Types of Hacking
Hackers can be classified into different categories such as white
hat, black hat, and grey hat, based on their intent of hacking a system. These
different terms come from old Spaghetti Westerns, where the bad guy wears a
black cowboy hat and the good guy wears a white hat.
White Hat Hackers
White Hat hackers are also known as Ethical
Hackers. They never intent to harm a system, rather they try to find out
weaknesses in a computer or a network system as a part of penetration testing
and vulnerability assessments.
Ethical
hacking is not illegal and it is one of the demanding jobs available in the IT
industry. There are numerous companies that hire ethical hackers for
penetration testing and vulnerability assessments.
Black Hat Hackers
Black
Hat hackers, also known as crackers,
are those who hack in order to gain unauthorized access to a system and harm
its operations or steal sensitive information.
Black
Hat hacking is always illegal because of its bad intent which includes stealing
corporate data, violating privacy, damaging the system, blocking network
communication, etc.
Grey Hat Hackers
Grey
hat hackers are a blend of both black hat and white hat hackers. They act
without malicious intent but for their fun, they exploit a security weakness in
a computer system or network without the owner’s permission or knowledge.
Their
intent is to bring the weakness to the attention of the owners and getting
appreciation or a little bounty from the owners.
Miscellaneous Hackers
Apart
from the above well-known classes of hackers, we have the following categories
of hackers based on what they hack and how they do it −
Red Hat
Hackers
Red
hat hackers are again a blend of both black hat and white hat hackers. They are
usually on the level of hacking government agencies, top-secret information
hubs, and generally anything that falls under the category of sensitive
information.
Blue Hat
Hackers
A
blue hat hacker is someone outside computer security consulting firms who is
used to bug-test a system prior to its launch. They look for loopholes that can
be exploited and try to close these gaps. Microsoft also uses the term BlueHat to represent a series of
security briefing events.
Elite
Hackers
This
is a social status among hackers, which is used to describe the most skilled.
Newly discovered exploits will circulate among these hackers.
Script
Kiddie
A
script kiddie is a non-expert who breaks into computer systems by using
pre-packaged automated tools written by others, usually with little
understanding of the underlying concept, hence the term Kiddie.
Neophyte
A
neophyte, "n00b", or "newbie" or "Green Hat
Hacker" is someone who is new to hacking or phreaking and has almost no
knowledge or experience of the workings of technology and hacking.
Hacktivist
A
hacktivist is a hacker who utilizes technology to announce a social,
ideological, religious, or political message. In general, most hacktivism
involves website defacement or denialof-service attacks