
Hosted by Amir Mizroch · EN
A Deep-Tech Deep-Dive "HARDTalk for Startups" show. From Amir Mizroch, ex EMEA Tech Editor, The Wall Street Journal

Send us a textThe AI revolution has a glitch. Despite reaching nearly a billion users, today's large language models suffer from a fundamental flaw: they hallucinate. With alarming confidence, chatbots make up information that is entirely fictitious—recommending non-existent products, inventing medical treatments, and even selling luxury cars for $1. This is not a bug, insist the experts, but an inherent property of systems designed to predict plausible text rather than retrieve verified facts.The cost of these fabrications is mounting. Air Canada was successfully sued after its chatbot promised free bereavement fares that violated company policy. Software firm Cursor hemorrhaged users when its AI support agent falsely claimed a technical glitch was actually an intentional policy change. According to research, approximately 20% of responses from even the most advanced models contain hallucinations—an error rate utterly unacceptable for critical sectors like healthcare, finance, and defense.Enter Qualifire AI, an Israeli startup building guardrails for corporate AI deployments. Rather than deploying another large language model to catch mistakes (which would simply compound the problem), Qualifire uses specialized small language models that act as a "reverse firewall," evaluating AI outputs before they reach users. The system intercepts problematic responses in milliseconds, replacing them with safer alternatives.What distinguishes Qualifire's approach is both its speed—operating within 20 milliseconds to maintain user experience—and its efficiency. Instead of requiring extensive integration with client databases, the system learns from small samples of sensitive information, automatically generating test cases to train itself.As AI adoption accelerates despite these risks, Qualifire addresses the crucial "last mile" problem that has stalled implementation in regulated industries. With AI's trustworthiness increasingly tied to its commercial viability, firms like Qualifire aren't merely offering technical fixes—they're constructing the governance infrastructure that could finally bring artificial intelligence into mission-critical environments.Support the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com

Send us a textAdvancing Battery Technology: An Interview with Addionics CEO Moshiel BitonIn this episode, Moshiel Biton, CEO and co-founder of Addionics, shares his journey from material science to pioneering battery technology, addressing the critical need for more efficient and longer-lasting batteries in today's energy-dependent world. He explains Addionics' innovative approach to improving lithium-ion batteries by replacing the traditional 2D metal foil current collectors with 3D porous structures, resulting in enhanced efficiency, longer life, and faster charging. Biton discusses the impact on the automotive industry, the role of strategic versus financial investors, and the challenges in scaling up production. He highlights the transformative potential of their technology in the evolving battery market and the broader electrification revolution.00:00 Introduction to the CEO and Company01:03 Company Overview and Strategic Investors02:47 Innovative Battery Technology Explained05:16 Battery Basics and Importance13:10 Challenges and Solutions in Battery Manufacturing20:24 Business Impact and Industry Implications22:13 High Energy Chemistry and Trade-offs23:12 Innovations in Battery Technology24:18 Market Impact and Business Strategy26:39 Challenges in Scaling Up29:46 Global Competition and Opportunities34:18 Electrification Revolution37:26 The Future of Battery TechnologySupport the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com

Send us a textRevolutionizing Plant-Based Foods with Alfred's Food TechIn this episode, I speak with the team behind Alfred's Food Tech, a company innovating in the plant-based food industry. Alfred's is adapting film coating technology from the pharmaceutical industry to create high-quality, plant-based proteins that overcome traditional barriers such as taste, texture, and nutritional content. CEO Gofna Liss-Rubin discusses the company's technology platform and market strategy, while CTO Marina Kirjner Matana explains the technological processes and challenges. The team highlights the importance of consumer acceptance and details their upcoming market launch in Israel. Dive into the advancements and market implications of Alfred's unique approach to plant-based proteins.00:00 Introduction to the Dejargonizer01:31 Meet the Founders of Alfred's Food Tech03:47 The Big Picture Problem in the Food Industry09:55 Alfred's Innovative Approach to Plant-Based Proteins11:51 Understanding the Technology Behind Alfred's25:16 Market Strategy and Consumer Insights33:55 Scaling Up and Future Prospects37:11 Conclusion and Final ThoughtsSupport the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com

Send us a text2025 is the New 1870: Dan Shapiro on how Trump Is Taking Us Back to the 19th Century In this episode of The Dejargonizer, host Amir Mizroch sits down with former US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro to unpack a provocative thesis: that Trump's foreign policy instincts are reverting global politics to a 19th-century model of competing imperial powers. Shapiro explains how Trump's real estate developer mindset of "ownership," his deal-making impulses, and conflict aversion could lead to a world divided into three spheres dominated by the US, Russia, and China. From Ukraine to Israel, Taiwan to Europe, the implications are profound and potentially destabilizing. A must-listen for anyone concerned about the future of global security and America's role in the world.Support the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com

Send us a textWhy does the World Economic Forum think misinformation is scarier than nukes and climate change? Why are we more polarized than ever before? How do foreign powers mess with our minds? On this episode we are joined by Daniel Ravner, co-founder and CEO of Brinker, a misinformation threat management platform. Daniel pulls back the curtain on the wild world of digital influence operations, from Iranian sleeper accounts lurking in your WhatsApp groups to AI-powered narrative warfare. This episode reveals how modern propaganda spreads and seeps into polarized societies. A mind-bending journey under the hood of the information war you didn't even know you were fighting.Support the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com

Send us a textWe’re diving into a game-changing shift in modern warfare. From mysterious drones over the UK and US to swarms reshaping battlefields in Ukraine, Gaza, and beyond, drones are rewriting the rules of conflict. These cheap flying machines can destroy multi-million-dollar tanks with pinpoint precision, and their stealth makes them almost impossible to track.Joining us is Dr. Yiftach Richter, founder of R2 Wireless, an Israeli startup that’s cracking the code on detecting wireless-emitting devices—like drones—before they wreak havoc. We’ll explore how drones work, how they’re controlled, and how the battlefield is evolving into a war of algorithms and autonomous systems.From military breakthroughs to everyday threats—think hacked delivery drones or spoofed autonomous cars—this episode uncovers how drones are shaping the future of warfare, technology, and even life at home.Support the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com

Send us a textIn this episode of The Dejargonizer Podcast, leading Syria and Lebanon expert Carmit Valensi, head of the Northern Arena Program at Israel's Tel Aviv University Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) and former IDF intelligence analyst, takes us on a wild road trip through the sinister world of Captagon, the dangerous drug fueling terrorism in the Middle East. Valensi is the perfect guide to explore Captagon's role in funding terrorist activities, the Assad regime's involvement, and the potential global spillover of this dangerous substance.Support the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com

Send us a text"He'd Be So Pissed If We Shut Down"- How a Mission-Driven Startup Deals With Its Founder's Sudden DeathThis episode of The Dejargonizer Podcast is dedicated to the memory of Adam Bismuth, the founder and CEO of SightBit, an AI-powered anti-drowning startup that's hoping to "bring Baywatch into the 21st Century". Adam, who served as an advanced master sergeant in the reserves, died in battle inside the Gaza Strip on 22 January, 2024. He was 35 years old. Founded in 2018 after Adam witnessed a drowning in 2019, SightBit uses computer vision on cameras installed at beaches and lakes to give lifeguards real-time drowning alerts. The company's Chief Technology Officer Itamar Gur, and Chief Business Officer Maayan Padan are my guests on this special episode. Support the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com

Send us a textDoesn't it seem that some people, many people in fact, will believe anything these days? How do seemingly normal and intelligent people fall for ridiculous conspiracy theories without question? What's happening to our ability to discern between the plausible and the preposterous?Guy Tytunovich, co-founder and CEO of bot-mitigation company Cheq, takes us into a shadowy and automated underworld where authoritarian regimes deploy armies of robotic avatars (bots) on social media platforms, especially around elections. Their aim: tear Western societies from within, peddle and amplify conspiracy theories based on disinformation, and weaken democratic societies.Support the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com

Send us a textIn this episode we focus on the story of Dr. Ofer Grosbard, a clinical psychologist who was hired by Israel's military intelligence to enhance its understanding in enemy profiling. Tasked with incorporating psychological insights, Dr. Grosbard aimed to reshape the unit's analytical approach. Despite initial optimism, he faced resistance and a lack of actionable response to his recommendations. After six months of trying to implement change and encourage open discussions, Dr. Grosbard left the unit, citing a failure to break through the entrenched analytical and cultural biases. His journey highlights the challenges of integrating cross-cultural psychology into military intelligence.Learn about the emotional bonds military intelligence analysts form with targets, and how these connections impact decision-making. Learn about the value of incorporating psychological tendencies like mild depression or minor paranoia to create a more balanced strategic outlook. Dr. Grossbard's compelling insights challenge the conventional wisdom of military intelligence, encouraging a profound shift in the way we engage with global security strategies. This episode promises to shift your perspective on the intricate web of psychological and cultural factors influencing military intelligence today.Support the showListenApple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts.ConnectLinkedInTwitterNewsletter Email: amir@orangegrovecomms.com