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Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
BKBT Productions
164 episodes
12 hours ago
Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks is the tech podcast about humans. Hosted by George K and George A, this podcast examines AI, infrastructure, technology adoption, and the broader implications of tech developments through both guest interviews and news commentary. Our guests bring honest perspectives on what's working, what's broken, and new ways to examine the roles and impacts of technology in our lives. We challenge conventional tech industry narratives and dig into real-world consequences over hype. Whether you're deeply technical or just trying to understand how technology shapes society, this show will make you think critically about where we're headed and who's getting left behind.
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All content for Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks is the property of BKBT Productions and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks is the tech podcast about humans. Hosted by George K and George A, this podcast examines AI, infrastructure, technology adoption, and the broader implications of tech developments through both guest interviews and news commentary. Our guests bring honest perspectives on what's working, what's broken, and new ways to examine the roles and impacts of technology in our lives. We challenge conventional tech industry narratives and dig into real-world consequences over hype. Whether you're deeply technical or just trying to understand how technology shapes society, this show will make you think critically about where we're headed and who's getting left behind.
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Technology
Society & Culture
Episodes (20/164)
Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Stay sharp, stay real: Wishing you a kickass 2026!
Wishing you a very happy and prosperous New Year!  We'll be back in 2026!
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12 hours ago
2 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Happy Holidays! Our listeners are the greatest gift!
It's a holiday week, so turn off this podcast!  But if you'd like to tune in all the same, then we're here to say think you. You, the listeners, have been the greatest gift this season as we've made this turn in our format from security to looking more broadly at the human impact of technology.  You've stuck with us. We've gotten a lot of great messages of support, and we love the direction of the show and love that you love it!  Happy holidays from BKBT! May your time off be peaceful and energizing for the new year.
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1 week ago
7 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Best Of: Confronting big tech's abuses as a question of human rights
We're off this week, deep into planning and scheduling for next year. Please enjoy this Best Of episode, originally released in October. Hannah Storey, Advocacy and Policy Advisor at Amnesty International [https://www.amnesty.org/], joins the show to talk about her new brief that reframes Big Tech monopolies as a human rights crisis, not just a market competition problem. This isn't about consumer choice or antitrust law. It's about how concentrated market power violates fundamental rights—freedom of expression, privacy, and the right to hold views without interference or manipulation. Can you make a human rights case against Big Tech? Why civil society needed to stop asking these companies to fix themselves and start demanding structural change. What happens when regulation alone won't work because the companies have massive influence over the regulators? Is Big Tech actually innovating anymore? Or are they just buying up competition and locking down alternatives? Does scale drive progress, or does it strangle it? What would real accountability look like? Should companies be required to embed human rights due diligence into product development from the beginning? Are we making the same mistakes with AI? Why is generative AI rolling forward without anyone asking about water usage for data centers, labor exploitation of data labelers, or discriminatory outcomes? The goal isn't tweaking the current system—it's building a more diverse internet with actual options and less control by fewer companies. If you've been tracking Big Tech issues in silos—privacy here, misinformation there, market dominance over here—this episode is an attempt to bring those conversations together in one framework. Mentioned: Read more about the Amnesty International report and download the full report here: "Breaking Up with Big Tech: a Human Rights-Based Argument for Tackling Big Tech's Market Power" [https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/pol30/0226/2025/en/] Speech AI model helps preserve indigenous languages [https://it-online.co.za/2024/01/22/speech-ai-model-helps-preserve-indigenous-languages] Empire of AI, [https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/743569/empire-of-ai-by-karen-hao/] by Karen Hao Cory Doctorow's new book, "Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What To Do About It" [https://www.versobooks.com/products/3341-enshittification]
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2 weeks ago
43 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Looking ahead to the next year in tech and human impact
2025 was hella weird. The AI revolution is here whether we asked for it or not. This week, George K and George A reflect on the year and what it means for 2026. At AWS re:Invent, George A watched a machine create a custom fragrance and marketing campaign in real-time from a voice prompt. What does that portend for product prototyping, and scaled manufacturing? Could voice and natural language finally replacing typing as the primary interface? We're watching the biggest shift in human-computer interaction since the mouse. Worldwide AI adoption isn't hype anymore—it's happening and doing so unevenly. Some enterprises are getting serious and some are still noodling. The tools are maturing. The question shifted from "if" to "how do we do this responsibly." There are serious questions to answer. GPU lifecycles. The Magnificent Seven's circular financing models. The human cost of moving this fast. But that's the work—building technology that serves us instead of the other way around. The revolution came. Now comes the interesting part: what we actually build with it. 2026 is going to be wild. We remain up to the challenge. Mentioned: * Brookings Institution, "New data show no AI jobs apocalypse—for now" [https://www.brookings.edu/articles/new-data-show-no-ai-jobs-apocalypse-for-now/] * Discussed in further detail with Ethan Mollick on Your Undivided Attention [https://open.spotify.com/episode/7tVke0Fuo6WSssgJ4eUDQa?si=UXKBrqKyR2acZqVl3UqXwA] * Reid Hoffman's interview with Wispr Flow founder/CEO Tanay Kothari [https://open.spotify.com/episode/7AxM51x61saSou9M1GkYwk?si=h7yIQa3fSrWyT2E4B8jYJQ] * More on Coreweave's financing model at The Verge [https://www.theverge.com/2023/8/8/23824661/coreweave-nvidia-debt-gpu-ai-chips-collateral?utm_source=podcast&utm_id=bareknucklesbrasstacks]
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3 weeks ago
33 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Why leveling up is about fixing your own "broken code" and doing the work
What if your biggest career obstacle isn't external—it's the "broken code" running in your own head? Rachelle Tanguay joins the show to unpack the difference between consuming self-help content and actually doing the uncomfortable work of rewiring your internal programming. From advising deputy ministers to coaching professionals across sectors, she's seen what happens when high-performers hit the wall between knowing what to do and actually being able to execute. This conversation cuts through the dopamine-hit culture of five-minute reels and quick fixes. Rachelle breaks down why most people confuse consuming content with doing the work, how imposter syndrome is not your own voice "chirping in your ear," and why even the most senior leaders need help to see the forest through the trees. If you've ever wondered why smart people with all the right information still can't break through their own barriers, this episode is for you. No buzzwords, no corporate speak—just an honest look at what it takes to level up when the real bottleneck is you. Mentioned https://www.kornferry.com/about-us/press/71percent-of-us-ceos-experience-imposter-syndrome-new-korn-ferry-research-finds https://www.mogawdat.com/solve-for-happy https://jamesclear.com/atomic-habits
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4 weeks ago
43 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
How Expertise becomes a blind spot in technology development
Graeme Rudd spent years taking emerging technology into austere environments and watching it fail. He assessed over 350 technologies for a Department of Defense lab. The pattern was consistent: engineers solved technical problems brilliantly. Lawyers checked compliance boxes. Leadership approved budgets. And the technology failed because no one was looking at how humans would actually use it. So he went to law school—not to practice law, but because solving technology problems requires understanding legal systems, human behavior, operational constraints, and business incentives simultaneously. Now he works on AI governance, and the stakes are higher. "Ship it and patch later" becomes catastrophic when AI sits on top of your data and can manipulate it. You need engineers, lawyers, operators, and the people who'll actually use the system—especially junior employees who spot failure points leadership never sees—in the room together before you deploy. This conversation is about why single-discipline thinking fails when technology intersects with humans under stress. Why pre-mortems with your most junior people matter more than post-mortems with experts. Why the multidisciplinary approach isn't just nice to have—it's the only way to answer the question that matters: Does it work when a human being needs to operate it under conditions you didn't anticipate?
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1 month ago
40 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Getting Addicted to the Process and Chasing Excellence
What happens when you go all in and bet on yourself? Taylor McClatchie, professional Muay Thai fighter with ONE Championship, joins the show to share how she did just that. She spent a decade in reproductive science, working in a lab. Then she walked away from it all to turn her pastime into her profession. Went 20-0 as an amateur. Made her pro debut at Madison Square Garden with a head kick knockout. Has competed 65 times—exceptionally rare for a North American woman in combat sports. This episode isn't about technology. It's about what happens when you stop following the prescribed steps and start building a life around what actually matters to you. Taylor didn't fall in love with winning. She fell in love with the process. With adding one more piece to training camp—sprints, nutrition coaching, strength work—and never taking them away. With waking up and doing it again. She talks about needing three types of sparring partners: people worse than you to test new skills, people at your level to compete with, and people better than you just to survive the round. "I never want to be the best person in the room because what am I getting from beating up on the new kids?" The parallel to our industry is unavoidable. You can't grow if you're always punching down. You need to be uncomfortable. You need rounds where you're just trying to survive. We spend a lot of time on this show questioning whether technology actually serves human interests. Sometimes the best lessons come from outside our world entirely—from someone willing to abandon the expected path to pursue something real.
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1 month ago
35 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Re-thinking How AI Can Actually Drive Business Value
Eric Pilkington joins the show to cut through the noise around artificial intelligence and deliver some hard truths about what's actually working—and what's just expensive theater. AI isn't new; it's been around for 70+ years. The current generative AI boom is democratization, not innovation—and 95% of AI projects are still failing. Startups with no product, no customers, and no revenue raising $30-100 million. Companies are getting massive funding without a single dollar of revenue. The real AI leaders aren't the loudest voices on conference stages. They're the ones quietly embedding AI into workflows, building better products, and closing the gap between pilots and actual impact.  Most companies chase cost savings instead of using AI to drive top-line growth. You can't cut your way to growth. Real business transformation comes from understanding the actual problems you're solving, not from chasing the newest shiny object. The superheroes of AI aren't prognosticating on stages—they're in garages and labs building things that'll matter five years from now. Mentioned: MIT Study on failure of AI pilots in business [https://mlq.ai/media/quarterly_decks/v0.1_State_of_AI_in_Business_2025_Report.pdf]
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1 month ago
36 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
A Biotech Innovation to Treat a Chronic Health Problem Impacting 2 Billion People
Hunter Grad, CEO and founder of Ameliogenix [https://ameliogenix.ca/], joins the show to talk about developing mRNA immunotherapies for cardiovascular disease. George K and George A sit down with Hunter to discuss: * How a procrastinated university project turned into a biotech startup tackling the leading cause of death worldwide * The novel application of mRNA technology to permanently reduce cholesterol levels through targeting proteins within the body rather than viral diseases * What it takes to bootstrap a biotech company in Ottawa, not Silicon Valley * The brutal realities of fundraising in biotech versus software startups, and why pivoting isn't always an option when lives are on the line * Clearing up the myths and misinformation around mRNA technology, from how it actually works to addressing fertility concerns * The role of machine learning in accelerating biotech research and drug discovery, and why quality data matters more than flashy AI hype Hunter breaks down complex immunology concepts into digestible explanations while sharing the raw challenges of being a young founder in a traditionally academic-led industry. This episode explores innovation at the intersection of technology and medicine, the importance of rigorous science over buzzwords, and what it means to swing for the fences on a problem that affects 2 billion people worldwide. Mentioned: Using AI, MIT researchers identify a new class of antibiotic candidates [https://news.mit.edu/2023/using-ai-mit-researchers-identify-antibiotic-candidates-1220]
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1 month ago
44 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Confronting Big Tech's Abuses as a Question of Human Rights
Hannah Storey, Advocacy and Policy Advisor at Amnesty International [https://www.amnesty.org], joins the show to talk about her new brief that reframes Big Tech monopolies as a human rights crisis, not just a market competition problem. This isn't about consumer choice or antitrust law. It's about how concentrated market power violates fundamental rights—freedom of expression, privacy, and the right to hold views without interference or manipulation. Can you make a human rights case against Big Tech? Why civil society needed to stop asking these companies to fix themselves and start demanding structural change. What happens when regulation alone won't work because the companies have massive influence over the regulators? Is Big Tech actually innovating anymore? Or are they just buying up competition and locking down alternatives? Does scale drive progress, or does it strangle it? What would real accountability look like? Should companies be required to embed human rights due diligence into product development from the beginning? Are we making the same mistakes with AI? Why is generative AI rolling forward without anyone asking about water usage for data centers, labor exploitation of data labelers, or discriminatory outcomes? The goal isn't tweaking the current system—it's building a more diverse internet with actual options and less control by fewer companies. If you've been tracking Big Tech issues in silos—privacy here, misinformation there, market dominance over here—this episode is an attempt to bring those conversations together in one framework. Mentioned: Read more about the Amnesty International report and download the full report here: "Breaking Up with Big Tech: a Human Rights-Based Argument for Tackling Big Tech's Market Power" [https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/pol30/0226/2025/en/] Speech AI model helps preserve indigenous languages [https://it-online.co.za/2024/01/22/speech-ai-model-helps-preserve-indigenous-languages] Empire of AI, [https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/743569/empire-of-ai-by-karen-hao/] by Karen Hao Cory Doctorow's new book, "Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What To Do About It" [https://www.versobooks.com/products/3341-enshittification]
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2 months ago
44 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
What a Ransomware Attack on a Hospital Really Mean (Audio Issue Fixed)
RE-ISSUE: This recording corrects for an audio overlap problem in the previous version of this interview at the 28:00 mark. Zach Lewis, CIO/CISO at University of Health Sciences and Pharmacy in St. Louis, joins the show to talk about his experience with a ransomware attack by the LockBit group. Zach takes us beyond the technical recovery into territory most people don't talk about: the gut-punch moment of finding the ransom note and the months of running on pure adrenaline while keeping his team from cracking under pressure. Key takeaways from our conversation: The human toll matters. When hospital systems go down, it's not just inconvenient. People can't get medications, emergency rooms have to reroute patients, and lives are at stake. This is the cyber war nobody wants to acknowledge. Attribution is nearly impossible. Even when you know who attacked you, there's rarely closure for victims. Leading through crisis. Zach shares how he kept his team together during months of remediation by staying calm on the outside, and knowing which team members could handle the pressure and which ones needed to stick to routine work. Sometimes the best leadership is just being that steady presence when everything else is chaos. If you want to understand what really happens when ransomware strikes, this episode is required listening. Available wherever you get your podcasts. Zach's book "Locked Up" drops January 6th and is available for pre-order now: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1394357044 Mentioned: Cyber Attack Suspected in German Woman's Death [https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/18/world/europe/cyber-attack-germany-ransomeware-death.html?unlocked_article_code=1.uU8.Cf4H.LEjQ0lmlN_Wn&smid=url-share] Chase Cunningham and cyber war [https://www.forbes.com/sites/tonybradley/2025/10/16/midnight-in-the-war-room-and-the-unsung-heroes-of-cybersecurity/]
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2 months ago
41 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Can Ethical AI Democratize Therapy and Higher Quality Care?
Clinical psychologist, Dr. Sarah Adler, joins the show this week to talk about why "AI Therapy" doesn't exist, but is bullish on what AI can help therapists achieve. Dr. Adler is a clinical psychologist and CEO of Wave [https://www.wavelife.io/]. She's building AI tools for mental healthcare, which makes her position clear—what's being sold as "AI therapy" right now is dangerous. Chatbots are optimized to keep conversations going. Therapy is designed to build skills within bounded timeframes. Engagement is not therapy. Instead, Dr. Adler sees AI as a powerful recommendation engine and measurement tool, not as a therapist. George K and George A talk to Dr. Adler about what Ethical AI looks like, the model architecture for personalized care, who bears responsibility and liability, and more. The goal isn't replacing human therapists. It's precision routing—matching people to the right care pathway at the right time. But proving this works requires years of rigorous study. Controlled trials, multiple populations, long-term tracking. That research hasn't been done. Dr. Adler also provides considerations and litmus tests you can use to discern snake oil from real care. Mental healthcare needs innovation. But you cannot move fast and break things when it comes to human lives. Mentioned: A Theory of Zoom Fatigue [https://theconvivialsociety.substack.com/p/a-theory-of-zoom-fatigue] Kashmir Hill's detailed reporting on Adam Raine's death and the part played by ChatGPT  [https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/26/technology/chatgpt-openai-suicide.html?unlocked_article_code=1.nU8.DE_a.Ur81NxfjZuNn&smid=url-share] (Warning: detailed discussion of suicide) Colorado parents sue Character AI over daughter's suicide [https://www.cbsnews.com/colorado/news/lawsuit-characterai-chatbot-colorado-suicide/] Sewell Setzer's parents sue Character AI [https://apnews.com/article/chatbot-ai-lawsuit-suicide-teen-artificial-intelligence-9d48adc572100822fdbc3c90d1456bd0] Deloitte to pay money back after caught using AI in $440,000 report [https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/oct/06/deloitte-to-pay-money-back-to-albanese-government-after-using-ai-in-440000-report]
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2 months ago
57 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
So, Are We Gonna Cure Cancer or Just Double Down on Mining Attention?
This week George K and George A switch formats to tackle the AI revolution's messiest questions—from autonomous coding agents to digital actresses and deepfake scams. The hosts examine what happens when innovation moves faster than ethics. When Claude Sonnet 4.5 promises 30 hours of autonomous coding, what's the real trade-off between productivity gains and security fundamentals? When talent agencies want to represent AI-generated actresses, are we witnessing the death of human performance art or just another moral panic? And when Brazilian scammers can steal millions in $19 increments using celebrity deepfakes, who bears responsibility—the platforms, the regulators, or the users? They explore the uncomfortable economics behind AI video generation, where companies promised to cure cancer but instead delivered infinite dopamine-mining slop. The conversation digs into data center energy consumption, the exploitation of human attention, and why your grandmother clicking Facebook ads might represent democracy's newest vulnerability. George A brings a practitioner's lens to AI governance, arguing for education from elementary school up, metadata standards for content authenticity, and balanced regulation that protects innovation without enabling exploitation. George K challenges the fundamental premise: if supercomputers are being pointed at our dopamine receptors just to sell more ads, what happened to building technology that actually improves human life? Most importantly, they ask: Are we building applications that create a better future, or are we just doubling down on the attention economy? News examined: * Anthropic releases Claude Sonnet 4.5 in latest bid for AI agents [https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/787524/anthropic-releases-claude-sonnet-4-5-in-latest-bid-for-ai-agents-and-coding-supremacy] * Emily Blunt among Hollywood stars outraged over 'AI actor' Tilly Norwood [https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c99glvn5870o] * AI: Meta, Google & OpenAI lean into AI Generated Social Videos [https://michaelparekh.substack.com/p/ai-meta-google-and-openai-lean-into] * Brazilian scammers, raking in millions, used Gisele Bundchen deepfakes on Instagram ads [https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/brazilian-scammers-raking-millions-used-gisele-bundchen-deepfakes-instagram-ads-2025-10-03/]
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2 months ago
36 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
BEST OF: Sex & Tech: Privacy, Power, and Human Intimacy in an AI Future
The lads are traveling this week, so we're revisiting their interview with Savannah Sly, dominatrix and sex worker rights advocate. She joined the show to talk about privacy, power, and the nuances of human intimacy as generative AI takes hold. George K and George A talk to Savannah about: * The current state of privacy for vulnerable communities and the real-world operational security challenges they face * Practical steps individuals can take to protect their digital identities when dating online * The intersection of AI, deepfakes, and the weaponization of intimate content * The zeitgeist and cultural headwinds for sex workers today
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3 months ago
48 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Are We Building a Star Trek Future or One that Looks Like Minority Report?
This week George K and George A switch formats to consider the deeper questions behind recent tech headlines. The hosts dig into the philosophical tensions driving today's biggest tech stories. When does technological dependency become too dangerous to ignore? How do we distinguish between genuine innovation and elaborate pump-and-dump schemes dressed up as progress? What are the real costs when entire economies become intertwined with a handful of companies? They explore whether we're witnessing the early stages of a historic bubble or if we're already past the point of no return. The conversation touches on the ethics of deploying untested technology on vulnerable populations, the normalization of surveillance capitalism, and why regulatory capture might be democracy's biggest threat. Most importantly, they ask the question that should keep every technologist awake at night: Are we building the future we actually want to live in, or are we just building the future that's most profitable for a few? The news examined: * Details emerge on the US' TikTok deal with China  [https://www.wsj.com/tech/details-emerge-on-u-s-china-tiktok-deal-594e009f?reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink] * Things just got worse for Nvidia in China [https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cqxz29pe1v0o] * To protect underage users, ChatGPT may ask for ID [https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/sep/17/chatgpt-developing-age-verification-system-to-identify-under-18-users-after-teen-death] * Meta's smart glasses get smarter [https://www.readthepeak.com/stories/09-25-meta-s-smart-glasses-get-smarter] Mentioned in the discussion: * MIT report: The GenAI Divide STATE OF AI IN BUSINESS 2025 [https://mlq.ai/media/quarterly_decks/v0.1_State_of_AI_in_Business_2025_Report.pdf] * Ed Zitron's podcast, Better Offline, and newsletter analysis of "Magnificent Seven" companies [https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-haters-gui/#the-magnificent-7s-ai-story-is-flawed-with-560-billion-of-capex-between-2024-and-2025-leading-to-35-billion-of-revenue-and-no-profit] * Kashmir Hill's detailed reporting on Adam Raine's death and the part played by ChatGPT [https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/26/technology/chatgpt-openai-suicide.html?unlocked_article_code=1.nU8.DE_a.Ur81NxfjZuNn&smid=url-share](Warning: detailed discussion of suicide) * Meta's leaked policy on allowing chatbots to engage in "sensual" chats with children [https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/meta-ai-chatbot-guidelines]
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3 months ago
40 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Thinking Like an Adversary, and How to Prepare for AI in Work and Life
Phil Dursey joined the show this week to cut through the hype and talked through what red teaming for AI means in mindset and practice. The conversation reveals a fundamental problem: organizations are rushing to implement AI without understanding their own workflows. Executives are buying "the thing with the AI" expecting magic efficiency gains, but they've never mapped out basic business processes. You can't automate what you don't understand. Phil's approach starts with the right question: "Are we using the right tool for the use case?" We also talked about education and kids. Find out why Phil argues philosophy and humanities give you the biggest advantage when working with AI systems. It's what he looks for in hiring, too. The ability to formulate good questions, understand context, and think clearly matters more than technical prowess. And finally we touch on the job market. We're heading toward AI capabilities that will exceed human professionals in specific domains. The displacement won't be overnight, but it's coming. If you're implementing AI in your organization, this episode should make you pause and ask harder questions. The technology is powerful, but power without thoughtful application is just expensive chaos. Mentioned: * Phil Dursey's guide, Red Teaming AI [https://nostarch.com/red-teaming-AI] * Hard Fork podcast segment on a student's AI workflow [https://youtu.be/X-KzyPRdcmc?feature=shared&t=3414]
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3 months ago
40 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Stalkerware Being Sold on TikTok & Monetizing our Worst Instincts
A stalkerware economy is thriving on TikTok, and it's generating hundreds of thousands in sales. Journalist Rosie Thomas from 404 Media joins the show this week discuss her investigation into GPS trackers being sold as relationship surveillance tools directly through TikTok Shop. This isn't some dark web operation - it's happening on one of the world's most popular social platforms. The findings are disturbing. Content targets people with taglines like "Is she really going out with friends?" are generating hundreds of thousands in sales. Algorithms don't just show you this content - they amplify it the moment you engage. The digital economy we all live in has normalized surveillance to the point where stalking your partner is being marketed as a reasonable relationship tool. The technology isn't new, but the accessibility and algorithmic amplification absolutely is. This conversation touches on everything from the failure of tech companies to consider abuse cases in product design, to how parasocial relationships are replacing actual community bonds, to the legal gaps that leave victims with limited recourse. If you work in tech, this episode should make you uncomfortable. As a citizen, it should terrify you. It's a reminder that our biggest threats often come from the normalization of our culture's worst tendencies. Read more on 404Media: https://www.404media.co/tiktok-shop-sells-viral-gps-trackers-marketed-to-stalkers/
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3 months ago
38 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Robot Brothels, AI Therapists, and the Future of Human Intimacy
This week on the show: some seriously cutting-edge territory. George A talks about what he saw at the Love and Sex with Robots conference in Montreal. Then George K and George A discuss AI companions, embodied LLMs, and the wild intersection of technology and human intimacy. This isn't just about sex robots - it's about the broader question of how AI is reshaping fundamental human experiences.  The reality check: If you think this stuff is too niche or weird to matter, give it 5 years. This technology is going to be everywhere - in education, therapy, companionship. The question isn't whether it's coming, it's whether we'll think through the implications before it's too late. This might be one of the most uncomfortable (and important) tech conversation we're not having as a society. Fair warning: This episode gets real, fast. But if you work in tech, security, or just want to understand where we're heading as a species, it's worth your time. Stay tuned to the end to hear about the "door prize" George A from the conference that is gonna make the office Secret Santa…interesting. Mentioned this episode: * Our Season 4 opener with Savannah Sly [https://open.spotify.com/episode/3hBd5UaTTBg5uTmduKCKij?si=Z34KWMGuQ7KEx1yKC6I1Uw] * Gov Pritzker Signs Legislation Prohibiting AI Therapy in Illinois [https://idfpr.illinois.gov/news/2025/gov-pritzker-signs-state-leg-prohibiting-ai-therapy-in-il.html] * Parents of teenager who took his own life sue OpenAI [https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgerwp7rdlvo] * You can read the full text of the lawsuit here [https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/26075676-raine-v-openai/] *  Scene from Interstellar [https://youtu.be/v2H1s9gj5DA?feature=shared&t=112] that George K references
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3 months ago
32 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Building a Shield for Your Mind Against Digital Manipulation
Sumona Banerji, founder of MindShield [https://www.mindshield.org/] and PhD candidate in cyber psychology, joins us to discuss building cognitive resilience in an age of exponential technology and algorithmic manipulation. George K and George A talk to Sumona about: * Truth is fragmented - Everyone only sees a piece of it, creating space for better discussion * The TAR framework - Trigger, Analysis, Response for emotional regulation with manipulative content * Expanding the amygdala - How meditation literally grows brain regions for critical thinking * Algorithm curation - Your feeds mirror your choices; conscious curation transforms your information diet From documentary filmmaker to tech psychology researcher, Sumona's unconventional path offers unique insights into protecting our cognitive capacity as knowledge workers navigating an increasingly complex information landscape. ------------- Got an idea or topic you'd like us to cover? Drop us a line at contact@bareknucklespod.com
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4 months ago
40 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Life After the NFL: Lessons for Identity, Goals, and Team Leadership
Former NFL player Mark LeVoir joins us this week to talk about life after pro sports, and the lessons he took transitioning to a career in tech. George K and George A talk to Mark about: * The transition from professional sports to tech sales and why goals beat identity every time * His simple method for aligning business outcomes with corporate objectives in enterprise deals * Building sales teams that can fail fast, learn quick, and operate on trust instead of aggressive tactics * Life lessons from the NFL locker room and why hanging with Tom Brady is just like hanging with regular dudes "I want my people to be able to fail. Fail fast. What do we learn from it? If your intent's in the right spot and you just failed, it's a coaching experience. If your intent isn't right, we're having a different conversation." Plus, George A. gets Mark talking about hanging with Tom Brady, why Lamborghinis are useless when you're 6'7", and his top cigar picks, because why not? ------ If there's a burning topic you think we should address, let us know! Email us at contact@bareknucklespod.com
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4 months ago
38 minutes

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks is the tech podcast about humans. Hosted by George K and George A, this podcast examines AI, infrastructure, technology adoption, and the broader implications of tech developments through both guest interviews and news commentary. Our guests bring honest perspectives on what's working, what's broken, and new ways to examine the roles and impacts of technology in our lives. We challenge conventional tech industry narratives and dig into real-world consequences over hype. Whether you're deeply technical or just trying to understand how technology shapes society, this show will make you think critically about where we're headed and who's getting left behind.