I got my first job in technology when I moved into my dorm freshman year. I had been looking forward to having Ethernet for a while, and once I plugged it in, no network. I realized that they still needed to assign IP addresses, and no network admin was around, so I watched the network, found free IPs, and spun up a DHCP server that gave out these free IPs. A few hours later my port shut off, and the network manager came to my room, asked what I did. I explained, and he offered me a job on the spot. I worked in networking for the university until I hooked up with the Unix guys, and my tech career shot up like a rocket from there. This was late 90s early 00s, so no fear of prosecution then. Hell, we ran a nearly-officially-sanctioned file sharing service when the internet handoff got too busy and we needed people downloading music and movies to lay off. The server ran in a rack in the datacenter for a few years until the MPAA paid a visit.