The world economic and social order went completely digital. 
              And so CRIME went digital too. 
            
            It is somewhere at the interstices of the new generation of 
            alienated young hackers (they sometimes refer to themselves as 
            "cyberpunks") and the world of sometimes-organized crime that we 
            locate the concept of the cracker. The term is, to some degree, an 
            attempt by the now-established older-generation hackers to separate 
            themselves from computer crime. The debate still rages as to what 
            constitutes the difference between hacking and cracking. Some say 
            that cracking represents any and all forms of rule-breaking and 
            illegal activity using a computer. Others would define cracking only 
            as particularly DESTRUCTIVE criminal acts. Still others would claim 
            that the early hackers were EXPLICITLY anarchistic and that acts of 
            willful destruction against "the system" have a place in the hacker 
            ethos, and that therefore the term cracker is unnecessary and 
            insulting. 
            Following four entries are from Michael Synergy, a MONDO 2000 
            associate editor, and a legendary ex(?)-cracker. 
            On Theft of Information
            Information can't be stolen. Unless they've come up with 
            something new, phenomenologically speaking. If I tell someone a 
            fact, I still know the fact. Property laws were set up to handle 
            tangible objects. We're dealing with raw data, information, the 
            stuff of dreams. The whole system to handle "ownership" is obsolete. 
            In a world where you can copy information, leaving the original 
            intact, and wind up with the perfect copy, the debate of ownership 
            is over. 
            On Browsing
            I'm an information addict. When I crack into computers, I browse 
            and read people's mail, papers, notes, programs, etc. I'm an 
            inquiring mind and I want to know. This is a real issue. I 
            want to learn and they want to impose "need to know" on 
            everything. 
            On the Debate over the Terms "Hacker" or "Cracker"
            The only difference is that one is employed. Or runs the company. 
            
            On Money & Computer Crime
            You know who was the most important president? Richard Nixon. You 
            know why? Because he took us off the gold standard. Once upon a 
            time, money in the bank had to be related to a real-world object. 
            But suddenly the governor was removed. Money was just a bunch of 
            bits and bytes in computers. Money became the first exploration into 
            cyberspace. This is why the economy is messed up. This is why banks 
            messed up. This is why computer crime is growing exponentially. This 
            is why the damage that can be caused electronically is so great. We 
            stopped using reality as the "acid test" for what was represented in 
            our machines. 
            This comment is from a hacker/cracker who calls himself 
            Emmanuel Goldstein. He edits 2600, the premier North American hacker journal. 
            
            No Fingerprints
            The more digital the society gets, the more we'll be able to 
            completely change money. We'll be able to change a date on a 
            document. We'll be able to add a figure to a bank balance. We'll be 
            able to change a "no" to a "yes". How do you trace things like that? 
            If you're a good programmer, there are no fingerprints. 
            Links
            
              
              
- The Hacker Crackdown - Law and disorder on the 
              Electronic Frontier 
              
- This Bruce 
              Sterling's classic book highlights the 1990 assault on 
              hackers, when law-enforcement officials successfully arrested 
              scores of suspected illicit hackers and other computer-based 
              law-breakers. 
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