Latest Episode
May 27 0000 UTC Brief
In tech and security
GitHub is telling administrators of self-hosted git servers to rotate their public encryption keys after a May 18 breach tied to a poisoned VS Code extension used by an employee. The company says about 3,800 repositories were compromised and it is rotating keys across the board. The broader message here is simple, if unnerving, supply-chain attacks are now reaching into the tools developers trust most.
That same pressure is driving new spending. Socket has raised $60 million in a Thrive Capital-led Series C round at a $1 billion valuation, and it plans to widen its software supply-chain security platform beyond package managers to developer tools and AI coding systems. Meanwhile, the White House has replaced Biden-era federal logging mandates with a narrower, risk-based cyber framework focused on threat hunting and forensic readiness, a shift that should help agencies move faster when intrusions do.
And in healthcare, The Oncology Institute says a 2025 hack at a third-party billing vendor exposed patient data, though it has not disclosed how many people were affected.
In U.S. politics
The White House is preparing to loosen the refugee cap, but only for white South Africans, according to a forthcoming memo. That is a remarkably specific use of refugee policy, even by current standards.
Separately, construction is underway on the White House lawn for a UFC arena expected to host a mixed martial arts fight on June 14, tying together Donald Trump’s 80th birthday and the 250th anniversary of the United States. Some administrations build monuments, this one appears to be building a cage.
In science and space
NASA says it is aiming for a working lunar base by 2029, with the first phase calling for 25 launches, 21 landings, and about four tonnes of cargo sent to the Moon’s south pole. The agency has also awarded hundreds of millions of dollars in contracts to four U.S. companies as it pushes the project forward with commercial, academic, and international partners.
In global business and resources
Australia is moving to limit Chinese involvement in its rare earths sector as part of a broader push to become a major power in critical minerals. It is a familiar strategic scramble, only with more rocks and fewer press conferences.
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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.
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