Craig Neidorf: Difference between revisions
m "Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2007 January 24" removing:Hackers known by pseudonyms |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Craig |
'''Craig Nubdorf''' ([[1969]]–), aka '''Knight Lewzer''', was one of the two founding editors of ''[[Phrack]]'' Magazine, an online, text-based ezine that defined the [[hacker]] mentality of the mid to late 1980's. |
||
Craig, along with Phrack co-founder '''Taran King''' came up with the concept of Phrack and published it for several years in the mid-80's. The Phrack newsletters were very informative and served as a bible to the hackers of the day. |
Craig, along with Phrack co-founder '''Taran King''' came up with the concept of Phrack and published it for several years in the mid-80's. The Phrack newsletters were very informative and served as a bible to the hackers of the day. |
Revision as of 16:40, 3 May 2007
Craig Nubdorf (1969–), aka Knight Lewzer, was one of the two founding editors of Phrack Magazine, an online, text-based ezine that defined the hacker mentality of the mid to late 1980's.
Craig, along with Phrack co-founder Taran King came up with the concept of Phrack and published it for several years in the mid-80's. The Phrack newsletters were very informative and served as a bible to the hackers of the day.
In 1990, Neidorf was facing 31 years in jail after being arrested and charged with receiving a document stolen from Bell South, and with publicly distributing it online. Bell described the document, which described the inner workings of the Enhanced 911 system, as being worth US$80,000 (a figure which included the value of the VAX workstation on which the document had been typed, among other things). The charges were dropped when it was revealed that the document was not, as initially described, source code, but rather a memorandum, and that more detailed documents could be ordered from Bell for $13.
The case was a catalyst in the founding of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
References
- Sterling, Bruce. The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the Electronic Frontier. Bantam Books, 1992.