Podcasts

News, analysis and commentary

Everything is getting much worse, much faster

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Technology Editor

In this podcast Brad Arkin joins James Wilson to talk about how the fear of being left behind in the AI era means enterprises are taking risks that would have been considered insane just a couple of years ago.

Fears around outages or being hacked have been trumped by fears of being labelled an AI laggard.

So where are we all going? Say hello to tech debt-riddled, vibe-coded apps, crazy dependencies on AI providers, and an emerging threat landscape that can’t be mitigated by a contemporary SOC. Sounds like fun, eh?

Everything is getting much worse, much faster
0:00 / 23:02

Soap Box: Detection and response in the AI age

Presented by

Patrick Gray
Patrick Gray

CEO and Publisher

In this sponsored Soap Box edition of the Risky Business podcast Patrick Gray chats with Edward Wu, founder of Dropzone, about what AI is doing to detection, response and the SOC more generally.

Dropzone makes AI agents that conduct alert investigations in your SOC, but will the SOC as we know it even exist in the future?

Ed has a deep expertise in SOC tech, having previously led AI/ML detection engineering at Extrahop. This interview is a fantastic look at what the future may bring for detection and response professionals.

This episode is also available on YouTube

Soap Box: Detection and response in the AI age
0:00 / 36:35

Risky Bulletin: EU unveils digital sovereignty plan

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

The EU unveils its digital sovereignty plan, an American law firm pays a $20 million ransom, authorities take down millions of email and social media scam accounts, and a new DoS bug can crash servers within seconds.

Risky Bulletin: EU unveils digital sovereignty plan
0:00 / 11:48

Srsly Risky Biz: NATO's cyber approach needs to change

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Technology Editor

Tom Uren
Tom Uren

Policy & Intelligence

Tom Uren and James Wilson talk about Tom’s trip to NATO’s Cyber Conflict conference. NATO countries want to bulk up their cyber efforts, and the pair discuss what that could look like.

They also look at the US military’s admission that commercial location data was used to target personnel involved in Epic Fury, the US war on Iran. This is not surprising at all, and is just the most visible manifestation of the national security risks of this kind of data sloshing around. If Iran is analysing this data in wartime, China is doing it in peacetime for intelligence and counter-espionage purposes.

This episode is also available on YouTube

Srsly Risky Biz: NATO's cyber approach needs to change
0:00 / 24:44

Risky Bulletin: FSB calls out Western spyware operation

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

Russia’s FSB calls out a Western spyware operation, high-profile Instagram accounts hijacked via Meta’s AI support agents, Red Hat npm packages were compromised in another supply chain attack, and ten percent of domains registered last year were malicious.

Risky Bulletin: FSB calls out Western spyware operation
0:00 / 10:39

Risky Business #840 -- Microsoft walks back researcher threats

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Technology Editor

Patrick Gray
Patrick Gray

CEO and Publisher

On this week’s show special guest co-host Andy Boyd joins Patrick Gray and James Wilson to discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. Andy is the CEO of REDLattice, which makes the Paragon “intelligence collection and reconnaissance” solution.

They cover:

  • Adversaries are tracking US troop locations with commercially available location data
  • A new Signal phishing campaign is going after message backups
  • 404 Media is suing ICE to get its spyware contract with REDLattice (lol)
  • Microsoft’s tone-deaf response to ‘never justifiable’ zero-day disclosures
  • Mini Shai-Hulud pops up again just as Glassworm gets shattered
  • Much, much more

This week’s episode is sponsored by Authentik, an open source identity platform that you can host yourself. In this week’s sponsor interview Authentik’s CEO Fletcher Heisler joins Patrick Gray to talk about how they’re keeping up with the bugpocalypse, and also the work they’re doing to support identities for AI agents.

This episode is also available on YouTube.

Risky Business #840 -- Microsoft walks back researcher threats
0:00 / 66:03

Solo podcast: A deep dive on TeamPCP

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Technology Editor

In this solo episode, James Wilson takes a detailed look at TeamPCP.

It started off by launching clumsy attacks against misconfigured Kubernetes clusters in September 2025. But by February this year, TeamPCP had skilled up and was smashing global software supply chains in the highest profile attacks of 2026.

TeamPCP upskilled and turned the software development ecosystem into its personal credential harvesting machine.

Here’s how TeamPCP did it, and what we can learn from it.

Solo podcast: A deep dive on TeamPCP
0:00 / 64:01

Between Two Nerds: The intelligence cult

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 the ways in which intelligence agencies are just like cults.

This episode is also available on YouTube

Between Two Nerds: The intelligence cult
0:00 / 27:55

Risky Bulletin: Recently patched PAN 0day exploited in the wild

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

A new Palo Alto Networks firewall bug is being exploited in the wild, Russia expands SORM surveillance, NIST is looking for new post quantum algorithms, and ENSOC launches in Europe.

Risky Bulletin: Recently patched PAN 0day exploited in the wild
0:00 / 7:05

Sponsored: Inside CISA's disastrous secrets leak

Presented by

Casey Ellis
Casey Ellis

Founder, Bugcrowd

In this sponsored interview Casey Ellis chats with Truffle Security’s founder and CEO Dylan Ayrey about the recent CISA secrets leak.

Days after Brian Krebs ran the story, plenty of the exposed credentials were still live, including an admin-level GitHub app key with full rights over CISA’s org.

Dylan walks through why deleting the repo doesn’t fix anything, why most cloud vendors won’t hard-revoke exposed keys (OpenAI and Slack will; AWS, Google and friends mostly won’t), why Hugging Face datasets now hold more secrets than GitHub itself, and what the next generation of multi-provider credential-harvesting supply chain worms is going to look like.

Sponsored: Inside CISA's disastrous secrets leak
0:00 / 19:10