Distinguishing between movement and progress, in AI, security, and more

Distinguishing between movement and progress, in AI, security, and more

Author: BKBT Productions April 20, 2026 Duration: 44:39
Are tech industries selling us a problems they invented? Ryan Clarque, CSO at Black Rifle Coffee Company [https://www.blackriflecoffee.com/], doesn't flinch at the big provocations. When Claude's Mythos model showed up in every LinkedIn feed promising a software apocalypse, Ryan's take was blunt: the basics were broken before Mythos, and they'll still be broken after it. The real question about a powerful AI model, it's whether you've built a program capable of doing anything about them when it does. But the conversation doesn't stop at hype-busting. Ryan has quietly done something the industry insists can't be done: built a lean, two-person security operation that ditched the big-ticket SIEM vendors, took control of its own telemetry, and outperformed programs with ten times the headcount and budget. When one of those vendors found out, they sent their "heavy hitter" to prove Ryan wrong, who left agreeing Ryan didn't need them. What emerges is a portrait of a practitioner who learned to distinguish progress from movement — and who thinks most of the industry is confusing the two. The procurement cycle, the Gartner roadmap, the sequence of investments you're told you must make: Ryan's argument is that inertia dressed up as strategy has left small security teams demoralized and over-leveraged, and that the fix is less about budget and more about the willingness to build your own way out. And then, at the end of a week of planes and conferences, Ryan says something that reframes all of it. The reason he doesn't chase the car or the watch or the title isn't asceticism — it's that working in security means observing the worst of what people do to each other, and the only way to stay functional is to invest hard in what actually holds. Time. Trust. People who remember how you made them feel. Mentioned: * Cal Newport on Mythos vs other LLMs in finding software vulnerabilities [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-8stQCeQiE]

There’s a lot of noise in the world of technology talk, but Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks cuts through it with a focus on the people behind the products and the societal currents shaping our digital landscape. Hosts George K and George A steer conversations that are less about specs and hype, and more about real-world consequences. You’ll hear them dig into topics like the messy rollout of new AI tools, the often-invisible backbone of digital infrastructure, and why communities adopt or reject certain technologies. This podcast regularly features guests from various fields who offer unvarnished opinions on what’s genuinely functional and what’s fundamentally flawed in our tech-saturated lives. The discussions move beyond simple commentary to challenge the standard narratives promoted by the tech industry, examining the cultural and social ripples of every new development. It’s a show for anyone who feels that technology coverage often misses the human element-the frustrations, the adaptations, and the ethical dilemmas. Tune in for a grounded, critical, and consistently engaging dialogue that connects the dots between code and culture. This production from BKBT Productions lives up to its name, getting down to the brass tacks of how technology is built and used, with a bare-knuckle honesty that’s increasingly rare.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Bare Knuckles and Brass Tacks
Podcast Episodes
How Expertise becomes a blind spot in technology development [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 40:45
Graeme Rudd spent years taking emerging technology into austere environments and watching it fail. He assessed over 350 technologies for a Department of Defense lab. The pattern was consistent: engineers solved technical…
Getting Addicted to the Process and Chasing Excellence [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 35:10
What happens when you go all in and bet on yourself? Taylor McClatchie, professional Muay Thai fighter with ONE Championship, joins the show to share how she did just that. She spent a decade in reproductive science, wor…
Re-thinking How AI Can Actually Drive Business Value [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 36:13
Eric Pilkington joins the show to cut through the noise around artificial intelligence and deliver some hard truths about what's actually working—and what's just expensive theater. AI isn't new; it's been around for 70+…
Confronting Big Tech's Abuses as a Question of Human Rights [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 44:36
Hannah Storey, Advocacy and Policy Advisor at Amnesty International [https://www.amnesty.org], joins the show to talk about her new brief that reframes Big Tech monopolies as a human rights crisis, not just a market comp…
Can Ethical AI Democratize Therapy and Higher Quality Care? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 57:03
Clinical psychologist, Dr. Sarah Adler, joins the show this week to talk about why "AI Therapy" doesn't exist, but is bullish on what AI can help therapists achieve. Dr. Adler is a clinical psychologist and CEO of Wave […
So, Are We Gonna Cure Cancer or Just Double Down on Mining Attention? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 36:59
This week George K and George A switch formats to tackle the AI revolution's messiest questions—from autonomous coding agents to digital actresses and deepfake scams. The hosts examine what happens when innovation moves…