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SquaredCast

Author: Chris Neal, Chris Volz

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Two friends. Both named Chris. One builds apps and self-hosted tools. The other makes video games in Unreal Engine. Together they make music as Project CSquared — and talk about tech, gaming, and whatever rabbit holes they've fallen into this week.

SquaredCast is a weekly show about building things, breaking things, and everything in between. Each episode covers what we're actually working on (The Build Log), the week's biggest tech and gaming stories with honest takes (The Rundown), and one topic we can't stop thinking about (The Deep End).

We're not backed by a network. We're not reading ad copy for products we've never touched. We're two guys who've been making stuff together for years—apps, games, infrastructure, music—and we finally have a show that does justice to all of it. Some of our production work as Project CSquared has even ended up in commercially released music, including a posthumous JUICE WRLD track.

New episodes drop weekly. Patreon supporters get bonus episodes and access to project builds, music assets, and more.

https://squaredcast.com/

3 Episodes
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PLEASE NOTE: The audio for this episode was recorded on March 13, 2026. Some stories covered here have developed since then. Updated sourcing and corrections are in the full show notes at squaredcast.com.Recently, the lines between smart devices and corporate surveillance got harder to ignore. Hisense TVs started showing unskippable full-screen ads when owners switched HDMI inputs, pushed silently through a firmware update, after the sale, with remote per-device control that nobody disclosed at the register. New York's attorney general sued Valve for running what she called a gambling operation, and a class action followed days later. The world's biggest gaming conference lost a third of its attendees, dropping to 20,000, the smallest turnout since 2011. International developers stayed home over U.S. border fears, and the Iran war shut down Middle Eastern airspace two weeks before the show opened. And YouTube, freshly crowned the world's largest media company, celebrated by rolling out 30-second unskippable ads on every TV it can reach. In the Deep Dive, we go long on the Stryker hack: a Fortune 500 medical device company with 56,000 employees had thousands of devices wiped in a single night. No malware. No zero-day. Just stolen admin credentials, a button that was already there, and a kill switch built into the tools companies use to manage their own infrastructure. Plus, there's a billion-record identity data leak that may or may not be real.Show notes, links, and more available here: https://squaredcast.com/episode-3/Uncensored episodes and bonus content available via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SquaredCast
Last week, the lines between AI companies and the U.S. government got a lot harder to ignore. Anthropic refused to strip weapons and surveillance safeguards from its Pentagon contract. The government blacklisted them, then kept using their AI in a live military operation anyway. OpenAI signed the deal Anthropic wouldn't, and the money trail tells its own story. Meanwhile, a Helldivers 2 fan tried to raise a thousand dollars for charity and lost his job, his volunteer work, and his safety. Nintendo sued the federal government to get its tariff money back. Researchers proved that AI can unmask your anonymous internet accounts for about four bucks. Apple launched its cheapest laptop ever the same week Samsung raised prices. And the global memory shortage got its own segment, because AI infrastructure is eating the world's RAM supply, jacking up your electric bill, and pricing regular people out of the hardware market, all while the economic returns remain, in Goldman Sachs' words, "basically zero."Show notes, links, and more available here: https://squaredcast.com/episode-2/Uncensored episodes and bonus content available via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SquaredCast
Discord’s age verification saga is just the visible tip of a much larger shift. Governments, platforms, and identity verification companies are all converging on the same goal: tying your real identity to everything you do online. The framing is child safety. The result is the slow death of anonymous internet use. And the timing of all of it, from Discord’s IPO to California’s new OS-level age verification law, tells you everything you need to know about who this actually serves.Show notes, links, and more available here: https://squaredcast.com/episode-1/
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