high school student earns A in hacking

Started by Metgod, December 21, 2002, 11:55:42 PM

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Found this one amusing.. At least he asked for permission before doing anything. And the outcome is quite.. surprising to say the least. It is nice to see more ethical folks... especially when they are still in highschool.

I have to give the guy a lot of credit for all he did. Not the actual 'attack', but how he went to ask, how he didn't do any harm, hell.. he even let the administration know how he got in if I remember right and didn't let anyone else know how it was done (that is, no students knew). And even if it was just a password issue (not sure but kind of sounds like it), at least he did something for school.. at least he cares about his grades, etc. Wasn't an incredible feat but he sure as hell manged it and did everything quite right.. especially compared to some his age.

Comments ?


Met



http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/living/community/4754902.htm

By Larry Slonaker
Mercury News
December 16, 2002

Reid Ellison, an 11th-grader at Anzar High School in San Juan
Bautista, recently decided a cool student project would be to hack
into the school's computer grading system. So he presented the idea to
school administrators, and they gave him the go-ahead.

He hacked his way in without difficulty. Once there, he wanted to
leave a footprint to prove he had been successful. But he couldn't
artificially bump up his grades -- he already had a straight-A
average.

His solution? Lower his grades. He dropped himself from a 4.0
grade-point average to 1.9.

``It was kind of the opposite of what most people would do,'' he said
Monday.

Reid's project was an Anzar ``exhibition.'' The school requires
students to create six exhibitions to graduate. The projects, which
have both a written and oral component, ``are supposed to be
issue-based, not topic-based,'' said Wayne Norton, Reid's adviser.

``They're not just reports.''

Students' exhibitions have to touch on six subject areas, and Reid hit
three in his hacking report -- history, science and math. (Part 2 of
his written report was, ``The History of Hacking.'')

Last week he gave a presentation on his project to his three
evaluators. They gave him a perfect score.

As it turned out, doing the report was the hard part of the project.  
The hacking was easy.

``I had a pretty good idea that it wasn't the best security system,''
Reid said. Once he had his hacking program in place, figuring out the
password ``didn't take too long -- 200 milliseconds.''

He didn't tell any fellow students he had been successful until the
administration had a chance to change the password. The school is
taking other steps to shore up its security, too.

``We're aware we've got a hole that needs to be plugged,'' Norton
said.

After his hacking venture was recorded, Reid remembered perhaps the
most important stage of the project. He made sure his grades were
adjusted back up.

He obviously didn't get that 4.0 by accident.

"My Terminal is my Soul"

Dang...i wish i had thought of that back in the day....

Haha, right. Well, I didn't have to do anything back in highschool.. not a graduation project and even if I did I would not do that. But I did manage to get through and given the district I was at and the cruelty I faced by students and even workers that is quite an accomplishment. Then with health and other things....

But regardless, this is an interesting article I must say.. At least something decent (and amusing too !).

Met
"My Terminal is my Soul"

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