Sinopsis
A Podcast on Computer Security & Privacy for Non-Techies
Episodios
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Ente: Private by Design
29/09/2025 Duración: 01h02minIt's rare these days to find a well-designed and useful application that was made to be private from the get-go. Too many apps today view your personal data as a cash cow to be mercilessly milked, claiming to value your privacy when they really value the extra revenue they can make off of your private data. When I find useful apps that are private by design, especially ones that can replace more popular apps that harvest our data, I like to call attention to them: in this case, Ente Photos. Today I'll ask the founder and CEO why privacy is important to him and how it influenced his design approach. Interview Notes Ente Photo: https://ente.io/ Ente Auth: https://ente.io/auth/ Ente’s Machine Learning: https://ente.io/ml/ Ken Thompon’s lecture on trust: https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/358198.358210 Further Info My book: https://fdsd.me/book My newsletter: https://fdsd.me/newsletter Support the mission: https://fdsd.me/support Give the gift of privacy and security: https://fd
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Find Old Accounts (Part 2)
22/09/2025 Duración: 01h05minIn our quest to clean up and secure our data, today I will give you several clever and useful techniques for uncovering old, forgotten online accounts. We'll scrape the bottom of the barrel to complete our list of accounts so that we can upgrade their security, see what data they have, and remove anything we no longer want floating around out there, waiting to be stolen or abused. In the news: Chat Control is up for a vote in the EU (time to contact your MEPs); Samsung to show ads on their smart refrigerators; new automated sextortion spyware; a third of UK firms spying on employees; airlines sells 5B flight records for warrantless searching; ICE signs $3M contract for phone hacking tool; ChatGPT to guess your age or require ID; Swiss government looks to enable mass surveillance; Google Pixel 10 adds C2PA support; Apple iPhone 17 includes killer hardware security feature. Article Links Chat Control: Can the EU Parliament save our encrypted chats? https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/ch
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On the Ethics of AI
15/09/2025 Duración: 01h08minArtificial Intelligence (AI) is the Big Tech buzzword of the day. Every company who wants investment (public or private) is scrambling to have an "AI story", adding chatbots and 'agentic' features in their products wherever possible. The AI companies themselves are constantly expanding their models, ingesting as much data (including highly personal information) as possible. In this AI gold rush, companies are making flawed and often harmful products. Companies are firing workers and trying to replace them with AI bots. And it's forcing us all to question what's real, what has actual value, and what the impacts could and should be on society as a whole. Discussing deep questions like this is the purview of philosophers - and today I'll be welcoming back someone uniquely and supremely qualified to address them, Carissa Véliz. Interview Notes Carissa Véliz: https://www.carissaveliz.com/ Privacy is Power: https://www.carissaveliz.com/books Carissa’s research: https://www.carissaveliz.com/research
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Find Old Accounts (Part 1)
08/09/2025 Duración: 01h03minThe next step in reducing our digital footprint is to identify all of our online accounts, including the long forgotten and unused ones. The easiest place to start is by using the tool we should already have: our password manager. By its very nature, it contains a list of all our accounts. You may have used your browser to remember your passwords, or you may have some other method... but it's time to move to a real password manager. In other news: update your Android devices ASAP; Android malware spreading via Facebook ads; Google to make it harder to sideload Android apps; dashcam company cloud storage hacked; Anthropic to train model based on your chats; OpenAI sharing some GPT chats with law enforcement; ChatGPT getting parental controls after teen suicide; Microsoft Word will auto-save to OneDrive; Chrome VPN extension caught taking screenshots of sites you visit; US tells BigTech not to comply with DSA; and Flock pauses work with federal agencies. Article Links This Android Malware Is Spreading
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Meet Rayhunter
01/09/2025 Duración: 01h06minWe take our cell phones with us everywhere - which makes them the perfect tracking device. Just walking around with your device will give your location away in multiple ways. But even if you had no apps on your phone, the cellular chips in our devices will constantly be interacting with every cell tower that's in range, negotiating the best tower to talk to, whether to use 5G or something else, and authenticating to the network - even in Airplane Mode. Cell site simulators (aka Stingrays or IMSI catchers) can be used to trick your phone into give away your location. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has developed a cheap, easy-to-setup device that can try to discover and report these devices. Today I interview an expert panel about the clever Rayhunter project: Cooper Quintin, The Gibson, and OopsBagel. Interview Notes Rayhunter announcement: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/03/meet-rayhunter-new-open-source-tool-eff-detect-cellular-spying EFF’s Rayhunter project: https://efforg.github.io/
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Going on a Data Diet
25/08/2025 Duración: 01h05minThe world wide web, as we know it today, has been around for over 30 years. In that time, most of us have created many dozens, perhaps hundreds, of online accounts. How many of those accounts are still alive somewhere? What data do they hold? And how good are the passwords you used? Today we're going to start on the path to finding all those accounts which could drastically improve our privacy and security. In the news: millions of Dell laptops have critical security flaws you need to patch now; Facebook may be secretly scanning your phone's images; National Public Data is back and you should delete your data; data brokers are flouting privacy laws; Ionic 5 owners in the UK will have to pay for a security fix; Flipper Zero devices are being (wrongly) blamed for auto thefts; the US Supreme Court allows Mississippi social media law to go into effect; data brokers are hiding their opt-out pages; app TeaOnHer exposed users' data; UK backs down from Apple backdoor demand; and now is the time for EU residents to
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I’m Just a (Privacy) Bill
18/08/2025 Duración: 01h11minWhy don't we have meaningful privacy laws in the US? While we haven't been able to pass federal privacy legislation, many states have managed to pass laws protecting our data and establishing some basic privacy rights. Vermont House Representative Monique Priestley led a Herculean effort to pass privacy legislation in her state last year. While managing to get a solid bill through the House and Senate, the bill was ultimately vetoed by the governor and the Senate failed to override it. But along the way, Monique learned valuable lessons about dealing with Big Tech lobbyists. Today we'll follow the journey of the Vermont Data Privacy Act of 2024 and what lessons we should learn for future attempts at privacy legislation. Interview Notes Monique Priestley: https://mepriestley.com/ Vermont State Representative site: https://priestleyvt.com/ Vermont Committee Zoom call: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RfvAteuwRCA Age Appropriate Design Code: https://epic.org/epic-applauds-passage-of-vermont-age
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Hacker Summer Camp 2025
11/08/2025 Duración: 58minIt's early August, which means it's time for BSides Las Vegas and DEF CON, part of the trio of conferences that make up "hacker summer camp" (the other being Black Hat, which I don't attend). It's been a crazy, chaotic week - as usual - but in almost completely good ways. After the regular news, I've got some mini interviews with Jake Braun (DEF CON Franklin), Stacey Higginbotham (Consumer Reports), Cooper Quitin (EFF) and The Gibson (Veilid and hackers.town). In other news: Tea app users file a class action lawsuit over massive breach; ChatGPT sessions may be searchable by anyone; US government launches initiative to centralize health data for use by tech companies; Australia rolls out age verification for search engines; Grok AI is now in Teslas; China-backed hackers exploit horrific Microsoft bug; Dropbox ends its password manager service. Article Links Tea User Files Class Action After Women’s Safety App Exposes Data https://www.404media.co/tea-user-files-class-action-after-womens-safety-app-exp
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Tariffs vs IP Law
04/08/2025 Duración: 01h02minCory Doctorow has garnered a lot of needed attention to the decline of modern online platforms, including Google Search, Facebook and Twitter. Much of this is a result of coining the now-viral term Enshittification. Today we'll talk about how the internet was broken and who's to blame. We'll also discuss the lack of privacy laws and the threats of AI to tech workers and copyrighted works. Finally, we'll discuss Cory's novel proposal for how countries could respond to US tariffs by ripping up intellectual property agreements, changing the power dynamic of the Big Tech industry and hopefully benefiting consumers in the process. Interview Notes Cory’s blog (Pluralistic): https://pluralistic.net/ Canada shouldn't retaliate with US tariffs: https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/15/beauty-eh/#its-the-only-war-the-yankees-lost-except-for-vietnam-and-also-the-alamo-and-the-bay-of-ham Who Broke the Internet? https://www.cbc.ca/listen/cbc-podcasts/1353-the-naked-emperor Enshittification book (coming Oct 20
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Physical Phone Security
28/07/2025 Duración: 01h18minWe take our phones with us everywhere. And they contain, or have cloud access to, pretty much all of our personal information and online accounts. While phone makers have made it difficult for thieves to resell a stolen phone, anyone with physical access to your device may be able to extract its data or access all your accounts. Thankfully, Apple (iOS) and Google (Android) have recently introduced several features that can significantly increase your device's physical security and privacy. We'll discuss some of them today. In the news: VPN signups in UK spike after age verification law kicks in; Tea app data breach includes IDs; Amazon buys Bee AI wearable; your power meter is a surveillance tool; Amazon's Ring returns to sharing video with police; startup sells hacked data to debt collectors; Gemini AI on Android to get third party app access; Brave blocks Windows Recall; UK backs down on Apple back door; Apple to make passkeys portable; two new AI chatbots that are truly open and private. Article Link
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Passport, Lawyer, Locksmith
21/07/2025 Duración: 01h09minWe talk a lot about digital or online security. Today we're going to focus on physical security and the general ethos of "be prepared". There are many situations in life when you will find yourself wishing you had had the foresight to acquire certain things or establish certain professional relationships before you actually needed them. Deviant Ollam is a physical penetration specialist. His job is to find and fix weaknesses in physical things... buildings, locks, safes, etc. And along the way he has learned some important lessons for all of us. Today he will share his wisdom with us. Interview Notes Deviant’s website: https://deviating.net/ Lawyer,Passport, Locksmith, Gun talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ihrGNGesfI Attacking Classified Safes & Vaults: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Z_Jv7vuiqg Red Team Alliance: https://shop.redteamalliance.com/ Red Team Tools: https://www.redteamtools.com/ CackalackyCon: https://www.cackalackycon.org/ Shut the F**k Up PSA: https://www.y
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Freezing Your Mobile Account
14/07/2025 Duración: 01h04minYour cell phone number uniquely identifies you. Many companies rely on this 1-to-1 relationship to authenticate you to their systems. So if someone were to somehow manage to steal your mobile phone number - a hack called SIM swapping - they could use that to impersonate you and compromise any of your accounts that are validated via SMS or phone call. There's a new tool to combat this scam that's better than the old-style account PIN codes. I'll explain how it works. In the news: many Brother printers have serious cyber vulnerabilities; Belkin in abandoning Wemo smart devices next January; Xfinity's WiFi routers can detect motion in your entire home; Bluesky is rolling out age verification in the UK; California is using drones to catch the use of illegal fireworks; McDonald's AI hiring bot was hacked to expose millions of applicants' data; Mexican drug cartel hacked FBI phone to catch informants; US strikes blow against North Korean fake worker scams; Denmark is looking to ditch Microsoft products. Artic
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Defending Student Privacy
07/07/2025 Duración: 01h09minPrivacy risks are bad enough for adults - but it's much worse for our kids, particularly as students. Who provides notice and obtains consent for minors at school? In many cases it's not the parents, let alone the students - it's the school system. Not only are they opting the students into invasive data collection by profit-driven third parties, but they often also bind them to mandatory arbitration clauses, neutering their ability to seek legal redress for the inevitable violations. Today I'll discuss this horrid state of affairs with someone who is on the front lines of this battle for our children's right to privacy: co-founder of the EdTech Law Center, Andy Liddell. Interview Notes EdTech Law Center: https://edtech.law/about-us/ EdTech current cases: https://edtech.law/cases/ Internet Safety Labs: https://internetsafetylabs.org/ The Right to Oblivion (book): https://www.hup.harvard.edu/books/9780674260528 ACLU, Digital Dystopia: https://www.aclu.org/publications/digital-dystopia-th
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The In-App Switcheroo
30/06/2025 Duración: 01h12minDo you realize that you're not always using your chosen mobile web browser or your network privacy features? Many mobile apps have their own in-app browser that can gather your data and even inject ads and trackers into any web links you click. I'll explain how this works and what you can do about it. In the news: 23andMe bankruptcy ombudsman argues for user consent to data; Meta AI app privacy nightmare; Amazon, Roku sharing users for ads; WhatsApp launches in-app ads; healthcare sites are sharing your data; ICE seeks powerful new surveillance tool; Austrian government wants your encrypted data; new US visa rules require social media posts; Scattered Spider targeting insurance info; VT governor signs child data privacy law; Flock blocks access to some US states; Microsoft offers 1-year security updates for Win10 users; new Android 16 security features; Denmark's answer to deepfakes; cleaner Google search results; ChatGPT user info reports. Article Links [therecord.media] 23andMe privacy ombudsman r
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ShmooCon: Moose You Already
23/06/2025 Duración: 01h11minOn January 12th, 2025, the ShmooCon hacker conference held it's 20th and final gathering. I was lucky enough to be able to not only attend the final show but also to interview the founders, Heidi and Bruce Potter. We talk about how it all got started, what made this hacker con so special and beloved, and hear some hilarious stories from the past twenty years of hacker shenanigans in Washington D.C. Interview Notes ShmooCon: https://www.shmoocon.org/ ShmooCon 2025 sessions: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLnKSfJ5rXw95HSPVl5L7dqhKpVAx3q_j0 Turngate: https://www.turngate.io/ HOPE conference: https://www.hope.net/ BSides: https://bsides.org/ Cackalackycon: https://cackalackycon.org/ Thotcon: https://www.thotcon.org/ SummerCon: https://www.summercon.org/ PancakesCon: https://pancakescon.com/ Further Info My book: https://fdsd.me/book My newsletter: https://fdsd.me/newsletter Support the mission: https://fdsd.me/support Give the gift of privacy and
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Rogue AI?
16/06/2025 Duración: 01h35sArtificial Intelligence is taking over. But I don't mean that in a Skynet kinda way. It's simply becoming ubiquitous because companies are insisting on inserting the technology into all their products, even if it's not useful - or not even safe. Unfortunately, the breathless reporting on dangers of AI is also getting way out of hand, including stories of AI systems 'blackmailing' their designers. Today I'll try to bring us back to reality a bit. Also in the news: Billions of session login cookies up for grabs; Meta and Yandex cheat in order to track you around the web; Qualcomm fixes three zero-day bugs being actively exploited; Apple releases transparency report on push notification data requests; LAPD using Waymo for gathering video evidence; another massive AT&T user data leak includes SSNs; AI system appears to try to blackmail its owner; judge grants preliminary injunction on DOGE data grab; and we'll check in on your 2025 New Year's Resolutions! Article Links [theregister.com] Billions of cook
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Dialog with the Data Diva
09/06/2025 Duración: 01h02minDebbie Reynolds (aka, The Data Diva) has been working in the privacy realm for many years, as a privacy consultant, speaker, advisor and podcaster. She and I have been running in the same circles on LinkedIn for a while now, and we finally decided it was time to be a guest on each other's shows. Today Debbie and I will discuss the dangers of privacy in the realm of IoT devices (including her contributions on the US Department of Commerce's IoT Advisory Board), vehicles, and AI. I'll ask about her experiences advising corporations on privacy issues with emerging technologies and how she advocates for less data gathering and more transparency. Interview Notes Debbie Reynolds consulting: https://www.debbiereynoldsconsulting.com/ Data Diva podcast: https://www.debbiereynoldsconsulting.com/podcast My interview on Debbie’s podcast: https://www.debbiereynoldsconsulting.com/podcast/e228-carey-parker The Right to Privacy book (1995): https://www.amazon.com/Right-Privacy-Caroline-Kennedy/dp/067941986
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Life in the Panopticon
02/06/2025 Duración: 01h26minTracking our faces and whereabouts is getting out of control. It's a mass surveillance infrastructure that keeps growing in Borg-like fashion. Facial recognition and license plate readers are proliferating at a stupefying pace and companies like Flock are consolidating the collected data and packaging it up for sale to law enforcement agencies. Even if no human in these agencies were to abuse this data, it's creating an irresistible target for scheming hackers and nation states keen on espionage. The longer we let this go, the harder it will be to stop. In today's news: Asus routers are being hacked and you need to take action; 23andMe has been sold, along with its users' genetic data; AI-generated videos have just become way more realistic; US government taps surveillance company to centralize all its citizen data; CFPB regulation limiting data brokers is axed; Kroger is packaging and selling its customer loyalty data; automated license plate reader data use is expanding in scary ways; Android phones gain
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Dividing Trust
26/05/2025 Duración: 01h10minVPNs were not invented for privacy, despite the name - they were invented for security. Nevertheless, in recent years, they have been touted as privacy tools to thwart rampant and fanatical data gathering. With a regular VPN, this really just means you're shifting your trust from your internet service provider to your VPN provider. But what if your encrypted data traffic was actually divided between two separate companies? The split trust model is a powerful way to protect your privacy and it's the key technology behind new services like Apple's Private Relay and Obscura VPN. Today we'll discuss the benefits of this approach with Obscura's founder, Carl Dong. Interview Notes Obscura VPN: https://obscura.net/ Wireguard: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WireGuard Obscura Wireguard configuration tool: https://obscura.net/#faq-wireguard-config QUIC explainer video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HnDsMehSSY4 Masque: https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/masque/about/ Privacy Pass: https://privacy
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Slay Message Snoopers
19/05/2025 Duración: 45minThere are way too many messenger apps today. It's a sad state of affairs and I don't see it getting better anytime soon. But the real problem (for me) is that almost all of the popular messenger apps aren't really that secure and private. Most do not have end-to-end encryption (E2EE) at all or it's not turned on by default. And frankly even the apps with E2EE are run by companies whose revenue model is based on monetizing your personal data. I'm going to suggest you try Signal. In other news: study finds Canadian's health data being sold to drug makers; DOGE worker's computer has been hacked; airlines are selling your data to ICE; a massive proxy botnet has been shut down; Google pays $1.4B to Texas over unauthorized tracking and data collection; Denver decides to stop using license plate readers of privacy concerns; jury orders NSO Group to pay hundreds of millions of dollars for hacking WhatsApp users. Article Links [cbc.ca] Millions of Canadians' health data available for sale to pharmaceutical i