In this weekly unscripted update, Marco Ciappelli and Sean Martin catch up on their latest stories, from AI agents replacing SOC analysts to mixtape nostalgia and vintage guitars made from NYC history. They also tease big things coming at Black Hat USA and reflect on why collaboration is core to ITSPmagazine.
ITSPmagazine Weekly Update | From AI Agents to Tape Mixes, to Guitars and Black Hat Buzzwords and much more with Marco & Sean's Random & Unscripted PodcastÂ
⸝ In this weekly unscripted update, Marco Ciappelli and Sean Martin catch up on their latest stories, from AI agents replacing SOC analysts to mixtape nostalgia and vintage guitars made from NYC history. They also tease big things coming at Black Hat USA and reflect on why collaboration is core to ITSPmagazine.Â
⸝ In this weekâs Random and Unscripted episode, Marco Ciappelli and Sean Martin return with another lively behind-the-scenes update from the ITSPmagazine world. As always, the conversation flows unpredictablyâfrom music and nostalgia to cybersecurity, AI, and everything in between. Marco kicks off the episode by confessing he saw ASIS liveâtwiceâand is now on a mission for the perfect mod haircut.Â
Sean follows with an unexpected review of an avant-garde opera at Lincoln Center, which explores humanityâs attempt to extend life through technology. That sets the stage for deeper reflection on AI, with both co-founders digging into the role of AI agents in cybersecurity operations. Sean recaps his recent contributor-led newsletters on threat intelligence and AI-powered SOC roles.Â
Marco, meanwhile, teases the next chapter in his âRobbie the Robotâ newsletter series, which will explore the merger of humans and machines. The episode also spotlights a series of published interviews: a brand story with Greg and John from White Knight Labs, Marcoâs conversation with Ken Munro wrapping up Infosecurity Europe 2025, and an episode with Abadesi from the Women in Cybersecurity trackâdiscussing how diverse teams build better tech.Â
Sean also drops new Music Evolves episodes, including a conversation with Summer McCoy of the Mixtape Museum and a new story on Carmine Guitars, where vintage NYC wood is repurposed into one-of-a-kind instruments. That sparks a philosophical reflection from Marco on the contrast between analog warmth and digital impermanence.Â
As the episode winds down, Marco and Sean turn their attention to Black Hat USA 2025. With sponsorships nearly sold out, they encourage companies to claim one of the last remaining spots. They also preview an upcoming live webinar where theyâll debate the eventâs inevitable buzzwords with industry peers.Â
As always, the tone is informal, curious, and community-driven. If you want the inside scoop on whatâs shaping the stories and strategies at ITSPmagazineâthis is the episode to hear.Â
⸝ Keywords: cybersecurity, AI agents, threat intelligence, SOC analyst, mixtape museum, custom guitars, Black Hat USA 2025, ITSPmagazine, analog vs digital, diversity in tech, robotic automation, newsletter strategy, editorial collaboration, pen testing, brand storytelling, tech culture, cybersecurity events, operational technology, digital transformation, music and tech
Hosts links:
đ Marco Ciappelli: https://www.marcociappelli.com
đ Sean Martin: https://www.seanmartin.com
July 18, 2025
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Marco Ciappelli:
[00:00:00] Well⌠do you know?
Â
Sean Martin:
I donât know. Are we recording?
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Do you know why? I meanâŚ
Â
Sean Martin:
It says weâre live.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
We are live.
Â
Sean Martin:
Live. Iâm live. Live and alive.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Alive and kicking. Do you remember that song?
Â
Sean Martin:
I do remember that song.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Oh, thatâs good. Shit, it was⌠yeah, talking about that kind of period, that was the eighties, I think. Right?
Well, hereâs my updateâI saw ASIS twice. Twice.
Â
Sean Martin:
Because you didnât get enough the first time?
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Well, I did. My wife⌠you really hope they noticed your haircut. My wife didnât.
So we doubled upâit was good. We went to Manchester and Cardiff. They still sound great.
And yeah, now Iâm trying to get the mod haircut.
So thatâs my news for this episode of⌠of Random and Unscripted, which Sean [00:01:00] turned into something that we actually use to give updates about whatâs going on in the ITSPmagazine world.
Â
Sean Martin:
And our own worlds, I guess.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
ITSPmagazine is pretty much our world.
Â
Sean Martin:
But I was telling you the other day, I went toâyeah, I guessâan opera, if you can call it that, at Lincoln CenterâŚ
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
A Night at the OperaâŚ
Â
Sean Martin:
âŚin the Geffen Hall. And it was quite interesting. It kind of presented a world being born, life being bornâwe want to extend our lives, and we turn to technology to make that happen.
It was quite an experience, listening to this eclectic, music-driven five-person opera.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Like I needed another idea for a newsletter.
Exactlyâtalking about the relationship between [00:02:00] technology and society.
But yeah, it did inspire. And you shared the link with me, so itâs in the queue.
Itâs in the queue. Come on, Sean.
Â
Letâs get to businessâfinally, after many years, this has become an update. A weekly update when possible, even when we are on location.
Weâll try to do it anyway. You know that.
Â
Sean Martin:
Yeah, yeah.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Iâll do it by myself.
Actually, itâll be the best weekly updateâjust drop pictures of me when youâre not here.
That would be fasterâŚ
Â
Sean Martin:
âŚand a lot more fun.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Come on, man.
So what did you do?
Last time, we proposed the two newsletters that we wrote. Mine was about Robbie the Robot, when I was re-listening to iRobot from Asimov.
And my next newsletter is going to be the follow-up to thatâstill about robotics and how we merge with them. Or maybe robots merge with us.
[00:03:00] I donât know which way itâs going to go, but itâs going to be a fun newsletter.
Whatâs up with you?
Â
Sean Martin:
Well, thatâs kind of what that show was about.
Letâs see. Yeah, for meâI think since then IâŚ
Well, I did theâwhat? Put the candle back, right? So Crisis Management: Put the Candle Back and The Art of Not Making Things Worse, I think.
Â
Yeah, thereâs a potential that we automate and scale bad stuff, right?
Then I wrote a few more articlesâsome of them I had taped to readâbut I looked at cybersecurity as not just about the code; itâs about the whole system.
This idea of systems of systemsâthat was a lot of fun.
Then I took a deep dive into threat intelligence as a way to drive business outcomes, not just security response.
And then I looked at AI agents as first respondersâcan they take the Level 1 SOC [00:04:00] analyst role?
A lot of people say replace itâIâm leaning more toward make them smarter.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Itâs a tool.
Itâs not substitutingâitâs implementing. Letâs put it that way.
I was on one of those conversations too, which weâll publish soon.
So definitely one of the things we talk about the most nowadaysânot only in cybersecurity.
I just got an emailâitâs been implemented in ChatGPT and you can make your own agent.
And an helicopter is flying over me.
So thatâs random.
Â
Sean Martin:
Thatâs pretty random.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
No, itâs L.A.âso itâs pretty normal.
Anyway, yeah, itâs definitely happening.
Â
And talking about thatâletâs just open that can.
Itâs probably going to be one of the buzz topics and buzzwords at Black Hat in two weeks from now, donât you think?
Â
Sean Martin:
Iâm sure it will be.
[00:05:00] And on that note, weâre actually going to put a webinar togetherâa pre-event webinar where we talk about that.
Thatâs in line with one of the things I wanted to point out about my last two newsletters.
Â
So, sometimes I write a newsletter based on an episode.
Sometimes I write one based on my own thoughts.
But the last two articles I did were contributor piecesâI asked folks to share their own thoughts.
Iâm not going to say robots contributedâno.
Well, a robot did help craft it.
But yeahâcontributions from the industry.
Folks provided their own insights on threat intelligence and AI agents.
Â
Thanks to everybody who didâIâm not going to list them here. Itâs too long.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
No, too long.
Â
Sean Martin:
I want to do more of thatâbring together a thought or idea and get people to comment on it.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
With Sean, itâs kind of going back to the origin for you.
[00:06:00] I remember when we started ITSPmagazine, you were doing a lot of this collaboration.
Iâm glad you went back to itâitâs a great way to bring the community together, especially the thought leaders in the industry.
If people want to know more, they can just go to your LinkedIn.
Maybe just DM you and see how they can work with you.
Â
My thoughts are just mineâI donât want anybody else involved.
Except for all my friends in my headâI have many invisible, imaginary friends to help me craft stories and all of that.
Â
Sean Martin:
Well, my early days in writing were kind of analyst-driven views.
I see a lot of things, I have opinions on where things are going, and sometimes I like feedback to help shape and refine those ideas.
Itâs fun.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
I think itâs a great idea, and I think a lot of our friends in the industry are going to like it.
They can be part of your stories anytime.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Talking about storiesâwe did a brand story after our last Random and Unscripted episode.
It was with our friends at White Knight LabsâGreg and Johnâwho hopefully weâll get to see in Las Vegas, right?
Weâll be very happy to share a coffee or a drink, depending on the time of day we actually get to see them.
And yeah, catch up on that app that presents what theyâre doing with their company, especially on the basic level training for pen testers.
They have some strong opinions on that.
Â
Sean Martin:
I think they have strong opinions in generalâ
and certainly for this thing theyâre putting together, which sounds pretty cool.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Thatâs the one thing I like about themâthey donât hold their horses.
They just tell it as it is.
So thatâs really good.
Â
So weâve got your newsletter⌠Iâm going through the things weâve doneâŚ
Oh yeahâ
I had kind of my final 2025 conversation, the closing of our Infosecurity Europe coverage.
I caught upâ
Â
Sean Martin:
2025⌠your last one of the year?
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
For Infosecurity Europe, yeah.
Well, you knowâwe just said Black Hat is coming up, and weâre not going to list all the other events weâre doing, but this oneâ
It was with Ken Munro.
And the people whoâve been listening know this goes back to when we met at DEF CON at the aerospace [village],
which wasnât called the Aerospace Village at the time.
It was more like⌠just talking about airplanes, right?
Â
And of course, you know who came up in the conversation.
You probably donâtâbecause you didnât listen to the podcast yet.
But I think you can imagine. Thereâs some kind of a prop characterâ
Â
Sean Martin:
I know exactly what youâre talking about.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
It might be inflatable?
Â
Sean Martin:
Exactly.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
It isâ
Itâs Otto, the autopilot that weâve seen in many different occasions.
A few pictures, a few videos floating around that weâve capturedâ
[00:09:00]
and a funny way to blow that guy upâŚ
Iâll just leave it there.
But it was great to catch up with Ken.
Â
They put together pretty much a little village in a pub near the ExCel.
You could hack cars, ICS systems, they talked about aerospaceâŚ
Have a drink⌠put together the community.
It was really, really fun.
Â
I invite people to listen to that episode, especially if theyâre in the UK.
We made a lot of referencesâ
For example, the car they hacked isnât even available in the U.S.,
so that alone tells you thereâs a bit of difference between here and there.
Â
Sean Martin:
Absolutely.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
And just to round that offâ
I also spoke with someone we were supposed to interview during Infosecurity Europe.
She keynoted the Women in Cybersecurity track of the event,
but we didnât get to record on location.
Â
So I invited herâ
But it wasnât about Infosecurity Europe,
it was actually part of my Redefining Society and Technology podcast.
Â
Her name is Abadesi.
Sheâs very much involved in investing, training, educationâ
everything about tech when it comes to diversity and inclusion.
[00:11:00]
We talked about how tech is so much better when the team developing it is actually a diverse teamâ
instead of just a bunch of white dudes.
Because then the product doesnât work so well for everybody else.
So⌠thatâs my side.
Â
Sean Martin:
Thatâs your side.
Well, I was very monogamous with all the eventsâ
but very busy the last few months covering them,
and therefore wasnât able to record many new episodes or publish a couple I had already recorded
for my Music Evolves podcast.
Â
I finally put out the one around the Mixtape Museum with Summer McCoy.
Talk about looking back in timeânostalgiaâ
and how the culture of creating mixtapes has shifted and transformed into what we now know as playlists.
Â
Funny enough, the playlists are very above-ground
because itâs all publicly available music.
Mixtapes had a lot of underground stuffâ
thereâs a lot of history with record labels, promotions, radio stationsâŚ
It was a pretty cool chat.
And what Summerâs doing with the museum is really cool.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
The museumâ
Is it a physical museum in New York?
Â
Sean Martin:
Nope.
Itâs a virtual museum.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Oh, itâs a virtual museum?
Â
Sean Martin:
Yeahâso you canât go there physically.
She documents mixtapesâ
people send in collections, she catalogs them and I believe sends them back.
Sheâs also a data scientist,
so sheâs got a lot of ideas about analyzing that space.
Great conversation.
Â
And Iâm working on another one that should go out todayâ
about custom guitar making.
Â
Thereâs a guitar shop here in NYC called Carmine Guitars.
Cindy creates custom wood guitarsâusing vintage wood from old New York buildings.
[00:13:00]
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
That is really cool.
That oneâs super cool.
Makes me think of those great guitar players in the â60s and â70s who built their own instrumentsâ
some of them still play the same old ones.
Â
Itâd be nice to put our hands on one of those,
but⌠I donât think itâs in our price range. Letâs put it that way.
Â
Sean Martin:
I donât see a custom guitar from Cindy in my horizon either.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Yeah, same.
Â
Sean Martin:
But itâs funâshe makes beautiful stuff.
The shop is full of amazing materialsâamazing stories too.
I encourage everybody to check it out.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
You know what I love about that?
How we can make things come around.
Using a piece of wood from a historical NYC buildingâ
instead of burning it or throwing it away, it takes on a new life in something new.
Thatâs absolutely amazing.
Â
Thatâs one of the things I love about the analog world versus the digital.
Which is a theme Iâm bringing back in Redefining Society and Technology.
The differenceâand interactionâbetween analog and digital.
Â
But you canât really do that with digital.
I mean sure, you can reuse a hard drive, butâŚ
youâre just deleting and adding new data.
In this caseâŚ
youâre making Pinocchio.
Â
Sean Martin:
And she showed me a piece of equipment that was originally usedâ
I donât know how many decades agoâ
to make duck decoys.
Theyâve repurposed it to create the indentation where your arm goes on the guitar.
She says it does good work for many things,
but she still finds it more funâand sometimes even fasterâto do it by hand.
Â
But just the way we use technologyâ
Iâm going to use that to connect to my other podcast that I just published,
which is not about music,
but about security and technology in the operational technology worldâ
the whole world of manufacturing.
Â
And to your point about digitalâ
a lot of those old manual machines are now controlled by robots.
And the systems that control those robots are now connected to networks.
And those networks are connected to back-office IT systems.
Itâs a whole world where the manufacturing infrastructure
and the OT infrastructure
is exposed to the internetâ
and all the fun (and not so fun) things that can happen from an adversarial perspective.
Â
Thatâs what I talked about with Tobias Hellmann.
Heâs based out of Germany.
It was a great conversation.
The newsletter for that episode kind of recaps my thoughts on the whole thing.
And obviously, the episode is out too.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Well, Seanâdefinitely a lot going on.
Itâs a very eclectic basket of things weâve put together.
Even though now itâs mostly the two of us doing this,
there are a few things coming up that I think Iâll announce next week.
Â
Something weâre going to work on with a really good friend of ours in the UK.
I feel like thereâs a magnet pulling me more and more toward Europe and the UK.
Â
You feel that?
Â
Sean Martin:
I donât know why, but yeah, itâs happening.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Yeah, itâs happening.
And itâll bounce back between L.A. and there.
But Iâll announce that later.
Â
What I do want to say, in these last couple of minutes,
is that weâre very excited about Black Hat.
Â
Itâs our birthdayâ
not yours or mineâ
but ITSPmagazineâs birthday as a publication.
Â
Itâs always fun to go there.
Â
Weâre going to be talking with Steve Wylie soonâ
I think this coming week.
We already recorded a pre-event conversation,
which weâll publish soon.
Â
Sean Martin:
A lot of briefings from sponsors coming.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Exactly.
Thatâs what I want to sayâRSA Conference was sold out in terms of sponsors and briefings.
Looks like Black Hat is about to do the same.
Â
We still have two weeks to go
and only a few spots left.
So if youâre listening to this and you want to join us in Las Vegasâ
to share your brand story, or to actually start even beforeâ
Â
Weâve got one little new thing going on.
Â
Sean, whatâs that webinar panel thing youâre putting together?
Â
Sean Martin:
Itâs similar to the newsletter contribution thing Iâm doing.
I have some thoughts on what the hot topics will beâwhat the conversations will rally around.
Â
But I want people rooted in the industry to participate in a conversation with us about it.
Â
So, you and I and three or four others will get together
and talk about what we expect to see and hearâ
what it means for the industry, for business.
Â
And weâll do that as a live webinar so people can join us,
shake their finger and say,
âNo, you got it wrong,â
or give us a thumbs up,
or chime in and share their own thoughts.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Place your bet.
Place your bet on what the buzzwordâs going to be.
I have a few ideas myself⌠but weâll see.
Â
The point is, weâll record thisâgo liveâ
and then everyone can watch it on demand.
I think weâre going to do it in about 10 days from now?
Â
Sean Martin:
Yeah, the 30th.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
The 30th.
Soâright before we leave for Black Hat.
And right here:
itspmagazine.com/blackhat-usa-2025
is where you can subscribe to our coverage,
sign up for a briefing,
grab one of the last full sponsorship spots,
or join us for the webinar.
Â
And maybe weâll do another one afterâ
to say who was right, who was wrong, and who won the bet.
Â
I donât know what the prize will beâ
maybe just bragging rights.
Coolest kid in town or something like that.
Â
Sean Martin:
Thatâs right.
Â
If you want to be part of any of thisâ
just DM Marco or me on LinkedIn.
Thatâs the easiest way.
Â
Of course, you can follow both of us on our own websites:
Â
All of our episodes, newsletters, and contact info is thereâ
including LinkedIn.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Good stuff.
I really enjoy these.
It helps me wrap my head around whatâs going on.
Â
Sometimes itâs hard to followâ
but when you stop for a second and look back at what weâve done,
and the few things coming upâ
it makes more sense.
Â
I think weâre doing something really cool.
Something I love doing.
I love doing it with you.
And I love doing it with our amazing audienceâ
and all the amazing sponsors that work with us
and allow us to do this thing we love:
sharing our thoughts, and sharing the community with the community.
All about the community.
Â
Sean Martin:
This is what we doâday in, day out.
I love it.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
That⌠and pretend to be musicians.
Â
Well, you are.
I just pretend.
Â
Sean Martin:
I am a musicianâ
but Iâm pretending to be a guitarist.
Â
So thereâs definitely a lot of pretending going on.
But itâs super fun.
And I like the balanceâmusic, tech, cyber, community.
And working with you?
Itâs good.
Â
Excited for the next couple weeks.
Stay tuned for more updates from us
as we continue to be Random and Unscripted.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Definitely random.
Â
Sean Martin:
One of them will be randomâŚ
Weâll plan it for Black Hat,
but itâll still be random and unscripted.
So stay tuned for that one in a couple weeksâ
and weâll see what we share next week.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
Iâm curious.
Â
Sean Martin:
Iâm curious.
Alrightâsee you!
Â
Thanks everybody for listening, watching,
laughing at us or with usâ
whichever you prefer.
And weâll see you all soon.
Â
Marco Ciappelli:
See ya.