A sharp analysis of the irony where security tools become the ultimate attack vector through supply chain exploits. Level1Techs delivers a sobering reality check on the fragile trust holding our digital infrastructure together.
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The Level1 Links with Friends Show May 6 2026: Checkmarx The LeakAdded:
Hello everybody. Welcome back. Today is May 6th and we're doing business and security stories for the middle of your week.
>> And uh the cloud wars.
I like the phrase the cloud wars. And they're they're they're hot and it's constantly like new people moving into the front. Now we have a new leader.
Google Cloud pulls ahead as big tech's AI bet swells to 700 billion. So Google had some impressive technology. They've made some big bets. They might have partnered with Intel. Everybody's got their earnings and their quarter the quarterly reporting in. And uh that is part of what is fueling all of this. And uh basically everybody except OpenAI reported kind of a record quarter like profits were up. I mean >> Oh, and Microsoft.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Well, yeah.
>> Microsoft. The Microsoft had a little bit of a they took a little bit of a ding, which we'll talk about, too. And the iPad babies, boy, are they going to be a problem. And every headline we see, and maybe some of this is sensationalized, I don't know. I I don't find it hard to believe the way that I You see people in restaurants and stuff, but this one is a wow, >> this is sad.
>> A bit eye watering.
>> Twothirds of babies watch screens, some for eight hours a day.
>> Okay, so twothirds of babies watch screens. Okay. But then there's a second clause there. Some for eight hours a day. What's that percentage?
>> Well, but it's even worse than that, right?
>> The details here are this is self-reported by the parents.
>> Oh, wow.
>> So, you know, they're putting in low numbers, right?
>> Who's saying who admits eight hours?
>> If you're saying eight, the reality is 12, right?
>> Or just baby doesn't want to sleep. Here, have the thing that makes quiet.
>> Yeah. anytime baby makes any noise >> here. Have this.
>> I mean, there's also part of me, the devil's advocate, that wonders if like there was this same sort of hysteria around like the television a little bit where it's like, oh, they just put their kids in front of the TV.
But the thing is is like the TV eventually has to turn off like, you know what I mean? Like it's >> Yeah. Back in those days, like at, you know, 1000 p.m. or midnight Yeah. you got the test pattern >> or you got or when I was a kid even like I remember you know at some point Nick at Night came on and then it's like oh it's just reruns of Gilligans Island and >> see I love Nick as a teen >> you like >> but that was some of the best viewing I thought >> I liked I liked actually liked Gilligans Island and I liked um a couple other like little ones but >> Taxi Taxi was great >> I didn't like >> I love Lucy Greenacres >> yeah I liked I love Lucy >> the Dick Van Dyke show the damn ottoman And uh we have uh you know autonomous trucking. I don't know the these aren't even autonomous. I'm sure they have that capacity, but the trucking world is changing and this is going to be a big part of it most likely.
>> Tesla Semi, the first truck rolls off of the high volume production line because well people aren't buying cars. The price has surprised me. It was $35,000.
Given that like some of the Cyber Trucks are 150, that is a much better deal.
>> No, but like in comparison to a diesel truck. Yeah.
>> I think that's very reasonable. Yeah.
It's one of the cheaper options actually.
>> Yeah. I mean, we used to do the software for managing the CRM for like the Cumins stuff and those trucks were like 350 up and it was crazy.
>> Some of those European ones are like really crazy.
>> Yeah.
So, we'll see. I mean, you know, Tesla has a tendency to promise a lot, not necessarily deliver, but be able to see him on the road soon if that's going to be the case.
And uh we have is here's the question.
What's the bigger failure? The metaverse or this?
>> Apple has given up on the Vision Pro after the M5 refresh flop. If you've got an Apple Vision Pro that's just gathering dust and you'd like to send it to me for dissection andor analysis, I'm I'm I would be glad to receive it.
>> Or if you really want to build your neck, look get a lot stronger there.
There's amazing video of um an electrician dude that has one of these and he uses the augmented reality thing to know where to drill. Like the geospatial awareness of the headset is good enough that he can go in the attic and be like, I want to put the hole here in the top of the wall and then he can go into the room, you know, where the wall joins the attic. And then he can look in the room and be like, oh, it's right here. And like get the hole in the right spot every time. It is mind-blowing.
That's the only use useful thing I ever saw from the Apple Vision Pride head.
>> I don't think that's going to sell many.
>> And uh we are probably about to see this tends to happen when we get a big fossil fuel energy shock of any kind. All of a sudden, everybody's like, "Hey, maybe we should start looking at these other technologies that we've possibly been suppressing up until this point."
>> There's those scientist deaths again.
>> So now we have another milestone. uh Tokamaku regime sustains stable fusion plasma for one minute while easing heat loads. And so this is an article that talks about the engineering feat that that is and how that's been overcome and how it looks like this might actually be attainable. Yay fusion. So, I mean, it's all, you know, it's all fun in games when you're like, "Hey, let's put the sun inside of this generator, but you have to keep it from melting." And so, that requires a lot of advanced magnetics and heat shedding and stuff like that. And they got it going for a minute.
Previous record was pretty close to that, wasn't it?
Maybe 40 seconds.
And the data center argument just keeps getting crazier. But what's even crazier than the argument is the scale of some of these things. And boy is this one incredible.
>> Nine uh new AI data center in Utah will generate and consume more than twice the amount of power the entire state uses.
Kevin Olirri's 9 gawatt Utah data center campus approved. And I know it seems insane. It's 40,000 acres. It's going to be using natural gas. The turbines that this thing uses, you can't even buy until 2030 and beyond. Maybe not even then.
You look at the finances from Google and other companies and it's like they are actually turning the investments into profit on paper which demands drives the demand for these kinds of things and yet it seems like if you just do the napkin math there's no way any of it works.
>> Now what did you say that run on >> natural gas?
>> Will that be liqufied natural gas?
>> LG. Yeah.
>> How much of that is currently on ships >> moving across the ocean?
>> Not a lot. No.
>> Zero.
Zero.
>> How much of that do we have in our uh SPR reserve?
>> Zero.
>> Also zero.
>> Yeah. It's weird. We We bled it down.
You know, we were so reckless when we bled bled down our reserve. We didn't even capture the uh the helium.
>> No, you're talking about oil reserve.
There is no natural gas reserve. Doesn't exist.
>> There used to be a helium reserve.
>> You know what? It's funny you mentioned helium because I've been noticing I went to Dollar Tree and Kroger and one other store, I can't remember where it was, and they all had prefilled helium birthday balloons just like in case you wanted one like it's ready.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> So, everyone they don't sell, we're just bleeding the most valuable gas in the universe.
>> We should feel that way about like almost everything. I mean, you know, talking about like oil or or natural gas, it's like when it's gone, it's gone. But like some of those things you can use for productive purposes. I don't think a birthday balloon >> Yeah. birthday balloon really is >> there are certain things it's like our you know descendants will look back and be like what were they doing?
>> But it's not even that we're filling them on demand. We are prefilling them because >> it takes too long to wait the five minutes to get it done.
>> It's an impulse buy. Oh, you know what?
I'll have a balloon. I don't know if it's Mimi, but there's I Chris, there's an amazing example that I want you to be aware of so that if you're ever at a thrift shop and you see one, you can pick it up for me. But in the 50s, like the atomic age and all this kind of stuff, there were a ton of toys. One, you know, palonium, it's like >> Yeah.
>> Putin's favorite poison. Uh there was a kid's ring that they sold that had plut palonium in it because you can see the radioactive decay. And so there was a little glass lens on it. It was like a it looked like a bomb. So you would you would hold it up to your eye and look at it decaying >> and it was just palonium in a children's ring and we were like, "Oh, it's probably fine."
>> What color was it?
>> It's I don't >> you don't you got to describe it a little bit more so if I see it I can look for it.
>> You can Google like palonium children's toy ring. It's just oh here you go.
There's also a play set like a like atomic play set that came with like uranium and some other things and it's like oh the geer counter clicks when you hold it near the uranium and it's just >> it's like oh yeah we just gave that to children that's fine. Yeah, that's a little bit beyond like the lead paint and asbestous in my opinion, but >> but you know Yeah. To >> as the descendants of those people.
Yeah.
>> Yeah. Yeah. To your point, it's like what are they? It's like we'll look back and just be like, "Oh, we could we can use lead paint or we could use lead for paint and cars and as a sweetener in our wines and our water lines."
>> Who cares about preserving fuel or moving to something like solar? This gas will be here forever. If you combine lead was that with asbests, it solves the world's energy problems.
>> Well, speaking of things that are toxic, Windows and uh everybody feels that way and they have been, you know what, I I like to think of the Windows development cycle like one of you know those coin pusher machines where it's just like like they just see it's like how one little bit falls and falls and then sometimes it's a big a bunch of them and it's like oh yeah, that's the Windows 11 update. But people are clearly getting fed up with it and I think Microsoft is finally waking up to that fact.
>> Say Nadella admits Microsoft needs to quote unquote win back Windows 11 fans and improve performance for low RAM PCs.
Really, he's just saying Windows 11 runs terribly on the hardware that you plebs can afford. We'll we'll try to fix that.
>> We didn't test it on any of that.
>> He went way further than that. And I mean, they have identified the problem.
To be fair, it was easy to identify.
They've known all along, but they're saying it out loud. They're saying start menu updates happening when you don't want them to.
Uh co-pilot, pulling co-pilot out of everything. And there were a couple of other like obvious issues that they're like, "Okay, we hear you. We're going to fix it."
>> Maybe putting all those ads in random internet spam in your start bar has caused a problem.
>> My favorite thing about that was moving the start menu because that's literally an apple. Like they pulled an apple. You could move the start bar since time in memorial. Yeah, the taskbar. That was one of them. They move it to the top if you want to.
>> And then then they took that away because they didn't want to bother debugging that because >> didn't you you always did yours on the side, I thought. Don't you?
>> Not anymore cuz I used to it. But yeah, I like I'm a left left sidebar.
>> That was my favorite.
>> I liked the the browser tabs over there, too.
>> Yeah. Yeah. And they really sabotaged the crap out of that >> because they make so much more sense vertically. You can have so many more.
>> Well, that's how Discord organizes. Now I've realized I really like that system.
>> We had it once.
>> Yeah, we had it all.
>> Again, it's like your computer should be your choice to experience it how you want. And it's like, oh, because everything's so locked down, you can't.
That's there's no excuse for that.
>> And there might not be an excuse for these people, but they are slow to realize it. However, based on some internal documents that have leaked, they might be catching on.
>> Palunteer employees are starting to wonder if they're the bad guys. It's like, wait a minute. We we we said we were going to build this technology for the good of all mankind, and here we seem to be using it to blow up brown people.
>> Do you think the school b school girls who were burned alive was the tipping point? That would be it for me.
That would be an obvious one, I think, in my mind. And we have uh some bad news because uh vibe exploiting has become a thing and somebody broke Denuvo. wide open and there really no putting that genie back in the bottle. So, what do you do? Well, this is not Denuvo. This is somebody else. But everybody's catching on. They're like, "Oh, we have to go to the worst possible step." Sony rolls out 30-day online DRM check-in for PlayStation digital games. Players could temporarily lose access if they don't keep their consoles online. So, what this is, this is weird, though. I don't know if this article I didn't read this one, but I read some other ones and that not all of them explained it properly.
When you buy a game, you got a 30-day you got a return window and you uh they give you a different game so that if you make a copy of that game during the return window, it will still expire. But after the return window lapses, then they give you the real copy of the game and that one doesn't expire after 30 days.
>> I don't think that's what this is. This is every 30 days. Basically, you get a token >> and it's good for 30 days for you being offline, but then you have to have that internet internet connection again to get your next token, >> which is copy paste the exact same headline.
>> Denovo has been cracked in single player games and previously protected 2K games and reportedly retaliate with mandatory 14-day online checks.
>> They're giving you half the time.
Uh, now this will be, I think, during a window. Oh, this might be worth thinking about. This is a window during the release of the game >> and then they might take this out later.
>> I thought the Sony thing was definitely motivated by the re refund policy.
Apparently, there is a scenario where you could buy a game legitimately and make a copy of it serreptitiously without the console noticing, get a refund from Sony. Sony would delete the game and then when you put it back, it still works.
And uh the question is will people tolerate age verification because there is an option of just saying no I don't want anything to do with this. Okay I have to age verify to use your thing.
I'm just not going to do it and maybe here's a data point.
>> Roblox's daily users continue to drop as age checks slow growth. I wondered. I mean, age checks are probably definitely part of it, but like how much of it is too just like the flavor of the month is moving on >> or parents finally catching on to the fact that this is a hot bed of predators.
>> Maybe I should look at what my children are doing online. No, no, no. Go juggle the chainsaws. It's fine.
>> You know what? If I'm to put my baby on this for eight hours a day, maybe I should look into it.
I don't think there's a lot of babies playing Roblox. Young children certainly.
>> What do you think the introductory age is? I bet it's like four.
>> Yeah, I would say four or five probably.
That's when you have the motor control and like, you know, they can start talking pretty well.
>> That was I would I would go so far as to say that playing games like Zelda uh helped my reading ability at an early age.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. But you were playing with other adults. Like you were playing that on your own.
>> The uh That's true. the multiplayer button. But I did know people who like if you were talking about video games and you brought up Final Fantasy, they'd be like, "Oh, that's that's too much reading."
Because Final Fantasy 7, we didn't have the voices yet. So, >> I can't be reading that.
>> They don't they don't even read the books and the RPGs. That's why you get so much lore.
>> We didn't even have books and RPGs back then.
>> Different generation >> and uh the age verification stuff. Now I guess the uh Coloradoatans will get a little bit of reprieve here but it seems like it is going to be mandated possibly at the federal level and some people are preparing for it which is getting its own kind of backlash.
>> Ubuntu's AI plans have Linux users looking for a kill switch. Canonical is adding AI features to Ubuntu soon but users say they can but they it says that users can remove anything they don't actually want. The one little thing that might be nice is just a helper that you know um it's not the man pages but it was the the other there was something where it was like man pages but it was like a more user friendly man pages that was a really good project. I can't remember what the name is off the top of my head. I'm sorry.
>> It shouldn't be in the operating system though >> but it it'd be nice if we could just talk to it. It's like hey how do I actually do this? And it's like oh yeah it's over here.
>> They could they could just have better UI.
>> I don't think What do you think we're talking about?
>> I know. I know.
>> I mean, Microsoft could do that with the start menus. Like you type in the start menu. How do I turn off ads in the start menu? And it's like just beyond >> there are no results.
>> Yeah. Well, no. I mean, it's just like we have taken away your ability to do that because we need a line on the dashboard to go up. At least don't lie to me. Come on.
>> And the backlash against anything AI generated is raging on. I swear the Steam reviews, man, they go crazy when they that I didn't even get confirmation. It's like that looks like there's six fingers on this picture.
Torches and pitchforks. And apparently the music world no different.
>> Spotify has introduced a verified artist badge to help distinguish humans from AI. Yay.
It's the Twitter check. But just tells you that you're human.
>> I don't hate it.
>> But they will keep putting the AI on there. That's kind of Some people are like, "Well, if you know, why don't you just not have that?"
Also, the way that they're doing it is interesting. They're not taking your word for it. They go and look at your social media and they make sure that you have like concert dates and stuff.
>> So, what if you're just >> an artist who doesn't play live? Yeah.
>> What if you're an agorophobe that's just cranking out music all the time?
>> One of the things I use sometimes is like I'll look at album release dates, like if they have something released before a certain time. I figure that's like a decent indicator. But >> now, here's something that I've learned in China because of the great firewall and because of all the lockdowns on posting things online. One of the few avenues that Chinese people have to vent their frustration is Steam reviews. And that's why you get a lot of review bombing from China, which is very interesting. And I don't think that the Chinese were necessarily interested in this one, but this is the same kind of thing. The headline from what is this PC Gamer is suspected Trump shooters game pulled from sale on Steam after a flood of meme reviews. So this was boredom BR like Neil's bore like it's a chemistry joke and the game was about that but it wasn't a very good game. I wasn't able to get in and look at those reviews, but I think the problem might have been that some of them were very positive and they were saying things that might have been supportive of uh assassin assassination attempts which themes want nothing to do with are you got how hype are you guys for the Call of Duty movie?
>> I didn't even know they were making it until today.
>> It's going to be so good. But as with many things, the director has a social media history, and a lot of people have been looking at it.
>> Call of Duty movie director called Star Wars or called War Games pathetic and said playing them was weak. Oops.
Whoopsie. Whoopsy doodle.
>> Yeah. He basically said that anybody did this was a loser and pathetic and uh he's in charge.
>> Do you think this is going to be more video game like or more like a more intense Saving Private Ryan?
>> No, because well, you see everything here.
>> Also, look at the characters. This is one of those situations where they take the name of the thing and then just do whatever they want. It has nothing to do with >> to do. Yeah.
>> But Call of Duty doesn't have like a cohesive narrative from game to game, right?
>> I mean, >> this is just the not the Nazi zombie mode.
>> Cobs was almost slapstick.
>> Well, I mean, the modern ones aren't Nazis anymore. It's modern warfare, right? So, >> Well, yeah. Which what era is he developing? I think it probably be the modern one >> because you get all all got to have all the like sexy new guns >> and the skins and stuff. Yeah, it's all a promotion just so you buy more stuff.
>> Can you imagine the promotions in terms of like when you buy the big popcorn tub, how crazy that's going to be?
>> I love the Dune popcorn bucket and how it's like spawned in a whole like generation of weird popcorn buckets.
Again, things that your descendants will look back on and be like, they had so many resources and they just spent them on popcorn buckets. That's bold to think that our descendants will be able to look at any kind of history.
>> That's true. Well, maybe they'll find it, you know, half buried in the mud and it's like, what was this used for?
>> What are they going to find? Ramsticks.
Like, uh, there's going to be nothing for them. We don't have uniform for them to dig up.
>> No, no. I'm I imagine it's like like we pull up pottery. They pull up the dune popcorn.
>> But they'll have no context.
>> What is What was this used for?
>> Such a twisted view of who we were.
>> Yeah.
>> They'll probably give us too much credit, honestly.
And here's the security section, which was a hot one this week. And it feels like this is going to be the future because now we have the LLMs hacking away at everything day and night. New Linux copy fail flaw gives hackers root on major dros. Yeah, this is bad. A lot of this was apocalyptically bad. The disclosure on this was not handled well.
A lot of dros did not update their kernels in a timely fashion. There were exploits in the wild. There was very little in most dros to mitigate this.
Um, some the particular flaw here has to do with crypto. sometimes a module and sometimes it's compiled in the kernel.
Some popular distros compiled it in the kernel which meant that even if you couldn't update, you'd still have to reboot to disable the routine in the kernel. So it it was just it was a dumpster fire all the way around.
>> And then there was another dumpster fire.
>> Hey, dumpsters all the way around.
>> Critical C panel application vulnerability identified. Update your server immediately. CPanel is is hugely popular. Is literally the most expensive option and it's supposed to be good.
This is a failure. This is a a corporate and infrastructure failure because this vulnerability has been in the wild since February. Their team, it was on the radar since February and it was not handled well and the disclosure was not handled well and the script that checks to see if you have an indicator of compromise was not handled well.
Everything about it was not handled well.
and the Flock cameras. Uh, one of the interesting things about Flock cameras is that, you know, they their PR team is always like, "Oh, look, Flock respects your privacy. This is not that big a deal." But as usual, it's the sales team that betray them because the sales team when they come into these little towns and they show it to the chief of police or whatever, they're like, "Hey, look at this cra. Look what we can do with this." And this one in particular got them in some hot water. City learns flock cameras uh flock accessed cameras in children's gymnastics room as sales pitch demo. Renews the contract. Anyway, that's Dun Woody, Georgia.
And the people of Dunwoody Georgia said they did what now?
>> Excuse me. What? What was in my trip gymnastics room?
>> Did we ask for this? So yeah, this accidentally revealed that Flock is not just looking at the traffic cameras that they own. They are making deals with private camera owners so that the flock network can also view those.
>> I keep telling my mom she has like a little you know doorbell camera and I'm like why are you making their job easier for them?
>> Yeah. And uh you know like the headline says it this wasn't enough. It wasn't enough to stop them because they probably offered him some kind of juicy kickback.
Maybe we all need to get into paintball.
And every time we see one of these cameras, >> then Amazoning paintball stuff will put you on a watch list. Yeah.
>> Oh, but that's not going to be necessary because soon just getting in the car with your paintball gun will be all that it takes because this is going to be our future.
>> Federal surveillance tech becomes mandatory in new cars by 2027. Did you watch the congressional hearings that go with this? They were amazing. Um, one of the the Congress critters asked uh the people that were pushing this bill, it's like, "So, do you buy the optional?
Like, this this could be an optional safety package, quote unquote safety package, but you shouldn't make it mandatory. It's just going to drive up the cost of the car, and a lot of Americans don't want it." And I said, "No, no, it needs to be mandatory." It's like, "Well, I went to the the parking lot and I looked at the VIN for your car, and your car doesn't have any of the optional safety packages, and neither does anybody in the room that is uh supporting this bill." And then they were like, "I'm outraged that you would invade my privacy." And it's like you >> Yeah. It's like the other like the the Met Police.
>> Yeah.
>> Like there's no awareness there. Like the billionaires.
>> Yeah. Rules for me. Rules for thee, not for me.
>> There's probably one like does anyone call them out on that where it's like you realize how hypocritical you sound right now?
>> That that should be ground like they should be uh what is it? Uh dis uh disallowed from reelection from something so egregious. I thought you were going to say breeding, which is what I would suggest. Uh but those kind of people >> these are that's assumes that you let them live.
>> Well, uh I think a lot of the those kinds of like you know law enforcement and billionaire venture capital, all that stuff. I think it selects for people who are able to their minds can just operate like that. Yeah. The irony >> they can live with the cognitive dissonance.
>> The hypocrisy just doesn't touch them.
Uh so this the details of this is always on camera that is observing you and looking for signs of fatigue or intoxication at which point it will refuse the ignition.
>> It's for safety.
>> What if you just have a like a I say resting face but it's just resting tired face.
>> Yeah. Or uh who was that the comedian that was on Saturday Night Live? Goat Boy. He always looked high. Oh, >> like no matter what, he always looked high. Like he joked about it. So, could he get past this?
>> It's like I can't drive a car because every time I try to get in it, it thinks I'm high.
>> And we have some ransomware, which is bad, but also it was bad ransomware, which is kind of good. But at the same time, the victim knows it don't get any soulless from this because it was the worst case scenario for them. Anyway, ransomware accidentally destroys all files larger than 128 kilobytes, preventing decryption. vect code likely partly vodcoded with AI or used an old codebase security researcher suggests.
So this was somebody was trying to DIY their commissionbased like this is part of the commission ransomware network um and they messed up and accidentally just deleted the whole thing and the EU is not the only place that has the mandatory app that you have to use. Russia has their own that's not age verification.
This is just for all your communication because you're not allowed to use any of the other ones. But Cloudflare has made a statement.
>> Major web security provider flags Russian super app max as spyware >> which is Cloudflare. But they have to clickbait you and not tell you that in the headline and f you know what this was a terrible one to end on because this may be the least interesting of all the security stories but still something that proves that we are just in a terrible time security-wise. Bit Warden and CLI compromised an ongoing check mark supply chain campaign. This is another one where they didn't respond properly because Bit Warden CLI is used for like some DevOps things and managing security in some of those contexts. And and yeah, supply chain compromise. Don't know what to tell you. It's bad. Take your stuff off the internet. Go patch.
>> Take yourself off the internet and just live out in the woods.
>> Start gardening. Oh, wait. There's no fertilizer.
You have to just use the the leaves from the trees and use that as a organic mulch that will deteriorate slowly over time.
>> Got to get into organic pottery and you're you're going to start pooping in the composter.
>> It's the only thing that can be done.
Actually, a lot of people pee in their composters. We don't do that, but that is a very common practice.
>> You're going to start.
>> Wow.
>> Anyway, on that note, bye.
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