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The Register is a leading and trusted global online enterprise technology news publication, reaching roughly 40 million readers worldwide. Our core audience is in America, Asia-Pacific, and the UK. We also have readers hailing from Canada, northern Europe, India, and beyond.

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Starting out in London in 1994 as an occasional email newsletter, The Register began publishing online daily in 1998. Today we have journalists in America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and Britain covering the worlds of enterprise technology, business software, and much more besides every working hour: The sun never sets on El Reg.

Many Register readers are technology professionals, IT decision makers, C-suite executives, and software developers – and we're read by technologists, government policy wonks, and other assorted techies around the globe. As a result, we cover hardware, software, AI, and cloud services, plus off-duty articles on space, electronics, tech culture, and interesting feats of engineering.

The Register and all its contents are copyright © 1998-2024, Situation Publishing. All rights reserved. All third-party trademarks are recognized.

After a long lunch, user thought a cursor meant their computer was cactus

Reg-reading heroes snacked on their woes and solved problems with extreme speed

Naïve <em>Reg</em> hack thinks he can beat Christmas food comas once and for all

One man's plan to ruin his holiday for the better

Former NSA cyberspy's not-so-secret hobby: Hacking Christmas lights

Rob Joyce explains how it's done

The winner of last year's Windows Ugly Sweater is ...

Register readers have spoken

Technical issue briefly grounds American Airlines flights across US

Unspecified "vendor technology" to blame for hour-long stop order

How Androxgh0st rose from Mozi's ashes to become 'most prevalent malware'

Botnet's operators 'driven by similar interests as that of the Chinese state'

Microsoft Edge takes a victory lap with some high-looking usage stats for 2024

Lots of big numbers, but market share wasn't one of them

What do ransomware and Jesus have in common? A birth month and an unwillingness to die

35 years since AIDS first borked a PC and we're still no closer to a solution

One third of adults can't delete device data

Easier to let those old phones gather dust in a drawer, survey finds

Are you better value for money than AI?

Tech vendors start saying the quiet part out loud – do enterprises really need all that headcount?

'That's not a bug, it's a feature' takes on a darker tone when malware's involved

Mummy, where do zero days come from?

Jury spares Qualcomm's AI PC ambitions, but Arm eyes a retrial

The victory may be short lived as the chip designer gears up for second round