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Top 10 Most Famous Hackers of All Time

The portrayal of hackers in the media has ranged from the high-tech super-spy, as in Mission Impossible where Ethan Hunt repels from the ceiling to hack the CIA computer system and steal the "NOC list," to the lonely anti-social teen who is simply looking for entertainment.

The reality, however, is that hackers are a very diverse bunch, a group simultaneously blamed with causing billions of dollars in damages as well as credited with the development of the World Wide Web and the founding of major tech companies. In this article, we test the theory that truth is better than fiction by introducing you to ten of the most famous hackers, both nefarious and heroic, to let you decide for yourself.

Black Hat Crackers

The Internet abounds with hackers, known as crackers or "black hats," who work to exploit computer systems. They are the ones you've seen on the news being hauled away for cybercrimes. Some of them do it for fun and curiosity, while others are looking for personal gain. In this section we profile five of the most famous and interesting "black hat" hackers.

  1. Jonathan James: James gained notoriety when he became the first juvenile to be sent to prison for hacking. He was sentenced at 16 years old. In an anonymous PBS interview, he professes, "I was just looking around, playing around. What was fun for me was a challenge to see what I could pull off."

    James's major intrusions targeted high-profile organizations. He installed a backdoor into a Defense Threat Reduction Agency server. The DTRA is an agency of the Department of Defense charged with reducing the threat to the U.S. and its allies from nuclear, biological, chemical, conventional and special weapons. The backdoor he created enabled him to view sensitive emails and capture employee usernames and passwords.

    James also cracked into NASA computers, stealing software worth approximately $1.7 million. According to the Department of Justice, "The software supported the International Space Station's physical environment, including control of the temperature and humidity within the living space." NASA was forced to shut down its computer systems, ultimately racking up a $41,000 cost. James explained that he downloaded the code to supplement his studies on C programming, but contended, "The code itself was crappy . . . certainly not worth $1.7 million like they claimed."

    Given the extent of his intrusions, if James, also known as "c0mrade," had been an adult he likely would have served at least 10 years. Instead, he was banned from recreational computer use and was slated to serve a six-month sentence under house arrest with probation. However, he served six months in prison for violation of parole. Today, James asserts that he's learned his lesson and might start a computer security company.

  2. Adrian Lamo: Lamo's claim to fame is his break-ins at major organizations like The New York Times and Microsoft. Dubbed the "homeless hacker," he used Internet connections at Kinko's, coffee shops and libraries to do his intrusions. In a profile article, "He Hacks by Day, Squats by Night," Lamo reflects, "I have a laptop in Pittsburgh, a change of clothes in D.C. It kind of redefines the term multi-jurisdictional."

    Lamo's intrusions consisted mainly of penetration testing, in which he found flaws in security, exploited them and then informed companies of their shortcomings. His hits include Yahoo!, Bank of America, Citigroup and Cingular. When white hat hackers are hired by companies to do penetration testing, it's legal. What Lamo did is not.

    When he broke into The New York Times' intranet, things got serious. He added himself to a list of experts and viewed personal information on contributors, including Social Security numbers. Lamo also hacked into The Times' LexisNexis account to research high-profile subject matter.

    For his intrusion at The New York Times, Lamo was ordered to pay approximately $65,000 in restitution. He was also sentenced to six months of home confinement and two years of probation, which expired January 16, 2007. Lamo is currently working as an award-winning journalist and public speaker.

  3. Kevin Mitnick: A self-proclaimed "hacker poster boy," Mitnick went through a highly publicized pursuit by authorities. His mischief was hyped by the media but his actual offenses may be less notable than his notoriety suggests. The Department of Justice describes him as "the most wanted computer criminal in United States history." His exploits were detailed in two movies: Freedom Downtime and Takedown.

    Mitnick had a bit of hacking experience before committing the offenses that made him famous. He started out exploiting the Los Angeles bus punch card system to get free rides. Then, like Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, dabbled in phone phreaking. Although there were numerous offenses, Mitnick was ultimately convicted for breaking into the Digital Equipment Corporation's computer network and stealing software.

    Mitnick's mischief got serious when he went on a two and a half year "coast-to-coast hacking spree." The CNN article, "Legendary computer hacker released from prison," explains that "he hacked into computers, stole corporate secrets, scrambled phone networks and broke into the national defense warning system." He then hacked into computer expert and fellow hacker Tsutomu Shimomura's home computer, which led to his undoing.

    Today, Mitnick has been able to move past his role as a black hat hacker and become a productive member of society. He served five years, about 8 months of it in solitary confinement, and is now a computer security consultant, author and speaker.

  4. Kevin Poulsen: Also known as Dark Dante, Poulsen gained recognition for his hack of LA radio's KIIS-FM phone lines, which earned him a brand new Porsche, among other items. Law enforcement dubbed him "the Hannibal Lecter of computer crime."

    Authorities began to pursue Poulsen after he hacked into a federal investigation database. During this pursuit, he further drew the ire of the FBI by hacking into federal computers for wiretap information.

    His hacking specialty, however, revolved around telephones. Poulsen's most famous hack, KIIS-FM, was accomplished by taking over all of the station's phone lines. In a related feat, Poulsen also "reactivated old Yellow Page escort telephone numbers for an acquaintance who then ran a virtual escort agency." Later, when his photo came up on the show Unsolved Mysteries, 1-800 phone lines for the program crashed. Ultimately, Poulsen was captured in a supermarket and served a sentence of five years.

    Since serving time, Poulsen has worked as a journalist. He is now a senior editor for Wired News. His most prominent article details his work on identifying 744 sex offenders with MySpace profiles.

  5. Robert Tappan Morris: Morris, son of former National Security Agency scientist Robert Morris, is known as the creator of the Morris Worm, the first computer worm to be unleashed on the Internet. As a result of this crime, he was the first person prosecuted under the 1986 Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

    Morris wrote the code for the worm while he was a student at Cornell. He asserts that he intended to use it to see how large the Internet was. The worm, however, replicated itself excessively, slowing computers down so that they were no longer usable. It is not possible to know exactly how many computers were affected, but experts estimate an impact of 6,000 machines. He was sentenced to three years' probation, 400 hours of community service and a fined $10,500.

    Morris is currently working as a tenured professor at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. He principally researches computer network architectures including distributed hash tables such as Chord and wireless mesh networks such as Roofnet.

White Hat Hackers

Hackers that use their skills for good are classified as "white hat." These white hats often work as certified "Ethical Hackers," hired by companies to test the integrity of their systems. Others, operate without company permission by bending but not breaking laws and in the process have created some really cool stuff. In this section we profile five white hat hackers and the technologies they have developed.

  1. Stephen Wozniak: "Woz" is famous for being the "other Steve" of Apple. Wozniak, along with current Apple CEO Steve Jobs, co-founded Apple Computer. He has been awarded with the National Medal of Technology as well as honorary doctorates from Kettering University and Nova Southeastern University. Additionally, Woz was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in September 2000.

    Woz got his start in hacking making blue boxes, devices that bypass telephone-switching mechanisms to make free long-distance calls. After reading an article about phone phreaking in Esquire, Wozniak called up his buddy Jobs. The pair did research on frequencies, then built and sold blue boxes to their classmates in college. Wozniak even used a blue box to call the Pope while pretending to be Henry Kissinger.

    Wozniak dropped out of college and came up with the computer that eventually made him famous. Jobs had the bright idea to sell the computer as a fully assembled PC board. The Steves sold Wozniak's cherished scientific calculator and Jobs' VW van for capital and got to work assembling prototypes in Jobs' garage. Wozniak designed the hardware and most of the software. In the Letters section of Woz.org, he recalls doing "what Ed Roberts and Bill Gates and Paul Allen did and tons more, with no help." Wozniak and Jobs sold the first 100 of the Apple I to a local dealer for $666.66 each.

    Woz no longer works full time for Apple, focusing primarily on philanthropy instead. Most notable is his function as fairy godfather to the Los Gatos, Calif. School District. "Wozniak 'adopted' the Los Gatos School District, providing students and teachers with hands-on teaching and donations of state-of-the-art technology equipment."

  2. Tim Berners-Lee: Berners-Lee is famed as the inventor of the World Wide Web, the system that we use to access sites, documents and files on the Internet. He has received numerous recognitions, most notably the Millennium Technology Prize.

    While a student at Oxford University, Berners-Lee was caught hacking access with a friend and subsequently banned from University computers. w3.org reports, "Whilst [at Oxford], he built his first computer with a soldering iron, TTL gates, an M6800 processor and an old television." Technological innovation seems to have run in his genes, as Berners-Lee's parents were mathematicians who worked on the Manchester Mark1, one of the earliest electronic computers.

    While working with CERN, a European nuclear research organization, Berners-Lee created a hypertext prototype system that helped researchers share and update information easily. He later realized that hypertext could be joined with the Internet. Berners-Lee recounts how he put them together: "I just had to take the hypertext idea and connect it to the TCP and DNS ideas and – ta-da! – the World Wide Web."

    Since his creation of the World Wide Web, Berners-Lee founded the World Wide Web Consortium at MIT. The W3C describes itself as "an international consortium where Member organizations, a full-time staff and the public work together to develop Web standards." Berners-Lee's World Wide Web idea, as well as standards from the W3C, is distributed freely with no patent or royalties due.

  3. Linus Torvalds: Torvalds fathered Linux, the very popular Unix-based operating system. He calls himself "an engineer," and has said that his aspirations are simple, "I just want to have fun making the best damn operating system I can."

    Torvalds got his start in computers with a Commodore VIC-20, an 8-bit home computer. He then moved on to a Sinclair QL. Wikipedia reports that he modified the Sinclair "extensively, especially its operating system." Specifically, Torvalds hacks included "an assembler and a text editor…as well as a few games."

    Torvalds created the Linux kernel in 1991, using the Minix operating system as inspiration. He started with a task switcher in Intel 80386 assembly and a terminal driver. After that, he put out a call for others to contribute code, which they did. Currently, only about 2 percent of the current Linux kernel is written by Torvalds himself. The success of this public invitation to contribute code for Linux is touted as one of the most prominent examples of free/open source software.

    Currently, Torvalds serves as the Linux ringleader, coordinating the code that volunteer programmers contribute to the kernel. He has had an asteroid named after him and received honorary doctorates from Stockholm University and University of Helsinki. He was also featured in Time Magazine's "60 Years of Heroes."

  4. Richard Stallman: Stallman's fame derives from the GNU Project, which he founded to develop a free operating system. For this, he's known as the father of free software. His "Serious Bio" asserts, "Non-free software keeps users divided and helpless, forbidden to share it and unable to change it. A free operating system is essential for people to be able to use computers in freedom."

    Stallman, who prefers to be called rms, got his start hacking at MIT. He worked as a "staff hacker" on the Emacs project and others. He was a critic of restricted computer access in the lab. When a password system was installed, Stallman broke it down, resetting passwords to null strings, then sent users messages informing them of the removal of the password system.

    Stallman's crusade for free software started with a printer. At the MIT lab, he and other hackers were allowed to modify code on printers so that they sent convenient alert messages. However, a new printer came along – one that they were not allowed to modify. It was located away from the lab and the absence of the alerts presented an inconvenience. It was at this point that he was "convinced…of the ethical need to require free software."

    With this inspiration, he began work on GNU. Stallman wrote an essay, "The GNU Project," in which he recalls choosing to work on an operating system because it's a foundation, "the crucial software to use a computer." At this time, the GNU/Linux version of the operating system uses the Linux kernel started by Torvalds. GNU is distributed under "copyleft," a method that employs copyright law to allow users to use, modify, copy and distribute the software.

    Stallman's life continues to revolve around the promotion of free software. He works against movements like Digital Rights Management (or as he prefers, Digital Restrictions Management) through organizations like Free Software Foundation and League for Programming Freedom. He has received extensive recognition for his work, including awards, fellowships and four honorary doctorates.

  5. Tsutomu Shimomura: Shimomura reached fame in an unfortunate manner: he was hacked by Kevin Mitnick. Following this personal attack, he made it his cause to help the FBI capture him.

    Shimomura's work to catch Mitnick is commendable, but he is not without his own dark side. Author Bruce Sterling recalls: "He pulls out this AT&T cellphone, pulls it out of the shrinkwrap, finger-hacks it, and starts monitoring phone calls going up and down Capitol Hill while an FBI agent is standing at his shoulder, listening to him."

    Shimomura out-hacked Mitnick to bring him down. Shortly after finding out about the intrusion, he rallied a team and got to work finding Mitnick. Using Mitnick's cell phone, they tracked him near Raleigh-Durham International Airport. The article, "SDSC Computer Experts Help FBI Capture Computer Terrorist" recounts how Shimomura pinpointed Mitnick's location. Armed with a technician from the phone company, Shimomura "used a cellular frequency direction-finding antenna hooked up to a laptop to narrow the search to an apartment complex." Mitnick was arrested shortly thereafter. Following the pursuit, Shimomura wrote a book about the incident with journalist John Markoff, which was later turned into a movie.

We hope you have enjoyed our introduction to some of the most famous real-life hackers, both white and black alike, and have gotten a clearer impression of who hackers really are. To find out more about hacking, cracking, these or other famous hackers, or just how to keep your computer safe from all of the above, check out the following resources:

  1. Kevin Mitnick's Security Advice
  2. IT Security: 10 Steps to Make Your Firewall More Secure
  3. Frontline: Hackers
  4. InfoSEC Institute Ethical Hacking
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Jim
Posted on July 29, 2009

Legitimate hackers to this day hate the media's use of the work "hacker" to describe computer criminals. Most of these people have limited computer skills (as demonstrated by only 2 out of your 5 black hats working in the computer industry today) and generally gain entry into computer systems either by exploiting lax systems administration at the target, or in the case of Mitnik, via social engineering.

I've also got to say that your list of white hats is rather lacking. Google some of these names: Ken Thompson, Guy Steele, Brian Kernighan, Dennis Richie, Donald Knuth, Larry Wall, Alfred Aho, Bert Bos, David Moon, Dave Cutler, Brian Behlendorf, Vinton Cerf, Grace Hopper, David Moon, Rob Pike, Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir, Leonard Adleman, Blake Ross, Eric Raymond, John Warnock. Without these people, computer software, both business and recreational, operating systems, and networking as we know it today wouldn't exist.

By the way, it's "rappel", not "repel".

0
Big E
Big E Replied on May 17, 2011

Its "word" and not "work".

0
promise desmond
promise desmond Replied on Feb. 6, 2012

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0
promise desmond
promise desmond Replied on Feb. 6, 2012

Interesting,
How is everything with you, I picked interest on you after going through your short profile. I really want to have a good friendship with you. Beside i have something very vital to disclose to you, but I found it difficult to express myself here, since it's a public site. Please i will like you to contact me, through my private e-mail via: (promise_desmond@yahoo.com)
So we can get to know each other better,and i well give you my pictures and also tell you more about me OK.Yours Friend Promise.

0
promise desmond
promise desmond Replied on Feb. 6, 2012

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0
santa cruz
santa cruz Replied on Feb. 20, 2012

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0
embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on March 22, 2012

it`s a top ten not a who`s who and since linus torvald is in there you could also put dozens of other developers and network engineers,but a good selection from the editors choice I think and a misnomer to call people hackers as is not hacking merely disassembly and reverse engineering in most cases making a null a 1 to get the desired effect,DDOS is not hacking although it is called so since it costs the end user millions in lost revenue as with betfair.com,Denial of service is just spamming requests at a server from bot networks caused by people downloading infected pictures or programs not from people coding day and night to break through firewalls and defenses as people assume and is as simple as a line of script or a simple server patch which as in Steve Gibson was perpetrated by a 14 year old.

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on March 22, 2012

I am reminded of a foundstone chapter titled Ethical Hacking whereby it is stated that all engineers are capable of hacking and if engineering or modifying programs make me a hacker I have done it 100`s of times in doing workarounds in Linux (Fedora core) throughout the years in order to update and modify the original operating system to my needs.I think if all people do as I do then the list for hackers would be too numerous to list let alone catalogue. (:^D)

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on March 22, 2012

Hackers,phreakers and spammers all aim at doing one thing and that is system penetration and exploitation sometimes relying on the participation of the end user in clicking a link to server through misdirection as in social networking exploits or through compiling unencrypted packet data or through things like data injection in web pages and many more exploits but ultimately achieve their goals of data mining for what they want as has been stated this doesn't make then engineers although some have very extensive knowledge and have the tool set to accomplish their objectives as with Backtrack o/s: http://www.backtrack-linux.org/

1
Angel Go
Angel Go Replied on May 1, 2012

can anyone help me how to hack my husband's yahoo account? please help me....

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

not ethical for me to tell you how to hack a corporate account Angel ,If you share a home computer you can privately monitor what he does through a Key logger that is about as much help as I am prepared to commit to on the subject: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystroke_logging

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gabriel Amadi
gabriel Amadi Replied on May 20, 2012

hi.
I need you tools man add my on amadiangel that my yahoo ID or email me on gabriel.amadi@yahoo.com
thanks

1
Subodh
Posted on Aug. 27, 2009

@Slipvyne I don't think Jonathan James is dead.

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Quesadilla
Posted on Aug. 29, 2009

According to Wikipedia, Jonathan James did die. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_James

1

The journalists who wrote that article got a part right ... but not everything.

The right part: hackers aren't only present in computer security :).
There are hackers in biology, chemistry, physics, electronics, computers, etc.
It's more of a mindset than anything else.

There are the people who do unauthorized stuffs with bad intentions and to make money, those are generally the black hat hackers.
There are the people who do unauthorized stuffs with good intentions for a good purpose, they are the grey hats.
The one who try to build, defend systems, etc, are the white hats. A lot of white hats or computer security expert has already illegally hacked into computers in order to train themselves and help fix holes. Yes, a lot of white hats were grey hats before going in the computer security industry.

Some grey hats, hack into computers for the fun of it (and help fix it at the same time).

James, Mitnick and Morris were more grey hats than black hats. They did not do it for personal enrichment but more for challenge i guess.
Grey hats are more white hats than black hats since they do not intend to profit from their activities. The only difference between them and the white hats is that they don't have authorizations and so are subject to injustice by the companies they hacked (but didn't profit or damage).

I know the article was written around 2009 so most of the references are outdated:
1 - Mitnick's advice is good but not enough

2 - It's a good idea to tweak your firewall (correctly) ... but you can still be hacked. WEP is outdated, don't freaking use it. Be careful about adding layers: the more code you run, the more probability that your computer contain vulnerabilities (security holes), yes even security products can get hacked.
For STRONG passwords, you should at least have a password with 14 characters with numbers, letters (uppercase and lowercase) and symbols. Anything under that length or without the mentioned charsets is doomed to be cracked. The best passwords are the ones generated by programs and mathematical algorithms ... humans are generally crap to generate "random" and good passwords.
Step 8 is crap, people can hack computers which are not connected to the internet, proof: Stuxnet.
In consequence, unless you read and educate yourself a bit about computer security YOU WILL get hacked (by bad guys). So be careful out there.

3 - This is total crap. Read "Hackers: Heroes of the computer revolution" instead.

4 - CEH can be useful but it doesn't teach you anything that hackers already knows ... this is basic stuffs.

Most ot the hackers are good people. Without them, either technologies would not have evolved up to the point we know or we would not be secured.
Some hackers are bad people. Some hackers do bad stuffs because they don't have any choices (think about Russians still having to survive in a post communism era, not something you erase overnight).

Hackers all have a field of expertise.
The guys who managed to build a 3D printer using sand as the raw material are hackers. They are builders but mostly hackers.
The guys who invented GPS are hackers.
The guys who invented the first Operating Systems: ITS, UNIX, MINIX, Linux, etc, are hackers.
The guys who created internet are hackers.
Some locksmiths are hackers.
The guys who invented nuclear energy are hackers (yes, Albert Einstein IS a hacker).
The guys who built the Eiffel Tower are hackers.
The guys who built the pyramids are hackers.
Excellent scientists ARE hackers (Einstein, Feynmann, Newton, Lavoisier, etc).
So why are journalists appropriated the term for fucking black hat hackers? ... go to hell guys ...
Without hackers, we wouldn't be as near to where we are nowadays :).

Being a hacker is being curious, inventive, creative, persistent, stubborn, you want to surpass your limits, you want to share your information, you like to think out of the box.
Hackers hate bureaucracy, authorities which will forbid them to attain their goals and any useless stuffs that's not related to their goals.

Who are the best people to secure a computer? Hackers.
Who are the best people for building stuffs? The one who best know how to break it (in an elegant manner).
Who are the ones who really master technologies? Hackers.
Those are people with skills and a lot of ingenuity which can be used for humanity good instead of putting them in useless jails ...

For those who want to understand hackers a LOT BETTER, read these:
- Hackers: Heroes of the computer revolution by Stephen Levy
- Hacker's Manifesto - http://www.phrack.org/archives/7/p7_0x03_Hacker%27s%20Manifesto_by_The%20Ment...

That being said, hackers are more than computer wizards ... they are people with amazing possibilities.

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

I totally agree most white hats (love the expression reminds me of cowboys) are grey hats as we do workarounds in a lot of areas to get applications to work ,all have the possibility to develop or aid in developing in the computer world as without the original concept no advances would be made,one of mine was to use ants p2p security in p2p applications as despite Ants being too slow it did incorporate innovative security(IRC internoding) and PARG-Paul Graham did the plug in from my idea in Java to allow p2p to be untrackable in Azureus,the concept has now been adopted by most good p2p applications as DHT and millions now use it,that is what sourceforge.net is all about in bringing people together to collaborate and build for the betterment of all :) jd6667/jeff666

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slasher 2122
slasher 2122 Replied on May 23, 2012

in not to sure people could hack on those old computers can thay? if so thay are really good to use them

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Subodh
Posted on Aug. 27, 2009

Nice info. I didn't know about many of them.

Thanks

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hey
Posted on Aug. 29, 2009
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Hey, shouldn't Steve Wozniak be in the black hats section the hacking he did stole... thus blackhat.

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Sunil Jain
Posted on Aug. 29, 2009
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Yes everyone James committed suicide by gunshot on May 18 2008
source:wikepedia.com

Adrian Lamo is on facebook pages.
Click below to become his fan
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Adrian-Lamo/6420362229

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Eli Skipp
Posted on Nov. 5, 2009
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I feel like he's a little cliche now, but I'm surprised that you didn't list Dan Kaminsky. While I know Torvalds, Stallman, and Woz, I feel like Dan Kaminsky's name comes up weirdly often. Maybe because he's still active as a white hat hacker within the hacker community itself?

Interesting article.

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Nice info and I think Tiger Mate is also a great Bangladesh Hacker.

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well what if you hack your own computer such as "jailbreaking" what does that come under?

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billy bob
billy bob Replied on June 16, 2011

white hat

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ilyax nazrax
ilyax nazrax Replied on Dec. 3, 2011

no that's just called, "making the technology work for you"

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From Where Is MafiaBoy ?

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Malik  Lange
Malik Lange Replied on Sept. 26, 2011

Yeah Micheal Calce is not there on the list he did attacked Ebay, CNN and Amazon and other big companies

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what is mean by black hat & white hat

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What they all had in common is the mind power to think differently and had a brilliant knowledge base....many are not on the list as this is just a article on FAMOUS hackers...

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What they all had in common is the mind power to think differently and had a brilliant knowledge base....many are not on the list as this is just a article on FAMOUS hackers...

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Brennan Deitsch
Online Marketing Manager, Ohio Marketing Frenzy
Posted on Oct. 28, 2011
  • Recommended by:

Hackers are the evil doers of the cyber world. There always has to be someone that messes with something good.

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ilyax nazrax
ilyax nazrax Replied on Dec. 3, 2011

they are only evil if you don't know how to do it yore self

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

quote: Hackers are the evil doers of the cyber world. There always has to be someone that messes with something good.
Without Hackers some things that are bad would never be made good,your security would be no good,your anti-virus would not exist and you would have no freedom or rights as your government,ISP and anyone else that chose too could rape your finances and strip you of all your personal data unencumbered in seconds and that is just the black hats,the White hats would not have created and made better the free operating systems like Linux which is enjoyed freely by over half the worlds population as well as over 70% of the worlds servers using Linux,operating systems like windows would have no development as it has only got better by its collaboration with Novells Suse Linux and computer development would have died a death around windows 98 se if not for Sourceforge.net and all the white and grey hat developers who work there to bring you new everything for the computer world,including games,communication,buisness solutions,etc,etc,etc.
As a sourceforge developer I also gave advice to Betfair.com which was DDos for a few days and who lost over 10 million ,problem then solved. :)

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slasher 2122
slasher 2122 Replied on May 23, 2012

hackers are not all evil even the police hack into peoples computers

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i am interested to hack,,how i hack

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

spend 5-10 years reading and learning,start with Foundstone and explore everything from compiling /decompiling programs (a good starting point would be learning to compile old debian o/s programs)move on to everything from wi-fi to php injection,networking,etc,etc,etc....when you know how to do more than click and point you may succeed once you know how a computer works both hardware and software then you stand some small chance of success but even then once you know everything there is to know unless you can think outside the box you will fail,most things have been done before like the sasser virus and once it is found how to neutralise these innnovative hackers then make derivatives of the same with variations etc,the same applies to network hacks etc,read,learn,digest,it is always better to be on the side of the angels though unless you like orange jumpsuits and having a cell-mate called Bubba :)

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saadat abbas
saadat abbas Replied 14 minutes ago

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saadat abbas
saadat abbas Replied 14 minutes ago

hey plz someone hlp me in hacking one of my czn facebook id plzzzz........someone hacked it some time ago now he is blackmalng her plz cntct me who knw to hack a id plzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

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saadat abbas
saadat abbas Replied 13 minutes ago

hey plz someone hlp me in hacking one of my czn facebook id plzzzz........someone hacked it some time ago now he is blackmalng her plz cntct me who knw to hack a id plzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

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i'm intrest to white hack to punish the black hack

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

Funny you should say that as the creator of the Sasser virus and 4 of its 12 derivatives was employed by Zone alarm I believe in using his knowledge as a white hat :)

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Bill McChesney
IT Executive, Large federal systems integration firm
Posted on Nov. 15, 2011
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Very fascinating read – thank you. Don’t forget about one of the earliest hacks by Frank Abagnale (of Catch Me If You Can fame) who printed his account number on blank deposit slips and add them to the stack of real blank slips in the bank. This meant that the deposits written on those slips by bank customers ended up going into his account rather than that of the legitimate customers

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vamsi kukkapalli
vamsi kukkapalli Replied on Nov. 24, 2011

right sir

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

Exploit rather than Hack, but nonetheless ingenious and many clever people out there,some who just this last year have breached federal security and made off supposedly with thousands of government files,unless that was just a red flag operation by the Government in order to implement CYBER at fort Meade,having read the CIA/NSA white paper on the US cyber strategy from 2001-2011 I don`t discount the possibility that it was a red flag job :D

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HACKING IS A SMART JOB.

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saddy hussain
saddy hussain Replied on Feb. 24, 2012

that's is right

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slasher 2122
slasher 2122 Replied on May 23, 2012

is not a job unless youre a police

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its good to let the world know what u are capable of.being white or black hacker is almost the same

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

In 99% of cases white and grey are the same as they work for the benefit and enjoyment of all,there are some black Hats like the creator of the sasser virus who then become a grey hat given the choice of working for a security company for financial gain or prison,all are capable given the right impetus to be one or the other. :D

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Its a challange to all ..can anyone decrypt this hash string 111ea108551813bbdacd21e221f84693.....

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ilyax nazrax
ilyax nazrax Replied on Dec. 3, 2011

Type Hash
--------- ---------
MD2 CEAA669C072977709C23CE98AD5FDC5F
MD4 14A4B43D4D3E7F0AB5743B01B1A62A5B
MD5 E0EB0048090E5DE2D76FE0353794B0C8
SHA-1 8D7A954CB475625ABF9439FE830BEE21AC818AC7
SHA-2 (256) A56A75C94119654E1EC835F579297D8F8D8A76D948D17DDCD83E8C9B3386736B
SHA-2 (384) 5378AE3B3C45588217A8E163F708BA963E978239034DCAC5C7C12635C067A983C05BB01B4ADA80B93BB76AB78D27CF24
SHA-2 (512) 2D899556F908F9D10E0FB42009994AA13472707872FBD3E68D6BEE418FAD42C062BAFAABD7312BC928D89D1216D7671ABE98D75127C2658A29207B3478581EDB
RIPEMD-160 85FBE684230572AE37C1F056098E2A7D42446FC6
NT 5AE077BCFC11BBEBB8D709268C8A081B
MySQL323 3F16EF7D27402840
MySQLSHA1 52746D58ACD058F1F31AA38C1EE9B89072222DC9
Cisco PIX UjC.7sELLz4srE7g
VNC Hash 8390102DF425C21A
Base64 ER6hCFUYE7vazSHiIfhGkw==

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ilyax nazrax
ilyax nazrax Replied on Dec. 3, 2011

is that it...

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zeadjm zalgoda
zeadjm zalgoda Replied on Jan. 17, 2012

.wew. thats the code?

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bambam bone
bambam bone Replied on March 24, 2012

what i will going to used this code for?

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

why would we want to even if it wasnt a waste of time,you can hash anything and DHT pass 100000000000`s of hash strings a day through p2p.

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

6209955e955a4191bce75e71fd06c65b in MD5 ,decrypt it and get back to me,good luck :)

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gabriel Amadi
gabriel Amadi Replied on May 20, 2012

i need a hacker my yahoo ID amadiangel

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How about if u hack Microsoft, playstion gift cards, Xbox points, jailbreak, games can u get in jail for that

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

in some respects in some countries where there is cyber enforcement depending on the software infringement laws of that country,which is why the Americans have created Cyber @fort Meade in order to police and control the internet with force if required so watch out for Big brother :D

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there is no site for 10th notes and if there r notes available then v hav to pay rs.......... so plz help me........

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Hacking is good, i debugs our programs and makes us safe from the real criminals.
soon the world is going to depend on hackers for help since everyone wants to be secure from crime, sudden deaths and uneccesary problems. viruses are things of the past. as the internet takes over the world (facebook, and other sites), everyone's personal information is out there. someone may use it wrongly and we may need the hackers to find them. The solution is to train hackers to get bad hackers.

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

Already being done Curtis the new Cyber section @fort meade has been built for 106 million dollars to do just that and whilst leasing UK MOD and other secure satellites as well as Americans they have started to implement their Cyber strategy on a global scale.

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

I think you miss the point a little though Curtis if it wasn`t for hacker we wouldn`t be secure Now as the internet was created to work on only a few 1000 computers in a theatre of war originally not 40bn computers worldwide so exploits have shown us the holes in security which are then plugged and made more secure ,if we hand over all to government hackers who`s government then controls all the information we open ourselves up to becoming Orwellian and being no longer free or individual but under the jack boot of the Big Brother regime and I for one have family in the services who for 5 generations have fought fascism to protect the rights we enjoy today. :)

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

social networking sites like facebook only know as much as you tell them and there are a lot of unscrupulous people on them do not trust what you are told or who you network with unless you know for sure who you are speaking too,originally social networks like my space etc were created as information gathering tools by the CIA and NSA and later sold to independent sources or so we are told,I for one never give out my real name or details to anyone or any organisation on the Internet,if you do you are really not very smart,or have no idea of security,whichever applies.

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superb for the modern world

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sooo amazinggggg!

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i think they should be rewarded and work for government..dont you think that it will be great for your country? -___-

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you are rit santa....those brains are realy priceless thing is that r using in wrong field....!!! pliz use those ideas in a good cause so that any country can get benefit...:))
Rajesh
Bangalore

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Hi!
My Name is Black Hacker...........
Can u tell me about Supersonic computer speed of Processor?

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mannan sankhla
mannan sankhla Replied on May 16, 2012

hello friend i am from india and please help me use unlimited internet in airtel 3g ple....help give me tricks

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embolism linux
embolism linux Replied on May 16, 2012

Not really sure TBH Black Hacker always thought it was some ridiculous term given to a processor that had the through put/output of over 6 GB/s of data,but Iam not infallible in this regard so may be ludicrously wrong or right :D
Many years ago people were experimenting on supercooling processors to achieve incredible running speeds now we have 2 ,4,8,16 core processors who knows the limitations we may ultimately achieve with other processors made in the future.

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slasher 2122
slasher 2122 Replied on May 23, 2012


Processor speed, memory size, ability to upgrade. Depending on what you want it for, also things like sophistication of sound or graphics

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I've met the man named the "Homeless Hacker" or Adrian Lamo, In my opinion yes what he did was wrong, but not entirely I think that just a word of Stop would of been good enough. What I would call him is defeinetly NOT a black hat "Hacker" but a grey hat, "A grey hat, in the hacking community, refers to a skilled hacker whose activities fall somewhere between white and black hat hackers on a variety of spectra. It may relate to whether they sometimes arguably act illegally, though in good will, or to show how they disclose vulnerabilities. They usually do not hack for personal gain or have malicious intentions,"

Copyied from Wikipedia,
I understand the thrill of breaking into someones system or website, its a thrill, and once you do it its a mixed feeling of accomplishment and what you want to do next, Get out of the website, or Try and find more flaws to report to them.

Also word to nasa, you're website is VERY unsecure, I was able to get into one of the websites and look at a bunch of hosted files, I did not steal any files.

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Firstly White and grey is a blurred distinction as all white hats are also grey hats as in problem solving and doing workarounds as engineers do, they have to switch hats ,secondly hosted files on NASA website are there free for you to download for the public for information and educational purposes,NASA,JPL,etc all provide this service so feel free to download pictures for your desktop and enjoy . (:^D)

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