The Host Unknown Podcast

Episode 193 - The "At Last!" Episode

Episode Summary

This week in InfoSec Talks about the visionary that is Mr Bill Gates Rant of the Week is a privacy horror show Billy Big Balls tells the story of the insider threat Industry News is the latest and greatest news stories from around the world And Tweet of the Week is a self-promoting tweet from one of our presenters

Episode Notes

This week in InfoSec  (11:36) 

With content liberated from the “today in infosec” twitter account and further afield

17th May 2015: CNN published their article on a statement Cybersecurity Consultant, Chris Roberts had publicly made on Twitter a month earlier.  There were lots of accusations made regarding Chris Roberts' actions hacking into computer systems while a passenger on multiple airline flights. Did he actually cause a plane to fly sideways? Maybe? But it's not like he made it fly upside down.

FBI: Hacker claimed to have taken over flight’s engine controls

https://twitter.com/todayininfosec/status/1791214444980080724

 

26th May 1995: Gates Declares Internet "Most Important Single Development"

Realising his company had missed the boat in estimating the impact and popularity of the Internet, Microsoft Corp. CEO Bill Gates issued a memo titled, "The Internet Tidal Wave," which signaled the company's renewed focus on that arena. In the memo, Gates declared that the Internet was the "most important single development" since the IBM personal computer -- a development that he was assigning "the highest level of importance”.

https://1995blog.com/2020/05/25/25-years-on-bill-gates-internet-tidal-wave-memo-a-seminal-document-of-the-unfolding-digital-age/

 

Rant of the Week (18:00)

Giving Windows total recall of everything a user does is a privacy minefield

Microsoft's Windows Recall feature is attracting controversy before even venturing out of preview.

Like so many of Microsoft's AI-infused products, Windows Recall will remain in preview while Microsoft refines it based on user feedback – or simply gives up and pretends it never happened.

The principle is simple. Windows takes a snapshot of a user's active screen every few seconds and dumps it to disk. The user can then scroll through the archive of snapshots to find what were doing some time back, or query an AI system to recall past screenshots by text.

 

Billy Big Balls of the Week (28:58)

Hacker Breaches Scam Call Center, Warns Victims They've Been Scammed

A hacker claims to have breached a scam call center, stolen the source code for the company’s tools, and emailed the company’s scam victims.

The hack is the latest in a long series of vigilante actions in which hackers take matters into their own hands and breach or otherwise disrupt scam centers. A massively popular YouTube community, with creators mocking their targets, also exists around the practice.

 

Industry News (34:17)

Authorities Arrest $100m Incognito Drugs Market Suspect

AI Seoul Summit: 16 AI Companies Sign Frontier AI Safety Commitments

UK Government in £8.5m Bid to Tackle AI Cyber-Threats

Mastercard Doubles Speed of Fraud Detection with Generative AI

PSNI Faces £750,000 Data Breach Fine After Spreadsheet Leak

GitHub Fixes Maximum Severity Flaw in Enterprise Server

National Records of Scotland Data Breached in NHS Cyber-Attack

NVD Leaves Exploited Vulnerabilities Unchecked

Microsoft: Gift Card Fraud Rising, Costing Businesses up to $100,000 a Day

 

Tweet of the Week (41:59)

https://twitter.com/gcluley/status/1792881296907043217

Two for one:

https://twitter.com/mer__edith/status/1793888092321202634