, 2008-09-26
In the early 90's, I attended an academic conference in Hawaii. At one presentation, a colleague from the University of California at Berkeley whom I'll refer to as "the supervisor," told a story of young hackers, who he referred to as the Urchins.
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Blaming the Good Samaritan
2008-09-29
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
Blaming the Good Samaritan
2008-09-30
Darin (4 replies)
Darin (4 replies)
Re: Blaming the Good Samaritan
2008-09-30
RU_Trustified (2 replies)
RU_Trustified (2 replies)
Blaming the Good Samaritan - You Idiots
2008-10-01
Bill (2 replies)
Bill (2 replies)
Good Samaritan? Houston Carr shouldnt be allowed to post here again
2008-10-05
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Good Samaritan? Houston Carr shouldnt be allowed to post here again
2008-10-06
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)

How do you know that the Carlton student wasn't acting malicious, and then became paranoid that he might have been discovered and cooked up the "16 page report" to cover himself? That to me is more likely than someone breaking in as a "Good Samaritan" without prior approval to run the test.
I think the lesson is if you're concerned about the security of your school's network, or the network of some arbitrary company - get permission to run the pen test. Why anyone would be that bored to want to improve the security of "Company X" is beyond me.
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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/481/35161#35161