Cybersecurity explained to my grandma
The history of hackers from the dawn of humanity to the present day. * Hackers ≠ villains “Hacker” simply means someone who pushes a system beyond its intended use; ethics split them into white hats(defenders) and black hats (attackers). * Flaws are human, not machine Bugs stem from programming mistakes; early example: 1950s “bugs” were literal moths in tube computers. Hackers exploit such flaws just as lock-pickers exploit bad locks. * First big hack (1834) The Blanc brothers bribed operators on France’s optical-telegraph network to slip stock tips through the error-correction mechanism, beating the market by days. * Phone-phreak era (1950s-1970s) Captain Crunch’s 2600 Hz whistle fooled switches into granting free calls; Jobs & Wozniak sold “blue boxes” doing the same. * Internet dawn & celebrity hackers Kevin Poulsen rerouted radio contests; Robert Morris’s worm crashed 10 % of the fledgling Internet; Kevin Mitnick mixed technical hacks with social engineering, landing on the FBI’s “Most Wanted.” * Hacker collectivism * Cypherpunks (1992): privacy, decentralization, crypto manifesto (free access, distrust authority). * Anonymous: leaderless “digital flock” coordinating online protests. * Chaos Computer Club (Berlin): white-hat research and public audits (e.g., Germany’s COVID app). * Four modern tribes 1. White hats / researchers – find and disclose bugs, defend privacy. 2. Criminal crews – profit-driven ransomware, card theft, etc. 3. Mercenaries – vendors of spyware like Pegasus, sold to states. 4. Nation-states – build cyber-armies; Stuxnet showed state-grade sabotage. * Why the bad reputation? Cyber-crime now out-earns all other transnational crime combined; 83 % of SMEs still lack basic defenses. As stakes rise—from personal data to national security—every hacker action feels existential. Bottom line: Hackers can be guardians or predators; their tools are neutral, but in a hyper-connected world the consequences—and the fear—have never been bigger. Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy [https://ausha.co/privacy-policy] for more information.
4 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Cybersecurity explained to my grandma!