Security, Spoken - podcast cover

Security, Spoken

WIREDplay.prx.org

Get in-depth coverage of current and future trends in technology, and how they are shaping business, entertainment, communications, science, politics, and society.

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Episodes

Going To the World Cup? Leave the Laptop at Home

A Russian sports official earlier this year estimated that as many as 2 million people would flock to the country during the World Cup, the month-long celebration of soccer—or football, fine—that kicks off today in Moscow. If you’re one of them, have fun! But also maybe leave your laptop at home. Yes, traveling to and between Russia’s 11 World Cup host cities should provide marvels aplenty. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices...

Jun 15, 20185 min

It's Nearly Impossible to Hold North Korea to Nuclear Promises

Throughout the Trump administration, the State Department has repeatedly called for the "complete, verifiable, and irreversible denuclearization” of North Korea. Heading into Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un's diplomatic negotiations in Singapore, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo reaffirmed this ambition on Monday. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 14, 20188 min

Feds Bust Dozens of Email Scammers, but Your Inbox Still Isn’t Safe

Your email spam filter works overtime to keep sketchy investing opportunities and cheap Viagra offers out of your inbox, but you've probably seen some scams sneak through. That's because email fraud operations are a multibillion-dollar business, often run by Nigerian-based syndicates that have members—not to mention targets—around the world. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 13, 20185 min

All the Times North Korea Promised to Denuclearize

The nuclear summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has concluded, with each securing something they value. The US will suspend the joint military exercises with South Korea that rattle the Hermit Kingdom. And North Korea has promised to denuclearize. At some point. Probably. But if the past is any sort of prologue, you shouldn't hold your breath. On the face of it, the agreement signed by Trump and Kim seems promising. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx....

Jun 13, 20188 min

The Elite Microsoft Hacker Team That Keeps Windows PCs Safe

One of them jailbroke Nintendo handhelds in a former life. Another has more than one zero-day exploit to his name. A third signed on just prior to the devastating Shadow Brokers leak. These are a few of the members of the Windows red team, a group of hackers inside Microsoft who spend their days finding holes in the world’s most popular operating system. Without them, you’d be toast. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices...

Jun 12, 20189 min

How NATO Defends Against the Dark Side of the Web

"Oops, your files have been encrypted!" This was the chilling message that greeted hundreds of thousands of computer users last summer. The WannaCry ransomware attack brought production to a standstill at Renault factories across France, put lives at risk by attacking hospitals in the UK, and cost companies around the world billions of dollars in lost revenue. WIRED OPINION ABOUT Jens Stoltenberg (@jensstoltenberg) is NATO secretary general and the former prime minister of Norway. Learn about yo...

Jun 12, 20185 min

Security News This Week: Flash Gets in One More Security Fail Before Retirement

As hard as it is to believe at this point, the week really did start with Apple's WWDC keynote. It feels like a lifetime ago! You can get a full recap here, but the two main security takeaways are that Safari is the best mainstream privacy browser now, and that it looks like Apple's going to slow down, take a breath, and try to release some major updates without quite so many bugs. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 11, 20184 min

WannaCry Hero’s New Legal Woes Spell Trouble for White Hat Hackers

British security researcher Marcus Hutchins, who was indicted and arrested last summer for allegedly creating and conspiring to sell the Kronos banking trojan, now faces four additional charges. Hutchins, also called MalwareTech and MalwareTechBlog, is well-known in the security community for slowing the spread of WannaCry ransomware as it tore through the world's PCs in May 2017. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 11, 20186 min

Facebook Bug Made Up to 14 Million Users' Posts Public for Days

Facebook has found itself the subject of another privacy scandal, this time involving privacy settings. A glitch caused up to 14 million Facebook users to have their new posts inadvertently set to public, the company revealed Thursday. The bug, which reportedly occurred while Facebook was testing a new feature, went live on May 18. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 08, 20185 min

Encyclopædia Britannica Wants to Fix False Google Results

In January 2014, Google made a fundamental change to its search product: It started showing answers to user queries directly in so-called snippets, no further clicks required. But what started out as a time-saver has morphed into a repeated source of misleading and outright false information, thanks to Google's frequent reliance on untrusted sources. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 08, 20186 min

Former Cambridge Analytica CEO Faces His Ghosts in Parliament

During a nearly four-hour grilling before Parliament Wednesday, Alexander Nix, former CEO of the now defunct data firm Cambridge Analytica, faced the ghosts of his past. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 07, 20187 min

An Encryption Upgrade Could Upend Online Payments

At the end of June, digital credit card transactions are getting a mandatory encryption upgrade. It's good news—but not if you have an old device, or depend on a retailer that hasn't completed the transition. When data moves from one device to another, it needs to protection so it isn't intercepted and manipulated along the way. This defense is especially crucial, as you might imagine, for sensitive communications like financial transactions. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choi...

Jun 06, 20185 min

How Will Microsoft Handle GitHub's Controversial Code?

After a weekend of rumors, Microsoft officially announced Monday that it will acquire the code repository site GitHub for $7.5 billion in stock. The platform is an important resource for some 28 million developers and home to billions of lines of open source code. It's in many ways a natural fit Microsoft, which has in recent years warmed up to open source. But the beloved developer platform may also introduce moderation headaches. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices...

Jun 06, 20188 min

Apple Just Made Safari the Good Privacy Browser

Apple announced a slew of new software features at its Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday, including an augmented reality upgrade and animojis that can stick out their tongues when you do. But the company's latest desktop and mobile operating systems contain a more subtle, yet more radical, innovation. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 05, 20186 min

Crime Fighting Gets High-Tech Advances

When criminals are plotting, so are vigilant police departments. Officers are increasingly turning to software and ­predictive analytics to anticipate when and where misdeeds are likely to occur. But big data is just one component in a growing arsenal of high-tech policing tools. As agencies around the country push for faster, savvier law enforcement, they’re looking more and more like the precrime unit in Minority Report. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices...

Jun 05, 20183 min

Security News This Week: Valve Squashes Decade-Old Steam Security Bug

This week we looked inward for change; if you ever wondered what it’s like to be a national technology and culture magazine that loses $100,000 in Bitcoin, have we got a story for you. If you'd rather an even wilder tale from around the globe, please read about how Russian journalist Arkady Babchenko faked his own death, and why some of his colleagues have cried foul. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 04, 20184 min

How a Former US Spy Chief Became Trump’s Fiercest Critic

James Clapper was eating lunch in Muscat, Oman, on November 9, 2016, when at 2:31 am EST Donald Trump was declared the winner of the presidential election. Clapper was on one of his final trips abroad at the end of a 54-year-long career in the military and intelligence, working with allies to shore up US interests overseas. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 04, 201820 min

How San Quentin Inmates Built a Search Engine for Prison

Marcellino Ornelas had been in and out of juvenile hall seven times by the time he finally went to prison at the age of 19 for assault with a firearm. He'd already been kicked out of high school and was working, he says, as the "local drug dealer," with a side gig at a Ross department store. In the past, every time he got out, he'd start dealing soon after. "It was like, this is how I make money. This is who my friends are," Ornelas says. "That always brought me back to the same situation. Learn...

Jun 01, 20188 min

The Bleak State of Federal Government Cybersecurity

It's a truism by now that the federal government struggles with cybersecurity, but a report recent report by the White House's Office of Management and Budget reinforces the dire need for change across dozens of agencies. Of the 96 federal agencies it assessed, it deemed 74 percent either "At Risk" or "High Risk," meaning that they need crucial and immediate improvements. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 01, 20186 min

Papua New Guinea Wants to Ban Facebook. It Shouldn't

Papua New Guinea, a small, island nation that shares a border with Indonesia, may soon turn off Facebook. The nation's communication minister suggested Tuesday that the government restrict access to the site for one month while it conducts research into issues like fake profiles, misinformation, and pornography. PNG will also reportedly explore creating its own, government-run alternative to Facebook. When the news reached Western outlets Tuesday, some people applauded. Learn about your ad choic...

May 31, 20187 min

Security News This Week: T-Mobile Web Portal Exposed 74 Million Accounts

At the beginning of the year, revelations about a new type of processor vulnerability had far-reaching implications for devices all over the world, and this week researchers disclosed yet another of these so-called "speculative execution" flaws in Intel, AMD, and ARM chips. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 30, 20186 min

Former Trump Campaign Aide: My Russia Ties Are Not Nefarious!

Michael Caputo’s favorite novel is Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita, the story of the Devil’s visit to Moscow in the 1930s and all the oddball characters who surround him. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 29, 201816 min

Puppy Brain Scans Could Help Pick the Best Bomb Sniffers

If you've been in a large crowded place with a fair amount of security, you've probably seen bomb-sniffing dogs at work. (You may have even petted the puppers.) Dogs have long been used for detecting contraband and explosives, but attackers have made advances in body-worn explosive technology, forcing law enforcement to evolve too. This means enlisting a new type of canine defense: Vapor Wake dogs. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices...

May 29, 20186 min

How WIRED Lost $100,000 in Bitcoin

Back in 2013, when you could still mine bitcoins at home, WIRED was sent a small, sleek mining device manufactured by the now-defunct Butterfly Labs. We turned on the Roku-looking machine in our San Francisco offices and allowed it to do its job. A small fortune was soon amassed, now worth around $100,000. Then, we lost the money. Forever. Here's what happened to WIRED's 13 Bitcoins—and to the millions of others that have faced the same fate. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choi...

May 28, 201810 min

Don’t Freak Out About That Amazon Alexa Eavesdropping Situation

On Thursday, Seattle news station KIRO 7 published a disconcerting story. A Portland family discovered that a snippet of private conversation had been recorded by an Amazon Echo and sent to a random person in their contact list. The report instantly sparked concern and outrage that Amazon's Echo smart speaker is listening to and recording much more than the company claims. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 25, 20185 min

Stealthy, Destructive Malware Infects Half a Million Routers

Home routers have become the rats to hackers' bubonic plague: An easily infected, untreated and ubiquitous population in which dangerous digital attacks can spread. Now security researchers are warning that one group of sophisticated hackers has amassed a collection of malware-infected routers that could be used as a powerful tool to spread havoc across the internet, or simply triggered to implode networks across the world. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices...

May 25, 20187 min

‘Significant’ FBI Error Reignites Data Encryption Debate

Law enforcement agencies including the FBI have long criticized data encryption as a threat to their ability to fight crime. They argue that encryption allows bad actors to "go dark," impeding agents’ ability to access the data of suspects, even with court orders or warrants. After years of raising the alarm about the going dark problem, though, officials have yet to convince privacy advocates that undermining encryption protections would do more good than harm. Learn about your ad choices: dove...

May 24, 20186 min

Facebook Is Beefing Up Its Two-Factor Authentication

Good news for those looking to secure their Facebook accounts: The social network says users can now sign up for two-factor authentication using apps like Duo and Google Authenticator, which will strengthen people's security on the site. Previously, you could only sign up for the feature with a phone number, though you could also enable tools like physical security keys and Facebook's own code generator that lives within the app itself. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices...

May 24, 20185 min

Security News This Week: California Charges Owners of Mugshots.com With Extortion

As is often the case, it was a week of mixed messages in security, with the White House eliminating its top cybersecurity policy roles at a crucial moment in geopolitics and the evolution of cyberwar. WIRED took a deep look at Robert Mueller's military service in Vietnam and his first year as special counsel, examining the Trump campaign’s interactions with Russia. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 22, 20186 min

A Location-Sharing Disaster Shows How Exposed You Really Are

There are plenty of guides available on how to protect your data, how to secure yourself online, and how to stop digital snoops from tracking you across the web and then profiting from that intrusion. (Sorry, “monetization”.) You should do these things. But if a cascading series of revelations this past week has taught us anything, it's that all of those steps amount to triage. The things you can control add up to very little next to the things you can’t. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.pr...

May 21, 20187 min
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