Watch Season 1 of Borgen Online Now!  Close

Community Discussions

Contact the Global Pulse team with your comments and feedback.

Teachers - Download Global Pulse Learning Guides

Are you a teacher? Link TV's Global Link of World Educators initiative uses Link's programs - including Global Pulse - to help bring cultural and media literacy of the world into the classroom. Learn more and download educational guides here!

Country/Broadcaster Info

Global Pulse Broadcasters

Learn more about the countries and broadcasters that fuel Global Pulse.

Know the News link

Add to Google

Add Global Pulse to your iGoogle page or reader

Virtual Surveillance and Hacking - Two Versions of the Same Thing?

This week’s Global Pulse examines hackers disrupting government websites. But governments are themselves hackers.
 
The Electronic Frontier Foundation describes how the U.S. National Security Administration and AT&T teamed up and “engaged in a massive program of illegal dragnet surveillance … of ordinary Americans.” Most analysts say China keeps track of its citizen’s computers through the “Ghostnet”, and by spying on communications through Skype. An article in Tech News World says that “Russia’s apparent effort to shut down Georgian government websites in August (2008) was one of the most public incidents of cyber attacks by a government to date.” Even liberal Holland has admitted to spying on a local news agency by means of hacking, as this article from the Der Spiegel website indicates.
 
It makes us wonder, is hacking different from a government’s spying on its own people and other countries? One obvious difference is that governments have more resources and personnel than hackers have. Bruce Shneier defines a hacker as “…someone who discards conventional wisdom, and does something else instead. Someone who looks at the edge and wonders what's beyond. Someone who sees a set of rules and wonders what happens if you don't follow them.” According to a study by Roger Blake at EFF, hackers are “mostly male, between the ages of twelve and twenty-eight” and, “consider themselves misfits and misunderstood.” The same study speaks of how hacker communities create their own information economy that values expertise in gathering information, much in the same way a surveillance operation does. 

Finally, a handful of accomplished hackers can grow up to become security consultants and “get to hack for a living.” In other words, they develop new security protocols for codes they are paid to break. So in the end, there is a continuum between hackers and governments that should give anyone pause before condemning one, or the other.

 
 

Comments (0)

 
Digg it!Add to RedditAdd to Del.icio.usShare on Facebook