Open Source Security
A podcast by Josh Bressers - Mondays

Categories:
475 Episodes
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Episode 115 - Discussion with Brian Hajost from SteelCloud
Published: 9/24/2018 -
Episode 114 - Review of "Click Here to Kill Everybody"
Published: 9/17/2018 -
Episode 113 - Actual real security advice
Published: 9/10/2018 -
Episode 112 - Google's Titan Key and the latest Struts issue
Published: 9/3/2018 -
Episode 111 - The TLS 1.3 and DNS episode
Published: 8/27/2018 -
Episode 110 - Review of Black Hat, Defcon, and the effect of security policies
Published: 8/19/2018 -
Episode 109 - OSCon and actionable advice
Published: 8/13/2018 -
Episode 108 - Bluetooth, phishing, airgaps, and eating soup off the floor
Published: 8/6/2018 -
Episode 107 - The year of the Linux Desktop and other hardware stories
Published: 7/30/2018 -
Episode 106 - Data isn't oil, it's nuclear waste
Published: 7/23/2018 -
Episode 105 - More backdoors in open source
Published: 7/16/2018 -
Episode 104 - The Gentoo security incident
Published: 7/9/2018 -
Episode 103 - The Seven Properties of Highly Secure Devices
Published: 7/2/2018 -
Episode 102 - Michael Feiertag from tCell
Published: 6/25/2018 -
Episode 101 - Our unregulated future is here to stay
Published: 6/17/2018 -
Episode 100 - You're bad at buying security, we can help!
Published: 6/11/2018 -
Episode 99 - Consumer security is too broken to fix, and it doesn't matter
Published: 6/4/2018 -
Episode 98 - When IT decisions kill people
Published: 5/28/2018 -
Episode 97 - Automation: Humans are slow and dumb
Published: 5/20/2018 -
Episode 96 - Are legal backdoors a good idea?
Published: 5/11/2018
Open Source Security is a media project to help showcase and educate on open source security. Our goal is to give the community a platform educate both developers and users on how open source security works. There’s a lot of good work happening that doesn’t get attention because there’s no marketing department behind it, they don’t have a developer relations team posting on LinkedIn every two hours. Let’s focus on those people and teams then learn what they do and how they do it. The goal is to hear from the people doing the work, they know what’s up, they have a lot to teach us. We just have to listen.