
Fast16, Fanny, and Stuxnet: Cyber Paleontology Redux
Show notes
(Presented by TLPBLACK: A cybersecurity intelligence platform focused on sharing curated, high-sensitivity threat insights and research with trusted security professionals.)
Three Buddy Problem - Episode 100: We cover AI eating reverse engineering, the death of the malware report, running local models on the DGX Spark, where Google DeepMind stands, and whether the frontier labs will stay in cybersecurity.
Plus, more on Anthropic's Mythos rollout and the thinly sourced Anthropic-NSA reports, the Fast16 sabotage of physics calculations, what researchers choose not to publish, Microsoft's bad Black Hat email, and Costin's Friday UFO files.
Cast: Juan Andres Guerrero-Saade, Ryan Naraine and Costin Raiu.
Timestamps:
0:00 - JAGS at InfoSecurity Europe
3:40 - Sponsor: TLPBLACK
5:54 - A roadmap for security after the AI revolution
11:01 - Stripe Atlas and how easy it is to start a company
15:00 - If anyone could reverse engineer anything for $5
19:49 - Layoffs at Google's Threat Intelligence Group
21:06 - The death of reading the report
27:53 - Pitting the AI models against each other
32:07 - Grok, local models, and the DGX Spark
39:27 - Where is Google DeepMind?
45:29 - Will the frontier labs stay in cybersecurity?
52:41 - Mythos, Project Glasswing, and the NSA deal
1:16:33 - FAST16, Stuxnet, and sabotaging Iran's bomb
1:57:52 - Microsoft, Black Hat, and the chilling effect
2:14:14 - Shout-outs, UFO files, and 100 episodes
Links:
- Transcript
- NSA using Anthropic's Mythos despite blacklist
- Anthropic: Mapping a year’s worth of AI-enabled cyber threats
- LLM ATT&CK Navigator (Anthropic)
- Ruben Santamarta on Fast16 sabotage malware
- A Fanny Equation: “I am your father, Stuxnet”
- TLPBLACK
- LABScon Call for Papers
- Disclosure Day | Official Teaser
- Disclosure Day