Weev went to jail for literally HTTP GET'ing an AT&T server with a URL that was readily available on any Ipad device. In the RFC there's literally a return code for "Not Authorized", he got a good ol' 200 saying 'come on in' and got convicted of "conspiracy to access a computer without authorization".
Federal prison for what was effectively WGET'ing something that was, again, readily available. Still, in the eyes of the public and the law, hacker and cracker are the same thing. The guy is a racist liar but he didn't deserve federal prison. His conviction was later vacated on a venue technicality, which sucks, because had it been overturned in a higher circuit with the judge offering an Opinion, case law would have been set and Aaron Schwarz would have at least some vindication[1].
[1] In no way am I comparing the character of these two men, just the injustice they both suffered at the arms of the technically illiterate law enforcement/legal system. If I were a medical doctor who was before the board being judged for malpractice, I wouldn't want a jury of 12 of my 'peers' deciding my fate - I'd want other doctors.
> Weev went to jail for literally HTTP GET'ing an AT&T server with a URL that was readily available on any Ipad device. In the RFC there's literally a return code for "Not Authorized", he got a good ol' 200 saying 'come on in' and got convicted of "conspiracy to access a computer without authorization".
Everybody repeatedly says this while ignoring his behavior during and after obtaining the information, which is what he was really convicted on. He said so himself.
Federal prison for what was effectively WGET'ing something that was, again, readily available. Still, in the eyes of the public and the law, hacker and cracker are the same thing. The guy is a racist liar but he didn't deserve federal prison. His conviction was later vacated on a venue technicality, which sucks, because had it been overturned in a higher circuit with the judge offering an Opinion, case law would have been set and Aaron Schwarz would have at least some vindication[1].
[1] In no way am I comparing the character of these two men, just the injustice they both suffered at the arms of the technically illiterate law enforcement/legal system. If I were a medical doctor who was before the board being judged for malpractice, I wouldn't want a jury of 12 of my 'peers' deciding my fate - I'd want other doctors.