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Lock and Code

English, Technology, 7 seasons, 119 episodes, 3 days, 9 hours, 9 minutes
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Welcome to Lock and Code, a Malwarebytes podcast. Every two weeks, we serve up the latest cybersecurity headlines, plus we dig deep into some of the industry's most vexing topics. From deep state to deep fakes, we separate cybersecurity myth from fact.
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Chasing cryptocurrency through cyberspace, with Brian Carter

On June 7, 2021, the US Department of Justice announced a breakthrough: Less than one month after the oil and gas pipeline company Colonial Pipeline had paid its ransomware attackers roughly $4.4 million in bitcoin in exchange for a decryption key that would help the company get its systems back up and running, the government had in turn found where many of those bitcoins had gone, clawing back a remarkable $2.3 million from the cybercriminals. In cybercrime, this isn't supposed to happen—or at least it wasn't, until recently.  Cryptocurrency is vital to modern cybercrime. Every recent story you hear about a major ransomware attack involves the implicit demand from attackers to their victims for a payment made in cryptocurrency—and, almost always, the preferred cryptocurrency is bitcoin. In 2019, the ransomware negotiation and recovery company Coveware revealed that a full 98 percent of ransomware payments were made using bitcoin. Why is that? Well, partly because, for years, bitcoin received an inflated reputation for being truly "anonymous," as payments to specific "bitcoin addresses" could not, seemingly, be attached to specific persons behind those addresses. But cryptocurrency has matured. Major cryptocurrency exchanges do not want their platforms to be used to exchange stolen funds into local currencies for criminals, so they, in turn, work with law enforcement agencies that have, independently, gained a great deal of experience in understanding cybercrime. Improving the rate and quality of investigations has also been the advancement of technology that actually tracks cryptocurrency payments online.  All of these development don't necessarily mean that cybercriminals' identities can be easily revealed. But as Brian Carter, senior cybercrimes specialist for Chainalysis, explains on today's episode, it has become easier for investigators to know who is receiving payments, where they're moving it to, and even how their criminal organizations are set up. "We will plot a graph, like a link graph, that shows [a victim's] payment to the address provided by ransomware criminals, and then that payment will split among the members of the crew, and then those payments will end up going eventually to a place where it'll be cashed out for something that they can use on their local economy." Tune in to today's Lock and Code podcast, with host David Ruiz, to learn about the world of cryptocurrency forensics, what investigators are looking for in reams of data, how they find it, and why it’s so hard.  You can also find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Google Podcasts, plus whatever preferred podcast platform you use. Show notes and credits: Intro Music: “Spellbound” by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Outro Music: “Good God” by Wowa (unminus.com)
12/19/202247 minutes, 18 seconds
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Introducing Lock and Code, a Malwarebytes podcast on cybersecurity

Lock and Code is the flagship podcast from the cybersecurity experts at Malwarebytes. Hosted by online privacy advocate and senior threat content writer David Ruiz, Lock and Code not only offers listeners an update on recent cybersecurity news, but it also features in-depth conversations about technology, privacy, cybersecurity, and hacking.  Listen every other week as we talk to a variety of internal and external guests. We've featured Director of Malwarebytes Labs Adam Kujawa, 1Password Chief Operations Optimist Matt Davey, Mozilla Chief Security Officer Marshall Erwin, Open Path co-founder Samy Kamkar, cybersecurity journalists Alfred Ng and Seth Rosenblatt, and far more.  Stay tuned, and stay safe.   
2/21/20202 minutes, 17 seconds