Every house is haunted. In each episode of Family Ghosts, we investigate the true story behind a mysterious figure whose legend has followed a family for generations. Grandmothers who were secretly jewel smugglers, uncles who led double lives, siblings who vanished without a trace, and other ghostly characters who cast shadows over our lives in ways that might not be immediately obvious. We are all formed in part by our familial collections of secrets, intrigues, and myths. By engaging with ...
…
continue reading
Content provided by RTL Luxembourg and RTL - Lisa Burke. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by RTL Luxembourg and RTL - Lisa Burke or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!
Go offline with the Player FM app!
Modern Espionage: Undermining Corporations & Global Power, 22/11/2025
MP3•Episode home
Manage episode 521319829 series 2867841
Content provided by RTL Luxembourg and RTL - Lisa Burke. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by RTL Luxembourg and RTL - Lisa Burke or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
Kenneth Lasoen joins Lisa Burke to expose modern espionage, from cyberattacks to insider threats and the hidden power struggles shaping our world today.
I wonder if John Le Carré's protagonist spy, George Smiley, could recognise the world of tradecraft today.
Dr Kenneth Lasoen is one of Europe’s foremost intelligence and security scholars. He serves as Associate Professor of Intelligence & Security at the University of Antwerp, Senior Lecturer at the KSI Institute, and is an advisor to governments, institutions and major corporations on national security, counterintelligence, and risk mitigation.
His academic background includes degrees from Ghent, Leuven, Brunel and Cambridge; and the Belgian Royal Military Academy. Kenneth’s research focuses on espionage, insider threats, economic and industrial spying, and how intelligence agencies shape geopolitics and corporate competition. He also briefs senior industry leaders on cybersecurity, supply-chain vulnerabilities, and foreign influence operations.
Espionage has slipped out of the shadows and into everyday life. It’s no longer a distant Cold War memory of trench coats, microfilm and whispered exchanges in European capitals. In the 2025 world, the spy wars are being fought through our smartphones, coded supply chains, university labs, satellites, corporate R&D hubs, and even the unlocked devices on our desks. Every industry is a target. Every citizen, a potential data point. Every corporation, hackable banks of information.
Kenneth reveals the uncomfortable truth:
• Allies spy on allies, because they can
• Insider threats (it just takes one) can bankrupt global companies
• Cyber incidents can cripple supply chains instantly
• The Internet of Things is, in reality, the Internet of Hacked Things
• Some of the most devastating breaches begin with the simplest human error (or human intent)
Russia, China, North Korea and Iran might operate aggressively in the intelligence space, but Western governments, corporations and academia are deeply enmeshed in their own networks of surveillance, information-gathering and counter-espionage.
Kenneth also brings the story closer to home: into research labs, corporate headquarters, scientific centres, and even vineyards. He explains why security failures often start from the inside, why organisations underestimate their risk, and how a single breach, digital or human, can destroy decades of innovation.
There are vulnerabilities across all parts of our society that touch every citizen and business.
https://ksi.institute/en/
…
continue reading
I wonder if John Le Carré's protagonist spy, George Smiley, could recognise the world of tradecraft today.
Dr Kenneth Lasoen is one of Europe’s foremost intelligence and security scholars. He serves as Associate Professor of Intelligence & Security at the University of Antwerp, Senior Lecturer at the KSI Institute, and is an advisor to governments, institutions and major corporations on national security, counterintelligence, and risk mitigation.
His academic background includes degrees from Ghent, Leuven, Brunel and Cambridge; and the Belgian Royal Military Academy. Kenneth’s research focuses on espionage, insider threats, economic and industrial spying, and how intelligence agencies shape geopolitics and corporate competition. He also briefs senior industry leaders on cybersecurity, supply-chain vulnerabilities, and foreign influence operations.
Espionage has slipped out of the shadows and into everyday life. It’s no longer a distant Cold War memory of trench coats, microfilm and whispered exchanges in European capitals. In the 2025 world, the spy wars are being fought through our smartphones, coded supply chains, university labs, satellites, corporate R&D hubs, and even the unlocked devices on our desks. Every industry is a target. Every citizen, a potential data point. Every corporation, hackable banks of information.
Kenneth reveals the uncomfortable truth:
• Allies spy on allies, because they can
• Insider threats (it just takes one) can bankrupt global companies
• Cyber incidents can cripple supply chains instantly
• The Internet of Things is, in reality, the Internet of Hacked Things
• Some of the most devastating breaches begin with the simplest human error (or human intent)
Russia, China, North Korea and Iran might operate aggressively in the intelligence space, but Western governments, corporations and academia are deeply enmeshed in their own networks of surveillance, information-gathering and counter-espionage.
Kenneth also brings the story closer to home: into research labs, corporate headquarters, scientific centres, and even vineyards. He explains why security failures often start from the inside, why organisations underestimate their risk, and how a single breach, digital or human, can destroy decades of innovation.
There are vulnerabilities across all parts of our society that touch every citizen and business.
https://ksi.institute/en/
101 episodes
MP3•Episode home
Manage episode 521319829 series 2867841
Content provided by RTL Luxembourg and RTL - Lisa Burke. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by RTL Luxembourg and RTL - Lisa Burke or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
Kenneth Lasoen joins Lisa Burke to expose modern espionage, from cyberattacks to insider threats and the hidden power struggles shaping our world today.
I wonder if John Le Carré's protagonist spy, George Smiley, could recognise the world of tradecraft today.
Dr Kenneth Lasoen is one of Europe’s foremost intelligence and security scholars. He serves as Associate Professor of Intelligence & Security at the University of Antwerp, Senior Lecturer at the KSI Institute, and is an advisor to governments, institutions and major corporations on national security, counterintelligence, and risk mitigation.
His academic background includes degrees from Ghent, Leuven, Brunel and Cambridge; and the Belgian Royal Military Academy. Kenneth’s research focuses on espionage, insider threats, economic and industrial spying, and how intelligence agencies shape geopolitics and corporate competition. He also briefs senior industry leaders on cybersecurity, supply-chain vulnerabilities, and foreign influence operations.
Espionage has slipped out of the shadows and into everyday life. It’s no longer a distant Cold War memory of trench coats, microfilm and whispered exchanges in European capitals. In the 2025 world, the spy wars are being fought through our smartphones, coded supply chains, university labs, satellites, corporate R&D hubs, and even the unlocked devices on our desks. Every industry is a target. Every citizen, a potential data point. Every corporation, hackable banks of information.
Kenneth reveals the uncomfortable truth:
• Allies spy on allies, because they can
• Insider threats (it just takes one) can bankrupt global companies
• Cyber incidents can cripple supply chains instantly
• The Internet of Things is, in reality, the Internet of Hacked Things
• Some of the most devastating breaches begin with the simplest human error (or human intent)
Russia, China, North Korea and Iran might operate aggressively in the intelligence space, but Western governments, corporations and academia are deeply enmeshed in their own networks of surveillance, information-gathering and counter-espionage.
Kenneth also brings the story closer to home: into research labs, corporate headquarters, scientific centres, and even vineyards. He explains why security failures often start from the inside, why organisations underestimate their risk, and how a single breach, digital or human, can destroy decades of innovation.
There are vulnerabilities across all parts of our society that touch every citizen and business.
https://ksi.institute/en/
…
continue reading
I wonder if John Le Carré's protagonist spy, George Smiley, could recognise the world of tradecraft today.
Dr Kenneth Lasoen is one of Europe’s foremost intelligence and security scholars. He serves as Associate Professor of Intelligence & Security at the University of Antwerp, Senior Lecturer at the KSI Institute, and is an advisor to governments, institutions and major corporations on national security, counterintelligence, and risk mitigation.
His academic background includes degrees from Ghent, Leuven, Brunel and Cambridge; and the Belgian Royal Military Academy. Kenneth’s research focuses on espionage, insider threats, economic and industrial spying, and how intelligence agencies shape geopolitics and corporate competition. He also briefs senior industry leaders on cybersecurity, supply-chain vulnerabilities, and foreign influence operations.
Espionage has slipped out of the shadows and into everyday life. It’s no longer a distant Cold War memory of trench coats, microfilm and whispered exchanges in European capitals. In the 2025 world, the spy wars are being fought through our smartphones, coded supply chains, university labs, satellites, corporate R&D hubs, and even the unlocked devices on our desks. Every industry is a target. Every citizen, a potential data point. Every corporation, hackable banks of information.
Kenneth reveals the uncomfortable truth:
• Allies spy on allies, because they can
• Insider threats (it just takes one) can bankrupt global companies
• Cyber incidents can cripple supply chains instantly
• The Internet of Things is, in reality, the Internet of Hacked Things
• Some of the most devastating breaches begin with the simplest human error (or human intent)
Russia, China, North Korea and Iran might operate aggressively in the intelligence space, but Western governments, corporations and academia are deeply enmeshed in their own networks of surveillance, information-gathering and counter-espionage.
Kenneth also brings the story closer to home: into research labs, corporate headquarters, scientific centres, and even vineyards. He explains why security failures often start from the inside, why organisations underestimate their risk, and how a single breach, digital or human, can destroy decades of innovation.
There are vulnerabilities across all parts of our society that touch every citizen and business.
https://ksi.institute/en/
101 episodes
All episodes
×Welcome to Player FM!
Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.