On this week’s show, Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week’s security news, including:
- Julian Assange finally cuts a deal, pleads guilty, and goes free
- USA to ban Kaspersky - even updates
- Car dealer SaaS provider CDK contemplates paying a ransom
- Intolerable healthcare ransomware attacks continue
- We revisit Windows proximity bugs via wifi and bluetooth
- And much, much more.
This week’s episode is sponsored by enterprise browser maker Island. Crowdstrike co-founder Dmitri Alperovitch is an investor in Island, and joins on its behalf to discuss why an enterprise browser is really starting to make sense.
Show notes
- Julian Assange released from prison and has left UK, WikiLeaks says
- US to ban Kaspersky Lab software nationwide later this year
- Cyberattack on CDK Global stymies work at car dealerships across US
- Almost 200 cancer operations postponed as ransomware group publishes London hospitals data
- UK government weighs action against Russian hackers over NHS records theft
- South Africa’s national health lab hit with ransomware attack amid mpox outbreak
- Ransomware victims are becoming less likely to pay up | Cybersecurity Dive
- Lawmakers in Philippines push for probe into Pentagon's anti-vax propaganda operation | Reuters
- Telegram says it has 'about 30 engineers'; security experts say that's a red flag | TechCrunch
- Two bluetooth vulnerabilities in Windows
- Thread on reversing the patch
- Basic concept for the latest windows wifi driver CVE