Malwarebytes

Lock and Code

Lock and Code tells the human stories within cybersecurity, privacy, and technology. Rogue robot vacuums, hacked farm tractors, and catastrophic software vulnerabilities—it’s all here.

Author

Malwarebytes

Category

Technology

Podcast website

www.malwarebytes.com

Latest episode

Jun 28, 2026

Where to listen?

Podcasts in the app Replaio Radio Coming soon

Podcasts are coming to the app soon. Install now and be the first to see a whole new take on podcasts

Get it on Google Play Install for free Android 5M+ downloads · 4.8 rating iOS soon

Episodes

SIEM is not storage, with Jess Dodson 29.07.2024

In the world of business cybersecurity, the powerful technology known as “Security Information and Event Management” is sometimes thwarted by the most unexpected actors—the very people setting it up. Security Information and Event Management—or SIEM—is a term used to describe data-collecting products that businesses rely on to make sense of everything going on inside their network, in the hopes of...

How an AI “artist” stole a woman’s face, with Ali Diamond 15.07.2024

Full-time software engineer and part-time Twitch streamer Ali Diamond is used to seeing herself on screen, probably because she’s the one who turns the camera on. But when Diamond received a Direct Message (DM) on Twitter earlier this year, she  learned that her likeness had been recreated  across a sample of AI-generated images, entirely without her consent. On the AI art sharing platfo...

Busted for book club? Why cops want to see what you’re reading, with Sarah Lamdan 01.07.2024

More than 20 years ago, a law that the United States would eventually use to justify the warrantless collection of Americans’ phone call records actually started out as a warning sign against an entirely different target: Libraries. Not two months after terrorists attacked the United States on September 11, 2001, Congress responded with the passage of The USA Patriot Act. Originally championed as...

(Almost) everything you always wanted to know about cybersecurity, but were too afraid to ask, with Tjitske de Vries 17.06.2024

🎶  Ready to know what Malwarebytes knows? Ask us your questions and get some answers. What is a passphrase and what makes it—what’s the word? Strong?  🎶 Every day, countless readers, listeners, posters, and users ask us questions about some of the most commonly cited topics and terminology in cybersecurity. What are passkeys? Is it safer to use a website or an app? How can I stay safe...

800 arrests, 40 tons of drugs, and one backdoor, or what a phone startup gave the FBI, with Joseph Cox 03.06.2024

This is a story about how the FBI got everything it wanted. For decades, law enforcement and intelligence agencies across the world have lamented the availability of modern technology that allows suspected criminals to hide their communications from legal scrutiny. This long-standing debate has sometimes spilled into the public view, as it did in 2016, when the FBI demanded that Apple unlock an iP...

Your vacation, reservations, and online dates, now chosen by AI 20.05.2024

The irrigation of the internet is coming. For decades, we’ve accessed the internet much like how we, so long ago, accessed water—by traveling to it. We connected (quite literally), we logged on, and we zipped to addresses and sites to read, learn, shop, and scroll.  Over the years, the internet was accessible from increasingly more devices, like smartphones, smartwatches, and even smart fridg...

"No social media 'til 16," and other fixes for a teen mental health crisis, with Dr. Jean Twenge 06.05.2024

You’ve likely felt it: The dull pull downwards of a smartphone scroll. The “five more minutes” just before bed. The sleep still there after waking. The edges of your calm slowly fraying. After more than a decade of our most recent technological experiment, in turns out that having the entirety of the internet in the palm of your hands could be … not so great. Obviously, the effects of this are com...

Picking fights and gaining rights, with Justin Brookman 22.04.2024

Our Lock and Code host, David Ruiz, has a bit of an apology to make: “Sorry for all the depressing episodes.” When the  Lock and Code podcast explored online harassment and abuse this year , our guest provided  several guidelines and tips for individuals to lock down their accounts and remove their sensitive information from the internet , but larger problems remained. Content moderation...

Porn panic imperils privacy online, with Alec Muffett (re-air) 08.04.2024

A digital form of protest could become the go-to response for the world’s largest porn website as it faces increased regulations: Not letting people access the site. In March, PornHub blocked access to visitors connecting to its website from Texas. It marked the second time in the past 12 months that the porn giant shut off its website to protest new requirements in online age verification. The Te...

Securing your home network is long, tiresome, and entirely worth it, with Carey Parker 25.03.2024

Few words apply as broadly to the public—yet mean as little—as “home network security.” For many, a “home network” is an amorphous thing. It exists somewhere between a router, a modem, an outlet, and whatever cable it is that plugs into the wall. But the idea of a “home network” doesn’t need to intimidate, and securing that home network could be simpler than many folks realize. For starters, a hom...

Going viral shouldn't lead to bomb threats, with Leigh Honeywell 11.03.2024

A disappointing meal at a restaurant. An ugly breakup between two partners. A popular TV show that kills off a beloved, main character. In a perfect world, these are irritations and moments of vulnerability. But online today, these same events can sometimes be the catalyst for hate. That disappointing meal can produce a frighteningly invasive Yelp review that exposes a restaurant owner’s home addr...

How to make a fake ID online, with Joseph Cox 26.02.2024

For decades, fake IDs had roughly three purposes: Buying booze before legally allowed, getting into age-restricted clubs, and, we can only assume, completing nation-state spycraft for embedded informants and double agents. In 2024, that’s changed, as the uses for fake IDs have become enmeshed with the internet. Want to sign up for a cryptocurrency exchange where you’ll use traditional funds to pur...

If only you had to worry about malware, with Jason Haddix 12.02.2024

If your IT and security teams think malware is bad, wait until they learn about everything else. In 2024, the modern cyberattack is a segmented, prolonged, and professional effort, in which specialists create strictly financial alliances to plant malware on unsuspecting employees, steal corporate credentials, slip into business networks, and, for a period of days if not weeks, simply sit and watch...

Bruce Schneier predicts a future of AI-powered mass spying 29.01.2024

If the internet helped create the era of mass surveillance, then artificial intelligence will bring about an era of mass spying. That’s the latest prediction from noted cryptographer and computer security professional Bruce Schneier, who, in December, shared a vision of the near future where artificial intelligence—AI—will be able to comb through reams of surveillance data to answer the types of q...

A true tale of virtual kidnapping 15.01.2024

On Thursday, December 28, at 8:30 pm in the Utah town of Riverdale, the city police began investigating what they believed was a kidnapping. 17-year-old foreign exchange student Kai Zhuang was missing, and according to Riverdale Police Chief Casey Warren , Zhuang was believed to be “forcefully taken” from his home, and “being held against his will.” The evidence leaned in police’s favor. That nigh...

DNA data deserves better, with Suzanne Bernstein 01.01.2024

Hackers want to know everything about you: Your credit card number, your ID and passport info, and now, your DNA. On October 1 2023, on a hacking website called BreachForums, a group of cybercriminals claimed that they had stolen—and would soon sell— individual profiles for users of the genetic testing company 23andMe . 23andMe offers direct-to-consumer genetic testing kits that provide customers...

Meet the entirely legal, iPhone-crashing device: the Flipper Zero 18.12.2023

It talks, it squawks, it even blocks! The stocking-stuffer on every hobby hacker’s wish list this year is the Flipper Zero. “Talk” across low-frequency radio to surreptitiously change TV channels, emulate garage door openers, or even pop open your friend’s Tesla charging port without their knowing! “Squawk” with the Flipper Zero’s mascot and user-interface tour guide, a “cyber-dolphin” who can “re...

Why a ransomware gang tattled on its victim, with Allan Liska 04.12.2023

Like the grade-school dweeb who reminds their teacher to assign tonight’s homework, or the power-tripping homeowner who threatens every neighbor with an HOA citation, the ransomware group ALPHV can now add itself to a shameful roster of pathetic, little tattle-tales. In November, the ransomware gang ALPHV, which also goes by the name Black Cat, notified the US Securities and Exchange Commission ab...

Defeating Little Brother requires a new outlook on privacy 06.11.2023

A worrying trend is cropping up amongst Americans, particularly within Generation Z—they're spying on each other more. Whether reading someone's DMs, rifling through a partner's text messages, or even rummaging through the bags and belongings of someone else, Americans  enjoy  keeping tabs on one another, especially when they're in a relationship....

MGM attack is too late a wake-up call for businesses, says James Fair 23.10.2023

In September, the Las Vegas casino and hotel operator MGM Resorts became a trending topic on social media... but for all the wrong reasons. A TikTok user posted a video taken from inside the casino floor of the MGM Grand—the company's flagship hotel complex near the southern end of the Las Vegas strip—that didn't involve the whirring of slot machines or the sirens and buzz...

AI sneak attacks, location spying, and definitely not malware, or, what one teenager fears online 09.10.2023

What are you most worried about online? And what are you doing to stay safe?  Depending on who you are, those could be very different answers, but for teenagers and members of Generation Z, the internet isn't so scary because of traditional threats like malware and viruses. Instead, the internet is scary because of what it can expose. To Gen Z, a feared internet is one that is vindi...

What does a car need to know about your sex life? 25.09.2023

When you think of the modern tools that most invade your privacy, what do you picture? There's the obvious answers, like social media platforms including Facebook and Instagram. There's email and "everything" platforms like Google that can track your locations, your contacts, and, of course, your search history. There's even the modern web itself, rife with third-party cookies that track your brow...

Re-air: What teenagers face growing up online 11.09.2023

In 2022, Malwarebytes  investigated the blurry, shifting idea of “identity” on the internet , and how online identities are not only shaped by the people behind them, but also inherited by the internet’s youngest users, children. Children have always inherited some of their identities from their parents—consider that two of the largest indicators for political and religious affiliation in the...

"An influx of Elons," a hospital visit, and magic men: Becky Holmes shares more romance scams 28.08.2023

Becky Holmes is a big deal online.  Hugh Jackman has  invited her to dinner . Prince William has told her she has "such a beautiful name." Once, Ricky Gervais simply  needed  her photos ("I want you to take a snap of yourself and then send it to me on here...Send it to me on here!"  he messaged on Twitter ), and even Tom Cruise slipped into her DMs (tho...

A new type of "freedom," or, tracking children with AirTags, with Heather Kelly 13.08.2023

"Freedom" is a big word, and for many parents today, it's a word that includes location tracking.  Across America, parents are snapping up Apple AirTags, the inexpensive location tracking devices that can help owners find lost luggage, misplaced keys, and—increasingly so—roving toddlers setting out on mini-adventures.  The parental fear right now, according to The Washington Po...

Listen to the Lock and Code podcast in Replaio

Radio and podcasts in one app - free, with no sign-up. Install today and do not miss the launch

Get it on Google Play

Replaio is not a podcast publisher; show names, artwork and audio belong to their authors and are distributed through public RSS feeds.