When Saul Alinsky wrote Rules for Radicals more than four decades ago, the world was a very different place than it is today. Protests and demonstrations were among the most common tactics for bringing about social change, and they were used on such a broad scale that they helped define the Vietnam War era and counterculture movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Today there’s a new tool available to those who want to change the world, however, and it’s already brought about results that are at least as dramatic. It’s called “hacking.”
So what are you trying to say Mr. Terry Cutler from DigitalLocksmiths? Iraqis are responsible for the rise of hackers? I don't understand why you would put the Iraq war and hackers in the same context, I find this rather insulting and racist, is this the type of ethical hacking that your company does because I will never deal with a racist company!
The Rise of the Ethical Hacktivist
Posted by: Katherine Noyes February 25, 2014 04:00 PMWhen Saul Alinsky wrote Rules for Radicals more than four decades ago, the world was a very different place than it is today. Protests and demonstrations were among the most common tactics for bringing about social change, and they were used on such a broad scale that they helped define the Vietnam War era and counterculture movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Today there’s a new tool available to those who want to change the world, however, and it’s already brought about results that are at least as dramatic. It’s called “hacking.”