PODCAST · true crime
Dark Perimeter: True Cybersecurity Stories
by Cole Drayden
Every major cyberattack has a story behind it. A vulnerability no one patched. A phishing email someone clicked. A nation-state with a motive. Dark Perimeter goes beyond the headlines to explore the true stories of the hacks, breaches, and cyber operations that shaped history - told in narrative form for security professionals and curious minds alike. No guests, no panels, no filler. Just the story.
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15
One Phone Call
In September 2022, a teenager broke into one of the world’s most valuable tech companies without writing a single line of exploit code. He bought stolen credentials on the dark web, flooded a contractor’s phone with authentication requests for over an hour, then sent a WhatsApp message pretending to be IT support. That was enough. Once inside Uber’s network, he found admin credentials sitting in a PowerShell script on a shared drive — and from there, he had access to everything: AWS, Google Workspace, Slack, bug bounty reports, and internal dashboards. He announced his success by posting on the company’s own Slack channel. This is the story of the 2022 Uber breach, MFA fatigue, and what it means that a phone call is still one of the most effective hacking tools ever invented.Support the show
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14
Trust the Machine AI Agents, MCP Servers, and the New Attack Surface
What if your AI assistant could be turned against you by an email you never read? In 2024, Anthropic released the Model Context Protocol - a universal standard for connecting AI assistants to email, code repositories, databases, and cloud infrastructure. Within months, researchers began finding something alarming: AI agents with this kind of access could be hijacked by hidden instructions embedded in the very content they were asked to process. No stolen credentials. No exploit code. Just words that the AI read and obeyed. This episode explores the emerging security frontier of AI agents and MCP servers - the real CVEs, the documented incidents, and why the security community is paying very close attention.
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13
Mythos: The Model That Scares Anthropic
Anthropic described its own upcoming model as posing unprecedented cybersecurity risks - then accidentally leaked that description. Cole Drayden sits down with former federal threat intelligence analyst Marcus Hale to work through what Mythos actually is, what it can do, and what happens when that capability reaches the wrong hands.
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12
The Blueprint Leak: What Anthropic Exposed About the Future of AI
On March 31st, a misconfigured build file exposed 512,000 lines of Anthropic's Claude Code source code to the world. Cole Drayden sits down with AI systems security consultant Dr. Elliott Vance to unpack what leaked, what it reveals about autonomous AI, and why this moment may accelerate the field faster than anyone expected.
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11
SPECIAL EPISODE: "Leaky Bucket" The Anthropic Claude Code Source Code Leak
On March 31st, 2026, a security researcher found that Anthropic had accidentally shipped thecomplete source code of Claude Code - its flagship AI product generating $2.5 billion inannualized revenue - in a public npm package. A missing configuration entry. A public cloudstorage bucket. Within hours, the code was mirrored across GitHub 41,500 times. A clean-roomrewrite called claw-code became the fastest-growing repository in GitHub's history, crossing100,000 stars in under 48 hours. Anthropic then accidentally blocked 8,100 legitimate developerprojects while trying to contain the damage. This is a breaking news special episode. Detailsare still emerging. We cover what is confirmed, what is unknown, and what it means for the AIindustry.
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10
Guardians of Peace. The Sony Pictures Hack of 2014
In November 2014, thousands of Sony Pictures employees arrived at work to find grinning red skulls on every computer screen. What followed was twenty-two days of leaked films, exposed emails, executive humiliation, and a geopolitical standoff that ended with the President of the United States calling out a foreign dictator by name. This is the story of the most destructive cyberattack ever launched against an American entertainment company - who did it, how they did it, and what it means for every organization operating in a world where a nation-state can decide you are a target.Support the show
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Every major cyberattack has a story behind it. A vulnerability no one patched. A phishing email someone clicked. A nation-state with a motive. Dark Perimeter goes beyond the headlines to explore the true stories of the hacks, breaches, and cyber operations that shaped history - told in narrative form for security professionals and curious minds alike. No guests, no panels, no filler. Just the story.
HOSTED BY
Cole Drayden
CATEGORIES
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