海角大神

Protecting the internet's purpose

Like every paradigm-shifting technology, the internet has evolved quickly from interesting to essential. Security failures are not an option.

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ANN HERMES/STAFF
VISITORS TRIED THE 鈥楬ACKING STATIONS鈥 AT R00TZ ASYLUM, A PROGRAM FOR KIDS AT THE DEF CON 24 CONVENTION IN LAS VEGAS.

Feeling out of sorts after the long and sometimes tawdry slog of the American presidential campaign? Dismayed by the tone of the media and pop culture? Then a recent cover story is for you. It鈥檚 for anybody who might have slipped into a what鈥檚-the-world-coming-to rut. Sara Sorcher introduces us to a fascinating group of young people who have become the 鈥渨hite hats鈥 of computer hacking (click here).

This is gratifying on many levels. First, we鈥檙e glimpsing the future. Its inhabitants seem whip-smart and ethical. That鈥檚 worth a fist pump and a big 鈥測eeesss!鈥 Also, while many of us of a certain age enjoy, use, and occasionally yell at the internet, we still consider it somewhat optional. We debate its pros and cons, remember life without it, and figure we could do without it if we had to (a mistaken notion perhaps, but persistent). To digital natives, the internet is a given.

鈥淭here was a time when people felt the internet was another world,鈥 noted Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, 鈥渂ut now people realize it鈥檚 a tool that we use in this world.鈥

It鈥檚 helpful to think of the internet as earlier generations thought of automobiles and airplanes. In the first half of the 20th century, those were exciting if iffy technologies 鈥 unregulated, unreliable, and unsafe. Breakdowns were common, accidents frequent. By midcentury, highway and air travel had gone from interesting to popular to essential. Year after year, users demanded, and business and government provided, better quality and safety.

Digital technology is on a similar curve. In the early days, dial-up connections were poky, 鈥渂lue screen of death鈥 freeze-ups were frequent, and 鈥404 not found鈥 errors were around every corner. As early problems were overcome, new ones cropped up. Security is the persistent one. No matter how strong the network is, each user is a potential point of vulnerability, a node that can be conned or spoofed into opening the door. We didn鈥檛 used to know not to click on dodgy links, use 鈥減assword鈥 as a password, or enter personal information on unsecured sites. We know a lot more than that now.

Sara鈥檚 wunderkind hackers are determined to make the internet 鈥 yours and mine, but really theirs 鈥 safer by ferreting out security flaws before bad guys find them. Their work is less controversial than that of Aaron Swartz, the young hacktivist who committed suicide in 2013 while under federal indictment for computer crimes. Mr. Swartz skirted the edges of the law to try to preserve the digital commons.

It is heartening that young hackers are uncovering internet vulnerabilities. It would be even better if, like Swartz, they were to use their talents not just to make the Xbox and Minecraft more secure but to protect the internet鈥檚 original purpose: to connect people and ideas, to make all knowledge freely available.聽

We are still in the early stages of the internet. It has gone from interesting to essential. Tomorrow鈥檚 generations will take it to places undreamed of. They鈥檒l own it, after all.

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