CNN: Electromagnetic Mind Control Weapons (1 of 2)
Electronics at Work - 1943 (Complete)
2600 Films: Freedom Downtime (Complete)
2600 Films: Kevin Mitnick Interview
GBPPR Vision #31: HP4328A Milliohmmeter Overview & Probe Construction
GBPPR Vision #30: Very-Low Frequency Converter
V2K Voice to Skull
ToorCamp 2014: The NSA Playset
GBPPR Vision #29: Oak Creek, Wisconsin Hamfest
The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz
GBPPR Vision #28: Overview of the NSA's RAGEMASTER Radar Retro-Reflector
GBPPR Vision #27: Overview of the NSA's LOUDAUTO Radar Retro-Reflector
GBPPR Vision #26: Overview of the NSA's TAWDRYYARD Radar Retro-Reflector
GBPPR Vision #23: 21.4 MHz FM Demodulator
CNN: Electromagnetic Mind Control Weapons (1 of 2)
Electronics at Work - 1943 (Complete)
2600 Films: Freedom Downtime (Complete)
2600 Films: Kevin Mitnick Interview
GBPPR Vision #31: HP4328A Milliohmmeter Overview & Probe Construction
GBPPR Vision #30: Very-Low Frequency Converter
V2K Voice to Skull
ToorCamp 2014: The NSA Playset
GBPPR Vision #29: Oak Creek, Wisconsin Hamfest
The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz
GBPPR Vision #28: Overview of the NSA's RAGEMASTER Radar Retro-Reflector
GBPPR Vision #27: Overview of the NSA's LOUDAUTO Radar Retro-Reflector
GBPPR Vision #26: Overview of the NSA's TAWDRYYARD Radar Retro-Reflector
GBPPR Vision #23: 21.4 MHz FM Demodulator
GBPPR Vision #24: HP3478A Battery Replacement
GBPPR Vision #25: Overview of the NSA's CTX4000/PHOTOANGLO Radar Units
GBPPR Vision #22: Scotty's Spectrum Analyzer - Part 6
Radio Intercept: Ironwood Township, Michigan Fire Page
GBPPR Vision #21: Tracking Generator for a HP8569 Spectrum Analyzer
GBPPR Vision #16: Scotty's Spectrum Analyzer - Part 1
GBPPR Vision #12: HP3336B to HP3336C Conversion
GBPPR Vision #7: Review of the AADE L/C Meter IIB
33 Bullets: The Story of Ben Sonnenberg
CNBC Interview with Kevin Mitnick (Complete)
'Use VPN!' Former 'Most Wanted Hacker' Mitnick talks Snowden, NSA, privacy
2600 Interview with Kevin Mitnick
thebroken: Kevin Mitnick Interview
American Stories Interview of Kevin Mitnick
Authors@Google: Kevin Mitnick
Kevin Mitnick - Interview
Short Kevin Mitnick Interview
Kevin Mitnick: How to Troll the FBI
Kevin Mitnick Interview: Raw, Uncensored and Uncut
Kevin Mitnick Spot On 60 Minutes
Kevin Mitnick - Part 1 - CNBC Interview
SecureTV Interview Kevin Mitnick 2012 from Las Vegas, "the hack legend"
Kevin Mitnick - How to Hack Into a Computer Near You - interview - Goldstein on Gelt - May 2012
Kevin Mitnick - The Art of Deception
Kevin Mitnick CNBC Interview - Part 2
Info.sec.radio: Hacking Through the Ages
Tsutomu Shimomura Interview
Kevin Mitnick - How I Became A Ghost in the Wires - interview - Goldstein on Gelt - July 2012
Kevin Mitnick 2005 Interview exerpts
Kevin Mitnick on Security for Digital Nomads
Kevin Mitnick Shares Hacker Secrets
Kevin David Mitnick (born on August 6, 1963) is an American computer security consultant, author, and hacker. In the late 20th century, he was convicted of various computer and communications-related crimes. At the time of his arrest, he was the most-wanted computer criminal in the United States.
Mitnick grew up in Los Angeles and attended Monroe High School. He was enrolled at Pierce College and USC. He worked as a receptionist for Stephen S. Wise Temple for a while.
At age 12, Mitnick used social engineering to bypass the punchcard system used in the Los Angeles bus system. After a friendly bus driver told him where he could buy his own ticket punch, he could ride any bus in the greater LA area using unused transfer slips he found in the trash. Social engineering became his primary method of obtaining information, including user names and passwords and modem phone numbers.
Mitnick first gained unauthorized access to a computer network in 1979, at 16, when a friend gave him the phone number for the Ark, the computer system Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) used for developing their RSTS/E operating system software. He broke into DEC's computer network and copied their software, a crime he was charged with and convicted of in 1988. He was sentenced to 12 months in prison followed by three years of supervised release. Near the end of his supervised release, Mitnick hacked into Pacific Bell voice mail computers. After a warrant was issued for his arrest, Mitnick fled, becoming a fugitive for two and a half years.
Aaron Swartz (born November 8, 1986) is an American programmer, writer, political organizer and Internet activist. He is best known in programming circles for co-authoring the RSS 1.0 specification. He received mainstream media attention after his federal indictment and arrest on 19 July 2011, for allegedly harvesting academic journal articles from JSTOR.
Swartz is the co-founder of Demand Progress and the Progressive Change Campaign Committee. He currently lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Swartz was active in discussions of Internet standards from an early age, and co-authored the specification for RSS by the time he was 14.[citation needed] Since then he has been a member of the W3C's RDF Core Working Group, co-designed the formatting language Markdown with John Gruber, and worked on many other projects.
Swartz attended Stanford University for a year, leaving to start the software company Infogami, a startup that was funded by Y Combinator's first Summer Founders Program. Infogami was built around a wiki backend, a subject of interest for Swartz since his early effort to develop theinfo, a wiki-based encyclopedia, in 2000.
Benjamin "Ben" Sonnenberg, Jr. (December 30, 1936 – June 24, 2010) was an American publisher and the founder of the literary magazine Grand Street, which he began as a quarterly journal in 1981.
Sonnenberg was born on December 30, 1936, in Manhattan, the son of publicist Benjamin Sonnenberg, whose clients included such notables as Samuel Goldwyn, William S. Paley and David O. Selznick, in addition to major corporations. In his 1991 autobiography, Lost Property: Memoirs and Confessions of a Bad Boy, Sonnenberg recounted his childhood growing up in a five-story townhouse on Gramercy Park, where his father and his household staff of six entertained celebrities at regularly held dinner parties.
Sonnenberg started communicating in epigrams at age seven and started writing his memoirs at age 13, inspired by Giacomo Casanova's Histoire de ma vie. He ran through a series of unsuccessful experiences at various private schools and never finished high school. He never attended college, educating himself by reading and developing close relationships with writers Ted Hughes and W. S. Merwin.