WHAT IS HACKING
In computer
networking, hacking is any technical effort to manipulate the
normal behavior of network connections and connected systems. A hacker is
any person engaged in hacking. The term "hacking" historically
referred to constructive, clever technical work that was not necessarily
related to computer systems. Today, however, hacking and hackers are most
commonly associated with malicious programming attacks on the Internet and
other networks.
Origins of Hacking
M.I.T. engineers in the 1950s and 1960s first popularized
the term and concept of hacking. Starting at the model train club and later in
the mainframe computer rooms, the so-called "hacks" perpetrated by
these hackers were intended to be harmless technical experiments and fun
learning activities.
Later, outside of M.I.T., others began applying the term to
less honorable pursuits. Before the Internet became popular, for example,
several hackers in the U.S. experimented with methods to modify telephones for
making free long-distance calls over the phone network illegally.
Hacking on computer networks is often done through scripts
or other network programming. These programs generally manipulate data passing
through a network connection in ways designed to obtain more information about
how the target system works. Many such pre-packaged scripts are posted on the
Internet for anyone, typically entry-level hackers, to use. More advanced
hackers may study and modify these scripts to develop new methods. A few highly
skilled hackers work for commercial firms with the job to protect that
company's software and data from outside hacking.
Cracking techniques on networks include creating worms,
initiating denial of service (DoS) attacks, or in establishing unauthorized
remote access connections to a device.
As computer
networking and the Internet exploded in popularity, data networks became by far
the most common target of hackers and hacking.
Hacking vs. Cracking
Malicious attacks on computer networks are officially known
as cracking, while hacking truly applies only to
activities having good intentions. Most non-technical people fail to make this
distinction, however. Outside of academia, its extremely common to see the term
"hack" misused and be applied to cracks as well.
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