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Salon.com October 31, 2000 Andrew Leonard |
Triumph of the free-software will The passion of open-source hackers may make their success inevitable. Impugn it at your peril... |
Fast Company December 2000 Astrid Sandoval |
VP of Hacker Relations Job Titles of the Future: Even in the free-for-all world of open-source software, you've got to have some order -- and some orderlies, people who serve as intermediaries between the programmers (otherwise known as hackers) and the companies that use their software... |
PC World May 2001 Kim Zetter |
Hacker Nation Shadowy, computer-wise predators slip in undetected to steal data, deface Web sites, crash systems--or just look around. We talk to some current and former hackers to find out more about them and what they're after... |
Salon.com May 18, 2001 Andrew Leonard |
No recession for free software Hackers scorn the theory that the economic downturn could hurt open-source software... |
Linux Journal April 2000 Brian R. Marshall |
The Generation Gap An examination of the issues involved with the use of open-source software components in closed-source applications. |
CIO March 15, 2004 Christopher Lindquist |
Model Hacker Behavior - Under Development Forget about patches. Researchers at the Florida Institute of Technology are looking for ways to fight hackers by modeling their methods, or "exploits." The research could eventually lead to new types of security tools capable of stopping attacks that hackers haven't even invented yet. |
Salon.com November 15, 2002 Andrew Leonard |
AbiWord up Booms come and busts go, but open-source developers keep improving the alternatives to Microsoft's "standards." |
Salon.com December 15, 2000 Andrew Leonard |
The Linux jihad Or, what do alien crypto, poststructuralism and virtual private networks all have in common? |
Salon.com February 6, 2001 Andrew Leonard |
Hunting the wild hacker Work should be play, says a new book that sets forth the emerging ethical code of free-software programmers... |
Bank Systems & Technology September 15, 2007 Sharon Gaudin |
Number Of Hackers Attacking Banks Jumps 81% Hackers no longer need to be technical wizards to set up an operation to steal people's banking information and then rob their accounts. |
Salon.com September 22, 2000 Andrew Leonard |
License to be good In the free-software world, people obey the rules because they believe in them. In the music industry, the rip-off is a way of life. |
Salon.com June 5, 2002 Andrew Leonard |
A new teenage wasteland? Script kiddies, Web site defacers, chat-room gangsters: Today's digital troublemakers get a bad rap. But in "The Hacker Diaries" we learn that they're really all right. |
Salon.com March 6, 2001 Ed Frauenheim |
Crafting the free-software future At VA Linux's SourceForge, thousands of programmers are collaborating for both love and money... |
Fast Company Neal Ungerleider |
China Allegedly Arrested Hackers To Comply With The U.S. Government's Demands Whether China will actually prosecute the hackers is a whole other issue; it's possible the country only made the arrests to skirt the economic sanctions that President Obama was lording over China. |
BusinessWeek August 22, 2005 Grow & Hamm |
From Black Market To Free Market Frustrated computer-security firms are offering to buy tips from the very hackers who bedevil them. |
eCFO December 2000 Karen J. Bannan |
Fear of the Black Hats Increasingly, companies are hiring hackers to test their network firewalls. This may not be such a good idea. |
PC World April 2, 2001 Kim Zetter & Andrew Brandt |
How Hackers Hack The tricks hackers use, and what you can do to foil them... |
Bank Technology News April 2001 Maria Bruno |
Hackers Steal 1 Million Card Numbers Teams of Russian and Ukrainian hackers stole more than 1 million credit card numbers from 40 American e-businesses in recent months, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation... |
Bank Technology News April 2007 Rebecca Sausner |
The New Red Menace Russian and eastern European hackers get all the glory these days, but their efforts to disrupt American financial services are a nuisance when compared to the nation-state threat that China's cyber army, and its rogue hackers, may pose. |