http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2015/03/flying_with_the_hacker.html



March 23, 2015
Flying with the Hacker

By John Horvat II <http://www.americanthinker.com/author/john_horvat_ii/>

Internet security has left me with many concerns, especially as I meet more
and more people who have had their accounts hacked or vital information
stolen. Despite all the security measures companies may take to keep bad
people honest, the sad fact is there are plenty of people out there who
break into these systems and make our lives miserable.

The typical response of the industry is to heap on ever more complex
security and firewalls. However, I believe that the best firewalls are the
moral firewalls inside souls that recognize the distinctions between good
and evil and lead us to act accordingly. When those moral walls go down,
there really are no possible means to keep everything secure.

My security concerns were only confirmed during a recent plane trip. As I
made my way down the aisle to my seat in the aircraft, I saw a young,
bearded, twenty-something man next to my seat. I noticed his bubbly
temperament, which almost guaranteed an in-flight conversation. I also
noted that he was incredibly adept at manipulating his iPhone.

True to my expectation, we soon engaged in a conversation after takeoff. I
introduced myself as a writer and he promptly identified himself as a
hacker.

A hacker? Yes, but, of course, he was a “good” hacker that works on the
other side of the hacking equation. He is paid by companies to hack into
their systems to verify their security measures.

The hacker was an amiable fellow, but he was all nervousness as he
constantly fidgeted with his devices. He spoke incredibly fast as it seemed
his mind was working much faster than his ability to speak. It was as if he
were all impulse. Over the course of our conversation, he explained his
hacker’s creed to me -- a philosophy of life apparently shared by many
fellow hackers on both sides of the equation.

Hackers, he explained, question everything, doubt everything and are
irreverent to all that is sacred. They trust no one and decide everything
by their own standards. They live life intensely, as if that is all there
is and hence do not acknowledge any religious considerations. They accept
only those limits needed to survive in a frenzied world and are constantly
pushing the envelope.

Such a creed only facilitates the task of hacking, since it creates in the
person an obsessive desire to break down barriers and challenge all
structures. When I asked the hacker what kind of systems he hacked, he
replied not without a little pride that he had entered all sorts of systems
almost with impunity. He entered one banking system and removed $100,000
and reconciled the ledger without the bank noticing. He even hacked a
railroad transport system and commandeered a freight train from his laptop.
Hackers, he claimed, could bring the whole system down if they so wished.

I then asked him why, if it could be done, the hackers did not take the
system down. He replied that hackers fear severe legal penalties,
especially in the post-9/11 world. He also claimed the best hackers (like
him) are very well paid by the business establishment.

However, I found these answers a bit unconvincing since they do not include
terrorists, anarchists, and enemies who are constantly probing our systems
and making our world a dangerous place.

The better answer came when I asked why he, in particular, did not so bring
the whole system down, since the hackers’ creed pretty much allows and even
encourages such behavior. And then a moral firewall kicked in. Although he
found it hard to define right and wrong, he said he felt it would be wrong
to do something of this nature.

Such moral firewalls, weak though they may be in the souls of postmodern
men, are still our best and only defense against chaos. Just as no police
force in the world can prevent a whole population intent upon stealing, so
also no security system can stop a network of unscrupulous hackers
determined to create cyber chaos. Moral restraint on the part of most
people keeps society in order. Remnants of such restraint hold back even
the hackers from bringing on Armageddon.

I was struck how the hackers’ creed was consistent with the frenetic
intemperance of our culture which likewise accepts no restraint and breaks
down barriers. Not only our computer systems are at risk, but all
modern-day systems -- whether financial, infrastructural or educational --
are vulnerable when moral restraint is gone. The more complex and
interconnected our systems become, the greater the risks when they fail.

When we hack down the moral firewalls that restrain us, we also take down
the supporting pillars that prevent society’s collapse. That is why a
return to order is only possible when the moral issues are debated. If
everyone adopts the hackers’ creed, society will be like a commandeered
train heading toward the cliff.

*John Horvat II <http://www.returntoorder.org/new/> is a scholar,
researcher, educator, international speaker, and author of the book **Return
to Order, <http://www.returntoorder.org/> as well as the author of hundreds
of published articles. He lives in Spring Grove, Pennsylvania, where he is
the vice president of the American Society for the Defense of Tradition,
Family and Property.*


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