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Enterprise Security Weekly (Video)

Enterprise Security Weekly (Video)

Security Weekly Productions · Adrian Sanabria

1,141 episodesEN

Show overview

Enterprise Security Weekly (Video) has been publishing since 2016, and across the 10 years since has built a catalogue of 1,141 episodes. That works out to roughly 740 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.

Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 30 min and 45 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language News show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 3 days ago, with 19 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Adrian Sanabria.

Episodes
1,141
Running
2016–2026 · 10y
Median length
34 min
Cadence
Several per week

From the publisher

News, analysis, and insights into enterprise security. We put security vendors under the microscope, and explore the latest trends that can help defenders succeed. Hosted by Adrian Sanabria. Co hosts: Katie Teitler-Santullo, Ayman Elsawah, Jason Wood, Jackie McGuire, Sean Metcalf.

The impact of Mythos and Florida Man, confidence gaps, phishing, & AI adoption - Erich Kron, Deepen Desai, Chris Wallis - ESW #458

May 11, 20261h 39m

Post Quantum Migration Struggles, AI Threats, and Modern Defenses - Bobby Ford, HD Moore, Eyal Benishti, Ramin Farassat, Daniel dos Santos - ESW #457

May 4, 20261h 32m

Rethinking Security from the OS Up in the Age of AI and more RSAC 2026 Interviews - Craig Sanderson, Sachin Jade, Travis Wong, Phil Calvin, Karen Heart - ESW #456

Apr 27, 20261h 35m

Making AI actually work in the enterprise and more RSAC Conference 2026 interviews - Aamir Lakhani, Camellia Chan, Ely Abramovitch, Jody Brazil, Jim Spignardo - ESW #455

Apr 20, 20261h 40m

We catch up on the news, including AI vuln hunting; also more RSAC interviews! - Mark Lambert, Samuel Hassine, John Wilson, Georges Bossert - ESW #454

Apr 13, 20261h 37m

Battling payment fraud with tokenization and executive interviews from RSAC 2026 - Brian Oh, Mickey Bresman, Ashish Jain, Thyaga Vasudevan, Jimmy White - ESW #453

Apr 6, 20261h 45m

Oops, all Interviews: Switching to Cyber, CISO Reflections, and the State of TPCRM - Lenny Zeltser, Helen Patton, Alexandre Sieira - ESW #452

Interview with Helen Patton about her new book, Switching to Cyber Helen joins us to discuss her second book, "Switching to Cyber." Her first book discussed strategies for handling various stages of the cybersecurity career, while this one, co-written with Josiah Dykstra, provides a guide for switching to cyber mid-career. Check out her book, Switching to Cyber: The Mid-Career Guide to Launching a Cybersecurity Career: on Amazon on Barnes & Noble and on the publisher's website Interview with Lenny Zeltzer: Reflections on Being a CISO After a cybersecurity career in various roles, doing everything from product management to malware analysis training, Lenny spent 6 years in the CISO seat at Axonius, from near the inception of the company through its growth from its modest Series A stage in 2019 to the present, with nearly a billion in funding today. Lenny's CISO Essays: What Being a CISO Taught Me About Security Leadership As a CISO, Are You a Builder, Fixer, or Scale Operator? The Chief Insecurity Officer Interview with Alexandre Sieira: The state of TPCRM is shifting The gold standard for third party cyber risk management has long been the humble questionnaire. While we've seen security rating services companies generate scores by scanning a company's external resources. Both approaches are widely considered inaccurate for either creating trust relationships or determining the true risk of doing business with a third party. Every analysis of this problem comes to the same conclusion: without internal data about the state of systems and the security program, TPCRM can't improve substantially. Most this believe this to be an impossible problem: third parties would never share data this sensitive with a customer and first parties assume the same. What if they did? That's exactly the premise behind Tenchi Security, and Alexandre joins us to talk about how they've accomplished the 'impossible' in Brazil and aim to expand their success to the US. Resources: Thoughts from a panel discussion at a recent FS-ISAC event, shared on LinkedIn Predicts 2026: Third-Party Cybersecurity Risk Management Evolves for the AI Era (Gartner Subscribers only, sorry) Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-452

Mar 30, 20261h 49m

Can AI help critical infrastructure, the state of the cyber market, and weekly news - Kara Sprague, Mike Privette - ESW #451

Interview with Kara Sprague - The AI Fix for Infrastructure's Oldest Security Risks. Critical infrastructure, often built on decades-old systems and legacy code, remains vulnerable to cyberattacks. From pipelines and energy grids to transportation networks, we break down where critical infrastructure is vulnerable and how AI could potentially help strengthen defenses. Interview with Mike Privette - The State of the Cybersecurity Market Here at ESW, we use Mike Privette's Security, Funded newsletter to prepare for every news segment. His newsletter covers the latest fundings, acquisitions, public market performance, layoffs, and other pertinent market details every week. We particularly enjoy the weekly Vibe Check. In this interview, he joins us for the third year in a row, to discuss the most interesting insights from his annual State of Market Report. Post recording Adrian here: Whooooo, so this conversation was SO good, I decided to punt the news segment in favor of a part 2 with Mike, so enjoy! Also, though I punted the news segment, I did collect these stories and annotated them, so I think there's still some value in leaving them in the show notes. Scroll down for the links and my comments on each of these! Weekly Enterprise News Finally, in the enterprise security news, funding announcements seem to be ramping up before RSA Should security architects be shifting right? How McKinsley's AI platform got hacked… by AI Amazon is having a bad time with AI lately Europe announces a Google Workspace/Microsoft 365 replacement Robot dogs are apparently guarding datacenters now Some much needed security humor in our squirrel stories before we all fly to San Francisco and lose our minds for a week All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-451

Mar 23, 20261h 42m

AI Governance, new book (Code War) from Allie Mellen, and the weekly news! - Jeremy Snyder, Allie Mellen - ESW #450

Interview with Jeremy Snyder from FireTail about AI Governance Death by a thousand cuts: the AI shadow IT problem I think the best description of the AI governance problem during this interview was the title of the award-winning movie, Everything, Everywhere, All At Once. Generative AI has been disrupting businesses, products, and vendor risk management for a few years now. FireTail is one of the companies trying to address this problem for enterprises, so we check in with Jeremy Snyder to see how things are going. Segment 1 Resources: https://www.firetail.ai/ai-breach-tracker Interview with Allie Mellen about her new book, Code War: How Nations Hack, Spy, and Shape the Digital Battlefield We're VERY excited to check out Allie's new book, which will be released on St. Patrick's Day 2026! The timing could not be better, as her book is perfectly positioned to provide some much needed perspective on the cyber aspects of the ongoing war in Iran. Is it normal to see the use of wipers on healthcare companies in the midst of the conflict? Is there any precedent for hyperscaler datacenters getting targeted (some of AWS's EMEA regions are still recovering)? Check out the conversation to find out! Pick up the book! from Wiley from Barnes & Noble from Amazon Allie's personal website The Weekly Enterprise News Finally, in the enterprise security news, Vibes and funding! Starting to see some disruption in the vuln mgmt space (finally!) Tons of new free tools lots of essays lots of reports logs of breaches the talks our hosts are giving at RSAC conference and someone is selling an actual cone of silence??? All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-450

Mar 16, 20261h 51m

Breaking in with CrashFix, supply chain security, and CMMC phase 1 - Anna Pham, David Zendzian, Jacob Horne - ESW #449

Interview with Anna Pham Breaking in with ClickFix: Anatomy of a modern endpoint attack Cybersecurity company Huntress just published a report on a new ClickFix variant they've discovered, which they've dubbed CrashFix. This technique was developed by KongTuke to serve as the primary lure within a new custom malicious browser extension also created by the group. In short, the team observed the threat actors using KongTuke's malicious browser extension to display a fake security warning, claiming the browser had "stopped abnormally" and prompting users to run a "scan" to remediate the threats. Upon "running the scan," the user is presented with a fake "Security issues detected" alert and instructed to manually "fix" the issue by opening the Windows Run dialog, pasting from their clipboard, and pressing Enter. The malicious extension silently copies a PowerShell command to the clipboard, disguised as a legitimate repair command. From there, they execute the malicious command. Segment Resources: BLOG - Dissecting CrashFix: KongTuke's New Toy Interview with David Zendzian Continuous compliance and real security lifecycle management Supply chain attacks are not just on the rise; attackers are learning from the past, making these attacks even more effective and dangerous than before. It was just over a month ago when the Shai-Hulud attack first impacted NPM packages, forcing enterprises around the world into lockdown. While only 187 packages were compromised in that initial incident, it served as a wake-up call for many: an accurate inventory of systems is good, but a clear, real-time Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) for applications is non-negotiable. In this world of manifest based infrastructure and container based applications with (real) "devsecops", the dream of continuous upgrades of OS/Runtime/Stack/App and App Dependencies is very mature and there are solid examples of companies and federal entities managing this at scale without thousands of teams and people. Segment Resources: BLOG - Supply Chain Security: How accurate SBOMs can deliver proactive threat mitigation Interview with Jacob Horne CMMC Phase 1 Enforcement — What the November 10 Deadline Means for the Defense Supply Chain With the upcoming CMMC Phase 1 enforcement on November 10, cybersecurity teams across the defense and federal supply chain are facing new compliance requirements that directly affect contract eligibility and data-protection standards. Jacob Horne, Chief Cybersecurity Evangelist at Summit 7, can break down what this milestone means for enterprise security leaders, MSPs/MSSPs, and contractors preparing for audits. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-449

Mar 9, 20261h 34m

OT Security/business resilience, lack of incentives for securing software & the news - Ben Worthy - ESW #448

Interview - Ben Worthy from Airbus Protect The current state of OT security and business resilience In this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly, we sit down with Ben Worthy, OT Security Specialist at Airbus Protect, to explore the evolving landscape of business resilience in safety-critical sectors. With over 25 years of experience across aerospace, nuclear, water, oil & gas, and other industries, Ben shares insights on how organizations are adapting to the surge in disruptive cyberattacks—from ransomware targeting operational technology to GPS spoofing and supply chain incidents. We discuss major cases including the Boeing/LockBit ransom demand, the Jaguar Land Rover production shutdown, and the SITA passenger data breach, examining how aviation and other critical infrastructure sectors are separating safety risk from business continuity risk. Ben also breaks down the regulatory changes reshaping the industry, including EASA's October 2025 and February 2026 deadlines that tie cyber assurance directly to safety oversight, and what ENISA's latest numbers reveal about hacktivism and ransomware trends. Whether you're in aviation, nuclear, or any safety-critical sector, this conversation offers practical lessons on building resilience that keeps operations moving while addressing threats in real time. This segment is sponsored by Airbus Protect. Visit https://securityweekly.com/airbusprotect to learn more about them! Topic: Where are the business incentives to build secure products and software? "It's the right thing to do," so of course businesses will make their products secure, right? Well, it turns out that breaches and vulnerabilities don't traditionally hurt financial performance all that much. Stocks recover, insurance covers the bulks of the losses, fines are paid, and lawsuits are settled. Most businesses can comfortably absorb the impact, so the threat of reputational harm or financial losses just aren't slowing them down. In the case of Ivanti, where the reputational harm was extreme, the company's companies continue to get hacked as critical vulnerabilities keep getting discovered in their products. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2026-02-19/vpn-used-by-us-government-failed-to-stop-china-state-sponsored-hackers In this topic segment, we don't aim to provide solutions to this problem, just the awareness that ethics, doing the right thing, and even signing the Secure by Design pledge don't seem to be enough to change vendor behavior when it comes to securing products. The Weekly Enterprise Security News Finally, in the enterprise security news, RSA Innovation Sandbox hot takes Did AI solve cyber? fundings and acquisitions a free app to warn you about smart glasses deep thoughts about OpenClaw replacing US tech with EU equivalents is hard should you turn off dependabot? accidentally taking over 7000 robot vacuums the director of AI Safety at Meta loses her email somehow should you go back to using a blackberry? All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-448

Mar 2, 20261h 54m

Bringing intelligence to assets, new White House cybersecurity strategy, and the news - Tim Morris - ESW #447

Segment 1 - Interview with Tim Morris Bringing intelligence to assets You've been through 6 CMDB projects in the last decade. None of them came close to the original goals, the CMDB was already out-of-date long before the project had any hopes of completing. Is building an asset inventory just too ambitious a project for most organizations, or is there a better way? Tim Morris shares a different approach with us today. It might require some convincing and some courage, but it seems much more likely to succeed than any of your past CMDB efforts… Segment Resources Trusted automation: Building autonomous IT with confidence This segment is sponsored by Tanium. Visit https://securityweekly.com/tanium to learn more about them! Segment 2 - Topic: the new White House cybersecurity strategy In this segment, we explore some early details about the White House's new, but yet unreleased cybersecurity strategy. It appears that drafts have been shared (or leaked) to the press, so there's plenty to discuss here! Segment 3 - News Finally, in the enterprise security news, Massive amounts of funding and acquisitions as we get close to RSA Open source registries need help Microsoft Copilot reads email marked as DO NOT READ Don't use an LLM to generate passwords is prompt injection a vulnerability defining risks AI changes the build versus buy equation the scammer's perspective All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-447

Feb 23, 20261h 42m

Hardware-level zero trust, don't trust AI with your employees, and the news - Matias Katz, J Wolfgang Goerlich - ESW #446

Segment 1: Interview with Mathias Katz What if you had enterprise-grade network security protections traveling with your users' laptops? What if it could be built into the laptop, but still stay safe even if the laptop OS and firmware were entirely compromised? Mathias and his company, Byos have built such a thing, and BOY do we have some questions for him. Segment 2: Interview with Wolfgang Goerlich Addressing the nuanced, nefarious threats of AI Sure, we need to worry about AI prompt injection and AI data leakage, but what about the threats to our BRAINS? Seriously, as we start to have daily conversations with this technology, how are they going to shape how we think? What inherent biases in the training, fine tuning, guardrails, or lack of guardrails are going to affect our decisions or how we work? Wolfgang is concerned about this, so he performed a human/AI experiment. With almost 1000 people partaking in the experiment, the results are sure to be intriguing. Segment 3: This week's enterprise security news Finally, in the enterprise security news, survey results on how folks are feeling about openclaw some hidden drama discovered in KEV updates some new KEV tools is AI replacing traditional code scanning tools? remote code execution in notepad no, not notepad++, NOTEPAD.EXE you know, the one that ships preinstalled on Windows the RSAC innovation sandbox finalists dealing with legacy vulnerabilities Don't accept OpenClaw Mac Minis from strangers! All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-446

Feb 16, 20261h 47m

Clickfixed, Zero Trust World, and OpenClaw is out of control - but that's the point - Rob Allen - ESW #445

Interview Segment - Rob Allen - Clickfix "Clickfix" attacks aren't new, but they're certainly more common these days. Rob Allen joins us to help us understand what they are, why they work on your employees, and how to stop them! We tie it into infostealers and ransomware actors. Plenty of practical recommendations for how to spot and prevent these attacks in your environment, don't miss it! This segment is sponsored by ThreatLocker. Visit https://securityweekly.com/threatlocker to learn more about them! Interview Segment - Rob Allen - Zero Trust World Threatlocker's 6th annual Zero Trust World event is happening next month! This three day event runs from March 4th through the 6th once again in sunny Orlando, Florida. This year's event is packed with hands-on hacking workshops, competitions, prizes, and keynotes from Marcus Hutchins, and Linus and Luke from Linus Tech Tips. Security Weekly will be there as well, doing live interviews and recording an episode of ESW live! This segment is sponsored by ThreatLocker's annual Zero Trust World. Visit https://securityweekly.com/ztw to learn more about the conference and register with discount code ZTW26ESW! News Segment For this week's enterprise news, we discuss OpenClaw! funding! acquisitions! testing out AI models' offensive security capabilities more openclaw! the need for more transparency and testing in the vendor space A photobooth service leaks drunken pictures of wedding parties The salty snack that helps server uptime All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-445

Feb 9, 20261h 41m

Initial entry to resilience: understanding modern attack flows and this week's news - Warwick Webb - ESW #444

Segment 1: Interview with Warwick Webb From Initial Entry to Resilience: Understanding Modern Attack Flows Modern cyberattacks don't unfold as isolated alerts--they move as coordinated attack flows that exploit gaps between tools, teams, and time. In this episode, Warwick Webb, Vice President of Managed Detection and Response at SentinelOne, breaks down how today's breaches often begin invisibly, progress undetected through siloed security stacks, and accelerate faster than human response alone can handle. He'll discuss how unified platforms, machine-speed detection powered by global threat intelligence, and expert-led response change the equation--turning fragmented signals into clear attack narratives. The conversation concludes with how organizations can move beyond incident response to build resilience, readiness, and continuous improvement through post-attack analysis. Listeners will leave with a clearer understanding of how attacks actually unfold in the real world—and what it takes to move from reactive alert handling to true attack-flow-driven defense. Segment Resources: Wayfinder MDR Solution Brief 451 MDR Report Managed Defense Redefined Blog This segment is sponsored by SentinelOne. Visit https://securityweekly.com/sentinelone to learn more about them! Segments 2 and 3: The Weekly News In this week's enterprise security news, we've got funding free tools! the CISO's craft agentic browsers tech companies are building cyber units? giving AI agents access to your entire life lots of dumpster fires in the industry today Cisco killed Kenna the state of AI in the SOC homemade EMP guns! don't try this at home All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-444

Feb 2, 20261h 37m

The future of data control, why detection fails, and the weekly news - Thyaga Vasudevan - ESW #443

Segment 1: Interview with Thyaga Vasudevan Hybrid by Design: Zero Trust, AI, and the Future of Data Control AI is reshaping how work gets done, accelerating decision-making and introducing new ways for data to be created, accessed, and shared. As a result, organizations must evolve Zero Trust beyond an access-only model into an inline data governance approach that continuously protects sensitive information wherever it moves. Securing access alone is no longer enough in an AI-driven world. In this episode, we'll unpack why real-time visibility and control over data usage are now essential for safe AI adoption, accurate outcomes, and regulatory compliance. From preventing data leakage to governing how data is used by AI systems, security teams need controls that operate in the moment - across cloud, browser, SaaS, and on-prem environments - without slowing the business. We'll also explore how growing data sovereignty and regulatory pressures are driving renewed interest in hybrid architectures. By combining cloud agility with local control, organizations can keep sensitive data protected, governed, and compliant, regardless of where it resides or how AI is applied. This segment is sponsored by Skyhigh Security. Visit https://securityweekly.com/skyhighsecurity to learn more about them! Segment 2: Why detection fails Caleb Sima put together a nice roundup of the issues around detection engineering struggles that I thought worth discussing. Amélie Koran also shared some interesting thoughts and experiences. Segment 3: Weekly Enterprise News Finally, in the enterprise security news, Fundings and acquisitions are going strong can cyber insurance be profitable? some new free tools shared by the community RSAC gets a new CEO Large-scale enterprise AI initiatives aren't going well LLM impacts on exploit development AI vulnerabilities global risk reports floppies are still used daily, but not for long? All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-443

Jan 26, 20261h 35m

Making vulnerability management and incident response actually work. Also, the News! - Beck Norris, Ryan Fried, José Toledo - ESW #442

Segment 1 with Beck Norris - Making vulnerability management actually work Vulnerability management is often treated as a tooling or patching problem, yet many organizations struggle to reduce real cyber risk despite heavy investment. In this episode, Beck Norris explains why effective vulnerability management starts with governance and risk context, depends on multiple interconnected security disciplines, and ultimately succeeds or fails based on accountability, metrics, and operational maturity. Drawing from the aviation industry—one of the most regulated and safety-critical environments—Beck translates lessons that apply broadly across regulated and large-scale enterprises, including healthcare, financial services, and critical infrastructure. Segment 2 with Ryan Fried and Jose Toledo - Making incident response actually work Organizations statistically have decent to excellent spending on cybersecurity: they have what should be sufficient staff and some good tools. When they get hit with an attack, however, the response is often an unorganized, poorly communicated mess! What's going on here, why does this happen??? Not to worry. Ryan and José join us in this segment to offer some insight into why this happens and how to ensure it never happens again! Segment Resources: [Mandiant - Best practices for incident response planning] (https://services.google.com/fh/files/misc/mandiantincidentresponsebestpractices_2025.pdf?linkId=19287933) Beyond Cyberattacks: Evolution of Incident Response in 2026 Segment 3 - Weekly Enterprise News Finally, in the enterprise security news, Almost no funding… Oops, all acquisitions! Changes in how the US handles financial crimes and international hacking Mass scans looking for exposed LLMs The state of Prompt injection be careful with Chrome extensions and home electronics from unknown brands Is China done with the West? All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-442

Jan 19, 20261h 43m

The State of Cybersecurity Hiring, 2026 content plans, and the weekly news - ESW #441

First Topic - Podcast Content Plans for 2026 Every year, I like to sit down and consider what the podcast should be focusing on. Not doing so ensures every single episode will be about AI and nobody wants that. Least of all, me. If I have one more all-AI episode, my head is going to explode. With that said, most of what we talk about in this segment is AI (picard face palm.png). I think 2026 will be THE defining year for GenAI. Three years after the release of ChatGPT, I think we've hit peak GenAI hype and folks are ready for it to put up or shut up. We'll see winners grow and get acquired and losers pivot to something else. More than anything, I want to interview folks who have actually seen it work at scale, rather than just in a cool demo in a vendor sandbox. Also on the agenda for this year: The battle against infostealers and session hijacking: we didn't have a good answer in 2025. When is it coming? Will it include Macs, despite them not having a traditional TPM? The state of trust in outsourcing and third party use (Cloud, MSSPs, SaaS, contractors): 2025 was not a good year for third parties. Lots of them got breached and caused their customers a lot of pain. Also, there's the state of balkanization between the US and... the rest of the entire world. Everyone outside the US seems to be trying to derisk their companies and systems from the Cloud Act right now. Vulnerability management market disruption: there are half a dozen startups already plotting to disrupt the market, likely to come out of stealth in 2026 Future of the SOC: if it's not AI, what is it? What else??? What am I missing? What would you like to see us discuss? Please drop me a line and let me know: [email protected] Topic 2: The state of cybersecurity hiring This topic has been in the works for a while! Ayman had a whole podcast and book focused on all the paths people take to get into security. Jackie worked with WiSys on outlining pathways into a cybersecurity career. Whether you're already in cyber or looking for a way in, this segment crams a lot of great advice into just 15-20 minutes. Segment resources: Ayman's personal guide for getting into security https://www.wicys.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/WiCyS-Pathways-in-Cyber-PDF-9.24.25.pdf News Finally, in the enterprise security news, Fundings and acquisitions still strong in 2026! Santa might be done delivering gifts, but not protecting Macs! ClickFix attacks Weaponized Raspberry Pis MongoDB incidents for Christmas Top 10 Cyber attacks of 2025 US gets tough on nation state hackers? Brute force attacks on Banks An AI Vending Machine All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-441

Jan 12, 20261h 35m

Why are cybersecurity predictions so bad? - ESW #440

For our first episode of the new year, we thought it would be appropriate to dig into some cybersecurity predictions. First, we cover the very nature of predictions and why they're often so bad. To understand this, we get into logical fallacies and cognitive biases. In the next segment, we cover some 2025 predictions we found on the Internet. In the final segment, we discuss 2026, drop some of our own predictions, and talk about what we hope to see this year. SPOILER: Please fix session hijacking, okay tech industry? Segment resources: A great site for better understanding logical fallacies and cognitive biases Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-440

Jan 5, 20261h 29m

Holiday Chat: Local AI datacenter activism, AI can't substitute good taste, and more - ESW #439

For this week's episode of Enterprise Security Weekly, there wasn't a lot of time to prepare. I had to do 5 podcasts in about 8 days leading up to the holiday break, so I decided to just roll with a general chat and see how it went. Also, apologies, for any audio quality issues, as the meal I promised to make for dinner this day required a lot of prep, so I was in the kitchen for the whole episode! For reference, I made the recipe for morisqueta michoacana from Rick Martinez's cookbook, Mi Cocina. I used the wrong peppers (availability issue), so it came out green instead of red, but was VERY delicious. As for the episode, we discuss what we've been up to, with Jackie sharing her experiences fighting against Meta (allegedly, through some shell companies) building an AI datacenter in her town. We then get into discussing the limitations of AI, the potential of the AI bubble popping, and general limitations of AI that are becoming obvious. One of the key limitations is AI's inability to apply personal experience, have strong opinions, or any sense of 'taste'. I think I shared my observation that AI is becoming a sort of 'digital junk food'. "NO AI" has become a common phrase used by creators - a source of pride that media consumers seem to be celebrating and seeking out. Segment Resources: Kagi absolutely did NOT sponsor this episode. I have become a big fan of paying for search so that I am not the product. There are other players in this market, but I've settled on Kagi. We mention Ira Glass's bit on taste, which is a small bit of a longer talk he did on storytelling. The shorter bit is here, and is less than 2 minutes long. The full talk is split into 4 parts and posted on a YouTube channel called "War Photography" for some reason. Part 1: https://youtu.be/5pFI9UuC_fc Part 2: https://youtu.be/dx2cI-2FJRs Part 3: https://youtu.be/X2wLP0izeJE Part 4: https://youtu.be/sp8pwkgR8 Finally, we also bring up a talk we also discussed on episode 437, Benedict Evans' AI Eats the World Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-439

Dec 29, 20251h 13m
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