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|
| Author |
Message |
| 14 new of 108 responses total. |
scott
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response 95 of 108:
|
Mar 27 17:25 UTC 1999 |
Is there no end to these cracker-wannabe morons?
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morpheus
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response 96 of 108:
|
Apr 26 02:47 UTC 1999 |
well, you had to wait a whole month for my response to that obviously
rhetorical question, so I will make it stellar:
Nope.
(grin)
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scott
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response 97 of 108:
|
Apr 26 18:01 UTC 1999 |
It was sort-of a rhetorical question. It was really aimed at the idiot who
entered this item. :)
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detcom
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response 98 of 108:
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May 31 06:46 UTC 1999 |
tehre is a real diffrence in the culture. hackers dont hamr systems, they go
in and they explore, and they are normaly non milicious. the crakcers are
the ones that you need to worrk about....... unfortunatly ethere is a
treyotype, and that needs to be destroyed
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mook
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response 99 of 108:
|
Nov 7 04:00 UTC 1999 |
And this all leads back to the source....
cyberkiller "Anyone wanna know how to hack? E-mail me at my elite hotmail
account"
well, maybe his message was not that idiotic but I feel rather bashing after
reading all 97 responses...but I am sitting in a booth running lights for a
very boring play....2 hours of talk :(
My view on hacking is that hacking in the real terminology as it was once
intended is now dead, or really close to death. TMRC is what I think of, and
although I am only 16 I totally agree with the TMRC views on hacking.
I am not a hacker, but I am into network security, and when I feel the urge
to break into a system, I e-mail the admin and ask for permission to hack his
system. Most systems I hack are picked out by what software they run and what
experience I need. For example, my latest attacks were on a FreeBSD system
with Apache and some proxy stuff. I know the admin and have my own shell to
the system, and we are good friends now....Friends because I asked if I could
try to break into his system. I see nothing wrong with an urge to get into
a system, and I know thatpeople don't hire 16 year olds as admins,,,However
I am my school network admin. I think that if you do want to hack, ask the
admin first, get an ok then try your luck... One you will be better, because
you can choose systems that you need practice with, and two you can gain some
very good relationships with people.
See ya-Mook
|
eronius
|
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response 100 of 108:
|
Jan 19 08:11 UTC 2000 |
the entire thread made an interesting reading. those who feel the same should
thank the elite hacker with a hotmail a/c. we need more people like that. :|
Mook's idea of asking somebody's permission to hack their system is funny.
but really it's a good idea. but not all sysadmins will allow that. not
everyone of them is that friendly.
|
pwdfile
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response 101 of 108:
|
Feb 5 15:40 UTC 2000 |
.
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d1abl0s
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response 102 of 108:
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Sep 27 16:35 UTC 2000 |
dude you are the lamest person in the world, a hotmail account what the hell
are you thinking. I bet you have the latest version of sub7 right. ha ha your
nothing but a fool.
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manthac
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response 103 of 108:
|
Dec 29 18:53 UTC 2000 |
HAHAHA
Does any body here think that it is funny that hacking itself is illegal even
if you do not look or mess with anything? The law Invasion of computer privacy
lol. Its dumb.
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cholist
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response 104 of 108:
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Jan 10 15:16 UTC 2001 |
then give me some credit card number!!
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scott
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response 105 of 108:
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Jan 10 19:06 UTC 2001 |
Welllll.... I hate to start giving out numbers I hacked so hard for, but
here's one I can't use because it's only got another $35,000 left on it:
1234-5678-9012-3456
Expires May 2002.
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cholist
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response 106 of 108:
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Jan 11 18:33 UTC 2001 |
ha.. ha..ha
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snipher
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response 107 of 108:
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Jan 17 04:22 UTC 2001 |
you are a classic cyberkiller - hotmail also = crap
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happyboy
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response 108 of 108:
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Jan 17 12:12 UTC 2001 |
><
-- <--- stern look.
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