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I read one of his books, "Ghost in the Wires," a few years ago. Great
story. He was a professional hacker and social engineering con-artist.
Taught businesses and indivuduals how to catch scammers. Can't believe
this guy fell for the scam.
https://t.me/ChestyP/274
https://t.me/covidbc/12312
https://twitter.com/David83823494/status/1682825950000496640
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Pioneering hacker Kevin Mitnick, FBI-wanted felon turned security guru, dead at 59
Kevin
Mitnick, whose pioneering antics tricking employees in the 1980s and
1990s into helping him steal software and services from big phone and
tech companies made him the most celebrated U.S. hacker, has died at age
59.
Mitnick died Sunday in Las Vegas after a 14-month battle with
pancreatic cancer, said Stu Sjouwerman, CEO of the security training
firm KnowBe4, where Mitnick was chief hacking officer.
His colorful
career — from student tinkerer to FBI-hunted fugitive, imprisoned felon
and finally respected cybersecurity professional, public speaker and
author tapped for advice by U.S. lawmakers and global corporations —
mirrors the evolution of society’s grasp of the nuances of computer
hacking.
Through Mitnick’s professional trajectory, and what many
consider the misplaced prosecutorial zeal that put him behind bars for
nearly five years until 2000, the public has learned how to better
distinguish serious computer crime from the mischievous troublemaking of
youths hellbent on proving their hacking prowess.
“He never hacked
for money,” said Sjouwerman, who became Mitnick’s business partner in
2011. He was mostly after trophies, chiefly cellphone code, he said.
Much
fanfare accompanied Mitnick’s high-profile arrest in 1995, three years
after he’d skipped probation on a previous computer break-in charge. The
government accused him of causing millions of dollars in damages to
companies including Motorola, Novell, Nokia and Sun Microsystems by
stealing software and altering computer code.
But federal prosecutors
had difficulty gathering evidence of major crimes, and after being
jailed for nearly four years, Mitnick reached a plea agreement in 1999
that credited him for time served.
Upon his January 2000 release from
prison, Mitnick told reporters his “were simple crimes of trespass.” He
said ”I wanted to know as much as I could find out about how phone
networks worked.”
HACKING No prison for Seattle hacker behind Capital One $250M data breach
He
was initially barred for three years from using computers, modems, cell
phones or anything else that could give him internet access, and from
public speaking. Those requirements were gradually eased but he wasn’t
allowed back online until December 2002.
Mitnick’s forte was social
engineering. He would impersonate company employees to obtain passwords
and data, a technique known as pretexting that remains among the most
effective in hacking and which typically requires considerable research
to pull off successfully.
“His ingenuity challenged systems, incited
dialogues, and pushed boundaries in cybersecurity. He will remain a
testament to the uncharted power of curiousity,” tweeted Chris Wysopal,
who as a member of the white-hat hacking group L0pht testified before
the U.S. Senate a few years before Mitnick did the same.
https://www.seattletimesDOTcom/business/pioneering-hacker-kevin-mitnick-fbi-wanted-felon-turned-security-guru-dead-at-59/
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