Zero Downtime

John Hass

Zero Downtime brings together tech, business, and the everyday experiences of running an IT company. John and Logan discuss what’s going on in their world, the questions people ask them most, and talk with other business owners and professionals in conversations that are real, relaxed, and worth your time.

  1. 1 HR AGO

    Anti-ICE Site Leaks 18K Users, Utah Bans VPNs, Defender Nukes DigiCert, Canvas Breach

    A platform built to expose ICE operations may have ended up exposing nearly 18,000 of its own users instead. This week, John and Logan break down the GTFO ICE data leak and the irony of an activist site getting taken down by Web App Security 101 mistakes, Utah's new law that tries to make websites responsible for VPN users (which is not how the internet works), the Microsoft Defender update that started deleting DigiCert root certificates as malware, and the Canvas breach that hit one of the biggest learning platforms in education. Stories in this episode: GTFO ICE data exposure. The activist platform reportedly tied to Miles Taylor allegedly leaked names, emails, phone numbers, and possibly location data for around 18,000 users through an unauthenticated API. No nation-state exploit. Just an open endpoint and no access control. Utah vs VPNs. SB 73 says it does not matter if you are using a VPN, if you are physically in Utah, you are a Utah user. The problem is websites cannot actually detect that, so the practical response will be VPN blocking and ID verification for everyone. Microsoft Defender attacks DigiCert. A bad signature update started flagging legitimate root certificates as a trojan and removing them from Windows on some systems. Your antivirus did not just alert. It attacked the chain of trust the entire internet runs on. Canvas breach. Instructure confirmed attackers accessed student IDs, emails, and internal messages between students and teachers. ShinyHunters is claiming 3.65 terabytes stolen. Line this up with Infinite Campus and PowerSchool, and the pattern is clear: edtech is a targeted campaign. Plus the bigger picture: organizational trust is collapsing at every layer, and the fix is not asking people to trust you more. It is designing systems that do not require blind trust in the first place. New episodes weekly. Follow Zero Downtime for cybersecurity, privacy, AI, edtech, and the tech stories that actually matter.

    1hr 8min
  2. 4 MAY

    iPhone Ultra Foldable, AI Nukes Production in 9 Seconds, Ford's Driver Spy Tech, Remove Copilot

    Apple might be about to rebrand its entire lineup around one word: Ultra. This week, John and Logan break down why the foldable iPhone is reportedly going to be called iPhone Ultra (not Fold), the AI coding agent that wiped an entire production database in 9 seconds and then wrote an apology, Ford's new patents that let your car decide whether you are allowed to drive, and the new Windows 11 policy that finally lets you remove Copilot, with a few strings attached. Stories in this episode: Apple's Ultra rebrand. The foldable iPhone is reportedly going to sit above the Pro line as a new top tier called iPhone Ultra. Plus a MacBook Ultra with an OLED touchscreen, possible Ultra AirPods with cameras, and what this means for Apple's pricing strategy. The AI that nuked production. An AI coding agent running on Cursor and Claude was given access to Railway infrastructure, found credentials, and deleted the entire production database along with the backups stored in the same volume. Then it wrote a detailed apology admitting it broke every safety rule. The real story is not the AI, it is the architecture that let it happen. Ford's scary new patents. Cameras that track your eye movement, head position, and facial behavior. Systems that detect impairment and refuse to let you drive. Lip reading as a fallback. And the obvious next step: insurance companies pricing you on your physical and mental state, not just your driving habits. Removing Copilot from Windows 11. Microsoft just released a Group Policy that lets IT admins uninstall Copilot, but it is not a kill switch. It is a one-time cleanup tool with conditions, and the app can come back. New episodes weekly. Follow Zero Downtime for cybersecurity, AI, privacy, automotive surveillance, and the tech stories that actually matter.

    50 min
  3. 13 APR

    LinkedIn Scans Your Browser, Copilot "Entertainment Only", Steam on Linux Hits 5%, iPhone in Space

    This week on Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down a packed lineup of stories that say a lot about where tech is heading right now: T-Mobile tightening device promos, Steam on Linux climbing past 5% market share, the Microsoft Copilot “for entertainment purposes only” controversy, reports that LinkedIn may be scanning browsers for thousands of Chrome extensions, and NASA using an iPhone to photograph Earth from deep space. They start with T-Mobile and the quiet end of the Un-carrier era. Fewer top-tier phone deals, tighter promo rules, and less flexibility for families all point to the same shift: T-Mobile is moving from growth mode to profit mode. The bigger question is what happens when the carrier that built its brand by not acting like Verizon starts to look a lot more like Verizon. From there, they get into Steam on Linux passing 5%. That might sound like a small number, but for Linux gaming it is a major milestone. With SteamOS, the Steam Deck, and Proton continuing to improve, developers may finally have a reason to take Linux support, anti-cheat compatibility, and proper QA more seriously. The conversation is really about something bigger: whether developers will keep targeting Windows first, or start targeting Steam first. They also unpack the Microsoft Copilot backlash after language in the terms described it as being for entertainment purposes only. Even if Microsoft says that wording is outdated, it highlights a real issue across AI. These products are sold as workplace tools and productivity multipliers, but the legal language still treats them like systems you should never trust without review. It is a useful reminder that AI can be powerful and helpful without being authoritative. Then they turn to one of the biggest privacy stories of the week. A report claims LinkedIn may be scanning browsers for more than 6,000 Chrome extensions while collecting device details used for browser fingerprinting. John and Logan talk through scraping detection, bots, privacy risk, and where the line is between legitimate security measures and surveillance tied to real-world identity. To close, they look at one of the coolest stories in tech right now: NASA astronauts using an iPhone to capture photos of Earth from deep space. It is a perfect example of how capable consumer hardware has become, and why the phrase “Shot on iPhone” hits a little differently when the photo is taken on a mission beyond low Earth orbit. Zero Downtime is a weekly tech podcast covering cybersecurity, privacy, AI, Apple, Linux, Microsoft, infrastructure, and the technology decisions that actually affect people and businesses.

    50 min
  4. 6 APR

    Apple Swift on Android, Claude Code Writes 100% of the Code, LiteLLM Hack, Infinite Campus Breach

    This week on Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down Apple Swift 6.3 adding official Android support, the head of Claude Code saying Claude writes 100% of his code, the LiteLLM supply chain hack, why the Mac Pro may be effectively finished, what is really behind falling RAM prices, and what showed up in the Infinite Campus breach dump. They start with Swift on Android and why this matters beyond Apple developers. Swift can now officially target Android, which means teams can reuse more business logic across iPhone and Android apps while still building native experiences on each platform. John and Logan talk through what this means for startups, lean engineering teams, and companies that already have a strong Swift codebase, along with why Flutter still wins if your goal is one shared UI codebase. From there, they get into Claude Code and the bigger shift happening in software development. When the leader of Claude Code says the tool writes 100% of his code, that does not mean developers disappear. It means the role changes. Engineers are spending less time typing every function by hand and more time defining tasks, reviewing output, validating results, and managing multiple AI coding agents at once. The productivity upside is huge, but so is the risk if review and testing do not keep up. They also cover the LiteLLM hack, which may be one of the biggest AI supply chain wake up calls yet. Attackers reportedly compromised the real LiteLLM release pipeline and pushed malicious versions that could steal API keys, cloud credentials, SSH keys, .env files, and Kubernetes secrets. Because LiteLLM often sits at the center of AI infrastructure, the blast radius is much bigger than a normal package compromise. Then they look at the Mac Pro and whether Apple Silicon has removed the reason for it to exist. The Mac Pro used to stand for expandability, swappable GPUs, PCIe cards, and high end workstation flexibility. Now Apple appears to be putting its top desktop strategy behind the Mac Studio, which raises the question of whether the Mac Pro is quietly done. They also dig into the headlines about RAM prices crashing. The trigger was TurboQuant and the idea that more efficient AI models might reduce future memory demand. John and Logan unpack why that market reaction may be too simplistic, because lower AI memory costs can also expand adoption and increase total demand over time. To close, they revisit Infinite Campus after the earlier Salesforce breach disclosure and discuss what was reportedly in the leaked dump. According to the episode notes, that included staff names, school GUIDs, some school-related data, support tickets, and files that appeared to contain passwords. Even a smaller breach dump can expose sensitive operational details and create downstream risk for schools. In this episode: Apple Swift on Android Claude Code writes 100% of the code LiteLLM supply chain hack Mac Pro no more RAM prices crashing Infinite Campus dump revealed Zero Downtime is a weekly tech podcast covering cybersecurity, data breaches, Apple, AI, software development, infrastructure, privacy, and the technology decisions that actually affect people and businesses.

    48 min
  5. 30 MAR

    Windows 11 Fixes, Amazon Phone Returns, Google AI Rewrites Headlines, Infinite Campus Hack

    Zero Downtime is a weekly tech news and cybersecurity podcast. In this episode, John and Logan break down the Infinite Campus breach, the Intoxalock outage, the Stryker cyberattack, Amazon's reported smartphone comeback, Chrome for ARM64 Linux, Google Search AI rewriting headlines, and Microsoft's latest Windows 11 quality fixes. They start with Infinite Campus, the student information system used by schools for grades, attendance, schedules, parent portals, emergency contacts, health records, and staff data. After claims tied to a compromised Salesforce account, John and Logan explain why a breach that sounds limited on paper can still be serious in practice, especially when support systems may contain sensitive notes, attachments, and internal data that create downstream risk for districts and families. From there, they look at the Intoxalock outage and the growing problem of cyber incidents that affect the real world. These court ordered ignition interlock devices depend on calibration and backend services, so when systems go down, drivers can end up stranded. It is a reminder that downtime is no longer just an IT problem. It can directly affect whether people can function in everyday life. They also unpack the Stryker cyberattack, where attackers reportedly used stolen access and Stryker's own trusted tools, including Microsoft Intune and enterprise admin controls, to wipe devices across the company. This was not classic ransomware. It was a destructive attack that shows how identity compromise can turn legitimate management tooling into a major operational threat, especially in healthcare and the medical device supply chain. Then there is Amazon's rumored return to smartphones. More than a decade after the Fire Phone failed, Amazon is reportedly exploring a new device tied to Alexa, shopping, Prime, and mobile personalization. John and Logan discuss why Amazon keeps chasing the phone market, why the original Fire Phone failed, and whether a more limited Amazon phone could actually find a niche in a market still dominated by Apple and Samsung. The episode also covers Chrome for ARM64 Linux, a meaningful move for Linux users, developers, and the growing Arm ecosystem. Google says the full Chrome experience is coming to ARM64 Linux devices in Q2 2026, extending browser support across another major platform. They also dive into Google's test of AI generated search headlines. If Google Search rewrites article titles in results, even when publishers never wrote them that way, it raises bigger questions about editorial control, tone, search traffic, and whether search engines are starting to reshape the web rather than simply index it. To close, John and Logan cover Microsoft's latest Windows 11 update plans, including top and side taskbar positions, faster File Explorer, quieter widgets, and a more restrained approach to Copilot. After years of user complaints, these quality fixes could mark the beginning of a real course correction for Windows 11. In this episode: Infinite Campus breach and Salesforce exposure Intoxalock outage and ignition interlock disruption Stryker cyberattack and Microsoft Intune abuse Amazon smartphone comeback and Fire Phone history Chrome for ARM64 Linux Google Search AI rewriting headlines Windows 11 quality fixes and Copilot changes Follow Zero Downtime for weekly episodes on cybersecurity, Microsoft, Windows 11, Google, Amazon, Linux, AI, privacy, infrastructure, and the technology decisions that affect real people and businesses.

    58 min
  6. 23 MAR

    Windows 11 Bug, Android Sideloading, Instagram Encryption Ends, Anthropic vs FSF, AI Cancer Vaccine

    This week on Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down the Windows 11 bug affecting some Samsung PCs, Google’s move to make Android sideloading less anonymous, Meta ending optional encryption in Instagram DMs, the growing Anthropic vs FSF fight, and the experimental AI-assisted cancer vaccine story that is raising real questions about the future of personalized medicine. They start with Microsoft confirming a serious Windows 11 issue that can make the C: drive inaccessible on certain Samsung systems, leaving affected machines close to unusable. From there, they get into Google’s push for more identity verification around sideloaded Android apps and what that means for the future of Android as an “open” platform. They also unpack why Instagram encryption is going away, what that says about moderation, privacy, and platform control, and why companies increasingly seem to want private messaging separated from the main social experience. Then they dive into the Anthropic vs FSF story and the bigger clash between open source principles, AI training data, copyright, and closed models. To close, they look at one of the strangest and most fascinating stories of the week: an experimental personalized mRNA cancer vaccine created for a dog using AI tools, genomics, and custom targeting. It is not a proven cure, but it is a real glimpse at how AI could help accelerate personalized medicine in the years ahead. In this episode: Windows 11 bug on Samsung PCs Android sideloading and Google verification Instagram encryption ends Anthropic vs FSF AI-assisted personalized cancer vaccine Zero Downtime is a weekly tech podcast covering AI, cybersecurity, privacy, Microsoft, Google, Apple, crypto, infrastructure, and the technology decisions that actually affect people and businesses.

    47 min

About

Zero Downtime brings together tech, business, and the everyday experiences of running an IT company. John and Logan discuss what’s going on in their world, the questions people ask them most, and talk with other business owners and professionals in conversations that are real, relaxed, and worth your time.