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Before yesterdayRisky Business

Risky Business #836 -- You can't patch the bugpocalypse

6 May 2026 at 01:14

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

  • The US Government says we just have to patch faster, but…
  • Bugs in cPanel, MoveIt and all Linux distributions this week show that patching alone isn’t enough
  • James gets mad about lame AI Agent adoption advice from the US and Australian Governments
  • James Kettle and Niels Provos both showed us that any model can find 0day like Mythos
  • And the cyber-assisted theft of cargo results in an astonishing loss of $725 million dollars

This week’s show is sponsored by SpecterOps. Their CTO, Jared Atkinson, chats to Pat about the big changes in the threat landscape, brought about by AI, that are causing a pivot away from detection and remediation, and toward prevention.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Snake Oilers: Ent AI, Spacewalk and Mondoo

30 April 2026 at 20:58

In this edition of the Snake Oilers podcast three vendors stop by to pitch the audience on their products:

  • Ent AI: Co-founder Brandon Dixon pitched Ent, an intent-aware, AI-powered endpoint security control.

  • Spacewalk AI: Founders Chris Fuller and Tim Wenzlau pitch Spacewalk, an AI-powered incident response platform.

  • Mondoo: Co-founder Dominik Richter pitches Mondoo, an AI-powered “service as software” in the vulnerability management space.

This episode is also available on YouTube.

Show notes

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

29 April 2026 at 00:43

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.

Show notes

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Risky Business #834 -- Vercel gets owned, Mozilla dumps hundreds of Mythos bugs

22 April 2026 at 05:11

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

  • Vercel got owned, and there’s a few infostealer and compromised employee dots to connect
  • Mozilla used Mythos to find 271 bugs, which feels like a sign of the bug-pocalypse
  • Speaking of the bug-pocalypse, is that why NIST is noping out of enriching a bunch of bugs?
  • The NSA is using Mythos even though the government did that whole Anthropic blacklisting thing
  • And DDos attacks hit a couple of smaller-player socials

This week’s episode is sponsored by Permiso. Ian Ahl chats to Pat about the subtle signals Permiso uses to detect ShinyHunters-style activity in cloud and on-prem environments.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Business #833 -- The Great Mythos Freakout of 2026

14 April 2026 at 23:34

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They cover:

  • Everyone has an opinion about Claude Mythos… even though almost nobody has used it yet
  • CISA adds a 2009 Excel bug to the KEV list, u wot?
  • Adobe also parties like it’s the 2000s, and fixes an Acrobat Reader bug
  • Disgraced former Trenchant exec Peter Williams’ sob story fails to resonate with … anyone
  • Remember those crosswalk buttons hacked to play audio mocking Trump and Zuck? They were “secured” by the password: 1234.

This week’s episode is sponsored by mobile network operator, Cape. Ajit Gokhale talks with James about the ways to get being a telco right when you’re starting from scratch and solving the security problems of 2026.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Snake Oilers: Burp AI, Sondera and Truffle Security

9 April 2026 at 17:33

In this edition of the Snake Oilers podcast three vendors stop by to pitch the audience on their products:

  • Burp AI and DAST: The founder of PortSwigger and creator of legendary security software Burp Suite, Dafydd Stuttard, drops by to pitch listeners on Burp AI and Burp Suite DAST.

  • Sondera: Josh Devon talks about Sondera, a technology designed to intervene when AI models start doing the wrong thing by statefully tracking their trajectories. This isn’t a permissions suite for AI agents, it’s a way to stick agents in a harness and make sure they adhere to hard policy boundaries.

  • Truffle Security: Dylan Ayrey, the founder of Truffle Security, joins Risky Business again to talk through the latest bells and whistles in Trufflehog, a security tool that searches for exposed secrets and validates them. The Truffle team has done a lot of work on the remediation part of their product over the last few years, and Dylan tells us all about it!

This episode is also available on YouTube

Show notes

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Risky Business #832 -- Anthropic unveils magical 0day computer God

8 April 2026 at 00:59

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They cover:

  • Anthropic’s new Mythos model hunts bugs and chains exploits together so well that… you cant have it…
  • …Unless you’re one of their Project Glasswing partners
  • The world isn’t short on bugs, though. F5, Fortinet, Progress ShareFile, and TrueConf are all getting rekt by humans
  • GPU Rowhammering goes in the GPU, past the IOMMU and back into the host-side Nvidia driver
  • North Korea is spending serious time and money on its crypto hacking
  • Just when the US needs CISA most, they slash its budget some more!

This week’s episode is sponsored by identity verification firm, Persona. Tying digital actions to actual human identities isn’t just for banking know-your-customer any more. Persona’s Benjamin Chait says know-your-staff checks belong in high-value flows inside your organisation, too.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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How the World Got Owned Episode 2: The 1990s, Part One

2 April 2026 at 20:35

In this special documentary episode, Patrick Gray and Amberleigh Jack take a look back at hacking throughout the 1990s, from the feel-good vibes of the early hacking communities to the antics of young hackers who wound up on the run from the FBI.

Part one features recollections from:

  • Jeff Moss (The Dark Tangent), DefCon and Black Hat founder
  • Chris Wysopal (Weld Pond), L0pht member, co-founder, @Stake
  • Kevin Poulsen (Dark Dante), 1990s hacker turned journalist
  • Elias Levy (Aleph One), author of Smashing the Stack for Fun and Profit, Phrack, 1996

How the World Got Owned is produced in partnership with SentinelOne.

Show notes

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Risky Business #831 -- The AI bugpocalypse begins

31 March 2026 at 23:50

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They cover:

  • Those pesky North Koreans shim a backdoor into a 100M-downloads-a-week npm package
  • TeamPCP appear to have ransacked Cisco’s source and cloud environments
  • AI is getting legitimately good at being told to “just go find some 0day in this”
  • Kaspersky says Coruna and Triangulation do share code lineage
  • Iranian hackers dump Kash Patel’s gmail spool
  • Oh, and of course there’s a Citrix Netscaler memory leak being exploited in the wild

This week’s episode is sponsored by Dropzone AI, who make automated AI SOC analysts. Head honcho Ed Wu explains how they’ve built pre-canned ‘hunt packs’ to lead the AI off into your environment to find weird, interesting and security relevant things.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Soap Box: Red teaming AI systems with SpecterOps

26 March 2026 at 21:07

In this sponsored Soap Box edition of the show, Patrick Gray and James Wilson talk about red teaming AI systems with Russel Van Tuyl, Vice President of Services at elite penetration testing firm SpecterOps.

SpecterOps is the company behind attack path enumeration tool Bloodhound and Bloodhound Enterprise, but they’re also a pentest and red teaming shop with world class expertise in popping shells on all sorts of interesting systems in all sorts of interesting places.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Business #830 -- LiteLLM and security scanner supply chains compromised

25 March 2026 at 00:13

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James WIlson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They talk through:

  • TeamPCP’s supply chain attack on Github, and they threw in an anti-Iran wiper, because why not?!
  • Anthropic hooks up its models to just… use your whole computer
  • After Stryker’s Very Bad Day, CISA says maybe add some more controls around your Intune?
  • Another iOS exploit kit shows up in the cyber bargain-bin
  • The FTC decides to ban… all new home routers?! U wot m8?!
  • Supermicro founder was personally sanction-busting Nvidia GPUs into China?!

This week’s episode is sponsored by enterprise browser maker, Island. Chief Customer Officer Bradon Rogers joins Pat to explain how its customers are using Island to control the use of personal AI services in regulated industries.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Business #829 -- Sneaky lobsters: Why AI is the new insider threat

17 March 2026 at 23:39

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James WIlson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They discuss:

  • Iran’s Intune-based wiper attack on medical device maker Stryker
  • Qihoo 360’s AI publishes its own wildcard TLS cert private key
  • Instagram is canning its end-to-end encrypted messaging
  • What’s going on with mobile internet access in Moscow?
  • The Xbox One’s bootloader gets voltage glitched into submission
  • Oh Qualys! We love you! (At least, whoever is in the basement writing these beautiful .txt files…)

This week’s episode is sponsored by browser-based detection and response company, Push Security. Researcher Dan Green and Field CTO Mark Orlando join Pat to talk through the InstallFix variant of the *Fix attack technique.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Biz Soap Box: It took a decade, but allowlisting is cool again

12 March 2026 at 19:12

In this Soap Box edition of the Risky Business podcast Patrick Gray sits down with Airlock Digital co-founders Daniel Schell and David Cottingham to talk about the role AI models could play in managing enterprise allowlists.

They also talk about the durability of allowlisting as a control. After 12 years in business, the Airlock product hasn’t really changed all that much. That’s a good thing! It also means the Airlock team have been able to spend some time doing deep engineering instead of chasing the latest attacker TTPs and writing detection rules for them.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Business #828 -- The Coruna exploits are truly exquisite

11 March 2026 at 00:31

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James WIlson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They cover:

  • The Coruna exploits were L3 Harris, but it seems Triangulation… was not!
  • Iran’s cyber HQ hit by Israeli (kinetic) strikes
  • Trump’s cyber “strategy” is … well, all we’ve got is jokes cause there’s no serious content
  • NSA and CyberCom finally get a leader after Lt Gen Joshua Rudd gets Senate nod
  • DOGE (remember them?!) employee walked a social security database out on a USB stick

This episode is sponsored by open source cloud security scanner Prowler. Creator and CEO Toni de la Fuente talks to Pat about some of the enterprise features Prowler is growing, while remaining true to its open source roots.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Business #827 -- Iranian cyber threat actors are down but not out

3 March 2026 at 23:29

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James WIlson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They cover:

  • The US-Israeli attack on Iran had a whole lot of cyber. It’s clearly in the playbook now!
  • The NSA Triangulation / L3 Harris Trenchant iOS exploit kit is on the loose, and being used by Chinese crypto scammers
  • So long Maddhu Gottumukkala, but CISA’s annus horribilis continues
  • Adam “humbug” Boileau complains about the Airsnitch wifi attack just being three ethernets in a trenchcoat
  • ASD’s Cisco SD-WAN threat hunting guide is clearly borne of … experience

This week’s episode is sponsored by AI threat hunting platform Nebulock. Sydney Marrone joins to talk about how useful AI models are on the hunt, and her work building out an open source framework and maturity model. It’s methodology agnostic, so you can adapt it for your environment, and the github link is in the show notes!

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Business #826 -- A week of AI mishaps and skulduggery

24 February 2026 at 22:49

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James WIlson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They cover:

  • Low skill actors compromise 600 Fortinets with AI-generated playbooks
  • Anthropic calls out Chinese AI firms over model distillation
  • Meta’s director of AI safety tells her ClawdBot not to delete her mail… so of course it does
  • Peter Williams cops 7 years in jail for selling L3 Harris Trenchant’s exploits to Russia
  • Ivanti got hacked in 2021 via… bugs in Ivanti

This episode is sponsored by line-rate network capture system Corelight. CEO Brian Dye joins to discuss what AI can do for defenders, and what it can’t.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Biz Soap Box: The lethal trifecta of AI risks

19 February 2026 at 18:33

There’s a lethal trifecta of AI risks: access to private data, exposure to untrusted content, and external communication. In this conversation, Risky Business host Patrick Gray chats with Josh Devon, the co-founder of Sondera, about how to best address these risks.

There is no magic solution to this problem. AI models mix code and data, are non-deterministic, and are crawling around all over your enterprise data and APIs as you read this.

But in this sponsored interview, Josh outlines how we can start to wrap our hands around the problem.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Business #825 -- Palo Alto Networks blames it on the boogie

17 February 2026 at 22:49

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James WIlson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They cover:

  • Palo Alto threat researchers want to attribute to China, but management says shush
  • An increasing proportion of ransomware is data extortion. Is this good?
  • Cambodia says it’s going to dismantle scam compounds
  • CISA sufferers through yet another shutdown
  • Google Gemini’s training secrets are being systematically harvested to improve other LLMs
  • Academics assess SaaS password managers’ resilience against a malicious server

This episode is sponsored by SSO-firewall integration vendor Knocknoc. Chief exec Adam Pointon joins to talk about the latest in defences… which is to say Knocknoc for Solaris/Sparc and HPUX on PA-RISC?! Okay also that other little known OS… Windows.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Business #824 -- Microsoft's Secure Future is looking a bit wobbly

10 February 2026 at 22:50

On this week’s show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week’s cybersecurity news, including:

  • Microsoft reshuffles security leadership. It doesn’t spark joy.
  • Russia is hacking the Winter Olympics. Again. But y tho?
  • China-linked groups are keeping busy, hacking telcos in Norway, Singapore and dozens of others
  • Campaigns underway targeting Ivanti, BeyondTrust and SolarWinds products
  • An unknown hero blocks 23/tcp on the US internet backbone
  • And James Wilson pops into talk about Claude’s go at a C compiler

This week’s episode is sponsored by Ent.AI, an AI startup that isn’t quite ready to tell us all what they’re doing. But nevertheless, founder Brandon Dixon joins to discuss AI’s role in security. Where does language-based understanding take us that previous methods couldn’t?

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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Risky Business #823 -- Humans impersonate clawdbots impersonating humans

3 February 2026 at 22:13

Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau are joined by the newest guy on the Risky Business Media team, James WIlson. They discuss the week’s cybersecurity news, including:

  • Notepad++ update supply chain attack has been attributed to China
  • The AI agent future is even more stupid than expected; behold the OpenClaw/Clawdbot/Moltbook mess
  • The Epstein files claim he had a personal hacker?
  • Microsoft is finally getting ready to (think about starting to begin to) disable NTLM by default
  • The usual bugs in the usual things! Ivanti, Fortinet, and Solarwinds. Again.
  • Telco hides a free trip in its privacy policy, someone actually reads it and wins!

This weeks’s episode is sponsored by opensource IDP platform Authentik. CEO Fletcher Heisler talks to Pat about their new endpoint agent that can enforce device posture policies during login.

This episode is also available on Youtube.

Show notes

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