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Fear the Klawn...

 

if you are a hacker, you are a revolutionary
--Dr. Crash1

It is worth remembering that, although we do not cause damage
to the systems we hack, what we do is still illegal. Our main
aim is to satisfy our desire to hack and this co-exists with
our aim of helping the system administrator secure his system
against possible future attacks by the sort cyber-vandals who
have managed to give hackers a bad name, by crashing systems,
violating people's privacy and generally causing trouble. The
closest we come to this sort of thing is when the machine we
hack is a web server, in which case, we will often leave our
"calling card" - a small image of an ace of spades - at the
bottom of the page, linked to a hidden page with information
about AoHP. One of our primary aims is to dispel the myth
perpetuated by the media that all hackers are bad. Our name
comes from an interview given by John Austen, then the
Detective Inspector in charge of Scotland Yard's Computer
Crime Unit, who expressed fears that "Gullible young hackers
could be taken advantage of by agents of a hostile power."
One of our aims is to influence gullible young hackers who
might otherwise fall into the trap of hacking into some
serious site using some script they've downloaded from the
Net that exploits some bug that allows them root access,
boasting about it online or to their friends and getting
busted by the FBI and touted as a major threat to national
security.

We feel that we define ethical hacking and we would like to
think that a system administrator, when asked "If you were
going to be hacked - didn't have a choice in the matter -
who would you prefer to be hacked by?", would reply "The
Agents of a Hostile Power."

More and more, we are seeing hackers being captured and
claiming that they did not intend to cause harm to the
systems they had hacked and that they were only doing it
for the challenge and so on. To these people, we would say
this: If this is true, then adopt our policies of not
altering the system by installing backdoors and of only
using true hacking techniques - ie. avoiding password
sniffers. Most importantly, alert the system administrator
to the fact that his systems security is flawed, and let
him know what steps he needs to take to fix this. Only
then can you claim that your intentions were honourable or
ethical as opposed to malicious.

We know that what we do is illegal and, if any of us were
to be captured, we would accept this fact, admit that we
knew what we were doing was wrong, and face the music. For
us, hacking is an intellectual challenge, not something to
boast about to our peers (particularly as none of us are
teenagers).Hacking isn't about impressing our friends. We
don't want fame. We're ethical hackers and although it may
sound corny, we have our honour and our code.

That's all we need.


                                                                                                      Taken from the Ethics section at Attrition.org


==

Are You a Hacker?

Take a little quiz for me today. Tell me if you fit this
description. You got your net account several months ago. You have been
surfing the net, and you laugh at those media reports of the information
superhighway. You have a red box, you don't have to pay for phone calls.
You have crackerjack, and you have run it on the password file at a unix
you got an account on. Everyone at your school is impressed by your computer
knowledge, you are the one the teachers ask for help. Does this sound
like you? You are not a hacker.
There are thousands of you out there. You buy 2600 and you
ask questions. You read phrack and you ask questions. You join
#hack and you ask questions. You ask all of these questions, and you
ask what is wrong with that? After all, to be a hacker is to question
things, is it not? But, you do not want knowledge. You want answers.
You do not want to learn how things work. You want answers. You do not
want to explore. All you want to know is the answer to your damn
questions. You are not a hacker.
Hacking is not about answers. Hacking is about the path you
take to find the answers. If you want help, don't ask for answers,
ask for a pointer to the path you need to take to find out those answers
for yourself. Because it is not the people with the answers that are
the hackers, it is the people that are travelling along the path.

                                                                    -ReDragon

You know who you Are.

I know who i´m Not.I am no Hacker for doing this.

You can call me...newbie, script kiddie, whatever. But i hope this to be useful, and someday, somehow THEY  all get the message and stop talking about Hackers as if they were scum like thieves,criminals, murderers and other shit, and start to worry about the real criminals...yes.. those who have Power,(whatever the country you live on),those who want to manipulate our lives to favour theirs.

 

    Hack In Peace.

                                                                  KyZseR : kyzser@yahoo.com

I thank the people that supports what I´m doing...and for the others who don´t, the only thing i can say is...YOU JUST DON´T GET IT.

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Administrador: aca esta el index.htm original.

Shoutz: SiDhArTtA kiWI®, Out-A-Time, Emi, Apocalypse Dow, Basanio  and all those who stand for our  privacy and freedom of speech.         

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