techcrunch.com — In 1985, when he was fourteen and in high school in Escondido, California, Anderson was subject to one of the largest FBI raids in California history after hacking into a Chase Manhattan Bank computer system and subsequently showing his friends how to do it.
Aug 30, 2008 View in Crawl 4
ebulatingAug 30, 2008
Facebook used to be better, before all the inane apps cluttered it up.
tracermanAug 31, 2008
Why should he not be respected in the first place? He owns one of the largest social networks. .
bduddyAug 31, 2008
Ouch... two minutes away. And so many internets could have been yours...
Closed AccountAug 31, 2008
Friendster is where the cool kids hang out.And Altavista pwns Google in search.
salvadorwiiAug 31, 2008
The only winning move is not to create a myspace
hurricaneAug 31, 2008
<a class="user" href="http://home.actlab.utexas.edu/~aviva/compsec/cracker/whocrack.html">http://home.actlab.utexas.edu/~aviva/compsec/crack ...</a>Bill Landreth:Known as "the Cracker", Bill was a member of the Inner Circle, an exclusive cracking club of the early 1980's. He began cracking when he was fouteen and retired at the ripe old age of 18 when FBI agents busted him and the Inner Circle in 1983. By then they had broken into computer systems of banks, newspapers, schools, the phone company, and credit card bureaus. The Inner Circle was indicted for computer fraud after they were caught tapping into the GTE Telemail Computer Network in Vienna, Virginia. Landreth was convicted and received three years probation. He now has a job in computer security.
whitey07Aug 31, 2008
Fight Club.
ronjohnSep 4, 2008
loser
knowlteySep 19, 2008
The article said it was also sometimes "none at all"
musotalkDec 31, 2008
I didn't even know, that this guy was for real.___<a class="user" href="http://www.mister-wong.de/user/musotalk/">http://www.mister-wong.de/user/musotalk/</a>