Back in mythical 1184 B.C. and after a long siege of the city of Troy, the Greek soldiers decided to construct a huge hollow wooden horse supposedly as a peace offering to the trojans, bearing the inscription “From the Greeks to the goddess Athena”. Inside that horse, a select force of men was hidden. The Greeks pretended to sail away, while the Trojans pulled the horse into the city as a victory trophy. After a feast, everyone fell fast asleep and the Greek forces attacked the city from the inside. The Greek army won the war in one night, after a fruitless ten-year siege. The expression Trojan Horse today denotes entry by trickery, guile and cunning, while in computing “Trojan” is any malware that misleads users of its true intent by disguising itself as a standard program. The techy term coming in mind? Hacking. No wonder Greeks were, and still are, innovative!