StarTalk Radio - The Power of Probability with Alex Cosoi
Episode Date: November 22, 2024What is the probability of our existence? Neil deGrasse Tyson and cohosts Chuck Nice and Gary O’Reilly learn about the probabilities all around us, the idea of risk, and how they factor into our own... security in the digital age with cybersecurity expert Alex Cosoi.NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://startalkmedia.com/show/the-power-of-probability-with-alex-cosoi/Thanks to our Patrons Ben Jackson, James Hall, XYZ, Rick Reyes, Brian Gilstrap, Jeffrey Silva, Simon Schwartz, Lori Thomas, Sally Sapp, Alberto.p, Kenneth W Miller, Richard Hart, Patience, Brent Fraliex, 4 Light Years Away, Michele Raiola, Tess Gleason, Connie Schreiber, Metthew Tucker, Hickory Ogle, and Aldeeep for supporting us this week. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
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You are alive against stupendous odds, and I take the posture that because of this, life should be cherished.
Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
This is StarTalk's special edition. Neil deGrasse Tyson here, your personal astrophysicist. And of course, we got Gary O'Reilly. Gary, former soccer pro,
sports commentator. Yep. Hi, Neil. And longtime co-host of StarTalk, Chuck Nice. What's going on, guys? Today's topic is one of my favorite, just as an educator, simply because it's where people
misthink things most often. And I feel extra responsible to try to get in there
and make it work for them. We're going to talk about probabilities. So Gary, it was your idea
to do this topic. I love the topic. I devoted a whole chapter to it in a recent book I published.
So I'm pretty fresh in commentary regarding it. But more specifically, where did you want to take
me on this? So probabilities, Neil, calculating risk gambling, call it what you will, we all do
it. Stand on a wobbly chair eat that
food in the fridge that's been there two weeks it's a gamble probabilities has its own branch
of mathematics yeah and it's intertwined into so much of our everyday lives risk and assessment
for insurance predicting extreme weather models uh which has been very, very important in the last few weeks.
It's baked into AI and especially that annoying predictive text program in my computer
that tells me what I should be typing and I hate it for that only.
It's probability that's used in cyberspace.
And we do without realizing have that baked in again.
And we'll get to that later on in the show when our guest, Alex Koshoi, he's Chief Security
Strategist at Bitdefender, the cybersecurity experts, and we'll open up what it's all about,
where it's going, what it's likely to look like going forward, and our approach to risk itself.
So having said that, Neil, let's find out more about what happens when a bunch of physicists turn up in Las Vegas.
Let me preface this by saying, back in the 1980s, my community of physicists, the American Physical
Society, the APS, have annual meetings. And one of them was scheduled for San Diego. San Diego,
especially of late, is a big convention town. Comic-Con, the most famous of the world's
Comic-Cons takes place there. And the whole city sort of adjusts for it. There's a convention center and everything.
Anyhow, the community of physicists had booked hotels and was ready. And it turned out there
was a snafu where the hotel reservations failed for some reason, and I don't remember why.
So here's this convention that was supposed to happen, and it can't happen. So what do you do?
to happen and it can't happen. So what do you do? Well, the MGM Grand, then the MGM Marina in Vegas says, we'll take you. We are the largest hotel in the country. We can take you on short notice.
So the APS pivoted to Vegas, pivoted. And so that year's convention was in Vegas where people give
talks and their public talks and professional talks and this sort of thing.
All right.
A lot of breakout rooms.
It's where we sort of reconnect,
especially in an era before there was much emailing going on.
It's a geek.
It's a geek fest.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Physics geek fest.
Well,
a week later,
there was a headline.
This is after the conference.
Physicists in town, lowest casino take ever.
The American Physical Society has been asked to never return to the city.
That's great.
And so you can ask, well, did the physicists sort of know the odds and play the odds?
No, they just didn't.
Didn't play.
Because here it is.
It is the only activity where the people tell you, we are legally cheating you.
Now, we just want you to know this. When you come in, the reason why we say good luck is because we already win.
And the great thing is, Chuck, when you get a little bit of a run going,
if that ever happens, they see you and they bring you free drinks.
Well, I was going to say, any place that brings you free drinks, there's a trap somewhere.
There's nobody that says, hey, just drink up all my liquor.
And yeah, and that's all.
We're good.
No.
So no.
Here's a cabinet.
Like I have some,
I had a party where my best friend at the time opened up my cabinet and took out a bottle of the McAllen 30 year old Scott.
Right.
Which I don't share with anybody.
Okay.
And proceeded to pour off my Mcallan to my other friends.
And I went around and picked up the glass.
What the hell are you doing?
This is how you don't get to do this.
So anybody giving you free liquor is a catch.
That's all there is to it.
So that lets you know what Vegas is up to.
Nice to know you've let that go, Chuck.
Yeah.
Chuck is still in therapy for many things.
Yeah, many things.
That is one of them yeah so i thought i'd look a little more deeply into this only to discover that if you look at various
branches of mathematics yeah right of which there are many but let me list a few let's go in sort of
historical order there's sort of geometry, geo, geometry means earth measurement, by the way.
Yeah.
From, I guess that would be Greek, geometry, earth measurement.
You have geometry, you have arithmetic, you have algebra.
Which is the terrorist version of mathematics.
Algebra is that.
I'm sorry.
Just move on. Let's keep moving.
Algebra. We keep going. You can get to calculus. There's trigonometry. Whole branches of math that
we remember, even if you're part of the walking wounded of those classes, we remember
these from perhaps as early as middle school, certainly high school. If you sequence these,
do you realize all of those branches of math were discovered, invented before it occurred to anyone
to take the average of numbers.
Okay.
Oh, interesting.
I see what you're saying.
Okay.
Yes.
That's weird.
That is.
That's weird when you think about it.
So here are these numbers.
You add them together, divide by the total.
Somebody had to do that first, okay?
That didn't happen until, when did I i have late 18th century long after calculus
newton had calculus in the bag okay by the late 1600s early 1700s calculus people and now someone
later on says hmm let me sum these numbers together and divide and see if that means anything. Well, that's early statistics.
Right. And there are books as late as the 1800s that believed, these are official math books,
that described how you can influence the outcome of a certain set of probabilities,
can influence the outcome of a certain set of probabilities because they believed that was the case because probability and statistics was not yet properly formulated as an authentic and
bona fide branch of mathematics right point is why is that so how is it that people we in our
species can say we need calculus and there's no probability.
Okay.
There must be some,
something absent in our brain wiring that prevents us from thinking natively
in this space.
Yeah.
It's,
it's,
it's called heuristic hubris.
It's that's who we are.
Because outcomes are what we want them to be.
Right.
Not what the math says and we still do
that we still do that we still do it to this day are we not hardwired neil to calculate risk as a
survival mechanism well okay so if you speak with sort of evolutionary biologists yeah uh they will
frequently and i think without much debate tell you that we do make certain assessments.
Yeah.
For example, if this will take us to an aspect of how the brain works, but consider there's something that repeats multiple times and you learn that and it hurts you.
Yeah.
Then you say, well, let me not do that again.
So then you don't and then you avoid it. Then you say, well, let me not do that again. So then you don't, and then you avoid it.
So this is simple.
So this is the act of how repeated occurrences decide for you what the future is going to be.
All right?
And this matters for survival.
My favorite survival fact is how we put order on things, even if there's no order there.
That has extraordinary consequences.
Let's look at how it might have begun.
So we're in the Serengeti, and you don't want to get eaten by a lion.
And there's the grass, you know, the amber grass is blowing in the breeze.
And you say to yourself, I wonder if there's a lion there in fact i think
there is let me go check yeah yeah right okay this will summarily remove sort of the curiosity gene
in because you don't you don't get to have children to be curious.
If it is a lion.
If it is a lion.
You don't get to have curious children to the extent that curiosity is inherited.
Okay, so it turns out we are better off thinking there's a lion in the grass.
Right.
Whether or not there is, and then going in the opposite direction,
than not thinking there's a lion in the grass, missing it, and having it eat us.
But consider that we think there's a lion in the brush, whether or not there is one,
and that's the genes that got protected.
Okay, so this is pattern recognition.
We will see patterns even if there isn't a pattern there.
We can put a set of random dots.
Right.
And you say, oh, I see this and I see that.
You must have done that on purpose.
Clouds.
I see it.
And your life experience overrides the mathematics of what just happened.
Or your life expectations or your life belief system overrides it.
The pattern recognition, Neil, is the probability that that will happen,
as you say, from experience. And we use this in sport a lot, from analyzing gameplay.
So let me bring this to the present. We have this feature in our brain wiring
to detect patterns, even if they aren't there, because that was in the interest of our survival.
We're not making those same decisions anymore about whether we might get eaten by a lion,
but that brain feature remains within us. And we see patterns in everything. And we think because
we see a pattern that the pattern is real. Even we think the absence of patterns is a pattern.
You had a roulette table. And I said, why do you keep betting on seven?
It's due.
It's due.
It's true.
And I said, how do you know it's due?
Because the roulette table shows you the previous 10 rolls, okay, spins, or the previous 20.
And you don't see a seven there.
It's due.
No, it's not due.
Take a freaking probability class.
Yeah. It's due. No, it's not due. Go take a fucking probability class.
Yeah.
It's not due the same way the Washington generals are not due to beat the Harlem Globetrotters.
Yeah.
How about that?
They play the Washington generals?
I don't know what they're called now.
I don't know. It's like 40 years ago.
Made up nine.
So this notion that because it hasn't happened recently, it's bound to happen in your next bet, is how casinos make money.
Casinos exist to exploit these frailties of the human brain wiring.
They exist for that purpose. But it goes back to the point you had about magicians.
The casinos know more about how you think than you do.
Yes.
And they manipulate that, obviously.
And it's completely manipulated.
And like Chuck said, they tell you that going straight up.
Hey, by the way, we're going to cheat you today.
Enjoy yourself.
Right.
Getting cheated.
Is that why they call Las Vegas lost lost wages lost wages yes yeah yeah and and
so by the way as a scientist we know how important probability is to separate your own bias on what
is going on in the world from what is objectively going on in the world so every year I was in school, we had some element of probability and statistics
taught related to the aspect of the sciences that we were addressing. So I would say all told,
I might've had eight years of probability and statistics. Yet, if you look at a school
curriculum, it's not there at all. No. At all. Now, will you grant me one conspiracy theory?
Go ahead.
Depends which one it is.
No.
See, Chuck believes in me.
He just says go out.
Go ahead.
Go for it.
If he doesn't like it, he's going to slam you down, but never mind.
Okay.
There it is.
You know the state lottery systems?
Yes.
Do you know how they get funding for that?
And what they, you know, there's tax levied on that.
Do you know where that money goes to typically?
Well, they tell you that it's for education.
Let's assume that's true.
Let's even assume that's true.
So it's for education.
And I said, oh, that's good.
Public education, you know, K through 12.
And then I looked at the curricula across the country of what is taught
and probability, if it's taught at all, is only an elective. It's not a fundamental part of the
math curriculum. And so it occurred to me that as long as they don't teach probability in school,
you are susceptible to playing the lottery.
Which funds the school.
Which funds the school.
Playing for your education.
If they talk probability, it could be the end of the state lottery system.
Well, yeah, because anybody who knows something about probability does not play the lottery. As a matter of fact, my father used to tell me, take a dollar a day the dollar you would play the lottery
start right now and just take that everyday dollar and put it in the bank and through
compound interest uh it will take 20 years but you will hit the lottery
that's good yeah people trying to assess their health or their security based on risk, risk factors.
And I think in the book, there are people who smoke knowing that there's a risk of cancer.
Yeah.
And I think if you're an active smoker, there's a one in eight chance that your tombstone will say died of lung cancer.
that your tombstone will say died of lung cancer.
And so then I thought, let me glorify that up a bit and say, okay,
instead of you just taking that risk, let's do it this way.
Today, everyone who lights up a cigarette, one in eight of them,
on that first puff, their head will explode and they'll fall over in a pile of blood on the pavement.
And if that is not you, you get to smoke for the rest of your life without cancer.
Would you take that risk?
What brand of cigarettes are we talking about?
The exploding kind.
The exploding kind. exploding. So, so what I tried to do in the book was rejigger the risk into something that might
be a little more tangible, a little more devastating for you to hear, even if the numerics
remain the same, just to try to get at the fact that our brain is not wired for this to happen.
So yeah, Gary, it's, uh, it's sad. Even I drive by casinos and it's like,
man, I'm sad for our brain wiring and for the education system that doesn't address that fact.
Drive past the casino, Neil, how often is the car park full?
Full all the time. Yeah. All the time. Yeah. That's why you gotta be an especially bad business person
to lose money
if you own a casino
or in a movie
where
George Clooney
turns up with some friends
Ocean's 11
12
13
14
15
20
whatever they're up to now
yeah the franchise
just keeps paying off.
I'm Jasmine Wilson, and I support
StarTalk on Patreon.
This is StarTalk with Neil deGrasse Tyson.
So, Neil, so neil i mean we're programmed we're hardwired but how do we get here what's the probability of actually us existing being alive being born now do you mean like having a mother like mine
and making it to adulthood or do you mean like being conceived at all?
Well, let's start with conception.
Oh, okay.
And then move through the laundry list.
Obviously, humans have no trouble making more humans, right?
Eight billion in the world.
We'll go to asymptote probably to 10 billion in the coming decades.
So having a person of any kind is not the issue here.
We can ask the question, what are the chances of you,
specifically you, Gary O'Reilly, having been born?
And so we look at your genetic code,
and a way to address that is how many possible configurations
of that genetic code exist wow
and you're the one that's you yes okay so you can do that now you know there's lots of ways
that they arrange and many of them you it makes a human but it's not entirely viable
where you have like three arms and two heads or whatever. So if you remove all the ones that create oddly different,
but still living humans, okay?
And so we talk about what we call a normal human.
There are different ways you can estimate this,
but we think it's one in a billion trillion trillion.
Wow.
That's not even a number.
What you just said, it's not even a number.
That's what a kid says, right?
It's a billion million trillion.
That's...
But there's a lot of configurations.
Point is the total number of humans who have ever been born.
Yeah.
You can estimate that is about a hundred billion.
Okay.
Just that's a round number, but that's about what it is.
So you can ask if a hundred billion humans have ever been born yet.
billion humans have ever been born yet we have the capacity to make a billion trillion trillion humans a vanishingly small fraction of all humans who could ever exist have ever been born interesting
so what are the chances of you showing up once again in this genetic code?
The answer is never.
It's never.
Yeah.
Okay?
Because of how much larger the total number of possibilities are compared to anything we will ever create on this earth.
So you are alive.
You, Gary O'Reilly, are alive against stupendous odds and i take the posture
in the book that because of this life should be cherished great and by the way even if you did
show up again in the genetic code there's no reason to think it would be you. No,
it would look exactly like you,
but we've done these experiments.
They're called twins.
We have identical DNA and you're not the same person.
You have independent thoughts.
Okay.
You even have different fingerprints turns out.
So the clone experiment doesn't require a machine to wonder how that's going to
turn out.
People said we shouldn't have clone machines because we'll clone people for their organs. And I'm thinking, do we do that with
twins today? Do we purposefully have twins to take out their organs? No. Why would we behave
any differently with a cloning machine than we do in the presence of twins that already walk among
us? Point is, you're never going to get another Gary. And so armed with that information, that cosmic, that scientifically informed cosmic perspective, we should treat life as the most cherished thing on earth. And not enough people do, leading to all manner of misery and bloodshed and war and in this world.
and bloodshed and war and in this world and i wonder if people really knew the statistics of this if we treat each other more kindly and more considerably than we do depends on how much you
like war and bloodshed you know oh some people some people are into that you know not in their
own bloodshed that's right no that's the point It's so funny. You're such a scientist because you actually went at that from the DNA configuration perspective, which I find fascinating because I thought about this. take for me to get here and i looked up the average number of viable sperm in an ejaculate
which is somewhere around 200 million yeah yeah half a billion typically somewhere around there
or it could be yeah somewhere and that means that for just me in that one batch You're one in 200 million. I'm one in 200 million just in that one little batch.
Forget the other batches that we don't even want to say what happened to them.
You know, I'm just saying, like, you know, dad was once a teenager.
That's all I'm saying.
He was 117 you know but that alone gives you an idea of just how hard it is uh for a human being
to come to existence right and that's another another angle that probability takes you into
the rarity of who you are as an individual wow yeah. Yeah. So, yeah, Gary, did I hit all the points you were looking for?
Yeah.
I mean, the thing is, if we go and do every single one,
we are going to be here for another day.
All right.
So, Gary, where else are we going to take this?
All right.
So we look at our everyday lives, and without realizing it,
we are calculating, as we've discussed.
And it's kind of like baked into a number of things.
We are living our lives online.
Some people conduct a whole part of their life online.
They'll have maybe a dozen, 10 or so online accounts, which they manage, which means passwords,
which means protection, which means security, all those things.
And the probability of all the bad stuff,
probability of it being okay.
So I think what we need to do is speak to someone who's really at that cutting edge of cybersecurity.
And for that, we have our dear friends at Bitdefender, the cybersecurity experts,
and we have Alex Koshoi.
I couldn't believe that's how you pronounce it.
If I got it wrong, I'll stand in a corner.
He is their chief security strategist.
So this guy is a guy who doesn't just try and look after things.
He will go after botnets with Europol or Interpol and bring them down.
They're on a large-scale level as well as the personal level. So there's a whole
different range of how they operate, which I think could be very fascinating and add another
facet to how probabilities are entwined into our lives. Yeah, because lately when I choose a
password, it tries to tell me whether it's a good password or a bad password. And presumably there's some risk factor calculated to assess that.
Otherwise, why would it know anything at all?
Like one, two, three, four is a bad password.
I mean, there's information that you have, right?
That's in the public domain.
For instance, your birthday.
Maybe the probability of something bad happening is greater.
So we need to speak to that expert. And Neil, here is Alex.
Alex. Hey, welcome to StarTalk.
Hi, Neil. Hi, guys. Thank you.
Hey, you have the bad assest title of anybody ever.
It's made up. Nobody knows. It's just made up.
Chief. Give me the title again. Chief what? Chief Security Strategist.
Chief Security Strategist. We should salute, shouldn't we?
So Alex, let me start with a couple of questions here. The word risk is related to
probability and statistics. People think they understand risk. Generally,
they don't. Or what they do understand is not the full story, typically, but they're making
decisions about their lives, about their health, their wealth, and their security based on their
understanding of risk. So Alex, in what way does the probability of a cyber attack fold into your decisions
and your job?
Yeah, this is, as you were talking
earlier, because I've been listening,
the probability of somebody
being attacked,
I would say it's biased.
From my perspective, it's
100%.
Everybody will be hacked
or attacked or scammed
at one point or another.
But we also did
a study a few years back
and all the respondents in total,
76% of them
said, I don't think
somebody will target me. I don't have
enough money. Why would I be of any
interest? Super false.
That's not how things are going in the
cybercrime industry they're practically attacking everybody and it's probability and percent of who
actually says and accepts that link and clicks on that button and does the next step so i'm pretty
sure gary neil chuck you've been targeted by a scam at least once in the past two years.
I put $10,000 on that.
Yeah, of course.
Can I have that $10,000?
I've actually targeted people in scams myself.
I know it's a little bit of a prank.
But the thing is, there's a sophistication to the scam.
Because if someone comes in, and this has happened to me, they take a very small amount to begin with. And if you don't
notice it and let it skip through your bank statement,
they come back in and go grab.
No, there's
an opportunity to that. So they tell you
you can invest
in this particular business.
You put like, you know,
$10 and you receive a return
$50. And then
they tell you if you put more, you'll get more. So you
put 10 grand, nothing comes back. How about that? Wow. Okay, so it's a con game. It's not just a
cyber attack. All in cyber, there's somebody has to communicate with you,
gain your confidence. And then so this is just another con game then.
It's a shell game. You know, you're moving those shows
around, there's a whatever the stone underneath.
It is, but all these things happen now in the cyber world.
So yeah, well, WhatsApp, Telegram, Instagram, Facebook,
things that you actually use every day. And these platforms
are actually challenging you into spending more and more hours in front of them.
So when the scammer shows up in your platform,
you already believe that this has already been vouched.
It has been checked if it's safe or not.
So you already have a 50% bias to do it, to fall for it.
So our familiarity with these platforms,
with our time spent
on a screen,
that familiarity breeds
the complacency.
Is that what you're saying?
I'm sorry, guys.
I hate to interrupt,
but as you can see,
I got to answer this call.
It's potential spam.
How about that? So you know that. It's just coming in right now so you know that
clearly that's a scam i hope somebody tried to get something from me yeah the idea is that when
you received like an anonymous call from a number you don't know or an email from somebody you don't
really know you're like yeah it's probably a scam i'm gonna ignore it like you have your phone with potential scam but when you receive these ads directly to a platform that you trust you've been
using it for years the chances of you being biased and ignore neil as you're saying the
probability of being scammed you're you pass the bias are so much higher. Like, oh, so I received this ad on Instagram to buy a ticket to some concert.
Okay.
Maybe Taylor Swift, because it's super in the news right now.
And it's so much cheaper than the actual prices.
And it's on this Instagram or Facebook or whatever.
You'll buy it.
Oh, wow.
And if you read the news, it's about at least a million or more on every concert.
A million dollars?
Yep.
On every concert?
Per country.
Per country, per concert, yeah.
That's a very good business.
Yep.
So now a lot of bands use one particular outlet.
We all spend our times doing PhDs and research. so can i ask what why do they want your emails like i get a lot of emails from i i just delete
them because there's either nothing in the body or it's a link. And I'm like, okay,
everybody who knows me knows I'm not opening any links. So I just, I just delete it. Why would you
want to get my email list? Or you hear people say, oh, I got hacked. Don't, you know, my email
list got hacked. What is the value in an email list okay so if i get a single
email address okay i can search known databases of passwords associated with that email address
oh my god that companies or other leaked databases okay so i have your email address
and now i have a list of passwords that you use on different websites. Oh, what?
I can go further. Anyone else scared right now?
With those passwords.
Dude, you're freaking us out. Alex is freaking us out.
Oh my God. This is terrible.
Alex, shut up now. I don't want to hear anything more from you. I'd rather live in my blissful.
If you want, you can give me your email addresses and
i can do the search for you that's no no no no no you can't you've already said trust me right
now you want my email address so wait a minute first they get your email then they get the
passwords and what else can they do i mean what's the next step well there are many steps later on
because i can see if these passwords are still working so getting into your various accounts
i can also see if you have the same password to a different email address that i don't know about
like your business email or your yahoo email that you used 10 years ago and you didn't change a password
and I can see all your previous girlfriends
from when you were 17.
How about that?
There are so many possibilities.
If you work in a company and email and passwords work,
I can use those to connect to your, I don't know, VPN account,
launch a ransomware attack, make some billions out of it.
Okay.
Mental note, change all email passwords.
Every password I must change.
Change it every day.
Every day.
Yeah.
We see hacks.
We see data leaks and breaches.
And it seems to be one a week almost.
And I know you do this.
You fight these bad actors daily and thank
god the people like you are out there but are we not now kind of desensitized and people are to the
point where it's going to happen so what the hell have we lost that sensitivity to the impact that
this could make uh yes but not with the right mindset for this conclusion.
Because, yes, there are news of cyber attacks literally every day.
So when I wake up and read the news, at least one hack per day, right?
So people are reading this and they're like, yada, yada, yada, yada.
Not going to happen to me.
That's unfortunately the bias and the conclusion of having being desensitized by this news. when it happens and i've been talking to hundreds of victims they're like i had no idea this is going to
happen to me you know i just came up with an idea that i'm sure somebody else has had to have
but why isn't there a service where i subscribe i have a master password,
but then that service changes my password on a daily basis.
And all I need to do is have the one password to get into them.
Yes, these services exist. They don't change your password every day because you don't have to do that.
Okay.
It's recommended to change your password, I would say,
maybe every three months,
the password that you use on these accounts.
But these password managers, this is how they're called,
they will do what, when you subscribe to a service, you don't have to think about, okay, what password should I use?
Should it be long, short, numbers?
So these are going to suggest a password.
They're going to save it for you.
You don't even need to know it.
And every time you need to log into that service, the password manager will fill to save it for you you don't even need to know it and every time
you need to log into that service the password manager will fill in the password for you and
some of the browsers already have this functionality built in so that's fine there are other uh
dedicated software that they're going to keep this passwords list super protected with super
encryption but yes the idea is that you remember one single master password and everything
else is being taken care of because for us every you know regular people let's be honest okay so
now in 2024 we might have an education of this but i bet you we have accounts that have been created
in 2010 we stopped using them in 2012. They're still active.
The passwords are still poor.
I don't know, 1234, for instance.
And there is information in there
that can still cause us trouble if it goes out.
Oh, cool.
I've got a different angle here.
If password hacking occurs because someone gets access to a file of previous passwords,
then they're not actually decoding your password. They're not actually figuring out your password
from scratch. So why is there any difference at all between a simple password and a complex password if they're not decoding your password for its complexity?
That is correct.
And that's the other reason why you should have a complex password, because there are different ways into finding out a person's password for a particular account.
One of them would be, you know, just brute forcing, trying all the passwords.
Another technique would be password spraying,
which means trying the most common passwords
on a particular account
that are known to be used by people.
And in many cases, this actually functions
because for particular languages,
statistically, people use similar passwords.
Test 1.4, that's quite similar. From 1 to test before that's quite similar
from one to nine that's quite similar i know in 2024 sounds stupid even nowadays we find these
passwords in reality my password is password don't never figure that one out yeah yeah yeah
somebody like uh from like the military uh like a high-end grade in the military, saying that I had a very simple password
because I thought they will never try that out
considering my job title.
It was a fake assumption.
So do you run algorithms
based on the probability
of a certain set of characters?
Yeah.
With every language, is that right?
Not necessarily the probability set of languages,
but also by words in that particular language. Yeah, would you have a language? Is that right? Not necessarily the probability set of languages,
but also by words in that particular language.
And also there are billions or hundreds of billions of passwords that already are in the public space or the public domain from previous hacks.
So you can make a statistic on that.
You can say, hey, 20% of the people use this password.
Let's try that on the first.
Wow.
And chances are it'll work, huh?
We know probability.
Criminals know probability.
So they will do their math first.
Damn.
Wow.
You want to talk about using math for terrible purposes.
You can use it for many things.
You know that joke with a very important mathematician that received the Nobel Prize and he had to fly to get it.
And he was so afraid to fly because he thought somebody would be
with a bomb in the plane and he wanted to reach the destination.
But eventually, at the event, he shows up.
Everybody knew about his fear.
So they asked him like, hey, we knew your fear about a bomb exploding.
So why are you here?
Well, how did you come?
Like, well, I took a bomb with me.
What were the odds of two bombs being in the same place?
No, you can't joke.
No, all that joke is it's older than TSA, right?
Because before they checked for bomb.
Oh, wow.
So, Alex, we're in October 2024 right now,
but last month there was the National Institute of Standards
and Technology, that's the U.S. National Institute,
that stated, and this was an article that was written in Forbes,
so it's a reputable news outlet.
But complicated passwords can make you less safe.
Yes.
Now we're talking about how to make complicated,
different characters and different cases and numbers
and all sorts of things.
But why now complication is an issue?
Because otherwise it's password one, two, three.
Yeah, there are two ways of defining a complicated password.
And one of the ways is actually okay.
The other way is not really that okay.
So by complicating a password, by making it longer with alpha characters, numbers, and everything else,
that's going to make the password super hard to remember
so unless you're using a password manager it means that you're going to have to write it down and so
on which basically sets in the mindset of you know just giving up just giving up putting the same
password because it took you so long to create it or just bring them down to make it easier for you
however you can make long passwords without doing all these characters,
unless the website or the service forces you to, by having a passphrase.
I went to the moon and back in a car.
That's pretty safe, okay?
Or an even longer phrase, something that's easier to remember.
But I think NIST and also our recommendation is to use a password manager that's going to make
your life a whole easier and also use a multi-factor authentication or two-factor
authentication so besides the password you can use something else or even eliminate the password at
all you can you can use all these things you're going to have a better peace of mind by that
yeah in fact I have a couple of websites that don't use passwords.
Exactly.
And it's two-factor authentication.
And don't you love going to those websites?
Yes, it's beautiful.
Okay, so Neil has quite a distinctive voice,
and he's in the public domain.
Are we now at the point where we no longer use voice recognition
as the password?
That was like in style for like six months, a couple of years ago.
Are we out of that phase?
Because there's just too much AI coming along to replicate.
Yeah, I don't think voice recognition can be still considered a way of authentication.
And even face recognition, that's not going to work any longer. I was in a
meeting with some of my colleagues, and one of them was on vacation, but he was showing up in
the meeting on Zoom. It was the fake AI, somebody was playing a joke, which was very nice because
he seemed a bit younger. He probably had photos from a previous training, but that was, it was scary for us because we know the possibilities, but it was very nice to have.
Wait, wait, wait, wait. You just said you had a business meeting and someone duped you into thinking an AI version of an attendee.
Yes, but it was a colleague. It was a colleague. However, there is, yeah, it was a colleague it was a colleague however there is yeah yeah it was on purpose
we knew what's going on we were just analyzing it and it's like oh this is so cool he looks so
close by but i remember reading an article uh quite last week about a scam in china where
somebody paid 55 million dollars because he was in a zoom meeting with, uh, I don't know, 13 or
14 other people from the organization, his manager, CEO, CFO, everybody was
saying it's safe.
He did it.
He was the only real person in there.
Everybody else was deep fake.
Oh my God.
That's the level we're talking.
That is.
Yeah. I is, yeah.
I have a question,
and plus we got to sort of think of landing this plane.
In the old days,
a computer virus was really just mischief.
People just trying to see if they could harass you in one way or another.
There wasn't much financial motive behind it.
Correct.
And so it was a nuisance.
Now, this kind of hacking always seems to have a financial objective.
What is the total money earned by bad actors?
So I would say a total would be what a total last year was $1.5 trillion.
What?
There's a T in there?
No, we're talking about ransomware and other scams.
Yeah.
These numbers vary.
I mean, if last year was $1.5, this year can easily go to $2 or $3 trillion.
We're talking about scams that target consumers.
Right.
I mean, that's a national debt for some countries yes well great like i said these are just money that are earned
by cyber criminals these are not money that count in your financial loss as a victim because if
you're a company when you pay that's one number but you also have a loss in reputation. You have a loss of productivity.
You have a loss of, you know, yeah.
So I, God, I can't believe I've been telling my son that he should continue to study to
be a biochemist.
What the heck?
He's in the wrong business.
He's in the wrong business.
I got one other thing I have to like, just get clear in my head.
Well, I got one other thing I have to just get clear in my head.
So that means in your business, you're worth $1.5 trillion to this world if you can prevent that from happening. If you can prevent it, right.
Okay, that's fact one.
Fact two.
It would protect everybody, which is not the case.
Okay, but here's my thing.
If someone retains you to protect their organization,
then they're putting all their trust in you.
So maybe the organization won't get hacked,
but suppose you get hacked.
You're a single point failure of that entire system
because we're all entrusting you in this one,
what do you call it, bottleneck of trust.
Yes.
That is called supply chain attack.
So basically when you're targeting a customer,
you can actually target all the software
that they use in their organization.
So if we have a vulnerability,
that's going to affect most of our customers.
Yes, that is a correct statement.
So now why aren't you just, why are you a good guy?
Why don't you become Dr. Evil?
What the heck is your problem?
Yes, we get that question a lot.
You can make a lot more money on the dark side,
but then again, how will you sleep at night?
On a very expensive mattress, that's how.
That is correct.
Because I'm part of a trillion-dollar industry that I created.
So, Alex, you're chief security strategist.
Yes.
How much of your strategy is, oh, this is a supply chain bottleneck.
We have to get ahead of a story.
How many stories are you getting ahead of rather than putting out fires?
Oh, good point. Interesting. I think it's an equal amount, I would say, because yes,
there are some situations that you can actually prevent because you thought about it and you
that would happen and you make some plan. But then by working with your customers and victims and
having a lot of conversations with law enforcement,
they're going to come up with stories
that you were like,
whoa, I'm an engineer.
I never thought of that scam.
So you start to figure out,
you know, what can you build
from a technological point of view
to prevent that?
So I would say it's a fair equal amount.
So, you know, I think we would be remiss
if we didn't leave our viewers
and listeners having you at our disposal at least one or two of the top things they should do to protect themselves from a cybersecurity incident. That will be like the main thing. Get the password manager, make him take care of your passwords
and try to remember all those accounts
that I'm pretty sure are connected
to your present accounts,
but you no longer use them.
They're still active.
They're still there.
They can still back hacked
if they're not already, right?
And second, still for consumers,
minimize your footprint,
your internet footprint.
Don't post stupid stuff, okay?
Now you tell me.
I'm pretty happy I'm a dinosaur, 41 years, so I don't have online all the stupid shit I did.
Oh, don't post stupid things that you did.
Exactly.
Oh, I got it. No, no, I don't do that.
And for enterprises, there is a wide range of uh tips
and tricks but the idea is that since ransomware is the number one threat right now make sure you
have backups and make sure you have systems that are going to log things that happen in your
organization so when we come in and say let's see how you were hacked. If you have blogs, we're going to tell you how. If you don't, we're
going to say, well, it happened.
Wow.
All right. Well, those are lessons
for the ages, really.
Actually, for the current age.
Exactly.
They're lessons for the next couple of years.
Maybe even that.
Maybe even that. So Alex, great having you on
StarTalk Special Edition on a topic that we all care about.
Gary, thanks for putting that together.
My pleasure.
Thank you, Alex.
Good.
All right.
And Chuck, thanks for doing nothing.
Someone hug Chuck.
Chuck, thanks for showing up.
Okay.
This is Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist. As always, I bid you
to keep looking up.