MILWAUKEE - Paul Watson thought he saw a security problem that
could seriously hurt the Internet, and he was willing to spend his
nights, weekends - even his vacation - figuring it out. <
"Just putting in hours researching intricacies of protocol and
stuff is a lot of fun," Watson said Tuesday, soon after landing in
Vancouver, British Columbia. <
The 35-year-old Milwaukee man discovered a flaw in the underlying
technology for nearly all Internet traffic that, left unaddressed,
could be used to seriously disrupt its flow of information. He is
expected to explain his findings Thursday at an Internet security
convention in Vancouver. <
At a conference last summer, Watson, an information security
specialist at Rockwell Automation, heard experts say it wasn't
practical to use the security problem to attack the Internet. <
"During their talk, I saw what I thought was a flaw in their
logic, asked a brief question, didn't like the answer and
immediately went out by the pool and started the first draft of my
research," he said. <
About two months later, his work was nearly done. <
But not before he took two weeks off to concentrate in his
basement, which Watson said has more than 30 computer systems "for
recreation." <
"It's his work, it's his hobby, it's just something he enjoys,"
said Watson's wife, Cynthia. "He pretty much lives in the basement."
<
So she and her husband's colleagues said they were not surprised
he made the discovery. Paul Watson kept his bosses at Rockwell up to
date during his research. <
Watson said he was a little taken aback by all the attention his
findings received Tuesday from the tech community and governments
around the world. <
Unlike others who intentionally disrupt the Internet, Watson
looks to fix the problems he finds in computer systems. Watson also
doesn't fit the quiet, dull stereotype of a hacker, his wife said.
Besides computers, he enjoys skiing, running and hanging out with
their two daughters, ages 8 and 13. <
But Paul Watson doesn't mind one stereotype about computer
experts. <
"I'm a hard-core geek through and through," he said. "To me, it's
the biggest compliment anyone could give me to call me a nerd." <