Category: Books

Read: Kevin Mitnick – Ghost in the Wires

Ghost in the Wires
Kevin D. Mitnick; Little, Brown and Company 2011

 

I was aware of Kevin Mitnick’s status as the most wanted hacker since my first year in college. The book is an excellent narrative on how he became the world’s most wanted hacker.

I have no issues whatsoever with his incessant need to hack as a way to understand computers and systems. I also understand his belief that each new challenge was not for profit, but simply to see if he could do something.

The book is a great reminder to me, and for anyone that reads it that the weakest link in computer security is the human sitting in the chair. There is nothing as exploitable as each other. And this is really where the separation for White hat vs. Black Hat comes in, social engineering is a devious and nefarious activity. Unless specifically hired for a company to do pen-testing, any use of social engineering is in my mind highly unethical.

I lack the drive necessary to take advantage of the trust people place in me. I still believe that technology is meant to help humanity, and can’t bring myself to exploit for personal gain. And perhaps that is why I will never be the world’s most wanted hacker.

Read: Blink

Blink
Malcolm Gladwell; Penguin Group UK 2009

 

This is the second book I have read from Malcolm Gladwell, and in reading both Outliers and now Blink; I enjoy the direct fashion the author presents his subject matter. It is refreshing to read books that take a matter of hours to read and yet still leave me with a more introspection and analysis about the authors assertions.

In Blink, Gladwell discusses the importance of our initial judgements in any given situation and how we can refine and cultivate our initial thoughts into a tool for assisting our daily lives.   He also describes how our initial reactions and insight to a particular event can fail us, occasionally with disastrous consequences.

The book does a good job of leading the reader to understand their intuition is worth paying attention to and not discarding immediately.  It does so with enough warnings that the reader should walk away knowing that a understanding our initial reactions is key whether we can trust instinct in a particular moment.

Read: Outliers

Outliers
Malcolm Gladwell; Little, Brown and Co. 2008

 

The author present several background stories on several successful and famous people to demonstrate the argument success largely depends on people and circumstances assisting the central character of each story.

It is a very fast read and a good story for investigating the under-represented reasons behind the success of individuals comprising the stories.