1)Jonathan
James
At the age of 16, James was
the first juvenile convicted and sent to prison for hacking. James targeted
high-security organizations for his hacking amusement. His conquests included the
Department of Defense, NASA and the Department of Justice, where he
viewed classified materials and stole software valued at $1.7 million.
James served a six-month sentence under house arrest, although an adult
convicted of his crimes would serve a 10-year sentence.
2)
Adrian Lamo
Lamo, known as the homeless hacker because he used public
connections at libraries and Internet enabled coffee houses, committed hacking
crimes involving penetration testing, finding security gaps in a company’s
computer system. He accessed personal information, such as social security
numbers, and then brazenly informed his victims, including The New York Times,
Yahoo!, Citigroup and Microsoft, of their system flaws. After his conviction, Lamo paid a $65,000 fine and sentenced to two years
probation after serving home confinement for six months.
3)
Kevin Mitnick
First arrested at the age of 17, Mitnick
eventually became the most wanted computer criminal in the country. Mitnick
hacked the systems of such well-known companies as Motorola, Fijitsu and
Novell for the purpose of stealing software and damaging their machines.
His final arrest came in 1995, and he served four years for computer crimes.
Mitnick authored two books, including “The Art of Intrusion.” Hollywood produced
a movie based on his hacking activities called, “Takedown.” Today, Mitnick
operates a computer security firm.
4)
Robert Morris
As a student in Cornell University in 1988, Robert T. Morris created the first computer worm, a virus that spreads via the Internet. His claims that the worm began simply as an experiment that spiraled out of his control did not persuade prosecutors, who pointed out the significant loss of time and money his creation caused. Morris served three years of probation along with community service and paid a fine of $10,000. Morris went on to create a company that sold online software products, which Yahoo! Purchased in 1998 for $45 million. Today, Morris works at M.I.T. as a professor in their computer science and artificial intelligence laboratory.
5)
Kevin Poulsen
In 1990, radio station 102.7 FM in
Los Angeles hosted a contest, awarding a free Porsche to the 102nd caller of
the day. Poulsen, having already hacked into the station’s phone lines arranged
to become that caller. He later went on to hack computer systems of the FBI and
the Defense Department. Arrested in 1991, after seventeen months of hiding, he
received a sentence of 51 months, the longest sentence ever given for computer
crimes at that time. Today, Poulsen writes professionally.
I hope after reading this, you have
much more knowledge then earlier.
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