Federal prosecutors say Reuters' deputy social media editor conspired with a notorious hacker network to cause an online security breach that should be punished by decades in federal prison.. Fervent online supporters of Matthew Keys say the journalist was just taking part in an online prank that briefly altered the Los Angeles Times' website, and he shouldn't ever have been suspended from his job. The link for this article located at LA Times is no longer available. . Fervent online supporters of Matthew Keys say the journalist was just taking part in an online prank. federal, prosecutors, reuters', deputy, social, media, editor, conspired, notorious, hacker. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
If you ask any stranger on the street what they think about hackers, you will probably get a surly look followed by a negative comment. The reason for this is simple — over 80% of computer users have been affected by a "hacking" incident. Whether it is a stolen credit card or virus attacks, the media has labeled the people behind such activity with the term "hacker." I am not going to bore you with the semantics of hacker, cracker, whitehat, and blackhat, because you can look those terms all over the internet. The point is that not all hackers are bad. In fact, most hackers stay on the legitimate side of the law and use their talents to create new technologies that you benefit from. For example, Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, the founders of Apple, are often labeled as hackers. . . If you ask any stranger on the street what they think about hackers, you will probably get a surly l. stranger, street, think, about, hackers, probably, surly. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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
Well-meaning hackers are creating an army of "script kiddies" by making security holes public, says a speaker at the Black Hat Security Conference. . Well-meaning hackers are creating an army of "script kiddies" by making security holes public, says a speaker at the Black Hat Security Conference. The link for this article located at eXcite News is no longer available. . Well-meaning hackers are creating an army of 'script kiddies' by making security holes public, says . well-meaning, hackers, creating, 'script, kiddies', making, security, holes, public. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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