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 2025-07-13 16:30
Tintri rescued by DDN just hours after filing for Chapter 11
Customer support to be saved, roadmap assurances delivered Exclusive DataDirect Networks (DDN) has come to the rescue of Tintri just hours after the array maker filed for bankruptcy in the US under Chapter 11.…
Boffin botheration as IET lifts axe on 20-year-old email alias service
IET phone home. Just don't email... A decision by the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET) to axe an ageing email alias service has left some of its members a-quiver with indignation.…
It's mid-year report time, let's see how secure corporate networks are. Spoiler alert: Not at all
Pen test bods probe about a dozen orgs – all fail Companies are still leaving basic security flaws and points of entry wide open for hackers to exploit.…
Shop-lock, stock drop and barrelled results: Nasdaq threatens Tintri with delisting
It's not looking good for array-flinger The noose around Tintri's neck tightened today as Nasdaq confirmed it will delist the company's stock on Thursday July 12.…
Former wig-wearing Twitterphobe replaces Hancock as UK.gov's Secretary of Fun
Jeremy Wright fourth MP to lead DCMS since 2016 Today's reshuffle of UK politicos sees Jeremy Wright – a man whose parody account has seen more activity in 12 hours than his real one has in the past three years – appointed Secretary of Fun.…
Fresh cup of WTF with lunch? TeamViewer's big in Twitter's domination-as-a-service scene
Sysadmins seeking help with remote control software find something quite different Users taking to Twitter to moan about TeamViewer have received a bit of a shock when attempting to use the eponymous hashtag.…
US taxmen want an AI to do the security checks it seemingly can't do itself
That would be all of it then The US tax authority – the Internal Revenue Service – is looking at how AI can secure and protect taxpayers’ data held on its servers.…
Vodafone emits new wearable ... kid-trackers
Creepy? Nah. Selling peace of mind to hyper anxious parents The best thing in two new consumer wearables Vodafone launched today is not mentioned by the firm itself: each does away with the need for a smartphone.…
Evil third-party screens on smartphones are able to see all that you poke
Of course researchers added machine learning to the mix too Smartphone hackers can glean secrets by analysing touchscreen user interactions, according to new research.…
Outage outrage: TSB app offers users a TITSUP* encore
Customers report Terribly Slow Banking Updated A UK bank's website and mobile app have flatlined this morning – and there are no prizes for guessing which embattled financial firm is struggling.…
CEST la vie, IR35 workers: HMRC sets out stall for ignoring Mutuality of Obligation
Don't have a cow, but taxman test disappears MOO HMRC has attracted further ire from contractors affected by plans to squeeze them for a bit more tax under IR35 rules.…
Big contenders in the broadband chart this week, but who will be #1? Well, not Britain
Down four places to 35th – and beaten by Madagascar Britain's place in global broadband speed rankings has slipped four places to 35th, according to a survey.…
New AWS auto-scaler started life as private show for Netflix
Amazon’s own auto-scaler now available for third-party apps AWS has announced that “Application Auto Scaling can be used to add scaling to any services that you build on AWS”, and Netflix has revealed the new feature started life as a custom job for the vid-streaming company.…
I think I'm a clone now: Chinese AMD Epyc-like server chips appear in China. What gives?
We answer your questions in five minutes Watercooler Hey El Reg, over the past few days I've seen news that Chinese chip biz Hygon is producing server-grade processors virtually identical to AMD Epyc processors. I'm kinda getting deja vu – you, too?…
Brown pants moment for BlueJeans: Dozens of AV tools scream its vid chat code is malware
How it all happened (clue: unsigned library loaded) Programmers at videoconferencing software house BlueJeans have been living through a developer's nightmare the past month or so – antivirus packages falsely labeling their code as malware.…
BGP borked? Blame the net's big boppers
Researcher says routes are leaking because ISP giants aren't filtering route info The Internet's fundamental routing infrastructure, the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), is so fragile that errors in one to four per cent of ISP route filters can propagate bad routes.…
Malware-slinging scum copied D-Link's code-signing certificates to dress up PC nasties
Password-stealing backdoor lobbed at Windows boxes Security researchers have warned that someone's obtained copies of code-signing certificates from two Taiwanese companies – and is using them to sign malware.…
Freshly baked storage: Take a pinch of Intel Skylake silicon, some flash powder, sprinkle into IBM's FlashSystem
9100 and 9150 arrays slide out of the oven, added to line up IBM today added new models to its FlashSystem line to more than double the family's maximum capacity, push performance higher with Intel Skylake processors, and strengthen its NVMe-over-fabrics capabilities.…
Nissan 'fesses up to fudging emissions data
Who needs software when humans can fake it for you? Nissan, last year accused by UK consumer magazine Which? of faking emissions data, has admitted its own “dieselgate”.…
You're indestructible, always believe in 'cause you are Go! Microsoft reinvents netbook with US$399 ‘Surface Go’
Ten-inch Win 10 S Pentium tablet. Keyboard, pen $99 each Microsoft has revealed its long-rumoured smaller Surface device – and to The Register’s mind it looks a lot like the re-invention of the netbook.…
Google’s Android Emulator gains AMD and Hyper-V support
But Intel’s HAXM is still ‘Droid’s preferred hypervisor Google’s given its Android Emulator a tickle to add support for AMD processors and Microsoft’s Hyper-V.…
Astroboffins spy the brightest quasar that lit the universe's dark ages
The light has only taken 13 billion years to reach us Scientists have spotted the brightest ancient quasar formed when the universe was less than billion years old, according to research published in The Astrophysical Journal.…
Apple emits iPhone cop-block update – plus iOS, macOS, Safari patches
Grab those updates, including iOS 11.4.1 which may close off USB to prying Feds Apple has released the latest version of its mobile operating system complete with its Fed-blocking option.…
Apple pushes out Fed-blocking iPhone update and app patches
iOS 11.4.1 is out and the USB is closed for business Apple has released the latest version of its mobile operating system complete with its Fed-blocking new option.…
Trump's Supreme Court pick will decide critical tech issues for decades – so what are the views of the contenders?
Privacy, net neutrality, mass surveillance... the small stuff On Monday, President Trump is expected to announce his pick for the next US Supreme Court Justice – a decision that will come with huge implications for technology and privacy.…
Sueball claims Apple broke hacking laws with iOS batt throttling code
30 per cent error fix was a violation of CFAA, claim scores of angry fans The saga of class-action lawsuits looming over Apple's iOS battery management took a new turn last week – as the Cupertino giant was accused of violating American hacking laws.…
An $18m supercomputer to simulate brains of mice in the land of Swiss cheese. How apt, HPE
Wow, the SGI brand. What a blast from the past, sorry, future HPE has sold an SGI 8600 supercomputer system to a Swiss research institute for the Blue Brain Project’s modeling of a mouse brain’s thalamus and neocortex.…
Microsoft might not support Windows XP any more, but GandCrab v4.1 ransomware does
Charming. First worm able to infect legacy systems has a module called 'network f*cker' Miscreants have developed the first strain of ransomware worm capable of infecting legacy systems, such as Windows XP and 2003.…
Cops suspect Detroit fuel station was hacked before 10 drivers made off with 2.3k 'free' litres
But experts aren't convinced... Updated Police suspect that high-tech thieves may have hacked into a Detroit petrol station before stealing 600 US gallons (2,271 litres) of fuel.…
Absolutely... fabless: Marvell swallows a large dose of Cavium
CPUs, HBAs making up for disk drive controller decline Analysis Fabless semiconductor company Marvell has become 40 per cent bigger today by completing its $6bn Cavium gobble.…
Basho investor to pay up $20m in damages for campaign that put biz on 'greased slide to failure'
Hostile takeover drove firm into the ground An investment fund and its manager have been ordered to pay up $20.3m after "misinformation, threats and combative behaviour" helped put NoSQL database biz Basho on a "greased slide to failure".…
Qualcomm data centre tech veep jumps ship
Whither the Centriq now? Qualcomm's veep of data centre technologies, Dileep Bhandarkar, has left the company, it appears.…
Leatherbound analogue password manager: For the hipster who doesn't mind losing everything
Notebook undermines years of good security hygiene with style News reaches us that will leave password management outfits quaking in their boots. The Conran Shop has a solution for forgetful users, and it is a snip at a mere £22.…
Slow-mo Tintri train-crash continues: Firm shuts up shop across Europe
Reg cries out into the voicemail void: Is anybody home? Tintri has shut down across EMEA according to claims from company insiders, customers have been left with no discernible support function and some staff told us they were laid off without any pay for June or redundancy terms.…
Hardware rumours, goat-spanking search engines and plenty of Azure. It's last week in Redmond
Bing curries favour with England. Not so much Croatia New builds, no outages and a few brokenhearted fanboys. It's the week at Microsoft.…
Roll up the cloud blanket, stash the flash fireworks, time for a storage picnic
Hot dog! That's a lot of post 4-July week storage You'd be forgiven for feeling a bit like a runner-up at the annual Nathan's Hot Dog eating contest this morning; there was not that much storage tech news to digest last week. However, there's also a lot more to expect over the coming week, as the industry – mostly based Stateside – recovers from its extended 4th of July celebrations.…
Cancelled in Crawley? At least your train has free Wi-Fi now, right?
Why your connection is as slow as the service itself Wi-Fi has been creeping its way on to UK trains over the last few years as the government seeks to deal with the issue of mobile dead-zones by getting the train companies to provide free connectivity.…
Tired sysadmin plugged cable into wrong port, unleashed a 'virus'
And then his colleagues pulled an all-nighter failing to fix it Who, me? Welcome once more to “Who, me?”, in which Reg readers ‘fess up to messes they made in the pursuit of IT excellence.…
Open plan offices flop – you talk less, IM more, if forced to flee a cubicle
Scratch the surface and most of us are misanthropic recluses Open plan offices don’t deliver their promised benefits of more face-to-face collaboration and instead make us misanthropic recluses and more likely to use electronic communications tools.…
'Domain Factory' confirms January 2018 data breach
German name 'n' hosting outfit tells customers told to reset passwords after hacker taunts German hosting company Domainfactory has taken down its forums after someone posted messages alleging to have compromised the company.…
GitHub given Windows 9x's awesome and so very modern look
'GitHub Windows Edition' is not a Microsoft atrocity, just wicked fun with skins How many baby boomers does it take to set up GitHub? Just one – but you've got to make it look like a 1990s Windows build.…
Nostalgic social network 'Timehop' loses data from 21 million users
Probably wishes it could go back in time and run 2FA, cos lack of it sparked the leak A service named “Timehop” that claims it is “reinventing reminiscing” – in part by linking posts from other social networks – probably wishes it could go back in time and reinvent its own security, because it has just confessed to losing data describing 21 million members and can’t guarantee that the perps didn’t slurp private info from users’ social media accounts.…
Fitness app Polar even better at revealing secrets than Strava
'I spent a year hiding in shrubs, and they just … publish their daily runs' +Comment Online investigations outfit Bellingcat has found that fitness tracking kit-maker Polar reveals both the identity and daily activity of its users - including soldiers and spies.…
Microsoft slows Dynamics 365 update cadence
Twice-annual tweaks is slower than Salesforce and Oracle, faster than other SaaS rivals Microsoft’s announced a new twice-annual release cadence for Dynamics 365, its cloudy CRM/ERP service.…
Australia defies trend for network sales slide, shovels cash at Cisco
Good old-fashioned hardware-defined networking growing like topsy Down Under The router market is stagnating worldwide, but nobody's told Australian buyers.…
Snooping passwords from literally hot keys, China's AK-47 laser, malware, and more
Your two-minute guide to the week's infosec bits Roundup The week surrounding America's "Huzzah, we kicked out the Brits, and will now spell color any way we like" Day, on July 4, is traditionally one of the slowest periods in the annual business tech news cycle.…
AI bots suck at marking written essays, not too shabby at old Atari games, and more...
The week in AI Roundup Hello, here's a quick roundup of some announcements from the world of AI this week.…
OK, so they sometimes push out insecure stuff, but software devs need our love and respect
So sayeth OWASP chairman Martin Knobloch AppSec EU Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) chairman Martin Knobloch wants security people and businesses to give developers respect and love rather than slating their work.…
Imagine a patent on organizing computer files being used against online shopping sites. Oh, it's still happening
Cyber bazaars push back against infringement claims In another sign that corporate America has had enough of patent trolls, this week monster retailers Macy's and OfficeMax accused SpeedTrack in court of creating a "fable" – and asked a judge to kill off its patent infringement claims for good.…
No Thanksgiving parade for patent troll SpeedTrack as Macy's takes firm line
Online retailers push back against cloud storage claim In another sign that corporate America has had enough of patent trolls, this week monster retailers Macy's and OfficeMax accused SpeedTrack Inc in court of creating a "fable" and asked a judge to kill off its patent for good.…
...793794795796797798799800801802...