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Security Software > Security
News
Hackers Live by their own Code of Ethics
11-19-2003 05:56:12 AM CST -- By Joseph Menn, Times Staff Writer
It wasn't Mary Ann Davidson's worst nightmare, but it was close. A fax from a
hacker in the Middle East landed on her desk at Oracle Corp., proclaiming the
discovery of a hole in the company's database software through which he could
steal crucial information from such customers as Boeing Co., Ford Motor Co. and
the CIA. The fax warned Davidson, the company's chief security officer, to contact
the hacker immediately — or else. Luckily, the hacker hadn't found a real hole;
he'd just misinterpreted a function of the program. More surprisingly, he meant
no harm. "The sort of threatening tone he took was really only to get our attention," Davidson
said. "He actually turned out to be a nice guy." The confrontational style of
Davidson's hacker isn't unusual. As they troll through other people's computer
networks, hackers abide by their own quirky rules of etiquette. What would strike
most folks in corporate America as bad manners or worse may be considered the
height of courtesy in hackerdom.
In large part, that disconnect stems from the fierce individualism of hackers — they
are, after all, the sort of people who set aside the instruction manual and take
a machine apart to see how it works. Though they inhabit a lawless domain where
no data are considered private and "No Trespassing" signs are meaningless, they
adhere to their own codes of ethics that vary depending largely on what motivates
the hacker to hack. Sometimes it's fame. Now and then it's money. Often it's
a selfless desire to make software more secure. And occasionally it's a yearning
to wreak senseless havoc. Most hackers aren't malicious, security experts agree.
But from afar, it can be difficult to distinguish the saboteurs from the merely
curious, because they use the same tools, travel in the same virtual circles
and often share a disdain for the rule of law. Their philosophy predates personal
computers, going back to the days when pranksters manipulated the telephone system
to make free long-distance calls and cause other mischief. The personal rules
that guide them today generally allow them to break laws, as long as they believe
nobody will get hurt.....continued.....
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