Want a good laugh?
Want a good laugh?
Check this out!
http://adequacy.org/public/stories/2001 ... .2147.html
Is your son a computer hacker? I found while looking for stories about victims of hackers. And what a load of bullsh*t it is!. But its also a good source of laughter. It was posted back in 2002 and there are over 5900 comments bagging the author out. So many corrections need to be made for this article even if it is old, but it is obviously a joke!
Also, about the word 'hacker', it should in fact be 'cracker'. We as computer programmers are hackers. The 'evil' infiltrators on the net are crackers.
http://adequacy.org/public/stories/2001 ... .2147.html
Is your son a computer hacker? I found while looking for stories about victims of hackers. And what a load of bullsh*t it is!. But its also a good source of laughter. It was posted back in 2002 and there are over 5900 comments bagging the author out. So many corrections need to be made for this article even if it is old, but it is obviously a joke!
Also, about the word 'hacker', it should in fact be 'cracker'. We as computer programmers are hackers. The 'evil' infiltrators on the net are crackers.
Last edited by hezoe on Mon Jun 06, 2005 11:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
The safest policy is to limit your children's access to the computer to a maximum of forty-five minutes each day.
they make it sound like a $$$ or something, lol.6. Does your son use Quake?
^pricelessBSD, Lunix, Debian and Mandrake are all versions of an illegal hacker operation system, invented by a Soviet computer hacker named Linyos Torovoltos, before the Russians lost the Cold War.
Hackers tend to dress in bright, day-glo colors. They may wear baggy pants, bright colored shirts and spiky hair dyed in bright colors to match their clothes. They may take to carrying "glow-sticks" and some wear pacifiers around their necks. (I have no idea why they do this).
Hezoe, it's a joke
Hezoe, It is obviously a joke. Not only is it satire, but it is incredibly well done satire, which is rare. I can't believe you though it was serious.
Joseph
Joseph
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No, I never thought the author was being serious! I'm certainly not that gullable, but I was just pointing out the seriousness of his other articles. 'Lunix' sure gave it away!
BSD, Lunix, Debian and Mandrake are all versions of an illegal hacker operation system, invented by a Soviet computer hacker named Linyos Torovoltos, before the Russians lost the Cold War.
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Strangly enough, I only copped why people wear those in the past two weeks... And I'm still not quite sure I'm right (I didn't ask to confirm it cause it's a sort of stupid thing to miss, and I may have gotten it WAAAY wrong)...some wear pacifiers around their necks.
matt
PS: writing a kind of comic at http://matt2jones.deviantart.com ... I DREW the pictures this time...
PPS: And 'hacker' means gaining access to another computer via 'backdoors'
'Cracker' means via a brute force attack, by just guessing the passwords
I 'cracked' the code/password
I 'hacked' the 'mainframe'
Programmers are just called programmers
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OK, you think that a hacker is whatever you want. But the true meaning is describe here http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/hacker-howto.html How to Become a Hacker. Hackers build things, crackers break them.
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Isn't that a reference to some techno raves? And the pacifiers are there because ecstacy poppers feel the compulsive need to chew, so they wear the pacifier to chew. That's what I heard anyway. What that has to do with hackers I don't knowHackers tend to dress in bright, day-glo colors. They may wear baggy pants, bright colored shirts and spiky hair dyed in bright colors to match their clothes. They may take to carrying "glow-sticks" and some wear pacifiers around their necks. (I have no idea why they do this).
- matt2jones
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okay lets have a flame war!
I challenge you: The basic definition is hackers one who hacks, and crackers is one who cracks.
I think I've read that article before, back when I was 14 and wanted to get into this shit, and If I remember right (and I could be thinking of a different article here), he claims that Bill Gates and his peergroup are real hackers, and that 'computer vandals' are stealing his name. And that really good carpenters are hackers.
From my 'extensive research' back when I was 14 (aka some dodgy bbs apple ][ files) I got the impression that the word hacker was invented by journalists to describe the breaking and entering of the 'cyberworld', and even if it was not, it definatly means that in the popular mind now, and by definition a word means what its used for, so...
And in general 'how to be an <alternate culture>' guides are bullshit, in one respect because these alternate cultures are products of evolution, and not rigidly defined cults, and so the steriotypes and rules are written to try and suit what exists to begin with, and are never really acurate then because the kind of person who likes to write list of rules and steriotypes tends to be a late comer, just getting into the scene trying to sort it out in there own mind by speaking their thoughts aloud, and in another respect because they're always a collection of free thinking individuals with differing codes of conduct, and so the more members the more varied...
whatever.
PS: Just to reasure, I actually enjoy these discussions and I value these arguements because, you know, challenging preconceptions is good, I'm not trying to flake you and i don't mean any of this personaly, its just a debate, okay? No one shut down this thread, YA HEAR ME? (brandishes gun)
matt
I challenge you: The basic definition is hackers one who hacks, and crackers is one who cracks.
I think I've read that article before, back when I was 14 and wanted to get into this shit, and If I remember right (and I could be thinking of a different article here), he claims that Bill Gates and his peergroup are real hackers, and that 'computer vandals' are stealing his name. And that really good carpenters are hackers.
From my 'extensive research' back when I was 14 (aka some dodgy bbs apple ][ files) I got the impression that the word hacker was invented by journalists to describe the breaking and entering of the 'cyberworld', and even if it was not, it definatly means that in the popular mind now, and by definition a word means what its used for, so...
And in general 'how to be an <alternate culture>' guides are bullshit, in one respect because these alternate cultures are products of evolution, and not rigidly defined cults, and so the steriotypes and rules are written to try and suit what exists to begin with, and are never really acurate then because the kind of person who likes to write list of rules and steriotypes tends to be a late comer, just getting into the scene trying to sort it out in there own mind by speaking their thoughts aloud, and in another respect because they're always a collection of free thinking individuals with differing codes of conduct, and so the more members the more varied...
whatever.
PS: Just to reasure, I actually enjoy these discussions and I value these arguements because, you know, challenging preconceptions is good, I'm not trying to flake you and i don't mean any of this personaly, its just a debate, okay? No one shut down this thread, YA HEAR ME? (brandishes gun)
matt
Do not mistake Apathy for feeling Content.
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Wikipedia wrote: Currently, "hacker" is used in two main ways, one pejorative and one complimentary: in popular usage and in the media, it generally describes computer intruders or criminals; in the computing community, it describes a particularly brilliant programmer or technical expert (for example: "Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, is a genius hacker."). The latter is said by some to be the "correct" usage of the word (see the Jargon File definition below). "Hacker" can therefore be seen as a shibboleth, identifying those who use it in its positive sense as members of the computing community.
As a result of this conflict, the term is the subject of some controversy. The pejorative usage is disliked by many who identify themselves as hackers, and who do not like their label used negatively. Many users of the positive form say the "intruder" meaning should be deprecated, and advocate terms such as "cracker" or "black hat" to replace it. Others prefer to follow common popular usage, arguing that the positive form is confusing and never likely to become widespread. It should be noted however, that the positive definition of hacker was widely used for many years before the negative definition, and thus can be seen as more authentic.
A possible middle ground position observes that "hacking" describes a collection of skills, and that these skills are utilized by hackers of both descriptions, though for differing reasons. The companion situation which illustrates this is the skills involved in locksmithing, specifically picking locks, which ? aside from its being a skill with a fairly high tropism to 'classic' hacking ? is a skill which can be used for good or evil.
A much better and more thorough history of the term "hacker" can be found in chapter 2 of Bruce Sterling's modern classic The Hacker Crackdown.
http://stuff.mit.edu/hacker/part2.html
The term clearly has two separate and distinct meanings. That article's usage of "hacker" was perfectly valid -- it was using the more popular definition meaning "computer criminal" or "computer intruder".
http://stuff.mit.edu/hacker/part2.html
The term clearly has two separate and distinct meanings. That article's usage of "hacker" was perfectly valid -- it was using the more popular definition meaning "computer criminal" or "computer intruder".
Well I don't think that 'expert' programmers 'hack'; they create/program. You could say that a cracker 'hacks' and when he (or she) breaches a system, they have cracked. So in MY view:
Hacker = Expert programmer
Cracker = Computer criminal/intruder
Hack = Attempt to breach system
Crack = Successfully breach
Hacker = Expert programmer
Cracker = Computer criminal/intruder
Hack = Attempt to breach system
Crack = Successfully breach
- matt2jones
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A hack is an amatuer, comming from amatuer journalists who couldn't type fluidly and 'hacked' at the keyboard with one finger...
and beleive it or not, my 'extensive research' was the Hacker Crackdown, I fork loved that .txt file, but I was 14 so I've prob. forgotten allot of it.
matt - studying hard
Wouldn't it make more sense if Hacker = 'one who attempted to breach a system', then something unrelated to any other meaning of the word?Hacker = Expert programmer
Cracker = Computer criminal/intruder
Hack = Attempt to breach system
Crack = Successfully breach
and beleive it or not, my 'extensive research' was the Hacker Crackdown, I fork loved that .txt file, but I was 14 so I've prob. forgotten allot of it.
But of this I admit defeat... Just with a certain confusion... Who's ass did they pull the word out of if it didn't come from the verb Hack?It should be noted however, that the positive definition of hacker was widely used for many years before the negative definition, and thus can be seen as more authentic.
matt - studying hard
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I believe, though I can't be sure, that the original usage of the word hack was tied to computer technology at the creation of the first video game, the description of which I don't remember. why it was called a hack, I'm not sure, but it could have been because making a game on the computer was pretty strange and not what the machine was intended for.