![DevNews artwork](https://is4-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts124/v4/bb/dc/2b/bbdc2bd6-2c8d-f4ea-a6bf-a90ff4f23598/mza_10082441775549656816.jpeg/100x100bb.jpg)
S7:E4 - Potential Effects of a Cyberwar Between Russia and Ukraine, a Coding Bootcamp Stands Strong In Afghanistan, and More
DevNews
English - February 03, 2022 03:00 - 51 minutes - 47.4 MBTechnology News Tech News Download Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
In this episode, we talk about The New York Time’s Wordle acquisition, and Apple App Stores new unlisted apps option. Then we speak with Hector Monsegur, director of research at Alacrinet and former black hat hacker about what a cyberwar between Russia and Ukraine would look like and what its effects could be. Finally, we speak with Jamshid Hashimi, founder of CodeWeekend, a coding bootcamp that is still providing education and hope within the chaos caused by the US pullout from Afghanistan and the new Taliban regime.
Show Notes DevDiscuss (sponsor) CodeNewbie (sponsor) Avalanche (sponsor) Wordle Is Joining The New York Times Games Unlisted app distribution Destructive malware targeting Ukrainian organizations Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency CodeWeekend
In this episode, we talk about The New York Time’s Wordle acquisition, and Apple App Stores new unlisted apps option. Then we speak with Hector Monsegur, director of research at Alacrinet and former black hat hacker about what a cyberwar between Russia and Ukraine would look like and what its effects could be. Finally, we speak with Jamshid Hashimi, founder of CodeWeekend, a coding bootcamp that is still providing education and hope within the chaos caused by the US pullout from Afghanistan and the new Taliban regime.
Hector X. Monsegur is director of research at Alacrinet and a former black hat hacker.
Jamshid HashimiJamshid Hashimi is a software engineer, teacher and founder of CodeWeekend, the first and largest developer community in Afghanistan.