The Chris Voss Show - The Chris Voss Show Podcast – CBP searched 30,000 devices, Facebook, Google Changes & Other Tech News Aug 28, 2019
Episode Date: August 28, 2019CBP searched 30,000 devices, Facebook, Google Changes & Other Tech News Aug 28, 2019...
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hi folks this is Voss here from thechrisvossshow.com thechrisvossshow.com
hey coming here with another great day oh my gosh what is it it's Wednesday
on August 29th 2019 you know what that means people the 30th is tomorrow
no it's hump day so uh happy humping That's what I'm telling you. A lot of you work right now
going, I can't help the work, Chris. It's against the office rules. Or at least that's what my
manager said when she caught me with Jane on the copier. Yeah. Don't do Janie on the copier. That's
not sanitary. That's not good. It's not healthy. Get a hotel room or something like most guys in
the middle of the day. You go get a hotel room, you bang your coworker, then you not good. It's not healthy. Get a hotel room or something like most guys in the
middle of the day. You go get a hotel room, you bang your coworker, then you go home. Anyway,
um, you know, or, you know, vice versa, whichever. I don't think I made that, uh, sexually applicable
to he or she. So whatever, man, enjoy your hump day. That's all I'm saying. Just, just enjoy it.
Savor the hump. It's going weird already. We just got started.
So anyway, uh, savor, savor the hump. I think that's my new, I think it's going to be a new
podcast. I'm going to start, uh, in a mastermind group. I think I'm going with that. A life coaching. How to Master the Hump.
That's by Chris Voss.
There'll be like a book series.
Maybe I'm thinking like a seminar, webinar.
How to Master Your Inner Hump.
Dude, I think I have like an Anthony Robbins
multi-billion dollar fucking franchise
I just came up with.
Mastering your internal hump.
For many of you, you've already mastered that,
but it's more external than anything.
Well, there's a lot of people that do a lot of things
in their brain that they just waste their time with.
Let's say that in pulling themselves.
So anyway, let's get back into news.
Holy shit, Chris, get us into news.
So news of the day, if you're getting a chance to tune in,
be sure to go to thecbpn.com or Chris Voss Podcast Network
to sign up for the seven different podcasts we do.
Lots of really cool stuff going on there.
Be sure to refer to your friends, tell them to sign up for the show.
And if you get a chance, review the show, Give us some good marks on iTunes and other places.
We would certainly appreciate and we would love you forever and ever. Or not. I don't know. You
make the call. Anyway, guys. So first off, we usually check in with ProductHunt.com to see if there's any sort of good, interesting things.
Kind of a boring day for me, at least in my opinion.
There's one thing that stuck out called Screen Space Promo.
It's the number five product of the day.
It's kind of cool if you have an iPhone app
and you want to make it look really cool and snazzy,
like you paid a studio
promo to do it. They have like these pre-made templates you can do. So you're making your app
look really awesome. Cause let's face it when you're just looking at an app and it's just
really flat, you're just kind of like, eh, this is another app. But you know, if you can do all
these cool sort of airline swing-in sort of pictures,
or I don't know what the fuck they call it,
but you can just zoom.
Then they're exciting.
Like, oh, my God, look at that.
It's probably the best app I've ever seen.
Next to Facebook or Instagram.
So, yeah, I didn't see a lot on ProductHunt.com.
It's not their fault.
It's the assholes that submit.
Why don't you submit some interesting stuff, folks?
This isn't cutting it.
So anyway, what else do we have on the news today we'll talk about
and all that good stuff?
The world's going to hell, as always.
Checking in.
I can't even find the article I'm looking for now.
Here it is.
Investing.com is reporting this morning the U.S. yield curve inverts further.
30-year yields hit a new record low.
Now, if you're familiar with the U.S. yield curve inversion is,
it's usually a tip-off to a coming recession.
Let's just say the last time this happened was in 2007, and it usually proceeds as an indicator to coming
recessions. So kind of dangerous. We're due for one. No economy can run hot forever without either
out of control inflation or having a cool down period, which is what the Federal Reserve's job
is to do. So pretty
interesting there. You might want to save your money. You may not want to be buying that Porsche
or that sports car, that Tesla for your pool boy or mistress. You might want to hold off on that,
maybe dial it back in like a Geo Metro or something. You may want to save your pennies.
This might be a bad one because these Chinese tariffs are pretty bad and I think from
what we saw in the G7 summit I'm not being political here hang with me but I think what
we're seeing in the G7 summit with the Chinese they figured out that this president may not be
here in a year and a half and I think they've decided to wait him out and I think the biggest
problem that they have with the tariffs not not being political again, but just strategic and mindful of the financial
aspects of the nature of the market, it's going to be really hard to go back to them and go,
hey man, I know I was a real asshole when I put those tariffs on you. Can we just go back to the
way it used to be? You ever do that with an old relationship with your with a girlfriend or boyfriend you're
like you're like hey man i'm sorry i was a real asshole and uh i was going through a bad time and
share it with you man and uh just thinking can we just wash those times i stabbed you
stole your stuff burn your clothes in the jaguar out front
and can i uh can we just go back to the way it used
to be where it's all lovey and shit you can't ever go back baby that's a that's the thing of life
even when you go back you know your child at home it's just never the same just never the same um
so anyway uh that's where we're at right now. So I don't think, and right now the farmers are freaking the hell out.
They've started finally waking up and they're freaking out.
One of the unions, I think it was in Iowa, came out and said they are no longer supporting people that support tariffs.
Let's put it that way.
And they're getting killed.
The bankruptcies are going off the chart.
We're starting to see increases to our prices for purchasing goods.
And that's not going
to help. And the economy is going to cool, and there's probably going to be layoffs, and there's
people being out of work. So my advice to you is save your money, be careful how you spend.
Of course, that usually causes or helps contribute to recession when people get worried about the
economy and consumer sentiment is down the consumer
confidence. I think it's the consumer confidence index. When that goes down, that's not good
because consumers pull their money out of the market. They kind of tend to sit on it. Therefore,
the economy cools and the tariffs are doing that in and of itself. So anyway, just talking about
the economy, how's it going and everything else. Let's talk about some other things that are going on in tech news. Telegram has raised $1.7 billion in 2018, told investors
it would deliver Gram, which is its cryptocurrency offering that it's coming out with. Facebook has
kind of fallen on, well, they've kind of, you know, they've seen they're going to get some
blowback from regulators and other people. But Telegram, you're familiar with the app, is charging ahead
with their own digital currency and says they will have a launch by October 31st, 2019, according to
the New York Times. Next up, we have hands-on on a gadget. You can go to Engadget and check out
their news there. With the Fitbit Versa 2, it's an Alexa-enabled AMOLED smartwatch
with a upgraded processor, Spotify integration,
available in order for September 15th for $200.
And they also announced, according to Verge,
a premium subscription service for $9.999 a month
or $79 a year with detailed health reports,
contextual advice games challenges and
more you know because that's what i needed another fucking 9.99 monthly subscription service
like seriously you know i i kind of get a little giggle out of these banks now these online banks
where this is their angle where they go where, where they go, you know what?
You probably are subscribed to like 5,999 monthly subscriptions. You have so many,
you don't even know. Like sometimes I've tried to clean them up myself too. They're a pain in the ass. Like it's like whack-a-mole. Like you're like, Hey, 999 came out of my fucking checking
account again. What company was that? And then sometimes they don't have the name of the company.
The name of the company that charges you is different than the name of the app
or whatever the fuck you're using.
And you're just like, hey, man, what was that?
And so there you go.
Another subscription, if you like Fitbits.
Me, I thought wearables were pretty much dead,
but every now and then I come across someone wearing an Apple Watch,
and I go, you're still here?
They still make you?
I don't know, man.
That whole thing just went off a cliff.
Wearables, ooh, they're so hot.
And then, like, not. And it's, like, went off a cliff. Wearables, ooh, they're so hot. And then, like, not.
And it's, like, right off a cliff,
which I kind of predicted, actually, back in the day.
It just didn't seem like they were making any sort of traction.
Part of it was just how much stuff you could put into these units.
And at first, they were kind of cool because people were like,
hey, it should have a bunch of shit in the watch.
But it still struggled to kind of achieve that uh dick tracy sort of uh effect
that i think we all hope for we could phone our watch we're gonna be like hey dick tracy
i don't know i didn't tell you how much i paid attention to my dick tracy comics all i knew is
that fucking watch was cool and uh you want to one as a kid but uh one of the biggest problems
that i've ever had with wearables
is they're so small, the batteries in them are so small,
you've got to constantly charge the batteries.
And, like, we've got, I think, a couple wearables watches
kicked around the office we reviewed over the years.
You know, you've got to take it off every now and then and charge it.
And that's a lot of work, man.
I mean, come on, man.
I've got enough to do every day.
You know what they need to do? They need to make like a, they need to make like a hand mold where when you're
laying in bed, I'm not sure if you guys are going to see this on the video, but you're laying in bed
like this, you know, on your back or something. And then your hand goes into a mold and you still
got the watch on it. And then that watch sits right on a charger and then you can charge it.
That or maybe we can just cut open our wrist and insert a battery pack in there.
So it'll automatically charge.
And then just every now and then we got to shove a wire in our elbow or something, a plug,
so we can charge the battery that charges the watch.
Maybe that's what the
future is. The future, people. Anyway, so that's with Fitbit. So if you're a big Fitbit fan,
I think they lead the market when it comes to wearables. Them or Apple Watch, no one cares
about Apple Watch, so there's that. This is a very interesting story. I've always wondered where this
thing was going to go. This is from the New York Times. Michael Isaac is reporting it. The U.S. government has charged Anthony Lewandowski, he's a former star engineer at Google
and Uber, with 33 counts of theft and attempted theft of Google trade secrets. I remember this
when this first came out years and years ago. And this guy jumped ship and took the technology with
them, or at least he was accused of that.
And it looks like finally the criminal side of it has caught up to him.
I know there was a civil case where there was a lawsuit going back and forth.
Hey, don't steal company, you know, secrets from your company and take them someplace else,
especially if it's not in your contract.
That's theft.
So there you go.
So it looks like he's got a criminal trial
he's going to have to deal with. It was kind of interesting. I believe it was, wasn't it Waymo?
Yeah. Yeah. It was Waymo and Uber and Trade Secrets and yada yada. And yeah. So don't steal
shit and you won't go to jail. for the most part google's going to shut down
hire google hire i guess it's a job application tracking system for small to medium-sized business
it launched two years ago in september of 2020 that's kind of weird isn't it we're going to
shut down this app because it's not working but we're going to do it in a year.
This is according to tech crunch.
I've now you can look up their thing.
Uh,
add another one according to Greg come Peric to the Google cemetery.
He says,
which is pretty cool.
I like how he worded that.
Add one to the Google cemetery right now.
They got a fucking giant cemetery,
man.
It's huge.
Like, I don't know. I think there's more products that work or no, hold on more products that Google has killed.
Then there are products that are successful by Google. I don't know. It's, it's kind of like
Trump's bankrupt businesses. You're like, wow, you, you had more failures than you had successes.
Now keep in mind, it's good to have more failures than successes,
but sometimes you just kind of wonder, like,
how much cash are you bleeding out, Google?
What's going on?
So this is kind of interesting, too.
I don't know if you guys use this.
Pelotons, if you're familiar with them, they make these bikes,
these pricey in-home bicycles and treadmills with on-demand fitness classes because God knows you don't want to go to the gym, be seen by those people, be oogled by the creepy guys.
You're like, yeah, you look really good in those hot yoga pants.
What I always hate about the gym is there's like a slime you get there.
It's like a sweat slime and you can't get it the fuck off
like you have to you have to like i have to take one of those acid bleach baking soda baths you
know you ever seen those things where when they when they wear the like the special like nuclear
suits and they gotta scrub themselves with like a baking soda, acidic, whatever. Like that's how I, that's about the
only way you can get the shit off. And as soon as I go to the gym and I touch one of those things
that 5,000 people have touched that day, I get that slimy stuff on me and I hate it. I just hate
it. I think chicks don't mind it because they're, you know, they always got lotion and they got all
sorts of stuff they put on themselves to keep themselves young, which is cool. But I just don't mind it because they're you know they always got lotion and they got all sorts of stuff they put on themselves to keep themselves young which is cool but i just don't yeah just once it gets
on you you can't get it off like i'll wash my hands like five times uh which even makes me more
skeever because i'm at the gym and uh uh and uh i'm worried about getting like all the fucking
diseases and colds and all
the shit that people have from,
you know,
all their kids and breeding grounds and the schools and stuff.
I'm the same way when I go to like Walmart and shit or the grocery store,
I make sure and wipe that thing down.
But you know,
I spray with some raid and shit just to be sure.
Cause you never know.
There could be spiders on those shopping carts or maybe there were spiting or something the shopping carts you're gonna pick up the eggs
take them home you never know i'm starting to sound like harry mendel really huh like i've got
some sort of bacterial issue maybe i do oh awesome i shrink tomorrow anyway uh pelotonins uh pelotons
i'm not sure i'm pronouncing it correctly. Clearly I don't use one.
Public S1 shows revenue of $915 million. Holy
fuck. Somebody's making a billion
dollars off of
treadmills.
Wow, man. What's old is new
and what's new is old again.
And up
110%. Wow.
I'd like to have that business year over year.
Annual subscriber growth of 144% over the past three years.
That's kind of a weird way to measure that.
To 500K this June.
Wow.
Pricing in-home bicycles and treadmills.
You always see the commercials for them.
Billet and, you know, people are riding in.
They're like pretending they're riding in the whatever,
and yeah, man, so individualized coaching, pretty cool, maybe I should get one of them to send one
to the Chris Walsh show to review, this is really interesting, this has to do with privacy,
and a few other things, there was recently a traveler who was, or not a traveler, a guy who
was coming here on a visa to go to Harvard.
And he, I don't know where he originated from.
You can probably find the story.
I'm not sure if I referenced it the past day or two.
I think it was one of the earlier podcasts.
So if you can, go back and check one of the earlier podcasts.
But the Customs Border Patrol, these guys who, when you come into the country, they check your ID. They even see if they're going to let you in the country, man.
This is why I never leave.
I'm worried they won't let me back because, you know, they know me.
They've seen me.
They're like, this motherfucker, he left.
Lock the door.
So according to TechCrunch, well, me uh tell some more of the story uh so anyway
there's this gentleman who was coming here to school on a visa for uh harvard you know so he
got into harvard i mean come on how bad can he be if you got into harvard uh but evidently when he
arrived uh at customs border patrol that sort of good stuff in this country to go to harvard But evidently, when he arrived at Customs, Border Patrol,
that sort of good stuff in this country to go to Harvard,
he's all set up to go to school, they checked his social media.
This is a new thing.
They're checking the social media.
They're checking the posts.
They're seeing what they're talking about.
So anyway, I guess he didn't have anything disturbing.
The problem was his friends did.
And a lot of his friends who posted, interacted with him on like Facebook and social media
had posted a bunch of stuff that was anti-American.
So crazy, huh?
And in posting that stuff, they pretty much denied his visa application,
denied his ability to go to Harvard, kind of shut him down basically and said, nope, you're not going anywhere.
But back on the plane bus, dumb.
And their whole thing was just your friends.
Like, can you imagine if you're like your boss called you in one day and said, hey, man, gotta let you go, man.
And you're just like, what?
I thought everything was cool here
i'm really cool and like you know your friends on facebook are a bunch of assholes and they're
always posting like uh i don't know recipes for pies and shit and i'm against pie i like it's bad
for you has sugar and i believe that cherries are a living animal
or living being and cherry pies and apple pies go against my religion or something. I don't
fucking know. Just figure something out. So your boss tells you that he goes, I don't like what
your friends are posting. And then he says, we got to fire you. And you're like, but I, I posted how
great this company is. I really, I'm really excited to work here and i i really think it's great
and they're like yeah that's cool man but your friends are pieces of shit and fuck them
you'd be pretty angry at your friends i'd be calling my friends you cost me my job motherfuckers
um so it's kind of interesting be careful who your friends are i guess if you come
to america but this is all new what they've been doing uh now getting to the story here uh so they
kicked him back he can't go to harvard can't get in the country i think once they deny your vc can't
reapply or maybe i don't know you have to reapply a while from now or something i don't know how it
works i've never tried to sneak into this country. Who would? No, that's not true. So anyway, according to TechCrunch and Zach Whitaker,
the CEP searched 30,000 devices last year without a warrant. And that's up from four times from
three years ago and increasingly denies entry to people over content.
Here's the key words here. People denies entry to people over content that has been sent by others,
not your content where you're just like, Hey, I'm going to America. It's going to be real
fucking cool. I'm going to go there and I don't know, get an education. Maybe, I don't know, have fun.
But they started this thing recently.
I think this was with the Trump administration,
where they demand your passwords.
They demand to look at your devices.
They want to look at your social media posts, your Instagram,
you know, all your different things.
And they want to see what you're talking about.
Maybe if you're, like, I don't know, I suppose a terrorist or something like that, but I don't know if you're
a really smart terrorist, like, are you going to be posting on social media? Hey, I'm going to
America and I'm going to do some evil stuff there. You know, the guys who the, to my understanding,
someone could correct me if I'm wrong, but to my understanding, the guys who came from Saudi Arabia to destroy the 9-11 terrorist attack that we had, they
weren't tromping around on social media going, yeah, we're going to do some bad stuff and
screw America.
No, they were quiet.
They were silent and deadly.
They were like a sub that came in.
No one saw them coming.
They quietly learned how to be pilots and nobody saw them coming. They quietly, you know, learned how to be pilots and nobody saw them coming.
And so, yeah, great.
You're checking all these people that are blatantly, you know, saying whatever or their
friends are saying whatever on social media.
But I think that's really odd.
Like you're basically being judged by your friends.
It's kind of like you're, it's kind of
like hanging out with your girlfriend or wife where she's like, Oh, I don't really like that
friend, Joey, that you have. You're going to have to stop talking to Joey. I used to get that all
the time. I have my modeling agency, my bikini team, my friends would come to me and go, Chris,
you know, we're really good friends, but, uh, you know, I'm getting married to what's her face. And
she says, you're a bad influence.
And I can't hang out anymore.
Like two years later when she cleans him out and he loses half his shit.
He calls me.
Hey, can we be friends again?
I'm like, fuck you, man.
So anyway, this is kind of interesting.
In fact, the Department of Homeland Security actually keeps a record of the conversation that they have with these people, which is kind of interesting.
It gets just transcribed.
And wow.
And so there, man, if you have somebody send you some pictures that are maybe anti-American, maybe anti-politics, I'm kind of curious, what these pictures are you could be sending like maybe maybe they're sending stuff against the current president or White House or what's going on in
America and your political slant on it and you're not posting these things but someone is sending
them to you. It's kind of scary. So here's somebody was talking about WhatsApp and the guy
asks when did you receive the photos on whatsapp from
cbd or cbp that's a different thing and he says i don't know and he goes do you understand the
concerns of the united states and its citizens when considering the graphic nature of the images
on your cell phone of course i understand no one finds the graphic pictures pleasant it's in human
well evidently that's some bad stuff uh but uh you know this is one
of those things i mean me for all i know it was dick pics and you know most i i know married
people that they like that sharing between themselves so um you know what are you gonna do
but it's kind of interesting like i'm gonna have to i'm gonna have to scrub my phone if i ever leave
the country in my social media because they're gonna i'm gonna try and come back in and they're gonna be like did you say some bad things about the president on
Facebook and I'll be like yeah and they're gonna be like you should probably just stay in Belgium
man yeah yeah we're not gonna yeah we don't want you back no deposit no return and they'll ship my
ass back that or they'll just put me in puntano or something like that
they'll be like yeah you posted a lot too many political things you gotta go man 1984 all over
again this is gonna be kind of interesting uh this is also from the verge this is uh google says
it's nest hello video doorbell can now detect package deliveries and notify U.S. users who are subscribed to its $5 a month Nest Aware service.
There's an interesting story I heard where Nest is really pushing hard
and Ring.com is pushing hard to try and get police departments to sign up
for their, to basically use your Nest device.
And people, of course, have to give their privacy up for this.
They have to agree to it, but basically they can take all the, all the Nest or rings in an area
and use them as police cameras, which is kind of weird because you're losing some privacy. I mean,
certainly your front yard is your privacy. Your kids are coming in and out. Like what if you have
some kids and you have a teenager,
and let's say he's coming in the house or he's maybe standing on the front porch with his girlfriend and they're smoking some little marijuana there.
And it turns out you're somewhere in the mid-United States
where it's not legal yet.
And cops are like, hmm, we just scoped them smoking marijuana on your property.
And you basically just busted your own kids.
Way to go.
Way to go, homie.
So anyway, it's kind of interesting.
The story came out from one of the other outlets
that they're putting a lot of pressure on police departments
to take and sign up for this service,
and they're even bribing them with, like, free nests and free ring.coms.
And I like my ring.
There's some other things that are going on in the Romans.
I'm not sure if I can talk about them yet.
I've got to get some more details from you on what's going on with Google and
Hey Google and,
and all that sort of good stuff in comparison to Alexa.
And,
uh,
I'll just say,
uh,
we'll just say walled garden and,
uh,
there may be some more stuff I'll be talking about at the end of this month.
So there's that.
Those are the new Brilliant Home Controls actually in the background.
You probably can't see them with the green screen, but pretty cool.
Check those out, Brilliant Home Controls.
Google them if you want.
We just barely installed them in the house.
They're freaking awesome so they're built in uh a l e x a i feel like i have kids
you want to go to the s-t-o-r-e tomorrow and not take the k-i-d-s sounds like something my parents
would do so anyway um you might want to take a look at if you're buying a Google product in the next short while,
let's say the next week or so,
you might want to take a look that there might be an announcement that you're going to be seeing
that's going to make you want to maybe go with Alexa.
Let's put it that way.
So we'll talk about it some more in the future.
I'm not sure how much of this is being put in the public sphere. I'm just getting this from the back end of some different things. So
if you have heard about it, you do know what I'm talking about. You'll know what I'm talking about.
If you don't, you may want to hold off for a week before you buy some Google stuff. Let's just put
it that way. Some Google IoT stuff. Let's put it that way. Anyway, what's up next? Washington Post,
the Facebook has tightened the rules on political advertisers
it requires further identity proof such as tax identification number and federal election
commission registration I love this wow I think I might have just gotten
I think I just might have gotten my nipples a little hard over this I love this I hope they
follow through with this.
So Facebook is going to tighten the rules on political advertisers.
You're going to have to prove your identity and also have a federal election commission regulation.
I love this.
This is hopefully going to help us in 2020 because we know the shit's going to go off.
I was just reading something else. I forget the
outlet about how, I think it's the state department is starting to warn that what Russia is planning
on doing is they're planning on hacking and doing malware, ransomware attacks of our voter rolls.
So what they're going to be doing is attacking the voter roll system, say, in Iowa.
And then if they can get a hold of them, they're going to either ransomware them or they're going to delete them.
So that when you show up to vote on election day, they don't know if you're registered or not.
So you can't vote.
That could be pretty freaking crazy.
And already we have, if you're not familiar with what's going on,
we already,
we have businesses,
we have small towns that are getting hacked with ransomware and they're
either having to pay incredible fines to get their data back.
Um,
not fines,
incredible,
uh,
payoffs,
blackmail,
if you will,
to get their data back.
Or sometimes they don't get it back.
They just delete it and they just, uh, I don't know if you could just delete it and they just uh i don't know
they either keep the money or they just go fuck it i'm sure you know russia doesn't need the money
they're just going to be like you know we're just going to delete it and so pretty scary and it's
also scary our congress isn't passing laws to the senate the senate seems to be the problem
uh to take and protect our election security.
So push for your senators to follow through on that or elect people that will in 2020,
which might be a challenge given.
I think Iran's going to be attacking us as well.
I wouldn't be surprised if China and North Korea has got one hell of a hacking sort of business going on.
They've hacked billions and billions of dollars through ransomware and other things.
So that'll be interesting to see where it goes. Your world is under attack each and every day. And I'm not just talking about those tacos you had for lunch with the extra
hot sauce. Now this is something much bigger than that and something that's not going to pass
tomorrow. It's definitely going to be here for a long time to come. And you may want to keep your
eyes, ears open, be careful when you click all that
sort of good stuff and everything else. ThoughtSpot according to Forbes is a business intelligent data
analytics startup it raised 248 million dollars in a series e led by Lightspeed Ventures at 1.95
valuation they're a business intelligence startup that offers data analytics and searches as simple to use as Google. And they hit unicorn status. We should probably try and get an interview
on them on startupunicornpodcast.com. See if we can interview them. It's always cool. You know,
we want to hear about stories about how they went from nobody, a startup, to unicorn, and all that good stuff.
So it's going to be interesting to see where all that goes in the future.
So that's kind of some of the stories that stuck out to me today
on the Chris Voss Show.
And you can tell me what you think.
You can go to all my accounts at twitter.com forward slash Chris Voss, facebook.com forward slash Chris Voss.
You can also go to LinkedIn forward slash Chris Voss. You'll find pretty much everyone on the
internet, even on chrisvoss.net. So there you are.
Fun is fun. If you'd like to be on the show, be sure to contact us. Let us
know. Let us think why you want to be on the show, what your thing is. We've got some really cool interviews
I believe coming up next week and uh there will be cedia the cedia show c-e-d-i-a cedia
uh we'll be on what is it uh it's gonna be september 12th and 13th we'll be at the cedia
show we'll be doing live interviews uh well fairly live interviews putting them on the podcast uh
doing booth interviews right there on the floor of Cedia.
Cedia is kind of like the later-in-the-year CES.
It's a little bit smaller than NAB and CES.
It's up in Denver.
It's supposed to be a really interesting show.
It'll be the first time I'm going, so I'm really excited.
We've got a lot of great appointments of people we'll be meeting,
about, I think, five to ten people a day. So watch for
that at Cedia. And if you get a
chance to come see the show and everything,
you'll get to see all the cool technology and
all the stuff they'll be offering here
in the future. So be sure to check
that out as well. Be sure to give the show a
like, give us a review, refer it
to your friends, follow us on youtube.com
forward slash Chris Voss. And
yeah, appreciate you guys spending some time with us. We'll look forward to seeing you tomorrow. Thanks for tuning youtube.com forward slash Chris Voss. And yeah, appreciate you guys
spending some time with us. We'll look forward to seeing you tomorrow. Thanks for tuning in.
We'll see you next time.