Afleveringen
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In this wholly sponsored Soap Box edition of the podcast Patrick Gray chats with Damien Lewke, the CEO and founder of Nebulock, about the future of threat hunting and detection.
Damien spent a decade in the EDR and MDR space before founding Nebulock in 2024. It started off as an AI-powered threat hunt platform but has evolved into a broader security data platform that can answer questions, drive hunts and drive detections.
This product is engineered around the idea that a lot of security is a data problem. So, if we accept this premise, how do we solve security? And how much of that solution is about agents, vs building a good graph? And if youâre going to build a good graph, do you want to build it for a person to use, or an agent to use?
This is truly a conversation for the security nerdâs nerd. Enjoy!
This episode is also available on YouTube
Show notes -
On this weekâs show Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news. They cover:
Anthropicâs Fable 5 returning while OpenAIâs GPT-5.6 gets thrown in model jail Distillation, cheap tokens, and AI chat harvesting is an industry in China Edge becomes a lolbin via a new malicious extension An Iranian APT bossâs vacation in a beautiful place goes wrong Much, much more!In this weekâs sponsor interview Daf Stuttard and Katie Warren from Portswigger pop along to talk about how they built an AI security testing product that people would actually feel comfortable using.
This episode is also available on YouTube.
Show notes Anthropic (@AnthropicAI) on X | X (formerly Twitter) Howard Lutnick (@howardlutnick) on X | X (formerly Twitter) U.S. government gives Anthropic green light for limited re-release of Mythos 5 | NBC News Tech OpenAI limits GPT-5.6 rollout after government request | TechCrunch The U.S. government will decide who gets to use the latest American AI technology | washingtonpost.com Anthropic says Alibaba illicitly extracted Claude AI model capabilities | reut.rs How to Buy Cheap Claude Tokens in China | Alex Stamos (@alexstamos) on X | X (formerly Twitter) Synthesis of Exploitarium Mass Zero-Day Disclosure | detections.ai Mythos on your desk? Using local LLMs for code reviews | Risky Business Media Beyond Fable: Can a Local LLM Replace Cloud AI for Security Code Reviews | Security Research Labs Accelerating EDR Evasion with LLM-Driven Analysis | SpecterOps CISA: Windows BlueHammer flaw now exploited by ransomware gangs | BleepingComputer When cybercriminals hire burglars: Inside an alleged Russian effort to infiltrate multibillion-dollar US law firms | CNN Politics | Social Signals Microsoft quietly extends free Windows 10 ESU support to October 2027 | BleepingComputer Edgecution: Malicious Edge Extension Backdoor | ThreatLabz | Social Signals Bluekit phishing kit adopts browser-in-the-middle for login theft | BleepingComputer New macOS malware embeds fake errors to confuse AI analysis tools | BleepingComputer DraftKings hacker 'Snoopy' sentenced to 18 months in prison | BleepingComputer Polymarket says hackers stole usersâ funds | TechCrunch Security Australia's spy chief warns of rising terror and cyber threats | japantimes.co.jp Russian hackers were behind $2.5 billion hack of Jaguar Land Rover: Report | TechCrunch Security Iranian national sought by US on hacking charges arrested in Montenegro | apnews.com [un]prompted.au - AI x CyberSecurity: Notes from the Field: Call for Speakers | -
Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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On this weekâs show special guest co-host Rob Joyce joins Patrick Gray and James Wilson to discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news. Rob served as an advisor to Donald Trump during his first term as president and also served at NSA for 34 years. While at the agency, Joyce led Tailored Access Operations (TAO), and later became NSAâs Director of Cybersecurity.
They cover:
The surprisingly well done Fortibleed campaign Stolen Klue OAuth tokens lead to Salesforce data theft OpenAI wants to patch the planet runZero gets acquired by Accenture, congrats HD Moore! Much, much more!This episode is also available on YouTube.
Show notes FortiBleed campaign used custom FortiGate sniffer to steal credentials | BleepingComputer FortiBleed: Fortinet device credential compromise expands into broader credential-attack guidance | unit42.paloaltonetworks.com Cybercriminals allegedly hacked tens of thousands of Fortinet firewalls used by major companies all over the world | TechCrunch Security Klue OAuth breach linked to 'Icarus' Salesforce data theft attacks | BleepingComputer Polymarket (@Polymarket) on X | X (formerly Twitter) The Korean telecom giant at the center of Anthropicâs Mythos controversy | wrd.cm Beyond Fable: Can a Local LLM Replace Cloud AI for Security Code Reviews - SRLabs Research | SRLabs OpenAI Launches Full-Scale Effort to Patch Open-Source Bugs as It Takes on Anthropicâs Mythos | wired.com Sponsored: Trail of Bits and OpenAI patch the planet | Risky Bulletin Intel agencies: Frontier AI models will reshape cybersecurity faster than expected | cyberscoop.com Embedding Forbidden Text in Spyware to Discourage AI Analysis | Schneier on Security A new unpatchable flaw in Apple chips opens the door to an iPhone jailbreak | TechCrunch Security USB worm spreads crypto-stealing malware via Windows shortcut files | BleepingComputer Android verification is coming: Google confirms timeline and supported app stores | Ars Technica California water utility probes breach claim by Iran-linked actor | Cybersecurity Dive Suspected cyberattack triggers false emergency alerts across parts of Brazil | The Record Tesco moving 40,000 server workloads off VMware amid Broadcom's "abusive conduct" | Ars Technica Trump directs federal agencies to protect US data from quantum threats | therecord.media Accenture shells out $4.18B on three companies in big industrial cybersecurity push | cyberscoop.com -
On this weekâs show Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news. They cover:
Anthropicâs Fable 5 and Mythos 5 get nuked by the US government four days after launch âbecause securityâ Why âguardrailsâ wonât keep the world safe from your AI doomsday machine The FISA 702 statute expired, but the spying can (probably) continue! NPM v12 delivers some protection against supply chain attacks, but not enough. Microsoft has a series of bugs that prevent Windows Update from ⊠updating Much, much more!This episode is also available on YouTube
Show notes Anthropic suspends new AI models after government directive | NBC News Tech Anthropic rankles users with safety-first Fable release | NBC News Tech How a 90-minute White House deadline sparked Silicon Valleyâs biggest AI fight | washingtonpost.com Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) on X | X (formerly Twitter) David Sacks (@DavidSacks) on X | X (formerly Twitter) DoW CIO Kirsten Davies (@DoWCIODavies) on X | X (formerly Twitter) David Shulman (@DavidShulmanFL) on X | X (formerly Twitter) Controversial FISA spying law expires tonight. The spying will continue. | Ars Technica GitHub announces npm security changes to tackle supply-chain attacks | BleepingComputer Why NPM v12 wonât stop supply chain attacks - Risky Business Media | Social Signals Oracle PeopleSoft servers hacked in ShinyHunters data theft attacks | BleepingComputer Microsoft patches Exchange Server zero-day exploited in attacks | BleepingComputer Max severity Ivanti Sentry vulnerability now exploited in attacks | BleepingComputer CISA warns of another cPanel plugin flaw exploited in attacks | BleepingComputer Critical Fortinet FortiSandbox flaws now exploited in attacks | BleepingComputer CISA orders feds to patch actively exploited Ivanti flaw by Sunday | BleepingComputer CISA to require federal agencies to patch some cyber vulnerabilities within 3 days | therecord.media Path traversal flaw in AI dev platform Langflow exploited in attacks | BleepingComputer Microsoft: Some Windows PCs fail to install latest monthly updates | BleepingComputer Microsoft fixes BitLocker recovery bug on Windows Server 2025 | BleepingComputer Microsoft fixes Windows update failures linked to WUSA installer | BleepingComputer New attack turned Microsoft 365 Copilot into 1-click data theft tool | BleepingComputer Over 73,000 French govt employees affected in Tchap messenger breach | BleepingComputer Signal Alums Reveal âEncrypted Spaces,â a System for Making Private Collaboration Apps | wired.com FBI disrupts massive AI-powered phishing service using a million URLs | BleepingComputer Cyberattack shuts down major Australian sugar mills, disrupting harvest | The Record Drug Sites Hijacked Spotifyâs Search Ranking Through Fake Podcasts, Report Finds | wired.com It Is Trivially Easy to Use Reddit to Manipulate AI Search, Research Suggests | 404.feed.press Who Runs the Ransomware Group âThe Gentlemen?â | krebsonsecurity.com :brdKnife: (@[email protected]) | Infosec Exchange -
On this weekâs show special guest co-host Chris Wade, the founder of Corellium turned Cellebrite CTO, joins Patrick Gray and James Wilson to discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news.
They cover:
Microsoft has repos owned, GitHub tokens popped, and a new 0day dropped on them Meanwhile, researchers are choosing full disclosure instead of engaging MSRC Metaâs AI support agent allowed a staggering 20,000 accounts to be stolen! Apple pulls Russiaâs MAX messenger from the App Store and disables notifications Anthropic gives the public our first Mythos-class model but it wonât do cybersecurity work Stripe and Google Tag Manager used in eCommerce website hack campaign And much, much more!This weekâs show is brought to you by runZero. HD Moore, runZerosâ founder, drops by in this weekâs sponsor interview to talk about the AI vibe shift. Everyone is very worried about getting owned all of a sudden, and itâs really changing the cybersecurity business.
This episode is also available on YouTube.
Show notes Microsoft Hacked to Deliver Malware to Claude and Gemini Users | 404.feed.press Researcher publishes GitHub token-stealing exploit, blames Microsoftâs disclosure process | therecord.media Microsoft Defender 'RoguePlanet' zero-day grants SYSTEM privileges | BleepingComputer Microsoft breaks Patch Tuesday record with 206 vulnerabilities | CyberScoop chompie1337 | X WhatsApp says NSO targeted users with spearfishing attacks in violation of court order | therecord.media Over 20,000 Instagram accounts stolen in Meta AI support hack | BleepingComputer New Apple feature automatically changes your compromised passwords | BleepingComputer Apple removes Russiaâs state-backed messaging app Max from its store | therecord.media Exclusive: Anthropic's Mythos can exploit new flaws in hours | Anthropicâs new model is Mythos on a leash | CyberScoop Anthropic Offers Mythos Upgrade for Cyber Partners and a âSafeâ Version for the Rest of You | wired.com OpenClaw AI agent found falling for phishing attacks, spills user data | BleepingComputer OpenAI unveils Lockdown Mode to protect sensitive data from prompt injection attacks | TechCrunch Security Hands on with Intelligent Terminal, an AI-powered Windows Terminal | BleepingComputer Seeking Counsel: Ongoing Targeted Campaign Against US Law Firms | Mandiant Check Point warns of zero-day flaw targeted by ransomware affiliate | Cybersecurity Dive ServiceNow discloses security incident exposing customer data | BleepingComputer Credit card theft campaign abuses Stripe to host stolen payment info | BleepingComputer CrowdStrike, Palo Alto Networks defy estimates as AI fuels cyber demand | Cybersecurity Dive The U.S. Military Quietly Turned GPS Into a Global âNumbers Station,â Evidence Suggests | 404.feed.press New 'HTTP/2 Bomb' DoS attack crashes web servers in under a minute | BleepingComputer Google has quietly cut staff across its Cloud business | businessinsider.com -
In this sponsored Soap Box edition of the Risky Business podcast Patrick Gray chats with Edward Wu, founder of Dropzone, about what AI is doing to detection, response and the SOC more generally.
Dropzone makes AI agents that conduct alert investigations in your SOC, but will the SOC as we know it even exist in the future?
Ed has a deep expertise in SOC tech, having previously led AI/ML detection engineering at Extrahop. This interview is a fantastic look at what the future may bring for detection and response professionals.
This episode is also available on YouTube
Show notes -
On this weekâs show special guest co-host Andy Boyd joins Patrick Gray and James Wilson to discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news. Andy is the CEO of REDLattice, which makes the Paragon âintelligence collection and reconnaissanceâ solution.
They cover:
Adversaries are tracking US troop locations with commercially available location data A new Signal phishing campaign is going after message backups 404 Media is suing ICE to get its spyware contract with REDLattice (lol) Microsoftâs tone-deaf response to ânever justifiableâ zero-day disclosures Mini Shai-Hulud pops up again just as Glassworm gets shattered Much, much moreThis weekâs episode is sponsored by Authentik, an open source identity platform that you can host yourself. In this weekâs sponsor interview Authentikâs CEO Fletcher Heisler joins Patrick Gray to talk about how theyâre keeping up with the bugpocalypse, and also the work theyâre doing to support identities for AI agents.
This episode is also available on YouTube.
Show notes The Pentagon Knew Enemies Could Track Troopsâ Phones for Years. Now They Are | wired.com U.S. says troops were targeted with location data, as senator warns ad industry is a ânational security threatâ | TechCrunch Security DOD location data attachment (Wyden) | Risky Business #830 -- LiteLLM and security scanner supply chains compromised | Risky Business Media US has seized nearly $1 billion in crypto from Iran, Bessent says | Russia claims foreign spy agencies hacked officials' phones | therecord.media Hackers are trying to steal Signal usersâ backups in new wave of phishing attacks | TechCrunch Security We Sued ICE to Get Its Spyware Contract. The Agency Is Redacting Essentially Everything | Social Signals Microsoft calls zero-day releases ânever justifiableâ as researcher threatens to drop more | therecord.media A shared responsibility: Protecting customers through Coordinated Vulnerability Disclosure | Social Signals Microsoft says it will not pursue security researchers after zero-day backlash | therecord.media IBMâs new $5B initiative will help enterprises rapidly patch open-source vulnerabilities | Social Signals Federal audit reveals NISTâs NVD is plagued by poor planning and duplication | cyberscoop.com Hackers Used Metaâs AI Support Bot to Seize Instagram Accounts | krebsonsecurity.com Critical Windows Netlogon RCE flaw now exploited in attacks | BleepingComputer CISA adds exploited Palo Alto Networks GlobalProtect flaw to KEV | Cybersecurity Dive Password manager Dashlane says hackers stole some customersâ password vaults | TechCrunch Security CrowdStrike disrupts Glassworm botnet that preyed on open-source supply chain | cyberscoop.com Botnet of more than 17 million devices dismantled | arstechnica.com Chinese-speaking fraud gang could be stealing millions from 2026 World Cup fans | therecord.media ACCC investigating Olympics ticket scam | ABC Dozens of Red Hat packages backdoored through its offical NPM channel | arstechnica.com Solo podcast: A deep dive on TeamPCP - Risky Business Media | Trump administration releases scaled-back AI executive order | cyberscoop.com Google security engineer accused of turning confidential search trends into $1.2M win on Polymarket | cyberscoop.com -
On this weekâs show Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news. They cover:
TeamPCP breached GitHubâs internal repos. Now what? Some absolute plonker glued Coruna to a hijacked npm package CISA is worried about about open source and wants third party submissions for KEV AI infrastructure is âsystemicallyâ insecure Much, much moreThis weekâs episode is sponsored by allowlisting vendor Airlock Digital. Airlockâs founders David Cottingham and Daniel Schell join Patrick Gray to talk about Microsoft briefly flagging DigitCertâs root certificate as malware. Fun!
This episode is also available on YouTube
Show notes GitHub confirms being hacked by TeamPCP, says customer data unaffected | therecord.media Grafana Labs links GitHub environment breach to TanStack npm supply chain attack | Cybersecurity Dive Coruna Respawned: Compromised art-template npm Package Leads... | Socket CISA chief frets about open-source vulnerabilities, delayed security improvements | cyberscoop.com Anthropic: Mythos finds more than 10,000 software flaws in first month | cyberscoop.com Pardon MIE? | ironPeak Blog CISA asks cybersecurity community to alert it to vulnerability exploitation | Cybersecurity Dive Lawmakers Demand Answers as CISA Tries to Contain Data Leak | krebsonsecurity.com Google publishes exploit code threatening millions of Chromium users | arstechnica.com Millions of AI agents imperiled by critical vulnerability in open source package | arstechnica.com Discord migrates all users to end-to-end encryption by default | The Record Texas AG sues Meta over claims that WhatsApp doesn't provide end-to-end encryption | arstechnica.com Alleged Kimwolf Botmaster âDortâ Arrested, Charged in U.S. and Canada | krebsonsecurity.com Iran-linked hackers target key US, allied sectors with sophisticated spear-phishing messages | Cybersecurity Dive FBI warns about fast-growing phishing kit targeting Microsoft 365 users | cyberscoop.com Analyzing the rise in device code phishing attacks in 2026 | Push Security Trump Mobile confirms it exposed customersâ personal data, including phone numbers and home addresses | TechCrunch Security Kash Patelâs clothing brand website shut down after reports it was hacked | TechCrunch Security Tulsi Gabbard resigns as US director of national intelligence | Social Signals When Certificate Trust Fails: The DigiCert Code-Signing Incident and Microsoft Defender False Positive | -
On this weekâs show Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news.
They cover:
GitHub announced a possible breach CISA leaks important creds, keys in public repo Awful vulnerability in Bitlocker renders it useless without a PIN So. Many. Patches. Polish Government urges officials to ditch Signal for mSzyfr Much, much moreThis weekâs show is brought to you by Thinkst Canary. Thinkstâs founder, Haroon Meer, is this weekâs sponsor guest. He joined James Wilson to talk about how doing âthe basicsâ in security isnât trivially easy.
This episode is also available on YouTube.
Show notes GitHub on X: "We are investigating unauthorized access to GitHubâs internal repositories. While we currently have no evidence of impact to customer information stored outside of GitHubâs internal repositories (such as our customersâ enterprises, organizations, and repositories), we are closely" / X CISA Admin Leaked AWS GovCloud Keys on Github â Krebs on Security Experts Confirm the Fast16 Malware Was Sabotaging Nuclear Weapons Tests, Likely in Iran Iran hackers: Hackers have breached tank readers at gas stations; officials suspect Iran is responsible | CNN Politics War and Data Centers Are Driving Up the Cost of Fiber-Optic Cable Microsoft on pace to break annual vulnerability record as AI-driven patch wave takes hold | The Record from Recorded Future News NCSCâs Ollie Whitehouse on surviving the "bugpocalypse" - Risky Business Media Defense at AI speed: Microsoftâs new multi-model agentic security system tops leading industry benchmark | Microsoft Security Blog Project Glasswing: what Mythos showed us Linus Torvalds says AI-powered bug hunters have made Linux security mailing list âalmost entirely unmanageableâ First public macOS kernel memory corruption exploit on Apple M5 OpenAI launches Daybreak to combat cyber threats | Cybersecurity Dive Zero-day exploit completely defeats default Windows 11 BitLocker protections - Ars Technica GitHub - Wack0/bitlocker-attacks: A list of public attacks on BitLocker · GitHub Catalin Cimpanu: "The Polish government has adviâŠ" - Mastodon CISA orders all federal agencies to patch exploited bug in Cisco SD-WAN systems by Sunday | The Record from Recorded Future News CVE-2026-20182: Critical authentication bypass in Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Controller (FIXED) Huawei zero-day attack behind last yearâs crash of Luxembourg's entire telecoms network | The Record from Recorded Future News Patch bypass allows hackers to exploit prior flaw in SonicWall SSL-VPN | Cybersecurity Dive Microsoft disrupts Fox Tempest malware-signing-as-a-service platform tied to ransomware gangs | The Record from Recorded Future News Streamer Realtime Deepfakes Himself into Mr. Beast, Says He Loves 'Touching Little Boys' -
In this sponsored soap box edition of the Risky Business podcast Patrick Gray chats with Toni de la Fuente, the founder of Prowler.
Prowler started off as a bunch of scripts in a trenchcoat, then became an open source cloud security tool, and itâs now a venture-funded cloud security business. In this interview Toni talks us through how AI is changing the game for him as an open source project owner, and as a vendor. In short, reports of the death of IT and security tooling at the hands of frontier models have been greatly exaggerated.
This episode is also available on Youtube.
Show notes -
On this weekâs show Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news.
They cover:
Mini Shai-Hulud and the TanStack compromise using Github Actions Instructure pays Canvas elearning platform data extortionists More Linux privilege escalation 0days! CISA helping critical infrastructure operators rearchitect their networks so they work offlineThis weekâs episode is sponsored by email security platform Sublime Security. Bobby Filar chats with Patrick about how agentic AI is being evaluated by buyers in a marketplace thatâs experiencing âAI fatigueâ.
This episode is also available on Youtube.
Show notes âMini Shai-Huludâ malware compromises hundreds of open-source packages in sprawling supply-chain attack | CyberScoop Hardening TanStack After the npm Compromise | TanStack Blog Canvas Breach Disrupts Schools & Colleges Nationwide â Krebs on Security Instructure pays ransom after Canvas incident as Congress announces investigation | The Record from Recorded Future News When DNSSEC goes wrong: how we responded to the .de TLD outage Adversaries Leverage AI for Vulnerability Exploitation, Augmented Operations, and Initial Access | Google Cloud Blog Mythos smythos! How to find 0day with lesser models - Risky Business Media GitHub - V4bel/dirtyfrag · GitHub retr0.zip NVD - CVE-2026-42511 Flaw in Claudeâs Chrome extension allowed âanyâ other plugin to hijack victimsâ AI | CyberScoop Ivanti customers confront yet another actively exploited zero-day | CyberScoop Palo Alto warns of critical software bug used in firewall attacks | The Record from Recorded Future News Where Have All the Complex Windows Malware and Their Analyses Gone? Meet Rassvet, Russiaâs Answer to Starlink | WIRED DOJ says ransomware gang tapped into Russian government databases | TechCrunch Iranian government hackers using Chaos ransomware as cover, researchers say | The Record from Recorded Future News Foxconn confirms cyberattack impacting North American factories | The Record from Recorded Future News New CISA initiative aims for critical infrastructure to operate offline during cyberattacks | The Record from Recorded Future News âHELLO BOSSâ: Inside the Chinese Realtime Deepfake Software Powering Scams Around the World How to Disable Google's Gemini in Chrome | WIRED FCC pushes ban on security updates for foreign-made routers, drones to 2029 | The Record from Recorded Future News -
On this weekâs show, Patrick Gray and James Wilson are joined by special guest co-host Brad Arkin. They discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news, including:
The US Government says we just have to patch faster, but⊠Bugs in cPanel, MoveIt and all Linux distributions this week show that patching alone isnât enough James gets mad about lame AI Agent adoption advice from the US and Australian Governments James Kettle and Niels Provos both showed us that any model can find 0day like Mythos And the cyber-assisted theft of cargo results in an astonishing loss of $725 million dollarsThis weekâs show is sponsored by SpecterOps. Their CTO, Jared Atkinson, chats to Pat about the big changes in the threat landscape, brought about by AI, that are causing a pivot away from detection and remediation, and toward prevention.
This episode is also available on Youtube.
Show notes Exclusive: US officials weigh cutting deadlines to fix digital flaws amid worries over AI-powered hacking, sources say | Reuters British cyber agency warns of looming âpatch waveâ as AI speeds flaw discovery | The Record from Recorded Future News Federal agencies must patch cPanel bug by Sunday, CISA says | The Record from Recorded Future News cPanel zero-day exploited for months before patch release (CVE-2026-41940) - Help Net Security The most severe Linux threat to surface in years catches the world flat-footed - Ars Technica New MOVEit vulnerabilities prompt urgent patch warning | Cybersecurity Dive US and allies urge âcareful adoptionâ of AI agents | Cybersecurity Dive careful_adoption_of_agentic_ai_services.pdf User just tricked Grok and Bankrbot to send tokens with Morse code - Cryptopolitan Finding Zero-Days with Any Model (1872) Sponsored: James Kettle built an AI hacker - YouTube Feature Interview: Nicholas Carlini, Anthropic - Risky Business Media Trellix investigating breach of source code repository | Cybersecurity Dive Popular DAEMON Tools software compromised | Securelist Komari Red: The Monitoring Tool with a Built-in Reverse Shell | Huntress Hackers earning millions from hijacked cargo, FBI says | The Record from Recorded Future News Congress punts FISA renewal to June | The Record from Recorded Future News Cops Use Apple Data And Car Bluetooth To Identify Crypto Robbery Suspect Stewart Baker, outspoken voice on cybersecurity and national security law, dies at 78 | IAPP -
In this edition of the Snake Oilers podcast three vendors stop by to pitch the audience on their products:
Ent AI: Co-founder Brandon Dixon pitched Ent, an intent-aware, AI-powered endpoint security control.
Spacewalk AI: Founders Chris Fuller and Tim Wenzlau pitch Spacewalk, an AI-powered incident response platform.
Mondoo: Co-founder Dominik Richter pitches Mondoo, an AI-powered âservice as softwareâ in the vulnerability management space.
This episode is also available on YouTube.
Show notes -
On this weekâs show, Patrick Gray and James Wilson are joined by special guest-host Dmitri Alperovitch. They discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news, including:
The US government is mad as hell about Chinese firms stealing American AI technology Dmitri has an opinion or two about the US selling Nvidia chips to China Speaking of Chinese AI, Kimiâs new 2.6 is very interesting The US sanctions a Cambodian senator for earning mega bucks through scam compounds And a ransomware family is promoting itself as being ⊠quantum-safe?This weekâs show is sponsored by Trail of Bits. CEO and co-founder Dan Guido chats to Pat about how private inference works and Trail of Bitsâ audit of WhatsAppâs private AI setup.
This episode is also available on Youtube.
Show notes Exclusive: US State Dept orders global warning about alleged AI thefts by DeepSeek, other Chinese firms | Reuters moonshotai/Kimi-K2.6 · Hugging Face Discord Sleuths Gained Unauthorized Access to Anthropicâs Mythos | WIRED Newly Deciphered Sabotage Malware May Have Targeted Iranâs Nuclear Programâand Predates Stuxnet | WIRED Hackers deployed wiper malware in destructive attacks on Venezuelaâs energy sector | The Record from Recorded Future News Mystery Around Venezuelan Cyberattack Deepens, with New Discovery of "Highly Destructive" Wiper Risky Business #819 -- Venezuela (credibly?!) blames USA for wiper attack - Risky Business Media AI Tools Are Helping Mediocre North Korean Hackers Steal Millions | WIRED CISA: US agency breached through Cisco vulnerability, FIRESTARTER backdoor allowed access through March | The Record from Recorded Future News US, UK authorities warn that Firestarter backdoor malware survives patching | Cybersecurity Dive Surveillance campaigns use commercial surveillance tools to exploit long-known telecom vulnerabilities | CyberScoop UK regulator closes loophole that allowed rogue companies to track phone users' location | Reuters US sanctions Cambodian senator for millions earned through scam compounds | The Record from Recorded Future News Vercel says some of its customers' data was stolen prior to its recent hack | TechCrunch Supply Chain Security Incident Update Apple fixes bug that cops used to extract deleted chat messages from iPhones | TechCrunch Kyle Daigle on X: "Wanted to provide more clarity about this. Yesterday, we had a regression in merge queue behavior where, in some cases, squash or rebase commits were generated from the wrong base state, making earlier changes appear reverted in branch history. 2,804 pull requests out of over 4M" / X Securing the git push pipeline: Responding to a critical remote code execution vulnerability - The GitHub Blog One ransomware crew now drives half of all cyber claims: At-Bay | Insurance Business In a first, a ransomware family is confirmed to be quantum-safe - Ars Technica What we learned about TEE security from auditing WhatsApp's Private Inference -
On this weekâs show, Patrick Gray and James Wilson are joined by special guest The Grugq. They discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news, including:
Vercel got owned, and thereâs a few infostealer and compromised employee dots to connect Mozilla used Mythos to find 271 bugs, which feels like a sign of the bug-pocalypse Speaking of the bug-pocalypse, is that why NIST is noping out of enriching a bunch of bugs? The NSA is using Mythos even though the government did that whole Anthropic blacklisting thing And DDos attacks hit a couple of smaller-player socialsThis weekâs episode is sponsored by Permiso. Ian Ahl chats to Pat about the subtle signals Permiso uses to detect ShinyHunters-style activity in cloud and on-prem environments.
This episode is also available on Youtube.
Show notes Vercel April 2026 Security incident Vercel breach linked to infostealer infection at Context.ai Vercel confirms breach as hackers claim to be selling stolen data Matt Johansen: âThis is not a good lookâ | X NIST limits vulnerability analysis as CVE backlog swells | Cybersecurity Dive CISA Cyber on X Ransomware attack continues to disrupt healthcare in London nearly two years later | The Record from Recorded Future News Lawmakers ponder terrorism designations, homicide charges over hospital ransomware attacks | CyberScoop In defeat for Trump, House extends electronic spying program for just 10 days | The Record from Recorded Future News Crypto infrastructure company blames $290 million theft on North Korean hackers | The Record from Recorded Future News US-sanctioned currency exchange says $15 million heist done by "unfriendly states" - Ars Technica Hackers are abusing unpatched Windows security flaws to hack into organizations | TechCrunch Mozilla Used Anthropicâs Mythos to Find and Fix 271 Bugs in Firefox | WIRED NSA using Anthropic's Mythos despite Defense Department blacklist Beyond the breach: inside a cargo theft actorâs post-compromise playbook | Proofpoint US Beware scam messages offering ships safe transit through Hormuz Strait, says security firm | The Straits Times New Jersey men given lengthy sentences for running North Korean laptop farms | The Record from Recorded Future News Turns Out Weâre Not Alone - Volodymyr Styran US joins nearly two dozen other countries in striking back against DDoS-for-hire platforms | Cybersecurity Dive Bluesky blames app outage on âsophisticatedâ DDoS attack | The Record from Recorded Future News Mastodon says its flagship server was hit by a DDoS attack | TechCrunch An IT expert explained under what conditions using a VPN can cause a smartphone to explode -
On this weekâs show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news. They cover:
Everyone has an opinion about Claude Mythos⊠even though almost nobody has used it yet CISA adds a 2009 Excel bug to the KEV list, u wot? Adobe also parties like itâs the 2000s, and fixes an Acrobat Reader bug Disgraced former Trenchant exec Peter Williamsâ sob story fails to resonate with ⊠anyone Remember those crosswalk buttons hacked to play audio mocking Trump and Zuck? They were âsecuredâ by the password: 1234.This weekâs episode is sponsored by mobile network operator, Cape. Ajit Gokhale talks with James about the ways to get being a telco right when youâre starting from scratch and solving the security problems of 2026.
This episode is also available on Youtube.
Show notes Lab Space The âAI Vulnerability Stormâ: Building a âMythosreadyâ Security Program Polymarket on X: "JUST IN: Goldman Sachs is reportedly ramping up its cyber defenses in preparation for Claude Mythos." Ananay on X: "Marcus Hutchins probably has the best take on Mythos doing vulnerability research" solst/ICE of Astarte on X: "Th vast majority of CISOs do not work at Google-sized companies, and will not have to worry about 0days" Charlie Miller on X: "weâve gone through this before with early fuzzers, afl, etc" James Kettle on X: "'Can AI Do Novel Security Research? Meet the HTTP Terminator' will premiere at Blackhat" jeffrey lee funk on X: "We've been tricked, again. Many of the thousands of bugs and vulnerabilities Mythos found are in older software are impossible to exploit." Claude is getting worse, according to Claude âą The Register Your Agent Is Mine: Measuring Malicious Intermediary Attacks on the LLM Supply Chain OpenAI's Mac apps need updates thanks to the Axios hack | CyberScoop Hack at Anodot leaves over a dozen breached companies facing extortion | TechCrunch Snowflake customers hit in data theft attacks after SaaS integrator breach Booking.com confirms hackers accessed customersâ data CPUID hijacked to serve malware as HWMonitor downloads âą The Register Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog | CISA Adobe fixes PDF zero-day security bug that hackers have exploited for months | TechCrunch The Sad Decline of Trenchant Exec Who Had Everything, Before Deciding to Steal and Sell Zero Days to Russian Buyer FBI Extracts Suspectâs Deleted Signal Messages Saved in iPhone Notification Database US operation evicts Russia from hacked SOHO routers used to breach critical infrastructure | Cybersecurity Dive Telegram Is Still Hosting a Sanctioned $21 Billion Crypto Scammer Black Market | WIRED The Dumbest Hack of the Year Exposed a Very Real Problem | WIRED -
In this edition of the Snake Oilers podcast three vendors stop by to pitch the audience on their products:
Burp AI and DAST: The founder of PortSwigger and creator of legendary security software Burp Suite, Dafydd Stuttard, drops by to pitch listeners on Burp AI and Burp Suite DAST.
Sondera: Josh Devon talks about Sondera, a technology designed to intervene when AI models start doing the wrong thing by statefully tracking their trajectories. This isnât a permissions suite for AI agents, itâs a way to stick agents in a harness and make sure they adhere to hard policy boundaries.
Truffle Security: Dylan Ayrey, the founder of Truffle Security, joins Risky Business again to talk through the latest bells and whistles in Trufflehog, a security tool that searches for exposed secrets and validates them. The Truffle team has done a lot of work on the remediation part of their product over the last few years, and Dylan tells us all about it!
This episode is also available on YouTube
Show notes -
On this weekâs show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news. They cover:
Anthropicâs new Mythos model hunts bugs and chains exploits together so well that⊠you cant have it⊠âŠUnless youâre one of their Project Glasswing partners The world isnât short on bugs, though. F5, Fortinet, Progress ShareFile, and TrueConf are all getting rekt by humans GPU Rowhammering goes in the GPU, past the IOMMU and back into the host-side Nvidia driver North Korea is spending serious time and money on its crypto hacking Just when the US needs CISA most, they slash its budget some more!This weekâs episode is sponsored by identity verification firm, Persona. Tying digital actions to actual human identities isnât just for banking know-your-customer any more. Personaâs Benjamin Chait says know-your-staff checks belong in high-value flows inside your organisation, too.
This episode is also available on Youtube.
Show notes Claude Mythos Preview \ red.anthropic.com Anthropic Claims Its New A.I. Model, Mythos, Is a Cybersecurity âReckoningâ - The New York Times Anthropic Teams Up With Its Rivals to Keep AI From Hacking Everything | WIRED FFmpeg on X: "Thank you to @AnthropicAI for sending FFmpeg patches" / X Critical flaw in F5 BIG-IP faces wide exploitation risk | Cybersecurity Dive React2Shell vulnerability helps hackers steal credentials, AI platform keys and other sensitive data | Cybersecurity Dive Critical flaw in FortiClient EMS under exploitation | Cybersecurity Dive Researchers warn of critical flaws in Progress ShareFile | Cybersecurity Dive CISA gives agencies two weeks to patch video conferencing bug exploited by Chinese hackers | The Record from Recorded Future News New Rowhammer attacks give complete control of machines running Nvidia GPUs - Ars Technica North Korea's hijack of one of the web's most used open source projects was likely weeks in the making | TechCrunch Drift crypto platform confirms $280 million stolen in hack as researchers point finger at North Korea | The Record from Recorded Future News Drift on X: "Drift Protocol â Incident Background Update " / X Trumpâs FY2027 budget again targets CISA | Cybersecurity Dive CISAâs vulnerability scans, field support on chopping block in Trump budget | Cybersecurity Dive Iranian hackers break into U.S. industrial systems, agencies warn FBI labels suspected China hack of law enforcement data 'a major cyber incident' Russia Hacked Routers to Steal Microsoft Office Tokens â Krebs on Security Massachusetts hospital turning ambulances away after cyberattack | The Record from Recorded Future News Exclusive | 'Ghost Murmur,' a never-used secret tool, deployed to find lost airman in Iran in daring mission A Secure Chat Appâs Encryption Is So Bad It Is âMeaninglessâ -
In this special documentary episode, Patrick Gray and Amberleigh Jack take a look back at hacking throughout the 1990s, from the feel-good vibes of the early hacking communities to the antics of young hackers who wound up on the run from the FBI.
Part one features recollections from:
Jeff Moss (The Dark Tangent), DefCon and Black Hat founder Chris Wysopal (Weld Pond), L0pht member, co-founder, @Stake Kevin Poulsen (Dark Dante), 1990s hacker turned journalist Elias Levy (Aleph One), author of Smashing the Stack for Fun and Profit, Phrack, 1996How the World Got Owned is produced in partnership with SentinelOne.
Show notes Elias Levy (Aleph1), Former Principle Engineer, Google Kevin Poulsen, Journalist Jeff Moss, DefCon founder Chris Wysopal, @Stake founder, L0pht member Hackers testifying at the United States Senate, May 19, 1998 Hackers May âNetâ Good PR for Studio DefCon Archives | DefCon 1 A Not So Terribly Brief History of the Electronic Frontier Foundation Innocent Hackers Want Their Computers Back Breakdowns in Computer Security Unsolved Mysteries, Season 3, Episode 4 The Last Hacker: He Called Himself Dark Dante. His Compulsion Led Him to Secret Files and, Eventually, The Bar of Justice Justia appeal summary, Kevin Poulsen, 1994 Smashing the Stack for Fun and Profit, Phrack Magazine, November 1996 From subversives to CEOs: How radical hackers built todayâs cybersecurity industry -
On this weekâs show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the weekâs cybersecurity news. They cover:
Those pesky North Koreans shim a backdoor into a 100M-downloads-a-week npm package TeamPCP appear to have ransacked Ciscoâs source and cloud environments AI is getting legitimately good at being told to âjust go find some 0day in thisâ Kaspersky says Coruna and Triangulation do share code lineage Iranian hackers dump Kash Patelâs gmail spool Oh, and of course thereâs a Citrix Netscaler memory leak being exploited in the wildThis weekâs episode is sponsored by Dropzone AI, who make automated AI SOC analysts. Head honcho Ed Wu explains how theyâve built pre-canned âhunt packsâ to lead the AI off into your environment to find weird, interesting and security relevant things.
This episode is also available on Youtube.
Show notes Google links axios supply chain attack to North Korean group | The Record from Recorded Future News Cisco source code stolen in Trivy-linked dev environment breach chiefofautism on X: "someone at ANTHROPIC just showed CLAUDE finding ZERO DAY vulnerabilities in a live conference demo" h0mbre on X: "Claude is somehow better at kernel exploitation than creating meal plans." Vulnerability Research Is Cooked â Quarrelsome MAD Bugs: vim vs emacs vs Claude - Calif MAD Bugs: Claude Wrote a Full FreeBSD Remote Kernel RCE with Root Shell (CVE-2026-4747) A Risky Biz Experiment: Hunting for iOS 0day with AI - Risky Business Media Security leaders say the next two years are going to be 'insane' | CyberScoop Coruna framework: an exploit kit and ties to Operation Triangulation | Securelist Apple says no one using Lockdown Mode has been hacked with spyware | TechCrunch Reverse engineering Appleâs silent security fixes - Calif Jury finds Meta's platforms are harmful to children in 1st wave of social media addiction lawsuits | PBS News Meta and YouTube found liable in social media addiction trial Iranian hackers publish emails allegedly stolen from Kash Patel Iran Us War: 'Legitimate targets': Iran issues warning to US tech firms including Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Nvidia - The Times of India Drop Site on X: "IRGC: From now on, for every assassination, an American company will be destroyed" OSINTtechnical on X: "Starlink shutdowns are forcing Russian troops even deeper into Ubiquitiâs ecosystem. " Citrix NetScaler products confirmed to be under exploitation | Cybersecurity Dive CISA tells federal agencies to patch Citrix NetScaler bug by Thursday | The Record from Recorded Future News Using a VPN May Subject You to NSA Spying | WIRED Post reporters called the White House. Their phones showed âEpstein Island.â - The Washington Post - Laat meer zien