Computer Underground Digest
Editor | Gordon Meyer and Jim Thomas |
---|---|
Categories | Online magazine |
Frequency | Bi-weekly |
First issue | March 28, 1990[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
March, 1990 to March, 2000.[2]
Contents
History
Meyer and Thomas were Criminal Justice professors at Northern Illinois University, and intended the newsletter to cover topical social and legal issues generated during the rise of the telecommunications and the Internet. It existed primarily as an email mailing list and on USENET, though its archives were later provided on a website. The newsletter came to prominence when it published legal commentary and updates concerning the "hacker crackdowns" and federal indictments of Leonard Rose and Craig Neidorf of Phrack.
The CuD published commentary from its membership on subjects including the legal and social implications of the growing Internet (and later the web), book reviews of topical publications, and many off-topic postings by its readership. Overtaken by the growth of online forums on the web, it ceased publication in March, 2000.
See also
External links
References
- ↑ "Electronic Magazines: CUD (The Computer Underground Digest)". textfiles.com. 2009. http://www.textfiles.com/magazines/CUD/. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
- ↑ Steve Mizrach (2009). "The electronic discourse of the computer underground". Florida International University. http://www.fiu.edu/~mizrachs/cudisc.html. Retrieved 2009-05-10. "Gordon Meyer, a sociologist who has since left academia but continues to be involved in the computer industry, wrote in his seminal paper The Social Organization of the Computer Underground that the "computer underground consists of actors in three roles - computer hackers, phone phreaks, and software pirates.""
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