• Home
  • Blog
  • Incoming Courses
  • Print Calendar
  • Web Page
  • Social media
    • facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • youtube
  • Procedimientos y Reglamentos
  • Cursos
    Any question?
    33 3825 5838
    [email protected]
    Login
    culturalenlinea.comculturalenlinea.com
    • Home
    • Blog
    • Incoming Courses
    • Print Calendar
    • Web Page
    • Social media
      • facebook
      • Twitter
      • Instagram
      • youtube
    • Procedimientos y Reglamentos
    • Cursos

      Reading of the Day

      • Home
      • Blog
      • Reading of the Day
      • Why Are Online Scams Called ‘Phishing’?

      Why Are Online Scams Called ‘Phishing’?

      • Posted by Gustavo Cruz
      • Date February 5, 2022

      By Ellen Gutoskey│ Mental Floss│2 min

      View Original

      calvio/iStock via Getty Images

      These days, phishing attacks can find you anywhere from your Gmail account to your text message inbox. But back when the word phishing was coined, they were specific to a single place: AOL.

      Hack, line, and sinker.
      calvio/iStock via Getty Images
      Hack, line, and sinker.

      It all started in 1994, when a group of enterprising hackers from across the U.S. began impersonating AOL representatives in private chats, hoodwinking unsuspecting AOL users into surrendering their login credentials and credit card information. The hackers were mainly just interested in stealing the data so they could use AOL through other people’s accounts, rather than having to pay for their own. According to Koceilah Rekouche, then a 16-year-old hacker known as “Da Chronic,” someone in their party aptly nicknamed this process of baiting a person—usually selected from a pool of users in a chat room—into turning over personal details “fishing.”

      By January 1995, Rekouche had created “AOHell,” a novice-friendly software program that automated the process with boilerplate messages and options to “fish” for passwords or credit card numbers. It was in AOHell that Rekouche, as he wrote in a 2011 journal article for Cornell University’s arXiv, first changed fish to phish. Though he didn’t provide an explanation for the switch, some believe it was inspired by the term phone phreak, which was coined in the 1970s to describe people who hacked phone lines to make free calls. (As for where phreak came from, it’s generally assumed that the ph- was borrowed from phone, and freak may have been a play on free call.)

      Phishing wasn’t AOHell’s only selling point. You could also, for example, “mail bomb” someone’s inbox with hundreds of spam emails; use the “Punt” button to log an AOL user out of their account; click “Ghost” to erase all comments except for yours; or send what The Boston Globe described as “a graphically obscene gesture” to everyone in a chat room. Unsurprisingly, the software became popular among teenagers, which was Rekouche’s intention.

      “I hate the staff on AOL for one, I hate most of the people on AOL for another, and I wanted to cause a lot of chaos,” Rekouche as “Da Chronic” told The Boston Globe in April 1995.

      Rekouche’s stint as the internet’s most powerful agent of chaos didn’t last forever—nor did AOL’s preeminence as the online service of choice. But the concept of phishing continued to grow and mutate, and the term phishing persevered right along with it.

      • Share:
      Admin bar avatar
      Gustavo Cruz

      Previous post

      The Science of How Your Body Ages
      February 5, 2022

      Next post

      8 New Creatures Join Most Wanted Lost Species List
      March 1, 2022

      You may also like

      William Shakespeare
      Poem vs. Sonnet: What’s the Difference?
      27 May, 2023
      Technology
      Always Do This Before Letting Someone Borrow Your Phone
      18 June, 2022
      HEALTH
      Important reasons why you should be drinking lemon water every morning
      17 June, 2022

      Upcoming Courses

      • Privacy
      • Terms
      • Sitemap
      icmn_logotipo
      33 3825 5838
       
      [email protected]

      Like Us On Facebook

      facebook_face1

      Nuestros maestros

      es el activo mas valioso!

      Our Courses

      ICMNJ by https://culturalenlinea.com/ Powered by WordPress.

      Login with your site account

      Lost your password?