In this week’s show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week’s cybersecurity news, including:
There’s a CVSS 10/10 remote code exec in the React javascript server. JS server? U wot mate?
China is out popping shells with it
Linux adds support for PCIe bus encryption
Amnesty International says Intellexa can just TeamViewer into its customers’ surveillance systems
…and a Belgian murder suspect complains that GrapheneOS’s duress wipe feature failed him?
This week’s episode is sponsored by Kroll Cyber. Simon Onyons is Managing Director at Kroll’s Cyber and Data Resilience arm, and he discusses a problem near to many of our hearts. Just how do you explain cyber risk to the board?
This episode is also available on Youtube.
All content for Risky Business is the property of Patrick Gray 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.
In this week’s show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week’s cybersecurity news, including:
There’s a CVSS 10/10 remote code exec in the React javascript server. JS server? U wot mate?
China is out popping shells with it
Linux adds support for PCIe bus encryption
Amnesty International says Intellexa can just TeamViewer into its customers’ surveillance systems
…and a Belgian murder suspect complains that GrapheneOS’s duress wipe feature failed him?
This week’s episode is sponsored by Kroll Cyber. Simon Onyons is Managing Director at Kroll’s Cyber and Data Resilience arm, and he discusses a problem near to many of our hearts. Just how do you explain cyber risk to the board?
This episode is also available on Youtube.
In this edition of the Snake Oilers podcasts, three vendors pop in to pitch you all on their wares:
Automated, AI-powered threat hunting with Nebulock
Damien Lewke from Nebulock joins the show to talk about how its agentic AI platform can surface attacker activity out of all those “low” and “informational” findings your detection team doesn’t have time to look at.
Runtime security for hypervisors from Vali Cyber
Austin Gadient from Vali Cyber stops by to talk about ZeroLock, its hypervisor security product. It’s marketed as a counter-ransomware control but is just a generally useful security platform for virtualised environments.
A secure mobile telco: Cape
The only thing American cell providers love more than providing patchy coverage is getting their customers’ data owned. Cape is here to change that. It’s a security and anonymity-focussed virtual mobile network operator (MVNO) that’s been spun up by a highly competent team. If we lived in the USA we would be customers, and a bunch of CISOs listening to this might want to consider Cape subscriptions for their workforce.
This episode is also available on Youtube
Risky Business
In this week’s show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week’s cybersecurity news, including:
There’s a CVSS 10/10 remote code exec in the React javascript server. JS server? U wot mate?
China is out popping shells with it
Linux adds support for PCIe bus encryption
Amnesty International says Intellexa can just TeamViewer into its customers’ surveillance systems
…and a Belgian murder suspect complains that GrapheneOS’s duress wipe feature failed him?
This week’s episode is sponsored by Kroll Cyber. Simon Onyons is Managing Director at Kroll’s Cyber and Data Resilience arm, and he discusses a problem near to many of our hearts. Just how do you explain cyber risk to the board?
This episode is also available on Youtube.