

The FBI's most wanted cybercriminal finally tells his story—and yes, there's a game called 'Spot the Fed.'
OWNED presents the 50 year history of the law-spurning tech tradition of hacking. This vibrant movement gained momentum in the 1960s with Captain Crunch and phone phreaking and now includes annual DefCon hacker conventions in Las Vegas (an amusing highlight of these is the fun game "Spot the Fed"). Kevin Mittnick, dubbed by the New York Times "FBI's Most Wanted Cybercriminal" speaks for the first time about the crimes that lead to his conviction. Misanthropic hacker Fuqrag casually wreaks havoc on government websites from a claustrophobic trailer in an anonymous trailer park.
Acting
Kevin Mitnick's first on-camera confession is genuinely riveting.
Production
Ridiculous 'Spot the Fed' DefCon footage is pure chaotic gold.
Director
Jennifer Read
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
John Draper really did use a plastic whistle from Cap'n Crunch cereal to hack phone lines—the 2600 Hz tone gave free long-distance calls. FREE
This doc captures hacker culture right before it split into two tribes: Silicon Valley billionaires and Anonymous-style hacktivists. LIGHT