About a year ago, six academics from Ruhr University Bochum and the CISPA Helmholtz Center for Information Security set out to survey engineers and developers on the subject of satellite cybersecurity. But most of these engineers were very reluctant to share any details about their satellites and their security aspects. Why were satellite engineers so reticent to talk about cybersecurity? What was so secretive, so wrong with it, that they didn’t feel they could answer even general questions, anonymously? Because let’s be clear: if there’s something wrong with the security of satellites, that’d be a serious problem.
Is Generative AI Dangerous?
Why aren't there more bug bounty programs?
The Voynich Manuscript
Roman Seleznev: Did the Punishment Fit the Crime?
Sony BMG's Rootkit Fiasco
Ad Fraud, Part 2
Ad Fraud, Part 1
The Economics Of Cybersecurity
The Reason You Don’t Have Data Privacy
How Entire Countries Can Lose the Internet
Olympic Destroyer
The Lawerence Berkeley Hack, Part 2
The Lawerence Berkeley Hack, Part 1
Russian Propaganda, Explained [ML B-Side]
Operation Ivy Bells
Why Do NFTs Disappear? [ML BSide]
The (Other) Problem with NFTs
SIM Swapping Follow Up [ML B-Side]
You Should Be Afraid of SIM Swaps
FBI vs. REvil [ML BSide]
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Insight Story: Tech Trends Unpacked
Zero-Shot
Fast Forward by Tomorrow Unlocked: Tech past, tech future
The Unbelivable Truth - Series 1 - 26 including specials and pilot
Lex Fridman Podcast