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...July 30 decision by Britain's Court of Appeal to allow the extradition of alleged cyber-hacker Gary McKinnon is one that takes some decoding. This much is sure: with only the hope of a last-ditch appeal to the European Court of Human Rights to cling to, the 42-year-old Briton's date with a U.S. court on charges linking him to what one U.S. prosecutor called "the biggest military computer hack of all time," is edging inexorably closer. Delivering a ruling that seemed pitched at would-be hackers everywhere, the appeal court judge said, "It must...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hack Attack | 7/31/2008 | See Source »

...Digital Media and Technological Determinism, by Tim Jordan, a lecturer at the U.K.'s Open University. "He's in there," says Jordan, "as as an example of how difficult it is for governments to tell the difference between organized terrorist or cyberwar attacks from other countries and the individual hacker." The remarkable depth and range of McKinnon's attacks and the fact that he appeared to be looking for something in particular is exactly the kind of pattern that security experts point to as evidence of cyberterror attacks. "This guy was organized and he was looking for specific material," says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hack Attack | 7/31/2008 | See Source »

Which brings us to The Lemur. It's the story of John Glass, a formerly crusading journalist who has been reduced, by ennui and a rich marriage, to writing the biography of his father-in-law, a plutocrat with a sketchy past. Glass hires a hacker to rake up some muck. The hacker rakes up so much muck that he gets himself shot neatly through the left eye. As Black tells us (at least four times, in different ways), "Everybody has secrets, mostly guilty ones...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dr. Banville and Mr. Black | 6/26/2008 | See Source »

...spectrum living with fewer economic protections, bearing more economic risk, chancing steeper financial falls," writes Los Angeles Times reporter Peter Gosselin in his new book High Wire: The Precarious Financial Lives of American Families. This Great Risk Shift from governments and corporations to individuals, as Yale political scientist Jacob Hacker labeled it in the title of another book on the subject, has become one of the defining economic realities of our age. Some aspects of it are still in dispute: economists can't seem to agree on whether jobs really have become less secure than they were. But others...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New President's Economy Problem | 5/15/2008 | See Source »

...seconds during Monday night’s championship game, according to the CSPI. “It is hypocritical for colleges to promote the aims of higher education at the same time as they’re in bed with broadcasters and brewers,” said George A. Hacker, the director of the CSPI’s Alcohol Policies Program Harvard joined a campaign in 2004 that called for the NCAA to completely eliminate alcohol advertising. The campaign has since been endorsed by 284 schools. In a statement yesterday, Harvard spokesman John D. Longbrake said Faust?...

Author: By Clifford M. Marks, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Faust, Others Decry NCAA Beer Ads | 4/10/2008 | See Source »

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