

Privacy Please
Cameron Ivey
Welcome to "Privacy Please," a podcast for anyone who wants to know more about data privacy and security. Join your hosts Cam and Gabe as they talk to experts, academics, authors, and activists to break down complex privacy topics in a way that's easy to understand.In today's connected world, our personal information is constantly being collected, analyzed, and sometimes exploited. We believe everyone has a right to understand how their data is being used and what they can do to protect their privacy.Please subscribe and help us reach more people!
Episodes
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Dec 15, 2025 • 10min
S6, E262 - WARNER BROS CRISIS: Class Action Lawsuit & The $108B Hostile Takeover (Dec 15 Update)
Send us a textIt is Monday, December 15th, and the battle for Hollywood has officially gone nuclear.What started as an $82 billion acquisition by Netflix has morphed into a $108 billion hostile takeover battle with Paramount Skydance. As of this morning, stocks are volatile, the government has frozen the deal, and a massive Class Action Lawsuit has just been filed to burn it all down.In this Special Report from Privacy Please, we break down the chaos of the last 72 hours. We uncover the "National Security" weapon Netflix is using to kill the deal, the foreign money backing Paramount, and the leaked memos that reveal why executives are selling you out.No matter who wins—the Algorithm or the Oligarchs—your privacy is the casualty.Time Stamps / Key Moments:0:00 - Monday Morning Chaos: Stocks Halted & The $108B Counter-Bid2:15 - Future A vs. Future B: The Algorithm Era vs. The Oligarch Era5:30 - BREAKING: The "National Security" Argument & Class Action Lawsuit8:45 - Leaked Memos: The "Golden Parachute" Betrayal11:20 - The Fallout: Why Streaming Prices Will Hit $35/MonthWhat you'll uncover in this deep dive:The Weekend of Chaos: A complete timeline of how Netflix lost control of the deal over the weekend.The "Foreign Money" Threat: Why Paramount's backing by sovereign wealth funds has regulators panicked.Netflix's Hypocrisy: How the surveillance giant is weaponizing "privacy" to stop their competitors.The Consumer Cost: Why the era of cheap streaming is officially dead.Join the Community: We are building a community dedicated to navigating these complex digital issues.Website & Newsletter: https://www.theproblemlounge.comSupport the Show: http://buzzsprout.com/622234/supportDon't forget to Like, Comment, and Subscribe! Your support helps us uncover the stories Big Tech wants to hide.#WarnerBros #Netflix #Paramount #StreamingWars #PrivacyPlease #Antitrust #FTC #DataPrivacy #Hollywood #BreakingNews #ClassAction #StockMarket Support the show

Dec 4, 2025 • 12min
S6, E261 - The Red Line: Salt Typhoon, Temu Spyware & The 'Side Door' Attack
Send us a textA week where the lawful intercept backdoor became the front door, a supply chain hop hit 200+ companies, a bargain app faced a malware lawsuit, and a university breach turned into a donor-targeting roadmap. We share simple moves to lower risk fast and set guardrails that actually hold.• Salt Typhoon abusing CALEA at major US telecoms• Negligence, unpatched routers and weak passwords• Why SMS is transparent and how to switch to Signal• Kill SMS 2FA and use authenticators or YubiKey• Gainsight-to-Salesforce island hopping at scale• Audit connected apps and revoke stale API keys• Arizona AG lawsuit calling Timu malware• Shop via browser sandbox and use masked payments• UPenn donor data leak and Oracle exploit• Whaling protections with voice verification and data scrubbing• Practical recap: trust nothing, verify everythingPlease follow us or subscribe on your podcast app, and watch the video on our YouTube or at theproblemlounge.com. If you have topics or guest ideas, we would love to hear from you Support the show

Nov 17, 2025 • 20min
S6, E260 - How Digital Therapy is Changing Mental Health (and Privacy) Forever
Send us a textA sleepless night, a soft prompt, and a flood of relief—the rise of AI therapy and companion apps is rewriting how we seek comfort when it matters most. We explore why these tools feel so human and so helpful, and what actually happens to the raw, intimate data shared in moments of vulnerability. From CBT-style exercises to memory-rich chat histories, the promise is powerful: instant support, lower cost, and zero visible judgment. The tradeoff is less visible but just as real—monetization models that thrive on sensitive inputs, “anonymized” data that can often be re-identified, and breach risks that turn private confessions into attack surfaces.We dig into the ethical edge: can a language model provide mental health care, or does it simulate empathy without the duty of care? We look at misinformation, hallucinated advice, and the way overreliance on AI can delay genuine human connection and professional help. The legal landscape lags behind the technology, with HIPAA often out of scope and accountability unclear when harm occurs. Still, there are practical ways to reduce exposure without forfeiting every benefit. We walk through privacy policies worth reading, data controls worth using, and signs that an app takes security seriously, from encryption to third‑party audits.Most of all, we focus on agency. Use AI for structure, journaling, and small reframes; lean on people for crisis, nuance, and real relationship. Create boundaries for what you share, separate identities when possible, and revisit whether a tool is helping you act or just keeping you company. If you’ve ever confided in a bot at 2 a.m., this conversation gives you the context and steps to stay safer while still finding support. If it resonates, subscribe, share with a friend who might need it, and leave a review to help others find the show. Support the show

Nov 7, 2025 • 10min
S6, E259 - Patch Tool Turns Predator
Send us a textIn this episode of Privacy Please, host Cameron Ivey discusses significant security threats, including a critical vulnerability in Microsoft's WSUS, a major data breach at the University of Pennsylvania, and the emergence of sophisticated malware known as Glassworm. The conversation highlights the importance of cybersecurity measures and the potential consequences of negligence in IT security. Support the show

Oct 23, 2025 • 15min
S6, E258 - The Synthetic Star: The AI Influencer Earning More Than You
Send us a textShe has millions of followers, lands six-figure brand deals, and lives a life of curated perfection. The only catch? She isn't real. She was entirely created by artificial intelligence.Welcome to the unsettling world of synthetic influencers.In this compelling episode of Privacy Please, we dive deep into the booming industry of AI-generated online personalities. Discover:The Technology: How advanced AI image generators, 3D modeling, and Large Language Models combine to create hyper-realistic avatars and their compelling "personalities."The Business Case: Why major brands and marketing agencies are investing millions in digital beings that offer total control, scalability, and no risk of scandal.The Privacy & Ethical Dilemmas: We explore the "uncanny valley" of trust, the impact of deception by design, the new extremes of unrealistic beauty standards, and the potential for these AI personas to be used for sophisticated scams or propaganda.The Future of Authenticity: What does the rise of the synthetic star mean for human creativity, genuine connection, and the very definition of "real" in our digital world?It's a future that's already here, shaping what we see, what we buy, and even what we believe.Key Topics Covered:What are virtual/synthetic influencers?Examples: Lil Miquela, Aitana Lopez, Shudu GramAI technologies used: image generation, 3D modeling, LLMsReasons for their rise: control, cost, scalability, data collectionEthical concerns: deception, parasocial relationships with AIImpacts: unrealistic standards, displacement of human creators, potential for malicious use (scams, propaganda)Debate around regulation and disclosure for AI-generated contentThe future of authenticity and trust onlineConnect with Privacy Please:Website: theproblemlounge.comYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@privacypleasepodcastSocial Media:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/problem-lounge-networkResources & Further Reading (Sources Used / Suggested):Federal Trade Commission (FTC):Guidelines on disclosure for influencers (relevant for future AI disclosure discussions)Academic Research:Studies on parasocial relationships with media figures (can be applied to AI)Research on the ethics of AI and synthetic media.Industry Insights:Reports from marketing agencies on virtual influencer trendsArticles from tech publications (e.g., Wired, The Verge, MIT Tech Review) covering Lil Miquela and similar figures. Support the show

Oct 3, 2025 • 32min
S6, E257 - How Apple’s New Chip Rewrites Mobile Security
Send us a textWe unpack how Apple’s Memory Integrity Enforcement changes the rules of mobile security by rebuilding memory architecture, not just adding guardrails. We weigh who should upgrade now, what this means for Android, and why people remain the biggest risk.• memory corruption explained with apartment analogy• why NOP sleds and heap sprays fail under MIE• tags, type segregation, and synchronous checks at runtime• market-share vs design: Apple, Windows, Android trade-offs• Pegasus, zero-click exploits, and threat profiles• game hacking parallels: reading vs corrupting memory• should you upgrade: high-risk users vs everyday users• why architecture-level security beats bolt-on tools Support the show

Sep 26, 2025 • 20min
S6, E256 - The Invisible Trade: How Data Brokers Profit from Your Life
Send us a textYou click "agree," you swipe a loyalty card, you browse online – every digital breadcrumb you leave is being collected, but not just by the apps and websites you use. Welcome to the world of data brokers, a multi-billion-dollar, hidden industry that aggregates, analyzes, and profits from your most intimate personal information.In this special episode from Privacy Please, we pull back the curtain on this shadowy ecosystem. Discover:What a data broker is and how they differ from typical tech companies.Where they get your data – from public records and online activity to your shopping habits and app usage.Who they sell your data to – marketers, financial institutions, insurers, political campaigns, and even law enforcement.The alarming real-world impacts, from hyper-targeted ads and scams to potential discrimination and exploitation.This industry operates with minimal regulation in the United States, leaving most consumers vulnerable.Actionable steps you can take right now to reclaim some control over your personal information, including data removal requests and essential digital hygiene.It's an invisible trade happening without your consent, and you are the product. Listen now to understand the true price of your digital life.Key Topics Covered:What are data brokers?Sources of personal data collectionTypes of data collected (demographics, health, financial, behavioral)Who buys data broker profiles?Impacts: targeted ads, scams, discrimination, political targetingLack of federal regulation in the U.S.Consumer rights (e.g., CCPA)Steps to protect your privacy from data brokersData removal servicesDigital hygiene best practicesConnect with Privacy Please:Website: https://theproblemlounge.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@privacypleasepodcast7446Social Media:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/problem-lounge-networkResources & Further Reading (Sources Used):Federal Trade Commission (FTC):Data Brokers: A Call for Transparency and Accountability (FTC Report, 2014) FTC consumer advice on data brokers and privacyConsumer Reports:Articles and investigations into data brokers and data removal servicesElectronic Frontier Foundation (EFF):Privacy resources, including "Surveillance Capitalism" explanationsCalifornia Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA):Official information on consumer rights in CaliforniaIdentity Theft Resource Center (ITRC):Information on scams and data exposureAcxiom, Oracle, Epsilon, Experian, etc. Support the show

Sep 15, 2025 • 50min
S6, E255 - Privacy, Law, and Emerging Tech: A Conversation with Sonia Siddiqui
Send us a textPrivacy and cybersecurity leader Sonia Siddiqui joins us to explore the collision between emerging technologies and privacy regulations, offering insights on how companies can navigate this complex landscape while building trust.• Sonia's journey from aspiring architect to privacy expert, motivated by the intersection of civil rights and privacy• The growing gap between rapid technological innovation and slower-moving regulatory frameworks• Examining real-world tensions like WorldCoin's iris scanning under GDPR's biometric data provisions• Why privacy should be a core business enabler rather than just a compliance checkbox• The importance of implementing privacy by design as a living process that evolves with technology• Why principles-based regulation allows for better adaptation to new technologies than prescriptive rules• The inseparable relationship between privacy and security in building customer trust• How privacy professionals can stay current through professional networks, podcasts, and continuous learning• Essential privacy resources including "The Unwanted Gaze" and "Dieterman's Field Guide to Privacy"Find Sonia and her privacy consulting practice at tamarack.solutions or connect with her at the upcoming AI conference in Boston. Support the show

Sep 5, 2025 • 7min
S6, E254 - The Tea App Breach: When Safe Spaces Turn Dangerous
Send us a textThe digital world can be treacherous, especially when you're looking for a safe space to share your most vulnerable thoughts. Today's story about the Tea app breach will make you rethink every "anonymous" platform you've ever trusted.Tea promised women complete anonymity, a digital sanctuary where they could share dating horror stories, relationship struggles, and deeply personal confessions too raw for other platforms. Thousands believed this promise, uploading personal photos and sharing intimate details of their lives. Then security researchers made a chilling discovery: Tea's entire database sat completely unprotected on the internet. No password required. The numbers are staggering: 72,000 private images including selfies and IDs, plus 1.1 million direct messages containing confessions about abortion, sexual assault, infidelity, and more, all exposed. But the story takes an even darker turn when someone created "T-Spill," weaponizing this stolen data by turning private photos into ranking games and mapping personal information to real locations. This wasn't just a technical failure; it was a profound betrayal that turned a supposed sanctuary into what can only be described as a predator's playground.As the FBI investigates and lawsuits mount, we're left with uncomfortable questions about digital trust. How do we balance our need for connection with the reality that our most vulnerable moments are only as protected as the people building these platforms? The next time an app promises total privacy, remember Tea and maybe wait to see how they handle their first crisis before sharing your deepest secrets. Subscribe to Privacy Plays for more deep dives into breaches that expose the very human cost of our connected world, and check out our expanded content on the Problem Lounge Network. Support the show

Aug 28, 2025 • 16min
S6, E253 - Have a Seat in the Metaverse: The Chris Hansen vs. Roblox Investigation
Send us a textFor decades, Chris Hansen’s iconic catchphrase, "Why don't you have a seat?" was the prelude to exposing predators in the real world. Now, his hunt has moved into the metaverse. His target is Roblox, the global gaming platform used by over 70 million people daily, most of whom are children. Hansen and his team allege the platform is a "cesspool" and a "hunting ground" for criminals, while Roblox maintains its safety systems are robust.In this special report, "Privacy Please" goes beyond the headlines to investigate the clash. We explore the platform's design, from the "Avatar Loophole" that allows bad actors to bypass chat filters to the recommendation algorithm that can lead young users down dangerous paths. Is this a simple case of a company needing to moderate more, or is the very business model that made Roblox a multi-billion dollar success also its greatest safety vulnerability?Credited Resources & Further ReadingPrimary Sources & Reporting:Takedown Across America with Chris Hansen: Official platform for Hansen's ongoing investigations and reporting.Roblox Corporate Statements & Community Standards: Official statements and policies from Roblox regarding their safety and moderation efforts.WIRED/Bloomberg Reporting: Recent articles from major tech publications that have investigated platform safety issues on Roblox and similar metaverse platforms.Common Sense Media: A non-profit organization that provides independent reviews and ratings for media and technology, often analyzing the safety features of platforms like Roblox.(Note: As this is an ongoing investigation, it's recommended to reference the most current news articles and official press releases from the time of recording for the most up-to-date information.) Support the show


