HoneyBot, The Cybersecurity Decoy

HoneyBot, The Cybersecurity Decoy

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Radio Archive, Episode 793 , Segment 5

Episode: Online Sales Tax, Executing Drug Dealers, Jaws: The Epidemic Right Under Our Noses

  • Apr 18, 2018 11:00 pm
  • 10:59 mins

Guest: Celine Irvene, Graduate Student and Research Assistant in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology and a member of the Communications Assurance and Performance (CAP) Group As the Internet of Things expands, more and more physical devices—refrigerators, hospital equipment, machines on a factory floor—are coming online. That means hackers have more opportunities to cause mischief in the physical world – and cause real physical harm to people. Scientists at the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a way to trap hackers trying to take over a robot remotely.

Other Segments

"Jaws: The Story of a Hidden Epidemic"

29 MINS

Guests: Sandra Kahn, DDS, MSD, Orthodontist; Paul Ehrlich, PhD, Professor of Population Studies Emeritus, President of the Center of Conservation Biology, Stanford University. Scientists who study skulls from thousands of years ago can tell you something surprising about our ancestors: they didn’t need orthodontists. Our ancestors, as a general rule, had great teeth: straight, strong, no crowding or impacted wisdom teeth or overbite. These days having perfect teeth without braces or some sort of dental work done is really rare in America. What changed?  Paul Ehrlich and Sandra Kahn explore that question in their new book, “Jaws: The Story of a Hidden Epidemic.” They claim that we, as industrialized humans, have a host of health problems because, from the time we’re born, we don’t force our jaws to work hard enough.

Guests: Sandra Kahn, DDS, MSD, Orthodontist; Paul Ehrlich, PhD, Professor of Population Studies Emeritus, President of the Center of Conservation Biology, Stanford University. Scientists who study skulls from thousands of years ago can tell you something surprising about our ancestors: they didn’t need orthodontists. Our ancestors, as a general rule, had great teeth: straight, strong, no crowding or impacted wisdom teeth or overbite. These days having perfect teeth without braces or some sort of dental work done is really rare in America. What changed?  Paul Ehrlich and Sandra Kahn explore that question in their new book, “Jaws: The Story of a Hidden Epidemic.” They claim that we, as industrialized humans, have a host of health problems because, from the time we’re born, we don’t force our jaws to work hard enough.