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by Rebecca Hill on (#336Q6)
But it’s still not the most popular way to zip data across the pond Almost half of the organisations surveyed by the International Association of Privacy Professionals say they will use the Privacy Shield data-sharing framework in the next year.…
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The Register
| Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
| Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
| Copyright | Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing |
| Updated | 2025-11-10 21:15 |
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by Rebecca Hill on (#336M3)
Hadoop-flinger promises one service to manage multiple platforms and use cases Hortonworks has launched an enterprise-scale data management service for multiple platforms and environments that will capture data-in-motion or at rest.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#336DN)
Bold claim by WND-UK grand fromage UK-based Sigfox network operator WND-UK has opened up a little on why it thinks Sigfox is significantly better, in security terms, than other competing Internet of Things connectivity standards.…
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by John Leyden on (#3366C)
Oops, did someone forget to turn on 2FA? Deloitte, one of the world's "big four" accountancy firms, has fallen victim to a cyberattack that exposed sensitive emails to hackers.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#3362S)
Gets its mitts on juicy GDPR-friendly data security tech German enterprise giant SAP has bought customer identity management firm Gigya for a reported $350m.…
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by John Leyden on (#335WF)
Which is to say neither do it Security researchers have discovered that two popular home automation systems are vulnerable to attacks.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#335P9)
Redmond also shows off SQL Server 2017 and internal Bing Microsoft has kicked off its annual Ignite conference with a fresh crop of products and services for the enterprise.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#335PB)
Too small for lasers, too big for nets Fresh from showing off its gotta-zap-'em-all Dragonfire laser cannon, the Ministry of Defence is now buying a £20m anti-drone system.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#335HE)
A referee would have stopped this fight While the iPhone 8 retains the same unremarkable design for the fourth year running, the internals are a different story. Thanks to extraordinary improvements in semiconductor design, it has been able to shrink the capacity and size of its battery pack, while opening up a significant performance lead over Qualcomm and Samsung.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#335DD)
Oxford students top of the pile with whopping £45k salary Computer science graduates are some of the highest earners six months after leaving university, according to The Sunday Times' annual Good University Guide.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#335DE)
Now with added NVMe-over-fabrics support Analysis Every two years or so NetApp brings out a new E Series flash box that stores more and goes faster than the last one. This month we have the EF570 arriving, updating the 2015-launched EF560. NetApp claims benchmark-backed price/performance leadership and NVMe-over-fabrics support, and we reckon this deservers a closer look.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#3359Q)
Why IBM's cancer projects sounds like Expert Systems Mk.2 Analysis "OK, the error rate is terrible, but it's Artificial Intelligence – so it can only improve!"…
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by Paul Kunert on (#3356H)
Lands Preben Fjeld Lenovo confirmed to the UK teamsters this morning at 9am that a new boss is set to parachute into the vacant MD’s hot seat locally in a little under six weeks.…
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by Stuart Burns on (#33552)
Intel chippery tech mitigates the most careless of workers Sponsored We can all agree that endpoint security is important – and also that it is a pain to enforce. Because of people. Worker carelessness is the most potent threat to endpoint security, according to US IT decision makers.…
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by SA Mathieson on (#3353J)
A star performer producing fission-free plasma power Geek's Guide to Britain I’m in a room that, in normal circumstances, is not fit for human habitation. It features a number of big red buttons surrounded by illuminated yellow rings – just in case. “Push button to switch off Jet. Press only in case of extreme emergency,†the signs read, informatively.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#3353M)
Once switches become just another function to spawn, you'll need to know how they'll fare If you fancy wrapping your mind around the complexities that make virtual switches (vSwitches) hard to benchmark, an IETF informational RFC is worth a read.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#33525)
Bacon, lettuce, tomato? No, loads of tasty bytes, layers and topologies Roundup Hungry for storage news? Tuck into this bulging storage sarnie for breakfast.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#33526)
Written in Python, it's not perfect – but it's pretty cool The Rubik’s Cube is one of those toys that just won't go away. Solving it is either something you can do in minutes to impress, or find so hard you end up using it as a paperweight.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#334YY)
Firm that Trump banned from another silicon sale scoops GPU tech outfit cored by Apple British chip designer Imagination Technologies Group has sold itself to China-aligned private equity outfit Canyon Bridge.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#334YZ)
Then Loop – or, at least, a future version of it – may be for you Review It's become a phrase repeatedly so frequently, it almost feels like a cliché: if you're not paying for the product, you are the product.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#334SV)
Particle streams unlikely to come from within the Milky Way The most energetic cosmic rays bombarding Earth originate from outside our Milky Way Galaxy, according to research published just before the weekend.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#334R6)
Share my car? I'd rather walk, punters tell Australian survey Australian researchers predict that the rise of the autonomous vehicle will make congestion worse.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#334PT)
Mission plan: retrieve lost votes from deep within black hole of democratic disillusionment Australia's government has committed to starting a space agency, but there are no details about its mission other than a vague commitment to helping industry.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#334H1)
No prize, because it's too easy: SVR Tracking had an unsecured AWS S3 bucket A US outfit that sells vehicle tracking services has been accused of leaving more than half a million records in a leaky AWS S3 bucket.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#334H2)
Power outage of software crash, depending on who you listen to Sydney airport was in chaos on the first Monday of the Australian state of New South Wales' spring school holidays, after air traffic controllers had to revert to manual operations.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#334EW)
Daesh-bags give up on writing their own attack code, copy successful hackers DerbyCon An analysis of the hacking groups allying themselves to Daesh/ISIS has shown that about 18 months ago the religious fanatics stopped trying to develop their own secure communications and hacking tools and instead turned to the criminal underground to find software that actually works.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#334BJ)
Feed antenna collapses, dropping debris onto main dish In the midst of the humanitarian disaster unfolding after Puerto Rico was battered by Hurricane Maria, astronomers working at the Arecibo radio telescope have reported damage that will leave it unable to operate for months.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3347V)
If you've got a lazy US$100k to $150k, a piece of history can be yours on Wednesday A replica of Sputnik-1 used to test the real thing's performance goes to auction this week.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#3341V)
Facebook gives up on share plan that would give Zuck control forever, even if he worked for government Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg's personal challenge for 2017 was “to have visited and met people in every state in the US by the end of the year.†He'd already visited 20, so the effort to tick off the other 30 means he's travelled rather a lot in 2017. That Facebook also hired former Obama campaign manager David Plouffe meant that many have observed his travels look like just the sort of thing a political aspirant would do to lay the foundations for a tilt at elected office. The theory was helped by a 2016 proposal to let Zuckerberg retain control of Facebook even if he stepped away from running the company to work in government.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#3302A)
Heavy-handed tactics during lead up to independence referendum The Spanish government has come under increasing criticism for raiding the offices of the .cat internet registry in the lead-up to a referendum on Catalan's independence.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#32Z6K)
Doesn’t stop them trying to put the frighteners, tho DerbyCon Security vendors are inserting language into their products' terms and conditions that attempt to silence critics, folks attending this year's DerbyCon conference were told on Friday.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#32Z4Q)
Hybrid BSD pact will be replaced by MIT deal for some projects Faced with growing dissatisfaction about licensing requirements for some of its open-source projects, Facebook today said it will move React, Jest, Flow, and Immutable.js under the MIT license next week.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#32YZZ)
...And here's how DerbyCon A sprinkle of code and an understanding of the Windows digital certificate process is all that's needed for a miscreant to sneak malware past Microsoft's application whitelist within a corporate environment.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#32YXN)
See no evil, hear no evil, speak of no evil Analysis No one at Facebook had any idea anyone might use its ad tools to target "Jew haters," said COO Sheryl Sandberg earlier this week.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#32YRJ)
Now is a good time to go check your own Amazon settings. It's OK, we'll wait Yet another major company has burned itself by failing to properly secure its cloud storage instances. Yes, it's Verizon.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#32YG1)
Change the name to A-d'oh!-be An absent-minded security staffer just accidentally leaked Adobe's private PGP key onto the internet.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#32YD4)
And who's going to stand up for the Arnold Palmer? In what might well be the most California thing ever, America's golden state has settled a lawsuit against sports drink maker Gatorade for sullying the good name of water.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#32XTY)
And things are looking even worse for the X iFixit’s teardown of the new iPhone 8 confirms that the screen and battery remain relatively replaceable, despite the addition of Qi-compatible wireless charging coils in the unit.…
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by John Leyden on (#32XQ4)
I don't know which is worse An IoT botnet is making a nuisance of itself online after becoming a conduit for spam distribution.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#32XM7)
Consultation opens on codes of practice for Digital Economy Act The UK government has offered more detail on how public authorities can pass around the data they hold on citizens – a mere five months after the Digital Economy Act passed into law.…
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by John Leyden on (#32XDB)
But pen-testers have questioned the figures Security vulnerabilities across the finance sector have increased more than fivefold (418 per cent) in the last four years, according to a study by NCC Group.…
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by Team Register on (#32XAS)
It's getting mighty crowded at MCubed Events In just over a fortnight we'll be gathering some of the brightest minds in AI, ML and data science together – so of course we'd really like to see you there.…
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by Rebecca Hill on (#32X7G)
Neighbours, everybody needs good neighbours Microsoft has revealed the location of its flagship UK store – just up the road from Apple's flamboyant, tree-lined Regent Street shop.…
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What a carve-up! A kebab shop owner who had sliced off a chunk of his takings and hid it from the taxman has been sent down for 30 months.…
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by Andrew Silver on (#32X2P)
Smart contracts language easy to use and create exploits with An Ethereum-backed contest has revealed a few new tricks for disguising malware as the harmless code the network uses to transfer and manipulate funds: digital smart contracts.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#32X14)
Inside ITP, Safari's third-party cookie zapper Can the world's biggest tech company tame the Wild West of the digital ad industry as its data slurping becomes ever more intrusive? Since Facebook and Google are essentially colluding with behavioural data collection, and Microsoft has given up the fight for user privacy, few companies have Apple's means or incentive. But for Apple, privacy doesn't hit its bottom line, and might even increase it.…
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