serching security by dhirendra chouhan
no....... hacking is for babies that think games are to difficult to understand -.-
This is not a question we can answer. Hacking is illegal and therefore not voluntary.
To learn hacking, first you should understand the systems you are looking at. A hacker strives to test the boundaries of any system. Learning coding is useful, but varying on whether you wish to hack software or websites different paths are recommended. Please note that in most countries, hacking is a criminal offence if caught.
Yes, if you work on the Federal Government.
There is a lot of bad juju surrounding that word. The term hacked has become a dysphemism synonymous with malicious computer programming. People who don't understand programming most likely don't understand that the word hacking is simply shorthand for problem-solving via computer programming. Of course, to the mundane, hacking is a bad thing because whenever they hear about a virus attack or phishing atempts, it's called HACKING. Of course it's hacking! When you tell a computer what to do, it's called hacking, period. All computer programmers--good or bad--are hackers. A lot of people simply associate hacking with malicious activity because that's what the people on the news call it when something bad happens.
how to be safe from hacking
Never ask for passwords. Hacking is illegal, and you will go to jail if you get caught. But if you are a child, I understand. I guess you didn't know that.
She had a hacking cough.
Because you are hacking.
Some of the arguments against internet voting include security risks, electronic and human errors.
Hacking is not just illegal, but cracking is. There is a general misconception that a hacker is a bad guy. A hacker is a computer guru, passionate, etc, that understand how system work. They do nothing illegal. However, a cracker is someone that uses computer skills to do illegal stuff. That is cracking, which is bad.
It depends on your definition of the term hacking. The modern usage is to break into a computer to do something you would not normally be allowed to do. This is wrong. It is illegal. It is unethical. You can go to jail for hacking. Don't do it. The older usage, is to delve into a computer or piece of equipment and know it so well that you are one with it. Original computer wizards back in the 60's and 70's were called hackers, and that was an honorable term, because it meant you had spent the time to learn the machine inside and out. Problem is, that modern usage has damaged the credibility of true hacking. There is still a need for people that understand the computer inside and out, but the term hacker has been vilified to the point that I will not call myself a hacker in mixed company without explaining, which I am presently doing. Perhaps the better term for what goes on today is cracking, as opposed to hacking. Unfortunately, the stigma remains. Bottom line - hacking to get access to something you should not have access to is wrong, and that answers the question. Hacking to understand the technology - now that is a good thing, but we need a better term than hacker in this day and age.