Top 10 Hackers

shenoxxx

Well-known member
  • Sep 23, 2009
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    Top 10 Hackers


    Hackers in Hollywood tend to be portrayed in extremes: They're either modern-day equivalents of James Bond or anti-social yet tech-savvy teenagers looking for ways to amuse themselves at the expense of other computer users. The truth is, hackers are an assortment of IT-knowledgeable individuals who are both responsible for billions of dollars of losses yearly and the unstoppable evolution of the worldwide web. As such, this article will tackle the good, the bad, and the geeky hackers of modern-day computing.


    1. Shawn Fanning: This hacker has helped a lot in revolutionizing (that is, enacting actual, irrefutable change) the music industry, particularly in the domain of music distribution. Together with the help of Shaun Parker and Jordan Ritter, the three visionaries set out to launch Napster—a P2P application that ultimately popularized the free exchange of music files via the Internet.

    2. Robert Morris: He is the inventor of first Internet-based worm ever made. His namesake exploited both fingerd and sendmail vulnerabilities in order to induce buffer overflow. After serving time for his supposed cyber crimes, he made a profitable startup that was bought by Yahoo for a considerable sum and became the co-founder of ViaWeb along with Paul Graham.

    3. VallaH: This hacker was the one responsible for the first smart DOS attack, ping-of-death, and jolt.c, which enabled him to entertain script kiddies across cyberspace and bring entire multinational companies down on their knees.

    4. Gordon Lyon: More renowned for the nom de net of "Fyodor", Lyon is credited as the creator of Nmap (the hacker's first-ever tool that has made a big enough impact in pop culture to be included in movies like "The Bourne Ultimatum" and "The Matrix"), the founder of insecure.org, and the pioneer of service fingerprinting.

    5. Kevin Mitnick: He's arguably the most famous real-life black hat hacker because of all the media and press attention he has gotten over the last decade. For years, he had been imprisoned without charge by the government before he was sentenced to three years and ten months with consideration of the time he'd already spent in jail. He now runs his own IT security company at present.

    6. The Mentor: This anonymous, cultish hacker leader was the author of the Phrack-magazine-published Hacker Manifesto. He served as an inspiration to a generation of children worldwide who wanted to become a hacker just like him.

    7. Karl Koch: This German hacker from the 1980s was far more well-known for his controversial antics (i.e., his paranoia over the Illuminati, his obsession with the number 23, and his cocaine addiction) than his involvement in a computer espionage incident during the Cold War.

    8. Richard Jones: A young Australian hacker (also known by the code name of Electron) who spread disorder across the Internet with nothing more than a modem and his technical know-how. After being arrested by Australian Federal Police in 1990 and serving time in jail, he eventually became a security consultant and researcher.

    9. Kevin Poulsen: He's a former black hat hacker who's now the senior editor of Wired News. He once used his hacking skills to "phreak" his way into winning an LA radio contest and getting a brand new Porsche, but he was ultimately caught and arrested for his actions.

    10. Adrian Lamo: This gray hat hacker demonstrated to everyone across the globe that it's possible to take down large websites by just manipulating URLs. He is now an award-winning journalist.​
     

    Chooty malli

    Well-known member
  • Mar 17, 2010
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    ඉන්න තැනක් හොයනව
    Ankit Fadia

    Ankit Fadia is an independent computer security consultant[1] He runs a program on computer security for corporates in alliance with Reliance Info.[2]
    Contents

    Biography

    Ankit went to Delhi Public School, R K Puram for school.[3] He started a website called "HackingTruths", which he claims was judged as the "second best hacking site in the world by the FBI".[3] He claims that when he was 14, he trashed the front page of an Indian magazine's website. He then sent an e-mail to the editor confessing to the hack, suggesting counter measures.[4] At 15, his book on Ethical Hacking made him the youngest author to be published by Macmillan India.[4] Many publications wrongly reported that Fadia is associated with FBI or CIA,[5][6] however, he himself denied this.
    Fadia has also sponsored Singapore Management University's "Ankit Fadia Information Security Award", which consisted of a $500 cash prize and Certificate and was given for two years to "an outstanding student" in the Information Security and Trust Course under the Bachelor of Science (Information System Management) degree.[7]
    Controversy

    Authenticity of claims

    According to Wendy McAuliffe at ZDNet UK, Fadia's Hacking Truths website was judged "second best hacking site" by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, though no ranked list of "hacking sites" has been published by the FBI.[3]
    In 2000, Chennai Online reported that Fadia's consulting clients included several of the largest technology and financial services companies in the world. No other source corroborates that report; were it true, Fadia's client list would exceed that of many of the largest independent security consultancies. The same article reported Fadia's involvement in decrypting a message from an Al Qaeda operative; no other source corroborates that claim, nor does any of Fadia's published work involve cryptography or cryptanalysis.[8][9][10]
    In April 2000, Rediff.com published an interview[11] with Ankit Fadia. Anti-India Crew (AIC), a Pakistani hacker group noted for defacing Indian Government websites, rubbished the claims that Fadia had made in the interview. Fadia had claimed that his alert to a U.S. spy agency had prevented an attack by Pakistani hackers. However, he never divulged the name of the agency, citing security reasons.[4] AIC and another Pakistani hacker group WFD defaced an Indian Government site, epfindia.gov.in, and "dedicated" it to Fadia in mock deference to his capabilities to hack or prevent hacking.[12][13] AIC also said that it would be defacing the website of the Central Board of Excise and Customs (CBEC), www.cbec.gov.in, within two days and challenged Fadia to prevent the attack by patching the vulnerable website. AIC maintained that Fadia should stop calling himself a hacker, if it succeeded in hacking the CBEC website.[12] AIC kept its promise and defaced the CBEC website after two days. At another defaced website (bhelhyd.co.in), AIC termed the claims of Indian media about Ankit Fadia as "Bullshit".[14]
    Some security experts in India dismissed him as just another fad.[15] Ankit Fadia is listed on attrition.org's Security Scene Errata: Charlatans webpage alongside individuals such as Steve Gibson and Carolyn Meinel. This page seeks to "point out a few cases of fakes walking among us".[16][17]
    He has been accused of copying materials from internet and paraphrasing into his own books and lectures. Recently, his claims have been proved false and he has been cited as fake person boastering in his own imaginations of fancy hacking for gaining cheap publicity.[18][19][20]
    Fadia's earlier site, Ankitfadia.com, was attacked in 2003, by a cracker who self-identified as SkriptKiddie. Fadia explained that he was using a private web server for hosting his website and they were responsible for the lack of security. However, all web servers give their customers an option to build their own security installing their own (customer's) software and patches when they opt for private servers.
    In December 2009 Fadia's business site, hackingmobilephones.com was hacked by a spammer promoting pharmaceutical products for erectile dysfunction. Fadia again "claimed it had happened because of a fault in the server that hosts his site." "The problem lies in the server and all the sites hosted by it have been infected."[21] [22]
    TV Shows

    According to the DNA Newspaper article, in Oct 2009 MTV India announced the launch of Ankit Fadia's new TV show on MTV called What the Hack! According to the MTV India website, on the show What The Hack! Ankit Fadia gives tips on how to make good use of the internet and answers people's queries/questions. Internet users email their problems to MTV India and Ankit gives them the solution.
    Books and Publications


    • Fadia, Ankit. The Unofficial Guide to Ethical Hacking, Course Technology PTR, 2020. ISBN 1931841721.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Network Security: A Hacker's Perspective, Course Technology PTR, 2020. ISBN 1598631632.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Hacking Mobile Phones, Course Technology PTR, 2020. ISBN 1598631063.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Tips and Tricks on Linux, Centro Atlantico, 2002. ISBN 972-8426-34-8.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Email Hacking, Vikas Publishing, 2020. ISBN 9788125918134.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Windows Hacking, Vikas Publishing, 2020. ISBN 9788125918141.
    • Fadia, Ankit; Jaya Bhattacharjee. Encryption Protecting your Data, Vikas Publishing, 2020. ISBN 9788125922513.
    • Fadia, Ankit; Zacharia, Manu. Intrusion Alert: An Ethical Hacking Guide to Intrusion Detection, Course Technology PTR, 2020. ISBN 1598634143.
    • Ankit, Fadia; Diwakar, Goel. Google Hacking - An Ethical Guide, Vikas Publications, 2020. ISBN 8125922490.
    • Das Patnaik, Nishant; Ankit, Fadia. Software Hacking, Vikas Publications, 2008. ISBN 9788125928676.
    • Ankit, Fadia; Boonlia, Prince. System Forensics, Vikas Publications, 2020. ISBN 9788125931515.
    • Ankit, Fadia; Singh, Aditya. Cracking Admissions in Colleges Abroad, Vikas Publications, 2020. ISBN 9788125930754.
    Fadia claims that his books are being "used as text books in computer security courses across South-East Asia".[23] In 2005, Fadia said that he is going to write a thriller on the lines of Dan Brown's Digital Fortress, which he hopes to make into a movie. He claimed that a production company has approached him with a blanket offer.[24]
    References


    1. ^ "Ankit Fadia: Everything official about him". The Times of India. 3 September 2001. http://www.cpilive.net/v3/inside.as...ISACA UAE Chapter, IT governance, IS auditing.
    2. ^ "Ankit Fadia Computer Security for Corporates program". Relianceworld.in. http://relianceworld.in/afcs.htm. Retrieved 2009-08-29.
    3. ^ a b c Wendy McAuliffe (2001-08-07). "Schoolboy's book on ethical hacking an online hit". ZDNet, UK. http://news.zdnet.co.uk/internet/0,1000000097,2092686,00.htm. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
    4. ^ a b c "Indian hacker turns cyber cop". BBC News. 2002-04-17. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/1934874.stm. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
    5. ^ "E2 labs to combat cyber crime in Hyderabad". The Hindu Business Line. 2003-04-19. http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2003/04/19/stories/2003041901390700.htm. Retrieved 2006-12-19.
    6. ^ Manoj Kumar (2003-04-13). "Teen hacker who is sought after by FBI". The Tribune, Chandigarh. http://www.tribuneindia.com/2003/20030413/cth1.htm. Retrieved 2006-08-19.
    7. ^ 8. Information Security Student Awards. SMU School of Information Systems.
    8. ^ "Cracking hacking". The Hindu. 2003-01-28. http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/...2003012800360200.htm&date=2003/01/28/&prd=mp&. Retrieved 2008-12-19.
    9. ^ "Ankit Fadia's new books". Chennai Online note. 2006-01-27. http://www.chennaionline.com/education/Books/2006/01ankit.asp. Retrieved 2006-08-19.
    10. ^ Suelette Dreyfus (2003-08-05). "Hacktivism through the eyes of an infiltrator". http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/08/04/1059849331034.html. Retrieved 2006-07-11.
    11. ^ Interview with Ankit Fadia. Rediff.com
    12. ^ a b K. Srinivas Reddy (2002-04-30). "Hacker threat to CBEC website". The Hindu. http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/2002/04/30/stories/2002043002271300.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-19.
    13. ^ K. Srinivas Reddy (2002-04-28). "This hacker has a different message". The Hindu. http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/2002/04/28/stories/2002042800921000.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-19.
    14. ^ "The defaced version of bhelhyd.co.in". http://www.zone-h.org/defaced/2002/04/26/bhelapp.bhelhyd.co.in/. Retrieved 2006-11-21.
    15. ^ Suelette Dreyfus (2003-08-05). "Hacktivism through the eyes of an infiltrator". http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/08/04/1059849331034.html. Retrieved 2006-07-11.
    16. ^ "Security Scene Errata - Charlatans". http://attrition.org/errata/charlatan.html. Retrieved 2007-06-06.
    17. ^ Irish. "Ankit Fadia Interview". http://attrition.org/errata/charlatan/fadia/fadia1.html. Retrieved 2007-06-06.
    18. ^ http://itsallpartoftheplan.wordpress.com/2009/09/26/demolishing-ankit-fadia-v-0-01/
    19. ^ http://www.ankurb.info/2007/12/05/ankit-fadia-certified-ethical-idiot/
    20. ^ http://gstek.info/forum/index.php?topic=1209.0;wap2
    21. ^ Attrition.org (2009-12-02). "Errata: Ankit Fadia Site Hacked by Spammers". http://attrition.org/errata/sec-co/fadia01.html. Retrieved 2009-12-02.
    22. ^ MiD DAY (2009-12-08). "Is Ankit Fadia selling Viagra?". http://www.mid-day.com/news/2009/dec/081209-ankit-fadia-hacker-hacked.htm. Retrieved 2009-12-08.
    23. ^ "The Ethical Hacker: Ankit Fadia". http://www.netregistry.com.au/news/articles/135/4/The-Ethical-Hacker-Ankit-Fadia/Page4.html. Retrieved 2006-11-20.
    24. ^ "Young cyber security guru from USA". The Tribune, Chandigarh. 2005-09-12. http://www.tribuneindia.com/2005/20050912/cth1.htm#9. Retrieved 2006-11-20.
     

    shenoxxx

    Well-known member
  • Sep 23, 2009
    11,838
    873
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    Ankit Fadia

    Ankit Fadia is an independent computer security consultant[1] He runs a program on computer security for corporates in alliance with Reliance Info.[2]
    Contents

    Biography

    Ankit went to Delhi Public School, R K Puram for school.[3] He started a website called "HackingTruths", which he claims was judged as the "second best hacking site in the world by the FBI".[3] He claims that when he was 14, he trashed the front page of an Indian magazine's website. He then sent an e-mail to the editor confessing to the hack, suggesting counter measures.[4] At 15, his book on Ethical Hacking made him the youngest author to be published by Macmillan India.[4] Many publications wrongly reported that Fadia is associated with FBI or CIA,[5][6] however, he himself denied this.
    Fadia has also sponsored Singapore Management University's "Ankit Fadia Information Security Award", which consisted of a $500 cash prize and Certificate and was given for two years to "an outstanding student" in the Information Security and Trust Course under the Bachelor of Science (Information System Management) degree.[7]
    Controversy

    Authenticity of claims

    According to Wendy McAuliffe at ZDNet UK, Fadia's Hacking Truths website was judged "second best hacking site" by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, though no ranked list of "hacking sites" has been published by the FBI.[3]
    In 2000, Chennai Online reported that Fadia's consulting clients included several of the largest technology and financial services companies in the world. No other source corroborates that report; were it true, Fadia's client list would exceed that of many of the largest independent security consultancies. The same article reported Fadia's involvement in decrypting a message from an Al Qaeda operative; no other source corroborates that claim, nor does any of Fadia's published work involve cryptography or cryptanalysis.[8][9][10]
    In April 2000, Rediff.com published an interview[11] with Ankit Fadia. Anti-India Crew (AIC), a Pakistani hacker group noted for defacing Indian Government websites, rubbished the claims that Fadia had made in the interview. Fadia had claimed that his alert to a U.S. spy agency had prevented an attack by Pakistani hackers. However, he never divulged the name of the agency, citing security reasons.[4] AIC and another Pakistani hacker group WFD defaced an Indian Government site, epfindia.gov.in, and "dedicated" it to Fadia in mock deference to his capabilities to hack or prevent hacking.[12][13] AIC also said that it would be defacing the website of the Central Board of Excise and Customs (CBEC), www.cbec.gov.in, within two days and challenged Fadia to prevent the attack by patching the vulnerable website. AIC maintained that Fadia should stop calling himself a hacker, if it succeeded in hacking the CBEC website.[12] AIC kept its promise and defaced the CBEC website after two days. At another defaced website (bhelhyd.co.in), AIC termed the claims of Indian media about Ankit Fadia as "Bullshit".[14]
    Some security experts in India dismissed him as just another fad.[15] Ankit Fadia is listed on attrition.org's Security Scene Errata: Charlatans webpage alongside individuals such as Steve Gibson and Carolyn Meinel. This page seeks to "point out a few cases of fakes walking among us".[16][17]
    He has been accused of copying materials from internet and paraphrasing into his own books and lectures. Recently, his claims have been proved false and he has been cited as fake person boastering in his own imaginations of fancy hacking for gaining cheap publicity.[18][19][20]
    Fadia's earlier site, Ankitfadia.com, was attacked in 2003, by a cracker who self-identified as SkriptKiddie. Fadia explained that he was using a private web server for hosting his website and they were responsible for the lack of security. However, all web servers give their customers an option to build their own security installing their own (customer's) software and patches when they opt for private servers.
    In December 2009 Fadia's business site, hackingmobilephones.com was hacked by a spammer promoting pharmaceutical products for erectile dysfunction. Fadia again "claimed it had happened because of a fault in the server that hosts his site." "The problem lies in the server and all the sites hosted by it have been infected."[21] [22]
    TV Shows

    According to the DNA Newspaper article, in Oct 2009 MTV India announced the launch of Ankit Fadia's new TV show on MTV called What the Hack! According to the MTV India website, on the show What The Hack! Ankit Fadia gives tips on how to make good use of the internet and answers people's queries/questions. Internet users email their problems to MTV India and Ankit gives them the solution.
    Books and Publications


    • Fadia, Ankit. The Unofficial Guide to Ethical Hacking, Course Technology PTR, 2020. ISBN 1931841721.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Network Security: A Hacker's Perspective, Course Technology PTR, 2020. ISBN 1598631632.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Hacking Mobile Phones, Course Technology PTR, 2020. ISBN 1598631063.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Tips and Tricks on Linux, Centro Atlantico, 2002. ISBN 972-8426-34-8.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Email Hacking, Vikas Publishing, 2020. ISBN 9788125918134.
    • Fadia, Ankit. Windows Hacking, Vikas Publishing, 2020. ISBN 9788125918141.
    • Fadia, Ankit; Jaya Bhattacharjee. Encryption Protecting your Data, Vikas Publishing, 2020. ISBN 9788125922513.
    • Fadia, Ankit; Zacharia, Manu. Intrusion Alert: An Ethical Hacking Guide to Intrusion Detection, Course Technology PTR, 2020. ISBN 1598634143.
    • Ankit, Fadia; Diwakar, Goel. Google Hacking - An Ethical Guide, Vikas Publications, 2020. ISBN 8125922490.
    • Das Patnaik, Nishant; Ankit, Fadia. Software Hacking, Vikas Publications, 2008. ISBN 9788125928676.
    • Ankit, Fadia; Boonlia, Prince. System Forensics, Vikas Publications, 2020. ISBN 9788125931515.
    • Ankit, Fadia; Singh, Aditya. Cracking Admissions in Colleges Abroad, Vikas Publications, 2020. ISBN 9788125930754.
    Fadia claims that his books are being "used as text books in computer security courses across South-East Asia".[23] In 2005, Fadia said that he is going to write a thriller on the lines of Dan Brown's Digital Fortress, which he hopes to make into a movie. He claimed that a production company has approached him with a blanket offer.[24]
    References


    1. ^ "Ankit Fadia: Everything official about him". The Times of India. 3 September 2001. http://www.cpilive.net/v3/inside.as...ISACA UAE Chapter, IT governance, IS auditing.
    2. ^ "Ankit Fadia Computer Security for Corporates program". Relianceworld.in. http://relianceworld.in/afcs.htm. Retrieved 2009-08-29.
    3. ^ a b c Wendy McAuliffe (2001-08-07). "Schoolboy's book on ethical hacking an online hit". ZDNet, UK. http://news.zdnet.co.uk/internet/0,1000000097,2092686,00.htm. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
    4. ^ a b c "Indian hacker turns cyber cop". BBC News. 2002-04-17. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/1934874.stm. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
    5. ^ "E2 labs to combat cyber crime in Hyderabad". The Hindu Business Line. 2003-04-19. http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2003/04/19/stories/2003041901390700.htm. Retrieved 2006-12-19.
    6. ^ Manoj Kumar (2003-04-13). "Teen hacker who is sought after by FBI". The Tribune, Chandigarh. http://www.tribuneindia.com/2003/20030413/cth1.htm. Retrieved 2006-08-19.
    7. ^ 8. Information Security Student Awards. SMU School of Information Systems.
    8. ^ "Cracking hacking". The Hindu. 2003-01-28. http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/...2003012800360200.htm&date=2003/01/28/&prd=mp&. Retrieved 2008-12-19.
    9. ^ "Ankit Fadia's new books". Chennai Online note. 2006-01-27. http://www.chennaionline.com/education/Books/2006/01ankit.asp. Retrieved 2006-08-19.
    10. ^ Suelette Dreyfus (2003-08-05). "Hacktivism through the eyes of an infiltrator". http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/08/04/1059849331034.html. Retrieved 2006-07-11.
    11. ^ Interview with Ankit Fadia. Rediff.com
    12. ^ a b K. Srinivas Reddy (2002-04-30). "Hacker threat to CBEC website". The Hindu. http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/2002/04/30/stories/2002043002271300.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-19.
    13. ^ K. Srinivas Reddy (2002-04-28). "This hacker has a different message". The Hindu. http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/2002/04/28/stories/2002042800921000.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-19.
    14. ^ "The defaced version of bhelhyd.co.in". http://www.zone-h.org/defaced/2002/04/26/bhelapp.bhelhyd.co.in/. Retrieved 2006-11-21.
    15. ^ Suelette Dreyfus (2003-08-05). "Hacktivism through the eyes of an infiltrator". http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/08/04/1059849331034.html. Retrieved 2006-07-11.
    16. ^ "Security Scene Errata - Charlatans". http://attrition.org/errata/charlatan.html. Retrieved 2007-06-06.
    17. ^ Irish. "Ankit Fadia Interview". http://attrition.org/errata/charlatan/fadia/fadia1.html. Retrieved 2007-06-06.
    18. ^ http://itsallpartoftheplan.wordpress.com/2009/09/26/demolishing-ankit-fadia-v-0-01/
    19. ^ http://www.ankurb.info/2007/12/05/ankit-fadia-certified-ethical-idiot/
    20. ^ http://gstek.info/forum/index.php?topic=1209.0;wap2
    21. ^ Attrition.org (2009-12-02). "Errata: Ankit Fadia Site Hacked by Spammers". http://attrition.org/errata/sec-co/fadia01.html. Retrieved 2009-12-02.
    22. ^ MiD DAY (2009-12-08). "Is Ankit Fadia selling Viagra?". http://www.mid-day.com/news/2009/dec/081209-ankit-fadia-hacker-hacked.htm. Retrieved 2009-12-08.
    23. ^ "The Ethical Hacker: Ankit Fadia". http://www.netregistry.com.au/news/articles/135/4/The-Ethical-Hacker-Ankit-Fadia/Page4.html. Retrieved 2006-11-20.
    24. ^ "Young cyber security guru from USA". The Tribune, Chandigarh. 2005-09-12. http://www.tribuneindia.com/2005/20050912/cth1.htm#9. Retrieved 2006-11-20.

    :yes::yes: