In the wake of Salt Typhoon, what does the future of secure telecom look like?
To find out, ChinaTalk interviewed John Doyle, a former Green Beret who spent a decade building Palantir’s national security practice before founding Cape, which calls itself “America’s privacy-first mobile carrier”. Also joining the conversation is Dmitri Alperovitch, chairman and co-founder of Silverado Policy Accelerator, founder of CrowdStrike, and an angel investor into Cape.
Thank you to Cape for sponsoring the episode.
We discuss…
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Why telecom data is so valuable to adversaries, and what China discovered in the Salt Typhoon campaign,
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Cape’s founding thesis, including what makes Cape’s cell network so much more secure than major providers like AT&T,
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How wars are run on commercial cell networks, and how Russia and Ukraine’s reliance on that has been exploited over the course of the war,
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Other instances of telecom data weaponization, including by Hezbollah, Israel, and Mexican drug cartels,
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Taiwan’s plan for dealing with undersea cable sabotage,
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What it takes to cultivate engineering talent in telecoms, and why Huawei has stayed innovative while US providers stagnated.
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