(Redirected from Hack (technology slang))'Hack' has several meanings in the technology and computer science fields: a clever or quick fix to a computer program problem; a clumsy or inelegant solution to a problem; illegally breaking into a computer, generally over a network connection; or a modification of a program or device to give the user access to features that were otherwise unavailable to them.
Origin of term

A fake fire truck on MIT's Great Dome
All of the modern meanings seem to be rooted in its widespread use as slang throughout the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), starting in the
1960s. There, the original meaning of "hack" was a quick, elaborate and/or "jerry rigged" solution, students devised for technical obstacle; it was used with ''
hacker'', meaning one who discovers and implements a hack. The word itself comes from the
German word meaning "someone who makes furniture with an axe", implying a lack of finesse in a "hack"; it is believed by many in the hacking community, that the reason for this is because, programs too large to run on the limited computer resources of the time, had portions "chopped" or "hacked" out in order to be reduced to a more reasonable size.
''See:
MIT hacks''
Over time, the meaning of the word there was expanded, perhaps through contact with the
amateur radio community. It came to mean either a
kludge, or the opposite of a kludge, as in a clever or elegant solution to a difficult problem. In the term "
hack value" it also acquired a meaning of anything that was simultaneously fun and clever.
The initial hacker community at MIT, particularly those associated with the
Tech Model Railroad Club, applied this pre-existing local slang to
computer programming, producing the variant which first came into common use outside MIT.
History in Computer Science
A "hack" now meant a clever or quick fix to a computer program problem, as in "That hack you made last night to the editor is working well". A ''
hacker'' came into the lexicon as meaning one who hacks, using this definition. The surface implication (which might be a modest mocking and play on the literary definition) was a casual attempt to fix the problem, but the deeper meaning was something more clever and thus impressive.
It was used especially among
US university computing center staff, such as those at
Stanford in the period beginning approximately in the mid-
1960s. The context determined whether the complimentary or derogatory meanings were implied. Phrases such as "ugly hack" or "quick hack" generally referred to the latter meaning; phrases such as "cool hack" or "neat hack" referred to the former.
In modern computer programming, a "hack" can refer to a solution or method which functions correctly but which is "ugly" in its concept, which works outside the accepted structures and norms of the environment, or which is not easily extendable or maintainable (see
kludge).
In a similar vein, a "hack" may refer to works outside of computer programming. For example, a
math hack means a clever solution to a mathematical problem. The
GNU General Public License has been described as a
copyright hack because it cleverly uses the copyright laws for a purpose the lawmakers did not foresee. All of these uses now also seem to be spreading beyond MIT as well.
The term has since acquired an additional and now more common meaning, since approximately the
1980s; this more modern definition was initially associated with
crackers. This growing use of the term "hack" is to refer to a
program that (sometimes illegally) modifies another program, often a computer game, giving the user access to features otherwise inaccessible to them. As an example of this use, for
Palm OS users (until the 4th iteration of this
operating system), a "hack" refers to an extension of the operating system which provides additional functionality. The general media also uses this term to describe the act of illegally breaking into a computer, but this meaning is
disputed. The term is additionally used to refer to attempts to gain low-level access to hardware such as a
graphing calculator,
video game console, or other device (see
CueCat for a notorious example) to expose or add functionality to a device that was unintended for use by end users by the company who created it. While it is generally accepted as a way of creating additional markets for such devices (and software as well), companies take different and sometimes inconsistent attitudes towards such practices, ranging from open acceptance (such as
Texas Instruments for its graphing calculators and
Lego for its
Lego Mindstorms robotics gear) to outright hostility (such as
Microsoft's attempts to lock out
Xbox hackers or the
DRM routines on
Blu-Ray players designed to sabotage compromised players). Such activity is generally considered to exist in a legal gray area.
Sometimes the jargon used by hackers is thought of as a language in its own right, called '
hackish' (see the
Jargon file). This should not be confused with "1337" or "
leetspeak."
See also
★
Hack value
★
HAKMEM
★
Haxie and
Extension (Mac OS)
★
History of "hacker"
★
IHTFP
★
Kludge
★
MIT hack
★
NetHack
★
External links
★
Hacking Forum, Real Life hackers and questinos answered
★
Hacking Challenge, Real life hack
★
MIT gallery of hacks
★
A Hack a day keeps the doctor away
★
On Hacking by
Richard Stallman