Hacker culture: Meaning (information, definition, explanation, facts)

The hacker culture is the voluntary subculture which first developed in the 1960s among hackers working on early minicomputers in academic computer science environments. After 1969 it fused with the technical culture of the pioneers of the Internet, after 1980 with the culture of Unix, and after 1987 with elements of the early microcomputer hobbyists. Since the mid-1990s the hacker culture has been almost coincident with what is now called the open source movement.

History

As the above implies, it was not always appropriate to speak of a single hacker culture. Before the computing world was as networked as it is now, there were multiple independent and parallel hacker cultures, often unaware or only partially aware of each others' existence. All of these had certain important traits in common:

  • placing a high value on freedom of inquiry; hostility to secrecy
  • information-sharing as both an ideal and a practical strategy
  • upholding the right to fork
  • playfulness, taking the serious humorously and their humor seriously

These sorts of cultures were commonly found at academic settings such as college campuses. The MIT AI lab, the University of California, Berkeley and Carnegie-Mellon University were particularly well-known hotbeds of early hacker culture. They evolved in parallel, and largely unconsciously, until the Internet and other developments such as the rise of the free software movement drew together a critically large population and encouraged the spread of a conscious, common, and systematic ethos. Symptomatic of this evolution was an increasing adoption of common slang and a shared view of history, similar to the way in which other occupational groups have professionalized themselves but without the formal credentialling process characteristic of most profesional groups.

Over time, the hacker culture has tended to become more conscious, more cohesive, and better organized. Hacker cons have drawn more and more people every year including SummerCon (Summer), DEF CON, HoHoCon (Christmas), PumpCon (Halloween), H.O.P.E. (Hackers on Planet Earth) and HEU (Hacking at the End of the Universe). Gatherings like these have helped expand the definition and solidify the importance of the culture.

The most important consciousness-raising moments have included the composition of the first Jargon File in 1973, the promulgation of the GNU Manifesto in 1985, The Conscience of a Hacker by The Mentor in 1986, and the publication of The Cathedral and the Bazaar in 1997. Correlated with this has been the gradual election of a set of shared culture heroes; first and arguably foremost Richard M. Stallman, also (in alphabetical order) Bill Joy, Eric S. Raymond, Dennis Ritchie, Ken Thompson, Linus Torvalds, and Larry Wall, among others.

The concentration of hacker culture has paralleled and partly been driven by the commoditization of computer and networking technology, and has in turn accelerated that process. In 1975 hackerdom was scattered across several different families of operating systems and disparate networks; today it is almost entirely a Unix and TCP/IP phenomenon, and is increasingly concentrated around Linux.

see also the Timeline of hacker history

Artifacts and customs

The hacker culture is defined by shared work and play focused around central artifacts. Some of these artifacts are very large; the Internet itself, the World Wide Web, the GNU project, and the Linux operating system are all hacker creations, works of which the culture considers itself primary custodian. The Wikipedia itself can be considered an artifact of hacker culture.

Since 1990 the hacker culture has developed a rich range of symbols that serve as recognition symbols and reinforce its group identity. Tux, the Linux penguin, the BSD demon, and the Perl camel stand out as examples. More recently, the use of the glider sructure from Conway's Game of Life as a general Hacker Emblem has been proposed and appears to be gaining acceptance. All of these routinely adorn T-shirts, mugs, and other paraphernalia.

Notably, the hacker culture appears to have exactly one annual ceremonial day—April Fool's. There is a long tradition of perpetrating elaborate jokes, hoaxes, pranks and fake websites on this date. This is so well established that hackers look forward every year to the publication of the annual joke RFC, and one is invariably produced making this movement very closely related to activism.

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