Recorded Future NewsTechnology, News
Recorded Future NewsTechnology, News
Recorded Future NewsTechnology, News
Recorded Future NewsTechnology, News

About

The podcast that tells true stories about the people making and breaking our digital world. We take listeners into the world of cyber and intelligence without all the techie jargon. Every Tuesday and Friday, former NPR investigations correspondent Dina Temple-Raston and the team draw back the curtain on ransomware attacks, mysterious hackers, and the people who are trying to stop them.

  • 127. Mic Drop: NSC’s Neuberger on mitigating cyber attacks: ‘We should be using an operational approach’
    The White House’s top cyber official is keen to set minimum cybersecurity standards for industry, put contingencies in place in case cyberattacks are successful, and start looping ordinary people into an effort to make products secure by design.
  • 126. The future of robotics from MIT’s "Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Labs Alliances" podcast
    An episode from the ‘CSAIL Alliances Podcast’ from MIT CSAIL Alliances. Host Kara Miller talks with MIT robotics researcher and professor Daniela Rus about how we can use a new generation of robots to help humankind. Rus is the co-author of the new book, "The Heart and the Chip: Our Bright Future with Robots."
  • 125. Mic Drop: The problem with the Nigerian economy has nothing to do with crypto
    Before Nigerian authorities detained two mid-level Binance executives back in February, they were telling anyone who would listen that the cryptocurrency platform was manipulating the value of its currency, the naira. It turns out the more likely culprit is more than a decade of economic mismanagement. We explain.
  • 124. The company man: US response to Nigeria’s detention of former IRS crypto investigator rankles federal agents
    A former American IRS investigator responsible for some of the earliest dark market takedowns has been in Nigerian custody since February. Neither Nigerian nor the US authorities seem to be distinguishing Tigran Gambaryan from Binance, the company where he works.
  • 123. Mic Drop: China seeks a Great Leap Forward in cyber
    Chinese hackers are stepping up their game, according to Nigel Inkster, the former director of operations for Britain’s MI6. He says they are taking on a new swagger in cyberspace and borrowing things from a familiar playbook: a Russian one.
  • 122. The UK-US unmasked a giant Chinese cyber operation but forgot one thing: to tell many of its victims
    The US and UK made a splashy coordinated announcement last month about a years-long cyber espionage campaign by Chinese state-backed hackers. The US indicted seven, the UK leveled sanctions. They just neglected to do one thing --- let some of the victims know.
  • 121. Mic Drop: A unusual peek inside a North Korean malware lab
    North Korea has a unique way of testing malware — they are less concerned about getting it right than getting it out… a kind of “smash-and-grab” approach to cyber attacks. Sentinel One’s Tom Hegel explains.
  • 120. North Korea’s ScarCruft gang is behind some very crafty phishin’ campaigns
    North Korea may be best known for the Lazarus group’s epic cryptocurrency heists. But there’s another special unit of state-backed hackers who have a different specialty: spying on journalists, dissidents, and cybersecurity experts. We look at the ScarCruft gang and their very crafty phishing campaigns.
  • 119. Mic Drop: Could an analysis of sound help save the jaguar in Costa Rica?
    Everyone is talking about the power of AI in conservation, but a professor at Arizona State University has found an even simpler, more elegant solution – and all you have to do is listen.
  • 118. AI and the Holy Grail of conservation: Real-time monitoring
    Cornell University’s Elephant Listening Project has been trying to get real-time monitoring of the Central African Republic’s forest elephants for years. FruitPunch AI and a roster of other AI researchers are closer than ever to making that a reality.
  • 117. Mic Drop: The Big Chill: Nigeria, Binance battle likely to add to economic crisis
    Matthew Page from the London-based think tank Chatham House pulls back to look at the potential economic fallout between Nigerian government and Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange.
  • 116. Detained execs, a bold escape, and tax evasion charges: Nigeria takes aim at Binance
    This week, Nigeria charged Binance and two of its executives with tax evasion in the latest twist in a month-long dispute between the cryptocurrency giant and the Nigerian government. Nigeria detained Binance’s regional manager and a former US federal agent for nearly a month after they flew to Abuja at the end of February to meet with officials there. Now, one executive has slipped away and the other has become a pawn.
  • 115. Mic Drop: Hear ye, Hear ye, the Hacker’s Court is in session
    We talk to Analyst1 senior researcher Jon DiMaggio about how hackers settle their disputes – think People’s Court without all the robes.
  • 114. Exclusive: LockBit ransomware leader says, ‘I felt like I was being hunted’ but they ‘can’t stop me’
    We speak with the leader of one of the most prolific ransomware-as-a-service gangs the world has ever known — LockBit. Just weeks after Operation Cronos, a global police action against the group, LockBitSupp tells us about the takedown, his attempt to rebuild, and his plans for the future.
  • 113. Exclusive: Embattled LockBit leader: ‘Now I want to create even more noise’
    Our interview of the week: LockBitSupp says his ransomware platform isn’t dead yet.
  • 112. Inside the i-Soon papers and China’s secret world of hackers-for-hire
    Newly leaked files from a private Chinese hackers-for-hire company provide a fresh look into China’s “cyber industrial complex” – and it appears to be bigger and more mature than observers had previously imagined.
  • 111. Mic Drop: Arms control expert Jeffrey Lewis on North Korea’s new BFF in Moscow
    Our interview of the week — a one-on-one with arms control policy expert, Jeffrey Lewis.
  • 110. North Korean Missiles in Ukraine and Kim Jong-un’s new swagger
    We talk to a team of open source analysts and weapons inspectors who have pieced together how Pyongyang avoided sanctions to get Russia missiles it needs for the battle in Ukraine and look at why Kim Jung-un is feeling he’s got his groove back.
  • 109. Mic Drop: FBI Director Wray on the latest wave of nation-state cyber threats
    Our interview of the week — a rare one-on-one with FBI Director Christopher Wray. 
  • 108. Exclusive: FBI Director Wray talks takedown operations, nation-state hackers, and growing threats in cyberspace
    FBI Director Chris Wray sat down for a rare interview with Click Here to talk about Operation Dying Ember, the uptick in nation-state hacking, and how just about everyone is now in hackers’ crosshairs.