On this week’s show Patrick and Adam discuss the week’s security news, including:
Turns out AI is still bad code review after all,Mintlify loses a bunch of Github tokens,Everything old is new again with the UDP loop DoS,Know-your-(recon satellite)-customer is hard,Microsoft takes away Russia’s powershell, solving living off the land,And much, much moreThis week’s show is brought to you by Material Security. In this week’s sponsor interview we speak with Material’s Rajan Kapoor, VP of Customer Experience at Material. We’re also joined by Chaim Sanders, who heads Security and Privacy at Lyft.
Show notes
Anthropic’s CISO drinks the AI kool aid - backpedals frantically on security analysis claimIncident report on March 13, 2024 - MintlifyLoop DoS: New Denial-of-Service attack targets application-layer protocolsState of IP SpoofingPharmaceutical development company investigating cyberattack after LockBit postingExclusive: After LockBit’s takedown, its purported leader vows to hack onRussian-Canadian hacker sentenced for global ransomware scheme to be extradited | CTV NewsA Suspicious Pattern Alarming the Ukrainian Military - The AtlanticExclusive: Musk's SpaceX is building spy satellite network for US intelligence agency, sources say | ReutersElon Musk’s SpaceX Forges Closer Ties With U.S. Spy and Military Agencies - WSJRussians will no longer be able to access Microsoft cloud services, business intelligence toolsRostelecom blocks the SIP protocol for clients of Russian hosters / Sudo Null IT NewsResearchers spot updated version of malware that hit Viasat | CyberScoopEarth Krahang Exploits Intergovernmental Trust to Launch Cross-Government Attacks | Trend Micro (US)PRC State-Sponsored Cyber Activity: Actions for Critical Infrastructure Leaders | CISAUS is still chasing down pieces of Chinese hacking operation, NSA official says875 workers rescued in Tarlac POGO raid | Philippine News AgencyFujitsu says it found malware on its corporate network, warns of possible data breach | Ars TechnicaMike Lindell must pay a Nevada man after election data dispute - The Washington Post