I find Kevin Mitnick going to the authorities for protection a little bit weird. If your claim to fame is that you are the 'worlds baddest hacker' you take the script kiddies as going with the territory. It's like Billy the Kid complaining about the wanna-be's that want to meet him at noon on main street.
"The move by AT&T came this week after Mitnick hired a lawyer to complain that his privacy was being invaded by people posting Mitnick's account information in public hacking forums"
You need a lawyer to complain these days ?
Most other 'celebrities' have these issues but being a high profile hacker makes you a great target.
The best defence against this is don't get caught hacking... that way your privacy stays yours.
What Mitnick should do is give tit for tat, expose the identities of his attackers. For such a hotshot security consultant (all digits?) that should be a piece of cake, really.
That said, AT&T has no business cutting him off, rather the opposite, they should secure their systems and use the publicity surrounding this to brand themselves as the provider that is good enough to secure even Kevin Mitnicks account.
Sure, but if you are a 'master burglar' selling your services to companies securing other peoples goodies your reputation as a 'master burglar' is what allows you to do that.
It means that a lot of people that you are putting down will see you as their prime target. This goes with the territory.
If KM would have taken a job as a programmer somewhere I highly doubt that this would have happened. After all, he is minting his reputation as a former bad guy, nobody forced him to do that.
If he had been a white hat all along it would be different, but a burglar complaining he's been burgled is a bit hypocritical imo.
I guess it sucks being on the receiving side.
Basically all these little jerks do is make him look silly, personally I wouldn't even bother to respond to them, just take it as praise and laugh at it. By taking it so serious he is actually fanning the fire.
When he sells his services, he either has access to the systems to look at their security, or has authorization to try and get in (don't know how he works, really). With ATT, he does not legally have access to fiddle with their vulnerable systems in order to keep the pests out.
Obviously AT&T is responsible for their own systems. But what better publicity for the two parties than to come together and fix this.
My personal take on all this is that Kevin Mitnick once was a hacker, good but probably not even that great (he did get caught, remember) who is now minting his newfound reputation.
These kids prove that his reputation is somewhat less than he presents it to be and he's pissed off about that.
There is a proverb in there somewhere: High trees catch lots of wind...
AT&T is a bunch of weaklinks for terminating his account (same goes for his provider), they should secure their stuff with or without Kevins help. To terminate a user because they 'attract bad people' is ridiculous, imagine your bank telling you that they can no longer take your business because because of you the keep having burglary attempts. It's too silly for words.
I think it's ok to use the up and down arrows to express agreement. Obviously the uparrows aren't only for applauding politeness, so it seems reasonable that the downarrows aren't only for booing rudeness.
--pg
It seems many people have responded to you though.
Downmodding isn't for disagreement anyway; it's about the kind of comment HN users want, not the stance taken by the commenter. I don't have downmodding power, but I chose not to upmod you because of your flippant tone.
"The move by AT&T came this week after Mitnick hired a lawyer to complain that his privacy was being invaded by people posting Mitnick's account information in public hacking forums"
You need a lawyer to complain these days ?
Most other 'celebrities' have these issues but being a high profile hacker makes you a great target.
The best defence against this is don't get caught hacking... that way your privacy stays yours.
What Mitnick should do is give tit for tat, expose the identities of his attackers. For such a hotshot security consultant (all digits?) that should be a piece of cake, really.
That said, AT&T has no business cutting him off, rather the opposite, they should secure their systems and use the publicity surrounding this to brand themselves as the provider that is good enough to secure even Kevin Mitnicks account.