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Risky Business

Risky Business

Risky Business Media · Risky.biz

116 episodesEN

Show overview

Risky Business has been publishing since 2024, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 116 episodes. That works out to roughly 100 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.

Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 46 min and 1h 2m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. 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 6 days ago, with 33 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 65 episodes published. Published by Risky.biz.

Episodes
116
Running
2024–2026 · 2y
Median length
57 min
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

Risky Business is a weekly information security podcast featuring news and in-depth interviews with industry luminaries. Launched in February 2007, Risky Business is a must-listen digest for information security pros. With a running time of approximately 50-60 minutes, Risky Business is pacy; a security podcast without the waffle.

Latest Episodes

View all 116 episodes

Risky Business #843 -- Fortibleed is kinda awesome, actually

Jun 24, 20261h 3m

Risky Business #842 -- Anthropic needs an adult in the C suite

Jun 17, 202659 min

Risky Business #841 -- Microsoft gets owned and 0day'd

Jun 10, 20261h 3m

Soap Box: Detection and response in the AI age

Jun 5, 202636 min

Risky Business #840 -- Microsoft walks back researcher threats

Jun 3, 20261h 6m

Risky Business #839 -- TeamPCP stole GitHub's internal repos

May 27, 20261h 0m

Risky Business #838 -- GitHub investigates possible breach

May 20, 20261h 2m

Soap Box: Where does AI fit into cloud security?

May 15, 202633 min

Risky Business #837 -- GitHub Actions footgun claims TanStack

May 13, 20261h 5m

Risky Business #836 -- You can't patch the bugpocalypse

May 6, 20261h 1m

Snake Oilers: Ent AI, Spacewalk and Mondoo

May 1, 202643 min

Risky Business #835 -- Why the Fast16 malware is badass

Apr 29, 20261h 6m

Risky Business #834 -- Vercel gets owned, Mozilla dumps hundreds of Mythos bugs

Apr 22, 20261h 0m

Risky Business #833 -- The Great Mythos Freakout of 2026

Apr 15, 202659 min

Snake Oilers: Burp AI, Sondera and Truffle Security

Apr 9, 202648 min

Risky Business #832 -- Anthropic unveils magical 0day computer God

Apr 8, 202653 min

How the World Got Owned Episode 2: The 1990s, Part One

In this special documentary episode, Patrick Gray and Amberleigh Jack take a look back at hacking throughout the 1990s, from the feel-good vibes of the early hacking communities to the antics of young hackers who wound up on the run from the FBI. Part one features recollections from: Jeff Moss (The Dark Tangent), DefCon and Black Hat founder Chris Wysopal (Weld Pond), L0pht member, co-founder, @Stake Kevin Poulsen (Dark Dante), 1990s hacker turned journalist Elias Levy (Aleph One), author of Smashing the Stack for Fun and Profit, Phrack, 1996 How the World Got Owned is produced in partnership with SentinelOne. Show notes Elias Levy (Aleph1), Former Principle Engineer, Google Kevin Poulsen, Journalist Jeff Moss, DefCon founder Chris Wysopal, @Stake founder, L0pht member Hackers testifying at the United States Senate, May 19, 1998 Hackers May ‘Net’ Good PR for Studio DefCon Archives | DefCon 1 A Not So Terribly Brief History of the Electronic Frontier Foundation Innocent Hackers Want Their Computers Back Breakdowns in Computer Security Unsolved Mysteries, Season 3, Episode 4 The Last Hacker: He Called Himself Dark Dante. His Compulsion Led Him to Secret Files and, Eventually, The Bar of Justice Justia appeal summary, Kevin Poulsen, 1994 Smashing the Stack for Fun and Profit, Phrack Magazine, November 1996 From subversives to CEOs: How radical hackers built today’s cybersecurity industry

Apr 3, 202646 min

Risky Business #831 -- The AI bugpocalypse begins

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James Wilson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They cover: Those pesky North Koreans shim a backdoor into a 100M-downloads-a-week npm package TeamPCP appear to have ransacked Cisco’s source and cloud environments AI is getting legitimately good at being told to “just go find some 0day in this” Kaspersky says Coruna and Triangulation do share code lineage Iranian hackers dump Kash Patel’s gmail spool Oh, and of course there’s a Citrix Netscaler memory leak being exploited in the wild This week’s episode is sponsored by Dropzone AI, who make automated AI SOC analysts. Head honcho Ed Wu explains how they’ve built pre-canned ‘hunt packs’ to lead the AI off into your environment to find weird, interesting and security relevant things. This episode is also available on Youtube. Show notes Google links axios supply chain attack to North Korean group | The Record from Recorded Future News Cisco source code stolen in Trivy-linked dev environment breach chiefofautism on X: "someone at ANTHROPIC just showed CLAUDE finding ZERO DAY vulnerabilities in a live conference demo" h0mbre on X: "Claude is somehow better at kernel exploitation than creating meal plans." Vulnerability Research Is Cooked — Quarrelsome MAD Bugs: vim vs emacs vs Claude - Calif MAD Bugs: Claude Wrote a Full FreeBSD Remote Kernel RCE with Root Shell (CVE-2026-4747) A Risky Biz Experiment: Hunting for iOS 0day with AI - Risky Business Media Security leaders say the next two years are going to be 'insane' | CyberScoop Coruna framework: an exploit kit and ties to Operation Triangulation | Securelist Apple says no one using Lockdown Mode has been hacked with spyware | TechCrunch Reverse engineering Apple’s silent security fixes - Calif Jury finds Meta's platforms are harmful to children in 1st wave of social media addiction lawsuits | PBS News Meta and YouTube found liable in social media addiction trial Iranian hackers publish emails allegedly stolen from Kash Patel Iran Us War: 'Legitimate targets': Iran issues warning to US tech firms including Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Nvidia - The Times of India Drop Site on X: "IRGC: From now on, for every assassination, an American company will be destroyed" OSINTtechnical on X: "Starlink shutdowns are forcing Russian troops even deeper into Ubiquiti’s ecosystem. " Citrix NetScaler products confirmed to be under exploitation | Cybersecurity Dive CISA tells federal agencies to patch Citrix NetScaler bug by Thursday | The Record from Recorded Future News Using a VPN May Subject You to NSA Spying | WIRED Post reporters called the White House. Their phones showed ‘Epstein Island.’ - The Washington Post

Apr 1, 202659 min

Soap Box: Red teaming AI systems with SpecterOps

In this sponsored Soap Box edition of the show, Patrick Gray and James Wilson talk about red teaming AI systems with Russel Van Tuyl, Vice President of Services at elite penetration testing firm SpecterOps. SpecterOps is the company behind attack path enumeration tool Bloodhound and Bloodhound Enterprise, but they’re also a pentest and red teaming shop with world class expertise in popping shells on all sorts of interesting systems in all sorts of interesting places. This episode is also available on Youtube. Show notes

Mar 27, 202630 min

Risky Business #830 -- LiteLLM and security scanner supply chains compromised

On this week’s show, Patrick Gray, Adam Boileau and James WIlson discuss the week’s cybersecurity news. They talk through: TeamPCP’s supply chain attack on Github, and they threw in an anti-Iran wiper, because why not?! Anthropic hooks up its models to just… use your whole computer After Stryker’s Very Bad Day, CISA says maybe add some more controls around your Intune? Another iOS exploit kit shows up in the cyber bargain-bin The FTC decides to ban… all new home routers?! U wot m8?! Supermicro founder was personally sanction-busting Nvidia GPUs into China?! This week’s episode is sponsored by enterprise browser maker, Island. Chief Customer Officer Bradon Rogers joins Pat to explain how its customers are using Island to control the use of personal AI services in regulated industries. This episode is also available on Youtube. Show notes ‘CanisterWorm’ Springs Wiper Attack Targeting Iran TeamPCP deploys CanisterWorm on NPM following Trivy compromise Andrej Karpathy on X: "Software horror: litellm PyPI supply chain" attack Checkmarx KICS GitHub Action Compromised: Malware Injected in All Git Tags Felix Rieseberg on X: "Today, we’re releasing a feature that allows Claude to control your computer" A Top Google Search Result for Claude Plugins Was Planted by Hackers Lockheed Martin targeted in alleged breach by pro-Iran hacktivist CISA urges companies to secure Microsoft Intune systems after hackers mass-wipe Stryker devices FBI seems to seize website tied to Iranian cyberattack on Stryker Stryker confirms cyberattack is contained and restoration underway Hundreds of Millions of iPhones Can Be Hacked With a New Tool Found in the Wild Someone has publicly leaked an exploit kit that can hack millions of iPhones Russia-linked hackers use advanced iPhone exploit to target Ukrainians Apple rolls out first 'background security' update for iPhones, iPads, and Macs to fix Safari bug Post by @wartranslated.bsky.social — Bluesky Signal’s Creator Is Helping Encrypt Meta AI Hacker says they compromised millions of confidential police tips held by US company Millions of 'anonymous' crime tips exposed in massive Crime Stoppers hack Feds Disrupt IoT Botnets Behind Huge DDoS Attacks FCC bans import of consumer-grade routers amid national security concerns White House pours cold water on cyber ‘letters of marque’ speculation Google launches threat disruption unit, stops short of calling it ‘offensive' Supermicro’s cofounder was just arrested for allegedly smuggling $2.5 billion in GPUs to China Cyberattack on vehicle breathalyzer company leaves drivers stranded across the US Man pleads guilty to $8 million AI-generated music scheme Two Israelis AI generated "intelligence" and sold it to Iran

Mar 25, 20261h 3m
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