show/hide this revision's text 3 more stuff, more hate?

This is a bit of an aside, but "programmers use the word "hacking" to mean clever or skillful programming" is incorrect. A hack usually means a kludge or ineloquent solution.

That said, security research is protected in the US. Otherwise all the defcon people would be in jail and those MIT kids wouldn't have been hired by the MBTA. As to when research becomes actionable legally, I think it depends on malicious damage.

EDIT: It seems some people disagree, but I am going to back myself up with wikipedia.

From wikipedia: "The word itself comes from the German word meaning "someone who makes furniture with an axe",[1] implying a lack of finesse in a "hack"; it is believed by many in the hacking community that the reason for this is because programs too large to run on the limited computer resources of the time had portions "chopped" or "hacked" out in order to be reduced to a more reasonable size."

Hacker has many meanings, several of which are complete opposites. But I believe this is the origin of the term. Hacker, as a programmer, can be simultaneously be a person who is clever AND implements a less then ideal solution. Due to the nature of early computing, just getting things to work sometimes took alot of creativity.

show/hide this revision's text 2 backing that shit up

This is a bit of an aside, but "programmers use the word "hacking" to mean clever or skillful programming" is incorrect. A hack usually means a kludge or ineloquent solution.

That said, security research is protected in the US. Otherwise all the defcon people would be in jail and those MIT kids wouldn't have been hired by the MBTA. As to when research becomes actionable legally, I think it depends on malicious damage.

EDIT: It seems some people disagree, but I am going to back myself up with wikipedia.

From wikipedia: "The word itself comes from the German word meaning "someone who makes furniture with an axe",[1] implying a lack of finesse in a "hack"; it is believed by many in the hacking community that the reason for this is because programs too large to run on the limited computer resources of the time had portions "chopped" or "hacked" out in order to be reduced to a more reasonable size."

show/hide this revision's text 1

This is a bit of an aside, but "programmers use the word "hacking" to mean clever or skillful programming" is incorrect. A hack usually means a kludge or ineloquent solution.

That said, security research is protected in the US. Otherwise all the defcon people would be in jail and those MIT kids wouldn't have been hired by the MBTA. As to when research becomes actionable legally, I think it depends on malicious damage.

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