He'll also have to pay AT&T $73,000 in damages. Andrew Auernheimer, better known by his pseudonym . He alerted AT&T to the flaw before sending the dataset to Gawker, which published it, leading to an FBI investigation. Mr. Auernheimer is part of the grey hat hacker collective Goatse Security, a division of the Gay Nigger Association of America, recently responsible for trolling the Daily Mail and unleashing a torrent of malicious spam on Tumblr. Back in November, Mr. Auernheimer was found guilty of . He notified Verizon about the vulnerability prior to any data breach resulting in criminal charges and imprisonment for Martin Hurst.. Data Breach, AT&T Security, Hacker Sentencing, Grey Hat Activity, Cybercrime News. . Dave Wreski
In recent months, hackers of all backgrounds have been forced to rethink their practices while facing a roundhouse combination of the DMCA, heightened law enforcement activity and deeper scrutiny by employers.. . .. In recent months, hackers of all backgrounds have been forced to rethink their practices while facing a roundhouse combination of the DMCA, heightened law enforcement activity and deeper scrutiny by employers. The issue pits two extremes against one another. At one end are the corporate-security experts who wear their metaphorical white hats because they adhere strictly to regulations and tend to believe that software vulnerabilities should be disclosed only to the software maker or a trusted third party. At the other are the black hats who are generally interested only in gaining access and breaking security. In the middle are the gray hats, who are finding their once-acceptable acts, such as informing the public of company security holes, could now land them in jail. Even the White House has weighed in on the controversy. While acknowledging the need for third-party discovery of flaws, President Bush's cybersecurity team believes that more stringent ethics need to be the rule, rather than the exception. The link for this article located at CNET is no longer available. . In recent months, hackers of all backgrounds have been forced to rethink their practices while facin. recent, months, hackers, backgrounds, forced, rethink, their, practices, while, facin. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Recently, "Gray Hat" crackers have been garnering a fair amount of publicity, exposing holes for nothing more than notoriety and a sense of self-fulfillment. These individuals seek out corporate networks and servers to pick them apart, find weaknesses the site administrators might have missed and make them public.. . .. Recently, "Gray Hat" crackers have been garnering a fair amount of publicity, exposing holes for nothing more than notoriety and a sense of self-fulfillment. These individuals seek out corporate networks and servers to pick them apart, find weaknesses the site administrators might have missed and make them public. However, the attention these people have been receiving is stirring debate. Are the good intentions of an attacker enough to exempt them from "Black Hat" status? The terms "White" and "Black Hat" can be traced back to old Westerns where the good guys wore white hats and the villains, black. Not only did this allow for quick identification of who's who, it also played on the good/light, evil/darkness concepts. When one speaks of "White Hats" in the information security realm, the consensus is you are referring to network and system administrators (and perhaps security researchers). The "Black Hats" are the evildoers, the persons intent on breaking into the system or causing it to perform in a manner contrary to its design. A newcomer to this arrangement is the "Gray Hat", a cross between good and evil; a person with no authority to access the systems they test but tends to portray himself as a well-meaning "researcher". The fundamental difference between the Black and the Gray would seem to be the individual's motivations for attacking the system. It should also be noted that most gray hat attackers are not looking to vandalize or otherwise alter the data of the systems they compromise, only modifying data when necessary to prove a point or leave a mark. The link for this article located at kill-hup is no longer available. . Shadow hackers unveil vulnerabilities for fame,merging the boundaries between righteous and nefarious aims in cyber intrusions.. Gray Hat Security, Ethical Hacking, Network Breaches. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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