There seems little point trying to turn back the tide now. The hacker as a bad guy has caught on and hacking is definitely perceived as a bad thing by the public at large. But it is unfortunate for those who grew up using "hack", "hacking" and "hacker" without the bad connotations. The speed with which the new definition has swept in has left those in the know missing a word, and a useful one at that.

The term "hacker" seems to have originally developed decades ago at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United States, a fabled source of geek wisdom and wizardry. There a hacker was a fairly general term for any kind of enthusiastic amateur expert. A computer hacker was someone who really knew computers, loved computers, and threw their time wholeheartedly into exploring them and their possibilities.

The term evolved a bit over the years. Before the word was usurped, calling someone a computer hacker meant that they were an agile, seat-of-the-pants developer, knocking out one ingenious thing after another. "Hacking" described the gleeful programming style of such people or, quite often, could be just a synonym for any kind of programming. And the term "hack" is commonly used by programmers to refer to a quick-and-dirty (but not destructive) fix for a problem. Companies like Facebook openly promote their "hacker way" of doing business, meaning they search for creative ways to solve problems and develop products.

Not everyone approved of the hacker approach, but it wasn't considered malicious. Hackers - in the traditional sense - are no more malicious than hipsters. Not everyone wants to be one, but they aren't intrinsically evil. In fact, some of their flair may be coming back in fashion, as companies and government agencies lash on to "hackathons" as ways to solve technical and marketing challenges.

I remember once reading a book (long lost to the mists of time, and to Google) aimed at kids that introduced the reader to computers and held up the hacker as a role model. Times have changed. And yet the old sense lingers on. Steadfast old-school hackers are reluctant to let the word go and similar words - like geek, or maker - don't quite capture its meaning.