boffins
Future Circular Collider hopes to rack up 100 tera electron Volts to probe physics CERN, the European research hub in Geneva, is already home to the world’s largest particle accelerator – and it’s hungry for another one that’s bigger and better.…
China's really cotton'd on to this whole Moon exploration thing: First seed sprouts in lunar lander biosphere
Living in a box, living in a faraway box, I'm living in a box Pic A tiny cotton seed brought to the Moon's surface by a Chinese spacecraft has apparently just sprouted, quite possibly making it the first Earth-based plant to start growing on our rocky satellite.…
Bipartisan Kumbaya: President Trump turns Obama's open govt data policy into law
Evidence-based policy? What a novel idea... Analysis President Trump on Monday signed legislation that attempts to make US government data more accessible for people and machines, though his predecessor deserves much of the credit.…
US prosecutors: Hey, you know how we said 'net gambling was OK? LMAO, we were wrong
2011 ban on interstate, foreign sports betting extended to online lotteries, poker, casinos Last November, US Justice Department officials, having reviewed the nation's laws, quietly concluded that, oops, interstate and international internet gambling is actually illegal. For some reason, that view was only made public on Monday. And for now, this hot take is not being enforced across the country.…
EDGAR Wrong: Ukrainians hacked SEC, stole docs for inside trading, says Uncle Sam
Crooks banked $270,000 in just one move, it is claimed A pair of Ukranian hackers broke into America's financial watchdog to swipe insider info for stock traders, it is claimed.…
If at first, second, third... fourth time you don't succeed, you're Apple: Another appeal lost in $440m net patent war
Yes, it plans to appeal again Apple has, for the fourth time now, lost an appeal against a $440m patent-infringement damages award, payable to VirnetX – and pledged to appeal the decision.…
'It's like they took a rug and covered it up': Flight booking web app used by scores of airlines still vuln to attack – claim
Security hole can still be exploited to tamper with journeys, warn infosec bods Exclusive A security hole in a widely used airline reservation system remains open to exploit, allowing miscreants to edit strangers' travel details online, The Register has learned. A fix to close the vulnerability was incomplete, and thus ineffective, it is claimed.…
Ahem, Amazon, Google, Microsoft... Selling face-snooping tech to the Feds is bad, mmm'kay?
Government facial surveillance harms civil liberties, advocacy groups warn The campaign against Uncle Sam's use of facial recognition stepped up a notch this week: scores of rights-warriors have urged Amazon, Google, and Microsoft to cease selling the panopticon tech to the US government.…
Google to yoink apps with an unauthorized Call Log or SMS habit from Android Play Store
'We take access to sensitive data and permissions very seriously...' No giggling, please Paul Bankhead, director of product management at Google, has told programmers that apps in the Play Store that want access to SMS or Call Logs will start being removed unless the ad-slinger has OK'd the given developer's justification.…
FCC's answer to scandal of AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile US selling people's location data: Burying its head in the ground
Congressman warns telco regulator: Must Pai harder America's comms watchdog, the FCC, is under fire for refusing to brief Congressional staffers on what exactly it is doing about cellular networks selling citizens' location data to dodgy characters.…
World's first robot hotel massacres half of its robot staff
'You're fired' Rise of the Machines™ The world’s first hotel “staffed by robots” has culled half of its steely eyed employees, because they’re rubbish and annoy the guests.…
Start trek, the next generation: PCie 4 flash controller demo flaunts speedy peripheral vision
Controller tech precedes NAND-tastic summer An SSD controller company has demonstrated faster SSD access with a gen 4 PCIe controller that was twice as fast as gen 3 PCIe.…
Rimini and Oracle's legal eagles return to the ring in front of Supreme Court
Top US justices hear oral arguments in copyright battle Rimini Street and Oracle were once again at odds in the courtroom yesterday, as the US Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the pair's long-running copyright battle.…
Google hands out roses to preferred Android MDM vendors
Lucky few get Chocolate Factory's endorsement as Enterprise Mobility Management Google is extending its Android Enterprise Recommended program to mobile device management.…
Yes, you can remotely hack factory, building site cranes. Wait, what?
Authentication is simply AWOL for remote RF control equipment, says Trend Micro Did you know that the manufacturing and construction industries use radio-frequency remote controllers to operate cranes, drilling rigs, and other heavy machinery? Doesn't matter: they're alarmingly vulnerable to being hacked, according to Trend Micro.…
Brit comms regulator Ofcom: Disabled left behind by tech
Have fewer phones, less internet access, says report Disabled people are being left behind by the technology industry - both in terms of services and an understanding of what technology can do, a new Ofcom study has claimed.…
Niagara Falls of cash: Storage startup Rubrik showers in VC moolah
Half a billion dollars plus of funding, and counting Palo Alto storage software startup Rubrik has inhaled $261m in an E-round of funding, taking its total funding to north of $553m and giving it a $3.3bn valuation.…
Army had 'naive' approach to Capita's £1.3bn recruiting IT contract, MPs told
£26m 'deducted' from payments but Public Accounts Committee remains sceptical Senior British Army generals have defended Capita's disastrous Recruiting Partnership Project (RPP) IT contract – despite confessing that the military will miss this year's recruiting targets by 40 per cent.…
Biz game in the mainframe: T-Systems buddies up with IBM
Subject to German competition authority approval, natch IBM is to buy Deutsche Telekom's ailing maniframe unit, according to multiple sources.…
And so it begins: Micron calls its bank manager... we'll be havin' your bit of our JV, Intel
Chipzilla says it has 'options' to source Optane 3D XPoint, 3D NAND production elsewhere Micron has confirmed it will indeed buy Chipzilla’s interest in their IMFT flash foundry joint-venture based in Lehi, Utah.…
HSBC suggests it might have found a... use for blockchain?
Says it used tech to settle 3 million forex transactions, $250k in payments last year HSBC claims to have settled three million foreign exchange (FX) transactions and made payments worth $250,000 using distributed ledger technology (DLT).…
Googlers to flood social media with tales of harassment in bid to end forced arbitration
Group says search giant hasn't changed its ways – and wants the public to know Googlers are launching a public campaign in a bid to end forced arbitration as part of the battle over harassment allegations levelled against the corporation.…
No more Windows build strings for you: BuildFeed has turned off the lights
Blames 'internal pressures' rather than a software giant getting stroppy about foldables As Windows 7 tipped over into its 12-month march to oblivion, the popular Windows tracking site, BuildFeed, issued its final update.…
Non-profit? Into DevOps, CI/CD, Containers? There’s a CLL ticket with your name on it
You just need to tell us who you are... Events If you’re heading down the path of DevOps, Continuous Delivery, Containers and all the rest, we’re guessing part of your plan is to save money, or at least spend it as efficiently as possible. But let’s face it, nothing beats free, does it?…
Huawei's horror show 2019 continues as Taiwanese research institute joins banhammer club
Also: US Commerce Dept blocks export of tech developed by Silicon Valley subsidiary It's only the third week of January, but 2019 is turning into a horror year for Huawei: the company's phones have now been reportedly banned from a major research institute in Taiwan.…
Spektr-R goes quiet, Dragon splashes down and SpaceX lays off
Unfortunate SpaceX workers start a different sort of countdown Roundup While China's rover kept on trundling, the news was not so cheery for workers in the US space sector or radio telescope fans over the past week.…
...727728729730731732733734735736...