On June 27, 2024, millions of people worldwide suddenly couldn’t access one of the internet’s most popular DNS services—not because of a cyberattack in the traditional sense, but because a single network in Brazil convinced the internet that it owned an IP address that belonged to someone else. This wasn’t hacking in the way most people understand it—no passwords were stolen, no systems were breached, yet traffic from 300 networks across 70 countries was instantly rerouted into oblivion. In this episode, we break down BGP hijacking: the invisible routing attack that lets anyone with the right access redirect your internet traffic anywhere they want, and why the protocol holding the entire internet together was built on a foundation of trust that no longer makes sense in 2026.

