Crashing robo-taxis, and name-dropping rappers
Description
Drones, some coloured cardboard, and a piece of tinfoil may be all the kit you need to crash a robot-driven taxi, and a rapper is accused of using Justin Bieber's name to defraud a TV company.
All this and more is discussed in the latest edition of the "Smashing Security" podcast by cybersecurity veterans Graham Cluley and Carole Theriault.
Warning: This podcast may contain nuts, adult themes, and rude language.
Episode links:
- Riding Baidu's self-driving robo-taxi - YouTube.
- Malicious Attacks against Multi-Sensor Fusion in Autonomous Driving - Research paper.
- Researchers warn robot cars can be crashed with tinfoil and paint daubed on cardboard - The Register.
- Gang of Hackers Tries to Steal Baidu’s Driverless Car Secrets - Bloomberg.
- Rapper Sean Kingston agrees to return to Florida, where he and mother are charged with $1M in fraud - AP News.
- Sean Kingston Extradited From California to Florida in Fraud and Theft Case - Entertainment Tonight.
- Rapper Sean Kingston, his mother arrested on fraud charges after SWAT raid at his Southwest Ranches home - Sun Sentinel.
- What is fraudulent use of personal identification information? - Pumphrey Law.
- Google’s AI really is that stupid, feeds people answers from The Onion - AV Club.
- Some of Google’s “best” AI search results - Twitter.
- Google Rolls Back A.I. Search Feature After Flubs and Flaws - NY Times.
- Sure, Google’s AI overviews could be useful – if you like eating rocks - The Guardian.
- Citymapper.
- Smashing Security merchandise (t-shirts, mugs, stickers and stuff)
Sponsored by:
- Vanta – Expand the scope of your security program with market-leading compliance automation… while saving time and money. Smashing Security listeners get 10% off!
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- Material - email security that covers the full threat landscape – stopping new flavors of phishing and pretexting attacks in their tracks, while also protecting accounts and data from exploit or exposure.
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THANKS:
Theme tune: "Vinyl Memories" by Mikael Manvelyan.
Assorted sound effects: AudioBlocks.
This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
OP3 - https://op3.dev/privacy