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Researchers Are Liberating Thousands of Pages of Forgotten Hacking History From the Government (vice.com) 35

An anonymous reader writes: In 1989, just a few months after the web became a reality, a computer worm infected thousands of computers across the world, including those of NASA. Late last month -- 30 years after the "WANK worm" struck NASA -- the agency released an internal report that the agency wrote at the time, thanks to a journalist and a security researcher who have embarked on a project to use the Freedom of Information Act to get documents on historical hacking incidents. The project is called "Hacking History," and the people behind it are freelance journalists Emma Best, and security researcher (and former NSA hacker) Emily Crose. The two are crowdfunding to raise money to cover the costs of the FOIA requests via the document requesting platform MuckRock.

In the last few years, hackers and the cybersecurity industry have gone mainstream, earning headlines in major newspapers, becoming key plotlines in Hollywood movies, and even getting a hit TV show. But it hasn't always been this way. For decades, infosec and hacking was a niche industry that got very little news coverage and very little public attention. As a result, the ancient and not so ancient history of hacking has a lot of holes. Now, the two women are trying to fill in those gaps in hacker history, like missing pieces of a puzzle, sending FOIA requests to several US government agencies, including the FBI.

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Researchers Are Liberating Thousands of Pages of Forgotten Hacking History From the Government

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  • If there's a dollar to be made it will be made.
  • Those who do not learn from the past are doomed to repeat it.
    Although I would bet a lot of the early "hacks" were just crap passwords. Still interesting to know.
  • The internet existed long before 1989, and even the year before the Morris Worm infected computers in 1988. What bullshit alternate history are kids making these days? The ARPANET existed in the 1970s and expanded ever since. The year 1989 started with over 60,000 nodes already attached.

    Go here and click on each decade's tab:
      https://www.computerhistory.or... [computerhistory.org]

    • by quarrel ( 194077 )

      It doesn't say the Internet, it says the web. You're being too pedantic.

      However (to be just pedantic enough!), even there they're pretty wrong. The web was not a reality in 1989, as the first browsers and servers didn't exist until 1990.

      • the "web" also existed before then. I was on it at national laboratory.

        • by quarrel ( 194077 )

          Say what? You were on it before Tim Berners-Lee wrote the first browser and servers?

          I was on the internet then too, we had gopher, usenet, all sorts of things, but no web.

          • wasn't speaking of html/hyperlink web and servers, but other linked text.

            the first" browsers" able to follow linked text to other documents and systems were done in the 1980s, like HyTelnet and Silversmiths.

            sure, depends on definitions, but the Internet (and global DECNet and some other networks) and ways to navigate information are older than most realize.

    • This is true. We were doing stuff way before you even dreamed of computers, and coupling 110 baud modems to dual hard lines then.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Lets go full distortion.
      In the 1980's a computer could connect to another computer and upload/download files.
      When it was done it disconnected and allowed another computer to connect and upload download.
      The "network" was always one computer connecting to one computer before 1989.
      No computer networks existing in any way other than a desktop computer connecting to a desktop computer before 1989 :)
      Like in the movies. With one POTS and that acoustic coupler.
      Lots of computer networks networking with lots
  • In the last few years, hackers and the cybersecurity industry have gone mainstream, earning headlines in major newspapers, becoming key plotlines in Hollywood movies

    What are some good hacking films other than Sneakers (which came out in 1992)?

    • Hackers was a lot of fun in a dumb way.

      But if we're talking key plot lines, obviously The Matrix.

    • In the last few years, hackers and the cybersecurity industry have gone mainstream, earning headlines in major newspapers, becoming key plotlines in Hollywood movies

      What are some good hacking films other than Sneakers (which came out in 1992)?

      It says mainstream, not good.

    • What are some good hacking films other than Sneakers (which came out in 1992)?

      I don't remember if I ever saw Sneakers, so I don't know what you mean by "good". If you mean realistic, damn few. While not realistic, War Games is a classic.

      • Re:Hacking films? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Major_Disorder ( 5019363 ) on Friday May 10, 2019 @05:59PM (#58571436)
        Wargames was great, and a lot of what was shown was common "hacking" tools of the day.
        War dialing
        Phone phreaking to avoid long distance charges.
        Finding written down (crappy) passwords
        Researching people to gain access to their systems
        Searching for backdoors.
        I grant you that the WOPR being more or less an AI was not accurate. However most people did believe that AI was coming soon, and all it really would take was a powerful enough computer.

        I bought a modem because of that movie.
        • It wasn't too bad, especially for its time. Certainly better than the way computers were represented before it. Most movies since have been pretty bad too. For the life of me I don't understand the way Hollywood has written computers into movies for the last 25 years or so. They've been pretty ubiquitous for a while now, but they still treat them like some sort of magic box to this day.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re 'What are some good" computer films?
      23 (1998) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0... [imdb.com]
      Underground: The Julian Assange Story (2012) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2... [imdb.com]
  • by Anonymous Coward

    that I hope that these "journalists" are ethical enough not to go full bore ratting out the names of the sources who reported the cranky old hackers or provided evidence along the way. Many of those responsible citizens are likely retired by now, and don't deserve the Windows boxes they keep on the net for gaming purposes being DOS'ed by the cranky old scumbags who couldn't complete a successful hack in the past but now would like some self-styled revenge.

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