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Teen hacking seen as casual activity
Anthem to 'pwned' youth.
By John E. Dunn, Techworld | Techworld
Published: 14:41 GMT, 15 May 09
Casual hacking is as almost as established a part of teen life as downloading music to an iPod, a new survey of the age group has claimed.
According to Panda Security, we should take seriously the statistic it gathered from a survey of over 4,000 15 to 18 year-olds that nearly one in five of them have the knowledge to use ‘advanced' Internet-distributed hacking tools. Of that group, nearly a third claimed to have used them on at least one occasion.
Two thirds of the group said they had actually succeeded in hacking instant messaging or social network accounts of people known to them, with 20 percent admitting to having published embarrassing photographs or videos of acquaintances on the Internet.
Apart from mischief-making and competition with their peer group, the main motivation for trying out hacking appears to be curiosity, with 86 percent citing that as the point from which their involvement started.
"We should encourage young people to use the Internet as a channel for personal development, teaching them to use it in a healthy and responsible fashion," said technical director of PandaLabs (the research wing of Panda Security), Luis Corrons. "It is important to help them avoid participating in dubious activities which are made all the easier thanks to the anonymity afforded by the web."
Despite the decent sample size, the survey does not show that teens are any more likely to engage in the more serious or illegal side of online activity than any other age group. It is also hard to assess the degree to which the individuals were being honest about their involvement in the more hardcore side of online hacking.
"Those who are drawn into hacking out of curiosity may very likely end-up discovering the financial potential of this activity, and become the next generation of cybercriminals," suggested Corrons.
What would be interesting would be to relate the statistics to location, something the company was not able to provide more details on at press time. It could be that a youngster in the Ukraine is more likely to see experimental hacking as the start of a career than his or her contemporary in the US, say.
The survey was carried out between January and April of this year online after prior email invitation.


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Tisiphone | Published: 03:52 GMT, 23 May 2009
I think this poll was incredibly unscientific. If I were to ask the average teenager if they "do things their parents tell them not to" or "drive fast" or "drink underage" or any other assorted inappropriate behavior in a survey, they're likely to say 'yes', even if they haven't! I know twenty and thirty-year-olds who claim to "hack" things, and they aren't doing anything remotely close to what a security professional would consider "hacking". (These are the same people I have to configure Linksys routers for). Ever since the Matrix, it sounds cool for people to claim that that they "hack". A better test would have been to create a list of real and totally fake hacktools and related commands, and have them pick out the ones that they would or have used. Unfortunately, Rick, computer law is still much more disputed and ambiguous than the synonyms you present. And there are huge differences in severity between one guessing an email password, or port scanning, or writing malware.
Rick | Published: 15:49 GMT, 18 May 2009
I can't believe the casual, apathetic manner with which this "casual hacking" is viewed! "It is important to help them avoid participating in dubious activities..." DOUBIOUS activities? What happened to properly calling them CRIMINAL activities, since the ARE. If those same teens were "casually" breaking into homes or places of business, equally criminal acts, their activities would not be met with such apathy! They would be properly met with prison terms. This trend goes hand-in-hand with the utter disrespect the same group treats the intellectual property problem. Somehow, a whole generation of people has determined that property associated with the Internet or electronic media is fair game for theft, even to the point of not even recognizing that it is theft. The young hoodlums deride victims and law enforcement agencies for their effort in prosecuting the criminals, and publicly advocate that others participate in IP theft, with apparent impunity. This must stop.