Well said. And it's not just individuals. In the current climate in the United States, one can be condemned simply because they are part of a group.Some are, some are not. The question is whether the hacker in question took responsibility for wrong-doing, paid the societal-imposed penalty, and then started doing positive things afterwards. In other words, LEARNED from the mistake and changed his/her ways.
The USA is not only a country of law (most of the time), but we also have the legal principle of forgiveness. Which is why we have a commonly used phrase, "paid your debt to society." While you might still have a criminal record, once you have paid the court-assigned penalty (jail time and/or monetary fines and/or community service), the law asks no more of you and most of your constitutional rights are legally restored.
If Kevin paid his debt and changed his ways as a result, then BY LAW as well as custom, we could still talk about his positive contributions and about him being a "good guy." We don't require people to be angels from birth. We acknowledge that there is some bad and some good in each of us. We just hope that the good outweighs the bad and manifests itself more often.
I could have been a hacker myself - but made other choices. If I had not chosen to retire from my Navy contracting job, I would have been required to take some "continuing education" courses as a Navy contractor and one appealing curriculum could have led me to become a Certified Ethical Hacker. But I was already 2 1/2 years past "normal" retirement age and didn't want to get started on a multi-year commitment for something that in practical terms I would never use anyway because I would HAVE to retire before then.
Well said. And it's not just individuals. In the current climate in the United States, one can be condemned simply because they are part of a group.
I recently had a rather dreary conversation with someone who was condemning an entire religious group on the basis of the actions of one of her ancestors a couple of generations back. While I agree that those actions by that person over 100 years ago were egregious, judging that person's many descendants guilty because they remain part of that religious group is borderline insanity, IMO.
There are groups and there are groups, of course. If you join a group because you espouse its philosophy, that's on you. On the other hand, we are part of some groups simply as a consequence of birth.
I would say becoming a hacker falls in the former.
There is absolutely nothing hateful or immoral about their stated tenets, but they do attact a % of people whose philosophy is way overboard - thus people condemn the whole group for the philosophies of some members.
Does the latter not influence the former? Take the "earth is flat" belief. Before, the extremist belief was the earth was round. Now, it is the opposite. The belief that the earth is flat is now considered extremist. Scientific discovery was directly related to what people believed.Extremism in any belief system is one thing. Acknowledging scientific advances is another.
I largely agree with you on some of the gist. But let me continue with playing devils advocate.What I "believe"is that the term extremist is not exactly applicable to either belief. The belief itself is, or was, based on the best available evidence and understanding at the time. The fact that it was mistaken didn't make it extreme, IMO.
I would agree that as human knowledge advanced, our understanding of the shape of the world had to change. What I would call extremist would be someone in 2023 insisting that the earth is flat based on some sort of religious or philosophical system which depends on that proposition despite being exposed to evidence to the contrary.
I can see that viewpoint and cannot totally disagree with it.In retrospect, posts# 3 to 35 of this thread twisted in an ugly direction. Why is toxicity perpetuated so much? One can imagine non-members reviewing these toxic threads and saying to themselves "I'm not going to join this toxic site..."
I loved it as well. I actually spent a day at their studio during the taping of the show plus a day onsite. I got to meet Matt Bomer, Tim DeKay, Marcia Thomesen, and guest star Treat Williams. All very very nice! Loved Marcia's British accent.Any of you seen netflix show White Collar? I absolutely LOVED that show. Very watchable, even for a family setting, incredibly interesting. Was so sad when I finished it!
My very limited knowledge tells me before you become a "White Hat", you've earned your wisdom working as a "Black Hat".One very big distinction between "Black Hat" hackers and "White Hat" hackers is their motive.