The test is no longer whether you 'broke into' a computer, or 'stole' information. Any use of a computer in excess of what you have been told you are allowed to do becomes a crime.
Lazy Workers May Be Deemed Hackers
Mark Rasch, 2009-08-25
Richard Wolf did more than daydream at work.
From his office job at the Shelby City (Ohio) Wastewater Treatment plant, he was browsing adult Web sites, including one called Adult Friend Finder to meet women. When some of the women asked Wolf for nude pictures, he bought a digital camera, took pictures, and e-mailed them using his work computer.
In a communication with a dominatrix that advertised online, the woman proposed a "no-######" session for $150, to which Wolf replied that, while he would love to be with her, he could not because he had "a lot of financial issues on my plate," but that he might contact the woman at some time in the future.
Apparently Wolf spent a lot of time browsing these Web sites about 100 hours over the course of several years,
kawcha on Xanga, for which he was paid by the city about 23.92 an hour including his benefits. When caught, Wolf admitted that what he did was in violation of established work practices and "unethical and wrong." He fully expected to be fired for his activities.
What Wolf did not expect was to be indicted. For the time he was supposed to be working but was surfing the Web, Wolf was charged with theft of his employers money for unauthorized use of property, and was charged with soliciting ###### for money. The court concluded that he conversations between Wolf and the dominatrix was enough to establish at least a solicitation of ######, if not an agreement to have ###### for money.
The recent Ohio State appellate case (pdf) demonstrates that computer, e-mail and Internet use policies that restrict the use of company computer systems can lead not only to termination of employees but to their prosecution and incarceration as well. More troubling for companies drafting computer use and computer security policies is the fact that Wolf was charged with computer hacking yes, hacking.
Redefining Hacking
The Ohio law on computer crime,
Cheap Pandora Charms, Ohio Revised Code 2913.04(b), like similar laws in many jurisdictions, provides that:
(a) person, in any manner and by any means,
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Tiffany Necklace, shall knowingly gain access to . . . any computer, computer system,
Pandora Charms Bracelet, computer network,
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Many jurisdictions prohibit not only computer hacking that is, the unauthorized access into a computer but also "exceeding the scope" of authorization to access or use a computer. This distinction derives from a case in the early 1980s where an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) employee from Boston was unsuccessfully charged with breaking into the agency's computers when he used his lawful access to the computer to read files of taxpayers he was not authorized to read.