AMMONNEWS - As a young boy, Jason Moon found a clever way to manipulate computers for immediate personal benefit.
Moon started hacking cash machines to get them to 'spit out money... Just because I wanted to buy Star Wars figures and things like that.'
But after a turning point in his life, Moon decided to use his skills for the public good.
Following the 9/11 attacks he joined a group of young hackers determined to pry open networks and unmask the organisations and individuals who had financed the attacks. The result was a list of names handed over to US intelligence officials.
Since then, governments and corporations have caught up with online hackers, but only up to a point. Almost every week we hear how systems are infiltrated - from newspapers to movie studios, to government agencies.
Cyber attacks are carried out by countries as well as armed groups such as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
So is there no effective way to stop cyber attacks? Will hackers always be a step ahead? And what could so-called good hackers to to fight back?
Jason Moon, a hacker who now advises governments and corporations on how to prevent cyber attacks, talks to Al Jazeera.
*Aljazeera
AMMONNEWS - As a young boy, Jason Moon found a clever way to manipulate computers for immediate personal benefit.
Moon started hacking cash machines to get them to 'spit out money... Just because I wanted to buy Star Wars figures and things like that.'
But after a turning point in his life, Moon decided to use his skills for the public good.
Following the 9/11 attacks he joined a group of young hackers determined to pry open networks and unmask the organisations and individuals who had financed the attacks. The result was a list of names handed over to US intelligence officials.
Since then, governments and corporations have caught up with online hackers, but only up to a point. Almost every week we hear how systems are infiltrated - from newspapers to movie studios, to government agencies.
Cyber attacks are carried out by countries as well as armed groups such as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
So is there no effective way to stop cyber attacks? Will hackers always be a step ahead? And what could so-called good hackers to to fight back?
Jason Moon, a hacker who now advises governments and corporations on how to prevent cyber attacks, talks to Al Jazeera.
*Aljazeera
AMMONNEWS - As a young boy, Jason Moon found a clever way to manipulate computers for immediate personal benefit.
Moon started hacking cash machines to get them to 'spit out money... Just because I wanted to buy Star Wars figures and things like that.'
But after a turning point in his life, Moon decided to use his skills for the public good.
Following the 9/11 attacks he joined a group of young hackers determined to pry open networks and unmask the organisations and individuals who had financed the attacks. The result was a list of names handed over to US intelligence officials.
Since then, governments and corporations have caught up with online hackers, but only up to a point. Almost every week we hear how systems are infiltrated - from newspapers to movie studios, to government agencies.
Cyber attacks are carried out by countries as well as armed groups such as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
So is there no effective way to stop cyber attacks? Will hackers always be a step ahead? And what could so-called good hackers to to fight back?
Jason Moon, a hacker who now advises governments and corporations on how to prevent cyber attacks, talks to Al Jazeera.
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