
Player FM - Internet Radio Done Right
59 subscribers
Checked 18d ago
تمت الإضافة منذ قبل nine عام
المحتوى المقدم من Social Media Global. يتم تحميل جميع محتويات البودكاست بما في ذلك الحلقات والرسومات وأوصاف البودكاست وتقديمها مباشرة بواسطة Social Media Global أو شريك منصة البودكاست الخاص بهم. إذا كنت تعتقد أن شخصًا ما يستخدم عملك المحمي بحقوق الطبع والنشر دون إذنك، فيمكنك اتباع العملية الموضحة هنا https://ar.player.fm/legal.
Player FM - تطبيق بودكاست
انتقل إلى وضع عدم الاتصال باستخدام تطبيق Player FM !
انتقل إلى وضع عدم الاتصال باستخدام تطبيق Player FM !
المدونة الصوتية تستحق الاستماع
برعاية
B
Bridechilla - Wedding Planning Podcast

1 444- Eloping is Fun with Jenny Mac 1:06:22
1:06:22
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب1:06:22
Want to ditch the big wedding and elope? This episode's for you! Jenny Mac, creator of New York City-based Eloping is Fun, joins us this week to chat about the next steps after deciding to elope, as well as the creative ways couples are balancing traditions with a more intimate elopement or micro-wedding. Find Eloping is Fun on Instagram at @elopingisfun and their website elopingisfun.com Visit thebridechilla.com for all the latest news! BriteCo: Modern Insurance for Modern Milestones. Visit brite.co/bridechilla/ for a fast, free quote today and unlock peace of mind knowing you're covered. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices…
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
وسم كل الحلقات كغير/(كـ)مشغلة
Manage series 1006421
المحتوى المقدم من Social Media Global. يتم تحميل جميع محتويات البودكاست بما في ذلك الحلقات والرسومات وأوصاف البودكاست وتقديمها مباشرة بواسطة Social Media Global أو شريك منصة البودكاست الخاص بهم. إذا كنت تعتقد أن شخصًا ما يستخدم عملك المحمي بحقوق الطبع والنشر دون إذنك، فيمكنك اتباع العملية الموضحة هنا https://ar.player.fm/legal.
Kaspersky Lab's security experts discuss recent news and give their advice on the topics of computer and smartphone protection.
…
continue reading
211 حلقات
وسم كل الحلقات كغير/(كـ)مشغلة
Manage series 1006421
المحتوى المقدم من Social Media Global. يتم تحميل جميع محتويات البودكاست بما في ذلك الحلقات والرسومات وأوصاف البودكاست وتقديمها مباشرة بواسطة Social Media Global أو شريك منصة البودكاست الخاص بهم. إذا كنت تعتقد أن شخصًا ما يستخدم عملك المحمي بحقوق الطبع والنشر دون إذنك، فيمكنك اتباع العملية الموضحة هنا https://ar.player.fm/legal.
Kaspersky Lab's security experts discuss recent news and give their advice on the topics of computer and smartphone protection.
…
continue reading
211 حلقات
كل الحلقات
×T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 365 kicks off with discussion around Donald Trump's recent courting of the crypto world. From there talk moves to Mozilla's recent decision to enable Privacy Preserving Attribution (PPA) by default – and that's got some in the EU worried. To wrap up the team discuss two stories related to A.I – first around Microsoft suggesting that omnipresent AI companions will soon be a thing, and second how AI is now capable of completing CAPTCHA quicker, and more efficiently than any human. How the tables have turned. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Crypto world hoping for Trump election win Mozilla Faces GDPR Complaint Over New Firefox Tracking Feature Microsoft: 'ever present' AI assistants are coming AI just made a mockery of CAPTCHA and that's bad news for real people…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 364 kicks off with a chat around the recent furore around Telegram's problem with unsavoury content. Following that, the conversation moves to a story that might concern people who rely on TOR (The Onion Router), as it's been disclosed that German police managed to de-anonymise data coming out of an exit node, in order to track and arrest owners of an illegal site. To wrap up, the team discuss news that delivery robots have been acting erratic, with some cases of them running over pedestrians, seemingly on purpose. Finally, to close conversation turns to Tamagotchi's and their seeming imminent return. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Telegram will now provide some user data to authorities Police Broke Tor Anonymity to Arrest Dark Web Users in Major CSAM Bust Delivery Robot Knocked Over Pedestrian, Company Offered 'Promo Codes' to Apologize A Tamagotchi comeback? Toy gets first UK store as global sales double…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 363 kicks off with a discussion around moderation on the popular messaging service, Telegram. From there the team move to discuss how one person managed to siphon off over $10 million from the likes of Spotify and Apple using bots to stream music. To wrap up the team discuss two stories, the first looking at how the Democrats in America are using "brain rot" videos, and the second looks at the seedy underworld of stolen mobile phones. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Telegram reportedly 'inundated' with illegal and extremist activity Musician charged with $10M streaming royalties fraud using AI and bots Kamala Harris Campaign Experiments With Ads for an Audience With "Brain Rot" Thieves snatched his phone in London - it was in China a month later…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 362 of the Kaspersky podcast kicks off with discussion around Brazil's controversial decision to ban Elon Musk's X platform. From there the team discuss a story from the BBC around the theft of a voice actors voice, which was used on an A.I platform. To wrap up the team discuss how scammers are looking to use sextortion tactics in order for you to cough up bitcoin and Apple's big problem around 'face swap' apps and pornography. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Top Brazil court upholds ban of Musk's X A tech firm stole our voices - then cloned and sold them Sextortion Scammers Try to Scare People by Sending Photos of Their Homes Apple's Huge "Dual Use" Face Swap App Problem Is Not Going Away…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 361 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news around the right to switch off in Australia. From there the team talk about privacy – specifically if you should have to pay to have online privacy. To wrap up, the team discuss how and why a popular game has attracted so much online attention. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Australians get 'right to disconnect' after hours Should you have to pay for online privacy? Blockbuster Chinese video game tried to police players - and divided the internet…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 360 of the transatlantic cable podcast kicks off with news that Nvidia are on the receiving end of a class-action law-suit, alleging that they scraped YouTube videos without creators' consent. From there, the team discuss news around Taylor Swift AI images being shared by Donald Trump and an additional story around how photography is quickly being swamped by generative A.I. To close, the team discuss a story around how your humble television is being invaded by advertisers. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Nvidia Sued for Scraping YouTube After 404 Media Investigation Swift Could Sue Trump Under State Law for Fake AI Endorsement The AI photo editing era is here, and it's every person for themselves Your TV set has become a digital billboard…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 359 kicks off with discussion around the recent riots in the U.K. and how the UK government is looking to leverage facial recognition to combat trouble makers. From there, the team discuss a strange story concerning how police forces in the U.S were able to locate a criminal via a lock-screen picture left at the scene of a crime. To wrap up the team discuss news that artificial intelligence is being leveraged to help find the 'next Olympians' – however, results may vary. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Keir Starmer says facial recognition tech is the answer to far-right riots Cops Used Facial Recognition on Lost iPhone Lock Screen to Find Post Office Robbers The AI tech aiming to identify future Olympians…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 358 25:26
25:26
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب25:26
Episode 358 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with news of American Cybersecurity firm KnowBe4 getting duped by a North Korean hacker who successfully when through their HR checks and secured employment! Deepfake bullying being used by children on Snapchat. X/Twitter's AI bot Grok is now reading your tweets, however there is a fix and we show you how to protect yourself. We close out the episode with news of a data breach at HealthEquity affecting 4.3 million people. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. · North Korean hacker gets employed at US Cybersecurity firm · Deepfake bullying · Grok AI reading public tweets · HealthEquity data breach…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 357 24:41
24:41
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب24:41
Episode 357 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with news of the Telegram zero-day vulnerability that went unnoticed for 5 weeks, as well as further CrowdStrike woes with threat actors targeting companies with fake fixes. From there Ahmed & Jag go on to discuss a potential hacktivism hit on Disney in response to Disney's embrace of AI, and finally wrap up with Elon unveiling human-like robots. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. · Telegram zero-day allowed sending malicious Android APKs as videos · Fake CrowdStrike fixes target companies with malware, data wipers · Disney investigating massive leak of internal messages · Musk says Tesla to use humanoid robots next year…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 356 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with news around the AT&T 'mega-breach'. From there the team discuss two stories related to AI – the first looks at how AI is being used to help doctors detect early-onset Alzheimer's; the team then talk about how K-Pop are looking to use artificial intelligence to write songs and create artwork. The final story discusses how legendary artist Bob Dylan has banned smart-phones in his upcoming gigs – just how that will pan out is anybody's guess. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. AT&T says hackers stole records of nearly all cellular customers' calls and texts New AI tool could be game-changer in battle against Alzheimer's Will K-pop's AI experiment pay off? Bob Dylan to bring 'phone-free' tour to Edinburgh…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 355 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast begins with news that Ticketmaster's recent data breach is creating more trouble for them than previously thought. Moving from Ticketmaster to TikTok, the next story covers a disturbing new trend on the social media platform, where a "mob attack led by middle schoolers" tormented teachers. To wrap up the team discuss news that Japan has finally "won the war on floppy discs" – surprisingly, Japan is one of the very few countries to be slower than most with the move to digital work. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Ticketmaster Hackers Leak 30K Ticket Barcodes, Share Counterfeit Tutorial Scalpers Work With Hackers to Liberate Ticketmaster's 'Non-Transferable' Tickets First-known TikTok mob attack led by middle schoolers tormenting teachers Japan declares victory in 'war' on floppy disks…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 353 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with an 'interesting' story involving Microsoft, real-time software recording and sex-toy retailers. To go into more details would just be a spoiler. From there, the team talk about how Facebook are the next business to face EU's DMA (Digital Market's Act) legislation. To wrap up conversation moves to how residents in local town meetings across America were being terrorised by people 'zoom bombing' calls and town meetings. The final story revolves around Google's Threat Analysis Group (TAG) thwarts over 10,000 attempts by Chinese influence operators. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Lawsuit Claims Microsoft Tracked Sex Toy Shoppers With 'Recording in Real Time' Software Facebook and Instagram's 'pay or consent' ad model violates the DMA, says the EU 'Local Residents' Terrorizing City Council Meetings Were Actually Overseas, Feds Allege Google Thwarts Over 10,000 Attempts by Chinese Influence Operator…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 353 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news around ransomware attacks, both in the UK and the US. From there, the team discuss updates around the EU's new DMA (Digital Market's Act) and how Apple could be a test case for record fines, if they're found to have abused their market position. To wrap up, the team look at how some of the biggest names in music are joining forces to sue start up generative A.I companies, who have alleged that they're infringing copyright on a massive scale. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Don't blame us for people suffering - London hospital hackers LockBit Ransomware Claims 33 TB of US Federal Reserve Data for Ransom Apple in breach of law on App Store, says EU World's biggest music labels sue over AI copyright…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 352 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with a story concerning generative AI and hackers, with the hackers taking the side of artists (or so it would seem.) From there discussion turns to the US surgeon general calling for 'warning labels' on social media, mainly in part due to the worrying rise in young people's mental health. To wrap up, the team look at two stories – the first concerning ransomware and hospitals, and the second looking at a recent NHS data breach and black binbags. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Hackers Target AI Users With Malicious Stable Diffusion Tool on GitHub to Protest 'Art Theft ' US surgeon general wants social media warning labels Medical-Targeted Ransomware Is Breaking Records After Change Healthcare's $22M Payout Student's flimsy bin bags blamed for latest NHS data breach…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 351 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast begins with discussion around Microsoft's controversial 'Recall' feature. Following from there, news turns to discussion around Elon Musk's frustration around Apple's decision to include ChatGPT in the upcoming iOS 18. To wrap up, the team discuss two news stories. The first covers the arrest of 2 suspects in relation to a smishing campaign, and what the police are calling "an illegitimate telephone mast," converted into a "text message blaster." The finals story looks at how a 27-year-old Tamagotchi mystery has finally been solved. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Microsoft 'recalls' screenshot feature after outcry Elon Musk threatens to ban Apple devices from his companies over Apple's ChatGPT integrations Two cuffed over suspected smishing campaign using 'text message blaster' A 27-Year Old Tamagotchi Mystery Has Been Solved…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 350 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with surprising news that whilst Generative AI tools such as ChatGPT and MidJourney are marketed aggressively, they're not actually that popular with everyday folk – with just 2% of people in the UK saying they use Gen AI in their day. From there talk moves to news regarding two large data breaches, both of which were hit by the same group "ShinyHunters". To wrap up, the team discuss a story around Microsoft's India X account, which was recently hacked in order to spread crypto scams. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. AI products like ChatGPT much hyped but not much used Ticketmaster hacked. Breach affects more than half a billion users Santander staff and '30 million' customers hacked Microsoft India's X account hijacked in Roaring Kitty crypto scam…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 349 25:07
25:07
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب25:07
Episode 349 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with a discussion on Microsoft's newly announced Copilot+ feature for personal computers. This feature, touted to give PCs a "photographic memory," raises significant privacy concerns as it can log everything a user does by taking screenshots every few seconds. Privacy advocates fear the potential for exploitation by hackers and the implications of such extensive data collection. Next, the podcast discusses the recent floods in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, and the rise of AI-generated misinformation during the disaster. The team highlights how false images and videos have been spreading on social media, complicating rescue efforts and public awareness. The episode then delves into the vulnerabilities of high-end car keyless entry systems. Despite advancements like ultra-wideband communications, a recent demonstration by Chinese researchers showed that the latest Tesla Model 3 is still susceptible to relay attacks, allowing thieves to unlock and steal the vehicle with minimal equipment. To wrap up, the team discusses the arrest of Lin Rui-siang, who was living a double life as an IT specialist and a dark web drug market operator. Lin, under the alias "Pharoah," ran the Incognito Market, which facilitated over $100 million in narcotics sales before executing an exit scam and attempting to extort users. His arrest at JFK airport by the FBI brought an end to his criminal activities. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Microsoft's AI screenshot function is being called a privacy nightmare. Brazil's flood disaster set off a torrent of AI misinformation. Teslas can still be stolen with a cheap radio hack despite new keyless tech. He Trained Cops to Fight Crypto Crime—and Allegedly Ran a $100M Dark-Web Drug Market.…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
We kick off with news that Google plan to introduce a new AI tool to help detect if you're being scammed in a phone call – a boon for those who fall prey to scams. From there the team discuss news that Scarlett Johansson isn't best pleased about the likeness of ChatGPT's new voice, which sounds eerily familiar to her own. To wrap up the team discuss two stories, firstly around how an 'AI porn-maker' (yes people, that's now a job) accidentally leaked his own customer data. The second story centres around BT's decision to move away from copper-cable landlines in the UK to an all-digital future – and it's got several people annoyed. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Android is getting an AI-powered scam call detection feature ChatGPT suspends Scarlett Johansson-like voice as actor speaks out against OpenAI Nonconsensual AI Porn Maker Accidentally Leaks His Customers' Emails BT scraps digital landline switch deadline…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 347 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast begins with news that Dell have been hit by a data breach, however details on the breach are scarce. Following that the team discuss another data breach, this time affecting Europol. To wrap up the team discuss two stories, the first around Spanish police pulling data on suspects from sources such as Proton mail and Apple. The final story is around Securelist's latest APT report, looking at Q1 2024. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Dell Discloses Data Breach As Hacker Sells 49 Million Customer Data Europol Hacked? IntelBroker Claims Major Law Enforcement Breach Encrypted services Apple, Proton and Wire helped Spanish police identify activist APT trends report Q1 2024…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 346 30:29
30:29
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب30:29
For the 346th episode of the Kaspersky Transatlantic Cable Podcast, Jag and I dive into a handful of stories that tie back to disinformation, privacy, people persisting, before ending with the WTF story of the week (and perhaps year). We kick things off discussing WhatsApp and encryption, but more importantly how the app's boss understands that it is being used – even in countries where there are bans on the popular messenger app. From there, we jump into the story from last week that impacts users of DropBox. After covering what it is, we discuss some safety measures that can be used by people using the service. For our third story, we dive into the world of TikTok. While the US ban may be top of mind, we are actually crossing the world to discuss a recent phenomenon on the app that ties back to North Korea. It isn't a hack, but rather an odd case of a propaganda song from the country going viral on the popular platform. Who would have thought that disinformation could go viral? But hey, I guess the beat slaps (as the kids say). After that bit of head scratching, we head back to the US where recent research has shown that phishing sites impersonating the USPS are getting almost as much traffic as the real site. To close things out, we dive into AI and porn. More specifically, a new app being advertised on PornHub that allows anyone with the app to see any person neked, with the help of AI and without consent. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. · Tens of millions secretly use WhatsApp despite bans · Dropbox says hackers stole customer data, auth secrets from eSignature service · Why North Korea's latest propaganda bop is a huge TikTok hit · US Post Office phishing sites get as much traffic as the real one · Pornhub's Nonconsensual 'Nudify' Ad…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 345 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with a story from the U.S, where a Pew survey suggested that most American's feel that social media platforms have too much political power and influence. From there the team discuss news that ChatGPT can hack software vulnerabilities and the U.K becomes the first country in the world to ban simple passwords such as 123456 or 'password' for smart devices. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Social media companies have too much political power, 78% of Americans say in Pew survey Could ChatGPT be the next big cybersecurity worry 'Admin' and '12345' banned from being used as passwords in UK crackdown on cyber attacks…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 344 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news that Grindr is being sued or sharing sensitive user data with third-parties. From there the team talk about news from the U.K, which shows that a third of 5-7 year old children already have their own mobile phones. To wrap up, the team talk about news that Meta AI is now inserting itself into Facebook group chats, but it doesn't always go to plan. If you like what you heard please consider subscribing. Grindr sued for allegedly revealing users' HIV status Ofcom: Almost a quarter of kids aged 5-7 have smartphones Meta's AI tells Facebook user it has disabled, gifted child in response to parent asking for advice…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 343 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast begins with news that Instagram is testing a tool to help tackle 'sextortion', or intimate image abuse. Following that, the team discuss how criminals are increasingly using A.I to defraud consumers out of their money. The last two stories look at X and ransomware. The first story focuses on how X is automatically removing "twitter" from URLs, providing scammers with a real opportunity – finally, the last story looks at how some ransomware gangs are trying their luck at calling the front desk of businesses, to try to leverage payment out of them – however, it doesn't always go to plan. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Instagram to test new tools to fight so-called sextortion Criminals ramp up social engineering and AI tactics to steal consumer details X automatically changed 'Twitter' to 'X' in users' posts, breaking legit URLs Ransomware gang's new extortion trick? Calling the front desk…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 342 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast focuses on political news this week, kicking off with a story that China is being accused of using AI-generated content, in order to sow discontent in the upcoming American election. From there the team look news that YouTube is being accused of complacent in blocking malicious videos advertisements in the upcoming Indian elections. To wrap up, the team look at news that a spear-phishing / honey trap campaign is being orchestrated in UK parliament, with several members confessing to being targets – but who's behind the attacks? If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. China Using AI-Generated Content to Sow Division in US YouTube failed to block disinformation about Indian elections UK minister confirmed as 12th target in Westminster 'honey trap' scandal…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 341 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news that a data broker leak has revealed sensitive data about people who visited the infamous island. From there, the team discuss news that the UN peace keepers are being told to shore up their cyber-defences, after warnings that nation-state attackers are actively looking to target them. To wrap up the team discuss look at a story which is itself baffling: one of the world's most wanted men is leaving restaurant reviews on Google, and has done for the last 5 years. The second story is around Elon Musk's Nuralink project, with the first ever patient using the tool to play Mario Kart with his dad. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Jeffrey Epstein's Island Visitors Exposed by Data Broker UN Peace Operations Under Fire From State-Sponsored Hackers Investigation finds Christopher Kinahan Sr left 'digital trail' of Google reviews I'm world's first Neuralink patient…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 340 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news that the EU is investigating META, Apple and Google for "uncompetitive practices". Additionally, the US government has gone ahead and levelled a lawsuit against Apple, for what they see as "monopoly" behaviour with their hardware. To wrap up, the team discuss two stories, the first around China and UK government hacking concerns and how age-verification for adult sites could actually be a bad thing in the long run. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Apple, Meta and Google to be investigated by the EU US sues Apple for illegal monopoly over smartphones Beijing behind cyberattacks on UK MPs and peers, deputy PM to warn The Dangers of Age Verification…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 339 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news that several employees in TikTok were caught covertly spying on Forbes journalists. From there, the team talk about a new cooperation between governments to better tackle spyware and news that the FTC is looking at the upcoming Reddit IPO and AI training data. To close out the podcast, the team discuss news that 'at least 900' websites built using Google's FireBase cloud database may be leaking sensitive user data. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. TikTok Spied On Forbes Journalists Finland, Germany, Ireland, Japan, Poland, South Korea added to US-led spyware agreement FTC investigating Reddit plan to sell user content for AI model training 900+ websites and expose millions of passwords via Firebase…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 338 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with the story of the year (so far) as some people see it – the Kate Middleton / photoshop mix ups. Is it really as big a deal as some believe it to be, or is it just a silly mistake? From there the team discuss news that South Korea have developed a tool to help scan images for deepfakes, but will it be useful enough to be of any use? Additionally, the team talk about the Play ransomware gang and will GDPR shut down WorldCoin? If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Kate photo withdrawn by five news agencies amid 'manipulation' concerns South Korean Police Develops Deepfake Detection Tool Worldcoin hit with temporary ban in Spain over privacy concerns Play ransomware leaked 65,000 government documents…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
In this special episode of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast, we engage in a thoughtful conversation with guests Genie Gan and Ekaterina Burdova about the pivotal topic of Women in Technology, coinciding with the celebration of International Women's Day. Throughout the episode, the panel delves into various aspects of empowering women in STEM fields, touching on strategies for governmental and academic institutions to foster greater female participation, community-driven initiatives aimed at providing support and encouragement, and corporate measures to promote gender diversity and create inclusive workplaces. Additionally, the discussion explores the influence of media representation, citing examples like "The Queen's Gambit" and its impact on shaping perceptions of female protagonists in male-dominated spheres. Emphasizing the significance of representation for aspiring female leaders, the guests also discuss ways to serve as role models for young girls interested in pursuing careers in technology. Furthermore, the conversation highlights the importance of mentoring programs in women's professional development, as well as the challenges and strategies for maintaining a healthy work-life-family-education balance. Ultimately, the episode aims to challenge myths surrounding women in tech and inspire meaningful change within the industry.…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 336 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast begins with news that Tumblr and WordPress are set to begin selling user data for AI training. From there the team talk about META's decision to begin helping assist the EU in combatting fake news and disinformation on their platforms. To wrap up, the team talk about LockBit's resurgence and a truly bizarre Wi-Fi password scanning tool. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Tumblr, WordPress Announce User Data Sales for AI Training Meta unveils team to combat disinformation and AI harms in EU elections Back from the dead: LockBit taunts cops, threatens to leak Trump docs Cybersecurity enthusiast collects Wi-Fi passwords using homemade device…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 335 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with news that Apple are already preparing for a post-quantum world with their latest iMessage update. From there the team discuss criticism around Google's 'woke' AI picture issues. Following that, the team wrap up with two stories, the first around Air Canada's chatbot giving incorrect refund advice to a customer, and a spoon-bending magician says he was paid to create a fake Biden robocall. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Post-quantum iMessage: the next step in privacy protection Google to fix AI picture bot after 'woke' criticism Air Canada must honor refund policy invented by airline's chatbot A magician says a Democratic op paid him to make the fake Biden call…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
In today's episode of the Transatlantic Cable podcast, the team look at news that companies at the fore-front of generative AI are looking to 'take action' on deceptive AI in upcoming elections. From there, the team discuss news that the Canadian government is set to take action against devices such as Flipper Zero, in an apparent fight against criminal activity. To wrap up, the team discuss news that international police agencies have taken down LockBit – the infamous ransomware gang. Additionally, the team discuss a bizarre story around Artificial Intelligence, blue aliens and job applications – yes, really. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Big tech vows action on 'deceptive' AI in elections Feds Want to Ban the World's Cutest Hacking Device UK leads disruption of major cyber-criminal gang Service Jobs Now Require Bizarre Personality Test From AI Company…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 333 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast dives into news that a site called 'OnlyFakes' is offering deepfake photo ID – the team also stay on the AI bandwagon with the next story which talks about the recent furore around illicit AI generated Taylor Swift images. From there the team discuss two final stories, the first around a virus that was released onto the Valhiem gaming Discord channels, causing havoc as it was spread. The final story looks at a recent Interpol campaign, dubbed 'Operation Synergia,' which resulted in 31 arrests and over 1,300 C2 (command and control) servers being taken down. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Inside the Underground Site Where 'Neural Networks' Churn Out Fake IDs Taylor Swift deepfakes spark calls in Congress for new legislation Valheim Discord servers locked after hacker releases virus Interpol operation Synergia takes down 1,300 servers used for cybercrime…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 332 of the Kaspersky Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news that, after the recent AI generated sketch, George Carlin's estate has decided to pursue legal matters against the creators. From there, discussion turns to Mozilla's worry about Apple's new browser rules and British law makers question the legality of live facial recognition. To wrap up, the team discuss news around the recent 23andMe data breach. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. George Carlin's Family Takes This AI Bullsh*t to Court Mozilla says Apple's new browser rules are 'as painful as possible' for Firefox British lawmakers question legality of live facial recognition technology 23andMe data breach: Hackers stole raw genotype data, health reports…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 331 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news regarding "the mother of all data breaches", consisting of some 26 billion (yes, really) user names. From there the team discuss fake Biden robocalls and a swearing customer chatbot. To wrap up, the team talk about the latest craze sweeping the gaming world – PalWorld. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. 'Mother of all breaches' data leak reveals 26 billion account records stolen from Twitter, LinkedIn, more The Biden Deepfake Robocall Is Only the Beginning DPD error caused chatbot to swear at customer 'Pokémon with guns' sells 5m copies in three days…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 330 of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks things off with talk around the potential for A.I poisoning, which could allow malicious actors to turn AI chatbots into 'sleeper agents'. From there the team talk about eBay and a truly bizarre story involving spiders, cockroaches and death threats, as well as China's crackdown on casino's, which has led to an underground boom in crypto-casinos. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. AI poisoning could turn open models into destructive "sleeper agents" Defending reality: Truth in an age of synthetic media eBay pays $3m fine in blogger harassment case China's gambling crackdown spawned wave of illegal online casinos…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with Stuxnet – yes, after 20 plus years, we're still talking about the infamous malware. From there, the team discuss news that artists and journalists are looking to collectively sue OpenAI around copyright theft – let's see how that turns out. To wrap up, the team discuss fake news on Twitter X via stolen gold-check mark accounts. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Dutch man sabotaged Iranian nuclear program without Dutch government's knowledge More non-fiction authors are suing OpenAI and Microsoft Experts: 5% Chance AI Kills Us All Fake and Stolen X Gold Accounts Flood Dark Web…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news that the EU are the next major governmental body to impose AI regulations, as countries around the world race to stay ahead of the technology. From there, the team discuss news that the BBC were able to make a version of ChatGPT which was capable of writing spam and phishing emails. From there the team discuss Securelist's story of the year: Generative A.I and it's impact on cyber-security. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. EU agrees landmark deal on regulation of artificial intelligence ChatGPT tool could be abused by scammers and hackers Story of the year: the impact of AI on cybersecurity…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with news that hackers are paying to gain access to hotel booking[.]com portals. The hack is apparently so lucrative, they're now advertising for access on the dark web. Additionally, the team discuss new content restriction laws being discussed in the U.K, with news that photo I.D may be required to access certain sites. Additionally, this week the team sat down with Vidit Gujrathi, Chess grandmaster and Maher Yamout, Lead Security Researcher at Kaspersky to talk about Chess, cyber-security and how the two are more connected than you might think. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Booking[.]com hackers increase attacks on customers UK porn watchers could have faces scanned…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable podcast begins with news that General Electric are investigating claims of a data breach, found it was found that an attacker was selling access to the business for just $500. From there, the team discuss how U.S police forces are returning $9 million in seized crypto assets back to victims of 'pig butchery' scams. To wrap up the team discuss how to stay safe online with tools like Duck Duck Go and Brave and they also sit down with David Emm to discuss APT predictions for 2024. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. General Electric investigates claims of cyber attack, data theft US cybercops take on 'pig butchering' org, return $9M in crypto Cyber-attack leaves home sales in limbo How to Make Your Web Searches More Secure and Private Advanced threat predictions for 2024…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with two stories around, you guessed it: Artificial Intelligence. To kick things off, the team discuss news that YouTube are testing a tool, allowing selected users to create audio from musicians. The second story focuses on YouTube's decision to force creators to label when AI content is used in their videos. Following that, the team also look at an insightful story around hacking and drug smuggling and how QR codes were (once again) leveraged by criminals in order to dupe victims out of their cash. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. YouTube tests AI tool that clones pop stars' voices YouTube Now Requires Creators To Label AI Content How a Hacker Helped Cocaine Traffickers Infiltrate Europe's Biggest Ports Woman targeted in £13k railway station QR code scam…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable podcast kicks off with META (aka, Facebook and Instagram) will now require political advertisers to mark when they use deepfakes. From there, the team discuss how META and Google are being sued for "spying" in Irish courts. To wrap up the team discuss two final stories – the first around the Royal ransomware gang siphoning off over $200M in ransom payments and the second on the recent cyber-attack against DP World – a port operator in Australia. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Meta requires political advertisers to mark when deepfakes used Meta, YouTube face criminal spying complaints in Ireland Royal ransomware asked 350 victims to pay $275 million Port operator gradually restarting operations around Australia after cyber-attack…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 The Transatlantic Cable podcast episode 323 38:19
38:19
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب38:19
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with news that fans of the Bored Ape Yacht Club reported severe eye burn from a recent event held in Hong Kong. From there the team discuss how to store your bitcoin passwords on VHS cassettes and how AI could potentially be used for ill-gotten gains on the stock market. The team close by discussing how a small town in America has connected all their CCTV cameras into one giant surveillance tool – and it has some privacy advocates concerned. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. ApeFest Attendees Report Severe Eye Burn No One Will Find My Bitcoin In This Copy of Perfect Dark for the N64 AI bot capable of insider trading and lying AI Cameras Took Over One Small American Town…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 322 35:02
35:02
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب35:02
In this episode, we cover Australia's SBS allowing ad opt-outs on its streaming service, exploring SBS's multilingual history and its ad-funded model. We then dive into the use of emojis in passwords, discussing their pros and cons. The podcast also delves into Meta's announcement of an ad-free subscription for Facebook and Instagram in the EU, EEA, and Switzerland. Wrapping up, we discuss the increasing resemblance of long AI conversations with ChatGPT to the interactions depicted in the movie "Her." Join us for this tech-packed episode! If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. · Meta to offer ad-free subscription in Europe in bid to keep tracking other users · Australian video-streamer lets users opt out of ads for burgers, booze, and betting · Life-hack of the day: emoji passwords · People are speaking with ChatGPT for hours, bringing 2013's Her closer to reality…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 The Transatlantic Cable Podcast - SAS Edition! 9:42
9:42
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب9:42
In this special edition of the Transatlantic Cable, we sat down with Igor I. Kuznetsov, Director of Global Research & Analysis Team to talk about Operation Triangulation, including: How Kaspersky researchers found the intrusion Why was Triangulation so bad? Who were targeted by the attack? If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing.…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with news that Okta has suffered a data breach from unknown attackers. The attackers were able to get hold of sensitive HAR files. The 1Password breach was also related, but 1Password are stressing that sensitive user info was not affected. From there the team look at a story around Microsoft's A.I tool integration into Teams, and Google's update to Chrome, which means better privacy and security for all users. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Okta suffers a security breach 1Password discloses security incident linked to Okta breach Microsoft's new AI assistant can go to meetings for you Google Chrome may be getting a new privacy feature…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with news that X has started a trial in selected countries, charging users $1 a year in order to access the platform. The official reason for the move is to cut down on bot activity, but some say that it's a step too far. From there, the team discuss a fascinating story around how some businesses have outsourced training A.I's to workers, for pennies. The final two stories look at a vulnerability in CISCO's IOS XE software (classed as a 10 out of 10 for severity) and how hackers are already looking to leverage it, and another story around how scammers are using a fake emergency tool in order to spread malware. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Musk thinks spammers won't pay $1 a year Millions of Workers Are Training AI Models for Pennies Over 10,000 Cisco devices hacked in IOS XE zero-day attacks SpyNote Android malware spreads via fake volcano eruption alerts…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with news that Sony have are the latest victim in the MoveIT vulnerability campaign. From there, the team discuss how NATO, the military alliance, was recently hit by a databreach. To wrap up, the team discuss the data leak at 23andMe, the DNA sequencing company, as well as how Fortnite is being leveraged by oil businesses. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Sony Confirms Second Data Breach in Months Hackers advertise sale of 23andMe data on forum 'Gay furry hackers' brag of second NATO break-in Fortnite Influencers Push Shell's Propaganda on Kids…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 ICS and IoT – A Special Podcast Series -Episode 1 31:11
31:11
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب31:11
We're kicking off a mini-series on the Transatlantic Cable Podcast, where our crew dives into the world of critical infrastructure with the team from Industrial Control Systems (ICS) research team to talk about research, new developments and upcoming events. The very first episode the team sit down with Evgeny Goncharov and Vladimir Dashchenko to talk about some of their latest research. The first piece of a look at data for Industrial Control Systems for H1, whilst the second was a deep dive into upcoming Internet Of Things threats for 2023. If you'd like to hear more about this, be sure to subscribe. Overview of IoT threats in 2023 Threat landscape for industrial automation systems. Statistics for H1 2023…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with news that NFTs are pretty much value-less. Following that, the team discuss a recent story around Tom Hanks deepfakes flogging a dental plan. The two final stories include news around the recent Sony hack and, "is Google altering your search results?" Also included in this week's episode is a teaser to the upcoming ICS podcast, with special guests Evgeny Goncharov and Vladimir Dashchenko from the Kaspersky ICS team. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. 95% of NFTs now totally worthless, say researchers Tom Hanks warns dental plan ad image is AI fake How Google Alters Search Queries to Get at Your Wallet What we know about the Sony PlayStation LAPSUS$ attack…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with talk around the crypto-exchange, JPEX and how they're being investigated by local authorities. From there, discussion turns to an AI enabled backpack from Microsoft (yes, really), Spotify refusing to ban A.I generated music and fake celebrity nudes are being used to promote a popular shopping site. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Hong Kong investigates influencer-backed crypto exchange Microsoft patents bizarre AI-powered backpack Spotify will not ban AI-made music, says boss Fake celebrity photo leak videos flood TikTok with Temu referral codes…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 316 of the Kaspersky Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with news that Microsoft suffered at the hands of a data leak, this time a whopping 38TB (yes, terabytes). From there the team look at the recent ransomware attacks against Casino's in the United States and news that a notorious hacker is trolling the F.B.I. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Microsoft worker accidentally exposes 38TB of sensitive data Okta Agent Involved in MGM Resorts Breach, Attackers Claim Caesars paid millions in ransom to cybercrime group prior to MGM hack One of the FBI's most wanted hackers is trolling the U.S. government…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 315 of the Kaspersky Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with a possible U-turn from the British government and end-to-end encryption. From there discussion moves MGM resorts being hit by a cyber-attack. Following on from that, discussion moves to Microsoft's odd decision to add pop-up ads for Edge into Windows and a supermarket in the UK had to recall a brand of snacks, as the website on the packaging led to a, shall we say, 'not very child friendly' website. Also, there's a discussion with David Emm, security researcher in GReAT about Q2 IT Threat Evolution report from Securelist. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Government denies U-turn on encrypted messaging row MGM Resorts: Slot machines go down in cyber-attack on firm IT threat evolution in Q2 2023 Microsoft is using malware-like pop-ups in Windows 11 to get people to ditch Lidl recalls Paw Patrol snacks after website on packaging displayed porn…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 314 of the Kaspersky Transatlantic Cable Podcast starts with news that another the infamous Lapsu$ is now behind bars. The gang were responsible for some of the more audacious hacks of 2022, including Rock Star games, Uber and even Nvidia. From there discussion moves to news that CLOP are continuing to distribute stolen data from their attacks. To wrap up, the team look at publication from 404 Media which dives into the murky world of credit header theft and a stalkerware application dubbed 'WebDetective' was recently hacked, with all their server data being deleted. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Lapsus$: Court finds teenagers carried out hacking spree Clop Ransomware Group Leaks Data of MOVEit Victims The Secret Weapon Hackers Can Use to Dox Nearly Anyone in America for $15 A Brazilian phone spyware was hacked and victims' devices 'deleted' from server…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
In Episode 313 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast, the team look at a new supply-chain attack with the majority of victims being in the Hong Kong area along with news that Google have introduced their first 'Quantum Resilient FIDO2 security key' – something that sounds like it's from a science fiction novel but is very much real and could be standard security practice in a few years' time. To wrap up the team look news that Duolingo has suffered a data breach, with over 2 million users data leaked, and a positive news story around Interpol – with the international service arresting 14 suspected cyber criminals, accused of stealing over $40 million in Africa. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Google Introduces First Quantum Resilient FIDO2 Security Key Implementation Interpol arrests 14 suspected cybercriminals for stealing $40 million Scraped data of 2.6 million Duolingo users released on hacking forum A New Supply Chain Attack Hit Close to 100 Victims…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 312 27:18
27:18
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب27:18
In Episode 312 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast , we delve into how cybercriminals exploit hacked websites, particularly WordPress-based ones, for phishing. Discover their tactics, risks involved, and signs of such attacks. We also uncover phishers' strategies, from hacking sites to evading detection, along with concerns about AI hiring tools. Additionally, we discuss the rise of AI chatbots in HR, covering efficiency gains, bias concerns, legislative actions, and motivations behind their adoption. Lastly, we highlight a cyberattack on the UK's Electoral Commission in 2022, accessing voter data, raising privacy concerns despite no impact on electoral processes.…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable Podcast Episode 311 22:40
22:40
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب22:40
We kick off Episode 311 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast by talking about how Mexican cartels are using the US government's CBP One app to help immigrants make their way through Mexico to the US borders. Then, we're heading over to Finland, where they've seen a crazy increase in ransomware attacks ever since they joined NATO. And hey, ever wondered why Google guzzled up a whopping 5.6 billion gallons of water last year? We've got the scoop on that too! Wrapping things up, we'll dive into the world of hacking, as a sneaky group of North Korean hackers managed to break into the computer networks of a major Russian missile developer. · Mexican cartels exploit US government's CBP One app · Finland sees fourfold spike in ransomware attacks since joining NATO, senior cyber official says · GOOGLE IS USING A FLABBERGASTING AMOUNT OF WATER ON AI · North Korean hackers breached top Russian missile maker…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest edition of the Transatlantic Cable begins with discussion around Elon Musk, Twitter X and WeChat – is Elon trying to pivot the social media app into an 'everything app?' From there, the team talk about the Home Office in the U.K looking into facial recognition technology for the retail sector. To wrap up the team discuss two stories, the first around the Lazarus group being implicated in a recent crypto heist and the other around Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II and a worm virus. WeChat: Why does Elon Musk want X to emulate China's everything-app? Home Office secretly backs facial recognition technology to curb shoplifting Lazarus hackers linked to $60 million Alphapo cryptocurrency heist Hackers are infecting Call of Duty players with a self-spreading malware…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Bonus - Cyber Insights from Asia-Pacific 37:31
37:31
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب37:31
Welcome to a special bonus episode, brought to you from the gang behind the Transatlantic Cable. Join David & Jag as they chat to cybersecurity experts & leaders in the Asia-Pacific region about the latest cyber trends in the region. In addition to this, we learn about the upcoming APAC Cyber Insights webinar. The upcoming APAC Cyber Insights webinar on 6th September 2pm Singapore time, is a must-attend event for anyone interested in staying ahead in the rapidly evolving cybersecurity landscape. This event brings together industry leaders and cybersecurity experts to discuss the latest trends, as well as the latest approaches to combatting advanced attacks. We look forward to seeing many of our viewers at the cyber insights event. Together we can be cyber resilient by strengthening our cybersecurity defences and protect against emerging threats. You can register for the webinar here .…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest edition of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with worrying news around the Mastodon social network – from there the team discuss some A.I related news – the first story around World of Warcraft A.I generated news stories and the second around James Cameron's thoughts on A.I. To wrap up, the team discuss news around Apple's decision to 'slam' the U.K's upcoming surveillance-bill proposals. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Stanford researchers find Mastodon has a massive child abuse material problem Warcraft fans trick AI article bot with Glorbo hoax James Cameron on AI: 'I Warned You Guys in 1984 and You Didn't Listen' Apple slams UK surveillance-bill proposals…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest edition of the Transatlantic Cable podcast focuses mostly on AI, with an opening salvo of stories, the first is news that the FTC are opening an investigation into Open AI and ChatGPT. From there, discussion moves to a worrying story around artificial intelligence and the recent writers and actors strikes. To wrap up, there are two stories, the first dedicated to AI and the growing voices raised against it and, would you use a facial recognition service if it meant less time waiting in line to board a train? If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. FTC investigates OpenAI over data leak and ChatGPT's inaccuracy The Black Mirror plot about AI that worries actors The Last Word on AI and the Atom Bomb Eurostar launches world's first walk-through biometric corridor for rail travel…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest edition of the Transatlantic Cable begins with news that a U.S judge has ruled that the United States government must limit its contact with social media networks. From there discussion moves to news that the U.K government is trying to push through new legislation to enable it to essentially break end-to-end encryption – privacy groups are, as you'd expect, concerned. The last two stories look at news around the 'snooper's charter in France and should parents hide their kids faces on social media – Mark Zuckerberg thinks so. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. Biden officials must limit contact with social media firms E2E encryption: Should big tech be able to read people's messages? New French laws dubbed a 'snoopers' charter' Zuckerberg hides his kids' faces on social and experts say you should do the same…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest edition of the Transatlantic Cable begins with talk around a Microsoft data breach. However, details are thin on the ground and Microsoft are denying that there's been a leak. From there talk moves to news around Google's update to Chrome and a breaking story that centres around PornHub and the EU. Lastly, the team talk about the recent changes to Twitter. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Microsoft denies data breach, theft of 30 million customer accounts 3 Billion Chrome Users Are About to See This Privacy Sandbox Pop-Up Pornhub Is Being Accused of Illegal Data Collection Confusion at Twitter continues over Elon Musk's tweet limits…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest edition of the Transatlantic Cable begins with discussion around Android phones accidentally dialling emergency services in the U.K. From there, discussion moves to malware-laced malware games and law-makers in the U.S share concerns around Alphabet's relaxing of 'fake-news' policies. To wrap up the team look at discussions around A.I and jobs – is a machine really going to swipe your job? If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing! UK police report epidemic of Android false emergency calls Malware-Laced Mario Fan Game Will Turn Your Computer Into an Unwitting Crypto Miner Lawmakers slam YouTube for overturning policy banning election misinformation The workers already replaced by artificial intelligence…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 304 kicks off with news that U.S government agencies are also affected by the recent CLOP gang as they're also using the affected MOVEit software. From there the team also discuss the most recent flaws in the MOVEit software and urge users to update. Following on from that, there's an interview with Ghislaine Boddington about the newly released Fast Forward audio series from Kaspersky; Apple's fight with Apples (yes, really) and the team wrap up with talk around OpenAI's seemingly contradictory statements on AI regulation. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. US government agencies hit in global cyberattack MOVEit Customers Urged to Patch Third Critical Vulnerability Apple Is Taking On Apples in a Truly Weird Trademark Battle OpenAI Lobbied the E.U. to Water Down AI Regulation…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 302 of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with discussions around the Clop ransomware gang issuing ultimatums to affected businesses. From there the team look at how ChatGPT is being used to create mutating malware which is capable of evading EDR; how a newly discovered malware dubbed 'DoubleFinger' is being used to steal crypto and another crypto-related story, this time around advertising crypto in the U.K. To wrap up the team look at a story around how a Nintendo Switch was used by the FBI to track a missing teenager, who was later found 500 miles from home. If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. BBC, BA and Boots issued with ultimatum by cyber gang Clop ChatGPT creates mutating malware that evades detection by EDR Sneaky DoubleFinger loads GreetingGhoul targeting your cryptocurrency Crypto: 24-hour cooling-off period included in ad overhaul A Nintendo Switch Helped Rescue A Missing Teenager 500 Miles From Home…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The team kick off episode 302 with news that cyber attackers have hit a pay-roll company in the U.K, affecting hundreds of thousands of victims. From there, the team talk about Apple's latest hardware and is it game over for Metaverse? Moving on, the team talk about scammers trying to defraud students and the FTC fine Ring for previous security breaches. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Hackers raid British Airways and BBC in cyber attack Mark Zuckerberg unveils new metaverse product despite claims VR world is 'dead' Instagram seller quoted me £500 for a GCSE paper FTC Orders Ring to Pay $5.8 Million in Refunds For Surveilling Customers…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 301 18:11
18:11
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب18:11
Episode 301 kicks off with Wired article exposes the China-backed Volt Typhoon Hack, a menacing cyberattack that poses a severe threat to critical infrastructure in the United States. With a specific focus on Guam's power grid control systems, this breach underscores the vulnerability and potential ramifications of such targeted attacks, Moving to New York county where they are still dealing with ransomware eight months after attack. Prepare for a fascinating journey down the Australian motorway as we explore an intriguing. We delve into an article from news.com.au that unravels an unusual phenomenon involving "passengers" like no other. Something extraordinary is afoot, and our curiosity is piqued as we seek answers to the perplexing question: What could possibly be amiss on this Aussie motorway? Would you use ChatGPT to write your legal defense? Well one lawyer did, let's see how it ended. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing! · China Hacks US Critical Networks in Guam, Raising Cyberwar Fears · New York county still dealing with ransomware eight months after attack · 'This has never happened': Something is odd about these Aussie motorway 'passengers' · A lawyer used ChatGPT for legal filing. The chatbot cited nonexistent cases it just made up…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 300 kicks off with a bang, with discussion around Meta's record breaking fine for sending EU citizens' data to the United States. From there discussion moves to A.I and fake ChatGPT apps on mobile stores. The team also discuss news around Neeva's closure, the search engine that asked for a donation instead of selling your search-history – is there really no room for innovation in the search market? It seems not, sadly. To wrap up the team sat down with Victor Sergeev, incident response team lead in SOC at Kaspersky to talk about his recent work with IOCs and ChatGPT . If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing! · Meta fined $1.3 billion & ordered to stop sending European user data to US · Generative AI that can change anyone's race is probably not a great idea · ChatGPT Scams Are Infiltrating the App Store and Google Play · Neeva: Ad-free search engine shuts down · IoC detection experiments with ChatGPT…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 299 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with discussion around photo-manipulation apps (aka: filters) on social media. Should they be banned or regulated? From there, discussion moves to news that a entrepreneurial 23 year old has created an AI version of herself which will be your girlfriend for $1 per minute. Moving swiftly onwards, the team then look at a story from the United States, as Wendy's looks to A.I to help them with drive-through orders. Finally, to wrap up, the team look at a story from China and a man in the Gansu province was recently detained for allegedly using ChatGPT to generate a fake story about a train crash. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. · Should social media face-altering filters be regulated? · A 23-year-old Snapchat influencer used OpenAI's technology to create an A.I. version of herself that will be your girlfriend for $1 per minute · Wendy's Is Bringing a Google-Powered AI Chatbot to Its Drive-Thru · China reports first arrest over fake news generated by ChatGPT…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 298 of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with news that ChatGPT recently suffered a data-breach, raising concerns about the amount of information we hand over to the AI chatbot. From there, the team discuss a recent story around QR scams in South Korea – be careful what you scan, is always good advice it seems. Moving on from QR codes, the team spoke to Seongsu Park about the infamous Lazarus group's recent activities. To wrap up, the team looked at two final stories, one around hackers impersonating META and Google on Facebook and another story around how social media and dating apps have become a hotbed for scammers. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing.…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 297 22:57
22:57
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب22:57
For the 297th edition of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast , Ahmed and I discuss a lot of stories that center around the hottest topic on the social web – AI. Our first story takes a look at how a company is now offering Deep Fakes for under $200… we opine about what could go wrong. From there, we jump over to recent news of Geoffrey Hinton quitting Google. The move from Hinton is on the heels of him questioning the uninhibited growth and development of AI – without looking as to what could go wrong. While this adds fuel to the fire, we stop our cynicism of AI and look at some research from our colleagues at Kaspersky. In this research, our team takes a look at whether or not ChatGPT can successfully determine phishing links. To close out the podcast, we discuss a FYI for folks in term of some zero days actively being used on major tech companies and why you need to patch now. If you liked what you heard please do consider subscribing, below are the stories we discussed in case you would like to dive deeper. · Tencent Cloud announces Deepfakes-as-a-Service for $145 · After Quitting Google, 'Godfather of AI' Is Now Warning of Its Dangers · What does ChatGPT know about phishing? · Apple issues Rapid Security Response update for iOS 16.4.1, macOS 13.3.1 Apple, Google, and Microsoft Just Fixed Zero-Day Security Flaws…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 296 kicks off with news that Oasis may be reforming – except not really. Turns out some boffins have figured out how to use A.I to create new Oasis music. Unsurprisingly, UMG (Universal Music Group) aren't too happy. From A.I to A.I, the next story looks at the evolution of Google's Bard bot and following that there's discussion around the U.K government's decision to build their own super-computer, with the purpose of, you guessed it, artificial intelligence. To wrap up, the team discuss a story about Twitter's recent problems around verification status. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. Musicians threaten to make Oasis 'Live Forever' with AI Google Bard introduces new features for generating and debugging code UK.gov gathers up £100M for AI super-models Twitter gives fake Disney account verified status…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 295 of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with discussions around LLM (Large Language Model) A.I regulations however, is it a case of too little, too late? From there the team talk about a concerning case of attackers using deep fake audio to try to extort money out of a victim. Following that, there's yet more discussion around A.I, including news that a fake photograph has won a prestigious photography award, and is the hacking of LLM A.I the start of something new in the cybersecurity world? Additionally, we also have an interview with Marc Rivero, Senior Security Researcher at Kaspersky to talk about his upcoming webinar entitled " Be aware of ransomware TTPs: applying MITRE to ransomware campaigns ". If you like what you heard, please consider subscribing. · 'We have to move fast': US looks to establish rules for artificial intelligence · AI clones child's voice in fake kidnapping scam · Sony World Photography Award 2023: Winner refuses award after revealing AI creation · The Hacking of ChatGPT Is Just Getting Started…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 294 43:04
43:04
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب43:04
Episode 294 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with news that some Samsung staff have shared sensitive technical information with ChatGPT. Following that a critical story around Tesla cars oversharing video feeds and are Twitter circles broken. To wrap up, the team discuss how A.I is now capable of breaking passwords faster than ever before and Apple's announcement of two zero-days currently being targeted by attackers. If you liked what you heard please do consider subscribing. · Samsung Employees Leaked Confidential Data to ChatGPT · Tesla workers shared sensitive images recorded by customer cars · Twitter Circles Is Broken, Revealing Nudes Not Meant For The General Public · Study shows how fast AI can crack your passwords; here's how to protect yourself Apple warns of two zero-days under attack…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
1 Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 293 25:19
25:19
التشغيل لاحقا
التشغيل لاحقا
قوائم
إعجاب
احب25:19
For the 293rd episode of the Kaspersky Transatlantic Cable podcast, we are down to a two-man booth as both Dave and Jag are away on vacation. To kick things off, Ahmed and I take a look at a story that pulls the curtain back on one of the web's most notorious websites – 4Chan. We were kind of shocked when we saw who was one of the benefactors and am pretty sure that you will be as well. We then climb out of the cesspool before falling into a story on a scam targeting taxpayers. From there, in the third story we look at a positive case for AI – yes, you read that right, we are positive on AI for once on the podcast. In this story, a university student uses AI to help get her out of a ticket. The happy stories end there, as our next tale looks tragically at the use of airtags for vigilante justice in Texas. If you read the headline below, you know the story. To close things out, we talk about Elon Musk's weird move of adding the Dodge Coin logo to Twitter, replacing the very familiar bird. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. · Famed Japanese Toy Company Good Smile Has Reportedly Propped Up 4chan for Years · Emotet malware distributed as fake W-9 tax forms from the IRS · York student uses AI chatbot to get parking fine revoked · Texas man uses Apple AirTag to track down person who stole his truck, then kills him: Police Twitter replaces logo with doge as Musk seeks Dogecoin lawsuit dismissal…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 292 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast is here! This week, the team talk about aggressive AI and how the DEA have turned Apple AirTags into a surveillance tool against criminals. Moving on, the team discuss recent news that Nvidia's CTO thinks that crypto-currencies don't "bring anything useful for society" – pretty bold words for a business that sold GPU cards to crypto-miners just a few years ago. To wrap up, discussion moves onto how the US is looking to block the use and sale of commercial spyware – however, there's a pretty big catch. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. · Microsoft's Bing AI Now Threatening Users Who Provoke It · The DEA Quietly Turned Apple's AirTag Into A Surveillance Tool · Cryptocurrencies add nothing useful to society, says chip-maker Nvidia · President Biden kind of mostly bans commercial spyware from US govt…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 291 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with news around OpenAI's recent decision to reduce the amount of information it's sharing about how ChatGPT is trained, causing some to worry that it's no longer as open as originally designed. From there discussion moves to a recent story around the DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration) in America and hackers looking to leverage DEA's internal toolset. Following that, news around hacked crypto ATMs and a new story from Securelist around a newly discovered APT group, CommonMagic. This episode also includes a discussion with Susi O'Neil from Kaspersky's Brand Activation Studio to talk about their upcoming audio mini-series called "Insight Story." The series aims to help business leaders better understand digital tech such as AI, Metaverse and much more. To listen to episode one, you can tune in here . If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. · OpenAI co-founder on company's past approach to openly sharing research: 'We were wrong' · Inside the DEA Tool Hackers Allegedly Used to Extort Targets · General Bytes Bitcoin ATMs hacked using zero-day, $1.5M stolen · Bad magic: new APT found in the area of Russo-Ukrainian conflict…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Please accept our apologies for the audio in places - we've done what we can to clean it up - back to normal scheduling next week! Welcome to the 290th episode of the Kaspersky Transatlantic Cable podcast. In this episode, we kick things off with a discussion on how ransomware gangs are taking new leaps to extort money. Spoiler alert - you aren't going to like it one bit. From there, we jump into a discussion surrounding the booming black market in China for access to ChatGPT. We continue the discussion looking at how a fitness app led a researcher to discover the home and walkabouts of a former top aid to Joe Biden. To close out the episode, we look at how banks' voice as a password is not secure. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. · Ransomware Attacks Have Entered a 'Heinous' New Phase · A booming illicit market for OpenAI's chatbot shows the huge potential, and risks, for Chinese generative AI · AllTrails Data Exposes Precise Movements of Former Top Biden Official · How I Broke Into a Bank Account With an AI-Generated Voice…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
In episode 289 of the Transatlantic Cable, the team look at four new stories to tempt your earbuds. This week kicks off with news that TikTok are implementing a 60-minute time limit for users under 18. Following that, discussion moves to further developments around FTX, this time about their missing $9 billion. To wrap up, we discuss news around Call of Duty players taking back Black Ops III from hackers and bots and more news around the recent LastPass data breach. If you liked what you heard, please consider subscribing. TikTok sets 60-minute daily screen time limit for under-18s FTX Confirms $9 Billion in Customer Funds Vanished Gamers are fixing a video game 'taken over' by hackers LastPass says employee's home computer was hacked and corporate vault taken…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable sees the team starting out with news around Signal and their refusal to weaken encryption for the U.K government. Following that, the team move onto discussions around Meta and National Center for Missing and Exploited Children's (NCMEC) campaign to help people with the spread of minors' intimate images online. To wrap up, the team discuss SnapChat A.I chat bots and LockBit's attack against the U.K's Royal Mail service. If you liked what you heard, please do consider subscribing. · Signal would 'walk' from UK if Online Safety Bill undermined encryption · LockBit leaks 44GB of Royal Mail's data and sets fresh £33 million ransom · Meta supports new platform preventing spread of minors' intimate images online · Snapchat is adding OpenAI chatbot capabilities for the new My AI feature…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable starts off with news that GoDaddy, one of the largest web hosting services was hacked back in 2020 and the attackers were able to gain access to the back end of millions of websites, helping them to push malware and steal credentials. Moving from there the team look at news of the recent remove of SMS 2FA (two factor authentication) from Twitter, sparking a fierce debate in the infosec world. There's also discussion around spam bots in Instagram and the (final) death of Internet Explorer 11. The team was also lucky enough to chat to David Emm, principle security researcher at Kaspersky about new research around kids attitudes to fraud and security online. If you liked what you heard, please do consider subscribing. GoDaddy says a multi-year breach hijacked customer websites and accounts T witter to charge users for text-message authentication Why Are 'Porn Stars' Liking Your Instagram Stories? RIP Internet Explorer: Microsoft Kills Off Legacy Browser…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The latest episode of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off once again with a discussion around A.I – this time, looking at how it could soon be used by musicians to help them create music – but concerns grow that it could one day be used to create music (much like it can now be used to create art). From there the team discus how a pair of developers have created an A.I that generates lifelike police portraits sketches, and it's got privacy and civil liberty experts worried. Moving away from A.I to something more concrete, the team talk about the recent proposal from the U.K government to ban the use and sale of encrypted phones – often used by criminals to circumnavigate prying eyes. David Guetta says the future of music is in AI Developers Created AI to Generate Police Sketches UK Proposes Making the Sale and Possession of Encrypted Phones Illegal Reddit Confirms It Was Hacked—Recommends Users Set Up 2FA…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 285 of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with yet more news around A.I and the ever-interesting topic of ChatGPT. However, this time, the discussion starts with regulation and the CTO of Open AI believes that it's inevitable. Moving from that to a more quirky story, still involving A.I however: a small team have used AI to create a never-ending Seinfield episode, streaming over on Twitch – sadly at the time of writing, it appears to have been shut down, but it still raises interesting questions around content creation, human creativity and what A.I will bring (or take away) from the table. Moving away from A.I to more cyber-security related news – the team discuss the closure of Exclu, an encrypted mobile phone company that enabled criminals to chat without fear of snooping, however the Dutch police were already inside the systems. To wrap up, the team talk about a recent story around the FBI's changing approach to ransomware, with the recent Hive takedown. If you liked what you heard, please do consider subscribing. · The Creator of ChatGPT Thinks AI Should Be Regulated · Dutch Police Read Messages of Encrypted Messenger 'Exclu' · AI has been generating an endless Seinfeld episode · Hive takedown illustrates FBI's evolution towards victim-recovery efforts…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 284 kicks off with a story that is going to surprise no one: over 50% of smart appliances are not connected to the internet, which is a surprise to only the manufacturers – it seems people aren't really convinced by Wi-Fi enabled refrigerators or washing machines, it seems. Moving on from that, the team discuss news that AI audio is becoming a problem, with AI company ElevenLabs saying that they're going to start clamping down on troublesome audio recordings – but has Pandora's box already been opened? Staying with AI, the team also look at a story breaking from China, with Baidu set to launch their own version of ChatGPT. To wrap up, the team discuss a rather odd story involving pet fish, Pokemon, PayPal and credit cards…. We'll leave the rest up to your imagination. If you liked what you heard, please do consider subscribing. Appliance makers sad that 50% of customers won't connect smart appliances AI Voice Firm Clamps Down After 4chan Makes Celebrity Voices for Abuse China's biggest search engine is to set launch a ChatGPT rival in March Pet fish playing Nintendo Switch run up bill on owner's credit card…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 283 kicks off with the recent (good news) story that ransomware gangs earnings are down by quite a bit from last year – turns out that people are starting to treat backups properly and are refusing to pay – great news for 2023! Following that, the team look at troubling news, this time from the crypto-currency world, with a story looking at the recent collapse of Genesis. Moving from crypto to the world of fake news, a recent study has shown that the reason people share fake news is perhaps more complex than previously thought. To wrap up, the team discuss concerning news around ChatGPT and exams, with a professor running the AI through an exam for Medical Licenses and Business Degrees and it turns out it can pass them both. Should teachers and professors be worried? Time will tell it seems. If you liked what you heard, please do consider subscribing. Cyber-crime gangs' earnings slide as victims refuse to pay Crypto lender Genesis files for bankruptcy Study reveals the key reason why fake news spreads on social media ChatGPT Is Passing Tests Required for Medical Licenses & Business Degrees…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 282 kicks off with new research from Which? Showing that 'smart' technology might not be as smart as we've been led to believe – their research shows that most devices stop receiving updates from 2 years, even thought the device has a suggested life of 10 – it seems more work needs to be done. From there the team look at two stories around A.I, the first on the media sensation, ChatGPT and how some people are looking to use it for malware creation, and the second looking at a chat A.I program that has become (and I'll quote from the article here) "too horny". In the middle of all this, I sat down with Evgeny Goncharov, head of ICS CERT at Kaspersky to talk to him about upcoming ICS APT predictions for 2023 . Following that, the team discuss news that Norton LifeLocker password manager has been breached, those affected are being urged to update and change their passwords as quickly as possible. If you liked what you heard, please do consider subscribing. ICS cyberthreats in 2023 – what to expect ICS cyberthreats in 2023 – what to expect Securelist report Smart appliances could stop working after two years, says Which ? Armed With ChatGPT, Cybercriminals Build Malware And Plot Fake Girl Bots Replika Users Say the Chatbot Has Gotten Way Too Horny NortonLifeLock warns that hackers breached Password Manager accounts…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The first episode of 2023 of the Transatlantic Cable Podcast kicks off with news around the "recent" Twitter hack – emphasis on recent as the data was actually siphoned from Twitter back in 2021, but has only recently come to light – timing is everything it seems. From there, the team look at news that the Web3 industry lost a whopping $4 billion to crypto-fraud last year – apparently, this is good news as the previous year it was a colossal $8 billion. Staying with crypto, the next story dives into the recent news around the closure of CryptoZoo – a game created by internet star, Logan Paul. The premise of the game allowed users to 'breed and share' unique NFT creatures, all whilst earning cryptocurrency. To wrap up, the last story looks at more news around crypto, this time looking at news that U.S. bank Silvergate saw $8 billion in crypto withdrawals, most near the tail end of 2022. If you liked what you heard, please do consider subscribing. More than 200 million Twitter users' email addresses leaked by hackers The Web3 industry lost billions to crypto fraud last year YouTube star Logan Paul apologizes for CryptoZoo project failure US bank Silvergate hit with $8bn in crypto withdrawals…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
The final episode of the year brings some pretty big stories for the Transatlantic Cable team. Kicking off this week, discussion starts with a troubling story about democracies and spyware – in particular, how others are leveraging the malicious software to try to subvert democratic countries. Moving from that, the team look at the big news of the week, with word that Twitter users have voted to remove Elon Musk as CEO of the troubled social network. However, even if he is removed as owner, he'll still have overall sway of what goes on the network. From there, discussion moves to security vulnerabilities in BrickLink – Lego's official second-hand and vintage marketplace for LEGO bricks. According to Bleeping Computer, a vulnerability could have, "allowed an attacker to take over members' accounts, access and steal personally identifiable information (PII) stored on the platform, or even gain access to internal production data and compromise internal servers." Thankfully, the flaws have since been fixed. To wrap up, the team discuss a recent story about Epic Games – which has recently been fined $520 million (yes, half a BILLION dollars) for privacy violations, and what the FTC calls "dark patterns," in order to "trick millions of gamers into making unintentional purchases." If you liked what you heard, please do consider subscribing. Spyware's threat to democracies Twitter users voted Elon Musk out. But CEO or not, he'll still call the shots LEGO BrickLink bugs let hackers hijack accounts, breach servers Epic Games to pay $520 million for privacy violations, dark patterns…
T
Transatlantic Cable Podcast
Episode 279 of the Transatlantic Cable kicks off with a troubling story about purported Chinese hacker group, APT41 attacking and stealing US Covid relief payments, to the cool tune of $20 million. Whilst details are thin, concerns are being raised around just how much of the nearly $800 billion was actually used by people in need. From there the team move onto discussions around North Korea's Lazarus group, with details around a malicious app, designed to siphon off people's crypto-currency. After that, discussion moves to concerns that independent journalists in El Salvador are looking to sue the NSO Group for spying. The final story looks at news around LastPass and their recent data breach. If you liked what you heard, please do consider subscribing. Hackers linked to Chinese government stole millions in Covid benefits Hackers use new, fake crypto app to breach networks, steal cryptocurrency Pegasus spyware was used to hack reporters' phones LastPass says it was breached — again…
مرحبًا بك في مشغل أف ام!
يقوم برنامج مشغل أف أم بمسح الويب للحصول على بودكاست عالية الجودة لتستمتع بها الآن. إنه أفضل تطبيق بودكاست ويعمل على أجهزة اندرويد والأيفون والويب. قم بالتسجيل لمزامنة الاشتراكات عبر الأجهزة.





























