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Ngo Minh Hieu (also known as Hieu PC; born October 8, 1989) is a Vietnamese cyber security specialist and a former hacker and identity thief.He was convicted in the United States of stealing millions of people's personally identifiable information and in 2015 he was sentenced to 13 years in U.S. federal prison. [2]
After serving his time in U.S. federal prison for stealing persons' personally identifiable information, hacker Hieu Minh Ngo (also known as HieuPC) left for Vietnam in August 2020. [6] Hieu is considered "one of the most prolific identity thieves ever to grace a federal prison". [7]
In 2013 a Vietnamese national, Hieu Minh Ngo, [27] was charged by the U.S. Department of Justice with attempting to sell personally identifiable information on hundreds of thousands of U.S. residents. This information had been allegedly purchased from Experian subsidiary and data aggregator Court Ventures.
Hieu Minh Ngo; Nguyen Thai Binh; T. Trịnh Xuân Thanh This page was last edited on 27 September 2020, at 23:49 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Maia arson crimew [a] (formerly known as Tillie Kottmann; born August 7, 1999) is a Swiss developer and computer hacker.Crimew is known for leaking source code and other data from companies such as Intel and Nissan, and for discovering a 2019 copy of the United States government's No Fly List on an unsecured cloud server owned by CommuteAir.
In 2019, Not Here won the Publishing Triangle's Thom Gunn Award in Gay Poetry, [4] [5] and was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry. [6]In a starred review, Publishers Weekly wrote, "Nguyen communicates with stunning clarity the ambivalence of shame, how it can commandeer one's life and become almost a comfort."
This hack comes days after a row involving a Chinese tourist at one of the hacked airports, Tan Son Nhat International Airport. A Chinese visitor complained, that her passport was handed back with obscenities written on the page that contains a map including China's "nine-dash line", that marks China's claim to territories in the South China Sea.
The Hacker Manifesto is mentioned in Edward Snowden's autobiography Permanent Record. Amplitude Problem's 2019 album Crime of Curiosity, featuring The Mentor himself, YTCracker, Inverse Phase and Linux kernel maintainer King Fisher of TRIAD is dedicated to The Hacker Manifesto. Each song title is a phrase from the essay. [7]