词条 | Stephen Gold |
释义 |
In 1984, Gold and fellow journalist/hacker Robert Schifreen demonstrated an "ad hoc penetration test" of a Prestel network which, according to the writer Nick Barron, used "a combination of clever shoulder surfing and good old-fashioned hacking skills".[1] An archive telling the story of how the 1980s hack of Prince Philip’s mailbox led to UK anti-hacking legislation is held at The National Museum of Computing in Bletchley.{{fact|date=January 2019}} Gold and Schifreen were convicted in 1986, (after a series of pre-'trials') at Southwark Crown Court on a charge of misusing passwords: the actual charge sheet read "uttering a forgery", under the Forgery and Counterfeiting Act 1981. They appealed successfully and were twice acquitted by higher courts on the basis that they had not obtained any material gain from their exploits. The appeals were pursued right up to the House of Lords by BT at taxpayers expense{{fact|date=January 2019}} during the Thatcher era. Their case, it has been said, "led directly to the introduction of the 1990 Computer Misuse Act". Gold was 'de facto' author of the forth edition of The Hacker's Handbook, previous editions of which had been completed by "Hugo Cornwall", [now] Professor Peter Sommer.[1] Gold died on 12 January 2015.[1] and is commemorated by webpage Silent Modems[2] created by friends and followers in his memory. See also
References1. ^1 2 3 Tim Ring, "Respected Information Security Journalist Steve Gold Dies", SC Magazine, 13 January 2015 {{DEFAULTSORT:Gold, Stephen}}{{England-writer-stub}}2. ^{{Cite web|url = http://silentmodems.com/|title = Steve Gold|website = silentmodems.com|access-date = 2016-05-04}} 3 : 2015 deaths|British technology writers|1956 births |
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