Interview: the "Punk Hacker Kid" Responds 188
Bucko asks:
I read the Salon article, and it wasn't exactly kind to
you. Do you think it was fair or a hatchet job?
Abe answers:
Hatchet job, no. Contorted, yes.
The article was written about four months ago and was passed around between a couple different media outlets before it was finally published on Salon. When I consider how many editors it went through, I can't be too disappointed with the final product.
The hatchet job was the "hacker" verbiage! EVERY single chance I got during the interviews I would correct the writer's inclination to use misuse of the term. "It's cracker. CRACKER! CRACKED! CRACKER! Please don't use 'hacker' or I'll look like an idiot." Back when I filled out "punk hacker kid" on my written Road Rules application I had wanted to sound cool to the technology illiterate casting team. My bad. I've since learned that 'dropping the term', even off-handedly, is painfully equivalent to 'dropping the soap' in flame hell.
GuySmiley asks:
Why does MTV suck so hard?
Abe answers:
I plead the 5th.
antizeus asks:
Do you see fragmentation in the Linux distribution market
to be a good, bad, or neutral thing? Do you think that
the"media frenzy" over Linux tends to harm other worthy OS
projects like the BSDs and BeOS? Do you think that big
business's entry into the Linux market will change the
gift-culture aspects of Linux, or will the businesses in
question adapt to Linux? Or both? What do you think is in
store for humanity in terms of relations between
governments, businesses, and individuals? Do you think that
we should actively pursue colonization of other planets in
our star system at this time, and if not, then when?
Abe answers:
You'll feel better if you take the long view.
Your questions all tie together and fit the theme of "ask Abe" well. One part traveling with peers in Mexico plus two parts juvenile conflict and one part media distortion equals "The Bad Guy"? I digress, yet according to MTV it does. But the media is like a big baby with an infant's attention deficit disorder - it focuses and probably tries to destroy one thing at a time; soon enough it moves on. The role of "big business" is less predictable but I think in the end likely to prove less damaging. For one thing, "big business" isn't as big as it once was; there's lots of money to throw around, sure, but success (a la Silicon Valley housing prices) ultimately leads to failure. Yin to yang.
So right now, maybe the earliest contributors to Linux are thinking about cashing inwives and kids and mortgages can do that to you. But behind them are more young coders who will keep the phenomenon of widely-shared free OS alive. That old joke about Microsoft and the Catholic church isn't really all that funny, but Martin Luther came along. And then when the Lutheran church got fat and dull with official state sponsorship, new generations advocating a kinder, simpler (and less expensive) church came along. Same with operating software, only in a time frame of months, not centuries. The process of creative destruction is inevitable.
True also for our human self-organization. After a few hundred years, we're in a period of decline for the nation-state. Borders are permeable (or fundamentally useless) in the "computer age." I don't know if your question comes from Peoria or Paris and it doesn't matter. There's still fear and a great respect for unimportant divisions among humanity, but there are many hopeful signs that that is changing. Even in a forum like this we tend to challenge each other's ideas without reference to gender, race or religion. That's nice; that's a good model for the development of the world.
Eventually government, business and the individual will not be seen as antagonistic elements but as cooperative strings on the violin of human culture. And when we have progressed as musicians, then we will be free, ready and eager to explore and colonize space.
brianvan asks:
(He had many questions; this is just one of them)
...you're a person who had a rough childhood who happens
to be good at computers. What are your thoughts on making
computers and the Internet accessible to the "financially
challenged?" What can people do to make sure that no one
misses out on the computer age, including those who are poor
and/or homeless?
Abe answers:
Your overall question is a larger issue that deserves more time than I've been given here. I feel strongly about making computers and the Internet a force for promoting greater income equality and educating everybody to their greatest potential, but strategies for doing that are complex.
One important thing is to make a difference in your own communities, and right now I'm a college student. The Associated Students of Cuesta College (ASCC) have an annual budget of approx $100,000. Through involvement with the student senate, I've learned that 4000 of those precious dollars had been partitioned off for upgrades of M$ office for the free ASCC computer lab. I'm going to have to volunteer my own time for setup, and I will likely need to 'convert' an IS administrator or two in the process, but I can guarantee you that while I'm at student at Cuesta, not a dime is going to be spent on M$ products. At least not any student body funds. I'm angling to get the money reallocated to hardware upgrades or making Linux CD's freely available.
This summer BMP brought all of the recent Real World and Road Rules cast members back to LA for a professional three-day public speaking seminar. (BMP's in bed with varsitybooks.com - "For the low, low price of $750 apiece, you can get MTV's backwash live and in person at your local campus! Call BMP's Joffe Agency now at 818-756-5244 and you too can meet the 'punk hacker kid' in person!")
Joking aside, on the onset of this training all eighteen of us were given different topics we could speak on for our final-night presentation. A few hypocritically choose to speak about std/aids awareness or alcoholism. I choose the topic closest to my life, volunteerism. Having had little first hand knowledge practicing the topic, I ended up relating my personal experience from being on the receiving side. You know - planned on exemplifying how important volunteer work really is by telling my welfare and YMCA camp stories. I ended up giving a 1200 person crowd a short introduction to Open Source Software ideology and using OSS as an example of unconventional yet dramatic ways of giving back.
So, save participating in local LUG's and extolling the virtues of OSS to unsuspecting BMP lecture audiences, I'm in no position to make sure the computer age reaches all. At least not yet
asad asks:
Do you feel that having a Slashdot interview about an 18
year old who got to be on MTV is sad evidence of Slashdot's
decline into media-whoring pablum? I mean, sure there are
countless programmers, writers, artists, thinkers, or
developers with something intelligent to say, but dude, have
any of THEM been on MTV?
Abe answers:
Mr. Robin Miller came to me back in July. I sat on his request until August, replying that a position paper on how the Open Source movement is enabling a whole generation of otherwise misguided teenagers would probably be much more interesting. ("Ask who?! You're kidding me!")
I apologize to those who truly deserve the exposure.
When you're on this end of things, Slashdot's so-called "decline into media-whoring pablum" seems more a product of its tough crowd quotient rather than any particular interview or story.
DonkPunch asks:
Explain the universe. Give three examples. :)
Abe answers:
Our planetary system is a spit-drop on a cosmic string which has been growing and unraveling for roughly 18 billion years. In another two billion years, we're going to ratchet back up like a yo-yo.
The earth is a cosmic egg waiting for the right moment to hatch. The chick's going to be a hungry 4-trillion-ton pecker and we're all just feed.
It turns out that hiccups are attempted transmissions from God. When we try to stop, we are actually inhibiting the evolution of the universe.
Python asks:
(Two questions selected from a long list he
submitted)What line of work do you plan to persue after
your 15 minutes of fame with MTV?
Would you recommend that others use your tactics of cracking boxes and breaking into future employers boxes and so on to get a job with them?
Abe answers:
I would recommend using all legal means available to unstack the deck. Contrary to many folks interpretation of the Salon story, I did not investigate Bunim-Murray Productions Windows/SMB network until the casting process was in it's final leg. I had seen enough of BMP to make a judgment call that they'd probably more impressed than pissed. By that time I'd also returned all four signed copies of the 30-page contract they require of semi-finalists. Perhaps it could be argued in court that by being under contract, and under so much scrutiny from them, my explorations constituted an acceptable behavior.
In the end, I've never used or had any inclination to use ill-begotten information for a malicious purposes. That won't protect my bare ass should MTV come calling with a legality spanking, but at least I maintained some dignity by not publicly airing their dirty laundry.
As for future plans - Every time I walk out of a class, I want to major in that subject. Perhaps Cuesta's better than most community colleges, or I'm just passing through a standard deer-in-the-headlights freshman syndrome. In the long run, computer science and business would be an obvious choice, but communication, psychology and journalism better fits my personality. I want to do it all.
rcade asks:
I'm one of the people who suggested Abe Ingersoll as an
interview subject on Slashdot. The guy snuck into the
unsecured network of the Road Rules producers and used the
information he gained to (a) improve his odds of getting on
the show, (b) play head games with people on the show, and
(c) improve his odds of getting laid while on the show.
Millions of TV viewers know the guy as a "computer hacker"
or "computer cracker."
Add all of this up, and I think it's worthwhile to see what's rattling around in the guy's head. Besides, he's not much more of an MTV fan than people making comments here, comparing Road Rules to "looking up someone's asshole" in the Salon article.
Some questions:
- If you are on probation for the credit card scam, snooping through Bunim-Murray's network could have sent you to jail. Did Bunim-Murray or anyone else make noise about pursuing legal action against you?
- What bug reports were you reading when you got the idea to employ Back Orifice on the Bunim-Murray network?
- By all appearances, you haven't suffered much in the way of negative consequences for cracking and other misdeeds. Now that you're on the MTV-celebrity lecture tour, are you doing anything to teach the teeming millions that cracking is a bad idea?
Abe answers:
The only comment I got back from Bunim-Murray regarding the Salon article was a smile. I think they may have expected that I'd do much worse, and are just hoping I don't get in bed with a lawyer who's seen "The Fight" before a statute of limitations runs out.
As for bug reports, that's essentially a misquote. I was asked to paraphrase statements about keeping abreast of computer world news in general into something more quotable.
If anyone needs to an example of how cracking is a bad idea and will eventually just cause you to hurt yourself, follow this link [no link was provided -ed.]and set your threshold low.
Next week's interview: Alan Cox
Next!! (Score:1)
Not too bad... considering (Score:1)
You're fingertips must still be raw after weeding through all that flammable material. As for Abe.... nice cover-up on both the ego, and for the misnomers that non-technologically minded Hollywood-types thrust upon you.... Even though I have to say WTF is up with a MS
Didja have to run WINE to get OFFICE to Load up..... BRRRRR the mere thought of that paperclip on a Linux box gives me the willies
Oh my. (Score:2)
lame... but here's a funny MS Support page :-D (Score:2)
MTV has all the sincerity and integrity of a bleached blonde silicon-enhanced porno whore, and if we don't want the culture they push they'll just keep pushing anyhow...
Anyways, I got this email today:
http://support.microsoft.com/isapi/support/pass
Originally it came to me as a different URL, but in a rare show of bug-fixing Microsoft plugged that one already...
Real Hackers (Score:4)
I submit the following to the slashdot audience to be moderated into oblivion...
1. Real Hackers aren't going to appear on MTV because they have long beards, look like hippies, and have spent so little time in the big blue room that they glow in the dark. As such, they are completely "unhip", and will not be appearing on any "hip" TV shows.
2. Let's face it: the life if a geek is boring. We spend all day in front of our computers checking our e-mail, coding, and sitting on our duff doing "nothing". Atleast to the untrained eye. On the molecular level, however, we are quite busy.
3. Ever tried holding a conversation with those tea-drinking, pony-tailed, geek-wannabes? You're more likely to find a fufilling conversation with your toothbrush. If you can get them to stop talking about the evils of eating meat, of course. *ducking and running*
As such, this article is a scam! Repent, heathen! :)
--
No self respecting "hacker" uses MS Word! (Score:2)
Or something.
But not MS Word. That's no fun.
interesting (Score:1)
If I had the chance to ask this guy a question it would've been:
Real World is sometimes interesting, but Road Rules just plain sucks. It was created as an after thought and is totally boring.
"Why didn't you hack your way onto the Real World?"
But I guess I'm too late with that question...
Let's at least *try* to be fair about MSWord... (Score:3)
In other words, it might not be *all* his fault...
Nato
Re:Not too bad... considering (Score:1)
I keep waiting for some enterprising programmer to program a penguin helper for Office 2k. He can sit around and berate you for using inferior MS products.
Also, whenever you ask him how to do something in office, he'll tell you how you would do it using a REAL operating system...
Otto - who is forced to use NT4 at work...
---
Best part of the article... (Score:1)
Dang. Am I the only one who likes the kid? (Score:2)
Sometimes you have no choice... (Score:1)
also, can someone find the link that his editors removed? i imaging that i dont want to take a personal machien to the site, due to his security mention, but still...
Not bad (Score:1)
I have no direct knowledge of his programming creds, but he's certainly a good writer. We need that as much as we need good coders, maybe even more. Hacker advocacy so far has been amateurishly pathetic except for a few shining instances. It's time we started winning -- and this guy writes like a winner.
--
Re:No self respecting "hacker" uses MS Word! (Score:2)
--
explain the universe. Give three examples. (Score:1)
nmarshall
#include "standard_disclaimer.h"
R.U. SIRIUS: THE ONLY POSSIBLE RESPONSE
Ugghhh! (Score:1)
what did he say? (Score:1)
Why does MTV suck so hard?
Abe answers:
The fact that I've been on MTV should be answer enough.
Excellent!! (Score:3)
"When you're on this end of things, Slashdot's so-called 'decline into media-whoring pablum' seems more a product of its tough crowd quotient rather than any particular interview or story."
How true, ohhhhh how true...
"That won't protect my bare ass should MTV come calling with a legality spanking, but at least I maintained some dignity by not publicly airing their dirty laundry."
:D !! (I couldn't resist - very sly...)
"If anyone needs to an example of how cracking is a bad idea and will eventually just cause you to hurt yourself, follow this link [no link was provided -ed.]and set your threshold low."
CRUEL!! VERY CRUEL! How can I break it to you Roblimo but the link he is refering to is the comments link following the article. (heheheheee..)
"I plead the 5th?" (Score:2)
Re:question... (Score:1)
'/me string' sends "* nick string *" to the whole channel. In my case, '/me shrugs' would produce "* BZ shrugs *".
As for what's wrong with just saying "my mind boggles at the concept," there's nothing wrong with it. People get used somewhat used to the sort of shorthand one would use with IRC or other chat software (/me, imho, ttyl, and so on) and begin to use it in other contexts, including those in which it is rather inappropriate. No cure has been found for this yet. :)
Slack on MS? (Score:1)
Nope. (Score:1)
Re:question... (Score:1)
i was too busy trying to be a dickhead and get the first post no matter how lame it sounded... i deserve the flamebait
Nope. (cont) (Score:1)
Re:MS word (Score:1)
Now sending plaintext (or HTML or RTF if one must have formatting) may be a decent idea. That way anyone could read it.
Re:No self respecting "hacker" uses MS Word! (Score:1)
Hahahaha!
Re:No self respecting "hacker" uses MS Word! (Score:1)
Re:No self respecting "hacker" uses MS Word! (Score:2)
What do you think Perl actually is?
Disclaimer: I really really like Perl. I've just fought with it all morning and through my lunch hour.
--
QDMerge [rmci.net] 0.21!
Jeezus... (Score:1)
Bowie J. Poag
Re:Excellent!! (Score:3)
Re:Not too bad... considering (Score:1)
My coworkers are looking at me mighty funny. I can see it now. Ahhh, sounds truly inspiringly evil.
Re:Ugghhh! (Score:1)
Just a thought
- Rick
www.bluealien.org
screw this kid ... put Alan Cox on MTV! (Score:1)
I'de ask you to put Richard Stallman on MTV as well, but I'm afriad that he'll kill someone (or himself) as soon as he hears the word "Linux". And then the show would never air.
Re:Damn. Am I the only one who likes the kid? (Score:1)
But I am just a girl with a weak spot for hacker kids.
I really don't understand the point of so much inventive whining and bitching. If you really don't care, why bother?
Tina.
Punk Hacker Kid (Score:1)
Just a thought. (Score:2)
Re:"I plead the 5th?" (Score:1)
"No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation."
In other words, he believes answering will jeopardize his relationship with MTV.
Man, that was dry.
Editors?? we don't need no stinking editors! (Score:2)
Re:Ugghhh! (Score:1)
-vertsen-
EXACTLY. (Score:1)
I could launch into a diatribe here, about there being two types of computer geeks..But I think its already abundantly clear to all of us where Abe falls. This guy has no less than 9 pictures of himself on his homepage..you figure it out.
Bowie J. Poag
Re:No self respecting "hacker" uses MS Word! (Score:1)
[...] But not MS Word.
Ah, did anyone bother running this... "Word Document" through a Perl interpreter? Java VM?
Just wondering.... ;-)
Re:Excellent!! (Score:1)
Alan Cox? (Score:1)
Re:Pathetic Abe (Score:1)
- spell check master
Re:*WHY* is this interview important? (Score:1)
Why is someone that has been on MTV important? Does that automatically give someone more precidence over someone else? I would rather read an article from an average Joe Linux user on the street, that hasn't given me a reason to think he is an asshole.
Millions of people saw this "computer hacker" on TV, and thousands more read about him on Salon. If a Slashdot interview can cut through the hype and figure out the guy's ratio of substance to bullshit, I think that's worthwhile.
I don't understand the notion that Slashdot should only interview admirable people. This is a news site; it isn't a religion. By interviewing Ingersoll, Slashdot provided a much more complete picture of the guy and his abilities (or lack thereof) than Salon did. If this site can debunk a few more hacker/cracker myths propigated by the mass media, more power to them.
Re:interesting (Score:1)
Re:Sometimes you have no choice... (Score:1)
with his talk about setting the threshold low
dunno.
Yes. (Score:1)
...
Porno Stars!? (Score:1)
>bleached blonde silicon-enhanced porno whore, and
>if we don't want the culture they push they'll
>just keep pushing anyhow...
I know quite a few "bleached-blonde silicon-enhanced porno" stars/whores who would be quite insulted to be associated with MTV.
You should apologize!
On Hackers (Score:1)
Sorry Abe, you are not a hacker. Hacker is not a term that you can claim for yourself. Hacker is a badge of honor that has to be bestoed on you by others. Real hackers don't have to call themselves hackers. They know they are and other hackers know they are. It is not a thing, it is a state of being, a level of enlightenment.
But you are on the right road, I think. One day someone might call you hacker and it will be true. When/If that day comes, you will know it. You won't need Mtv, you won't need to Slashdot. It will just be, you will know it and that will be enough.
But sadly, that days isn't yours yet.
Damn! What the hell are they putting in cold pills today. That reads like something out of Zen and the Art of Modercycle Repair.
Re:Not bad (Score:1)
Cuesta College? (Score:1)
Cal Poly SLO's CS program?? A hacker -
hurumph!
Re:Cracker, not hacker? (Score:1)
Ditto re:AGE. Whence I was growing up in West Virginia, a cracker was something I munched on while hacking.
...or one of my neighbours.
...or both. (ObFacetiousHomoErotica)
--
Re:screw this kid ... put Alan Cox on MTV! (Score:1)
Sean
Re:Not too bad... considering (Score:1)
OK, thousands of people probably complained to Microsoft that they didn't like the paperclip. So, they probably launched an initiative to come up with more popular alternatives. Hence, the planet.
Of course, if Microsoft had listened to what people were REALLY saying about the paper clip, professor, planet, cat, whatever, they would have eliminated the entire "feature".
These make Office worse to use than even whatever problem I'm having lately that GPFs Word every couple of hours.
Re:Not too bad... considering (Score:2)
Yet another reason I don't use Office. I just do all my word processing in HTML, myself.
---
"'Is not a quine' is not a quine" is a quine.
The answers wern't that bad (Score:1)
Re:Editors?? we don't need no stinking editors! (Score:1)
Use a Razor (Score:1)
Re:Real Hackers (Score:1)
=)
Seriously- hackers come in all shapes, sizes, and affiliations. One would be wise not to create the equation "hip punk kid == skript kiddy && dull boring geek == Real Hacker". The best programmers I've met have all been really interesting people who were quite different from each other.
Re:Real Hackers code in hex. (Score:2)
C'mon guys... (Score:1)
Slashdot's so-called "decline into media-whoring pablum" seems more a product of its tough crowd quotient rather than any particular interview or story., indeed! He also managed to deflate antizeus' attempt at a mocking question by mocking it himself... You'll feel better if you take the long view. Ouch! Smacked that condescending question volley right back in his face, eh?
C'mon guys... (Score:1)
Re:Just a thought. (Score:1)
Re:Just a thought. (Score:1)
Re:Just a thought. (Score:1)
Re:Cuesta College? (Score:1)
Re:*WHY* is this interview important? (Score:1)
While I'd like to agree with this statement, I can't. It's just a wild guess, but I'd say /. is pretty much preaching to the converted. Most of us here have at least half a clue what the difference is between "hacker" and "cracker."
Sites that are visited by the unwashed masses are probably the only place any useful debunking could occur. But that just isn't happening, and I doubt it will anytime soon.
Therefore, I'd suggest that /. isn't really the forum for this drivel at all. But, of course, The Geek Compound is free to post what they will and I'm free not to read it if I don't want to.
At least crappy articles like this sometimes produce some pretty humourous responses from /. readers :)
Re:Let's at least *try* to be fair about MSWord... (Score:1)
I come from a place where being "a punk" means something more than just being a self proclaimed outcast from society.
Abe is a lot more readable than Jon Katz!!!! (Score:1)
No matter what you have to dump on this kid, he went and went where he wanted and used whatever tools he could to do it...More power to him. Would that more you loud mouthing do nothing "geeks" did the same. then maybe we would not have the general LACK of any real ACTION or WORTH here.
In an age where 90% of the people talk loud and do nothing it is refreshing to see some one go out and kick some crap around. True he made some mistakes, true it was MTV (play the DK's "MTV get offf the air" here), and true he did play badly with terminology (which he cops to if you actualy read the aswers).. but he DID SOMETHING.
Get off your fat code induced lard asses and go take a bit out of lifes pie.
Re:"I plead the 5th?" (Score:1)
word (Score:1)
Re:A friggin' *.doc........ errrr (Score:1)
---
Openstep/NeXTSTEP/Solaris/FreeBSD/Linux/ultrix/OS
URGENT. P4K!ST4N H4CK3RZ KLUB MEET1NG (Score:1)
i h4ve 4 msg 4 u br0th3rs
my n4me i$ m1$tEr REALHACKER (mr. realhacker).
=========MR. REALHACKER=====================
1 4m beg1nn1ng 2 th1nk th4t aBe troOly h4z no sk1ll wh4t$oEvr. 1 k4nt kw1te expl4in y 1 b feEl1ng th1s w4y, 1tz supErn4tur4l. l1ke tHe kuRdz f1ght1ng w1th thE pKk f1nd1ng 0ut th4T abDoOl4h oc4l4n 1z a sp1nlEsS k0w4rd fac1ng ex3cut1on, we muSt b str0ng wh3n wE f1nd 0ut our her0 aBe 1z t0t4lly klo0le$s.
1f U r w1th mE br0th3r$ plz me3t mE hEre 2n1ght aT 11pm EST:
NUA : 02080 57040540
my n4me 1z MR REALHACKER
P4K!ST4N H4CK3RZ KLUB
W0RLD D0M!N8N 1999
OFF!C14L PHC M0TT0:
f mountd
f imapd
f named
f ttdb
f statd
f cmsd
PHUCK > 0-D4Y!!!!!!!!!!!!
[PHC] [PHC] [PHC] [PHC] [PHC] [PHC] [PHC] [PHC]
#include slammer.h
greetz 2 DOCTOR NUKER
and MISTER_SWEET
Re:Just a thought. (Score:2)
Timeline (Score:1)
BULLSH*T
e quickly discovered a significant security flaw in the Bunim/Murray network -- namely, that it had no security. The company was running various incarnations of Windows, which, according to Abe, contained gaping holes. Abe doesn't hang out or correspond much with the hacker community -- "I'm not a typical hacker!" he insists -- but he does read "bug reports," in which hackers list the flaws they've discovered in software programs and operating systems. Drawing on that information and several hours of trial and error, Abe found a point of entry. Then he made a quick stop at Cult of the Dead Cow, an active hacker site, where he downloaded a copy of Back Orifice, a "remote control" program that allows someone like Abe to operate a Windows 95 machine from any location via the Internet.
I think this whole hack thing is a lie.
Re:Oh my. (Score:1)
Re:"I plead the 5th?" (Score:1)
Re:MS word (Score:1)
And the best part of all this is.. (Score:1)
I got to read that.
MS Word (Score:1)
*my 2 cents*
-raj jr
"why can't we all just get along?"
ps: he should've anticipated these comments about the
Re:On Hackers (Score:1)
<fake Japanisee accent>
Ayyyee. Grasshopper, when you can snatch this pebble from my hand you shawl understand.
</fake Japanisee accent>
Re:Not too bad... considering (Score:1)
Because most people immediately turned the annoying thing off rather than futz around with it?
Re:Real Hackers code in hex. (Score:1)
Kids these days -- think they're tough.
-Billy
Re:Real Hackers code in hex. (Score:2)
--
Re:On Hackers (Score:1)
Of course you realise that if you ask 10 different people what a hacker is, you'll get 11 different answers.
Re:Real Hackers code in hex. (Score:1)
Wow, that almost made sense....
Re:Sometimes you have no choice... (Score:1)
Re:On Hackers (Score:1)
If you don't know how to use man(1), why would you type $ man man?
You can never open the same IO::Stream twice.
What's the difference between BSD?
Re:Not too bad... considering (Score:1)
Re:MS word (Score:1)
If a product is good use it. I like Word, i used it from my dos days. Word 2000 is a different story.
You know if you are going to bas hsomething do so on merits, if someone attempts to better the prducts commend them, don't bash them more. But i am moving off topic. My point is so what if it was sent in a word format. Truth is a word format is probably the most common text document format used in the corporate world.
Garbage!...Utter Fscking Garbage! (Score:1)
I am Insulted and offended that:
a)
b) someone actually thought L-user kid was actually a somebody!
always from the heart of my mind!
-Ravage
A real hacker speaks in binary code. (Score:1)
-------
PovRayMan
prm@alignment.net
Re:No self respecting "hacker" uses MS Word! (Score:1)
Re:Cuesta College? (Score:1)
Re:No self respecting "hacker" uses MS Word! (Score:1)
I have a ponytail, and I'm offended (Score:2)
I know what you mean, however. My high school contained a number of punk hacker wannabes.
They made me sick. We never bothered each other at first, but then they started asking me questions.
"Hey, you know how to program?"
"yeah."
"What language?"
"Well, C is my main one."
"I'm going to learn C++, it's way better."
"Rrrreally." I wanted to ask if he thought it was better because of the "++." But, I'm not usually one to stir up shit, unless it's *really* deserved.
Another time, when I was learning x86 assembly, a friend of mine who was a very proficient coder (he was severely into crypto) told me that I'd see some really great tight asm examples in virii. He gave me a bunch and I found some more. Learned a hell of a lot. The morons somehow found out that I had quite a collection and asked me if I could give them some.
"No."
"Why?"
"Because you'll probably try to run them on the school computers or some of your little bbs enemies computers. Then when you get in trouble, you'll tell them I gave them to you. You obviously have no interest learning tight asm, so the answer is no."
They didn't like me very much after that. It wasn't like they were hard to find or anything. This was a time when pirate sites,etc went up for a loooong time and few incoming directories were protected or even checked. It wasn't hard to find them. Sometimes an archie search would reveal one and it would still be there when you got to it.
If they couldn't figure that out....
Re:I have a ponytail, and I'm offended (Score:2)
I know what you mean. I was just stereotyping to get a point across.. I didn't mean to step on anybody's toes in doing so.
Anyway, I still deal with the wannabes on a regular basis. It wouldn't be so bad if I didn't know for a fact they weren't interested in learning how to do xyzzy magic, but instead just wanted to reap the power of knowing it. The classic example is the high school kid who wants to become a super-elite hacker and impress all his peers and "slap down" anybody who would dare to challenge him. Blah blah.
Personally, I find those people to be as irritating as watching a Barney and Friends telemarathon. That is what I picked up from reading this article, and I'm disappointed that MTV didn't contact members of our community to get a real portrait of what a geek / hacker is before posting this sensationalistic garbage to appeal to the "hip" segment of society.
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Re:No self respecting "hacker" uses MS Word! (Score:2)
Re:Just a thought. (Score:2)
('Cause everyone knows real hackers use XPM...)
:)