As remote work becomes the norm, the physical "Analog Hole"—the sound of your voice leaking through thin walls—has become a major privacy liability. This episode examines the emerging field of acoustic containment and the hardware designed to keep your private conversations off your neighbor's radar. We analyze the engineering behind wearable acoustic chambers that muffle speech at the source and the fascinating mechanics of laryngophones that capture vocal vibrations directly from the skin. From the challenges of the "occlusion effect" to the way modern AI models are being trained to reconstruct degraded audio signals, we explore how the technology of 2026 is attempting to fix the architectural failures of the 1950s. Whether you are dictating sensitive research or taking a confidential meeting in a shared apartment, the tools of vocal isolation are evolving to meet the demands of a voice-first world.