LC control no. | no 96000802 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Mitnick, Kevin, 1963-2023 |
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 country | United States |
Birth date | 1963-08-06 |
Death date | 2023-07-16 |
Place of birth | Los Angeles (Calif.) |
Place of death | Pittsburgh (Pa.) |
Field of activity | Hacking Computer security |
Affiliation | KnowBe4 (Firm) |
Profession or occupation | Computer engineers Writers Hacker |
Found in | Takedown, 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 language | eng |
Invalid LCCN | no2002095031 |