Randal L. Schwartz

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Randal L. Schwartz

Born November 22, 1961 (1961-11-22) (age 46)
Residence Portland, Oregon
Nationality American
Other names merlyn (internet handle)
Occupation Programmer, Author, Instructor
Employers Stonehenge Consulting Services, Inc.
Known for Schwartzian transform
Website
www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/

Randal L. Schwartz (born November 22, 1961) is an American author, system administrator and programming consultant. Schwartz is the co-author of several widely used books about Perl, a programming language for computers, and has written regular columns about Perl for several computer magazines. He popularized the Just another Perl hacker signature programs. He is a founding board member of the Perl Mongers, the worldwide Perl grassroots advocacy organization. He is currently a co-host on FLOSS Weekly.

Schwartz's name is also associated with the Schwartzian transform, a trick to efficiently sort a list according to a computation, without repeating the computation many times for each element of the list.

Since 1985, Schwartz has owned and operated Stonehenge Consulting Services, Inc.

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[edit] State of Oregon vs. Randal Schwartz

In July 1995, Schwartz was convicted in the case of State of Oregon vs. Randal Schwartz. According to the prosecution, Schwartz, then working as a consultant for Intel, illegally bypassed computer security, gaining access to computers on which his accounts had been disabled, by means of other users passwords and a backdoor program called "gate", in order to gain access to a password file. According to Schwartz, he was only trying to show that management employees of Intel were selecting passwords that could be easily guessed by individuals who then could compromise computer security. Prosecutors rebutted that Schwartz failed to notify anyone at Intel of the security weaknesses, and further alleged that Schwartz had admitted that he "needed them in case they caught me doing it and they would shut me down", depriving him of access to Intel's computer resources.

Schwartz was convicted on all three felony counts, with one reduced to a misdemeanor. On September 11, 1995, he was sentenced to several years' probation, a fine of US $ 68,000, and left to pay about US $ 170,000 in personal legal bills.[1]

On February 1, 2007, his arrest and conviction records were sealed through an expungement action, and he is legally no longer a felon.[2]

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] References

  1. ^ Intel v. Randal Schwartz: Why Care? by Jeffrey Kegler, February 4, 1996.
  2. ^ State of Oregon vs. Randal Schwartz - Case summary

[edit] External links

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