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100 episodes
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Risky Business News risky.biz
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Regular cybersecurity news updates from the Risky Business team...
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Risky Biz News: US charges Andariel member for ransomware attacks
A short podcast updating listeners on the security news of the last few days, as prepared by Catalin Cimpanu and read by Claire Aird.
You can find the newsletter version of this podcast here. -
Srsly Risky Biz: Chinese Illegal Gambling's Worldwide Tentacles
In this podcast Tom Uren and Patrick Gray discuss the wild story of a Chinese illegal gambling operation that involves human trafficking, shell companies, money laundering, hundreds of thousands of websites and sponsorship of European football teams.
They also talk about why a potential CSRB review of CrowdStrike’s disaster should focus… not on CrowdStrike, but instead on the legacy practice of security vendors having kernel-level access to Windows.
Finally, Tom is happy that the FTC is going to investigate ‘surveillance pricing’. -
Risky Biz News: New Russian ICS malware cuts heat to 600 Ukrainian apartment buildings
A short podcast updating listeners on the security news of the last few days, as prepared by Catalin Cimpanu and read by Claire Aird.
You can find the newsletter version of this podcast here. -
Between Two Nerds: Every cloud has a silver lining
In this edition of Between Two Nerds Tom Uren and The Grugq discuss whether the rise of cloud computing has been a boon or a curse for cyber espionage agencies.
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Risky Biz News: CrowdStrike faulty update affects 8.5 million Windows systems
A short podcast updating listeners on the security news of the last few days, as prepared by Catalin Cimpanu and read by Claire Aird.
You can find the newsletter version of this podcast here. -
Sponsored: Socket CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh on how tracking vulnerabilities isn't enough for open source repositories
In this Risky Business News sponsored interview, Tom Uren talks to Feross Aboukhadijeh, CEO and Founder of Socket about how open source repositories are riddled with horrible software. Feross explains why it makes a difference if a package is vulnerable, malicious or just unwanted and how current transparency mechanisms such as CVEs and the NVD just aren’t suitable for the challenge of open source repositories.