On Tue, Jun 14, 2011 at 4:24 AM, Mathieu ONeil <mathieu.oneil@anu.edu.au>wrote:
During the past two decades, hacking has chiefly been associated with software development. This is now changing as new walks of life are being explored with a hacker mindset, thus bringing back to memory the origin of hacking in hardware development. Now as then, the hacker is characterised by an active approach to technology, undaunted by hierarchies and established knowledge, and finally a commitment to sharing information freely.
i wish I had any understanding of why this view can continue to be promulgated. i see so little of it from groups like anonymous and so on. to the contrary, contemporary hacking is characterised by: - attempting to steal every bit of information and financial property i and you and every other person on this list has earned or owns by whatever means; - doing so without any clear political program or input from political thinkers, but typically because there is something they don't like about the target, and/or the target has something of value they want to steal; - being absolutely antidemocratic and authoritarian with regard to their decisions and actions; - keeping whatever profits they make solely for themselves; - in many cases, working on behalf of large multi-national corporations and governments. the most famous recent example is Stuxnet. where is the special issue on that topic? why do we keep having them, and endless list and conference discussions, on this one, which does not map onto the reality i know at all? it's not like this was in the news as recently as yesterday or today or anything... Hardly a month has gone by this year without a multinational company such as Google Inc., EMC Corp. or Sony Corp. disclosing it’s been hacked by cyber intruders who infiltrated networks or stole customer information. Yet no hacker has been publicly identified, charged or arrested. If past enforcement efforts are an indication, most of the perpetrators will never be prosecuted or punished. “I don’t have a high level of confidence that they will be brought to justice,” said Peter George, chief executive of Fidelis Security Systems Inc., a Bethesda, Md.-based data protection consulting firm whose clients include International Business Machines Corp., the U.S. Army and the Department of Commerce. “The government is doing what they can, but they need to do a lot more.” In the U.S., the FBI, the Secret Service and other law enforcement agencies are confronting what amounts to a massive crime wave that’s highly organized and hard to combat with traditional methods. The hacker organizations are well-funded and global, eluding arrest except in the rarest of cases. Attacks are coming from organized crime groups based in Eastern Europe and Russia, from industrial spies in China and from groups such as LulzSec, whose members appear to reside mostly in the U.S. and Europe and seem more interested in publicity than in making a profit from their crimes. (By Michael Riley, Greg Farrell and Ann Woolner, Bloomberg News, "Cyber intruders confound: Few hackers are brought to justice<http://www.telegram.com/article/20110612/NEWS/106129977/-1/NEWS05>," Jun 12 2011) -- David Golumbia dgolumbia@gmail.com