Episodes

  • One Daily Habit That Makes Hackers' Jobs Harder
    Jun 17 2026

    Confidence isn't something you find — it's something you build, one skill at a time. In this episode of SipCyber, Jen Lotze visits Bitty and Beau's Coffee in Charleston, SC, a shop with a mission as meaningful as its coffee: creating employment opportunities for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. That spirit of empowerment carries straight into the cybersecurity conversation.

    This month, Microsoft released fixes for more than 200 security vulnerabilities in a single Patch Tuesday — one of the largest update releases in the company's history. It sounds overwhelming. It's not. Jen breaks down what these patches actually mean, why most security failures aren't technical failures, and the one simple habit that closes more gaps than most people realize: restarting your computer every day.

    No advanced IT knowledge required. Just a small, consistent action — and maybe a good cup of coffee.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • What Microsoft's record-breaking June Patch Tuesday actually means for everyday users
    • Why security updates don't fully protect you until you reboot
    • The real reason most people get compromised (hint: it's not a lack of expertise)
    • A dead-simple daily habit that strengthens your security posture
    • Bonus tip: how to restore all your browser tabs after a restart (no more excuses)

    ☕ Featured Coffee Shop: Biddy and Bo's Coffee, Charleston, SC

    Small actions, big results. Subscribe for weekly cybersecurity tips from the best coffee spots across the country — and share this with the person on your team who hasn't restarted their laptop in six months.

    #Cybersecurity #PatchTuesday #Microsoft #CyberHygiene #SoftwareUpdates #InfoSec #CyberSafety #SipCyber #DigitalSecurity #SecurityAwareness #SmallBusiness #CharlestonSC

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    4 mins
  • Your Health App May Not Be HIPAA Protected
    Jun 3 2026

    In this episode of SipCyber, Jen Lotze settles into The Fox and Pantry in Plymouth, MN — a space so thoughtfully designed it immediately earns your trust — and uses that feeling as the perfect lens for a conversation about AI and healthcare privacy. Over a Pineapple Mango Mint Refresher on a blazing Minnesota afternoon, Jen breaks down a growing blind spot: millions of people are using AI tools to interpret health information, but many of those tools aren't subject to HIPAA the same way your provider is.

    The app looks secure. The interface feels clinical. But confidence and verification are not the same thing.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • Why many AI health tools aren't covered by HIPAA — even when they market as "healthcare-focused"
    • What to look for in a privacy policy before uploading any medical information
    • How polished design creates a false sense of data security
    • What business owners need to know when employees use AI with patient or customer data
    • The one-minute habit that protects your most personal information

    This isn't about avoiding AI — it's about using it with eyes open. Your health history, mental health concerns, and lab results deserve the same scrutiny you'd give any tool handling your most sensitive data.

    ☕ Featured Spot: The Fox and Pantry, Plymouth, MN

    Don't hand your health data to an app before you know where it goes. Subscribe for weekly cybersecurity insights delivered from the best local spots across the country — and share this with someone who's ever typed a symptom into an AI chatbot.

    #HealthcarePrivacy #HIPAA #AIPrivacy #HealthData #Cybersecurity #DataPrivacy #AIHealthcare #InfoSec #SipCyber #DigitalSafety #MedicalData #CyberAwareness #HealthTech

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    5 mins
  • The Digital Footprint You Didn't Know You Were Leaving
    May 27 2026

    Your name. Your city. Your job title. Your relatives' names. It's all out there — and attackers don't need to hack you when they can just look you up.

    In this episode of SipCyber, Jen Lotze settles in at Pryes Brewing — brick walls, big windows, the river just outside — with a hop water in hand and something worth saying: most of us spend our lives trying to be known, but online, a little strategic obscurity might be the best defense you've never considered.

    The data broker ecosystem is massive, largely invisible, and actively feeding the phishing emails and vishing calls that feel unsettlingly personal. That text that knew your city. That call that referenced your coworker's name. That's not magic — that's aggregated public data being weaponized against you.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • How attackers use publicly available personal data to manufacture trust
    • Why "people search" sites are a threat actor's first stop
    • Yael Privacy Lab's data broker opt-out list — free and practical
    • The Intel Techniques workbook for manual removal
    • Paid services (DeleteMe, Optery) that automate and monitor removals
    • How Google's subscription tools can alert you to new exposures

    This isn't about going off the grid. It's about being a little harder to find — and a lot harder to fool.

    🍺 Featured Spot: Pryes Brewing

    You can't control every breach — but you can control how much is floating out there about you. Subscribe for weekly cybersecurity insights from the best local spots across the country, and share this with someone whose name is probably on one of those sites right now.

    #DataPrivacy #DataBrokers #OnlinePrivacy #Cybersecurity #PhishingPrevention #DeleteMe #Optery #DigitalFootprint #InfoSec #SipCyber #CyberSafety #PrivacyTools #OSINT

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    3 mins
  • The Illusion of Safe: Instagram, Kids & Vanishing Photos
    May 20 2026

    Temporary doesn't mean safe. In this episode of SipCyber, Jen Lotze stops into Happy Monday and Company in Roseville, MN — a coffee shop born from a mobile cart, built on handmade pottery, good community, and the radical idea that Mondays can actually be worth looking forward to. Over a slow-steeping loose leaf black tea, Jen unpacks Instagram's expanding disappearing message features, including its new Instgram Instance app, and what parents, educators, and digital citizens need to understand before trusting "gone forever."

    Because here's the thing: Instagram says screenshots are blocked. But anyone can grab a second phone. And once something is shared digitally, you've handed partial control to someone else — whether you know it or not.

    For the younger generation, features like disappearing photos don't feel suspicious. They feel normal. That normalization is exactly why this conversation matters.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • How Instagram's disappearing photo features (and the new Instance app) actually work
    • Why "screenshot-blocked" doesn't mean your content is safe
    • The low-tech workaround that defeats every privacy feature
    • How to talk to kids about digital trust without creating fear
    • The connection between fast digital sharing and misplaced trust online

    This isn't about panic. It's about slowing down long enough to think — the same way a good cup of tea asks you to.

    ☕ Featured Spot: Happy Monday and Company, Roseville, MN

    Think before you share — and subscribe for weekly cybersecurity insights delivered from the best local spots across the country. Pass this one along to any parent, teacher, or anyone with kids on Instagram.

    #Instagram #DigitalSafety #DisappearingMessages #SipCyber #CyberSecurity #OnlineSafety #ParentingOnline #PrivacyTips #SocialMedia #InfoSec #DigitalParenting #CyberAwareness #HappyMonday

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    4 mins
  • AI Gets a Personality: What Could Go Wrong?
    May 13 2026

    The more consistent something feels, the more we trust it. That's human nature — and it's exactly what makes AI identity systems worth paying attention to.

    In this episode of SipCyber, Jen Lotze steps into Being There Coffee in Robbinsdale, MN — a coffee shop tucked inside a brewery, where nothing is hidden and everything is exactly what it appears to be. It's the perfect backdrop to unpack Claude Mythos: Anthropic's framework for giving AI a stable, consistent identity across conversations.

    It sounds like a feature. And in many ways, it is. But consistency isn't the same as correctness — and when a tool starts to feel familiar, we stop questioning it. That's the moment worth noticing.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • What Claude Mythos is and why AI identity continuity matters
    • How consistency in AI creates unconscious trust — for better and worse
    • The difference between something feeling accurate vs. being accurate
    • Simple guardrails for individuals and businesses using AI tools
    • Why staying curious about what's "underneath" matters more than ever

    This isn't about distrusting AI. It's about staying human while using it.

    ☕ Featured Spot: Being There Coffee, Robbinsdale, MN

    Don't let familiarity replace judgment. Subscribe for weekly cybersecurity insights from coffee shops across the country — and share this with anyone who uses AI at work.

    #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #AITrust #ClaudeAI #CyberSecurity #AISafety

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    4 mins
  • AI Phishing Attacks: When Fake Emails Feel Too Real
    May 6 2026

    If something feels right, do you question it? In this episode of SipCyber, Jen Lotze sits down at Walden Coffee in Minnesota with a plain latte—one with just enough latte art to make her stop and look twice. And that moment of recognition becomes the perfect lens for one of the most dangerous trends in cybersecurity right now: AI-generated phishing emails that sound exactly like the people you trust.

    Attackers aren't guessing anymore. They're studying. Pulling patterns from LinkedIn, past emails, and social media to reconstruct how your boss writes, how your coworker asks for favors, and what a "normal" request looks like in your world. Then they send something that fits. Perfectly.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • How AI learns your communication style to impersonate people you trust
    • Why today's phishing emails have no typos, no red flags—just context
    • The one-step verification habit that breaks the attacker's pattern
    • How businesses can implement a simple "second check" policy for urgent requests
    • Why the things that feel most natural online deserve a second look

    This isn't about paranoia. It's about adding one intentional pause before acting—because that's all it takes to break the spell.

    ☕ Featured Spot: Walden Coffee, Minnesota 🍵 Jen's Order: Plain latte

    Don't click before you think twice. Subscribe for weekly cybersecurity insights from the best local spots across the country—and share this with someone who's ever gotten an email that felt just a little too convenient.

    #Phishing #AIPhishing #CyberSecurity #EmailSecurity #SocialEngineering #InfoSec #SipCyber #CyberAwareness #AIThreats #DigitalSafety #CyberCrime #HumanHacking #ScamAlert #SecurityTips

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    4 mins
  • AI Is Reading Your Emails Before You Do
    Apr 29 2026

    AI doesn't just help defenders anymore—attackers are using it to study you before you ever know you're a target.

    In this episode of SipCyber, Jen Lotze sits down at Forgotten Star Brewing in Fridley, MN—a former WWII manufacturing facility built on a legacy of doing things right—with a rare seasonal Maibock in hand, and a sharp warning about how AI is quietly transforming phishing attacks into something far more dangerous: emails that look exactly like everything else in your inbox.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • How attackers use AI to map relationships and mimic writing styles inside your organization
    • Why 91% of successful cyberattacks still start with an email
    • Advanced email filtering tools (Harmony, Abnormal) and what they actually do
    • What you can do if you don't have enterprise-level protection at home
    • The simple habit—verify outside the email—that can stop even sophisticated attacks

    This isn't about fear. It's about the one pause that changes everything.

    🍺 Featured Spot: Forgotten Star Brewing, Fridley, MN (Formerly a WWII boiler room—and yes, the Maibock is worth the wait.)

    Don't let a "normal-looking" email cost you everything. Subscribe for weekly cybersecurity insights delivered from the best local spots across the country—and share this with anyone who uses email at work.

    #AIPhishing #CyberSecurity #EmailSecurity #PhishingAttack #InfoSec #SipCyber #AIThreats #CyberAwareness #SocialEngineering #DigitalSafety #EmailHacking #CyberDefense #ForgottenStarBrewing

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    5 mins
  • Your Photos Are Sharing More Than You Think
    Apr 15 2026

    Your photos are talking behind your back — and most people have no idea.

    In this episode of SipCyber, Jen Lotze stops into Profit Coffee in North Charleston, SC — a thoughtfully designed space where even the milk choices signal awareness — and unpacks a privacy habit you probably never knew you needed. Inspired by a fisherman friend who screenshots every photo before sending it, Jen breaks down what's quietly hiding inside the images you share every day.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • What photo metadata is — and why it matters for your privacy
    • How a single image can reveal your home, your routines, and your location history
    • The simple screenshot trick that strips hidden data before you share
    • How to disable location tagging in your camera settings in under a minute
    • Why awareness — not paranoia — is the most powerful privacy tool you have

    You're not oversharing on purpose. You're oversharing by default. One small setting change fixes that.

    ☕ Featured Spot: Profit Coffee, North Charleston, SC

    Think privacy is complicated? It doesn't have to be. Subscribe for weekly cybersecurity tips from the best local spots across the country — and share this with someone who still sends photos straight from their camera roll.

    #PhotoPrivacy #Metadata #CyberSecurity #DigitalPrivacy #InfoSec #SipCyber #DataPrivacy #OnlineSafety #CyberAwareness #PrivacyTips #LocationData #EXIF #PhotoSecurity #CyberTips #DigitalSafety

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    4 mins