Hacker's List, a website that offers to connect customers and
"professional" hackers for hire, would have you believe that just
about everyone, at one point or another, needs to hack into something.
And it wants to help.
The website —
which shows listings as far back as November, when it launched — includes more
than 400 posts from users seeking hackers. There are around 70 hacker profiles
displayed on the site, but many of them don't appear to be active.
"Hiring a
hacker shouldn't be a difficult process, we believe that finding a trustworthy
professional hacker for hire should be a worry free and painless
experience," reads the website.
Hacking is no longer considered a task only reserved for high-stakes
situations, like international espionage.
There are
listings for a variety of activities, which are called "projects" on the
website, from breaking into iPhones to tampering with academic grades.
Once
a user posts a job, hackers will respond with ideas for how to accomplish the
task. After that, the person doing the hiring picks a hacker, based on price,
availability. When pricing is agreed upon, the first payment is made. (Though
Hacker's List claims it holds all payments until the project is complete.)
Bids for
hackers can range from low prices (say, $1) to thousands. One listing, for
example, wants hackers to remove content and images from search engines. The
buyers is willing to pay as much as $4,000 for the job. Using this website, of
course, doesn't mean that a hacker will automatically take on the job — many of
the posts don't have any bids at all.
Data breaches
are seemingly more common than ever before. The hackers freelancing for the
listing service will have varying skill levels, but, as Mashable's Christina Warren put it, everyone should have the
expectation that "our privacy and security are finite and will probably be
breached."
To help keep
sites secure, use password managers and generators — like LastPass — as well as two-factor authentication, which requires a password
and a uniquely generated code, to protect email accounts and computer systems.
The better the security, the more difficult it is to hack.
Hiring hackers
online isn't new, and services sometimes have surprising legitimacy. One
example: NeighborHoodHacker.com, which has a
1-888 number and live-chat receptionist. There's even a dedicated website for reviewing them. If something goes
awry, the users can consult one of Hacker's List's "dispute
specialists."
Of course, how
legal all of this is remains entirely questionable. The site's terms and conditions forbid "use
the Service for any illegal purposes," but breaking into someone's
personal email, for one, is almost never OK, lawfully
speaking.
The founders
of the website are still too afraid to go public, according to The New York Times. The report said the founders were
advised by legal counsel about how to structure the website to avoid liability
for any wrongdoing by people either seeking to hire a hacker or by hackers
agreeing to do a job. The site is registered in New Zealand.
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