| ==Phrack Magazine== | |
| Volume Four, Issue Forty-Four, File 26 of 27 | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| International Scenes | |
| There was once a time when hackers were basically isolated. It was | |
| almost unheard of to run into hackers from countries other than the | |
| United States. Then in the mid 1980's thanks largely to the | |
| existence of chat systems accessible through X.25 networks like | |
| Altger, tchh and QSD, hackers world-wide began to run into each other. | |
| They began to talk, trade information, and learn from each other. | |
| Separate and diverse subcultures began to merge into one collective | |
| scene and has brought us the hacking subculture we know today. A | |
| subculture that knows no borders, one whose denizens share the common goal | |
| of liberating information from its corporate shackles. | |
| With the incredible proliferation of the Internet around the globe, this | |
| group is growing by leaps and bounds. With this in mind, we want to help | |
| further unite the communities in various countries by shedding light | |
| onto the hacking scenes that exist there. We have been requesting files | |
| from people to describe the hacking scene in their country, but | |
| unfortunately, more people volunteered than followed through (you know | |
| who you are.) This issue we want to introduce you to the scenes in | |
| Quebec, Sweden and Israel. | |
| ******************************************************************************* | |
| What is going on in the 418 scene | |
| By Gurney Halleck of NPC | |
| Believe it or not, there are hackers and phreakers in the 418 AC and | |
| people are just starting to hear from us. There are only two real H/P BBS in | |
| Quebec City, The Workshop and Miranda BBS. The first one is a NPC hang out | |
| (Northern Phun Co.), a local Hacker/Phreaker group that has a certain fame, | |
| just read Phone Pirates, a recent book by two Toronto journalists.... | |
| The other one is considered a little bit lame by some. Personally, I am | |
| friends with the sysops, they're not real hackers, but generally nice guys. | |
| Here are some names you might have seen in the H/P scene, Blizkreig, | |
| SubHuman Punisher, KERMIT, Atreid Bevatron, Coaxial Karma, Mental Floss, | |
| Fairy Dust, Evil-E, Black Head, Santa Claus, Blue Angel Dream, myself of course | |
| and probably many more I have forgotten to mention. (sorry) | |
| NPC Publishes a monthly magazine and will be celebrating their first | |
| anniversary on November 1st 1993. They have been on national TV and press for | |
| breaking into the computer of the prime minister's cabinet. | |
| In 418, there is only one Internet Node, at Laval University, and to | |
| get a legal account on one of their systems, be ready to shell out 90$ a month. | |
| No kid can pay that much, so that's why there are so many hackers. They hack | |
| anything from old VAX/VMS machines to brand new Suns and Datapac and Edupac. | |
| Back in April of 1993, a hacker, Coaxial Karma, was arrested for trying | |
| to "brute force" into saphir.ulaval.ca, a cluster VAX/VMS. He was working from | |
| information from another hacker, myself, that there were many "virgin" accounts | |
| (account that were issued but never used) and that these accounts all had a | |
| four letter (just letters) password. So he proceeded to brute force the | |
| computer, after 72000 tries, he finally got in. An operator, entirely by | |
| chance, found the logs for the 72000 failed logins for one account on saphir, | |
| an proceeded to call the police. The hacker, being a juvenile, got by easily, | |
| not even loosing his computer. | |
| On September 30th, another hacker, SubHuman Punisher, was arrested | |
| by the RCMP. It all started a long time ago, when people started hacking | |
| into Laval University's systems. First, they installed a password on their | |
| terminal servers, just one password, the same for everybody! Needless to say, | |
| everybody knew it. Second, most sys-admins knew next to nothing about | |
| security, so when they found intruders, they could not keep them out. | |
| Enter Jocelyn Picard, sysadmin of the GEL subdomain and security expert. | |
| He does his job and does it well. He kicked them out for a long time. | |
| (I personally do not think it was his idea to call the RCMP.) | |
| After a while, the hackers where back with a vengeance and using | |
| Laval's systems to hack other systems. So the guys from the CTI (Centre | |
| de Traitement de l'Information) decided to call the authorities. Bell | |
| monitored the phone lines from Sept 16th to Sept 30th. Systems in the ERE | |
| hierarchy in the umontreal.ca domain were also logged for Internet activity. | |
| On the 30th, 2 hackers where arrested. Both of them, their only crime | |
| was wanting to be on the internet. Now is that so bad? | |
| I only knew one of the two, SubHuman Punisher, so I'll tell you what | |
| happened to him. He was charged with theft of telecomunications (that charge | |
| has been dropped) and for illegally using a computer. A new charge as been | |
| added after they drop the first one: copyright infringement. All his | |
| equipment was taken away. We don't think he'll get by as easily as the first | |
| electronic martyr of 418 (as we like to call him). This time it looks serious. | |
| So we at NPC have started a relief fund for his legal defense, The "Fond de | |
| Defense SubHuman Punisher" ( the SubHuman Punisher defense fund). | |
| All contributions are welcomed, write to: | |
| FDSP | |
| 886 St-Vallier St. app 7 | |
| Quebec City, Qc | |
| Canada, G1K 3R4 | |
| ******************************************************************************* | |
| The Swiss Scene | |
| by Holz | |
| Welcome to Switzerland, the country that's famous for, ehmm err, well now | |
| famous for... come to think of it....nothing really. | |
| Well, for those of you that didn't pay much attention at high school: | |
| Switzerland is a rather unimportant country (to anyone but the Swiss) in | |
| the middle of Europe with about 7*10^6 inhabitants and some light industry. | |
| Networks in Switzerland | |
| ----------------------- | |
| Switzerland has two internet providers, SWITCH and CHUUG. Lets deal with them | |
| in that order. SWITCH was originally formed from a consortium of the 9 (?) | |
| or so universities in Switzerland. It's purpose was linking the universities | |
| in Switzerland and providing access to international networks for their | |
| researchers. SWITCH is linked to the nfsnet via CERN (the European center | |
| for nuclear research in Geneva) and INRIA in France. SWITCH's Customers | |
| are almost exclusively universities or large corporations, they don't cater | |
| much to individuals. Most of the Network operates at 2..10 Mb/sec, SWITCH uses | |
| cisco hardware. | |
| The other provider, CHUUG, founded by Simon Poole does cater to individuals | |
| (they offer some for of pub access unix, + slip + uucp/news/mail feed), their | |
| links, which last time I looked went via Germany and Holland are somewhat | |
| slower. CHUUG also links some smaller companies (improware for instance) | |
| Apart from the Swiss Internet, there is a DECNET based Network called CHADNET, | |
| managed by SWITCH which also links the Swiss universities. There is even a | |
| gateway to HEPNET and SPAN at the Paul Schaerrer Institute (PSI) in Zuerich. | |
| Due to the restrictions in DECNET you need to use poor man's routing to get | |
| anywhere. | |
| Some of the universities have non ip internal networks, the most notable | |
| being KOMETH, which links the university of Zuerich and the ETHZ, most | |
| universities however just use their ethernets and don't have any fancy hardware. | |
| Apart from this Switzerland has it's own PDN, Telepac, operated by the Swiss | |
| Ptt (our federal telecommunications agency) with dnic 2284. This network | |
| is accessible at speeds of up to 9600 bps at a fixed charge all over the | |
| country. Apart from Telepac their are several other x25 based networks | |
| directly accessible from Switzerland, notable Sprintnet, with dialins in | |
| Zuerich and Bern, Tymnet with Dialins in Zuerich and Neuchatel, and Infonet. | |
| Last but not least Switzerland has a national vtx system (which i've never | |
| used, and i'm proud of that) called Videotext, which is linked to BTX in | |
| Germany, Prestel in England and Minitel in France. The only reason for using | |
| was the fact that up till recently it could be accessed for free via our | |
| equivalent of the 1-800 number (ours start with 155). The ptt now claims that | |
| this was a "mistake" (some mistake considering it lasted for two years and | |
| was used by everyone and his dog.....but I digress.) | |
| Hacking in Switzerland | |
| ---------------------- | |
| Well there's not much of a scene here. I have known a few (5-10) Swiss hackers | |
| and one or two good ones, but that doesn't go very far. As for boards, I can't | |
| think of any right now. BGB (with nua 0208046451064) used to have a hacker | |
| corner, but that's been closed for some years now I think. Pegasus | |
| (022847521257) which runs on a vax under vms is quite a nice system, where on | |
| occasion you meet people with an interest in vms. | |
| I don't know of any conventions in Switzerland, we've tried to organize one | |
| once (we ended up with three people). Hacking incidentally is illegal in | |
| Switzerland, but only as of this year. | |
| Phreaking in Switzerland | |
| ------------------------ | |
| I don't know much about Phreaking (anything ?). The Swiss telephone system | |
| is a very modern one, and nearly identical to the one in Sweden. This means | |
| that any of the old methods suitable for older exchanges (most notable blue | |
| boxing) don't work. There are some limited possibilities via our 1-800 | |
| system, but Switzerland phone systems aren't easily abused. The switches | |
| incidentally are Siemens AX-10 (does that meen anything to anybody ?) | |
| I know of one or two good phreaks (rather than card abusers) in Switzerland. | |
| Phreaking and any messing with telephones, unlike hacking, has always been | |
| illegal in Switzerland. | |
| Some Incidents | |
| -------------- | |
| Well here's for old times sake. (doubt this can do any harm any more) | |
| 1) | |
| I've already mentioned the Swiss X.25 Network Telepac. To use this you need | |
| a nui, which is usually an 8 character string, and a password, which is six | |
| characters, mixed upper and lower case + usually numbers. Well obviously | |
| the ptt has nuis for internal use, as in this case the one for the employees | |
| of the ptt headquarters in Bern. The nui it seems was available to all the | |
| employees needing access and someone let the secret get out... so for two | |
| years every hacker in Switzerland used this nui to make x25 calls round the | |
| world. In fact it became so popular that the German hackers near the border | |
| found it worth their while to pay the ld charges to Switzerland just so they | |
| could use this nui. Eventually someone noticed. The cost must have been | |
| phenomenal. | |
| 2) | |
| An acquaintance got into the Vax cluster of BAG (our equivalent to NIH). | |
| The people at BAG eventually noticed and kicked him out. In their press | |
| release to the incident, while being forced to admit that someone had got | |
| in they made a firm point of how 'secure' they were, and explained that it | |
| was impossible that anyone had seen any personal data on People registered | |
| as HIV positive. Well this was such an obvious cover-up that my acquaintance | |
| decided to give them a piece of his mind, so he called the national radio, | |
| and gave them an interview live on his motives and accomplishments. | |
| BAG continued to deny his version (but changed all their passwords.) | |
| ******************************************************************************* | |
| The Israeli Scene | |
| by | |
| Herd Beast | |
| Didn't you always want to know about the "scene" in Israel? | |
| YOU WILL... | |
| A SMALL OVERVIEW | |
| **************** | |
| This article was written after I read Phracks 42/43, and the idea seemed | |
| good. I am not affiliated with any person or any group mentioned | |
| in this file. | |
| It's hard to describe the "Israeli scene", so I will start with a short | |
| description of the state of technology in Israel. | |
| TECHNOLOGY | |
| ********** | |
| The Israeli telephone system isn't very advanced. Most of the country | |
| still doesn't even have tone dialing, and while the phone company has | |
| rAd plans about installing CLID and a pack full of other exciting things, | |
| the fact remains that half the country breathes rotary phones and analog | |
| lines. Pathetic as it seems, it still means that tracing someone through | |
| the phone lines can be rather hard; it also means that K0D3 scanning is | |
| abundant. | |
| After the telephones comes the X.25 connection, Isranet: DNIC 4251. | |
| Isranet used to be a "hassle free system", eg every 11 year old could | |
| get a NUI and use it, and NUIs lasted. Those merry times in which | |
| practically everyone who had a modem was an X.25 "hacker" are almost | |
| over. The weakness of Isranet (the telco's fault!) is why if you happened | |
| upon QSD some years ago, you would have probably noticed that after Italian | |
| lesbians, Israelis lurked there the most. Recently, Isranet switched | |
| systems. The old system that just prompted NUI? and ADD? is gone, and | |
| in came the SprintNet (Telenet) system. It is now generally believed | |
| that Isranet is un-crackable. Way to go, Sprint, ahem. | |
| Amongst other thing the Israeli phone company supplies besides an X.25 | |
| network is an information service (like 411) through modem, e-mail/FAX | |
| and database systems (a branch of AT&T EasyLink) and a bunch of other things. | |
| Not to forget the usual "alien" connections, like a TYMUSA connection | |
| (with very low access levels), and toll free numbers to the AT&T USA*Direct | |
| service and sexy-sounding MCI & Sprint operators. | |
| To my knowledge, cellular telephony among phreaks in Israel is virtually | |
| non existent, (that is to say, when talking to phreaks, none of them seems | |
| to care about cellular phones at all, for different reasons one of them | |
| being the starting price which is high), which is a pity but is also a | |
| blessing since security is lax and besides, the Israeli cell phone market | |
| is monopolized by Motorola (whose cell phones re known as "Pele Phones" | |
| which means "Wonder Phones"). | |
| As you might have understood, up until lately, the Israeli phone company | |
| (Bezeq) wasn't very aware of security and boring stuff like that. Now | |
| it's becoming increasingly aware, although not quite enough. The notion | |
| in Israel is that hackers are like computer geniuses who can get into | |
| ANYWHERE, and when last did you see someone like that? So basically, | |
| corporate security is lax (does "unpassworded superuser account" ring a | |
| bell?), although not always that lax. | |
| Last but not least are the elytee -- the computer literate public. | |
| These are most of the people in charge of machines on the *.il domain on | |
| the Internet. Security there is better than usual, with (for example) | |
| "correct password" rules being observed, but (another example) with holes | |
| like /usr/lib/expreserve on SunOS still open. For this reason, there is a | |
| difference between hackers in Israel. There are university students who | |
| play around with the Internet, hack, and are usually not aware that | |
| there is a bigger hacking community beyond IRC. Then, there are the | |
| modemers, who use modems and all the other things, but are generally not | |
| as proficient, since Internet access in Israel is given only to | |
| university people and employees of the very few companies who have | |
| Internet connections. (The notion of public access Unix exists, but | |
| access costs $50 a month and to get it one must have approval of the | |
| ministry of communication because of an old law; and since calling up a | |
| system and running by all the defaults usually does not work, not | |
| everyone has access to the Internet.) | |
| Calling card abuse is very popular in Israel, because Bezeq cannot find | |
| abusers and really doesn't care. Therefore there are a lot of pirates | |
| in Israel who are in very good touch with American pirate groups, and | |
| this includes the works - crackers, artist, couriers. If you know a bit | |
| about the pirate community, good for you. | |
| Hackers as in computer hackers are a little rarer. To become a hacker you | |
| need to pass some grueling tests. First, you resist the lures of becoming a | |
| calling card and download junkie. Then, you have to become proficient | |
| from nothing. Finally most of the Israeli hacking community | |
| hacks for the single reason that goes something like "get into QSD", | |
| "get into IRC" (without paying). Not very idealistic, but it works... | |
| Assuming you passed all these stages, let's say you are 18... and you go | |
| to 3 years in the army. Did I forget to mention that serving in the | |
| army is mandatory in Israel? Not really relevant, but that's life in | |
| Israel, and when you leave the army, you usually forget about hacking. | |
| Up until now I was just explaining things. Now.. | |
| THE PARTICULARS | |
| *************** | |
| I will concentrate on the "modemers" in this section, so first about the | |
| students. You may know this, but there is a lot of "bad" Internet | |
| traffic on *.il, in the form of pirate/virus FTPs and stuff like that. | |
| If you read Usenet, you probably saw at some time a wise ass post such a | |
| site. These are usually the works of students. To be honest, that's as | |
| much as I know, since I'm not a student and my stupidity is not so high | |
| as to assume every Internet user from *.il is a student... | |
| The "serious" modemers hackers don't really hang out in big groups. | |
| They have close friends or work alone, so there is nothing like Israeli | |
| ######Cons. I can't make an estimate of the actual amount of hacking | |
| done in Israel, but I do know that a lot of people got drafted lately. | |
| Other than that, there are a lot of Israelis hanging around on IRC (if | |
| you're into that), but they usually work like k0D3 k0ll3kt0rZ, only | |
| instead of codes they collect Unix account. | |
| In a country that has fewer people than NYC, the total number of | |
| people who actually have modems and do hack AND know what they're doing | |
| is not so large, which is why until now my description didn't sound very | |
| pretty. But considering these facts, they're actually not bad. | |
| There are some "underground" groups in Israel. Not exactly groups as | |
| magazines -- if there is one thing Israel is full of it's local | |
| magazines. These are usually small releases featuring things like "FTP | |
| Tutorial" and "Pascal Trojan" along with several oh-so-accurate anarchy | |
| files. The most prominent, and in the fact the only magazine to have | |
| lasted beyond one issue is called IRA (International Raging Anarchists). | |
| For the sake of the pirates, an Israeli formed group that also has | |
| American members is called HaSP; it usually releases cracks for all | |
| kinds of software. | |
| THE NETWORK | |
| *********** | |
| Some time ago there was an attempt to bring up a hacking network in | |
| Israel. It was called the IHPG (Israeli Hack Phreak Group) and was | |
| a bunch of FidoNet-style echos passed between underground boards. The | |
| subjects on hand were hacking, phreaking, trojans, and viruses. At first | |
| there was a genuine attempt to make things happen, but almost no one shared | |
| information (more accurately, accounts/passwords/codes) and the net | |
| slowly died out. To my information it is still operational on around 3 | |
| boards around Israel, with something like 3 posts per month. | |
| LAW AND ORDER | |
| ************* | |
| The law and the establishment in Israel are divided. For starters, | |
| there is the wide public opinion among the public that every hacker, in | |
| particular those who get caught are computer geniuses. Therefore, in a | |
| lot of cases where hackers (usually university students) get caught, they | |
| are given a better position within the computer staff, or are later hired | |
| by a company (no matter what for -- and it's not always security). | |
| Although police and Bezeq do preach that hacking is a crime etc, I seriously | |
| doubt that there will be such an outrage among computer people if someone | |
| was to go on and build an Israeli ComSec (as an example). | |
| Police has a very limited staff assigned to computer investigations, | |
| (along the lines of 1-2 officers), and they are in charge of everything; | |
| this means they should check calling carders, but also on bank | |
| embezzlers who keep information on "secure" floppies. Guess which cases | |
| get priority? Of course, there is still the phone company and when | |
| things get more serious more man force is issued. | |
| >From time to time, however, there are arrests (see PWN on Phrack 35, | |
| 38 elsewhere). These usually involve (in the case of the guy described on | |
| Phrack 35) a tip from police overseas, who kept bugging the Israeli | |
| police until they made a move, or idiots who sell things. The guy in | |
| the Phrack 35 World News, Deri Schreibman, was arrested after he | |
| supplied credit cards to people in the U.S. and Canada, who turned him | |
| in when they got caught. He himself turned in a lot of people, but his | |
| information "just" led to them being visited. Nothing much has been | |
| heard about that since, but his case got a lot of publicity because he | |
| had a lot of computer equipment, including this/that-boxes, and was | |
| said to have broken in Washington Post and the Pentagon. After him, | |
| there have been raids on hackers but nothing serious happened to them, | |
| and the news coverage was not incredible. A year or so ago one total asshole | |
| went on a national show (nothing like Geraldo) and told everyone how he too, | |
| abused Isranet and the Washington Post; he also claimed that Bezeq | |
| didn't have a clue and that was why he wasn't afraid. He was visited and | |
| his equipment was taken. At much earlier times there was a teenager who | |
| changed an article on the last page on an Israeli newspaper to say that his | |
| math teacher had been arrested for drug dealing; he got to write a computer | |
| program to aid blind and deaf people. That is the general way busts go on | |
| in Israel, because there is no such great danger as to even warrant dreams | |
| of something like Sundevil. There are also sometimes problems in the army, | |
| but they are dealt with internally, by the army (I don't think anyone | |
| gets shot though). | |
| When a bust occurred, usually many people quit fooling around with | |
| Isranet for a while, because all those who did get caught were doing the | |
| same things with Isranet. But except for that, there were no great | |
| waves in the pond after busts, except again for the Deri S. case. This | |
| is due simply to the fact that hackers, in Israel and usually anywhere | |
| else, simply don't amount to the amount of problems "professional" | |
| criminals make to the police, (the same way Israeli software houses chase | |
| down pirating firms and not boards), and since Israel doesn't have an | |
| FBI and/or USSS the law isn't going around pointing guns at hackers. | |
| HACKING IN ISRAEL | |
| ***************** | |
| Hacking or phreaking in Israel in not very sophisticated. The average | |
| Israeli can scan all he likes; Israeli toll free numbers in the format of | |
| 177+Country Code+XXXX exist to almost every country. This means that by | |
| dialing 177 (= 1-800), a country code (440 for the UK, 100 for AT&T, 150 | |
| for MCI, etc), and a number on the XXXX format, you have a chance of | |
| connecting to a number in country whose country code you're using. | |
| Voice mail systems, modems and other things can be found there | |
| (h00ray!). | |
| There are also calling cards and X.25 and 056 (= 1-900) scams, etc, etc. | |
| A nice way to start scanning (if anyone is interested) the 4251 DNIC is | |
| based on area codes (yes, just like Telenet). For example, a lot of | |
| systems in the 04 area code will be somewhere at: 4251 400 ... This | |
| might lead to disappointing results, though, since most systems use Hebrew | |
| (most interesting systems). The best way to get Israeli area codes is by | |
| using a file on international country/area codes put out a while ago... | |
| Funny, but it's more accurate than a C&P phone book. | |
| If you're into social engineering foreigners, give 1 800 477-5664 (AT&T) | |
| or 1 800 477-2354 (MCI) a call. These will get you to an Israeli | |
| operator who will be happy to place a call for you, if you're into | |
| experimenting (another one of Bezeq's new services, called | |
| Israel*Direct... also available from the UK, Ireland, Germany and more.) | |
| CONCLUSION | |
| ********** | |
| I hope you have learned about the Israeli scene. My purpose was NOT to | |
| dis anything, it was to show that even though we live in this | |
| global village of networks and electronic data exchange (ohh), living in | |
| outer butt-fuck (I did not invent this term) has its advantages, in the | |
| form of basic stupidity, and its disadvantages in the form of lack of | |
| technology and organization in the community. Yeah. | |
| There are still many nice things about hacking in Israel. Enjoy your life. | |