)
A. J. Weberman popularized the word
garbage-ology in 1971 in an
Esquire cover story about searching through celebrity trash, including
Bob Dylan's trash, for journalistic information. In this sense, garbology is an investigative tool for law enforcement,
journalists,
corporate espionage,
private investigators,
paparazzi, In the 1990s, the
Trinity Foundation found evidence in dumpsters that the organization of the crooked televangelist
Robert Tilton discarded prayer requests it received after removing the money inside. Investigator
Benjamin Pell sold information gleaned from paperwork in prominent people's garbage to the British press in the 1990s. In British English, this practice is called "binology". Starting in the mid-1970s and 1980s,
phone phreaks and
computer hackers used
dumpster diving, which they called garbology or "trashing", as a strategy to find system manuals and other information for
social engineering and circumventing security measures. Early hackers including the
Masters of Deception and
Susan Headley used this method to learn about telephone company systems. In Weberman's 1980 book
My Life in Garbology, he tells the story of
Jerry Neil Schneider, who scavenged documents from
Pacific Bell dumpsters that helped him
fraudulently obtain equipment from the company in the early 1970s. Protection against unauthorized extraction of information from discarded materials, such as using
paper shredders and destroying
hard drives before disposal, remains part of
physical information security. At
electronic waste recycling sites,
scam artists may try to extract
passwords and other
personal data from discarded hard drives to use for
credit card fraud and
identity theft. The
Supreme Court found in
California v. Greenwood (1988) that
warrantless search of garbage set out for disposal was not against the
Fourth Amendment, allowing law enforcement use of "trash pulls" and "garbage pulls". Many counties and cities in the United States have ordinances against unauthorized retrieval of materials from trash, considering it
trespassing or
garbage theft. ==See also==