| ==Phrack Inc.== | |
| Volume Three, Issue 30, File #11 of 12 | |
| PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN | |
| PWN PWN | |
| PWN P h r a c k W o r l d N e w s PWN | |
| PWN ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ PWN | |
| PWN Issue XXX/Part 1 PWN | |
| PWN PWN | |
| PWN Created, Written, and Edited PWN | |
| PWN by Knight Lightning PWN | |
| PWN PWN | |
| PWN Special Thanks to Dark OverLord PWN | |
| PWN PWN | |
| PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN | |
| Happy Holidays and Welcome to Issue XXX of Phrack World News! | |
| This issue of Phrack World News contains stories and articles detailing events | |
| and other information concerning Acid Phreak, AT&T, Apple Computer Co., | |
| Bellcore, Bernie S., Klaus Brunnstein, Cap'n Crunch, Captain Crook, Chaos | |
| Communications Congress, Cheshire Catalyst, Clifford Stoll, CompuServe, Leonard | |
| Mitchell DiCicco, Emmanuel Goldstein, FCC, Katie Hafner, Harpers Magazine, | |
| Intellical, Michael Synergy, Kevin David Mitnick, Phiber Optik, Phonavision, | |
| Phrozen Ghost, Prime Suspect, Sir Francis Drake, Susan Thunder, Telenet, Terra, | |
| Tuc, Tymnet, The Well, and... | |
| Announcing the Fourth Annual... | |
| SummerCon '90 | |
| June 22-24, 1990 | |
| Saint Louis, Missouri | |
| This year's convention looks to be the more incredible than ever. Many of you | |
| will be hearing from us directly over the next few months about what will be | |
| taking place and where SummerCon '90 will be held specifically. The posted | |
| date is of course a tentative one (as we are still six months away), but any | |
| and all changes or new information will be in PWN and passed to our network | |
| friends. | |
| If you are thinking about attending SummerCon '90, please find a way to contact | |
| us as soon as possible. If you are not on the Internet or one of the public | |
| access Unix systems across the country, then post a message on bulletin boards | |
| that asks who is in contact with us. Chances are that there will be someone on | |
| there that can reach us. | |
| Knight Lightning / Forest Ranger / Taran King | |
| "A New Decade Is Upon Us... And The Future Never Looked Brighter!" | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| Mitnick's Partner Gets Community Service November 29, 1989 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| By Kathy McDonald (New York Times) | |
| "Man Sentenced To Community Service For Helping Steal Computer Program" | |
| LOS ANGELES -- A federal judge has sentenced a 24-year-old suburban Calabasas | |
| man to community service at a homeless shelter for his role in helping computer | |
| hacker Kevin Mitnick steal a computer security program. | |
| In rejecting a sentencing report that suggested a prison term, U.S. District | |
| Judge Mariana Pfaelzer noted that Leonard Mitchell DiCicco had voluntarily | |
| notified authorities of the computer hacking. | |
| "I think you can do some good" in the community by using his computer skills | |
| productively, Pfaelzer told DiCicco. | |
| She sentenced DiCicco to five years of probation, during which he must complete | |
| 750 hours of community service through the Foundation for People, a Los Angeles | |
| group that matches probationers with community service projects. | |
| DiCicco was assigned to develop a computer system for the Anaheim Interfaith | |
| Shelter, said Frances Dohn, a foundation official. | |
| DiCicco also was ordered to pay $12,000 in restitution to Digital Equipment | |
| Corporation of Massachusetts, from which Mitnick stole a computer security | |
| program. | |
| Assistant U.S. Attorney James Asperger agreed with the community service | |
| sentence, saying DiCicco's cooperation had been crucial in the case against | |
| Mitnick. | |
| DiCicco reported Mitnick to DEC officers. Mitnick later admitted he stole the | |
| program and electronically brought it to California. | |
| DiCicco pleaded guilty in July to one count of aiding and abetting the | |
| interstate transportation of stolen property. He admitted that in 1987 he let | |
| Mitnick, age 25, of suburban Panorama City, use his office computer at | |
| Voluntary Plan Administrators in Calabasas to break into the DEC system. | |
| Mitnick pleaded guilty and was sentenced in July to one year in prison and six | |
| months in a community treatment program aimed at breaking his "addiction" to | |
| computer hacking. | |
| Under a plea bargain agreement with the government, DiCicco pleaded guilty in | |
| July in exchange for a promise that he would not be prosecuted for any of the | |
| other instances of computer hacking he and Mitnick carried out. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| If you are looking for other articles related to Leonard Mitchell DiCicco and | |
| the famous Kevin David Mitnick please refer to; | |
| "Pacific Bell Means Business" (10/06/88) PWN XXI....Part 1 | |
| "Dangerous Hacker Is Captured" (No Date ) PWN XXII...Part 1 | |
| "Ex-Computer Whiz Kid Held On New Fraud Counts" (12/16/88) PWN XXII...Part 1 | |
| "Dangerous Keyboard Artist" (12/20/88) PWN XXII...Part 1 | |
| "Armed With A Keyboard And Considered Dangerous" (12/28/88) PWN XXIII..Part 1 | |
| "Dark Side Hacker Seen As Electronic Terrorist" (01/08/89) PWN XXIII..Part 1 | |
| "Mitnick Plea Bargains" (03/16/89) PWN XXV....Part 1 | |
| "Mitnick Plea Bargain Rejected As Too Lenient" (04/25/89) PWN XXVII..Part 1 | |
| "Computer Hacker Working On Another Plea Bargain" (05/06/89) PWN XXVII..Part 1 | |
| "Mitnick Update" (05/10/89) PWN XXVII..Part 1 | |
| "Kenneth Siani Speaks Out About Kevin Mitnick" (05/23/89) PWN XXVII..Part 1 | |
| "Judge Suggests Computer Hacker Undergo Counseling"(07/17/89) PWN XXVIII.Part 1 | |
| "Authorities Backed Away From Original Allegations"(07/23/89) PWN XXVIII.Part 1 | |
| "Judge Proposes Comm. Service For Hacker's Accomp."(10/13/89) PWN XXX....Part 1 | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| Chaos Communications Congress | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| by Terra of the Chaos Computer Club | |
| On December 27-29, 1989 is the Chaos Communication Congress at Eidelstaedter | |
| Buergerhaus, Hamburg, West Germany. | |
| The topics of this Congress include: | |
| - The new German PTT law | |
| - Discussion about Copyright and Freedom of Information act | |
| - Women and Computers | |
| - Mailbox and other Networks (Zerberus, InterEuNet, UUCP) | |
| - Workshops for East and West German people to build networks between the two | |
| countries. | |
| - Discussion between Professor Klaus Brunnstein and CCC members about the | |
| problems of viruses and worms. | |
| - Workshops about Unix and UUCP for beginners, advanced, and special people | |
| - Presswork in a special room | |
| - Workshop Cyberbrain or Cyberpunk | |
| - Workshop and Discussion about Secure Networks (Special: TeleTrust, coding | |
| mixed gateways) | |
| The prices to enter the Congress are | |
| 33 DM for Normal people | |
| 23 DM for CCC-members | |
| 53 DM for Press | |
| Regards, | |
| Terra | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| Phonavision At The University of California October 15, 1989 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| Taken From the New York Times | |
| CALIFORNIA -- Students at two campuses of the University of California, at | |
| Berkeley and Los Angeles, have become the test market for a new public | |
| video-telephone booth called Phonavision. | |
| Its developers claim that it is the world's first video telephone for the | |
| general public. | |
| Each of the campuses has one of the large, silver-color phone booths in its | |
| student union. Phonavision opened on October 9, for a week of free | |
| demonstrations. Starting October 16, video phone calls from one campus to the | |
| other will cost $10 for three minutes. | |
| "We view all this semester as a test," said Stephen Strickland, chief executive | |
| officer of the Los Angeles-based company, Communications Technologies, that | |
| developed the video phones. "We want to be sure that when we do go to market | |
| with this service, it's as good as it can be." | |
| "We feel we're probably six months to a year away from having a system that we | |
| can go out and market," Strickland said. "I see them in airport lobbies, hotel | |
| lobbies, shopping centers, indoor high-traffic locations." Video telephones | |
| are already widely used in business, he added. | |
| Phonavision callers speak to each other on standard telephone receivers. | |
| A snapshot-size image of their own face is projected on one half of a small | |
| screen, and the other half shows a picture of the person to whom they are | |
| talking. | |
| As a caller talks, the video screen shows small movements of the mouth or face. | |
| But sudden movements mean a distorted picture. | |
| With a tilt of a caller's head, for example, the image will move to the side in | |
| separate parts, starting with the top of the head and moving down in a wavelike | |
| motion. | |
| Annalee Andres, a sophomore from Santa Ana, California, who has not yet | |
| selected a major, was one of the first students to try out Berkeley's new video | |
| phone. She and her friends crowded around the phone booth in the Martin Luther | |
| King Jr. Student Center, taking turns talking to a student from UCLA. | |
| "I think it has a long way to go yet, but it's really cool," she said. "I can | |
| really see where it's leading." | |
| Ms. Andres speculated on the effects that widespread use of video phones would | |
| have. "What if they catch you and you're just out of the shower?" she asked. | |
| "It'll change dating." | |
| Daniel Ciruli, a junior from Tucson, Arizona, majoring in computer science, was | |
| enthusiastic about his trial session, but he said the fee would keep him away | |
| in the future. | |
| "It's a new toy," he said. "But at $10 for three minutes, with only one other | |
| Phonavision, it's not going to be something that students are beating down the | |
| door to use." | |
| The video phone booth offers other services: Recording and dealing in | |
| videotapes and a place to send and receive fax messages. The booth accepts $1, | |
| $5, $10 and $20 bills, as well as Mastercard and Visa. | |
| Gary Li, a senior from Beijing, who is majoring in electrical engineering, | |
| started setting up Berkeley's phone booth in April. Since then he has spent | |
| about 20 hours a week repairing kinks in the system. | |
| Berkeley and UCLA were chosen as tryout spots for the new service because most | |
| students know somebody at the other campus, said Strickland, the company's | |
| chief executive. | |
| "That's a place where we can get novelty use," he said, adding that "Berkeley | |
| and UCLA have a reputation for being front-runner schools -- places that are | |
| innovative, that like new technology." | |
| Strickland said his company has spent almost three years developing | |
| Phonavision. He would not disclose total costs, but priced the video phone | |
| booths at $50,000 each. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| The Omnipresent Telephone October 10, 1989 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| Taken from The New York Times | |
| Whatever the psychological implications, new technology has clearly made the | |
| phone more omnipresent. More calls are generated because of answering | |
| machines, now owned by 28 percent of the nation's households, according to the | |
| Electronic Industries Association. People who use them say they make and | |
| receive more calls because of them. | |
| "In olden days you would just miss the call," said Michael Beglin, a | |
| businessman in Nashville. | |
| Jill Goodman, an art dealer in New York, says she talks on the phone so often | |
| that "I'm tortured about it, teased and insulted." She uses the phone to | |
| socialize, shop and check in with people she wants to stay in touch with but | |
| does not want to take the time to see. | |
| "I have two lines in the country, two lines at home in the city and three lines | |
| in my office, if that gives you any idea of how much phone I can generate," she | |
| said. | |
| A month ago, after resisting initially, she decided to have a car phone | |
| installed. "I thought it might be nice to have a couple of hours without being | |
| reachable," she said. "But I didn't like not being able to reach when I wanted | |
| to." | |
| Increasingly, too, people are using the phone to get services, information and | |
| products. | |
| The 900 numbers, which require callers to pay the cost, and the 800 numbers, | |
| paid for by the calls' recipients, are growing quickly. | |
| Sprint Gateways started a new 900 service in May that already has 250 lines. | |
| Callers can get wrestling trivia, financial updates, real-estate information | |
| and a host of other data. They can even play a version of "Family Feud," which | |
| receives as many as 7,000 calls a day, said Adrian Toader, the director of | |
| sales and marketing. | |
| Telephone shopping through 800 numbers continues to grow, too. In 1986, L.L. | |
| Bean, the Freeport, Maine, retailer, received 60 percent of its orders by | |
| telephone and 40 percent by mail; by 1988, telephone orders had risen to 70 | |
| percent. Like an increasing number of retailers, L.L. Bean allows customers to | |
| call in their orders 24 hours a day. | |
| But callers to 800 numbers often want more than a new shirt or sweater. | |
| Susan Dilworth, who takes telephone orders for L.L. Bean, said, "A lot of | |
| people call and say: 'I'm coming to New England for the first time. How | |
| should I dress?'" Other callers order merchandise but then begin talking about | |
| their personal lives. "I think they're lonely," Mrs. Dilworth said. | |
| Indeed, these anonymous but personal contacts are so popular that some people | |
| are becoming hooked. | |
| Marilyn Ng-A-Qui, the acting executive director of the New York City Self-Help | |
| Clearinghouse, said one man called looking for help because he had run up a | |
| $5,000 bill calling 900 numbers. "It is emerging as a problem all over the | |
| country," she said. | |
| Despite the deluge of telephone conversation, there are holdouts. Lois Korey, | |
| a partner in a New York advertising agency, writes letters whenever she can, | |
| often suggesting lunch meetings. "I really like to see who I'm talking to," | |
| she said. | |
| But even her partner, Allen Kay, calls her from his office just four feet away. | |
| The only time he could not telephone, Mrs. Korey said, was when he was in his | |
| car. And now those days are over. "He got a car phone a month ago, and he | |
| calls all the time," she said. "When I sit in the front seat of his car, I try | |
| to step on it." | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| Higher Phone Rates For Modem Users November 26, 1989 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| (Material gathered from an Apple digest on Usenet) | |
| A new regulation that the FCC is quietly working on will directly affect you as | |
| the user of a computer and modem. The FCC proposes that users of modems should | |
| pay extra charges for use of the public telephone network which carry their | |
| data. | |
| In addition, computer network services such as CompuServe, Tymnet, & Telenet | |
| would also be charged as much as $6.00 per hour per user for use of the public | |
| telephone network. These charges would very likely be passed on to the | |
| subscribers. | |
| The money is to be collected and given to the telephone company in an effort to | |
| raise funds lost to deregulation. | |
| Jim Eason of KGO newstalk radio (San Francisco, California) commented on the | |
| proposal during his afternoon radio program during which, he said he learned of | |
| the new legislation in an article in the New York Times. Jim took the time to | |
| gather the addresses which are given below. | |
| It is important that you act now. The bureaucrats already have it in there | |
| mind that modem users should subsidize the phone company and are now listening | |
| to public comment. Please stand up and make it clear that we will not stand | |
| for any government restriction on the free exchange of information. | |
| The people to write to about this situation are: | |
| Chairman of the FCC | |
| 1919 M Street N.W. | |
| Washington, D.C. 20554 | |
| Chairman, Senate Communication Subcommittee | |
| SH-227 Hart Building | |
| Washington, D.C. 20510 | |
| Chairman, House Telecommunication Subcommittee | |
| B-331 Rayburn Building | |
| Washington, D.C. 20515 | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| Here is a sample letter: | |
| Dear Sir, | |
| Please allow me to express my displeasure with the FCC proposal which | |
| would authorize a surcharge for the use of modems on the telephone network. | |
| This regulation is nothing less than an attempt to restrict the free exchange | |
| of information among the growing number of computer users. Calls placed using | |
| modems require no special telephone company equipment, and users of modems pay | |
| the phone company for use of the network in the form of a monthly bill. In | |
| short, a modem call is the same as a voice call and therefore should not be | |
| subject to any additional regulation. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| FCC Orders Refunds to Long-Distance Companies November 30, 1989 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| Taken from Associated Press | |
| WASHINGTON -- Local telephone companies may have to refund as much as $75 | |
| million to long-distance companies and large private-line business customers, | |
| the Federal Communications Commission says. | |
| Pacific Northwest Bell in Idaho is one of the 15 companies named. The local | |
| phone companies accumulated overcharges between 1985 and 1988 under FCC | |
| guidelines that allowed prices of these high capacity private-line services to | |
| exceed the phone companies' costs of providing the services. | |
| The FCC ordered a refund as it considered challenges to the special pricing | |
| scheme, which the local phone companies provide for long-distance companies or | |
| large business customers. The commission voted 4-0 that the scheme was legal | |
| during the 1985-88 period, when the high prices were designed to keep too many | |
| customers from switching from the regular public network to private lines, but | |
| that market conditions no longer justify continuation of the special pricing. | |
| The commission said it expects the local phone companies to refrain from | |
| requesting such special prices in the future. | |
| While examining the challenges to the special pricing scheme, the commission | |
| said it found that local phone companies in some cases had charged more than | |
| allowed under the commission's guidelines. Therefore, the companies must | |
| refund those charges, which could amount to as much as $75 million, the | |
| commission said. The FCC said the amount of the refunds will not be known | |
| until the local phone companies file detailed reports with the commission. The | |
| companies have 40 days to make their filings. | |
| The companies found not to be in compliance with the commission's pricing | |
| guidelines from October 1, 1985 to December 31, 1986 were: | |
| - Diamond State | |
| - South Central Bell in Alabama | |
| - Southwestern Bell in Missouri and Oklahoma | |
| - Northwestern Bell in Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, and North Dakota | |
| - Pacific Northwest Bell in Idaho | |
| Pacific Northwest Bell is now called U.S. West Communications and is the phone | |
| company that serves most Seattle-area residents. | |
| Companies found not complying from January 1, 1987 to December 31, 1988 were: | |
| - Ohio Bell | |
| - Wisconsin Bell | |
| - Southern Bell in North Carolina and South Carolina | |
| - South Central Bell in Mississippi and Tennessee | |
| - Pacific Bell | |
| - Nevada Bell | |
| - Southwestern Bell | |
| - Mountain Bell | |
| - Northwestern Bell | |
| - Cincinnati Bell | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| AT&T v. Intellicall: Another Lawsuit November 8, 1989 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| Dallas -- AT&T filed a lawsuit charging that a Texas-based corporation equips | |
| its pay telephones to illegally obtain billing information owned by AT&T. | |
| The lawsuit asks for $2 million in punitive damages and an undetermined amount | |
| in actual damages from Intellicall Inc., headquartered in Carrollton, Texas. | |
| It also asks the U.S. District Court in Dallas to order Intellicall to stop its | |
| unauthorized use of AT&T billing information. | |
| At issue is how Intellicall pay phones determine the validity of calling card | |
| numbers for billing purposes. AT&T contends that Intellicall pay phones are | |
| designed and programmed by Intellicall to reach into and obtain the information | |
| directly from AT&T's card validation system. | |
| That system, called Billing Validation Application (BVA), is a part of AT&T's | |
| network facilities. Before AT&T completes a call that will be charged to an | |
| AT&T Card, its validation system verifies that the number provided by the | |
| customer is currently valid. | |
| Based on contractual arrangements made before the 1984 breakup of the Bell | |
| System, regional Bell telephone companies also use the validation system. AT&T | |
| does not permit competitors such as Intellicall to use the system because the | |
| system was built by AT&T and contains valuable competitive information. | |
| AT&T alleges that when callers use an AT&T Card or Bell company calling card at | |
| an Intellicall pay phone, the pay phone automatically places a separate call | |
| through AT&T or local Bell facilities to a pre-programmed telephone number so | |
| that AT&T's validation system will automatically check the card number. | |
| If the card number is valid, the Intellicall pay phone then puts through the | |
| original customer call. | |
| "As a result of these practices," the lawsuit says, "Intellicall | |
| surreptitiously and without authorization obtains validation data from AT&T, | |
| obtains fraud control for calls by its customers without having to invest in | |
| fraud control facilities or otherwise purchase fraud control services, imposes | |
| costs on AT&T, and... obtains an unfair advantage over its competitors | |
| providing pay telephone and/or long-distance service, including AT&T." | |
| Although AT&T does not authorize other companies to accept the AT&T Card and | |
| does not permit competitors to use its validation system, the lawsuit notes | |
| that Intellicall could purchase validation services for Bell company calling | |
| cards from other companies. | |
| AT&T said it notified Intellicall that it was violating AT&T's proprietary | |
| rights and gave Intellicall every reasonable opportunity to halt the fraudulent | |
| validation practice. Only after Intellicall persisted in its unfair practices | |
| did AT&T decide to take legal action. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| AT&T v. Intellicall: The Lawsuit Is Over November 13, 1989 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| Dallas -- AT&T and Intellicall, Inc. today announced the settlement of a | |
| lawsuit filed by AT&T against Intellicall, seeking damages and an injunction. | |
| AT&T had accused Intellicall of unauthorized access to AT&T's calling card | |
| validation system. | |
| The settlement also covered potential counterclaims which Intellicall intended | |
| to file against AT&T. | |
| In the agreement, Intellicall acknowledged AT&T's proprietary rights in the | |
| Billing Validation Application system, and agreed to make modifications in its | |
| licensed pay telephone software to safeguard against unauthorized access and | |
| use of the AT&T system. | |
| The terms of the agreement include an undisclosed payment by Intellicall to | |
| AT&T to contribute to the establishment of a compliance program which will | |
| permit AT&T to monitor unauthorized access to its billing systems. | |
| "AT&T is pleased that a settlement recognizing AT&T's proprietary right to the | |
| validation system was reached so quickly," said Gerald Hines, director of AT&T | |
| Card Services. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |