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Patch your browser and watch your endpoints. This week on Zero Downtime, John and Logan break down a Google Chrome zero-day being exploited in the wild, the growing Windows 11 Recall backlash, Apple’s rumored A18 MacBook as a Chromebook alternative, and the unsettling “stolen voice” allegations tied to Google NotebookLM. They open with the ClickFix style attack that turns basic troubleshooting into a trap. A seemingly normal DNS lookup can return a malicious PowerShell command, using iwr (Invoke-WebRequest) to pull down a zipped payload, run a Python script, and ultimately drop a RAT. The scary part is how quickly attackers can swap the command out, and how AI-assisted copy paste “fixes” make it easier than ever for users to run the wrong thing. Next, they talk hardware strategy and the student laptop market. A rumored lower cost MacBook built around the A18 chip could land right in Chromebook territory with Apple build quality, a simpler spec sheet, and just enough performance for school. The big question is whether Apple can turn years of Chromebook familiarity into long term Mac users. From there, the conversation shifts to why more people are seriously considering leaving Windows for Linux. Ads, telemetry, AI features, and overall bloat are pushing power users and regular users alike to look for alternatives. Gaming has historically been the blocker, but Proton, Vulkan, improved GPU drivers, and a changing anti-cheat landscape are making Linux a more realistic daily driver than it used to be. They also dig into the “who owns your voice” problem. A lawsuit alleges the sound of a professional voice was used to train an AI experience in Google NotebookLM, raising uncomfortable questions about consent, training data, and what happens when voice cloning gets good enough that it stops feeling like a novelty and starts feeling like theft. They close on Windows 11 “AI slop” and quality control. Recall, forced integrations, updates that break core workflows, and the feeling that users are now the QA department. If the trend continues, the push toward Linux and “built by humans, for humans” software is only going to accelerate. In this episode of Zero Downtime, John and Logan cover: • ClickFix attack via DNS How a DNS lookup can return a PowerShell command that downloads a RAT payload • Chrome zero-day patch now What a “zero-day” means today, and why use-after-free bugs matter • Apple A18 MacBook vs Chromebook A student-focused MacBook concept, pricing pressure, and what Apple is really targeting • Switching from Windows to Linux Proton, WINE, Vulkan, drivers, and the practical blockers like Office and Adobe • Google NotebookLM stolen voice allegations Voice cloning, consent, and the future of identity in an AI world • Windows 11 Recall and AI slop Telemetry, forced apps, broken updates, and why users are losing patience Zero Downtime is a weekly conversation about reliability, cybersecurity, privacy, and real-world tech decisions that actually impact businesses and everyday users. Subscribe for weekly episodes, and drop a comment with the one change you would make to Windows 11 if you could. #ZeroDowntime #Cybersecurity #Chrome #ChromeZeroDay #Windows11 #Recall #Apple #MacBook #Chromebook #Linux #Proton #WINE #Vulkan #Google #NotebookLM #VoiceCloning #DNS #PowerShell #RAT #TechNews