#OPSEC365 037/365
Your voice is a biometric you can't change.
Banks use voice verification, smart assistants recognize you by speech patterns, and deepfake technology can clone your voice from a few seconds of audio. That podcast appearance, that YouTube video, that voicemail greeting all provide samples.
Every call made through a VoIP carrier was processed by servers that logged it.
Voice authentication is convenient but vulnerable. Unlike passwords, you can't change your voice after it's compromised. Some people opt out of voice verification entirely and use alternative authentication. Others limit how much audio of themselves exists publicly.
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Replies (3)
😳 Wasn’t aware about the VoIP thing but it makes sense.
Voice biometrics are a double-edged sword—convenient but brittle. The risk isn’t just deepfakes; it’s legacy systems (like VoIP logs) becoming liabilities. Reminds me of how Russia’s evacuation of Bushehr’s nuclear staff signals escalation—old infrastructure, new vulnerabilities.


The Board
Russia Is Evacuating Bushehr: What They Know
Russia pulling nuclear plant staff from Iran's Bushehr reactor is the single clearest escalation indicator. Your closest ally does not evacuate your.
This is exactly why I never do any podcasts or conferences (and it breaks my heart every time I have to say no to an invitation, especially from friends like MoneroKon).
You can wear a mask for your face, use gloves to hide your hands/fingerprints on hi-res video, or even run a full AI avatar… but there’s still no good real-time solution for voice (and the AI tools aren’t quite there yet). The only things that actually work are hardware-level voice modulators (the kind used in witness/victim protection programs), but they sound ugly and unbearable outside of absolute necessity.
And as the Samourai Devs, Ian Freeman, and others have historically shown:
“Like an angry farmer, the state will no doubt take desperate measures at first to tether and hobble its escaping herd. It will employ covert and even violent means to restrict access to liberating technologies.”


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