Hacking is not a new problem nor is it isolated to one
country
1971
Vietnam vet John Draper uses the giveaway whistle in a Cap'n
Crunch cereal box and a homebuilt "blue box" to make free phone
calls. When Esquire publishes a how-to guide for making blue boxes,
incidents of wire fraud in the US skyrocket.
1972
College kids Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, future founders of
Apple Computer, launch a home business making and selling blue
boxes - illegal telephone attachments that hacked into phone
systems, allowing the user to make free long-distance calls.
1981
The Chaos Computer Club forms in Germany and becomes one of the
most influential hacker organisations in Europe.
1983
In Milwaukee, six teenagers go on a hacking spree lasting
several months, during which they break into computers at
high-profile institutions such as the Los Alamos National
Laboratory and the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
1983
The movie War Games opens in cinemas.
1984
Congress passes the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, making it a
crime to break into computer systems.
1987
The hacker mag Decoder launches in Italy.
1988
Kevin Mitnick secretly monitors the e-mail of MCI and Digital
Equipment security officials. He is charged with causing $4m in
damage to a Digital Equipment computer, stealing a highly secret
computer security system and gaining access to unauthorised MCI
long-distance codes through university computers in Los Angeles and
England. Mitnick serves five months in prison and six months in a
rehab programme. He goes on the run in late 1992, when the US
Federal Bureau of Investigation searches for him for alleged parole
violations.
1989
Hackers in West Germany are arrested for breaking into US
corporate and government systems and selling OS source code to the
KGB.
1991
Rumours are rampant that a virus called Michelangelo will crash
computers on 6 March 1992, the artist's 517th birthday. Nothing
happens.
1994
Russian hackers, led by Vladamir Levin, siphon $10m from
Citibank and disperse it to bank accounts around the world. Levin
is caught, and all but $400,000 is recovered.
1997
The Brotherhood of Warez, a Canadian hacker group, breaks into
the Canadian Broadcasting website.
1997
A 15-year-old Croatian breaks into computers at a US Air Force
base in Guam.
1998
A 19-year-old Israeli hacker, Ehud Tenebaum, leads a string of
break-ins into Pentagon computers and steals software programs.
Tenebaum is arrested but is later appointed to be chief technology
officer of a computer consulting firm.
1998
Two hackers are sentenced to death in China for breaking into a
bank's computer network and stealing the equivalent of $31,325.
1999
President Clinton announces he will propose that the government
spend $1.46bn in FY00 to improve government computer security.
December 1999
A Russian hacker tries to extort $100,000 from online music
retailer CD Universe and threatens to expose customer credit card
numbers. He posts them on a website after his extortion attempt
fails.
February 2000
Canadian hacker Mafiaboy launches a denial-of-service attack,
taking down Amazon.com, CNN.com and Yahoo in the process.
March 2000
President Clinton admits he doesn't e-mail his daughter Chelsea
at college because he doesn't think the medium is secure.
May 2000
The I Love You virus spreads quickly around the globe by sending
copies of itself to everyone in a computer's address book.
February 2001
A Dutch hacker releases the Anna Kournikova virus, punishing the
legions of people who attempt to view what they think to be a sexy
photo of the Russian tennis star.
February 2001
FBI agent Robert Hanssen is arrested and charged with using his
computer skills to spy for the Russians.
April 2001
The FBI tricks two Russian hackers into coming to the US to
reveal how they were breaking into US banks.
May 2001
Tensions between the US and China set off a chain of web
defacements by hackers from both countries, dubbed "The Sixth
Network War of National Defense".
September 2001
In the wake of 9/11, new anti-terrorism laws are passed, many
defining hackers as terrorists.
February 2002
As a part of its Trustworthy Computing initiative, Microsoft
shuts down Windows development and puts 8,000 programmers through
security training.
May 2002
The Klez.H worm surpasses all other viruses to date in the
number of computers it has infected.
February 2003
The US convicts a Kazakhstan hacker of breaking into Bloomberg's
computers and attempted extortion.
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