Lock and Code – Details, episodes & analysis
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🇨🇦 Canada - technology
21/01/2026#92🇺🇸 USA - technology
24/12/2025#100🇨🇦 Canada - technology
27/11/2025#83🇨🇦 Canada - technology
26/11/2025#62🇨🇦 Canada - technology
21/10/2025#71🇨🇦 Canada - technology
09/10/2025#97🇨🇦 Canada - technology
08/10/2025#64🇨🇦 Canada - technology
07/10/2025#68🇺🇸 USA - technology
01/10/2025#77🇺🇸 USA - technology
30/09/2025#91
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See all- http://incompetech.com/
19942 shares
- http://incompetech.com
4933 shares
- https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog
60 shares
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What the arrest of Telegram's CEO means, with Eva Galperin
Season 5 · Episode 19
lundi 9 septembre 2024 • Duration 34:03
On August 24, at an airport just outside of Paris, a man named Pavel Durov was detained for questioning by French investigators. Just days later, the same man was charged in crimes related to the distribution of child pornography and illicit transactions, such as drug trafficking and fraud.
Durov is the CEO and founder of the messaging and communications app Telegram. Though Durov holds citizenship in France and the United Arab Emirates—where Telegram is based—he was born and lived for many years in Russia, where he started his first social media company, Vkontakte. The Facebook-esque platform gained popularity in Russia, not just amongst users, but also the watchful eye of the government.
Following a prolonged battle regarding the control of Vkontake—which included government demands to deliver user information and to shut down accounts that helped organize protests against Vladimir Putin in 2012—Durov eventually left the company and the country all together.
But more than 10 years later, Durov is once again finding himself a person of interest for government affairs, facing several charges now in France where, while he is not in jail, he has been ordered to stay.
After Durov’s arrest, the X account for Telegram responded, saying:
“Telegram abides by EU laws, including the Digital Services Act—its moderation is within industry standards and constantly improving. Telegram’s CEO Pavel Durov has nothing to hide and travels frequently in Europe. It is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner are responsible for abuse of the platform.”
But how true is that?
In the United States, companies themselves, such as YouTube, X (formerly Twitter), and Facebook often respond to violations of “copyright”—the protection that gets violated when a random user posts clips or full versions of movies, television shows, and music. And the same companies get involved when certain types of harassment, hate speech, and violent threats are posted on public channels for users to see.
This work, called “content moderation,” is standard practice for many technology and social media platforms today, but there’s a chance that Durov’s arrest isn’t related to content moderation at all. Instead, it may be related to the things that Telegram users say in private to one another over end-to-end encrypted chats.
Today, on the Lock and Code podcast with host David Ruiz, we speak with Electronic Frontier Foundation Director of Cybersecurity Eva Galperin about Telegram, its features, and whether Durov’s arrest is an escalation of content moderation gone wrong or the latest skirmish in government efforts to break end-to-end encryption.
“Chances are that these are requests around content that Telegram can see, but if [the requests] touch end-to-end encrypted content, then I have to flip tables.”Tune in today.
You can also find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and whatever preferred podcast platform you use.
For all our cybersecurity coverage, visit Malwarebytes Labs at malwarebytes.com/blog.
Show notes and credits:
Intro Music: “Spellbound” by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Outro Music: “Good God” by Wowa (unminus.com)
Listen up—Malwarebytes doesn't just talk cybersecurity, we provide...
Move over malware: Why one teen is more worried about AI (re-air)
Season 5 · Episode 18
lundi 26 août 2024 • Duration 48:39
Every age group uses the internet a little bit differently, and it turns out for at least one Gen Z teen in the Bay Area, the classic approach to cyberecurity—defending against viruses, ransomware, worms, and more—is the least of her concerns. Of far more importance is Artificial Intelligence (AI).
Today, the Lock and Code podcast with host David Ruiz revisits a prior episode from 2023 about what teenagers fear the most about going online. The conversation is a strong reminder that when America’s youngest generations experience online is far from the same experience that Millennials, Gen X’ers, and Baby Boomers had with their own introduction to the internet.
Even stronger proof of this is found in recent research that Malwarebytes debuted this summer about how people in committed relationships share their locations, passwords, and devices with one another. As detailed in the larger report, “What’s mine is yours: How couples share an all-access pass to their digital lives,” Gen Z respondents were the most likely to say that they got a feeling of safety when sharing their locations with significant others.
But a wrinkle appeared in that behavior, according to the same research: Gen Z was also the most likely to say that they only shared their locations because their partners forced them to do so.
In our full conversation from last year, we speak with Nitya Sharma about how her “favorite app” to use with friends is “Find My” on iPhone, the dangers are of AI “sneak attacks,” and why she simply cannot be bothered about malware.
“I know that there’s a threat of sharing information with bad people and then abusing it, but I just don’t know what you would do with it. Show up to my house and try to kill me?”Tune in today to listen to the full conversation.
You can also find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and whatever preferred podcast platform you use.
For all our cybersecurity coverage, visit Malwarebytes Labs at malwarebytes.com/blog.
Show notes and credits:
Intro Music: “Spellbound” by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Outro Music: “Good God” by Wowa (unminus.com)
Listen up—Malwarebytes doesn't just talk cybersecurity, we provide it.
Protect yourself from online attacks that threaten your identity, your files, your system, and your financial well-being with our exclusive offer for Malwarebytes Premium for Lock and Code listeners.
Picking fights and gaining rights, with Justin Brookman
Season 5 · Episode 9
lundi 22 avril 2024 • Duration 46:13
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 is failing nearly everywhere, and data protection laws are unequal across the world.
When we told the true tale of a virtual kidnapping scam in Utah, though the teenaged victim at the center of the scam was eventually found, his family still lost nearly $80,000.
And when we asked Mozilla’s Privacy Not Included team about what types of information modern cars can collect about their owners, we were entirely blindsided by the policies from Nissan and Kia, which claimed the companies can collect data about their customers’ “sexual activity” and “sex life.”
(Let’s also not forget about that Roomba that took a photo of someone on a toilet and how that photo ended up on Facebook.)
In looking at these stories collectively, it can feel like the everyday consumer is hopelessly outmatched against modern companies. What good does it do to utilize personal cybersecurity best practices, when the companies we rely on can still leak our most sensitive information and suffer few consequences? What’s the point of using a privacy-forward browser to better obscure my online behavior from advertisers when the machinery that powers the internet finds new ways to surveil our every move?
These are entirely relatable, if fatalistic, feelings. But we are here to tell you that nihilism is not the answer.
Today, on the Lock and Code podcast, we speak with Justin Brookman, director of technology policy at Consumer Reports, about some of the most recent, major consumer wins in the tech world, what it took to achieve those wins, and what levers consumers can pull on today to have their voices heard.
Brookman also speaks candidly about the shifting priorities in today's legislative landscape.
“One thing we did make the decision about is to focus less on Congress because, man, I’ll meet with those folks so we can work on bills, [and] there’ll be a big hearing, but they’ve just failed to do so much.”
Tune in today.
You can also find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and whatever preferred podcast platform you use.
For all our cybersecurity coverage, visit Malwarebytes Labs at malwarebytes.com/blog.
Show notes and credits:
Intro Music: “Spellbound” by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed...
Safely using Google Chrome Extensions with Pieter Arntz
Season 1 · Episode 15
lundi 14 septembre 2020 • Duration 29:06
Uncovering security hubris with Adam Kujawa
Season 1 · Episode 14
lundi 31 août 2020 • Duration 34:46
Monitoring the safety of parental monitoring apps with Emory Roane
Season 1 · Episode 13
lundi 17 août 2020 • Duration 35:52
Pinpointing identity and access management's future with Chuck Brooks
Season 1 · Episode 12
lundi 3 août 2020 • Duration 30:00
Locating concerns of Bluetooth and beacon technology with Chris Boyd
Season 1 · Episode 11
lundi 20 juillet 2020 • Duration 38:00
Last month, cybersecurity experts warned the public about the data collection embedded in the Donald Trump 2020 re-election campaign’s mobile app. Once downloaded, the app requests broad access to user information, including device contacts, rough location, device storage, ID, call information, Bluetooth pairing, and more. On today’s episode, we’re looking at just one of the apps’ requested permissions—Bluetooth. To help us better understand Bluetooth and beacon technology, how they are applied to online advertising, and whether apps that request access to Bluetooth functionality are a big concern, we’re talking today with Chris Boyd, lead malware intelligence analyst for Malwarebytes.
Pulling apart the Internet of Things with JP Taggart
Season 1 · Episode 10
mardi 7 juillet 2020 • Duration 40:03
Strengthening and forgetting passwords with Matt Davey and Kyle Swank
Season 1 · Episode 9
dimanche 21 juin 2020 • Duration 34:04









