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Charges Against High School Hackers Dropped

ZosX writes "According to eSchool News Online, the 13 students from Kutztown, PA originally charged with felonies for hacking have been given a deal, dropping charges in exchange for 15 hours of community service. From the article: 'The probation department realizes this is small potatoes,' said William Bispels, an attorney representing nearly half the accused students. This is great news for the students and their families."

5 of 348 comments (clear)

  1. I hope they don't take the deal by Rogerborg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I hope that at least one of them fights it out, and makes the state (in all senses) that started this madness either see it out, or drop the charges altogether.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  2. I was asked to hack by Boomshanka · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I was in my senior year in high school back in 86 and Apple IIe's were the flavour of the day (wonder if linux will run on it?) the math department had a password protected program for tracking and scoring all the students of the school for that year and guess what.. they forgot the password. I was asked what could I do so I ran the program through a hex dump and looked for unusual words appearing in the hex and found a word "ferret" tried it and got in. So its not all bad to be a computer enthusiast (nerd) at high school. I got no community service for that. I had the chance to up my grades but I of course I didnt.

  3. Lucky fucking kids by rk87 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You know, this is such absolute bullshit.

    Several years ago (I think '99) I was in an optional school activity that fixed computers and made sure the school network worked etc.. There was one particular trouble computer where apparently students snuck on and installed a whole bunch of nasty stuff. One of the other guys that did this with me installed Back Orifice on it to monitor it (remember, those were the days when it was popular). One day he asked me to go on the linux box and check on that computer (I watched him do it plenty of times, so i knew how). At this point, the head of the computer group came around and saw bo2k. Oooh boy was he pissed. Since this was the time of people using bo2k as a virus, he instantly thought it was.

    I told him that I was just checking it for the other guy but when he asked him he knew nothing about it and wondered why there was a virus on the linux box. Fuck.

    I got kicked off the computer group, got a total of abut 25 hours of detention cleaning desks, and my parents got to pay the equivalent of about $200 in "damages". And no, I did NOT make slashdot with this.

    --
    I'M NOT ANGRY!
  4. Outrageous by hooeezit · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The authorities in question had the gall to offer a compromise that included:

    15 hours of community service, a letter of apology, a class on personal responsibility, and a few months of probation.

    A letter of apology? That I'm sighted, not dumb, and would like to use convenient technology to stay in touch with my friends?

    And what is this from one of the defendant attorneys:

    Mike Boland, who represents one student, said his client likely will accept the offer. "It doesn't require my client to acknowledge he is guilty of anything," he said.

    I'd say a letter of apology counts as acknowledging guilt, at least in my books!
    If you keep track of Paul Graham's essays (try http://store.yahoo.com/paulgraham/nerds.html), you will probably recognize this as a glowing example of the holding pen analogy he uses vis-a-vis present day school system. I'm apalled that the most important thing that these bright kids are impressioned with is 'Obey the Thought Police'!

  5. So...they did not have the right to read? by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Reading the students' story, it sounds almost like The Right to Read.

    Student Story:

    At a school board meeting ~ a year ago, opponents of the high school's Computer Initiative predicted that the administration would not be able to control the student's access to inappropriate internet sites...

    It would allow the computer department to monitor student activity and it limited access to the network and internet. This configuration was protected by an administrative password and, as our administration discovered, the laptop could be easily reconfigured by curious students when the password was not secured...

    At least one student figured it out and passed it along until ~ 80 - 100 of the students had access to it...

    the Kutztown Police Department notified the parents of 13 high school students that their children were being charged with the crime of Computer Trespass. This offense is graded by the state as a felony of the 3rd degree.


    Right to Read:

    This put Dan in a dilemma. He had to help her--but if he lent her his computer, she might read his books. Aside from the fact that you could go to prison for many years for letting someone else read your books...

    In his software class, Dan had learned that each book had a copyright monitor that reported when and where it was read, and by whom, to Central Licensing...

    There were ways, of course, to get around the SPA and Central Licensing. They were themselves illegal. Dan had had a classmate in software, Frank Martucci, who had obtained an illicit debugging tool, and used it to skip over the copyright monitor code when reading books.
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    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.