By the age of 20, Benjamin Breuninger's life was a mess. Estranged from his mother and stepfather, a dropout with no job and months behind on his rent, he often went a day or more without eating.. . .. By the age of 20, Benjamin Breuninger's life was a mess. Estranged from his mother and stepfather, a dropout with no job and months behind on his rent, he often went a day or more without eating. Online, he had a different life. There, he was Konceptor, a skilled hacker who broke into computer networks, defaced Web sites and strutted in online newsgroups such as alt.2600, where he closed his frequent postings with this warning: "The Keystroke is mightier than the Pen. And this is My GAME." In 2 1/2 years in the late 1990s, Breuninger hacked into dozens of computer systems. He peeked at the payroll of a nearby Taco Bell, left messages supporting Jesse Ventura on the St. Paul Public Library and KSTP radio Web sites and stole thousands of Internet e-mail accounts and passwords. Breuninger's online exploits ended when the FBI arrested him at his Bloomington apartment Sept. 11, 2000, for hacking into and downloading files from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California. . Benjamin Breuninger, a coding prodigy, led a double life of youthful aspirations and hacking thrills that ultimately caught the attention of authorities. hacker biography, cybersecurity story, ethical hacking, computer networks, online identity. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Privacy groups, led by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said the Federal Trade Commission should have taken action when they filed their first complaint this summer. The complaint, signed by 13 organizations, alleges the new operating system coerces consumers into . . . . Privacy groups, led by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said the Federal Trade Commission should have taken action when they filed their first complaint this summer. The complaint, signed by 13 organizations, alleges the new operating system coerces consumers into revealing sensitive personal information, with little control over how it will be used. In the face of government inaction, several groups said Tuesday that consumers should take pains to avoid signing up for Microsoft's Passport online identity service when they upgrade to Windows XP, which is due out Thursday. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Privacy groups, led by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said the Federal Trade Commission . privacy, groups, electronic, information, center, federal, trade, commission. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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