The Library of Congress > LCCN Permalink

View this record in:  MARCXML | LC Authorities & Vocabularies | VIAF (Virtual International Authority File)External Link

Mitnick, Kevin, 1963-2023

LC control no.no 96000802
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingMitnick, Kevin, 1963-2023
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Variant(s)Mitnick, Kevin D. (Kevin David), 1963-
Condor, 1963-2023
N6NHG, 1963-2023
Chernoff, Anton, 1963-2023
Weiner, Fred, 1963-2023
Nusbaum, Lee, 1963-2023
Merrill, Brian, 1963-2023
Stanfill, David, 1963-2023
Case, Thomas, 1963-2023
Other standard no.0000 0001 1493 9703
79185196
Q7449
Associated countryUnited States
Birth date1963-08-06
Death date2023-07-16
Place of birthLos Angeles (Calif.)
Place of deathPittsburgh (Pa.)
Field of activityHacking Computer security
AffiliationKnowBe4 (Firm)
Profession or occupationComputer engineers Writers
Hacker
Found inTakedown, the pursuit and capture of Kevin Mitnick, America's most wanted computer outlaw ... c1996: t.p. (Kevin Mitnick) p. 236 (Kevin David Mitnick; reached adolescence in suburban L.A. in the late 1970s)
Fusion Anomaly: Kevin Mitnick Web site (grew up in Sepulveda, California; born Kevin David Mitnick 1963; also known as: The Condor, N6NHG, Anton Chernoff, Fred Weiner, Lee Nusbaum, Brian Merrill, David Stanfill, Thomas Case; former member of The Roscoe Gang; arrested at age 17; rumored to have cracked NORAD, inspiring the film "Wargames")
The art of deception, 2002: t.p. (Kevin D. Mitnick)
The art of intrusion, 2005: (Kevin D. Mitnick) dv (b. Aug. 6, 1963)
Ghost in the wires: my adventures as the world's most wanted hacker, 2011 (surrogate): title page (Kevin Mitnick)
New York times, 21 July 2023: in an obituary on page A21 (Kevin Mitnick; born Kevin David Mitnick on Aug. 6, 1963 in Los Angeles [Calif.], died Sunday [July 16, 2023] in Pittsburgh [Pa.], aged 59; who at the dawn of widespread internet usage in the mid-1990s became the nation's archetypal computer hacker -- obsessive but clever, shy but mischievous and threatening to an uncertain degree -- and who later used his skills to become "chief hacking officer" of a cybersecurity firm; Mr. Mitnick was a fugitive for more than two years; at the time of his capture in February 1995, The Mitnick Affair drove a fretful international conversation not just about hacking, but also about the internet itself; Mitnick was a part-owner of the cybersecurity company, KnowBe4)
Associated languageeng
Invalid LCCNno2002095031