Review of The Hacker Crackdown Posted
Amazon.com just posted my five star review of The Hacker Crackdown by Bruce Sterling. From the review:
Bruce Sterling's book The Hacker Crackdown (THC) captures the spirit and history of the "hacker scene" in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Having lived through that period with my C-64 and first 386 PC, I thought the author accurately describes what it was like for computer users during that era. THC is one of my favorite books on hacker activity because it combines a narrative with the author's accounts of interactions with key individuals. THC expertly tells several stories from multiple perspectives -- hacker, law enforcement, security professional, telecom operator, even homeless man-on-the-street! The author also manages to not offend technically-minded readers while describing material for non-technical audiences.
Bruce Sterling's book The Hacker Crackdown (THC) captures the spirit and history of the "hacker scene" in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Having lived through that period with my C-64 and first 386 PC, I thought the author accurately describes what it was like for computer users during that era. THC is one of my favorite books on hacker activity because it combines a narrative with the author's accounts of interactions with key individuals. THC expertly tells several stories from multiple perspectives -- hacker, law enforcement, security professional, telecom operator, even homeless man-on-the-street! The author also manages to not offend technically-minded readers while describing material for non-technical audiences.
Comments
Good to see that these old books is still read.
A suggestion of next books to read could be:
* Fatal System Error: The Hunt For The New Crime Lords Who Are Bringing Down The Internet by Joseph Menn
* At large: The strange case of the world's biggest Internet invasion by David Freedman & Charles Mann
* The watchmen: The twisted life and crimes of serial hacker Kevin Poulsen by Jonathan Littman
* Confessions of teenage hackers by Dan Verton
* Black Ice ; The invisible threat of cyber-terrorism by Dan Verton
Just to mention some of the ones in our shelves