Here's yet another great example of the gross misuse of the term 'hacker' by the under-informed media: http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/apr2003/tc20030416_7638_tc029...
A quick search on google, for some background: http://www.google.com/search?q=misuse+of+term+hacker
Imagine how angry a Muslim would be at an article titled "Should You Hire a Muslim?"--the author going by the assumption that all Muslims are terrorists. If you're a Muslim living in the US post 9/11, or if you have Muslim friends in a similar situation, you'll understand what I mean.
Just as all Muslims are not terrorists (it's a real, real shame we have to explain this to some over-patriotic jerk in the US), all hackers are not social outlaws who break into systems to steal private data or cripple the system. A good hacker is capable of such stuff, and some hackers do, but the vast majority don't!
Kevin Mitnick *might* be a hacker--I don't know, I don't care. Even if he is a hacker, he's also a guy, white, American, etc. and his name begins with 'K'. Is it fair to say that all white American guys whose names begin with 'K' are criminals?
A hacker is only as likely to be a lawbreaker as, say, a carpenter, doctor, sportsperson, soldier, musician, lawyer (yes!) or even policeman.
I'm proud to be associated with the hacker community of GNU, Linux and the Internet, and I urge my fellow hackers to raise their voices against such tarnishing use of our name.
-Manish
On Thu, 17 Apr 2003 23:35:28 +0530 Manish Jethani wrote:
Kevin Mitnick *might* be a hacker--I don't know, I don't care.
I guess he succeeded more because of his social engineering skills. The techie tricks of trade were all there on IRC.
Manish, Did you kept a copy of your mail to Deborah Radcliff and www.businessweek.com, if not, please do so
We should always do that whenever we see any misrepresentation like this. I was also assuming hacker means evil. Because that was the meaning for the hacker given by media.
Cheers Biju
--- Manish Jethani manish.jethani@oracle.com wrote:
Here's yet another great example of the gross misuse of the term 'hacker' by the under-informed media: http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/apr2003/tc20030416_7638_tc029...
A quick search on google, for some background: http://www.google.com/search?q=misuse+of+term+hacker
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Biju G C wrote:
Manish, Did you kept a copy of your mail to Deborah Radcliff and www.businessweek.com, if not, please do so
Thanks for pointing out. I couldn't get a direct contact to Deborah Radcliff but I've sent it out from the "Letters to the Editor" section on the site. I do have a copy of the acknowledgement.
-Manish