Podcasts

News, analysis and commentary

Srsly Risky Biz: US Vows to Fight Distillation Attacks

Presented by

Amberleigh Jack
Amberleigh Jack

Producer and Editor

Tom Uren
Tom Uren

Policy & Intelligence

Tom Uren and Amberleigh Jack talk about the US government stepping in to fight ‘distillation attacks’ by Chinese AI labs. These are methods used to steal the special sauce of frontier AI models simply by asking questions.

They also discuss the wide-spread shift amongst Chinese threat actors to using botnets for all aspects of their operations. It’s a problem for defenders, but also a disruption opportunity for authorities.

This episode is also available on YouTube.

Srsly Risky Biz: US Vows to Fight Distillation Attacks
0:00 / 18:22

Risky Business #835 -- Why the Fast16 malware is badass

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Enterprise Technology Editor

Patrick Gray
Patrick Gray

CEO and Publisher

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray and James Wilson are joined by special guest-host Dmitri Alperovitch. They discuss the week’s cybersecurity news, including:

  • The US government is mad as hell about Chinese firms stealing American AI technology
  • Dmitri has an opinion or two about the US selling Nvidia chips to China
  • Speaking of Chinese AI, Kimi’s new 2.6 is very interesting
  • The US sanctions a Cambodian senator for earning mega bucks through scam compounds
  • And a ransomware family is promoting itself as being … quantum-safe?

This week’s show is sponsored by Trail of Bits. CEO and co-founder Dan Guido chats to Pat about how private inference works and Trail of Bits’ audit of WhatsApp’s private AI setup.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Risky Business #835 -- Why the Fast16 malware is badass
0:00 / 66:28

A deep dive on AI model distillation attacks

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Enterprise Technology Editor

In this solo episode of Risky Business Features James Wilson explores how distillation techniques are both a legitimate way to train smaller models, as well as a way to steal model capabilities. It’s not just a problem for frontier labs! Any LLM-based product could have its competitive advantage stolen through these attacks.

James covers:

  • High-level concept of distillation
  • Why it matters including close/open-weight/open-source explanation
  • Types of distillation and the prompts used
  • The distillation pipeline end to end
  • Distillation at scale and mitigation techniques
  • Hardware resource constraints for distillation
A deep dive on AI model distillation attacks
0:00 / 72:08

Risky Bulletin: Ukrainians hacked Russian satellite comms platform

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

Ukrainians hack Russian satellites, Vimeo is being extorted, Greece wants to ban anonymity on social media, and a Scattered Spider hacker was arrested in Finland.

Risky Bulletin: Ukrainians hacked Russian satellite comms platform
0:00 / 8:31

Between Two Nerds: Hackers from the future

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 what the North Korean hack of Drift can tell us about the future of hacking.

This episode is also available on YouTube.

Between Two Nerds: Hackers from the future
0:00 / 32:10

Risky Bulletin: New fingerprinting technique can track Tor users

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

A fingerprinting technique can track Tor users, Intellexa had an American exploit provider, the US accuses China of copying its AI, and the US router ban also covers WiFi hotspots.

Risky Bulletin: New fingerprinting technique can track Tor users
0:00 / 8:39

Sponsored: RunZero accidentally got good at OT

Presented by

Casey Ellis
Casey Ellis

Founder, Bugcrowd

In this Risky Business sponsored interview Casey Ellis chats to RunZero’s founder and CEO HD Moore about RunZero’s new release: 4.9. It drops this week and doubles down on OT scanning. Animated world and network maps add another layer to visualisation and for those that have been asking: yes, there’s a dark mode.

Sponsored: RunZero accidentally got good at OT
0:00 / 15:39

Risky Bulletin: Sean Plankey withdraws CISA nomination

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Claire Aird
Claire Aird

Newsreader

Sean Plankey withdraws his CISA Director nomination, Russians hacked the Bundestag President, Discord users gain unauthorised access to Anthropic’s Mythos, and the US sanctions a Cambodian senator for running cyber scam compounds.

Risky Bulletin: Sean Plankey withdraws CISA nomination
0:00 / 11:38

Feature Interview: Nicholas Carlini, Anthropic

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Enterprise Technology Editor

Patrick Gray
Patrick Gray

CEO and Publisher

In this episode, Anthropic’s Nicholas Carlini joins Patrick Gray and James Wilson to talk about advancements in AI-driven vulnerability research and exploit development.

Nicholas’ talk at the recent [un]prompted conference demonstrated how Anthropic’s Opus 4.6 could find and exploit vulnerabilities in popular open source projects. In the short few weeks since then, Anthropic announced a new model that’s already identifying hundreds of bug fixes across critical software. Nicholas talks us through the work he does at Anthropic, what’s possible and the limitations with current frontier models, and where this goes from here.

This episode is also available on YouTube

Feature Interview: Nicholas Carlini, Anthropic
0:00 / 42:44

Srsly Risky Biz: Musk snubs French authorities

Presented by

James Wilson
James Wilson

Enterprise Technology Editor

Tom Uren
Tom Uren

Policy & Intelligence

Tom Uren and James Wilson talk about the French criminal investigation into bias and illegal content on X. Elon Musk and former X CEO Linda Yaccarino didn’t appear for voluntary interviews scheduled this week, but refusing meetings won’t make X’s problems go away. European countries are concerned about X’s influence and regulators will be exploring all other options beyond criminal investigations.

They also discuss the fight to renew authorisation of Section 702 collection. It’s a valuable intelligence source, but in the past the FBI pointlessly overused it.

This episode is also available on YouTube

Srsly Risky Biz: Musk snubs French authorities
0:00 / 22:24