In this week's update
UK shops are about to call the police on you within four seconds of you walking through the door - and you don't have to do anything wrong first.
A GitHub account sat completely silent for 19 months, then woke up and dropped a working mass-exploit kit within minutes - and age on the internet is not the same as trust.
Fifty-five percent of Americans have quietly stopped posting on social media - and the reason isn't what the platforms want to admit.
Recruiters say they can't find workers. New graduates say they can't find jobs. The economy says both of them are right - and AI is not actually the villain in this one.
Applied AI engineering is becoming one of the hottest jobs in tech, and the skill that matters most is not writing clever prompts - it's building report cards for AI that catch the model when it quietly does something dangerous.
The Pentagon opened a paid cybersecurity apprenticeship that requires no degree, no experience, and no prior skills - and 70,000 people showed up within days.
Russian intelligence didn't hack into military networks to spy on NATO supply convoys - they just looked through the security cameras of ordinary homes with default passwords.
The US and China are fighting an AI war on two fronts simultaneously: American companies are secretly using Chinese models to cut costs, and Chinese teams are running millions of fake conversations with American AI to steal what makes it work.
Cloudflare has stopped asking you to click the traffic lights. Now it just watches your mouse move - for your entire visit - and decides from there.
This week's stories are united by a single uncomfortable observation: the systems we built for convenience keep turning into systems of surveillance, and the systems we built for security keep being the ones we forgot to secure. Some of this week is alarming. Some of it is genuinely useful. All of it is worth understanding.
Let's face it.
Find the full transcript to this week's podcast here.