19 Burst results for "Mitnick"

DARKWEB.TODAY - Hackers & Cyber SECURITY
"mitnick" Discussed on DARKWEB.TODAY - Hackers & Cyber SECURITY
"Point. But it looks like their profile picture is Jack, right? Or is it just someone who looks like that? Me, John? Yeah. That's my face. You look like I'm totally Doc. Use that one little thing to soften you the little bit for social engineering. Because we're having a conversation now about me. In any way, but what I did was throw out a couple of things. I knew about you just quickly grabbed and you would respond to that positive. I'm pretty sure. But know your audience, right? If everyone here has some point, has that awareness, then everybody here has that defense as well, right? Yeah, we're all kind of like already on the other side of that. So it's hard to explain, but it's so much easier with people that are so oblivious, you know what I'm saying. Like we are talking about social engineering right now. But to do it to somebody that has no idea what that even means is insane. It can happen so easily for everybody. And it's crazy what people will tell you. Like even Kevin mednick back in the day would convince people just easily to just give up passwords. And to give up information about networks and all kinds of stuff just by talking to somebody on the one 800 number. They talk. That's right. Every company has a yearly training. But that's brilliant right there right there. That is social engineering. Mitnick is the boss of that. Have you been able to actually meet him in real life? I wish, I'd love to I'd love to party with that guy. Bought him all the beers, and the coffees, or whatever he wanted, you know? I chatted with him at some point. But I just remember that he was in the cover of every 2600. You know what? I have like 12, 2600, just sitting here right like three feet from here right now. From the old days, hilarious. You see, I'm from the old school days where I used to have a thing that could hack a phone. I could send tones into the phone. It was before Apple and really, I think it was, I think it was one of the Apple developers that developed. One of the guys then won the group of people who are all the young that were that initial huggers that started fucking with all the terrible creating. It was a captain crunch whistle, right, that that's why it was its own from a Katherine crunch whistle. Yep. People would, you know, captain crunch. Anyway, but let's get back into social engineering because, you know, whatever. We're all. We all know this, right? And how do we make it better? That's the thing. There's so much information now that, I mean, it's ridiculous. Like I tried to throw these in earlier. It's our filter. What are your thoughts regarding AI and the future of social engineering? And being able to social engineer human beings. And holy crap, AI, and I didn't even think of that, really, until I heard the whole conversation from VP. To manipulate. We're already being manipulated in multiple ways by software already, right? So it's absolutely going to be used. The thing is none of this manipulation works on people who know it's out there, right? It only works on the ignorant. So if we can educate others and ourselves about what to look out for, then we're okay, but the problem is you get that message out there when you're going up against people with unlimited resources. And you have not compared to that. I'm thinking I've even done it and I'm ignorant. And I think I fall into these patterns. You know what I mean? You just got to look these three screens to get onto this site or whatever. Google, log on, click, click, click, click. And you go through these processes. You know what I mean? And that's also a part of engineering because if you can get into that into that psych, you know, and that's what's crazy is everybody's just programmed to be in a cycle and once everybody's on the process at what part of the process do you question the process? Yeah, but today that only happens with the cheaper fungi. So it's the androids and only happens with the Windows. It only happens with certain things, right? But it won't happen in an outperformance. Apple tracks all your location, all that data is collected by Apple and stored, just as it is with Google and Android. The corporate information that you're giving now. Oh, okay. Yeah. Well, I don't know. There probably is more on Android, right? Because there's more malware is made for them. But I still, as far as privacy goes, go ahead. Humans want to be to hack shit. So at the end, I mean, you know, it's never going to end. There is a kid that is born today that's probably going to hack the shit out of everybody. And I'm just saying that yeah, I mean, technology can not go forward fast enough for people to overcome it and understand what it's doing to them and adjust to what it's doing to them. And hack it and profit at some point of the process. Period. That's what keeps everyone employed and that's what creates progress, right? Complacency is the worst that we're sending me a progress.

This Week In Google
"mitnick" Discussed on This Week In Google
"One zero zero zero 6 and a certain busty picture. That just says hi. Yeah. On my web. Interface. I don't even get that. I just get high. So on a web interface, I report it because I want to be a good citizen to Twitter. To try to report it on the mobile interface, my God, they want you to hire lawyers and start a trial. It's ridiculous. I'm impressed that you're reported. Honestly, if I get this call a lot on the radio show, somebody asked me this weekend. Should I report this? And I said, there's no point. That phone number will never be used again. You can't block that phone number. That phone number is not real. Reporting it does nothing. Why did I do a DM? Yeah, I guess on Twitter. Twitter because you're going to get the account taken down. But that makes sense. Those are always spoofs. I do worry though. One of the problems with being a police officer is you see the worst of humanity and pretty much colors your perception of the world. Has that happened to you? Yeah. I mean, I have my entire career has been dealing with people. Cause harm. How did you how did you start on this? I'm eager for that kind of. Yeah. So I started in the 80s when my Santa Claus brought me a Commodore 64. When I was believed I was 7 or 8 years old and a 300 baud modem. And so I did a lot of stuff as a kid and teenager that for which the statute of limitations has run out. You're happy to say, I might add. Yeah. And then, but I was fortunate, I went to a nice group of Sacramento, the Midwest of California, which means I can both key and duck hunt. That's how you can tell. A nice public high school in Sacramento was able to go to Cal. Did electrical engineering studied under Dave Patterson kind of famous guy who did some incredible work and then was able to get a career doing legit stuff. So I had the economic opportunities and the educational opportunities that if I was growing up in Poland or in ex Soviet state at the same time would not have had. You'd be in a ransomware gang. I'd be wearing Adidas track suits. I see that so much. And maybe it's your generation, maybe the younger generation won't be like this, but I think if people like Kevin mitnick, who took a career as a hacker and made a career as a security professional, that seems to be the usual career path. Well, it's a fun one because you can go and actually hack stuff all day and they get paid not to jail. You can go home at night and have a family and real life and not live. That lives day to day thinking again. What is it that attracts though your mind to that? Penetrating systems. I mean, it's just fun to break things, right? It's fun to I like doing security both attack and defense. I really enjoy doing instant response when it's not my incident. I really enjoy it as a consultant. It's less fun when you're a forensics. It's like you're the guy who comes in. There's a murder scene. You got to solve it. Right, yeah, I mean, I bet if you ask cops, they could never say this. Publicly, but privately, I kind of like being a murder detective. It sucks. That somebody died. But they enjoy the work. So fortunately, nobody generally, people aren't dying when we're talking about it. Something bad's happened and you get to investigate and understand and you unlike other forms of engineering, you have an adversary, right? So you build the Golden Gate Bridge. Your adversary is earthquakes and corrosion and wind, right? Non intelligent things. That you figure out how you build the bridge, and you're like, okay, we're done, right? You never build a bridge in security. You're playing chess. And whatever you do, you can't just read a bunch of books and play the perfect chess game. Your opponents always get better. And so I always found that from attacker and defender perspective, it's a lot of fun to be planning against real people. That's how close. The cuckoo's egg. That was what that whole book was about. We talked to Bill cheswick, same thing. He was just an innocent engineer who had to solve a problem built the first honey pot. And that's how you get into it. Yeah, yeah. But I bet because the human mind loves solving problems. These are some of the best, most interesting problems. Because it's a human adversary. Right. We're growing up in classical Rome. You'd have to be a philosopher or solve math or a philosopher or whatever they called scientists. But if you grew up in the latter 20th, early 21st century and you want to pull things apart and figure out how they work, hack into pretty good ways. These days. You're also hacking into the human brain. Yes, right? Yeah. And I've always liked Matt cutts, our friend Matt cod, dealing with the spam, you think he'd be just a growly, nasty, miserable person, and he's the nicest person that I practically know. And how does it affect because your version both the engineering part of it, but also the human part of it and seeing this part of humanity always trying to be a step ahead of you. Is it, does it ever get you down? Yeah. The change I made in my career, so when I joined before I joined Yahoo, I was just pure InfoSec,

Cloud Security Podcast by Google
"mitnick" Discussed on Cloud Security Podcast by Google
"Hey, on that standpoint, we've got a really cool capability coming in about two months here where we're going to be able to tie issues we're seeing in cloud back to the importance of the assets that those issues affect and the degree to which those issues open or don't open a pathway between the Internet and that resource. Yeah, can you do that inversely for insiders as well? We can talk about that. If you can do that, that would be cool. So then we really talked about that. It's not about path to Internet, how many people have access to this in that's very complex, right? And I get a phone call every day about a startup that's trying to solve them. And it's not easy. Because a lot of them just do cloud native, and I know this is a cloud podcast, but my risk is not, is more than cloud, right? Yeah. And attackers don't see it. Well, I'm just going to say in the cloud because this is only a cloud hack. Nope, it's going to be laptop to God knows what to. But this is what I learned from talking to the main game guys. They almost wanted to steer me away from cloud security because if you hacked on premise and then use the credits to go to cloud, can you really say it's a cloud security issues? If they hack the freaking, I don't know, Active Directory server. I don't know. Random example. And then use the credits to log in into your cloud environment. Then is this a another fancy word for different type of infrastructure that's all the same as it was before, right? It's just somewhere else. We typically found before we go down that rabbit hole. I'm afraid I have to ask our traditional closing questions. Yes, sir. Do you have recommended reading for our group? And some people will be surprised to learn that you do know how to read. No, I don't, actually. I have my dog read to me and Charlie, come here. What books am I reading right now? What books? I don't know. I don't know why this pops up to my head first, but it's mitnick's book. Oh yeah, sure. His autobiography because especially with the recent Uber compromise. Social engineering is still the most effective way to pop an environment. The human is always the strongest and weakest link. The strongest means if you make them educated and informed and part of the security extended family, they're going to be of great service and if you don't do that or treat them poorly or something to that effect and I'm not saying anybody would do that, but if you did, they're going to be less effective and then you're going to get popped. That's a great recommendation for reading. Do you have one weird tip for helping people improve their cloud security outcomes? And don't say use common sense because I think you already used up that one. One weird tip for improving cloud security outcomes. To manage cloud security and cloud security outcomes, you have to be prepared for

Parts Counter Gurus Podcast
"mitnick" Discussed on Parts Counter Gurus Podcast
"And I think that the initial, some of the comments that were made, she's basically trying to hone his hacking skills. Was part of the reason for him doing this. He said that the teenager even posted an explicit image on an internal information page meant for employees and put up messages demanding higher pay for drivers. Yeah, doing it for the man. First of all, this is an 18 year old. So he could be prosecuted as an adult. You'd better be careful, yes. I will say that and they're probably will be legal ramifications if he did damage. So as far as being able to do this, this is a really, really poor effort on Uber's part to the fact that this guy was able to do this means they don't have the safeguards in place they should. In theory, that's what audits are for, but I don't know. This says a lot about how they run their company. Right. And which worries me. Yeah. And again, which is my apprehension to get. I was a competitor, right? There's another company, okay? And that would be lift. And I've actually heard Lyft drivers say that the lift corporate that they're better on their drivers. But. I was just going to say, but you know, it's like Uber is just everywhere. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, they have deals, they run a promo every month with American Express where I get the first ride I get like $10 off or something like that. So but here's where I really think, you know, obviously having a technology background, I would always point to companies that just couldn't justify spending the months on a funds on tech. You know, that they just didn't think it was worth it. On the sales team, you weren't making money for the company, right? And I get that. But the alternative is very, very risky in this example. We see that. Right. And so this hearkens back in a lot of ways, Jay, and I don't know if you know who this is. There's a guy by the name of Kevin mitnick. Have you ever heard that name? Kevin mittens. It's sounds familiar, but why it sounds familiar. I do not know. All right. So Kevin mitnick in the 90s and 2000s was kind of an elitist hacker before hacking became cool. There you go. And he later went on to do some ethical hacking, but Kevin mitnick had a famous event where he hacked Motorola. And in that event, he got access to source code for the star tech flip phone, which is essentially like that back then in the 90s was the iPhone of today. It was the coolest, most popular in a lot of ways. It was, it was awesome. And you know how Kevin got access to that information? The same way that this 18 year old got into Uber. He made a couple phone calls to people in the company and convinced them to give him a password. Because he was bob right, bob and engineering down the hall or bob from IT or whatever. Trick someone into thinking that he was someone there.

Game of Crimes
"mitnick" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"Well, yeah, come on. You actually got to tap Michael Francis, did you, did you and him go to church afterwards? And did he give you his religious spiel? No, we did need him though down at the Southern California game conference, so we interesting a guy and needless to say very disappointed in him because he's totally reinvented himself. I mean, but isn't that what isn't that what everybody does? Isn't that the whole thing is you can go through and I'm not going to pick on Michael. I'm going to talk about anybody. But you go through your whole life being a shithead, but you go to rehab, you come out of rehab and go, I'm a new guy. Now I want to tell you my story about being a shit hit. And now I want to make a bunch of money on it. It's kind of like, what happened to the good old people who work their ass off all those years and didn't become a shithead and don't get to know their story. Thank you. I said that all the time. You hear about people saying, oh, you know, they want to be patted on the back because they buy their kids formula and diapers and spend the weekends. That's what you're supposed to do. A parent is supposed to take care of their child, period. You shouldn't get an applause for doing that. It's what you're supposed to do. But the same thing with people, supposed to live a good, honest life. It isn't like you said, and all of a sudden, decide to change. And now we're supposed to applaud and build you up. I don't think so. Well, I'm going to take one more divergence and give you a real big story about that because I work with some of the FBI guys in training, but they were a couple of the guys that brought down the first hacker to ever be put on the FBI top ten list, a guy named Kevin mitnick. Now I ended up running to Kevin years later.

DARKWEB.TODAY - Hackers & Cyber SECURITY
"mitnick" Discussed on DARKWEB.TODAY - Hackers & Cyber SECURITY
"Make themselves so I want to present. When my daughter told me that, I thought, okay, this is the end of the world for me. I won't be able to live for me personally with like hell I mean I couldn't even get an idea of what would I do there? It was terrible. And how long did they keep you there? Well, I was 8 months in prison. I was released because my lawyer appealed what the side and the relation was in my favor. They didn't find any justification to have me there waiting for the rest of the process. But I was granted the freedom after paid a bail of $10,000. At that point I realized that fuck justice is a fucking lie. So if you have money to pay a bill, you can get out of this house. And if you are pure and don't have access to that, you have to stay in this house, just because you're pure. Fuck justice is a beautiful world, a beautiful concept, but in the world, in the real world, shaft is not succeed. I mean, justice is depends on how much money you have, how much power you are, who you are. Some pure people are unfortunately already sentenced to be in prison just because where they were born, their context. That's very made me open my mind and realize that this fucking world in this fucking system is all a lie and everything that's wrong and I was really open in my eyes and seeing the world in a different way where I was angry with the system with what I thought was something that was working correctly that the society was perfectly working. No, the society is allowing the things that happen involves corruption, abuse of power, so many things that people are not aware of and it's all a big life, what we hear and see all the news that what really goes on, that's a big lie and for me was like, okay, from now on, I won't believe anything. That was a great learning from my experience that I was able to open my mind and realize that they were not what it looks like. And I should do something to change that, I can do something. He said from based on your experience, you know, working on improving the legislation with respect to computer laws in Uruguay. That's correct. That's correct. I contact many people from the Congress. A few of them answer me telling that they were really interested in doing that. Nothing was eventually done. So that was not a successful. So I decided to take another approach because here, all the press knew about my case, but all of the most important journalists I talked to and they all knew my case because unfortunately, I didn't want it, but I became famous. No, I'm not crazy. Not always the world, but basically I was like, wow. Nobody told me it's a criminal. I mean, there are so many heroes. Wow, this guy was able to do this. The government of hiring him, they sent him to prison. That's crazy. That only happens here in this banner republic. It's stupid, but the people that take the decisions and it's still there are ignorant. The lack of any language of competence to do the things that they do, and unfortunately the life of the people is in their hands. When you send somebody to prison, you are basically destroyed the life of a person because that person normally loses his job, his family gets destroyed, that he gets out and he's unable to find any shelf. So the life of a person is basically destroyed completely and that decision is taken by people that are stupid. Ignorant, that's very sad. In my case, those effects were fortunately when it comes to aka. If you go to prison, that's something that gives you value instead of costing receptor in society. I got so many shop offers after bees at the prison. It's like, okay, everybody was interested on having me. That's something unique. It no other crime that I am aware of. Anyone wants to please them for any other kind of situation. They've subject like this. I mean, everybody goes to prison and then they get out and to get in society again and get a decent job. It's hard. It's almost impossible because all the doors are closed. The discrimination is terrible. Yeah. I know this happens a lot. I remember reading Kevin mitnick's autobiography called the ghost in the wires and he said one time they accused him of having launched goods to nuclear arsenal and yeah, basically he was sent to solitary confinement, which means being alone in a room in a cell for 23 hours a day that drives anybody crazy that's proven that cost a trauma irreverent single in any human being that something that is brutal and he was in there because they said that he has the power to use a telephone to launch a nuclear attack. That's not funny, but that's a big exaggeration. Yeah, but that shows how they learn and the people that is learned see the image of a character. They see that we have certain power, but they do not know exactly the scope that if they were going to do this just here. Okay, these guys can do magic and it costs fear for them because they consider dangerous because the same thing happened to pay with me..

This Week in Tech
"mitnick" Discussed on This Week in Tech
"It's really interesting. Of course there are people lots of people were making money through various bug bounty programs or pwned to own, which is a bug bounty program or these companies like Cerrone. But if you've got a really good zero click zero day on an iPhone, and you do this for a living, you know, there's a place you can go and make the most possible money. And that's NSO group, right? Well, that's what made this imperium story so interesting when it first came out. You had a research company that had an Android exploit that was a non click exploit. It you send it and the phone is exploited. This was worth millions, millions upon millions of dollars if they had just sat on it and developed it. But they released it under a bug bounty. They got nothing except publicity. Now, it was a feel good story, but the underground was looking at this going well, that's just stupid. You'll get your 150 K bug bounty and actually no, they took $1337. That was it. And that was it. It was gone. And it turned out to be an anti responsibility campaign because people said, don't be as imperium. Don't be an idiot. Don't sell the $10 million exploit for a thousand. That feel good story was a hairy. So look, hey guys, I'm giving this one away for free that it ended up. And then now everybody knows who did it so you call that guy being yellow mic. What you're doing this weekend. You know, I come to work and you know what I'm saying? That's your credo this is that you can do it, you know, like manigo stacked in quarters on top of the backboards at the basketball courts in Brooklyn. And then they became the legend. So now everybody was after him, prior to that, nobody NBA wanted to, you know, draft him because they didn't go to college. Back then that wasn't a thing, right? So yeah, maybe that's the story. Maybe now they're looking for the guy who did it and trying to bring them in. I feel like there's so much going on that we don't really know about. It's all behind the scenes, mysterious. There's a couple of discords for that. Yeah. Exactly. You've always had a little bit of that black hat thing going on for other Robert. I dipped a tower too. Which is funny because you're a priest. But my peeps. I guess, you know, there's the angel on your shoulder. There's the devil on your shoulder. Dresses in black. Probably wears a black hat sometimes. There's a little professionalism. I actually, I had a very long and civil message chain with a group that actually exploited a network here in the Vatican. And wow, he let me know how they did it. So, I mean, I appreciate it. And that was important because you're the guy who had to fix it. Or talk to the guys who had to fix it. Why did they talk to you? Why did they tell you? Did they decide it probably was imprudent to hack the Vatican? We had met each other a long time ago, and he did not know that that network was connected to me. And so he respected you. Correct? Oh. Robert for years, you've gone to black hat and DEFCON and kind of hobnobbed with his community. See, this is why it's going to conferences. Maybe. Yeah. You just came up with it. No one's going to discuss this over a Zoom call, but they will, if you give them enough tequila, they'll discuss it in a back room somewhere. Interesting. So I think it's important in a way as well because one thing that a lot of the guys who had the skills they went into is they went in to help it out, you know, a law enforcement for a kidnapping cases and things like that. Some girls that are here did a really good documentary on trafficking coming from Cambodia where they're originally from. And it was a group of hackers that sort of help get the ring shut down and I was pretty impressed with the story when you hear it. So I think, you know, we do need some guys that are kind of keeping going on both sides in order to help solve this stuff. And there's a really good one right now about a fellow who is helping this catch this cameras by he works in the center. And then when he sees them about to get somebody really bad, like he'll secretly call them and be like, hey, you're talking to this dude right now. He's telling you to do this yet. And they're like, oh, yeah, yeah, and he goes, don't do that to this guy's full of crap. Just hang up or see if you can merge the call in with police at the same time. And so what he works in the call center in Calcutta and he's stopping this. The one that's obviously he stopped his lady from transmitting like a $150,000 on the social security administration fraud type thing. It's crazy. If I can find a story I'll send it to you, but it's pretty impressive. I'm not up to date on how people become hackers. In my day, the hackers I knew people like John Draper was they had a fascination for this stuff. Often started with phone freaking with the phone system because at the time, that was the most complicated network in the world. And you would dig through dumpsters out behind network operations centers and try to find manuals you would learn about this stuff. And you would hack it. It was fun. It was speed lumping. It was exploration. Later, as they became coders, they might start doing the same thing with computer operating systems and computer software. And at the time, it was just kind of fun. Some people, and again, I'm familiar with the older generation, the old school hackers, but some people like Kevin Paulson and Kevin mitnick, would sometimes mitnick had these interests and skills and then kind of turned him a little bit to the dark side as a way to make money..

The Social-Engineer Podcast
"mitnick" Discussed on The Social-Engineer Podcast
"And remember radio shack rest in radio shack and buy kits from that start putting them together And then i want college in studied electrical engineering with a sort of sub focus on computer engineer. How do you put computers together. You know as part of electrical engineering. How do you do simulations. And things like that went to grad school and focused on information networking Which is just. How can computers talk to each other. And how can we build distributed applications on them. So i kind of made a move from hardware into more software and then i got my first job working for bell. Communications research bellcore. So if you look really carefully we used to say that the people who work at but we have a bell shaped head and their head. There i was. You know really fortunate. Because i got on the security team there so my work there started with. How are the phone. Companies getting hacked Both from the telephony side of it so you know a lot of stuff associated with kevin pollack and and kevin mitnick and all that kind of stuff and then also from the sort of nations ip networks that they had How are they getting hacked there. So i did a lot of incident response digital forensics analysis of how the phone companies are getting hacked. And then they're like well. Gee maybe to stop us from getting hacked. We should have these people who know how we get hacked. Hack us so that kind of made my move into penetration testing and I did it for the phone companies. That i did that for five or six years. Then i moved on and started doing it for various government agencies and military groups and then from there i started forming a companies with my friends..

The Shared Security Show
"mitnick" Discussed on The Shared Security Show
"Right. But i am hard pressed to think that it is worthwhile to listen to kevin mitnick when he expounds on any top because here is a person who broke the law and we discuss whether he was a hacker associates near the world's best. I don't care. Right i really. Don't i throw gregory evans. Who you mentioned in your podcast with robin. I giggled quite a bit too right. I think it's reasonable for me. To say you know what. Kevin mitnick has proven time and time again that he is in the business to make himself money. Not make anybody else right. He doesn't care about the make other people. So i think it's okay in my opinion to say i'm not gonna listen to anything and anybody else who says to me here is what kevin said and you should be listening to it because commitments genius. I can immediately disregard what they said because saying transgender. Probably i agree with the idea that there are people. What was the guy's name. He was really popular in infosec and then it came out that he was sexually assaulting people apple which won several of those twitter with somebody. Doing something that i find so disgusting. I'm not okay with them doing it. I'm okay with me saying anybody who supports them. I don't wanna deal. I'm okay with that if you come out and you start comparing betzeen requirements to being the holocaust. I'm okay immediately disregarding everything you say. I understand though that that ability for somebody to dog pile on somebody right it. It's very easy on twitter. To say thomasson said this thing and it was atrocious and horrible and everybody should report him in in that that starts to become probably becomes way too easy to turn into swatting doc. Saying so i don't know where the lions but i am okay with disregarding people because of who they hang out i think ignoring his i. Yeah look guilty by association thing. It's not it's it's it's guilty by supporting outright supporting. I'm with humanity between I think mike mike mike. A little guy. Greg evans kevin era probably. That's why mitt. Charlie charlatans. Is that the nick. Not not the word not yeah. I think that's the word right. I think that's has been is the right word now. No i don't think it is. And the reason i say i don't think it is one and love attrition dot org chart yes. How's this nice talking about i. i'm. I'm very upset and happy that the latest addition was added but I think the charlatan implies that everything this person says it's fake or wrong or aurelie or whatever and let's back to my example. Kevin mitnick their time. Enlisted kevin mitnick in the things he's talking about are accurate the it's the rest of him as a scumbag ness so i don't like there's no reason for me to pick pearls from this swine right because i can get those pearls from better people and so charlatan i don't i maybe you're right word but worthless i think is like i mean. Do you know why generally mad though he's mad because people will say you would look like kevin mitnick That doesn't make me mad at all. You look at munich all you want. 'cause i love the fact that i have signed at least one hundred of his books. I don't know what i've got. I've signed a ton of his books. Because raff you may not know this but a lot of people have told me. I looked like him. I don't see it. But i know it's true. From a perspective of regularly. People will bring me a copy of his book. Sign it and so. I do but i signed it. Kevin johnson is so yeah. I think there has to be a level of. Maybe we just need go..

The Promised Podcast
"mitnick" Discussed on The Promised Podcast
"Health conscious mojo food popsicles turned two bags of colored. Water and are frozen vegetables became sacks of soggy vegetation. She was online research. Magic determined our best option to be a westinghouse with the freezer on the bottom of the fridge on top now we have not purchased a major american appliance since we moved to israel. Not because we don't buy american but because israel is on the european standard no doubt reflecting the vision of arizona's founders that palestine would be culturally part of pinnacle of civilization or perhaps because of the british mandate well we went to westinghouse importers called smeg. Really that's their name. I mean can they come on. Apparently it's an acronym in french and we found a showroom filled a fifties style retro refrigerators with smooth and rounded corners as if we were in one division i kept expecting mrs cleaver to come around the corner apron but no we were in the herzliya industrial area and upmarket high-tech vendor land and our american westinghouse we discovered was made in turkey like most appliances are these days. They told us the refrigerator movers. Setup our new darling but failed to get the old fridge out the kitchen door which will require removing the molding which they don't do feeling bad for having left their job incomplete. They told us we should advertise and we could probably get five hundred shekels for better yet. They said we should donate it to poor people who would be happy for a fridge. That could chill if if it couldn't freeze. And then they gave a detailed instructions how to implement both plans. This struck me as a distinctively israeli response even if we're not likely to follow through but when i came home last night and could see our fridge goods at i level. It was life changing but it wasn't just the fridge. Our oven decided that it's only interested in broiling our multi system dvd player. Yes all right. I'll stop right here and we still have the. Dvd player decided. It was spiritually exhausted from screening bbc productions of all thirty-seven shakespeare plays recorded in the nineteen eighties and the complete films of ingmar bergman and the dvd player simply killed over cell phone announced. Its retirement by turning off for good appliances. They just have a kind of species lifeforce in so many of ours. We're not asking to be repaired. Who repaired anything these days but to make way for a younger generation while they relocate to the dresser drawer the zakian cart or like semiotics acolytes of roland. Barthes are deconstructed. Even our two year old kea niro too young for a major failure but jealous of the attention. It's mechanical brothers. Were getting blinked. Its front headlight. Of course it may just be incidents and not. That machine extensions are acting in concert against us or they're infecting each other or that the breaking down to express the extra stress or feeling or that i signed personally and triggering all these failures in things mechanical one set of museum. I tested off. The charts on the electricity coursing through my body. Actually that may be the explanation. Maybe we just don't want to drag last year's detritus into next year so we're finally getting around to fixing replacing our stuff. I think carl jung had a theory that our moods affect our appliances. And if he didn't he should have. I'll end with the roads phone screen which stopped responding to his touch. I had this phone repair three months ago. The exact same problem and gotta warranty so but when you need road brought it in. They told him he'd caused the damage and then have to pay again for the same repair which i took as a personal affront and figure they're trying to push around a kid and i stormed off to hold them to their word now. The youngest owner and i raised our voices behind our masks and after twenty minutes of him. Showing me the so-called damage and me showing him the warranty and increasingly loud claims and counterclaims about who did or who did not call the other one aligarh. He told me he had to stop because he was starting to feel sick. From our argument any went and brought both of us cups of cold water and we come down. I decided he wasn't trying to cheat us and he agreed to go down in the price for the second repair. He fixed it within a day and wish me happy new year and he asked me to come back and bring all my phone business to him which i just might do. Was it worth all the aggravation of safety circles. Well no but the reconciliation was priceless shall not avow takhar happy and most importantly healthy new year to you all. Allison what is your what a country. So journalism isn't exactly a profession that has a reputation for kindness patience and compassion when reporters are per trade and television and in the movies were always ruthlessly chasing each other for the big scoops and the story a colleagues triumph is your personal failure and also the middle east isn't known for an atmosphere of kubiak cooperation. Either so middle east journalism right. That should be a recipe for fostering cutthroat and non collegial atmospheres but at a funeral for my colleague. Josh mitnick who i knew not well. But new and over the course of interviewing people while writing his obituary. I realized that this isn't really true. Josh who died last saturday at the age fifty climbed up the local ladder in the profession writing financial news at first at bloomberg until he got the each to cover politics for years he wrote for the christian. Science monitor went onto the wall street journal the la times and like most of us pens for hire a big list of other publications working to continue over recent years to make a living as the internet completely destroyed journalism business model and made it more and more difficult to do so everyone i spoke to for his obituary and also across social media. Everyone who came into contact with josh. How to story about a kindness. He done for them the day of his funeral. The first place. I went following the end of my post travel quarantine. Our mutual colleague dna craft his close friend wrote about covering yasser arafat's funeral with him while they were working for different media outlets dina wrote at one point. We got swallowed up in a crowd. Josh held onto my hand until the crowd thronged forward. I remember the feeling of that moment. When i lost the hold of his hand anguish. Fear confusion i feel that again now and so achingly much more she also told. The story of how josh is palestinian translator. Nuha were out reporting a story At an east jerusalem village protesting israel's security barrier that was being built there she recalled that knew how was refraining from both food and water because it was the muslim holy month of ramadan and she urged mitnick to drink after they had walked kilometers in the middle east teat. Josh said no. You are fasting. And we're working together. So i'll do the same as you sheera frankel. Who was a young ambitious freelancer here. A few years ago and is now since send it to the heights of the new york times and just published a book about. Facebook tweeted my first year in jerusalem. I was covering a press. Conference failed to hit the record button on my tape deck. Josh saw me nearly in tears and sat with me on the sidewalk. While i transcribed from his tape when i personally looked at my. What's ops with josh. I see a history of mutual help and support. Do you have this guy's number. What do you know about that topic. What do you think about this situation. Josh brought his kindness compassion and generosity to the story of conflict and heartbreak in israel and expanded it to those. He wrote about just to see shared it with his colleagues. His funeral was at a cemetery on a breathtaking hill into von. If there's a top ten list of beautiful cemeteries locations in israel. It should definitely make the list as i stood there. I saw around me a group of people. The local community of journalists long-term irs lifers. We don't just parachute in. We don't just prove ourselves and then move onwards and upwards like shera franken did which is totally legitimate. By the way. I realized we were a different breed. Those of us who have stuck around this crazy place for two or three decades and how our lives have become intertwined with the mission of telling the story of this place when people ask why i stay in israel. Why don't i wanna go back home to the us. I don't just think of having a husband and kids here. And i don't just think of not wanting to leave places and people that i love and i don't even think of my free healthcare but one of the first things that comes to mind is that i wanna keep telling the story. I want to be part of this community. Local and foreign born who are writing the next chapters. Also the next chapters right for better or worse. I don't wanna be in another place reading about them. So josh mitnick cruelly at the age of only fifty is not able to tell the story anymore. I guess i feel more privileged grateful than ever that i get to continue to do. So will i be able to do it as well as thoroughly and his sensitively as josh did probably not always but like the rest of us who knew and were inspired by josh. I will definitely try He's a crowbar. I went to the airport with susan right after we recorded last week's show. The cab waited. While i put away the mic mixer and kodak to start our long trip home and when you fly home to israel you pass through what i think of. As a gradient of israelis at first in dc there was hardly any israeli instead all just one guy on the small commuter plane to newark wearing sandals. The tipped you off after we landed. We had long layover in the united club and there around the hot cold buffet table. I overheard a conversation about whether to stock up on string. Cheese and burritos for the flight would seem pretty israeli to me all the more so i guess because it was in hebrew of course by the time. You're waiting to board to tel aviv. You're mostly surrounded by israelis and likewise on the plane. But i didn't much feel it at first. While i was mostly flipping through the movie selection then the head of the cabin crew came on the speaker and said such pleasantries as heads of cabin crews always say adding at the end that federal law requires all passengers wear masks at all time except while eating and drinking he was followed by a hebrew speaking flight attendant. Who skipped the warm welcome and said look. You have to wear your masks. You don't wanna wear your. You still have to wear your mask and wearing masks doesn't mean wearing a mask on your chin it doesn't mean wearing your mask on your mouth with your nose out. It means covering your mouth and your nose you know this. I do not need to tell you this. This is not a joke and it's not a suggestion. If you do not wear your mask we will find you and if you do not wear your mask you will be arrested less. We have not closed the door of the plane yet. If you're not gonna wear your mask all through the flight the door is open. Walk through it now. So we were higher on the israeli gradient after we took off a guy in the row in front of us turned to the youngest woman sitting next to susan and said i overheard you say back in the airport that you're going to israel to yeshiva. You've gotta come and spend chabad at our place in bay any you want. Were always there standing invitation. Bring a friend later after the guy said chocolate is morning prayers. The woman next to susan said. Can i borrow your sea door. Your prayer book and the guy said now there is a question you don't hear every day sure take it. If you need it you can keep it. You can give it back to me when you come to visit and bay cheche when we landed. We learned that the baggage handlers were on strike and who knew how long it would be before the bags game and other tick up. The israeli gradient sitting down in the row of chairs near are silent luggage carousel a little kid in the seat next to susan asks his father why we need to wait and then asked what does that mean to strike and the father said that the rabbi said that people need to treat the people who work for them fairly and when they don't and he went on explaining labor disputes in the language of the tom mood after a few hours started to turn when the third or fourth bags slid down the ramp. A woman standing next to me squealed said imola. It's my suitcase. And i didn't think i would ever see her again. I'm so happy. I could kiss her. And after a man standing to the belt pulled the bag off the woman fell to her knees hugged her suitcase and planted a kiss on top. Our bags income for a long time and alongside me was a man asking. His three-year-old is each bag. Came out is that our bag and the kids screamed go over and over and over again neither of them showing any signs of tiring of this game after longtime our bags came and then there was the krona test and then i was in a cab and the driver asked where i'd been and then he said yeah. I need to go to america. I need to get the hell out of this place. And i knew that the israeli gradient was now almost one hundred percent and i was really really really happy to be home and that brings us the end of our show. Thanks and shana tova to a meat. Ashkenazi are genius researcher conciliatory scholar not residents. Thanks and janata to tie shalimar station manager without whom we have none of this thanks to are high. She believed my favorite band from keyboards. Gather davis music at the start an anniversary. Oh thank you and janata via to you. Alison to you natalie to you don. And we'd like to thank and say to all our borders for your generosity and support. It keeps the show going and it keeps the station going. We are moved in grateful in in your debt. And we'd like to wish to buy and say thank you to all of you out there for taking the time to listen. We'd like to ask us on facebook and drop us a line sanction. Maybe we're going to answer and then go to apple podcasts. And give us a five star review. Maybe one that begins with this. the promise. Podcast has been on the air for as long as friends next week. It'll be longer and now this is the podcast for you. If your life so joke you're broke and your love lice. Delay dot finish that. Anyway you want but before you do that. Remember that this week. Of course we will celebrate. Rocha shanna the jewish new year. What the michener calls yoma dean. The day of judgment and the day on which camara says we are aren't inscribed in the book of life. Also we blow into a ram's horn eat strange exotic fruits and use a fish head as a centerpiece see. I love russia. Shanna for its combination of trippy weirdness. It's obsession with misdeeds moral failings and for its ratcheting up. Will i live or will. I die existential angst but then i've been around long enough to know that just like that. Russia will be over not to return for a whole 'nother year and that's on the assumption. That i get inscribed in the right book which let's be. Frank is hardly a sure thing. Not so the promise podcasts. We will be back view next week and every week reminding you that yemi missouri eam terrible days. Don't just happen in the fall and that you can find weird assery sin iniquity and existential dread all through the year on this the promised podcast.

Malicious Life
"mitnick" Discussed on Malicious Life
"Hi welcome back to saba reasons militias life. I'm ran living a few weeks ago after we released the second part of the albert gonzalez's series by came across this interesting tweet from one of our listeners. In clearly allman wrote quote. Greatest hacker in the world soup. Nazi was a lot of things calling him. That is ignorant. He wasn't even the brightest hacker in his own circle of friends in reply sherry davidoff. Our guest in the series wrote quote agreed that he wasn't super technical but as prosecutors said he was quote unparalleled in that he didn't just get heck done. He got a heck done. He got the exfiltration of the data done he got the laundering of the funds done. He was a five tool player and later replied with rebuttal of his own. But the reason why i mentioned the short conversation has nothing to do with. How good of a hacker gonzalez was. I mean there's no hecker rating system that we can use to figure out who was the best hacker ever peck in basketball. We have real bonafide statistics shots. Mrs whatever and my daughter and her friends still can't agree on who was the best. Nba player ever michael jordan or lebron james but almost tweet got me thinking about the relationship between a hacker and the technological environment. He or she operates. Take for example. Kevin mitnick who did most of his hacking in the early ninety s the technological landscape back then was very different from our current one. The internet for example was still pretty young if we could magically transport young mitnick to our current time would he still be as successful as he was back. Then by the way kevin. If you're listening to this. I'd love to hear your thoughts about this question..

Mueller, She Wrote
"mitnick" Discussed on Mueller, She Wrote
"After trump tried to get fred to sign the codicil giving donald total control of the estate. The siblings actually the reason they got back together again. The band broke up but they got back together as they. They needed each other to hide the fortune their fortune from the tax man. And they did that. By establishing something called all county building supply and maintenance and they siphoned large amounts of money from fred's company through griffiths disguises. Legitimate business transactions. The ruse was so effective. That when fred died he only had one point. Nine million in cash and no assets larger than ten point three million and by the time gam died the entire state was only worth about fifty one million so as the kids pushed it all through their all county business to cheat the tax system. That's how they siphoned all that money. Off and freddie's family was totally written out of all of that and in two thousand and four the entirety of the trump management. You know fred's chit was sold by the siblings to a single buyer for about seven hundred million which was stupid because had they kept it. They each have made five to ten million dollars a year each but donald needed a large infusion of cash fast fast and they also could have sold the buildings individually instead of as a package and made substantially more money selling it off for parts but donald and his creditors were impatient. They wanted the money fast and split four ways they each got about one hundred seventy million and if any of the siblings objected. They didn't speak up about it Mary saw marianne in eighteen. Who thought the article was baseless and meaningless and probably sourced by jack mitnick fred's old accountant. Mary wondered why on earth the siblings never tried to talk. Donald out of running for president given the scrutiny that he would inevitably face. You know what i realized. Just now jeeze. You're reading that. I believe that's win. Mary started recording marianne. Because it was two thousand eighteen two thousand nineteen. She's like oh go ahead and let her think i wasn't. The source of this shoe and marianne was unconcerned about the expose though and when a court inquiry into her began all she had to do to end it was retire and take her two hundred thousand per year pension as federal judge quote in fact The vast amounts of money the siblings had possibly stolen made their fight with us over. My grandfather's will and their drastic devaluation of our partnership. Share seemed pathologically petty and their treatment of my nephew vis vis our medical insurance even more cruel. Yep yeah that's wants. Mary learned all that and then was like so. They had all this money and they they they siphoned it off from. Fred stole it. Hit it from the tax man and they had hundreds of millions of dollars and they still took the health insurance away from her nephew. Mary's nephew and just they're all assholes and fought over the will. Yeah hello everybody. It's ag alison gill for the msw book club. And if.

Mueller, She Wrote
"mitnick" Discussed on Mueller, She Wrote
"He's in hundred millions of dollars debt hundred million dollars of debt just in his casinos alone but he kept spending he spent two hundred and fifty thousand dollars on a ring for marla maples. He put ten million dollars to ivonne for the for the divorce. Right but the banks didn't flinch and donald ego and the feeling he could do whatever the fuck you want just ballooned and it was around this time. Our intrepid author was attending tufts university. At one point. She'd been robbed and gam gave her some money right which prompted an angry phone. Call from irwin yelling at her for asking him for money. i didn't. I told game. I was mugged game just offered and then game said don't don't ever turn down and give the money and irwin warned mary that fred senior was watching her and thinking of disowning her and he was pissed that he couldn't read the signature. She endorsed checks with so he she had to change that and play quote unquote the game. Whatever the fuck that means the family was she says more like a bureaucracy than a family and that kind of holds true with all the lack of emotions and but even at work like if somebody there's more emotions where i work then in this bureaucracy but and there's not a lot yet but it's at this point that we learned that donald was mary's trustee am i now donald was on his bank loans and no one would lend any him any money But donald blamed the economy bad luck and the bank's never himself rating ever blames himself for any of course of course not taught him that never accept responsibility. Blame the other guy deny deny deny attack and this is just like his. Dad blamed steeplechase. On freddie so fred knew all of the games donald was playing because he taught him how to play them lying cheating. Bribing politicians those were all legitimate. Business practices in fred's is and became such in donald's is to quote the most effective game for father and son was the shell game while fred kept turning out projects. He was fattening his wallet with taxpayer money by skimming off the top and allegedly committing so much tax fraud. That has four. Children continue to benefit from it for decades while the rubes focused on the salacious details donald kept generating for the tabloids. Fred was building a reputation for success based on bad loans bad investments and worst judgment But while fred actually ran an income generating business. Donald only had his ability to spin and his father's money to prop up illusion. Mary says so. It got to the point where neither of them could face financial reality And and donald's belief that no matter what he would be okay. was fortified right. That was sort of short up there. And that guaranteed donald. We would never change. Because he didn't need to write quote it also guaranteed a cascade of increasingly consequential failures that would ultimately render all of us collateral damage. Jesus and then next here. In the chapter is the story of the the codicil. Donald approached his lawyer or when durbin and his accountant jack. Mitnick jackson durban durban. And mitnick. fuck you and they all have horrible names to any a gross and he wants he. Donald wants to draft a causal to fred. Seniors will that would put donald is like a like an addendum like an amendment. I guess it would put me. But donald and total control of the estate when fred died and as much as i hate fred senior. These two assholes approached him with this like it was his idea and tried to get him to sign it and you know he's falling into dementia. But fred was having like more of a lucid day. That day got. We didn't understand what was happening. But he was pissed and he refused to sign it and gam told the other kids and marianne had one of her husband's colleagues. Look at at this. Th this codicil and donald scheme just unraveled and it was then fred. Fred rewrote his entire will make all four siblings executors so donald tried to pull that shit on he. He over played his cards. And i'm praying. I'm praying he does that now. You know what i mean. Either he gets to a point where he gets so greedy that he overplays his cards and someone says and things fall apart. I'm really hoping that somehow that happens with us. It hasn't though right like he. Overplayed his cards and withholding of funds to ukraine. That were appropriated by congress against the law and True and he was acquitted in the senate for that Like every the muller investigation just hundreds and hundreds of pages of of collusion Eleven accounts obstruction of justice off the hook like he just keeps getting away with everything and and it's continuing in this in this presidency and it's it's hard to watch an apparently at some point we'll the chapter ends with the story about donald hiring mary to go straight his next book. The art of the comeback and this is one of those stories dana again. this really highlights. Mary's wit that you spoke about earlier and apparently trump got a letter by from tufts university asking for money a mary. Road it right Asking for money for tufts and and called her up and said Ghost write my book at first of all told her about leonard. Like oh my god. I'm sorry they sent you that. That's rude you know like that was for us. Not you just because you're my uncle. Sorry about that. He's like no. This is great. Great letter. And i want you to ghost. Write my book and she realized later why he liked the letter. It's because mary was really gifted at making other people look really good. You know so. She got an office and a desk at trump tower and trump organization. One of the guys in the office said he would drop off Or one of the guys in the office said he would drop off folders on of material that she could work with right on her desk. I'll just bring you folders of stuff and put it on your desk 'cause there. She wasn't sure the book was even supposed to be about outside abroad and rice from the title the comeback. She said here. I haven't. I haven't read other books. But i understood a lot about them until that. She wanted to return to the seriousness of the second book. As she said about quote trying to explain how under the most adverse circumstances he emerged from the depths victorious and more successful than he'd ever been. He was about to file for his fourth bankruptcy. I mean who's goal isn't for success to file by that time their fourth bankruptcy. It's only his four if there would be more to come so he was still will So she would stop by trump's office every morning donald office and he'd usually be on a call saying something gross about women are talking about. How much excitement and he'd be looking through newspaper clippings about himself. That people were paid to gather for him on a daily basis. So there there's a meeting there was a meeting. I'm sure we're trump was like clipping everything you find about me in the newspapers and the tabloids bring it to me in a folder every morning on my desk at eight. Am thank you and then he would just sit and rifled through the folder of him and then he would take a felt marker and right like what he thought to be. Witty comebacks on these articles is kind of reminiscent of my god. The hurricane map that he drew on but he would ask mary how. How awesome is this..

WBZ NewsRadio 1030
"mitnick" Discussed on WBZ NewsRadio 1030
"And forth, but not bad 60 right now and still Blue Sky in Boston. Very high school football field and WBC's Jim McKay says. It's not a good look. Gatien was conducted by attorney Edward Mitnick had found the team was using inappropriate terms for offensive line calls dating back to 2010 terms like Rabbi in Dratel were used in practice and then spilled out in the Holocaust terms many deem anti Semitic like Auschwitz, which was used in a game this year. And players from the opposing team. Plymouth North High School reported it to their coaches that then led to the school district, firing head coach Dave Cameron, who is also a teacher at Ducks, very high school now on leave from his job as a special education teacher. The team met with state Senator Barry Feingold, who offered to meet with the team to show them the importance of why what they were saying was offensive. They also took part in diversity, equity and inclusion training. Jim McKay WBC Boston's NewsRadio Dartmouth medical School in New Hampshire, drops all sanctions against students accused of cheating. During online exams. In an email to those students, the school says information from the test provider has recently come to light. More than a dozen students involved have always maintained their innocence on those cheating accusations. So this may be an offer you can't refuse. Would you bet money on a horse race That already happened. One New England state. Sure hopes you will. WBC's match. Hearer has more historic horse racing is coming to New Hampshire. But state Rep. Fred Deuce, it says it's not what it sounds like. Of course, first thing comes to mind is all right to get the strike had on and watch the ponies. But it's not that now. It's more like sitting at a slot machine. But instead of betting on a random number generator, you're trying to guess the outcome of a horse race that happened. Decades ago. But don't even bother trying to Google it. They don't give you enough information to go on. There's no way to Jimmy these machines. Some of the revenue at these consoles will go to charity, and a lot of it will go to the state revenue estimates for the first six months would be right around $6 million. In other words, New Hampshire wins the race every time. Matt Shearer WBZ Boston's news radio, Delta did it. Southwest did as well and it's catching on in the skies over the United States. We check out what this means. With Bloomberg business. What about it? Tom Busby? Well, Jeff American Airlines, the nation's biggest carrier, says it's going to stop publishing its in flight magazine. It's called American Way With the June issue. You can find that issue on seat backs right now the end of an era. McDonald's hit by a data breach in South Korea and Taiwan. That's according to Dow Jones, Meantime, video game publisher Electronic Arts, the maker of the Madden NFL series, also hit by hackers, they still source code for its new FIFA 2021 soccer game. Wall Street, The Dow futures are up up 77 points a lot of hopes for a deal out of Washington on infrastructure spending. I'm Tom Busby Bloomberg Business on WBZ, Boston New News Radio, a national park. It's electric details next at 809..

Mala Wielka Firma
"mitnick" Discussed on Mala Wielka Firma
"Jenny shiva toaster-oven mattress ships nipple speedometers view by both gust glove crosse ball. You loved here but again kofsky. Poaching ching-kuo just jump trims autonomy. Shed blood shy going forte online. Buoying share promo wasn't a doctor rather cheap bars process disposal. Multiple abuse of on added. Similar goku custodial podcast but an extra national roosevelt and you go jin carrying key either going for mafia. Just got him up ahead. Of course you study bench. Doc acclimated to go get shots sugar olkiluoto now dish. Lots damn polska. Zavod wasn't game all all the jagna. Upshot sa- greenwich opening the viviana jamie taco sample. That is stuck. You know mental status conditions. Jim shaw tillerson coke. Older down the middle seattle launder was nego- cover kim anthem shas polska's washer exploit just you awesome them before not going around. And all that xia metre barshefsky go out stomach. Memento vista shored mighty stephanie. It's not easy. Yo studying metre ostrovsky kabuga What'd you just shush lockstep huckabee. Kevin mitnick is also one of the ice for chagall. Dopey self johnston swami now. I'm on your coaching out. Abuse amusing namias for abusive pasta. Automobiles on the interest volume polack was for up on top notch above conservative nippon stem cell. There was lots vouch all system. Vital just stems promo much net. Little duked after. I started me should use them. Those does not is not the and using your soul upset. Symbiotic of the answer was no also be stone spun. Bev negatives i watkin nashville block to podcast. Chicano utopia chipper of social media savvy. Promo will business meet china's talk washing. You should know your style. Diets w sava jaka gel content marketing analyst. Sylvia poggioli ranaldo. Not enough for me and mommy dilkusha verte java meritorious nathan to raise interest on potential nuclear daily volume. Don't show me the problem. Stems are indoor officials who found your best interest in sports. Nice thousand also treat young them through a multilateral hodge pled sanyo dot echo when you cut ciocci sawyer. Eat promo venue was booked. But i've actually thought zebanejad spoilsports van stuck in bishop was now. It's funny. I calculated davos. Is that attack off. Some mega petanque camille picking. Nits nid plan liberty. The lubitsch orange beyond me measure dope promo vanya wasn't able of cash and john was two buttons. That are march. Nick junior general dodge audio military snowboarders g promo vanish avia Coochie stanley del. Muslims just footage treasury varta not reenter. Emas on years vanya swaggie but as she of course is we try. Ordina clamor stimulus each polygon that viola should he is played after nick. Saban talk zupan. You or the jerome l. Chebbi noble the stereotype with forza artists artists. To share jesuit pizza. Split on your not four of this for you. J. up scrapped browser garner trivia. She's exception yet wadham now. Don't ask that spray chuck to recuperate browsers. That will be. The oprah of galleries are medium media. It is tash. Marshall stereotypical not on. I wish oriental vijay juliette nasty. That day we accused me. No shot luganda naci g shy full itza song years optical nile obscene shelf. Sammy for you do you. Rock shocks it when he was nine. Pm traffic foliage vietnamese john. Such coverage does canal in the oliver scar screwed on our stall jimmy johnson. Piano we will give you the objects finish elbow some stuff. I i put. Bogaert qatar executive. Vm move so they special counsel. Toss him okay effectiveness. Joe's stay in the bottom. Nebo advertised yet knows nasreen eco-system e because will be nestle. All amador bars dodger have warrior baton me yuck to motorcycles and obesity some michelle. A promo venue was it. But i'll do you think it'll be just wobble now. Teaneck gina washington anthem boardman attached to tree at some who spilled on the process. But what should not supervisors for your feedback on. The latin gust e. bartle do go on july Shabby podcast bill. Till komo hoppy. Mimi am english challenge each job. Nick matt montreal. Canadian aleph better than momentum ready author. We have cash jet neutral to be. The threats are not iaea. Swatch motors wmd autograph. Can we delegate keep preval yucky. we'll talk more volume about them. Say they go yucky of noski to modest. Which launch blush do going you tell me. Johnny productive podcastone Tomorrow bobo a tall zambia. Meets our other volume boeing. Nick tulips up chiclayo also get gas shadow. Osama mateo to the status quo left bending moments after are arado. Ch- has not given your luxury. Tax battle is eligible. talk show up of what. He's new coach the dish me back how they feel the analogies going should yes. San slowly as wash does not have washed up. So i'm still be posted. I have argued. That dot puts podcast. Scotto all you got me as aaliyah's spot another diet showing not just on veatch ease now as well kick out of your car to podcast. Burma gubbio show.

Newsradio 700 WLW
"mitnick" Discussed on Newsradio 700 WLW
"Son when we used to hear where we used to get love, a baby, the planner, so let's get back together. That's where we belong. A very merry 26 in the Queen City. Chick Ludwig Chip Tater Pratt, His taking the baton from Jeff Carr, tonight's producer. They both are keeping the chicks her off the ledge and in the fairway. Wow. I've barely recovered from Mark Adams interview and I'm serious. I'm ready to run through a wall with snot bubbles and we followed that up with Mac McClellan standing on the gas at the Daytona 500, man. I'm just so fired up tonight. And you know, I talk a lot about my childhood here in Cincinnati, growing up on the West side, Holy family Parrish Grand Avenue and then moving up to the top of the hill, West Price Hill, the corner of West Eighth and Rosemont in time for my first grade at ST William School. And, you know, I talked about going to Crosley Field with my dad going to Schmidt Memorial Field house to see the Savior Musketeers. And old Corcoran Stadium to see and Xavier play football against the Quantico Marines and you D in Miami and you see, and then you seize Armory Field house. You know, it's the kid God unbelievable Memories. It. I just cherish and love hearing from fans, and it was so awesome when I had Jerry Durga on last week from Mitnick. They named the You know the cord after Jerry Dirk er 28 years it, Nick Nicholas and I get this awesome email because I mentioned former elder high school coach Dave Hills. Who was the head coach before a Paul Hans Fry. I was Hans, a student manager, Elder High school and Mike Hills whose mode Hills his son. And, uh, Dave Hill's is Mike's uncle. He sends me this gorgeous email, and, uh, thanking me for mentioning his uncle. Um, Dave Hill's who is still kick and just celebrated his 90th birthday. You know, a couple of months ago, and Mike's dad is mode Hills. Who are, you know? Had an outstanding coaching career at Covington, Catholic before starting the Northern Kentucky University basketball program is the first head coach in 1971. When Mike his son was in a kindergarten. So Wow. And he said that his dad's top assistant cuff CAF in the late sixties was hep Cronin. Wow! Which led to help getting the job it Roger Bacon in 1970. Hap is my kills His godfather. Oh, my gosh, The Just the, uh, everything intertwining here on the West side, man. It's just It's just unbelievable. So, um Man. I am wide open here this this final half hour on tonight's show, and I can't thank our guests. Enough. Bobby Nightingale, The Cincinnati Enquirer insist night dot com talking all things Reds. At the top of the show. And then Tim McGee joining me at the 6 35 talking Bangles. The Ring of Honor. Oh, man, is that ever going to come to fruition? With the great Paul Brown. There should be a statue in front of Paul Brown Stadium in honor of the NFL's number one game changer. The great Paul Brown and you need Anthony Moon Io send you need Ken Anderson and you need Ken Riley on a ring off honor. No doubt about that. Will it ever come to fruition? We're going to find out we went down to Tampa and talkto the great sports writer Joe Henderson about Uh, wow. The new title Town USA, Tampa with the Tampa Bay Lightning, winning the 2020 Stanley Cup and then Super Bowl 55 last week. Unbelievable. And Mark Adams, ESPN college basketball analyst and the new APP called Focus. It Tracks Hustle stats. Amazing. Get ahold of Mark Adams. We're so lucky to have him right up the road here in Springboro, Ohio, and then the great race car driver Mac McClellan. We are wide open. You want to talk reds? You see basketball Xavier basketball Reds Bangles. It's all coming up. And Kyle and Mason. Hang on. We've got the bottom of the hour news. I'm coming to you first when we return, this is Chick Ludwig 700. Wlw News, Traffic and weather news Radio 700 w L. Jealousy Cincinnati. Cleared for a second time by the U. S. Senate. This is.

WNYC 93.9 FM
"mitnick" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"Is so important to our mountain related business, so any new restrictions will make our situation extremely difficult. In the meantime, families and skiers here in the tyrannies fully intend to continue enjoying their time in the snow. Especially as there's a lot around at the moment. Chris Bockman reporting there from the period knees. You're listening to Neuza. This is the BBC World Service. And you're listening to news out with James Menendez, Let's head to the United States now because Tuesday sees the start of Donald Trump's impeachment trial in the Senate Democrats in Congress accused the former president of inciting insurrection over the attack on the Capitol building by his supporters last month, but they only have half the seats in the Senate. The two thirds majority is needed to convict. Many Republicans believe impeachment. Mr Trump's second is a mistake, but not all draw. Mitnick is a Republican lawyer was appointed by Mr Trump is general counsel to the Department of Homeland Security. He was fired in 2019 over disagreements with the White House over immigration policy. I asked him first. How the impeachment troubled unfold next week on whether President Trump himself would appear Well, he was invited to testify. And there was a very quick response in the form of a letter from his legal counsel, basically calling the invitation a quote unquote stunt, So it appears you will not be appearing. And by the way, there's a two thirds vote of the Senate necessary to convict Trump and that would require 67 senators to vote to convict. And that seems very unlikely. On Lee, five Republican senators voted that holding an impeachment trial would be constitutional in the first place, so those five might be reliable votes for conviction. And it appears that there are other senators who are open to conviction. But getting to 67 is going to be very difficult. And if that's the case, one has to ask. What's the point of this? Well, I think the point is in some way to hold Donald Trump accountable for inciting the attack on the United States Capitol and on Congress. On January 6 2021. It's critical that Trump be held accountable for that, and that the story be told openly in a proceeding in the United States Senate, regardless of the ultimate outcome isn't the point of impeachment, though, to decide whether or not to remove someone from office and given that he's not in office. Anymore again. Does that not undermine the process? I agree with the overwhelming weight of scholarly opinion across the entire political spectrum that the president is subject to impeachment trial and conviction, even after leaving office. I think that is the best reading of the constitutional provision regarding impeachment. In fact, to interpret those provisions otherwise would permit a significant consequence of impeachment, which is disqualification from holding future office to be avoided by the official just resigning. My understanding is that the banning an official from holding office in the future that is dependent on conviction. In other words, there has to be the conviction first, before you can have a simple majority. In favor of disqualification. So that's not gonna happen either, is it? It is dependent on conviction, and I think that goes back to the issue of ultimate outcome. But we have trials all the time when in fact in every trial, the outcome is uncertain. We don't fail to have a trial just because we think a certain outcome is likely. I still hold out hope that there will be conviction and so do a lot of other people in my party and certainly I think the overwhelming majority in the Democratic party, but we'll see what happens. If it doesn't happen, though. I just wonder. I mean, are you not worried that you'll end up with this sort of situation? That's the worst of all worlds. You'll you'll have a divisive process. Mr Trump will be acquitted, and that will simply emboldened him and his supporters and perhaps confirmed to those supporters that he was right all along, particularly when it comes to his lies about the results of the election. That's certainly a new argument that's made. My personal view is ultimately that's with all due respect to those who make the argument that argument is species. It is much more important. I think to have a public proceeding for the public to understand in the world to understand exactly what happened and Donald Trump's role in inciting what happened. And then force members of the United States Senate to vote in public on the record have that be part of their legacy? And regardless of whether Trump is convicted, or not, All of this will be on the public record, and his reputation will be affected accordingly. Just one final thought of their other avenues. I mean, if you believe that Mr Trump incited the riot in sight of that insurrection. They're simple criminal processes that could be pursued. Theoretically, yes, And perhaps those will be pursued or not, But of course, the standard is different in an impeachment. The standard is high crimes and misdemeanors. But that doesn't equate necessarily to the language of the criminal law. Per se. It has its own sort of specialized meaning in the impeachment context. But it is yes, it is possible that that will happen. Can the Republican Party ever shake off Mr Trump Shake off Trump isn't I certainly hope so. And as you may know, although I was appointed official nominated and appointed by Trump, despite that, I endorsed Joe Biden in the election. Because I considered Donald Trump to be an existentially threat to the rule of law in our constitutional order in the United States, and they're a lot of people who agree with me, including on the Republican side. Many of us on the Republican side Right now, we're trying to decide what to do. We just had a very big meeting of principled conservative if you will Republican leaders this past Friday, and while the Chatham House rule applies and I can't attribute specific statements to individuals, They're different options on the table. One is forming a brand new political party and another one is creating a faction that would either operate within the Republican Party or outside it. There are a lot of people even on the Republican side, who are very dissatisfied with trump and trumpism and want to move away from that. And even if there is no conviction in the computer mint trial, and he is theoretically allowed to run for office again, we will be working against him and Trumpism, I believe will prevail. That was John Mitnick, a former general counsel to the Department of Homeland Security. Rescue operations underway in northern India to try to find dozens of people still missing after flash flooding caused by the collapse of part of a Himalayan classier. At least nine bodies have already being recovered. Many of the victims are thought to be construction workers at a hydropower project on the Dolly Ganga River in a direct can state. This eyewitness Pooran Singh Rana described What he saw. Nobody said the woman behind the intelligence. I looked up the valley and I saw something that looked like a scene from a Bollywood film. I've never seen anything like it about 50 to 100. People were Running for their lives but could not be saved and they were engulfed by the river. The situation here is still dangerous. People are leaving their homes and are fleeing towards the forest. They're taking their belongings, including quilts and mattresses. The government has made no arrangements so far, but the local authorities have given us bedding, rations and water. Locals from neighboring villages have said they're worried that the damn near them could also collapse. BBC San's Asia editor Amberson Arthur Rajan told me more about the risks associated with living in this part of India. This region itself is prone to landslides, earthquakes, flooding and also cloud bust. All these things happen in the last 30 years. The previous other natural disaster was in 2013 when there was like heavy monsoon drain. And then a cloud bust, which killed nearly 5700. People in night washed away many villages. It was a major national disaster of that time. In the nineties about two earthquakes in the same region, killing hundreds of people and then very often the landslide sucker. I mean, there have been warnings about this in a huge glaziers on then they can break away. There have been warnings that I've been reports off that this has happened even before on, but now they need to find out exactly the reason because it happened in the upper reaches. But this is clearly a warning because many environmentalists have been warning that these kind of projects Should not be undertaken like a big dams. A power project would not be undertaken in these ecologically sensitive areas because this is very close to the humanly aware there are patterns of climate change affecting the region. Number US unethical. Roger, not South Asia editor. As much recently that the U. K's Health minister, Matt Hancocks, handling of the vaccine program here was influenced by the film Contagion. The movie was at least made with.

How I Built It
Stop Losing Your Data with Brian Gill
"Thanks for coming on the show so I am I am interested in talking to you today because we really haven't had a guest talk about some of the topics that we're going to talk about today but why don't we start off a little bit with who you are and what you do yeah sure so without going into full back story. well I basically have surround myself with a bunch of really quality humans and together for the last sixteen years my primary mission has been to help the people out of data related disasters whether that's bad guys infiltrating network or data being stolen or a server crashing or making mistake and accidentally deleting all the pictures of their wedding or baby photos we are a bunch of Tech nerds who do everything we can to to help people out of those crises and also once they've kind of experienced those crises we help them either back up or sometimes they'll hire us as if they got hacked they'll hire us as we call it a part time see so or come in and do Kinda monthly risk assessments to help them prevent the next attack so you know it's just helping people out of Disasters Gotcha yeah well I mean as as somebody who has lost all of his photos and music for all of our music was in the cloud on a streaming service I can definitely level with that like after that happened to me I made sure to get an external hard drive live and of course today I have like a time machine on my Mac and back blaze and Nass and just like lots of things 'cause I I've been in that situation what I haven't been in is A well what my company or my clients knock on wood haven't really been involved in stuff like data-breach so it sounds like you do some of the more personal personal computing problems right data loss and recovery the recovery side of our business we founded back in two thousand four and we that's the data recovery company and that company it's a mix you know maybe forty percent of our clients are just normal people consumers who lost their personal data on a laptop or they dropped their phone toilet or you know that kind of stuff maybe thirty percent are small business owners with maybe one to fifty employees had a server crash or a chief executive ever accounting professional had a laptop hard drive crash or an SSD go bad and then the other third is large corporate America the government you know we've done recoveries for almost eighty percents of the Federal Bureau so it's pretty much everybody loses data on the data brief side of things we almost would I don't WanNa say never our average size client who got data breached is probably a hundred to five hundred employees may sometimes even larger for the for the micro sized businesses who get breached they're less likely to need an army of nerds to come in in an address that situation you know yeah yeah absolutely so so you you serve all sorts of people doing all sorts of things but I wanna get I wanna get back to the basics a little bit in your intro here so I also I have my degree in computer science I have a masters in software engineering and I went the web development path I when I was in college in Highschool I read like Kevin Mitnick's books and I thought man I really want to do that but ah I decided to go the other route what made you want to get into this particular field yeah I mean in general I got my computer science degree from University Wisconsin and that was like right before the first big tech bubble the first day web one point no and I jumped on a plane a and went out to the Silicon Valley and really wanted to play the startup game and joined a couple of startups one of them's still around that were you know involved with ECOMMERCE and that kind of stuff and you know I was primarily on the back end development style database design and things of that nature and a lot of back end programming I my four was not my forte was not the kind of user experience all of that's kind of changed over the years when that whole economy just imploded and all the valley was horrible place I mean I would say eighty percent of my friends were out of work I had a job but it wasn't star was in a bank so I had a job but it wasn't the type the job that I moved out there for so I kind of tucked my tail between my legs and say well I'm GonNa work at a bank I might as well do it in Wisconsin from from immoral my family is my brother had just had a couple of kids and I wanted to be there for that and I just wipe the three thousand dollars often read so I I talked tail between my legs Humpback Wisconsin and was just doing some consulting some really boring but wonderful companies like insurance companies and cheese manufacturers and all kinds of words and I really wanted to start a company right but the Donovan was in the crapper there was zero percent chance of getting any kind of bank loan so I knew I needed to do something that I could bootstrap uh with like the fifty grand that had saved up you know so whatever I was going to do I needed to be able to get to revenue within my within my budget right because it's just I wasn't going to get an angel financing I wasn't GonNa Fifty Thousand Dollars Angel Financing for a new idea they were going to take if your business back then it was just a horrible time to be an entrepreneur so my brother tyler younger brother Tyler was going to school at University Wisconsin ucf degree he's about nine years younger than me and he had a hard drive crash so he was trying to figure out how do I get my stuff back and he found two companies in the whole us that advertised for it and both of them wanted like three thousand dollars and that was like again exactly you know turns out it's pretty hard but we had the right circle of friends we had one of my buddies was an electrical engineer ear one of my buddies was a mechanical engineer I had the computer science and kind of ECOMMERCE background and we kind of had all the pieces of the the kind of academic puzzle so the next question is okay so there's very few competitors in the two that are out there that we could find were very prohibitively expensive so could we start a company for less than fifty grand learn enough about how to do this that we could serve underserved part of the market right and get it off the ground and and that's kind of where it came from and turns out we could that's fantastic I love that I have I have a similar story of how I got into web development you know essentially my church came to me and they said we want a website and I said I don't know how to do that and then we'll pay you and Mike are okay sweet money's yeah

Wisconsin's Afternoon News with John Mercure
Facebook: 50 million accounts directly affected by hack
"Ago earlier this afternoon. Note that Facebook came out and said, oh, by the way, we've been hacked and almost fifty million of you have been affected. What? Yes, indeed. A hacker gained access has business insider reports a hacker gaining access to nearly fifty million Facebook user accounts, they did. So by exploiting, a weakness and getting really into the weeds here, but a weakness basically in the social networks systems, the news of the attack which and they've had some issues lately, obviously, a Facebook, and what is and is not public knowledge and who's allowed into some of that info. But news sent shares of the company down roughly three percent in the middle of trading earlier today. CEO Mark Zuckerberg, he hosted a conference call with journalists shortly after the news was announced the underscored the severity of the situations Burke sang in a blog posted as well today. We do not yet know whether these accounts were misused, but we are continuing to look into this. And we'll update when we learn more trying to find some analysis on this this voice, you're about to hear is Kevin Mitnick. He is an internet. Securities expert. He's also expert on hacking, and he appeared on CNBC earlier today to talk about what exactly is the real world effect of this this hack, the security breach. Do we have a good sense about how many of the people whose information has been act are actually in some future way wounded injured hurt by the fact that data may have been compromised. In other words, they lose money. Do they do what happens? Ordinarily, the bad guys might sell their sell the data like equifax, for example on the dark web. And eventually those individuals will be defrauded. I don't know if there's a particular statistic of how many for example, equifax members were actually the frauded because of the compromise. But I can't tell you one thing there's a website called we leak info dot com and on this website. They have hundreds of databases of leaked passwords that were publicized on the dark web, for example. And what people can do is actually search their own username their own Email account and actually identify whether their information was leaked, and that's important because people tend to reuse passwords. What does it? Yeah. We we we leak info dot com. What you can see is if your password was leaked in some sort of data database breach. And. What the problem is? People tend to reuse passwords, so or the have a pattern that the always use that it's easy for the hacker to figure out and it's really important. You know, a password manager, for example. But also to check we leak info dot com, and there's others out there, of course, to see if your information's out again that was the voice of Kevin Mitnick CNBC earlier today an internet security expert, but we just put this out there. Maybe check out that website to see if yours your password information is also out there. Nevertheless, it has been a rough I'd say year, but even longer than that a rough go of it for Facebook for Zuckerberg and company, of course, dealing with hacking by Ford entities related to the election, and now, oh, by the way this. Yeah. It's really interesting. I mean, how often do you actually change your password? I know people always tell you to do that. Or do you just add an extra number? You get kind of lazy about it. I think after a while. And then you don't want to forget all your passwords because if you make it. On each and every one everything requires a password nowadays. So you kind of try to keep it simple. But then something like this happens, and then you kind of out there and a nice little public service reminder password. One two three four is never a good pass.