12 Seiten
60 Seiten
3 Materialien






How did hacking evolve from experimental curiosity to geopolitical weapon?
Where is the line between security research and cybercrime?
This academically structured presentation explores the development of hacker culture from the 1970s to AI-driven cyberwarfare.
✔ Origin of the term “Hacker” (MIT, 1960s)
✔ White Hat / Grey Hat / Black Hat
✔ Phone Phreaking & Blue Box
✔ Chaos Computer Club & Hacker Ethics
✔ Early computer viruses (Brain, Morris Worm)
✔ Internet vulnerabilities (SQL Injection, Buffer Overflow)
✔ State cyber operations (Stuxnet, NSA revelations)
✔ Economic espionage & APT groups
✔ Ransomware & RaaS
✔ Social engineering psychology
✔ AI-powered attacks & defenses
✔ Cyberwar & critical infrastructure
✔ Cryptography & post-quantum security
✔ Bug bounty programs
✔ Future of cybersecurity & regulation
Chronological and structured
Strong ethical reflection
Interdisciplinary relevance
Encourages debate
Up-to-date with 2026 developments
Perfect for advanced Computer Science and Digital Society courses.
This comprehensive bundle provides everything needed for a structured unit on hacker culture, cybersecurity and digital power.Included✔ Full teaching concept (14–18 lessons)✔ Structured presentation✔ Classroom-ready worksheets✔ Debate & simulation modules✔ Assessment toolsAcademic FocusOrigins of hacker cultureEthical vs. malicious hackingRansomware economicsState-sponsored cyber operationsAI-powered cyberattacksEncryption & digital infrastructureInternational cybersecurity regulationStudents analyze how digital systems shape global power and democratic structures.Perfect for advanced Computer Science and Digital Society courses.
Klassenstufen: EF (10./11. Jhg.), Q1 (11./12. Jhg.), Q2 (12./13. Jhg.)
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