Hacking is often framed as breaking in. But some of the most influential hackers have worked to protect systems, preserve privacy, and defend users from surveillance. Women in cybersecurity have been central to developing tools, protocols, and strategies that safeguard anonymity and digital rights. Their work reminds us that hacking isn’t just about offense: it’s also about ethics, privacy, and resilience.
The ethical dimension of modern hacking
As the internet grew, so did concerns about surveillance, tracking, and data misuse. Protecting privacy became both a technical and a moral challenge. Engineers and researchers developed encryption standards, anonymity networks, and privacy-preserving systems to protect ordinary users and vulnerable communities alike.
Women contributed at the forefront of this movement, often bridging technical research with advocacy and education.
Sarah Jamie Lewis and anonymous networks
Sarah Jamie Lewis is a researcher whose work on anonymous communication networks has been widely cited. She studies the strengths and vulnerabilities of systems designed to protect identity online, from Tor and I2P to privacy-enhanced cryptocurrency protocols.
Her research is technical but also deeply human-centered. By evaluating how users interact with these systems in practice, she helps developers build tools that are both secure and usable. Her contributions shape the safety of journalists, activists, and everyday users navigating an increasingly surveilled internet.
Cryptography and digital rights
Women have also contributed to cryptography research that underpins secure communication. While early cryptography often existed in academic or classified settings, modern privacy challenges required implementation in consumer software and open-source projects.
Researchers like Jude Milhon combined advocacy with hands-on technical work. She encouraged encryption adoption, contributed to early privacy tools, and inspired other women to engage in technical activism.
The work of these pioneers shows that privacy isn’t just about algorithms: it’s about designing systems that protect people.
Privacy research meets ethics
Protecting anonymity online raises both ethical and technical questions:
Invisible, yet indispensable
Like their peers in earlier hacker eras, many women working on privacy and cryptography remain pseudonymous or under-recognised. Their influence is evident in safer messaging apps, anonymous networks, secure operating systems, and privacy-conscious protocols, yet their names rarely make headlines.
By highlighting their work, we see a broader definition of hacking: not just breaking systems, but also defending them, designing for resilience, and protecting human rights.