Cuckoo's Egg

Paperback, 356 pages

English language

Published Nov. 1, 1990 by Pocket.

ISBN:
978-0-671-72688-1
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5 stars (3 reviews)

In the days when the presence of a computer did NOT presume the presence of a network (they used to be freestanding units that could not easily communicate with another system), accounts to use the computer were expensive to maintain and heavily scrutinized by management. When the Accounting staff of Stoll's university employer discovered 75 cents' worth of time used with which no user was associated, they called him and demanded that he locate the "phantom" user. Stoll wasn't even a computing pro - he was an astronomer that used the computer to run programs that pointed telescopes properly. But he was a member of a club that exists today - that person elected to do network administration because he drew the short straw. Stoll tells the ensuing circa 1985 tale of analysis when people worldwide were only just discovering what networks could reveal... and hide. Rather like today.

12 editions

Great introduction to information security: spies, philosophy, and so much more.

5 stars

This book is an excellent introduction to hacking. It's great for beginners as it explains concepts on a fundamental level. It asks moral questions surrounding information security and who protects users. It is also a great starting point for people who need to see the picture of their learning or are struggling with being interested in learning about information security.

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5 stars
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5 stars

Subjects

  • Espionage & spy thriller
  • True crime
  • Hannover
  • Espionage
  • True Crime / Espionage
  • Politics/International Relations
  • United States
  • Computer Industry
  • Literary Criticism & Collections / General
  • Defense information, Classified
  • Data bases
  • Espionage, Soviet
  • Germany (West)

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