| ==Phrack Magazine== | |
| Volume Four, Issue Forty-Three, File 3 of 27 | |
| Phrack Loopback | |
| Part II | |
| ====================================================================== | |
| ToneLoc T-Shirt Offer | |
| ====================================================================== | |
| Yes, the rumors are true: A ToneLoc t-shirt is at last available. | |
| The shirt is an extra large, 100% cotton Hanes Beefy-T, silk screened | |
| with four colors on front and eight colors on back. | |
| The front features an "anti-bell" logo, with your favorite corporate | |
| symbol in blue under a slashed circle in red. The ToneLoc logo appears | |
| above, with an appropriate quote below. | |
| The back has six Tonemaps, visual representations of exchange scans, | |
| contributed by ToneLoc'ers from around the globe. The exchange and | |
| scanner's handle is printed below each Tonemap. The handles of the beta | |
| testing team are listed below the maps. | |
| If you act now, a free copy of the latest release of ToneLoc will be | |
| included with your order! Please specify 3.5" or 5.25" disks. | |
| $15 postpaid; add $5 for international orders. | |
| Make your check or money order payable to "ToneLoc Shirt." | |
| Send to: | |
| ToneLoc Shirt | |
| 12407 Mopac Expwy N #100-264 | |
| Austin, TX 78758 | |
| Voice Mail (24 hours): 512-314-5460 | |
| - Mucho Maas | |
| - Minor Threat | |
| [Editor: I have one of these. The only hacker program immortalized in | |
| cotton. Nifty!] | |
| ****************************************************************************** | |
| The return of a telecom legend... | |
| &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& | |
| &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& | |
| && &&&&&&& &&&&& &&&&&&&&&&& &&&&&&&&& &&&&&&&&&&&&&& &&&&&&&& | |
| && &&&&& &&&&&&&&& &&&&& &&&&& && &&&&&&&& &&&&&&&&&&&&& &&&&&&& | |
| && &&& &&&&&&&&& &&&& &&&& && &&&&&&& && &&&&&&&& && & &&&&&& | |
| && & & & &&&&&&&&& &&& & &&& && &&&&&&& && &&&&&&&& && && &&&&& | |
| && && && && && && &&& && && &&&&&&& && &&&&&&&& && &&& &&&& | |
| && &&& &&& && &&&&& && &&& && && &&&&&&& && && &&&&& && &&&& &&& | |
| && &&&&&&& && &&&&& && &&& && && &&&&&&& && && &&&& && &&&&& && | |
| && &&&&&&& && &&&&& && && && &&&&&&& && && &&& && &&&&& && | |
| && &&&&&&& && &&&&&&&&& &&& && && &&&&&&& && && && && &&&& &&& | |
| && &&&&&&& && &&&&&&&&& &&& && && && && & & && &&& &&&& | |
| && &&&&&&& && &&&&&&& &&& && &&&&&&&&&&& && && && && && &&&&& | |
| && &&&&&&& && &&&&&&&&& &&& && &&&&&&&&&&& && && &&& && & &&&&&& | |
| && &&&&&&& && &&&&&&&&&&&&&&& &&&&&&&&&&& && &&&&&&&& && &&&&&&& | |
| && &&&&&&& &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& && &&&&&&&& | |
| &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& | |
| &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& | |
| S O U T H W E S T | |
| A Neon Knights/Metal Communications Experience | |
| cDc | |
| _ _ | |
| ((___)) | |
| [ x x ] | |
| cDc \ / cDc | |
| (' ') | |
| (U) | |
| '..and none but the Bovine survived the onslaught' | |
| -cDc- CULT OF THE DEAD COW -cDc- | |
| cDc communications | |
| -cDc- D0PE SYSTEM -cDc- | |
| --------------------------- | |
| Very K-Rad | |
| 713-468-5802 | |
| No Lame Ratios | |
| Running Baphomet | |
| Sysd00d : Drunkfux | |
| 86,400 Seconds A Day | |
| OoOOooOdlez o' T-Files | |
| The Official HoHoCon BBS | |
| New Pimping Tips Every Day | |
| Tonz o' Nifty Ascii Pictures | |
| Talk To Satan Himself.. Live!! | |
| Free 5-Digit Metro K0DEZ For All | |
| d0Pe Gifs Of Gail Thackeray Online | |
| Read Hate Filled Nazi Skinhead Poemz | |
| Home Of K-RAP : The K-Rad Ascii Possee | |
| Learn How To Make Money! Just Ask Byron! | |
| Necropheliacs & Kidporn Kollekt0rz Welcome | |
| Y0 Y0 Y0 Lonely D00dz! We gotz girlie uzerz! | |
| Lots Of Message Bases With Really K-KeWL Names | |
| Is This Whole "Volcano Ad" Thing Stupid Or What? | |
| GNU Warez From The Future! We Have A Time Machine! | |
| I Think We Have One Of Those Big, EL8 Drive Thingies | |
| No Net Access? Submit Your cDc & Phrack Articles Here! | |
| The Only System Authorized By The Debbie Gibson Fan Club | |
| The Neon Knights Did NOT Die, We Just Went Way Underground | |
| This Thing Is Starting To Look Like That Album St0nerzz Like | |
| Mega KooL Games Like Lemonade Stand And Hunt The Wumpus Deluxe | |
| Hey! It's The Mashed Potato Mountain Thing From Close Encounters | |
| Users Include Lots Of Elite Peoplez You See On Shows Like Dateline | |
| That Really Trendy Super High Speed Modem All Those Warez DooDz Have | |
| cDc / CuD / dFx / Neon Knights / NIA / Phrack / uXu / Video Vindicator | |
| Telco / Systems / Networks / Security / Cellular / Satan / Death / K0DEZ | |
| *************************************************************************** | |
| Hi there! | |
| As a beginner in Cyberspace & a new reader of Phrack, I just wanna say thiz... | |
| IT'S X-CELLENT DUDES!!!!!. | |
| Keep the good work!!!!!. | |
| I only have your latest issue, and I never read previous ones, so this | |
| is maybe old stuff... but I would like to see the Infonet network and | |
| Datapac covered in some of UR articles... let me know if u published something | |
| in recent issues. | |
| Greetings from South America, | |
| LawEnforcer. | |
| (yes, it's an Alias!!!) | |
| [Editor: Well, InfoNet we've never done. Any takers? Datapac I | |
| personally scanned some time ago, but almost ALL of the | |
| 100K of NUA's I found still work. Maybe someone should | |
| take my script and re-scan it. Anyone? Class? Bueler?] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| begin contribution------------------------------- | |
| VMS machines that have captive accounts often have accounts such as HYTELNET. | |
| This is an account which will archie for you, or take you to a few select BBSs | |
| or any of many boring things to do. You simply log in as HYTELNET, there isn't | |
| a password, and go through the menus. Now, that's where the fun begins. If | |
| you use HYTELNET to telnet anywhere, while it is connecting, simply type your | |
| local telnet escape key (something like ^\ or ^]) and then........you have a | |
| telnet prompt. Unfortunately, if you close or disconnect, it will return to | |
| the HYTELNET menus, and you can't open a new connection, since you're already | |
| connected. So, what you do is SPAWN whatever process you want.....you could | |
| SPAWN TELNET or SPAWN FTP or SPAWN anything else for that matter. SPAWN with | |
| no arguments (the shell escape) does not work, however. This works from any | |
| captive account that telnets. So, you can telnet to a VAX that has HYTELNET, | |
| log in as HYTELNET, do what I told you, and then hack to wherever, since the | |
| reports from the target site will show that HYTELNET@insert.vax.site committed | |
| the heinous crimes that you did. | |
| Kaneda | |
| end contribution-------------------------------- | |
| [Editor: Kaneda: thanks for that tidbit. Now I'm sure to get grief | |
| on IRC from someone coming from an odd site. :) | |
| Give my regards to Tetsuo. "But some day...we will be"] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| _ _ | |
| ((___)) | |
| [ x x ] cDc communications | |
| \ / Global Domination Update | |
| (' ') #12 - April 1st, 1993 | |
| (U) | |
| Est. 1986 | |
| New gNu NEW gnU new GnU nEW gNu neW gnu nEw releases for April, 1993: | |
| _________________________________/Text Files\_________________________________ | |
| 221: "Sickness" by Franken Gibe. Paralyzed by thoughts. Rage! Fight! Dark! | |
| 222: "A Day in the Life of Debbie G1bs0n" by The Madwoman. The pop idol faces | |
| her arch enemy on the fields of ninja combat and in the arms of love. | |
| 223: "The B!G Envelope Stuffing Scam" by Hanover Fiste. How to get money. | |
| Make Sally Struthers proud of you. | |
| 224: "The Bird" by Obscure Images. Story 'bout a sad guy who laughs at birds. | |
| It's depressing. Oi's a kooky guy. | |
| 225: "Tequila Willy's Position Paper" by Reid Fleming and Omega. Unknown to | |
| most, Tequila Willy thew his hat in the ring for the 1992 presidential | |
| election. Here's the paper detailing his positions on all the important | |
| issues. Better luck in '96, eh? | |
| 226: "Simple Cryptology" by Dave Ferret. Introductory guide to cryptology | |
| which also includes a good list of other sources to look into. | |
| 227: "Big Ol' Heaping Pile of Shit" by Suicidal Maniac. Buncha poems about | |
| lots of things. Wacky. | |
| 228: "ISDN: Fucking the Vacuum Cleaner Attachments" by Reid Fleming. Intended | |
| for _Mondo 2000_, this file drops science about everyone's favorite future | |
| phone system. | |
| 229: "The Evil Truth About Peter Pan" by Lady Carolin. It's a whole mess of | |
| things you and your puny little mind might not have noticed about this popular | |
| kiddie (hah!) story. | |
| 230: "The 2:00 O'Clock Bus" by Tequila Willy and Bambi the Usurper. Geriatric | |
| porn with some doggy flavor. | |
| _____________________________/Other Stuff to Get\_____________________________ | |
| From: cDc communications/P.O. Box 53011/Lubbock, TX 79453 | |
| This is Swamp Ratte's stuff: | |
| All the cDc t-files on disk by mail, for convenience sake! Specify | |
| MS-DOS or Apple II format 3.5" disks. $3.00 cash. | |
| cDc stickers! Same design as were flying around at HoHoCon, with the | |
| scary-lookin' cow skull. k00l. Send a SASE and 50 cents for a dozen of | |
| 'em (or just send a dollar). | |
| Weasel-MX tape! _Obvious_ 45-minute cassette. This is Swamp Ratte's | |
| funk/punk-rock/hip-hop band. It's a mess, but fun. $3.00 cash. | |
| cDc hat! Yeah, get yer very own stylin' black baseball cap embroidered | |
| with the cDc file-header-type logo on the front in white. This isn't the | |
| foam-and-mesh cheap kind of hat; it's a "6-panel" (the hat industry term) | |
| quality deal. Roll hard with the phat cDc gear. $15.00 plus a buck for | |
| postage. | |
| _Swingin' Muzak_ compilation tape! An hour of rockin' tuneage from | |
| Weasel-MX (all new for '93), Counter Culture, Acid Mirror, Truth or | |
| Consequences, Grandma's V.D., and Sekrut Squirrel. Lotsa good, catchy, | |
| energetic stuff for only $5.00 cash. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| From: FNORD! Publications/2660 Trojan Dr. #912/Green Bay, Wisconsin 54304-1235 | |
| This is Obscure Images' stuff: | |
| FNORD! 'zine #1 & #4 - $2.00 Each | |
| Shoggoth 912 #1 - $0.75 | |
| For some snarly techno grooves, send away for the new tape from Green | |
| Bay's finest (and only) technorave sensation, I OPENING! IO-Illumination | |
| Demo Tape (7 songs of joy) - $5.00 | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| From: Freeside Orbital Data Network/ATTN:dFx-HoHoCon-cDc/11504 Hughes Road #124 | |
| Houston, TX 77089 | |
| This is Drunkfux's stuff: | |
| HoHoCon '92 T-Shirts : Black : XL : Elite : Stylish : Dope : Slammin' | |
| Only $15 + $2 shipping ($2.50 for two shirts). | |
| Your choice of either "I LOVE FEDS" or "I LOVE WAREZ" on front, where | |
| "LOVE" is actually a red heart, ala "I LOVE N.Y." or "I LOVE SPAM." | |
| On the back of every beautimus shirt is... | |
| dFx & cDc Present | |
| HOHOCON '92 | |
| December 18-20 | |
| Allen Park Inn | |
| Houston, Texas | |
| HoHoCon '92 VHS Video : 6 Hours : Hilariously Elite : $18 + $2 Shipping | |
| Please make all checks payable to O.I.S. Free cDc sticker with every | |
| order! w0w! | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| From: Bill's Shirt Thing/P.O. Box 53832/Lubbock, TX/79453 | |
| This is Franken Gibe's stuff: | |
| AIDS sucks! Order a catalog! Nifty t-shirts that make you happy. | |
| Proceeds go to local AIDS Resource Center. Send a $0.29 stamp for the | |
| cat'. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| From: Teach Me Violence magazine/61 East 8th St./Suite 202/New York, NY 10003 | |
| This is The Pusher's stuff: | |
| Teach Me Violence 'zine: | |
| Issue #1 (Mr. Bungle, COC, Murphy's Law) | |
| Issue #2 (Helmet, Supertouch, Agnostic Front, American Standard) | |
| Issue #3 (Faith No More, Chris Haskett, Cathedral, Iceburn, Venom) | |
| $3.00 cash each | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| From: A Day In The Life Of.../P.O. Box 94221/Seattle, WA 98124 | |
| This is Lady Carolin's stuff: | |
| A Day In The Life Of... 'zine, free with two stamps. | |
| Bi-monthly contact list of girlie bands/grrrl bands/female vocalists. $1. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| __________________________________/cDc Gnuz\__________________________________ | |
| "cDc: savin' trees in '93" | |
| Hiya once again, here's whassup: | |
| NEW Internet FTP site: zero.cypher.com. This is Drunkfux and Louis Cypher's | |
| chilly-the-most deal. Login as "anonymous" and get all the cDc stuph fast fast | |
| fast. | |
| NEW cDc Mailing list: Get on the ever-dope and slamagnifiterrific cDc mailing | |
| list! Send mail to cDc@cypher.com and include some wonderlessly elite message | |
| along the lines of, "ADD ME 2 DA MAILIN LIZT!!@&!" | |
| NEW Official cDc Global Domination Factory Direct Outlets: | |
| Cyberspace.Nexus +31-67-879307 [Belgium] | |
| Mirrorshades BBS 903/668-1777 | |
| The Ministry of Knowledge 401/043-3446 | |
| The Crowbar Hotel 713/373-4031 | |
| We're always taking t-file submissions, so if you've got a file and want to | |
| really get it out there, there's no better way than with cDc. Upload text to | |
| The Polka AE, or my Internet address, or send disks or hardcopy to the cDc post | |
| office box in Lubbock, TX. | |
| NEW updated CDCKC0W.TXT file. All the information for sysops to get going | |
| running Factory Direct Outlets. It should be available from wherever you got | |
| this Update. | |
| NEW CDCV9.ZIP is out containing cDc t-files 201-225. Factory Direct Outlet | |
| sysops should get this and put it up on their systems. | |
| See ya in May. | |
| S. Ratte' | |
| cDc/Editor and P|-|Ear13zz |_3@DeRrr | |
| "We're into t-files for the girlies and money." | |
| Write to: cDc communications, P.O. Box 53011, Lubbock, TX 79453. | |
| Internet: sratte@cypher.com, sratte@mindvox.phantom.com. | |
| [Editor: Whew. Any word on those cDc Glow in The Dark Toilet | |
| Seat Covers? I've got my 29.95 ready!] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| Hey there a few of us use this account and wuld like to get phrack | |
| sent to us here if at all possible... :) | |
| We are all Australians and all read your magazine to death.. | |
| a friend of mine runs a board called shred til ya ded which is basically | |
| a hpac and warez assortment... nothing 0 day but definately good for hacking | |
| info... we are in the middle of getting all of your mags online at the moment | |
| you mentioned in phrack 42 that you would like people from other countries | |
| to write pieces about the scene there... well depending on the kind of thing | |
| you want i would be more than happy to give it a go with some mates | |
| thanks | |
| Darkstar | |
| [Editor: Darkstar and anyone else--send me your files about your | |
| scenes in other countries. Nearly everyone who promised me | |
| a file about their country flaked out. You'll see who did | |
| send me a file later in this issue. Other countries: get | |
| off your duffs and send me a file! We want to know what | |
| goes on there! Boards, Busts, History, Hackers, Hangouts, | |
| Groups, Greats, Legends, Lore, EVERYTHING!] | |
| *************************************************************************** | |
| I remember seeing a message somewhere on the WELL saying an issue of | |
| Phrack carried listings of Viruses. Could you tell me which one(s)? | |
| Also, do you know of any sites which have virus listings archived ? | |
| Thanks, | |
| Jon Barber | |
| [Editor: Well, John, Phrack doesn't carry virii info. You might | |
| check around for 40hex. Personally, I think virii | |
| are vastly overrated hype driven onward by McAffee | |
| and other self-serving interests. That is why we | |
| ignore them. (That is also why I don't mention them | |
| when I lecture on computer security...they are no | |
| big thing.)] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| Ok, | |
| So I was reading Phrack 42's listing for SprintNET nodes... But there was | |
| no information on how to access it.. | |
| What are the ACNS For the Sprintnet? Is there a Phrack out that details | |
| use of the SprintNET.. | |
| Would appreciate ANY and ALL, as I've never heard of it being used widely | |
| like the Internet, and would like to know how to use it.. | |
| Jack Flash... | |
| [Editor: Jack...you kids are spoiled. You and your Internet. Hrumph. | |
| Remember when Arpanet was like a 20 or so Universities and | |
| Contractors, and tied to about 100 bases thru Milnet? No? | |
| Sheesh. | |
| To answer your question, Sprintnet (used to be Telenet, and | |
| always will be to me) is a public packet switched network. | |
| It can be accessed in nearly EVERY city in the USA, and in | |
| many large cities in other countries. | |
| The Toll-Free dialups are: 300-2400: 800-546-1000 | |
| 9600 v.32: 800-546-2500 | |
| At the TERMINAL= prompt, type D1. Then to find a local | |
| dialup, at the @ prompt type MAIL. Login as username | |
| PHONES password PHONES.] | |
| ***************************************************************************** | |
| RE: Loop-Back | |
| I was wondering if it would be possible for you to do something on Novell LAN | |
| security, as we have one at my high school. I was also wondering about | |
| bluebox tones...in my area, if you call into the next county, sometimes you | |
| hear what sounds like bluebox tones. I had thought these lines were digital, | |
| and therefore, would not require tones of any type.. any ideas? | |
| RF Burns | |
| [Editor: As for the Novell...check later in this issue. | |
| As for the MF tones...when calls go from one area to another | |
| it is quite common to hear multi-frequency tones. Depending | |
| upon the way the call is routed, your particular pick of LD | |
| carrier and the equipment between you and the destination, | |
| you may hear these tones. You may even be one of the lucky | |
| ones, and be able to seize a trunk. Using certain LD carriers | |
| you can still box, but usually you are stuck with a trunk that | |
| can't get out of the area. Alas.] | |
| ***************************************************************************** | |
| Hi - | |
| I'm a student in the MLS program here at SUNY Albany. I | |
| found out about Phrack while researching a paper for my public policy class, | |
| on the ECPA and shit. | |
| Well, I gave a fabulous 45-minute presentation on it all and then wrote | |
| an even better paper for which I was rewarded with an A as well as an A | |
| for the class. Turns out John Perry Barlow and Mitch Kapor are heroes of | |
| my professor as well. | |
| So now I'm hooked. For my thesis I'm writing a user manual for librarians | |
| on the Internet and helping teach a class in telecommunications. | |
| Just wanted to let you phrack-types know you're my heroes and I want to be | |
| a member of the phrack phamily. Can't send any money, though. *:( | |
| Keep the faith, | |
| hopey t | |
| [Editor: That's really great! Usually profs are terribly anal about | |
| anything regarding Phrack and/or hacking. You are very | |
| lucky to have had such an instructor. Congrats on the | |
| class and good luck with your thesis!] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| Hi! | |
| I was just glancing through Phrack #42, and read the portion | |
| that sez that all computer professionals (essentially) have to | |
| delete this and even old copies of Phrack. | |
| Coupla questions: I'm a Network Administrator for a University, | |
| do I have to comply? It's not like I am a thug from Bellcore or | |
| anything like that. Although one of the things I am concerned with, | |
| professionally, is the security of our systems, I am no Cliff Stoll. | |
| If I were to catch an unauthorized visitor, I would give him the boot, | |
| not chase him down with prosecution in mind. | |
| I have, of course, deleted all my old Phracks as well as #42, | |
| but I would like to be able to re-snarf them. Let me know... | |
| Thanks! | |
| Dan Marner | |
| [Editor: Well, Dan, technically Phrack could quite possibly | |
| be beneficial to you and assist you with your career, and | |
| this is the typical scenario in which we request that you | |
| register your subscription and pay the registration fee. | |
| Of course, we don't have the SS as our own personal | |
| thugs to go break your legs if you don't comply. :) | |
| You might at least try to get your employer to pay for | |
| the subscription. | |
| As far as issues prior to 42 go, KEEP THEM! They are | |
| exempt from anything, and are arguably public domain.] | |
| ***************************************************************************** | |
| Hey, | |
| I need to get in touch with some Macintosh phreakers. Know any? | |
| Anyway, are there any good war dialers or scanners out there for | |
| Macintosh? I need something that picks up PBXs and VMBs as well as | |
| Carriers. | |
| Thanx in advance... | |
| [Editor: I personally avoid the little toadstools like the plague, | |
| and I was unable to get a hold of the only hacker I know who | |
| uses one. If anyone out there on the net could email us | |
| with the scoop on Mac hacking/phreaking utilities it would | |
| be most appreciated.] | |
| ***************************************************************************** | |
| Hello! I was just wondering if you knew of any FidoNet site that carries | |
| back issues of phrack. The main reason behind this, as my link through the | |
| Internet is basically through a FidoNet-type network and I am unable to ftp | |
| files. Any help would be appreciated! | |
| Thanks! | |
| Jason K | |
| [Editor: Phrack pops up everywhere. I would be very surprised if | |
| it wasn't on a ton of fido sites. However, I have no idea | |
| of what those sites may be. If anyone knows of any, | |
| let us know!] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| Can you give me the email address for the 2600 Magazine or | |
| whomever the person in charge. | |
| I've no idea how to contact them, so that's why I'm asking you. | |
| I'm much obliged. | |
| Thanks, | |
| MJS | |
| [Editor: 2600 magazine can be reached at 2600@well.sf.ca.us | |
| To subscribe send $21 to 2600 Subscriptions, P.O. Box 752, | |
| Middle Island, NY, 11953-0752. | |
| To submit articles write to 2600 Editorial Dept., P.O. Box 99, | |
| Middle Island, NY, 11953-0099. | |
| Note: If you are submitting articles to 2600 and to us, | |
| please have the courtesy of LETTING BOTH MAGAZINES KNOW | |
| IN ADVANCE. Ahem.] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| Do you know if there has been a set date and place for the next HoHoCon? | |
| Best Regards, | |
| Mayon | |
| [Editor: Actually, it's looking more and more like HoHoCon will | |
| be December 17, 18, 19 in Austin, TX. It may still | |
| be in Houston, but methinks the Big H has had about enough | |
| of dFx. We'll let you know when we know for sure.] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| Reporter for major metro paper is interested in help finding out anything | |
| there is to find on four prominent people who have volunteered to have their | |
| privacy breached. | |
| Financial fundamentals. Lives of crime. Aches and pains. How rich they are, | |
| where they vacation, who they socialize with. You name it, we're interested in | |
| seeing if it's out there. | |
| All for a good cause. | |
| If you're willing to advise this computer-ignorant reporter, or dig in and | |
| get the dope on these volunteers, please contact him at tye@nws.globe.com | |
| Or call at 617-929-3342. | |
| Help especially appreciated from anyone in the BOSTON area. | |
| Soon. | |
| Thanks. | |
| [Editor: Interesting. This showed up in my box in late June, so it should | |
| still be going. I would recommend watching yourselves in any | |
| dealings with journalists. Take it form one who has been | |
| burned by the press. (And who has a journalism degree himself.)] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| Hey there... | |
| I don't know if this will get to Dispater or to the new editor. Since the | |
| change in editorship, the proper way to contact Phrack has become sort of a | |
| mystery. (The new address wasn't included in Phrack 31.) | |
| Anyway, I'm writing to bitch about the quality of #31. I've got two main beefs: | |
| 1. The article about fake-mail was GREAT until it turned into a "how-to" | |
| primer on using the info given to cause damage. That is exactly the | |
| kind of thing that will end up getting you sued. I have some legal | |
| background, and I'm pretty sure that the author of that article and | |
| possibly even Phrack itself and its editors are now open to a damn | |
| good argument for tortuous negligence if anyone follows the instructions | |
| and damages someone on Compuserve, etc. | |
| The argument will go something like, "Phrack set into motion a chain of | |
| events that led to my client being damaged." You guys should have | |
| just given the info, and left off the moronic ways to abuse it. | |
| 2. The article on "Mall Security Frequencies" was copied directly from | |
| Popular Communications, Nov. 1992 issue. Hell, that was even their | |
| cover story. Can we say "copyright enfringement?" If not, I'm sure | |
| you'll be _hearing_ it a few more times. If I was still practicing, | |
| I'd call 'em up and ask their permission to sue on contingency. | |
| Split the damages obtained on a motion for summary judgment 50/50 with | |
| them. It would only take a week and one filed complaint... | |
| Point is, you have opened yourselves up to get sued and lose EASILY. | |
| As much as I've enjoyed reading Phrack over the years, if this new | |
| staff continues in this manner, I'll be stuck with back-issues. | |
| Cyber (305) | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| To find out more about the anon service, send mail to help@anon.penet.fi. | |
| Due to the double-blind system, any replies to this message will be anonymized, | |
| and an anonymous id will be allocated automatically. You have been warned. | |
| Please report any problems, inappropriate use etc. to admin@anon.penet.fi. | |
| *IMPORTANT server security update*, mail to update@anon.penet.fi for details. | |
| [Editor: I think you meant 41, not 31. But to answer your points: | |
| 1) As long as there is a first amendment, Phrack will | |
| continue to print articles that some may or may not | |
| agree with. Printing the blueprints for an atomic bomb | |
| does not make you an accomplice to those who build it | |
| and detonate it. | |
| 2) Numbers are numbers. Can we even spell "copyright | |
| infringement?" If you were still "practicing..." | |
| We at Phrack wholeheartedly encourage you to again pick | |
| it up, and keep practicing and practicing until you | |
| get whatever it is you were practicing down pat. | |
| Obviously it must have been guitar, and not law. | |
| Such a litigious society we live in. Suing Phrack would | |
| accomplish nothing. It would not even hinder its | |
| publication. Since Phrack has no money, nothing would | |
| be gained. Even if fined, Phrack could not be forced to | |
| sell its computer equipment to pay fines, since this would | |
| be removing the livelihood of the publisher, thus it would | |
| continue its quarterly publication. Where on Earth did | |
| you get such ideas? You obviously know nothing about | |
| lawsuits. Any lawyer would laugh at the thought of suing | |
| Phrack since it would gain nothing financially, and provide | |
| such a huge amount of bad publicity that even if a judgement | |
| were reached in their behalf it would not be worth it. | |
| Oh wait, you were a lawyer. Now I know why the past tense. | |
| But you are correct on one point: we cannot print | |
| copyrighted material without permission. You may have | |
| noted that last issue (among other changes) Phrack | |
| no longer includes full text of news items without | |
| prior permission from the publisher. That was the | |
| ONLY thing that worried me about publishing Phrack, and | |
| so I changed it. | |
| We at Phrack welcome constructive criticism, but at least | |
| have the nerve to email directly, rather than hide behind | |
| an anonymous remailer. That way, someone could have | |
| responded to you in a more direct and expeditious manner.] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| Dear Sir/Madam, | |
| I am a student at ukc in England and wish to subscribe to Phrack receiving | |
| it as email at the following address ks16@ukc.ac.uk thank you and keep up the | |
| good work. | |
| We use unix and I would be interested in getting a copy of su (switch user) | |
| which looks for the user file passwd.su in the users home directory. I don't | |
| know much about unix, but I do know it would need to run from my home directory | |
| and access the kernel. | |
| Many thanks for any help you may be able to give. | |
| S | |
| [Editor: Its "SIR" hehe. Sir Bloodaxe. In any case, if anyone would | |
| care to draft up this modification to su and send it in | |
| I'll print it in the next issue's line noise.] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| I had some beef with Rack's article in PHRACK 42. I've attached a | |
| writeup of comments; you're welcome to a) forward it to him, b) | |
| shitcan it, or c) publish it. | |
| thx, | |
| -Paul | |
| My background: I've been into the scene for about 12 years. My day job | |
| is writing unix s/w for a NASA contractor. My night job... well, never | |
| mind that. I have a strong amateur interest in crypto, and I'd like to | |
| share some of what people in the usenet/Internet community have been | |
| kind enough to teach me. | |
| Racketeer sez: | |
| > If you think that the world of the Hackers is deeply shrouded with | |
| >extreme prejudice, I bet you can't wait to talk with crypto-analysts. These | |
| >people are traditionally the biggest bunch of holes I've ever laid eyes on. In | |
| >their mind, people have been debating the concepts of encryption since the | |
| >dawn of time, and if you come up with a totally new method of data encryption, | |
| > -YOU ARE INSULTING EVERYONE WHO HAS EVER DONE ENCRYPTION-, mostly by saying | |
| >"Oh, I just came up with this idea for an encryption which might be the best | |
| >one yet" when people have dedicated all their lives to designing and breaking | |
| >encryption techniques -- so what makes you think you're so fucking bright? | |
| One real reason for this reaction is that people _have_ been studying | |
| encryption for 100 years or so. As a result, many simple cryptosystems | |
| are continually being reinvented by people who haven't ever made even | |
| a simple study of cryptosystems. | |
| Imagine if someone came up to you and said "Wow! I just found a | |
| totally K00L way to send fake mail! It's radical! No one's ever | |
| thought of it before!" | |
| You'd laugh, right? _Anyone_ can figure out how to forge mail. | |
| Well, _anyone_ can come up with the n-th variation of the Vigniere or | |
| substitution cipher. | |
| An even more important reason for their 'tude is that cypherpunks are | |
| suspicious by nature. A key principle of crypto is that you can only | |
| trust algorithms that have been made public and thoroughly picked | |
| over. Without that public scrutiny, how can you trust it? | |
| The fedz' Digital Signature Standard (DSS) got raked in the crypto and | |
| industry press because the fedz wouldn't disclose details of the | |
| algorithm. "How do we know it's secure?" the cypherpunks asked. "We | |
| won't use it if we don't know it's secure!" | |
| Point being: (for those of you who skipped over) cypherpunks trust NO | |
| ONE when the subject is encryption algorithms. Maybe J. Random Hacker | |
| has come up with a scheme faster and more secure than, say, RSA. If | |
| JRH won't share the details, no one will use it. | |
| Racketeer goes on to talk about DES. One important thing to note is | |
| that the unix crypt() function has NOTHING to do with DES. Here's part | |
| of the SunOS 4.1.2 man page for crypt(): | |
| crypt implements a one-rotor machine designed along the | |
| lines of the German Enigma, but with a 256-element rotor. | |
| Methods of attack on such machines are widely known, thus | |
| crypt provides minimal security. | |
| It's fairly clear that for a known-ciphertext attack (i.e. you | |
| have a block of encoded text, but neither the key nor the plaintext) | |
| will, at worst, require 2^56 decryption attempts. Various schemes for | |
| parallel machines and so forth have been posted in sci.crypt. Does the | |
| NSA have something that can crack DES? Probably. | |
| Remember that DES is mostly used for short-lived session keys. ATMs | |
| are a good example; they typically use a DES key for one communication | |
| session with the central bank. New session, new key. DES is _not_ very | |
| well suited for long-term encryption, since it can probably be | |
| attacked in "reasonable" time by a determined, well-equipped opponent. | |
| Now, on to PGP. Pretty Good Software was indeed threatened with a | |
| lawsuit by Public Key Partners (PKP). PKP holds the patent on the RSA | |
| public-key algorithm. (Many people, me included, don't think that the | |
| patent would stand up in court; so far, no one's tried.) | |
| The nice thing about PGP is that it offers IDEA and RSA in a nice | |
| package. When you encrypt a file, PGP generates an IDEA session key, | |
| which is then encrypted with RSA. An opponent would have to either a) | |
| exhaustively search the entire IDEA key space or b) break RSA to | |
| decrypt the file without the password. | |
| Racketeer also mentions that PGP can optionally compress files before | |
| encryption. There's a solid crypto reason behind this, too. One | |
| well-known and successful way to attack an encrypted file is to look | |
| for patterns of repeated characters. Since the statistical frequencies | |
| of word and letter use in English (and many other languages; some | |
| folks have even compiled these statistics for Pascal & C!) are | |
| well-known, comparing the file contents with a statistical profile can | |
| give some insight into the file's contents. | |
| By compressing files before encrypting them, PGP is moving the | |
| redundancy out of the text and into the small dictionary of | |
| compression symbols. You'd still have to decrypt the file before you | |
| could do anything useful with that dictionary, or even to determine | |
| that it _had_ a signature! | |
| [Editor: Well, Rack is not to blame for all complaints I got about the | |
| file. I printed a file that was several KBytes short of | |
| complete. I noticed it seemed odd, but was assured by | |
| Rack, TK & Presence that I had received the correct file. | |
| I was misinformed, and should have known better than to | |
| print a file I should have known was incomplete. I apologize | |
| to Rack & to all of you. | |
| About the other gripes: Rack, care to reply?] | |
| ***************************************************************************** | |
| In issue #42 of Phrack there was an article about the USPS' practice of | |
| selling change of address information without consumer consent. I sent | |
| the supplied form letter and carbon copied my congressman and senators. | |
| Today I received a reply from the USPS Records Office. | |
| April 1, 1993 | |
| Dear Mr. Rosen: | |
| This concerns your recent Privacy Act request for accountings of | |
| disclosure of mail forwarding information you have provided to the Postal | |
| Service. | |
| Disclosure of your forwarding address might have been made to individual | |
| requesters by post offices or to subscribers to the National Change of | |
| Address File (NCOA) by an NCOA licensee. The NCOA is a consolidated file | |
| of all forwarding information provided by postal customers and stored on | |
| automated media. Listholders may subscribe to NCOA to obtain the new | |
| addresses of individuals for whom they already have in their possession | |
| the old address. | |
| For disclosures made by post offices, we are in the process of querying | |
| the Washington, DC postmaster for any accountings. | |
| For disclosures made from the NCOA system, we will begin querying NCOA | |
| licensees all of which keep logs identifying the particular subscribers to | |
| whom they have given NCOA information. This accounting will not identify | |
| with certainty the subscribers who have in fact received your new address, | |
| but will give you a list of all subscribers receiving NCOA service for the | |
| relevant time period and thus might have received your address. | |
| Because a large number of requests like yours are being received, there | |
| will be a delay in responding. Requests are being processed in order of | |
| receipt and you will be sent the accountings as soon as possible. Your | |
| patience is appreciated. | |
| Sincerely, | |
| Betty E. Sheriff | |
| USPS Records Officer | |
| [Editor: Thanks for sending that letter in! Amazing that someone | |
| in the maze of red tape even thought to make a form letter | |
| to respond. I think I'll demand a disclosure as well.] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| Phrack 42 Errata | |
| We mistakenly noted that the TRW video shown at HoHoCon was dubbed by | |
| Dispater and Scott Simpson. It was actually made by Dispater and ZIBBY. | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| ==Phrack Magazine== | |
| Volume Four, Issue Forty-Three, File 3a of 27 | |
| EDITORIAL | |
| My Problems With Clipper | |
| by Chris Goggans | |
| The introduction of the new government backed encryption chip, Clipper, | |
| has become a much debated issue. I like many others have a large number | |
| of problems with the chip and the problems it may bring in the future. | |
| Why should we believe that this algorithm is robust? For years | |
| and years the NSA has backed DES as the encryption standard, when | |
| cryptoanalysts have consistently brought its strength into question. | |
| Additionally, the NSA has forced companies to submit their routines | |
| for analysis before allowing them to be distributed commercially. At | |
| times they have even requested that the algorithms be purposely | |
| weakened (we will assume that this was so they could more easily | |
| decipher the encrypted data.) | |
| With this in mind, why should we now meet anything endorsed by the NSA | |
| with anything but suspicion? And the fact that they refuse to release | |
| the algorithm for security reasons even further adds to the suspicion | |
| that this chip is either inherently weak and easily broken by the NSA | |
| or that there is a backdoor in the algorithm that will allow the NSA | |
| to effortlessly view any data encrypted with the Clipper. | |
| Assuming that the government is on the level (for once), and they cannot | |
| decipher Clipper-encrypted data without legally obtaining keys from | |
| the assigned escrow agents. The idea that the government will have to | |
| go before a judge and show just cause for needing the keys pacifies some, | |
| but from my own personal experience, the government will always get | |
| what they want. If the Secret Service could get a search warrant to | |
| enter my home based solely upon one posting to an electronic bulletin board, | |
| they could certainly obtain the necessary keys needed to decipher my | |
| speech. In fact, most non-technical persons will become needlessly | |
| suspicious upon the mere mention of someone using encrypted speech mechanisms | |
| and be more easily swayed to release the keys to law enforcement. | |
| Should Clipper be adopted by various government agencies for use, this could | |
| have serious trickle-down effects upon the lives of regular citizens. | |
| Let's say the military decides that they will use Clipper. They will then | |
| most likely require their various contractors to use it as well. Then | |
| after continued use, the contractor may begin to tell its other customers | |
| to communicate with them using Clipper also. Usage could grow | |
| exponentially as more and more people become comfortable with the use | |
| of the secure communications devices until it becomes a defacto standard | |
| without any legal pressures to use it ever mandated by Congress. | |
| Should Congress mandate its use in any form, even if only within the | |
| government itself, this potentiality will rapidly become reality. | |
| If Clipper eventually receives such accepted use, anyone using any other | |
| type of encryption will be immediately suspect. "Why aren't you using | |
| the chip? What do you have to hide?" The government may even outlaw | |
| the use of any other encryption technologies, and if America | |
| has become comfortable and satisfied with Clipper such a law may go | |
| unchallenged, after all, only spies, child pornographers and drug dealers | |
| would have something to hide, right? | |
| As the world's computer networks creep ever further into our daily lives, | |
| and the speed and power of supercomputers multiplies every year a rather | |
| frightening scenario emerges. Since the government is a major funder of | |
| the Internet, who is to say that Clipper won't become the basis for | |
| encrypting over its lines? As our country moves closer to ISDN and the | |
| PSTN and the PSDN's become more intertwined, who is to say that Clipper | |
| won't be the basis for encryption since companies like AT&T already | |
| endorse it? | |
| Imagine if you will, a massively parallel supercomputer, the likes of which | |
| may not exist yet, in a special room in Ft. Meade, or buried underground | |
| in New Jersey, that consistently decrypts all communications and | |
| sorts it according to communicating parties. Then through the use of | |
| AI, the computer decides whether or not such communication presents a threat | |
| "to national security." | |
| The structure of the telephone network already supports such an arrangement. | |
| The purpose of the NSA allows for such an arrangement. The advances in computer | |
| technology will give the potential for such an arrangement. If Clipper is | |
| tainted, yet accepted, there will be no more privacy in America. | |
| Perhaps my view of the government and their ultimate intentions is way off | |
| base. I sincerely hope so, as I do not want to be forced to take the mark | |
| of this beast to conduct my business dealings and to live my life in peace. |