Steve McLaughlin on Wed, 6 Jul 2016 20:07:18 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> What were the first instances of hacking 4 Whisteblowing |
I'm not sure if this is what you're looking for, but the accidental leak of Diebold's source code and internal emails in 2003 comes to mind. It didn't contain a smoking gun as far as I know, just evidence of sloppy voting booth security. The real significance of the incident was the resulting legal precedent. Swarthmore students Nelson Pavlosky and Luke Smith, along with the Online Policy Group, brought suit against Diebold for misusing DMCA takedown requests, convincing a judge to enforce 512(f) for the first time. Peñalver and Katyal have a chapter on the case in their book _Property Outlaws_ (2010): https://mega.nz/#!ntFG0JzQ!mD2TOkW1HGzvvMoSgM4fSjEHsxQU3IHFaqHqjKyggF0 And here's Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_Policy_Group_v._Diebold,_Inc. -- Stephen Reid McLaughlin PhD Student, UT Austin School of Information On Wed, Jul 6, 2016 at 9:03 AM Gabriella "Biella" Coleman <enid.coleman@mcgill.ca> wrote: � �Hi all, I am writing a piece that is trying to historicize direct action hacking/whistel blowing and am trying to pin point any early examples of hackers hacking in order to access and then leak the information/emails to ex pose wrong doing.. <...>
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