Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, March 28, 2026

Subject: This Company Is Secretly Turning Your Zoom Meetings into AI Podcasts
Source: 404media.co
https://www.bespacific.com/this-company-is-secretly-turning-your-zoom-meetings-into-ai-podcasts/

404 Media no paywall: “WebinarTV, a company that bills itself as “a search engine for the best webinars,” is secretly scanning the internet for Zoom meeting links, recording the calls, and turning them into AI-generated podcasts for profit. In some cases, people only found out that their Zoom calls were recorded once WebinarTV reached out to them directly to say their call was turned into a podcast in an attempt to promote WebinarTV’s services. WebinarTV claims to host more than 200,000 webinars. It’s not clear how it’s recording so many Zoom calls without permission, but in some cases the stolen videos posted to WebinarTV can put call participants at risk. Tom Rademacher, a teacher and editor, told me he organized a Zoom call for educators and education advocates in the months after Donald Trump was elected to discuss keeping kids safe from ICE. “I very intentionally did not record the webinar since we’d be talking politics and there were some local electeds and district leaders that were on,” Rademacher told me. “There were definitely people on there who it would have been bad politically and professionally to be, especially at the time, linked to being anti-Trump in an education space.” Rademacher received an email on October 7, 2025, from WebinarTV VP of communications Sarah Blair, whose profile image appears to be AI-generated and who has no online presence. “Your webinar is featured on the Phil & Amy Show,” Blair said in her email. “They talk about the highlights from your webinar – without giving away too much – to entice viewers. To listen to the show, click Highlights tab on the OnDemand page or click here.” The link sent Rademacher to a page on WebinarTV.us which featured a full recording of the Zoom recording, an AI-generated video summary of the meeting, “chapters” that sent the viewers to different parts of the meeting, and an AI-generated episode of the “Phil & Amy Show,” in which two AI-generated personalities discuss the content of the call, including quips and rapport between Phil and Amy. “By suddenly having the whole meeting be public so you could see what [participants] were saying, after all the talk about safe spaces, it just felt super gross,” Rademacher told me. Rademacher asked Blair how she got the recording of the meeting and asked that WebinarTV take it down, which it did….

Abstracted from beSpacific
Copyright © 2025 beSpacific, All rights reserved.


Subject: Wireless Router Ratings & Reviews
Source: Consumer Reports
https://www.consumerreports.org/electronics-computers/wireless-routers/c36971/?INTKEY=I61PVBR2C

Citing national security concerns, the FCC has banned all new foreign-made router models from being imported or sold in the U.S. And, because virtually every consumer WiFi router available in the U.S. today is manufactured overseas, this has understandably raised a lot of questions.

The good news: If you already own a WiFi router, nothing changes for you.

But the decision could reshape the router market in the months ahead. Here’s what you need to know.

In this article

Subject: This new scam could trick you into downloading malware
Source: ITRC via WTAE
https://www.wtae.com/article/this-new-scam-could-trick-you-into-downloading-malware/70848118

A new scam is exploiting a familiar internet security check — tricking people into compromising their own computers.

The Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC) is warning that criminals are using realistic-looking fake CAPTCHA pages to trick Windows users into running malicious commands that install information-stealing malware.

CAPTCHAs are commonly used to verify that a user is human, often by asking them to click images or check a box. But in this scam, the page prompts users to follow a series of keyboard steps to continue.


Subject: OMB’s AI guidance falls short on privacy, watchdog says
Source: FedScoop
https://fedscoop.com/omb-ai-guidance-data-privacy-gao-report/

Governmentwide guidance on artificial intelligence from the Office of Management and Budget falls short of addressing myriad privacy-related risks agencies should take into account, according to a new watchdog report.

The Government Accountability Office reviewed OMB AI guidance and hosted a three-day virtual panel made up of a dozen privacy experts from various professional fields. The takeaway from the watchdog and those experts was that AI guidance from the White House office “does not fully address all the identified privacy-related risks and challenges.”

“Given the risks and challenges, additional guidance from OMB could help ensure agencies take appropriate steps to protect the privacy of sensitive data when using AI,” the GAO said in a press release accompanying the report. “Without this additional direction, risks are increased that agencies’ use of AI would disclose sensitive data, or compromise privacy in other ways.”

In the experts’ minds, the remaining eight challenges have been just “partially addressed” by OMB in its guidance as of January. Those challenges are:

“Without additional information or direction on addressing these challenges, agencies will be hindered in protecting privacy when using AI, as well as making the public aware of the associated risks and steps they are taking … to mitigate them,” the report concluded.


Subject: 🔥 THE FBI DIRECTOR GOT HACKED. BY IRAN. FROM IRAN. AND NOW HE’S OFFERING $10 MILLION TO CATCH THEM. IN IRAN. LOL.
Source: Dean Blundell Substack
https://deanblundell.substack.com/p/the-fbi-director-got-hacked-by-iran

The story of the week is also the story of the year — and it involves cigars, rum selfies, a vintage convertible, and the most embarrassing government-email security lapse since, well, ever.

The head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (T-shirt salesman, kids book author, conspiracy theorist, WWE Superfan – that’s it, those are his qualifications) — the most powerful domestic law enforcement agency on planet Earth, the institution whose literal job it is to catch hackers — just had his personal Gmail account cracked open like a piñata by an Iranian-government-linked hacking crew. They published his photos. His emails. His old résumé.

And the FBI’s response? A $10 million bounty.

For hackers.

In Iran.

During a war.

The year is 2026, and this is your FBI Director.

🕵️ STORY ONE: THE HACK — WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED […]

🇮🇷 STORY TWO: WHO THE HELL IS HANDALA AND WHY DID THEY DO THIS? […]

💊 STORY THREE: THE OTHER HACKS — STRYKER, LOCKHEED, AND A CUBA PROBLEM […]

💣 STORY FOUR: THE NUCLEAR MAILBOX — WHAT’S STILL OUT THERE […]

😤 STORY FIVE: THE $10 MILLION BOUNTY — KASH PATEL’S MAGNIFICENT FURY […]


Subject: Tech issues continue to haunt 911 systems
Source: Route Fifty
https://www.route-fifty.com/public-safety/2026/03/tech-issues-continue-haunt-911-systems/412394/

Many still operate using outdated technology and are prone to cyberattacks, leading advocates and lawmakers to call for more funding to make up the shortfall.

A recent report by the Idaho Legislature’s Joint Legislative Oversight Committee called for the creation of a statewide 911 program amid rising costs and aging technology.

The report warned that the state’s call centers and call-handling systems are expected to reach their end of life within the next two years, while its radio systems are not far behind. And while many states are transitioning to Next Generation 911, an internet-based system known as NG911 that allows for text, photo and video messaging, as well as better location detection, among other upgrades, the system is not ready for that change and not funded appropriately. Idaho relies on a $1 monthly phone line fee to fund its local 911 systems.

Fragile tech systems have emerged as one of the biggest issues in 911 emergency calling and dispatching, and they have shown few signs of going away. A report last year from emergency communications and response platform Carbyne, and NENA: The 9-1-1 Association, a trade group for 911 professionals, found that 88% of emergency call centers had experienced a tech outage in the last year, up from 75% the year before. Nine percent reported being subject to a cyberattack.

Upgrading 911 technology is a daunting prospect, however. In a 2018 report to Congress, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimated it would cost between $9.5 and $12.7 billion over 10 years to expand NG911 capabilities to every call center nationwide.

Technology is changing so rapidly, however, that some worry about obsolescence almost as soon as they have upgraded their systems. And with cyberattacks sure to multiply, especially from nation-state actors determined to cripple critical infrastructure, it is a troubling time.

Posted in: AI, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Technology Trends