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Blaming the Good Samaritan
Houston Carr, 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 2008-09-26
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Blaming the Good Samaritan 2008-10-01
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disagree with premise 2008-09-27
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Blaming the Good Samaritan 2008-09-27
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Blaming the Good Samaritan 2008-09-28
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Where to draw the line 2008-09-29
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Blaming the Good Samaritan 2008-09-29
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Blaming the Good Samaritan 2008-09-30
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Thin Skull Rule 2008-10-17
Anonymous
Blaming the "Cracker" 2008-10-11
Anonymous
If biblical references are going to be used, biblical ethics and morals should be applied.

A good samaritan is someone who, while minding his own business, accidentally encounters something amiss and attempts to provide aid.

A "white hat" hacker is not a good samaritan because he would be under contract with the system owner to discover vulnerabilities, and would be doing so with advance permission.

If a knowledgeable customer were to accidentally find a problem in a webform, and were to b=ring this to the attention of the webmaster, he'd be a good samaritan, but if he were intentionally probing the site looking for weaknesses, he be neither a good samaritan nor a white hat hacker, he'd be committing a felony.

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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/481/35208#35208
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