Podcasts

News, analysis and commentary

Risky Bulletin: DHS IG investigates forced CISA reassignments

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

The DHS inspector general will investigate forced CISA reassignments, Canada hacked a ransomware gang, Taiwan charges two executives with helping Chinese hackers, and new vulnerabilities can disable Hoymiles solar panels.

Risky Bulletin: DHS IG investigates forced CISA reassignments
0:00 / 9:48

Soap Box: Using threat hunting to drive detection

Presented by

Patrick Gray
Patrick Gray

CEO and Publisher

In this wholly sponsored Soap Box edition of the podcast Patrick Gray chats with Damien Lewke, the CEO and founder of Nebulock, about the future of threat hunting and detection.

Damien spent a decade in the EDR and MDR space before founding Nebulock in 2024. It started off as an AI-powered threat hunt platform but has evolved into a broader security data platform that can answer questions, drive hunts and drive detections.

This product is engineered around the idea that a lot of security is a data problem. So, if we accept this premise, how do we solve security? And how much of that solution is about agents, vs building a good graph? And if you’re going to build a good graph, do you want to build it for a person to use, or an agent to use?

This is truly a conversation for the security nerd’s nerd. Enjoy!

This episode is also available on YouTube

Soap Box: Using threat hunting to drive detection
0:00 / 35:16

Between Two Nerds: Why AI has not meant more hacks. Yet.

Presented by

The Grugq
The Grugq

Independent Security Researcher

Tom Uren
Tom Uren

Policy & Intelligence

In this edition of Between Two Nerds Tom Uren and The Grugq talk about why we haven’t seen an explosion of devastating hacks even though AI has been used to discover lots and lots of bugs.

This episode is also available on YouTube.

Between Two Nerds: Why AI has not meant more hacks. Yet.
0:00 / 32:14

Risky Bulletin: EU official’s phone infected with Pegasus

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

A European MP’s phone was infected by Pegasus spyware, Android drops its PIN guessing limit from 1,800 attempts to 20, Alibaba bans employees from using Claude at work, and there’s a new vulnerability in the Linux kernel.

Risky Bulletin: EU official’s phone infected with Pegasus
0:00 / 5:46

Risky Bulletin: FatFs bugs enable physical access attacks on a load of devices

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

FatFs bugs enable physical access attacks on industrial equipment, a clever password spraying attack bypasses M365 MFA, an AI agent is deploying ransomware in live attacks, and a webinar platform sues two security firms over bad IOCs.

Risky Bulletin: FatFs bugs enable physical access attacks on a load of devices
0:00 / 9:20

Srsly Risky Biz: America won't beat the distillation ecosystem

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Technology Editor

Tom Uren
Tom Uren

Policy & Intelligence

Tom Uren and James Wilson talk about Chinese AI labs stealing the special sauce of American AI models in ‘distillation attacks’. These attacks are fed by a grey market in which Chinese consumers buy access to American models, where one of the byproducts is logs of user requests and responses. These make wonderful inputs into distillation attacks and the whole market might be subsidised by Chinese AI Labs paying for these logs.

They also discuss the possibility that last year’s hack of Jaguar Land Rover was caused by a group of Russian hackers. Was it Russians? Was it state-directed or endorsed? Who knows, but even the possibility that it was has some benefits for the Russian state.

This episode is also available on YouTube

Srsly Risky Biz: America won't beat the distillation ecosystem
0:00 / 30:02

Risky Bulletin: Researcher drops giant cache of zero-days

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

An anonymous researcher has dropped a giant cache of zero-day exploits, a sensitive DHS network got hacked, the US Supreme Court restricts geofence warrants, and security firm Huntress has denied accusations of a malicious insider.

Risky Bulletin: Researcher drops giant cache of zero-days
0:00 / 9:45

Risky Business #844 -- China closes AI vulndev gap as USA lifts Fable ban

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Technology Editor

Adam Boileau
Adam Boileau

Co-host at large

Patrick Gray
Patrick Gray

CEO and Publisher

On this week’s show Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They cover:

  • Anthropic’s Fable 5 returning while OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 gets thrown in model jail
  • Distillation, cheap tokens, and AI chat harvesting is an industry in China
  • Edge becomes a lolbin via a new malicious extension
  • An Iranian APT boss’s vacation in a beautiful place goes wrong
  • Much, much more!

In this week’s sponsor interview Daf Stuttard and Katie Warren from Portswigger pop along to talk about how they built an AI security testing product that people would actually feel comfortable using.

This episode is also available on YouTube.

Risky Business #844 -- China closes AI vulndev gap as USA lifts Fable ban
0:00 / 60:11

Mythos on your desk? Using local LLMs for code reviews

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Technology Editor

In this podcast episode James Wilson chats with Karsten Nohl about his research into using local LLMs to replace cloud AI in security code reviews.

In essence, Karsten created a hybrid code reviewing system where both cloud and local models are used to orchestrate, triage outputs, and write reports. In this system, only the local LLMs have source code access, with the cloud models used to manage the local models.

In this “source-local” review technique, the source code never leaves the local endpoint, which is a requirement for some reviews. But funnily enough, Karsten was able to use this system to generate findings that were as impressive as when using frontier models directly.

In a nutshell, Karsten proved it’s possible to use locally-hosted, open-weight models running on commodity hardware to produce findings comparable to those discovered by frontier cloud models.

This episode is also available on YouTube.

Mythos on your desk? Using local LLMs for code reviews
0:00 / 71:29

Between Two Nerds: Set cyberspace ablaze

Presented by

The Grugq
The Grugq

Independent Security Researcher

Tom Uren
Tom Uren

Policy & Intelligence

In this edition of Between Two Nerds, Tom Uren and The Grugq discuss whether cyber organisations should actually be separated from Signals Intelligence organisations. The Grugq argues that having cyber expertise subordinate to intelligence collection means that many opportunities are never explored.

This episode is also available on YouTube.

Between Two Nerds: Set cyberspace ablaze
0:00 / 39:08