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authorRalph Amissah <ralph@amissah.com>2010-02-08 15:13:09 -0500
committerRalph Amissah <ralph@amissah.com>2010-02-08 15:13:09 -0500
commitf83357672e72eb70b05f6aeb91b49ec15b5513c9 (patch)
tree4e92ac0697e2594a3716a1691dc06210dfa1104a /data/v1/samples
parentMerge branch 'upstream' into debian/sid (diff)
parentreadme, minor (diff)
Merge branch 'upstream' into debian/sid
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@@ -6324,7 +6324,7 @@ Bruce Schneier
http://www.schneier.com
1~afterword_2 Afterword by Andrew "bunnie" Huang, Xbox Hacker
+
Hackers are explorers, digital pioneers. It's in a hacker's nature to question conventions and be tempted by intricate problems. Any complex system is sport for a hacker; a side effect of this is the hacker's natural affinity for problems involving security. Society is a large and complex system, and is certainly not off limits to a little hacking. As a result, hackers are often stereotyped as iconoclasts and social misfits, people who defy social norms for the sake of defiance. When I hacked the Xbox in 2002 while at MIT, I wasn’t doing it to rebel or to cause harm; I was just following a natural impulse, the same impulse that leads to fixing a broken iPod or exploring the roofs and tunnels at MIT. 
 
Unfortunately, the combination of not complying with social norms and knowing “threatening” things like how to read the arphid on your credit card or how to pick locks causes some people to fear hackers. However, the motivations of a hacker are typically as simple as “I’m an engineer because I like to design things.” People often ask me, “Why did you hack the Xbox security system?” And my answer is simple: First, I own the things that I buy. If someone can tell me what I can and can’t run on my hardware, then I don’t own it. Second, because it’s there. It’s a system of sufficient complexity to make good sport. It was a great diversion from the late nights working on my PhD.