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CNet's "Top 10 Hacks"

tdrury writes "CNET has a story describing the "top 10 hacks" (sic) of all time. Good bathroom material - if you can surf from your bathroom. " Mentions the Morris worm and a few other clever ones. And several quite unclever ones (like the Jurassic Park/Pond PR stunt).

8 of 100 comments (clear)

  1. ... by Signal+11 · · Score: 4
    Thanks again Big Media for only getting half of the story. You write up this big article on hacking, but don't mention the reason behind it. Once again sensationalism overcomes common decency. Why not ask the community what they think? We're here, we're online, and we're accomodating. If you're honest with us, we're honest with you.

    The greatest hack of all time may be that we're all laughing at you instead of with you and you don't even realize it yet. It's not "just" about hacking websites... it's about exploring the System. The system isn't just the online world you see, it's your reality. The media has had nearly unlimited power to shape our collective reality until now. Until now. Now the community is redefining what reality is, and exposing alot of facts that most would rather see buried.

    Perhaps geeks are more paranoid than most because they know how far information manipulation can go... and infact see it on a daily basis. "Mistrust authority. Promote decentralization." Subversive? Us? Nah.

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  2. Most intelligent hack of all time by Ignatius · · Score: 5
    Check out the "back door" entry of the Jargon File to learn about one of the IMHO most creative hacks of all time:

    [...] Ken Thompson's 1983 Turing Award lecture to the ACM admitted the existence of a back door in early Unix versions that may have qualified as the most fiendishly clever security hack of all time. In this scheme, the C compiler contained code that would recognize when the `login' command was being recompiled and insert some code recognizing a password chosen by Thompson, giving him entry to the system whether or not an account had been created for him.
    Normally such a back door could be removed by removing it from the source code for the compiler and recompiling the compiler. But to recompile the compiler, you have to use the compiler -- so Thompson also arranged that the compiler would recognize when it was compiling a version of itself, and insert into the recompiled compiler the code to insert into the recompiled `login' the code to allow Thompson entry -- and, of course, the code to recognize itself and do the whole thing again the next time around! And having done this once, he was then able to recompile the compiler from the original sources; the hack perpetuated itself invisibly, leaving the back door in place and active but with no trace in the sources. [...]

    A detailed description of the hack by Ken Thompson himself can be found here.

  3. The Greatest Hack of All Time by Uruk · · Score: 5

    Orson Wells. War of the Worlds.

    Remember, hacking isn't just with computers. Probably the best piece of hacking/social engineering EVER was Orson Wells with the war of the worlds. Who else can claim that their hack affected MILLIONS of people all over the country?

    Oh sure, I hear the naysayers saying that he probably didn't even mean to do it. But to me, that's immaterial. The hack of turning a regular radio show into a national panic is quite a hack, IMHO. It may not have been cool or good, but I would consider it a hack.

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    -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
  4. They left out beautifulgirls.com by BlueLines · · Score: 4

    Anyone remember this site? If not, read on...
    They were a "free porn" ("jumbo shrimp"?) site..all you had to do to get the pr0n was download thier "client"...which actually turned the speaker off of the (l)user's modem, dialed a phone number in Outer Mongolia , and connected to a pop there. Brilliant. beautifulgirls.com split the phone revenue with a northern slobovian phone company, and the people who found $200+ international ld calls on their phone bill were screwed; a court case determined that they were indeed liable for the charges....now _that_ was memorable..btw, i wasn't one of those lusers...

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    --BlueLines "The cost of living hasn't affected it's popularity." -anonymous
  5. The top 8 web hacks.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    did anyone else notice that 80% of these were not true hacks but just web site modifications. (except two : the movie [which wasn't a real hack] and morris [i remember a story from back then where the guys at MIT reverse engineering the worm came to the conclusion that the perpetrator just plain wasn't that good a programmer : the worm could have been a MUCH better hack.) why not real hacks? why not _better_ imagined ones (E911 anybody?) the WWW is NOT the net. there's a lot more to hacking then a URL. [sigh]

  6. No mention of the MIT hacks! by Wee · · Score: 4
    Not one mention of some of the world's truly great hacks: the tradition at MIT of pulling off a really super stupendous hack, usually in full view of god and everyone.

    For my money, the Green Building as a VU meter is the most impressive, the cop car on the dome the most humorous.

    Anyway, I thought it was sad that true great hacks got no mention.

    -B

    --

    Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

  7. Thompson back door by dalke · · Score: 4
    My favorite is the back door Thompson put in the unix login program. The back door wasn't in login.c but was in the C compiler, so when login was compiled, the code was added -- you never saw the code in the login source. In addition, the C compiler was modified to add the back door code when it compiled itself, so you never saw the modifications in the source.

    See http://www.acm.org/classics/sep95/for more details.

  8. Slashdot list of best hacks. by Raindeer · · Score: 5

    Allright we've seen the CNET article and though it is amusing it is no where near to being a list of most 'subversive hacks'. I have allready seen some good hacks being cited here.

    Instead of complaining, maybe we could show CNET what a good hack is supposed to look like. What I propose is that we compile a list, that is actually a list of best hacks. Together with some help from Slashdot editors this list could be build and through voting I think we could come up with a list that is a more accurate definition of the word hack.

    I vote for Charles Babbage to be on this list. Doing all, that he did, mechanically was and is a great hack.

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