
In the security news this week: GPS spoofing and satellite jamming are getting way too accessible Rekeying satellites in orbit sounds terrifying Cyber extortion and whether criminals still have ethics AI helping cybersecurity research... and drug discovery Data centers eating regional power grids Nuclear, solar, natural gas, and the future of AI infrastructure What happens when GPS stops being trustworthy? Satellite constellations as the next critical infrastructure target AI guardrails and why sci-fi warned us first Cyber ranges that don't simulate reality anymore The weird morality line between hackers, scammers, and criminals Future satellite warfare without calling it warfare Security standards for infrastructure nobody thought would be online Historical cybersecurity stories that suddenly feel very current Why AI changes both offense and defense simultaneously And how much of modern cyber defense is just educated guessing Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-931
Jun 18
2 hr 6 min

In the security news: Trolling Microsoft With Vulnerabilities Fable 5 loves guardrails Binwalk vulnerability EMBA and local models EDRChoker AI worms Interesting Arista vulnerability added to KEV BOD 26-04 and stakeholder specific vulnerability categorization Bring your own execution environment Homelab tips MikroTik routers as interceptors Ivanti Sentry and irony Smart TV botnets Privacy laws Solarwinds Serv-U lives on More Cisco SD-WAN fun! Russia can jam GPS No nudes for you says UK Government "Why would someone want to learn code when AI does it better and faster?" Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-930
Jun 11
2 hr 2 min

This week in the security news: Security Researchers Are Threat Actors according to Microsoft Hands-free malicious firmware If you've ever typed "ls" in Windows, this is for you Cisco makes more patches, wants you to pay Ambiguous Secure Boot bypass Threat actors love network edge devices, and I have the chat logs and leaks to prove it The downside of chip sanctions Your VoIP phone is hacked Vulnerability disclosure and incentives Claude reccovers Bitcoin wallet an Instagram "Exploit" Turn the plane around The worms will continue PAN-OS global protect vulnerability The 1-Click Github token stealer Data-nuking prompt injection Turning Buses into spies SymJack NIST NVD mistakes, and how CNAs need to up their game Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-929
Jun 4
2 hr 1 min

This week we have a technical segment focused on Linux! Paul released a script that helps you get a handle on Linux supply chain security, and new features allow you to assess the state of Secure Boot on your Linux systems (that also use MS certificates, ironically). The script is in his Git repo: https://github.com/pasadoorian/Linux_Hacks. In the security news: The CVE chase The new security basics Enterprises are lacking more than AI Detections are falling behind Why DOOM!?! Chromium vulnerability The ambitious Flipper One I'm still curious who was behind these leaks Mitre moves Caldera to Apache foundation Wind cybersecurity PQC updates YellowKey Bitlocker Bypass updates The software supply chain is in deep trouble Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-928
May 28
2 hr 4 min

In the security news this week: FCC router bans and the hidden firmware update problem Why extending support timelines actually improves security Github supply chain concerns and the evolving SBOM ecosystem CRA and NIS2 compliance deadlines are getting very real The EU Cyber Resilience Act's 24-hour vulnerability disclosure requirement Security regulation: vertical vs horizontal compliance models Vehicle-to-load EV systems powering homes during outages Solar, batteries, AI farms, and the future economics of electricity Data centers consuming regional power grids BitLocker "Yellow Key" fallout and large-scale remediation challenges AI-generated PowerShell fixes and the rise of vibe scripting Linux kernel exploits, module jail, and default deny strategies Medical biometric data theft and why fingerprints are terrible passwords Interpol cybercrime operations across the MENA region OT security, connected vehicles, and accepting real-world risk The crew also discusses threat intelligence obligations under the CRA, the operational realities of patching at enterprise scale, the economics of secure-by-default systems, and why making security cheaper than insecurity might finally move the industry forward. Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-927
May 21
2 hr 2 min

This week: New Yellowkey bitlocker bypass and what it means for you Hackers can run you over with a robot lawnmower FCC says new things about routers, again Glitching with AI almost no false positives AI thought it was evil DirtyFrag and the sad state of Linux LPEs You can buy better tools, perfect security, and other lies The Canvas breach Hackers can still take over trains Baby monitors, on the Internet! dnsmasq flaws I am now paying attention to Swordfish A neat vulnerability for ransomware Mythos, Curl, and how to do secure software Various ways to use AI to find bugs, spoiler, you don't need Mythos Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-926
May 14
2 hr 2 min

Rob Allen from Threatlocker joins us to discuss the risks associated with VPN appliances and how to implement better security solutions that don't leave you hanging out on the open Internet. The interview segment is sponsored by ThreatLocker. Visit https://securityweekly.com/threatlockerrsac to learn more about them! In the Security News: Less details about the FCC router ban Canary traps that work Hacking trains and getting arrested You can be an adult if you have a mustache cPanel is being exploited Pro-Iran group takes down Ubuntu Anthropic's new security solution Safe AI Agents and other lies People still use screensavers? CISA and operating for weeks or months in isolation Paramiko issues fixes Find security research Copy/Fail and AI slop debate ESP32 simulator Spotting vibe coded malware Fast16 - Stuxnet before Stuxnet Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-925
May 7
2 hr 4 min

This week in the security news: Are you a FIRESTARTER? Eavesdropping via fiber-optic cables Copy Fail - more Linux LPE Github RCE Running Linux on a PS5 BadUSB tricks SilentGlass and HDMI threats Sonicwall and vague details Universities are for porn? The Banshee Before CVEs comes scanning Vendor addresses AirSnitch GitHub and not serious work Routers have country-specific backdoors Phones with Hotspot are fine Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-924
Apr 30
2 hr 2 min

This week: Larry's in the host seat and chaos ensues. We dig into: A very questionable story about tracking a warship with a $5 Bluetooth tracker Serial-to-IP devices quietly sitting in critical infrastructure… and full of holes New York regulators mandating MFA and asset inventory—aka CIS Control #1 is now breaking news A ransomware negotiator who decided to double-dip (and landed in prison) "Brand new" hard drives that come preloaded… with someone else's data The Vercel breach: no zero-day, just shadow IT, stolen tokens, and bad decisions AI-driven vulnerability discovery and the looming "vulnpocalypse" Quantum crypto debates: real threat or just another security boogeyman? Mirai is STILL alive—because apparently we still don't patch routers And yes… Flipper Zero makes an appearance (no, you're not hacking airplanes… calm down) Then, we rebroadcast an interview from RSAC. Breach Readiness for Measurable Risk Reduction in the Age of AI Cyber leaders no longer debate whether a breach will occur. What has changed is the speed and scale at which AI now enables those breaches. The real question is how far an attacker can move once inside. In this conversation, Rajesh Khazanchi explores why breach readiness, including AI-assisted containment, measurable blast radius reduction, and pervasive microsegmentation, has become mission-critical for business continuity in 2026. This segment is sponsored by ColorTokens. Visit https://securityweekly.com/colortokensrsac to learn more about them! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-923
Apr 23
2 hr 3 min

This week: CSA issues guidance to CISOs on Mythos Vuln management woes Windows tells you about Secure Boot AI-assisted firmware vuln hunting The dumbest hack Edge decay and the failing perimeter Mac OS X on a Wii Little snitch comes to Linux CPUID served malware Buying plugins to backdoor them Addicted to hacking Is Mythos just a sales pitch? We are still talking about Adobe Acrobat vulns A single line AI jailbreak Hacking Apple Intelligence Don't leave your ICS device or RDP exposed to the Internet! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-922
Apr 16
2 hr 4 min
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