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Spotify’s terrible privacy settings just leaked Palmer Luckey’s bops and bangers

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Have you ever wondered what bops powerful figures are listening to on Spotify? You’d be amazed what you can get with a profile search — but just in case you want them all in one place, there’s the Panama Playlists, a newly published collection of data on the musical listening habits of politicians, journalists, and tech figures, as curated by an anonymous figure.

The site appears to have data for a number of notables, including Open AI CEO Sam Altman, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, US Attorney General Pam Bondi, and Late Night host Seth Meyers. Five people featured on the website confirmed to The Verge that data for them is accurate: “Thankfully mine isn’t too embarrassing,” New York Times journalist Mike Isaac tweeted. Spotify’s Laura Batey said Spotify would not have any comments before this story’s publication.

“What I’d be way more interested in is what podcasts people like JD Vance, Karoline Leavitt etc are listening to!!”

Among the notables are Vice President JD Vance — whose “Making Dinner” playlist features “I Want It That Way” by the Backstreet Boys and “One Time” by Justin Bieber, according to the site. Vance spokesperson Taylor Van Kirk did not respond to a request for comment.

Taylor Lorenz, who is also featured on the site — “Take a Bow” by Rihanna and “Romeo and Juliet” by Dire Straits appear on her playlist, “Favs” — confirmed her listing. “I mostly use Spotify to listen to podcasts and what I’d be way more interested in is what podcasts people like JD Vance, Karoline Leavitt etc are listening to!!” she said in a text message. Former Verge staffer Joanna Stern, who is a personal tech columnist at The Wall Street Journal, confirmed her information is accurate and added, “the maker of the Panama Papers Playlists seems to be anti-Third Eye Blind.”

Another featured journalist, Kara Swisher, said that the playlist listed for her wasn’t accurate. (It is called “My Peloton Music” and features “Savage” by Megan Thee Stallion.) But Swisher also said that she shares a Peloton with her wife, so the site may have picked up her wife’s Peloton music. Reached for comment, the editor Amanda Katz, Swisher’s wife, said that playlist is “definitely not mine.” Katz added, “[Swisher] doesn’t even really use Spotify. In conclusion, trust no one.” Those songs might have played during a Peloton class, Katz said. If Katz is right, then judging people by the “My Peloton Music” playlists is about as accurate as judging people by whatever’s on at their gym.

This website is possible because Spotify’s design assumes everyone wants to share everything with the entire world and makes it difficult for users to protect their privacy. It defaults to making all playlists and profiles public. To change that, users need to go to the “Privacy and social” menu and toggle the “Public playlists” setting to private. However, that won’t retroactively make playlists private; instead, you’ll have to do all that by hand on each individual playlist.

It’s not clear who’s behind the website, or how they got ahold of this data

A lot of people use their name as their login — which may be because they signed up with their Facebook accounts. That makes searching for people particularly easy; I was able to find a Spotify profile for an Adam Mosseri that listed the “Hang” playlist on the Panama Playlists website. Mosseri did not respond to an email asking if that account belonged to him. I found two Palmer Luckey accounts; one, “Palmer Freeman Luckey,” contained the “Best Music Ever” playlist that the Panama Playlists identified. “I can confirm the playlist is real,” Luckey posted on X.

It’s not clear who’s behind the website, or how they got ahold of this data. Some of the profiles, such as that of NBC’s Al Roker, include play counts for specific songs — which aren’t part of the public profile. If Roker had his “Listening activity” setting toggled to “on,” it’s possible whoever put this together followed Roker, then manually counted how many times he listened to Elton John’s “Philadelphia Freedom,” but I can’t say for sure.

When The Verge staffers were reviewing our own privacy settings, one of my editors was stunned to discover I was following her. She thought she’d set her own profile to maximum privacy — but when the two of us collaborated on a friend’s playlist, I was able to follow her. She never received a notification. And when I checked in on my own profile, I was surprised to discover that I too had followers I had never been notified about.

I think my running playlists are highly sensitive information! You are welcome, however, to know that I enjoy E-40.
Screenshot by Elizabeth Lopatto

Spotify collects a lot more personal data than most users realize. Search queries, streaming history, browsing history, interaction with other users, location data, device IDs, and even data about how you hold your devices are among the information for collection listed in the company’s privacy policy. It is not possible to make a private profile; your profile name and photo are always available to any Spotify user you haven’t blocked.

The “Panama Playlists” is pretty silly as private data goes — discovering people’s favorite songs isn’t nearly as scandalous as getting into their email, direct messages, or other sensitive data. But it does reflect a generalized move toward total surveillance. A similar and more serious version of this kind of Silicon Valley carelessness around user privacy has resulted in multiple stories about politicians’ public Venmo transactions.

Some of the data featured was more specific than playlists. According to this site, Alexandr Wang, Meta’s chief AI officer, played The Lumineers’ “Stubborn Love” immediately after Meta’s $14 billion investment in Scale AI. Wang didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Casey Newton, my former colleague who writes the Platformer newsletter, confirmed his information was accurate: his No. 1 song last year was “All You Children” by Jamie xx and the Avalanches. “Here is my comment: ‘All You Children’ by Jamie [xx and the Avalanches] absolutely slaps,” he wrote. “Highly recommended for your summer BBQ playlists.”

With reporting by Nilay Patel and Sarah Jeong.

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Artificial Intelligence

How Cisco builds smart systems for the AI era

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Among the big players in technology, Cisco is one of the sector’s leaders that’s advancing operational deployments of AI internally to its own operations, and the tools it sells to its customers around the world. As a large company, its activities encompass many areas of the typical IT stack, including infrastructure, services, security, and the design of entire enterprise-scale networks.

Cisco’s internal teams use a blend of machine learning and agentic AI to help them improve their own service delivery and personalise user experiences for its customers. It’s built a shared AI fabric built on patterns of compute and networking that are the product of years spent checking and validating its systems – battle-hardened solutions it then has the confidence to offer to customers. The infrastructure in play relies on high-performance GPUs, of course, but it’s not just raw horse-power. The detail is in the careful integration between compute and network stacks used in model training and the quite different demands from the ongoing load of inference.

Having made its name as the de facto supplier of networking infrastructure for the enterprise, it comes as no shock that it’s in network automation that some of its better-known uses of AI finds their place. Automated configuration workflows and identity management combine into access solutions that are focused on rapid network deployments generated by natural language.

For organisations looking to develop into the next generation of AI users, Cisco has been rolling out hardware and orchestration tools that are aimed explicitly to support AI workloads. A recent collaboration with chip giant NVIDIA led to the emergence of a new line of switches and the Nexus Hyperfabric line of AI network controllers. These aim to simplify the deployment of the complex clusters needed for top-end, high-performance artificial intelligence clusters.

Cisco’s Secure AI Factory framework with partners like NVIDIA and Run:ai is aimed at production-grade AI pipelines. It uses distributed orchestration, GPU utilisation governance, Kubernetes microservice optimisation, and storage, under the umbrella product description Intersight. For more local deployments, Cisco Unified Edge brings all the necessary elements – compute, networking, security, and storage – close to where data gets generated and processed.

In environments where latency metrics are critically important, AI processing at the edge is the answer. But Cisco’s approach is not necessarily to offer dedicated IIoT-specific solutions. Instead, it tries to extend the operational models typically found in a data centre and applies the same technology (if not the same exact methodology) to edge sites. It’s like data centre-grade security policies and configurations available to remote installations. Having the same precepts and standards in cloud and edge mean that Cisco accredited engineers can manage and maintain data centres or small edge deployments using the same skills, accreditation, knowledge, and experience.

Security and risk management figure prominently in the Cisco AI narrative. Its Integrated AI Security and Safety Framework applies high standards of safety and security throughout the life-cycle of AI systems. It considers adversarial threats, supply chain weakness, the risk profiles of multi-agent interactions, and multi-modal vulnerabilities as issues that have to be addressed regardless of the nature or size of any deployment.

Cisco’s work on operational AI also reflects broader ecosystem conversations. The company markets products for organisations wanting to make the transition from generative to agentic AI, where autonomous software agents carry out operational tasks. In most cases, this requires new tooling and new operational protocols.

Cisco’s future AI plans include continuing its central work in infrastructure provision for AI workloads. It’s also pursuing broader adoption of AI-ready networks, including next-gen wireless and unified management systems that will control systems across campus, branch, and cloud environments. The company is also expanding its software and platform investments, including its most recent acquisition (NeuralFabric), to help it build a more comprehensive software stack and product portfolio.

In summary, Cisco’s AI deployment strategy combines hardware, software, and service elements that embed AI into operations, giving organisations a route to production-grade systems. Its work can be found in large-scale infrastructure, systems for unified management, risk mitigation, and anywhere that connects distributed, cloud, and edge computing.

(Image source: Pixabay)

 

Want to learn more about AI and big data from industry leaders? Check out AI & Big Data Expo taking place in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event is part of TechEx and co-located with other leading technology events. Click here for more information.

AI News is powered by TechForge Media. Explore other upcoming enterprise technology events and webinars here.

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Combing the Rackspace blogfiles for operational AI pointers

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In a recent blog output, Rackspace refers to the bottlenecks familiar to many readers: messy data, unclear ownership, governance gaps, and the cost of running models once they become part of production. The company frames them through the lens of service delivery, security operations, and cloud modernisation, which tells you where it is putting its own effort.

One of the clearest examples of operational AI inside Rackspace sits in its security business. In late January, the company described RAIDER (Rackspace Advanced Intelligence, Detection and Event Research) as a custom back-end platform built for its internal cyber defense centre. With security teams working amid many alerts and logs, standard detection engineering doesn’t scale if dependent on the manual writing of security rules. Rackspace says its RAIDER system unifies threat intelligence with detection engineering workflows and uses its AI Security Engine (RAISE) and LLMs to automate detection rule creation, generating detection criteria it describes as “platform-ready” in line with known frameworks such as MITRE ATT&CK. The company claims it’s cut detection development time by more than half and reduced mean time to detect and respond. This is just the kind of internal process change that matters.

The company also positions agentic AI as a way of taking the friction out of complex engineering programmes. A January post on modernising VMware environments on AWS describes a model in which AI agents handle data-intensive analysis and many repeating tasks, yet it keeps “architectural judgement, governance and business decisions” remain in the human domain. Rackspace presents this workflow as stopping senior engineers being sidelined into migration projects. The article states the target is to keep day two operations in scope – where many migration plans fail as teams discover they have modernised infrastructure but not operating practices.

Elsewhere the company sets out a picture of AI-supported operations where monitoring becomes more predictive, routine incidents are handled by bots and automation scripts, and telemetry (plus historical data) are used to spot patterns and, it turn, recommend fixes. This is conventional AIOps language, but it Rackspace is tying such language to managed services delivery, suggesting the company uses AI to reduce the cost of labour in operational pipelines in addition to the more familiar use of AI in customer-facing environments.

In a post describing AI-enabled operations, the company stresses the importance of focus strategy, governance and operating models. It specifies the machinery it needed to industrialise AI, such as choosing infrastructure based on whether workloads involve training, fine-tuning or inference. Many tasks are relatively lightweight and can run inference locally on existing hardware.

The company’s noted four recurring barriers to AI adoption, most notably that of fragmented and inconsistent data, and it recommends investment in integration and data management so models have consistent foundations. This is not an opinion unique to Rackspace, of course, but having it writ large by a technology-first, big player is illustrative of the issues faced by many enterprise-scale AI deployments.

A company of even greater size, Microsoft, is working to coordinate autonomous agents’ work across systems. Copilot has evolved into an orchestration layer, and in Microsoft’s ecosystem, multi-step task execution and broader model choice do exist. However, it’s noteworthy that Redmond is called out by Rackspace on the fact that productivity gains only arrive when identity, data access, and oversight are firmly ensconced into operations.

Rackspace’s near-term AI plan comprises of AI-assisted security engineering, agent-supported modernisation, and AI-augmented service management. Its future plans can perhaps be discerned in a January article published on the company’s blog that concerns private cloud AI trends. In it, the author argues inference economics and governance will drive architecture decisions well into 2026. It anticipates ‘bursty’ exploration in public clouds, while moving inference tasks into private clouds on the grounds of cost stability, and compliance. That’s a roadmap for operational AI grounded in budget and audit requirements, not novelty.

For decision-makers trying to accelerate their own deployments, the useful takeaway is that Rackspace has treats AI as an operational discipline. The concrete, published examples it gives are those that reduce cycle time in repeatable work. Readers may accept the company’s direction and still be wary of the company’s claimed metrics. The steps to take inside a growing business are to discover repeating processes, examine where strict oversight is necessary because of data governance, and where inference costs might be reduced by bringing some processing in-house.

(Image source: Pixabay)

 

Want to learn more about AI and big data from industry leaders? Check out AI & Big Data Expo taking place in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event is part of TechEx and co-located with other leading technology events. Click here for more information.

AI News is powered by TechForge Media. Explore other upcoming enterprise technology events and webinars here.

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Ronnie Sheth, CEO, SENEN Group: Why now is the time for enterprise AI to ‘get practical'

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Before you set sail on your AI journey, always check the state of your data – because if there is one thing likely to sink your ship, it is data quality.

Gartner estimates that poor data quality costs organisations an average of $12.9 million each year in wasted resources and lost opportunities. That’s the bad news. The good news is that organisations are increasingly understanding the importance of their data quality – and less likely to fall into this trap.

That’s the view of Ronnie Sheth, CEO of AI strategy, execution and governance firm SENEN Group. The company focuses on data and AI advisory, operationalisation and literacy, and Sheth notes she has been in the data and AI space ‘ever since [she] was a corporate baby’, so there is plenty of real-world experience behind the viewpoint. There is also plenty of success; Sheth notes that her company has a 99.99% client repeat rate.

“If I were to be very practical, the one thing I’ve noticed is companies jump into adopting AI before they’re ready,” says Sheth. Companies, she notes, will have an executive direction insisting they adopt AI, but without a blueprint or roadmap to accompany it. The result may be impressive user numbers, but with no measurable outcome to back anything up.

Even as recently as 2024, Sheth saw many organisations struggling because their data was ‘nowhere where it needed to be.’ “Not even close,” she adds. Now, the conversation has turned more practical and strategic. Companies are realising this, and coming to SENEN Group initially to get help with their data, rather than wanting to adopt AI immediately.

“When companies like that come to us, the first course of order is really fixing their data,” says Sheth. “The next course of order is getting to their AI model. They are building a strong foundation for any AI initiative that comes after that.

“Once they fix their data, they can build as many AI models as they want, and they can have as many AI solutions as they want, and they will get accurate outputs because now they have a strong foundation,” Sheth adds.

With breadth and depth in expertise, SENEN Group allows organisations to right their course. Sheth notes the example of one customer who came to them wanting a data governance initiative. Ultimately, it was the data strategy which was needed – the why and how, the outcomes of what they were trying to do with their data – before adding in governance and providing a roadmap for an operating model. “They’ve moved from raw data to descriptive analytics, moving into predictive analytics, and now we’re actually setting up an AI strategy for them,” says Sheth.

It is this attitude and requirement for practical initiatives which will be the cornerstone of Sheth’s discussion at AI & Big Data Expo Global in London this week. “Now would be the time to get practical with AI, especially enterprise AI adoption, and not think about ‘look, we’re going to innovate, we’re going to do pilots, we’re going to experiment,’” says Sheth. “Now is not the time to do that. Now is the time to get practical, to get AI to value. This is the year to do that in the enterprise.”

Watch the full video conversation with Ronnie Sheth below:

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