| Title | : | At Large: The Strange Case of the World's Biggest Internet Invasion |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.74 (319 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0684835584 |
| Format Type | : | Paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 320 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 1998-06-03 |
| Genre | : |
Hailed as "a chilling portrait" by The Boston Globe and "a crafty thriller" by Newsweek, this astonishing story of an obsessive hacker promises to change the way you look at the Internet forever. At Large chronicles the massive manhunt that united hard-nosed FBI agents, computer nerds, and uptight security bureaucrats against an elusive computer outlaw who broke into highly secured computer systems at banks, universities, federal agencies, and top-secret military weapons-research sites. Here is "a real-life tale of cops vs. hackers, by two technology writers with a flair for turning a complicated crime and investigation into a fast-moving edge-of-your-seat story" (Kirkus Reviews, starred). At Large blows the lid off the frightening vulnerability of the global online network, which leaves not only systems, but also individuals, exposed.
Editorial : Perhaps the scariest story of insufficient computer security and cybercrime yet is the true tale of Phantom Dialer. He accessed university and military research centers, banks, even the computers that controlled central California's dams. His actions could have put tens of thousands of lives at risk. And what makes it so frightening is that he was not a criminal or computing genius. He was a curious, persistent, and mentally-challenged young man who never truly understood his own actions. So if he could do that, what might a determined terrorist do? Because, as Charles Mann and David Freedman show, advances in the Internet have been making it easier, not harder, for security crackers to go where they're not wanted. The book reads like a techno-thriller--from the discovery of a small cyberbreak-in to the massive manhunt that tracked him down and the troubled birth of the FBI's computer crime squad--complete with all the humor and poignancies of real human events.
great characters and well developed story. I own a number of Eric Maisel's books and I've found in each unique gifts that have helped me in my journey as a writer. As a speaker, this book is a must to help get a speech started the right way and get the audiences hooked from the first word.. But given all the other information in this book, that's a pretty small nitpick.. Hundreds of names of insignificant people, and events that added nothing to the story. Also, some of Schiefelbein's vampire myth makes no sense. I love Monica Kulling's historical and biographical picture books so it is with no surprise that I found The Tweedles adorable. I can't say much more without ruining it, so I'll simply say this book was a real pleasure to read. I build furniture, and carve wood. You might know what all the words mean, but put them together and it's like Greek to me. I had no deadline.
I spent 5 weeks in Germany after I finished Volume I. When it came time to write this book, he evid
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