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by watwut
1704 days ago
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In low crime areas, people don't lock the doors. It is obvious security fault, but in fact, the people walking in and messing with their stuff are in the wrong. Of course they were furious at your hacking. And of course you should have not done that regardless of what fault the system had. (They would be in the wrong of they tried to impose serious consequences on 10 years old, which I hope did not happened.) |
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"Hacking" isn't the same as "breaking in". Breaking into somewhere is usually destructive, dangerous, can be done b anyone and reveals no poor security (how did they forget to protect their vault door from a drill and plastic explosives??). A DDoS attack falls into this same category - a boring zero-skill brute force attack that can only be interpreted as malicious.
"Real hacking", however, isn't any of those things. If I put on an orange jumper and walk right into the back of my local bank and straight down to the vault without so much as a confused glance from a guard, they will, as they should, be more concerned with firing their guards for dangerous incompetence than prosecuting me for walking past an "employees only" sign. Especially if I, after arriving at the vault, called the bank manager and explained how bad their security is.