Ethical hacker
An ethical hacker is a computer and network expert who attacks a
security system on behalf of its owners, seeking vulnerabilities that a
malicious hacker
could exploit. To test a security system, ethical hackers use the same
methods as their less principled counterparts, but report problems
instead of taking advantage of them. Ethical hacking is also known as penetration testing, intrusion testing and red teaming. An ethical hacker is
sometimes called a white hat, a term that comes from old Western movies, where the "good guy" wore a white hat and the "bad guy" wore a black hat.
One of the first examples of ethical hackers at work was in the 1970s,
when the United States government used groups of experts called red teams
to hack its own computer systems. According to Ed Skoudis, Vice
President of Security Strategy for Predictive Systems' Global Integrity
consulting practice, ethical hacking has continued to grow in an
otherwise lackluster IT industry, and is becoming increasingly common
outside the government and technology sectors where it began. Many
large companies, such as IBM, maintain employee teams of ethical
hackers.
In a similar but distinct category, a hacktivist
is more of a vigilante: detecting, sometimes reporting (and sometimes
exploiting) security vulnerabilities as a form of social activism.
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