59 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
59 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 596
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Title: HPR0596: The Importance of Community
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0596/hpr0596.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 23:40:16
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---
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This is Sporus of the Infanomicon Computer Club.
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What I'd like to talk about on this episode of Hacker Public Radio is the importance of community.
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Before I begin, let me go ahead and say that this is my first time podcasting,
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and though I'm no stranger to recording, I'm normally not the one being recorded.
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So bear with me as this is a brand new experience for me.
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Now that that's out of the way, I'd like to say that I believe that in the hacker subculture,
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community is just as important if not more important than anywhere else.
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Here at Hacker Public Radio, you can see that plainly, because HPR is a community driven podcast
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that without the community wouldn't be what it is and most likely wouldn't exist at all.
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When I first became interested in hacking and hacker culture and started calling myself a hacker,
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I was in middle school.
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At the time, I felt that I was the stereotypical hacker who spent all their time locked away in their room on the computer
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for the most part being anti-social.
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And looking back now, I can see that from the start, I relied on and considered myself part of a community.
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It was just a community that looked strange to the outside world.
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Back then, all my community involvement was on forums in IRC and other various places on the internet.
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And during that time, I didn't really think I was part of a community, but now looking back,
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I realized that the community influenced who I am and how I think today.
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Now, going forward to last year, I had just started college and I didn't know anyone when I got here.
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One of the first people that I met went on as now, someone I consider a good friend and one of my mentors.
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And last year, he invited me to go with him to Freaknik 13.
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I had heard of Freaknik before and other conferences like Defcon and Black Hat and different conferences like that,
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but I'd never had a chance to go to one or had I really seriously considered going to one.
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And before going to Freaknik last year, I had started to lose interest in security and hacking in general,
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I'd never really been able to meet with other like-minded people and learn new things by talking to them and hearing what they had to say.
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I'd had all been online, but while I was there after seeing and hearing about what other people were working on
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and just what all the different groups were doing and just everything going on there, I was inspired.
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At the end of Freaknik, I was invited to become a member of the Phenomicon Computer Club and that really meant a lot to me.
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From that point forward, I really felt that I was part of a community.
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And since that time, I've gone to a couple more conferences, Outer Zone 6 and Freaknik 14,
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and at each conference, I've met more people and I've become more inspired to start new projects and help with ongoing projects.
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Without this community, I wouldn't have taken the jump to finally start podcasting, which is something I've wanted to do for years now,
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but I just didn't know how to start. And, you know, getting to know groups and other people in it Phenomicon,
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I found out about Hacker Public Radio, and Mayor Vinci has been telling me for a while that I needed to record some stuff for it.
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Now I am.
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Without the community, I wouldn't be working on something that I consider is a fairly ambitious project with someone who's a doctoral candidate,
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and we intend to unveil that project at a future conference.
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And most importantly, I wouldn't have met some of the great people in the security industry and in the hacking community that I now look up to for guidance and for inspiration.
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These days, there's more offline venues to participate in the community than I knew about in the past.
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I'd always dreamed of something like a hacker space, but I didn't know they existed, though every now and then I'd hear about one.
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I didn't know about the extent to which they existed until I started going to these conferences.
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I think a hacker space is probably the best forum of community in our culture that I can imagine.
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Someday, I hope to have a local space to join or possibly start one so that others can share in it, and I can help teach other people about all the things I'm interested in.
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The community is there to support you, to critique you, and to inspire you.
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Just by listening to this podcast, you're a part of the community.
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I'm proud to call myself a member of the hacker community, and I just wanted to share what the community's done for me and how much it means to me.
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Thank you.
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Thank you for listening to Hackers of the Radio.
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HPR is sponsored by Carol.net, so head on over to C-A-R-O dot E-C for all of us here.
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Thank you very much.
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