Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!bonnie.concordia.ca!uunet!zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!percy!m2xenix!randy From: randy@m2xenix.psg.com (Randy Bush) Newsgroups: comp.admin.policy Subject: Re: SUSPEND SYSOPS, NOT STUDENTS Message-ID: <1991Jun14.033915.18220@m2xenix.psg.com> Date: 14 Jun 91 03:39:15 GMT References: <20740@slice.ooc.uva.nl> Organization: Pacific Systems Group, Portland Oregon US Lines: 21 > And just as a note, a user mailing a password file out so someone > else can hack on it is about as FAR from "playing around" as you can get. Sadly, it is nowhere near as far from playing around as today's net crackers are willing to go. But, I think the points of this story are simple. Knives are used for good and bad things, as are other readily available tools. /etc/passwd, or copies thereof, can be used for good and bad things. We are told, in this case, that the student gave a knife to someone else knowing they intended to use it for bad things. So, as you went on to say, the question is the punishment, not whether a crime was committed. -- randy@psg.com ..!uunet!m2xenix!randy