Talofa reader,
I often tell the story of what first got me into thinking about tech, so for this edition, I thought I’d dive deep into what made it such a life-changing point in my life.
Without a doubt, it was getting "hacked" by a high school friend over ICQ late one night while chatting.
That opened my eyes to what was possible with a little knowledge and skill with tech.
From then on, I was hooked.
I couldn’t wait to get my course costs from my university loan to buy my own, very first computer, an Acer laptop.
Real hackers run Linux, so I installed RedHat 5.2—no dual boot, just deleted Windows.
Linux straight, no chaser.
For the next, what seemed like ‘always’, I would battle it out with device drivers, getting my sound card to work, getting my video card to work, learning how to configure, compile and install my own kernels to ensure things worked.
My obsession with getting really good at wielding the power of computing, networking, and programming drove me to learn anything and everything from the hardware up through all 7 OSI layers.
I can’t even hazard a guess at how many hours all up I spent on learning, breaking, and fixing computers, how many all-nighters, weekends, and public holidays I spent just hacking on things.
I thought I just wanted to be a 31337 hax0r, and that was my obsession…
But it wasn ’t until I came across a piece of writing, iconic in hacking culture, that I realised hacking was more than computer tricks for me…
That piece of writing was the hacker's manifesto.
TheHackers Manifesto1is a short essay written Lloyd Blankenship aka"The Mentor"of the infamous hacker group"Legion of Doom".
It featured in Issue 7, of equally infamous Hacker Magazine “Phrack” in 1986, and has been cited in popular culture, like the movie Hackers, The Social Network and in Edward Snowden’s autobiography.
You can read it yourself, but it’s the perspective of a smart kid, misunderstood and dismissed by his teachers, bored and unchallenged at school, who finds a world that challenges and teaches him, whereinformation is free.
Sure- if you're familiar with the manifesto- you might think it's cheesy, a bit cringe, “of it’s time” etc.
But I can’t deny the sentiment of"The Mentor"vibed somewhere deep in me.
Why?
Good question.
The manifesto sounded like it was written by a palagi kid, from the U.S., I’m going to go out on a limb here and say probably from a decent home (one that had a computer at least).
So what did we have in common?2