Wednesday, January 15, 2020
Computer Hacking Essay
Abstract: Recent discussions of computer ââ¬Ëhackingââ¬â¢ make explicit reference to the disproportionate involvement of juveniles in this form of computer crime. While criminal justice, computer security, public and popular reï ¬âections on hacking seldom refer to formal criminological analyses of youth offending, they nonetheless offer a range of explanations for the over-representation of young people amongst computer hackers. Such accounts of hacking can be seen to converge with criminological analyses, by stressing a range of causal factors related to gender psychology, adolescent moral development, family dysfunction and peer-group and subcultural association. The homologies between ââ¬Ëlayââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëadministrativeââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëexpertââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëpopularââ¬â¢ and criminological discourses, it is suggested, offer considerable scope for developing a critical, academically-informed, and policyoriented debate on young peopleââ¬â¢s participation in computer crim e. It has been noted that ââ¬Ëyouthfulnessââ¬â¢ or ââ¬Ëbeing a teenagerââ¬â¢ appears as ââ¬Ëa constant source of fascination and concern for politicians, media commentators and academic analystsââ¬â¢ (Muncie 1999, p.2), not least when involvement in supposedly ââ¬Ëcriminalââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëdeviantââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëanti-socialââ¬â¢ activities is concerned. Whenever anxieties erupt about new threats to the moral and social order, ââ¬Ëyouthââ¬â¢ are seldom far away from the line-up of societyââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëusual suspectsââ¬â¢. Societyââ¬â¢s perennial fascination with ââ¬Ëyouth and crimeââ¬â¢ has itself become the object of sociological and criminological analysis, furnishing numerous explorations of the ways in which young people and their cultural commitments have become the ââ¬Ëfolk devilsââ¬â¢ in successive waves of ââ¬Ëmoral panicsââ¬â¢ about crime and disorder (Young 1971; Cohen 1972; Hall et al. 1978; Pearson 1983; Hay 1995; Sp ringhall 1998). Since the 1990s, academic commentators have observed how the Internet has emerged as a new locus of criminal activity that has become the object of public and political anxieties, sometimes leading to over-reaction (Thomas and Loader 2000, p.8; Littlewood 2003). Yet again, the category of ââ¬Ëyouthââ¬â¢ has ï ¬ gured centrally in discussions of the threat, especially in relation to ââ¬Ëcomputer hackingââ¬â¢, the unauthorised access to and manipulation of computer systems. Politicians, law enforcement ofï ¬ cials, computer security experts and journalists have identiï ¬ ed ââ¬Ëhackingââ¬â¢ as a form of criminal and deviant behaviour closely associated with ââ¬Ëteenagersââ¬â¢ (see, inter alia, Bowker 1999; DeMarco 2001; Verton 2002). This association has been cemented in the realm of popular cultural representations, with Hollywood ï ¬ lms such as Wargames (1983) and Hackers (1995) constructing the hacker as a quintessentially teenage miscreant (Levi 2001, pp.46ââ¬â7). While hacking in general has garnered considerable attention from academics working in the emergent ï ¬ eld of ââ¬Ëcybercrimeââ¬â¢ studies (see Taylor 1999, 2000, 2003; Thomas 2000), and some attention has been given to questions of youth (see Furnell 2002), few connections are made with the rich and extensive criminological literature of delinquency studies. On the other hand, those specialising in the study of youth crime and delinquency have largely neglected this apparently new area of juvenile offending (for an exception, see Fream and Skinner 1997). The aim of this article is not to offer such a new account of hacking as ââ¬Ëjuvenile delinquencyââ¬â¢; nor is it to contest or ââ¬Ëdeconstructââ¬â¢ the public and popular association between youth and computer crime. Rather, the article aims to map out the different modes of reasoning by which the purported involvement of juveniles in hacking is explained across a range of ofï ¬ cial, ââ¬Ëexpertââ¬â¢ and public discourses. In other words, it aims to reconstruct the ââ¬Ëfolk aetiologyââ¬â¢ by which different commentators seek to account for youth involvement in hacking. Substantively, I suggest that the kinds of accounts offered in fact map clearly onto the existing explanatory repertoires comprising the criminological canon. Implicit within most non-academic and/or non-criminological accounts of teenage hacking are recognisable criminological assumptions relating, for example, to adolescent psychological disturbance, familial breakdown, peer inï ¬âuence and subcultural association. Drawing out the latent or implicit criminological assumptions in these accounts of teenage hacking will help, I suggest, to gain both greater critical purchase upon their claims, and to introduce academic criminology to a set of substantive issues in youth offending that have thus far largely escaped sustained scholarly attention. The article begins with a brief discussion of deï ¬ nitional disputes about computer hacking, arguing in particular that competing constructions can be viewed as part of a process in which deviant labels are applied by authorities and contested by those young people subjected to them. The second section considers the ways in which ââ¬Ëmotivationsââ¬â¢ are attributed to hackers by ââ¬Ëexpertsââ¬â¢ and the public, and the ways in which young hackers themselves construct alternative narrations of their activities which use common understandings of the problematic and conï ¬âict-ridden relationship between youth and society. The third section considers the ways in which discourses of ââ¬Ëaddictionââ¬â¢ are mobilised, and the ways in which they make associations with illicit drug use as a behaviour commonly attributed to young people. The fourth section turns to consider the place attributed to gender in explanations of teenage hacking. The ï ¬ fth part explores the ways in which adolescence is used as an explanatory category, drawing variously upon psychologically and socially oriented understandings of developmental crisis, peer inï ¬âuence, and subcultural belonging. In concluding, I suggest that the apparent convergence between ââ¬Ëlayââ¬â¢ and criminological understandings of the origins of youth offending offer considerable scope for developing a critical, academically-informed debate on young peopleââ¬â¢s participation in computer crime. Hackers and Hacking: Contested Deï ¬ nitions and the Social Construction of Deviance A few decades ago, the terms ââ¬Ëhackerââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëhackingââ¬â¢ were known only to a relatively small number of people, mainly those in the technically specialised world of computing. Today they have become ââ¬Ëcommon knowledgeââ¬â¢, something with which most people are familiar, if only through hearsay and exposure to mass media and popular cultural accounts. Current discussion has coalesced around a relatively clear-cut deï ¬ nition, which understands hacking as: ââ¬Ëthe unauthorised access and subsequent use of other peopleââ¬â¢s computer systemsââ¬â¢ (Taylor 1999, p.xi). It is this widely accepted sense of hacking as ââ¬Ëcomputer break-inââ¬â¢, and of its perpetrators as ââ¬Ëbreak-in artistsââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëintrudersââ¬â¢, that structures most media, political and criminal justice responses. However, the term has in fact undergone a series of changes in meaning over the years, and continues to be deeply contested, not least amongst those within the computing community. The term ââ¬Ëhackerââ¬â¢ originated in the world of computer programming in the 1960s, where it was a positive label used to describe someone who was highly skilled in developing creative, elegant and effective solutions to computing problems. A ââ¬Ëhackââ¬â¢ was, correspondingly, an innovative use of technology (especially the production of computer code or programmes) that yielded positive results and beneï ¬ ts. On this understanding, the pioneers of the Internet, those who brought computing to ââ¬Ëthe massesââ¬â¢, and the developers of new and exciting computer applications (such as video gaming), were all considered to be ââ¬Ëhackersââ¬â¢ par excellence, the brave new pioneers of the ââ¬Ëcomputer revolutionââ¬â¢ (Levy 1984; Naughton 2000, p.313). These hackers were said to form a community with its own clearly deï ¬ ned ââ¬Ëethicââ¬â¢, one closely associated with the social and political values of the 1960s and 1970s ââ¬Ëcounter-cultureââ¬â¢ and protest movements (movements themselves closely associated with youth rebellion and resistance ââ¬â Muncie (1999, pp.178ââ¬â 83)). Their ethic emphasised, amongst other things, the right to freely access and exchange knowledge and information; a belief in the capacity of science and technology (especially computing) to enhance individualsââ¬â¢ lives; a distrust of political, military and corporate authorities; and a resistance to ââ¬Ëconventionalââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëmainstreamââ¬â¢ lifestyles, attitudes and social hierarchies (Taylor 1999, pp.24ââ¬â6; Thomas 2002). While such hackers would often engage in ââ¬Ëexplorationââ¬â¢ of othersââ¬â¢ computer systems, they purported to do so out of curiosity, a desire to learn and discover, and to free ly share what they had found with others; damaging those systems while ââ¬Ëexploringââ¬â¢, intentionally or otherwise, was considered both incompetent and unethical. This earlier understanding of hacking and its ethos has since largely been over-ridden by its more negative counterpart, with its stress upon intrusion, violation, theft and sabotage. Hackers of the ââ¬Ëold schoolââ¬â¢ angrily refute their depiction in such terms, and use the term ââ¬Ëcrackerââ¬â¢ to distinguish the malicious type of computer enthusiast from hackers proper. Interestingly, this conï ¬âict between the ââ¬Ëoldââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ënewââ¬â¢ is often presented in inter-generational terms, with the ââ¬Ëold schoolââ¬â¢ lamenting the ways in which todayââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëyoungstersââ¬â¢ have lost touch with the more principled and idealistic motivations of their predecessors (Taylor 1999, p.26). Some have suggested that these differences are of little more than historical interest, and insist that the current, ââ¬Ënegativeââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëcriminalââ¬â¢ deï ¬ nition of hacking and hackers should be adopted, since this is the dominant way in which the terms are now understood and used (Twist 2003). There is considerable value to this pragmatic approach, and through the rest of this article the terms ââ¬Ëhackingââ¬â ¢ and ââ¬Ëhackersââ¬â¢ will be used to denote those illegal activities associated with computer intrusion and manipulation, and to denote those persons who engage in such activities. The contested nature of the terms is, however, worth bearing in mind, for a good criminological reason. It shows how hacking, as a form of criminal activity, is actively constructed by governments, law enforcement, the computer security industry, businesses, and media; and how the equation of such activities with ââ¬Ëcrimeââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëcriminalityââ¬â¢ is both embraced and challenged by those who engage in them. In other words, the contest over characterising hackers and hacking is a prime example of what sociologists such as Becker (1963) identify as the ââ¬Ëlabelling processââ¬â¢, the process by which categories of criminal/deviant activity and identity are socially produced. Reactions to hacking and hackers cannot be understood independently from how their meanings are socially created, negotiated and resisted. Criminal justice and other agents propagate, disseminate and utilise negative constructions of hacking as part of the ââ¬Ëwar on computer crimeââ¬â¢ . Those who ï ¬ nd themselves so positioned may reject the label, insisting that they are misunderstood, and try to persuade others that they are not ââ¬Ëcriminalsââ¬â¢; alternatively, they may seek out and embrace the label, and act accordingly, thereby setting in motion a process of ââ¬Ëdeviance ampliï ¬ cationââ¬â¢ (Young 1971) which ends up producing the very behaviour that the forces of ââ¬Ëlaw and orderââ¬â¢ are seeking to prevent. In extremis, such constructions can be seen to make hackers into ââ¬Ëfolk devilsââ¬â¢ (Cohen 1972), an apparently urgent threat to society which fuels the kinds of ââ¬Ëmoral panicââ¬â¢ about computer crime alluded to in the introduction. As we shall see, such processes of labelling, negotiation and resistance are a central feature of ongoing social contestation about young peopleââ¬â¢s involvement in hacking. Hacker Motivations: ââ¬ËInsiderââ¬â¢ and ââ¬ËOutsiderââ¬â¢ Accounts Inquiries into crime have long dwelt on the causes and motivations behind offending behaviour ââ¬â in the words of Hirschi (1969), one of the most frequently asked questions is: ââ¬Ëwhy do they do it?ââ¬â¢. In this respect, deliberations on computer crime are no different, with a range of actors such as journalists, academics, politicians, law enforcement operatives, and members of the public all indicating what they perceive to be the factors underlying hackersââ¬â¢ dedication to computer crime. Many commentators focus upon ââ¬Ëmotivationsââ¬â¢, effectively viewing hackers as ââ¬Ërational actorsââ¬â¢ (Clarke and Felson 1993) who consciously choose to engage in their illicit activities in expectation of some kind of reward or satisfaction. The motivations variously attributed to hackers are wide-ranging and often contradictory. Amongst those concerned with combating hacking activity, there is a tendency to emphasise maliciousness, vandalism, and the desire to commit wanton destruction (Kovacich 1999); attribution of such motivations from law enforcement and computer security agencies is unsurprising, as it offers the most clear-cut way of denying hacking any socially recognised legitimacy. Amongst a wider public, hackers are perceived to act on motivations ranging from self-assertion, curiosity, and thrill seeking, to greed and hooliganism (Dowland et al. 1999, p.720; Voiskounsky, Babeva and Smyslova 2000, p.71). Noteworthy here is the convergence between motives attributed for involvement in hacking and those commonly attributed to youth delinquency in general ââ¬â the framing of hacking in terms of ââ¬Ëvandalismââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëhooliganismââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëcuriosityââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëthrill seekingââ¬â¢ clearly references socially available constructions of juvenile offending and offenders (on à ¢â¬Ëhooliganismââ¬â¢ see Pearson (1983); on ââ¬Ëthrill seekingââ¬â¢ see Katz (1988); Presdee (2000)). One way in which commentators have attempted to reï ¬ ne their understandings of hacker motivations is to elicit from hackers themselves their reasons for engaging in computer crimes. There now exist a number of studies, both ââ¬Ëpopularââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëscholarlyââ¬â¢ in which (primarily young) hackers have been interviewed about their illicit activities (for example, Clough and Mungo 1992; Taylor 1999; Verton 2002). In addition, hackers themselves have authored texts and documents in which they elaborate upon their ethos and aims (see, for example, Dr K 2004). Such ââ¬Ëinsiderââ¬â¢ accounts cite motivations very different from those cited by ââ¬Ëoutsidersââ¬â¢. In fact, they consistently invoke a rationale for hacking that explicitly mobilises the ââ¬Ëhacker ethicââ¬â¢ of an earlier generation of computer enthusiasts. In hackersââ¬â¢ self-presentations, they are motivated by factors such as intellectual curiosity, the desire for expanding the boundaries of knowledge, a commitment to the free ï ¬âow and exchange of information, resistance to political authoritarianism and corporate domination, and the aim of improving computer security by exposing the laxity and ineptitude of those charged with safeguarding socially sensitive data. However, such accounts ââ¬Ëstraight from the horseââ¬â¢s mouthââ¬â¢ do not necessarily furnish insights into hacker motivations that are any more objectively true than those attributed by outside observers. As Taylor (1999) notes: ââ¬Ëit is difï ¬ cult . . . to separate cleanly the ex ante motivations of hackers from their ex post justiï ¬ cationsââ¬â¢ (p.44, italics in original). In other words, such self-attributed motivations may well be rhetorical devices mobilised by hackers to justify their law-breaking and defend themselves against accusat ions of criminality and deviance. Viewed in this way, hackersââ¬â¢ accounts can be seen as part of what criminologists Sykes and Matza (1957) call ââ¬Ëtechniques of neutralisationââ¬â¢. According to Sykes and Matza, ââ¬Ëdelinquentsââ¬â¢ will make recourse to such techniques as a way of overcoming the inhibitions or guilt they may otherwise feel when embarking upon law-breaking activity. These techniques include strategies such as ââ¬Ëdenial of injuryââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëdenial of the victimââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëcondemnation of the condemnersââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëappeal to higher loyaltiesââ¬â¢. The view of hackersââ¬â¢ self-narrations as instances of such techniques can be supported if we examine hacker accounts. A clear illustration is provided by a now famous (or infamous) document called The Conscience of a Hacker authored by ââ¬ËThe Mentorââ¬â¢ in 1986, now better know as The Hackerââ¬â¢s Manifesto. In the Manifesto, its author explains hackersââ¬â¢ motivations by citing factors such as: the boredom experienced by ââ¬Ësmart kidsââ¬â¢ at the mercy of incompetent school teachers and ââ¬Ësadistsââ¬â¢; the experience of being constantly dismissed by teachers and parents as ââ¬Ëdamn kidsââ¬â¢ who are ââ¬Ëall alikeââ¬â¢; the desire to access a service that ââ¬Ëcould be dirt-cheap if it wasnââ¬â¢t run by proï ¬ teering gluttonsââ¬â¢; the desire to explore and learn which is denied by ââ¬Ëyouââ¬â¢ who ââ¬Ëbuild atomic bombs, [. . .] wage wars, [. . .] murder, cheat and lieââ¬â¢ (The Mentor 1986). Such reasoning clearly justiï ¬ es hacking activities by re-labelling ââ¬Ëharmââ¬â¢ as ââ¬Ëcuriosityââ¬â¢, by suggesting that victims are in some sense ââ¬Ëgetting what they deserveââ¬â¢ as a consequence of their greed, and turning tables on accusers by claiming the ââ¬Ëmoral high groundââ¬â¢ through a citation of â⬠Ërealââ¬â¢ crimes committed by the legitimate political and economic establishment. Again, we see an inter-generational dimension that references commonplace understandings of ââ¬Ëmisunderstood youthââ¬â¢ and the corrupt and neglectful nature of the ââ¬Ëadult worldââ¬â¢. Thus young hackers themselves invest in and mobilise a perennial, socially available discourse about the ââ¬Ëgulf ââ¬â¢ between ââ¬Ësocietyââ¬â¢ and its ââ¬Ëyouthââ¬â¢. Discourses of Addiction: Computers, Drugs and the ââ¬ËSlippery Slopeââ¬â¢ A second strand of thinking about hacking downplays ââ¬Ëmotivationsââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëchoicesââ¬â¢, and emphasises instead the psychological and/or social factors that seemingly dispose certain individuals or groups toward law-breaking behaviour. In such accounts, ââ¬Ëfree choiceââ¬â¢ is sidelined in favour of a view of human actions as fundamentally caused by forces acting within or upon the offender. From an individualistic perspective, some psychologists have attempted to explain hacking by viewing it as an extension of compulsive computer use over which the actor has limited control. So-called ââ¬ËInternet Addiction Disorderââ¬â¢ is viewed as an addiction akin to alcoholism and narcotic dependence, in which the sufferer loses the capacity to exercise restraint over his or her own habituated desire (Young 1998; Young, Pistner and Oââ¬â¢Mara 1999). Some accounts of teenage hacking draw explicit parallels with drug addiction, going so far as to suggest that engagement in relatively innocuous hacking activities can lead to more serious infractions, just as use of ââ¬Ësoftââ¬â¢ drugs like marijuana is commonly claimed to constitute a ââ¬Ëslippery slopeââ¬â¢ leading to the use of ââ¬Ëhardââ¬â¢ drugs like crack cocaine and heroin (Verton 2002, pp.35, 39, 41, 51).
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