The term “hacker” is an interesting one. If you ask what it means to someone at my local LUG, they’ll say that it’s the guy that was able to add support for 5000 cheap webcams into the Linux OS. On the other end of the spectrum are the news media outlets, which have defined it as a computer criminal, regardless of proficiency.
Somewhere in between is this small devoted contingent of people, that have come to define it as those that have been able to make computers and electronic hardware accomplish extraordinary things. In their world, someone who is able to fit a 3D game engine with textures and AI into 32KB using ASM is not belittled, but rather reigns king. In their world, digital security is a toy that is fair game to be undone, laws be damned. It’s a world where knowledge rules, and where age has become all but irrelevant.
And one graphic novel author understood that: Ed Piskor. Piskor has just released this first volume of a series called Wizzywig. It’s a tale about Kevin Phenicle, a fictitious character that draws much inspiration from real-world hacker and social engineer extraordinaire, Kevin Mitnick. Mitnick is famous for being sent into solitary confinment, by judge convinced that Kevin could do catastrophic things if granted access to a regular prison telephone. Things such as, according to the prosecutor on the case, launching a nuke by whistling in a set of tones.
I’ve ordered the book, and it’s heading towards me in the mail. Once I get it, I’ll give a full review. But from what the preview pages tell me, this guy gets it. The content is heavily inspired by real world characters and stories, which has no doubt helped in giving the overall hacking elements to the plot credence. There’s a radio show that is pretty much 2600’s “Off the Hook”, with Emmanuel Goldstein at the helm. Appropriately enough, the host in this fictional world is called Winston Smith. There’s a sgement that pays hommage to Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak’s blue boxing beginnings, whose fictitious equivalents are named “Steve & Steve.” The book even appears to come with a “Free Kevin” sticker drawn on it’s back cover.
I can’t wait for this to get in.
PS. And if you like it enough, order three like Jason Scott.