| ==Phrack Magazine== | |
| Volume Four, Issue Forty-Four, File 8 of 27 | |
| Conference News | |
| Part III | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| A Hacker At The End Of The Universe | |
| by Erik Bloodaxe | |
| Eight hours on a plane isn't that bad. It isn't that fucking great | |
| either, but it isn't the end of the world. This is especially true | |
| under certain circumstances like if you were being inducted into the | |
| mile-high club by means of an obscure tantric ceremony, or you've just | |
| successfully hijacked a 747, or you are nestled in your seat on your way | |
| to Amsterdam. | |
| Unfortunately, I haven't hijacked much lately, and as far as the mile | |
| high club goes I'm pretty sure you need a partner to join; but as I was on | |
| my way to Hacktic's Hacking at the End of the Universe conference, I was | |
| stoked. | |
| When I finally arrived in Amsterdam and breezed through customs, I was | |
| greeted with the pleasant sight of a LOD Internet World Tour T-Shirt | |
| being held up above the throngs congregating at the customs exit. Its | |
| owner, Carl, was probably the only American that I knew that was going | |
| to be in this country so we had arranged previously to meet. The shirt | |
| was my beacon. | |
| EB's Handy Travelling Tip #1: Never have more bags than you have hands. | |
| I was to find out that we were in for a good deal of walking. Me being | |
| such a fucking plan ahead kind of guy, had packed enough clothes for 8 days | |
| and brought a camcorder as well as my laptop and assorted other crap. This | |
| was all find and dandy except for the fact that I had three bags and only two | |
| hands. I hoisted one bag up on a shoulder strap (which would begin its | |
| week-long gradual slicing into my collarbone) and drug the other two bags | |
| behind me. | |
| Carl had rented a room in Naarden at a Best Western or something. The con | |
| was in Lelystad somewhere. Neither of us had any idea of exactly where | |
| these two places were in relation to one another. We would soon find | |
| that they were no where close. | |
| EB's Handy Travelling Trip #2: Buy a Eurail Pass or the national equivalent | |
| thereof. | |
| Luckily, Carl had the foresight to suggest that we should buy a train | |
| pass for the week. It was only like 50 bucks and got us free rides | |
| on the trains, trams, buses, and train-taxis everywhere in the Netherlands. | |
| It MORE than paid for itself. | |
| We hopped a train and rode to the Amere stop, then took a taxi to | |
| the hotel, dropped off our crap then rode a bus back to the station | |
| and went into Amsterdam. | |
| Amsterdam is a really neat place. I think everyone should go there | |
| at least once. Carl and I wandered around for hours and hours | |
| just checking things out. During our travels I discovered some really | |
| neat places. | |
| EB's Handy Travelling Tip #3: Pornography Is Good. | |
| Foreign Pornography is GREAT! | |
| I have to respect a country that has smut proudly displayed everywhere. | |
| In every magazine rack, in every train station, convenience store and | |
| in large (clean, well-lit, heh) stores everywhere, smut. Not your average | |
| run of the mill nastiness either. We're talking monumental titles | |
| like "Teenage Sperm," "Seventeen," "Teeners From Holland," "Sex Bizarre," | |
| and "Color Climax." | |
| I went in every smut shop we saw. I think Carl wanted to die of embarrassment. | |
| I was like a kid in a candy store. It was really pathetic. You would not | |
| believe the shit they sell over there. Well, maybe you would. I pray | |
| that I can buy a vcr that transfers PAL to NTSC someday. | |
| One of the most hilarious items I saw was a HUGE dildo in the shape of an | |
| arm with a fist. And I mean life size. Like Arnold Schwartzenegger's | |
| arm life size. I wonder if that's a big seller? | |
| We finally got totally zonked out and headed back to the hotel to | |
| relieve our jetlag tomorrow was the con! | |
| EB's Handy Travelling Tip #4: Always take the Train Taxi | |
| In Holland, once you get off the train, for an extra 10 guilders, you can | |
| get a pass for a special taxi to take you anywhere you need to go. Carl | |
| and I didn't find this out until a few 20 dollar cab rides to the campground. | |
| HEU was held out in the Dutch countryside. A more appropriate title might | |
| have been "Hacking in the Middle of Fucking Nowhere." The taxi driver | |
| had been shuttling people out there all day. As we approached the campground | |
| signs for the conference began to show up. Signs of geekdom on the horizon. | |
| We got out at the gate, and walked over to the tent that said registration. | |
| In the tent were a couple of guys who took your picture and printed out | |
| a badge with your picture digitized on it. | |
| The area was layed out very well. There was a very big barn like structure | |
| where several dozen computers were all networked together. I sat down | |
| at one and saw that there was even a slip trying to work. With that many | |
| people trying to be on the net, it was almost 20 baud! Wow, technology | |
| at its finest. :) I also noticed that at least 2 people were running | |
| ethernet sniffers, so I decided that it would not be prudent to | |
| mess with the net there, even if the bandwidth dramatically increased. | |
| Also in the barn were a tv/vcr area, several couches, a merchandise | |
| area and a snack bar. The snack bar sold rolls for a buck, and had free | |
| sandwich makings (like pb & j, cheese & meat, etc..) chips, jolt, and | |
| beer. This was very important to me since I was wondering if I'd | |
| get to eat. | |
| There was to be some kind of food provided (a meal) for five bucks, but | |
| it was so foul that it could not be believed. And to top it all off | |
| it was vegetarian. Not just regular vegetarian, but totally off beat | |
| stuff that smelled like old socks. Nasty gruel unfit for even | |
| prisoners. | |
| Behind the barn was the camping area. There was a HUGE tent | |
| that was the main meeting area, and several mid-size tents. | |
| Additionally there was a large lookout tower, and a shitload of | |
| tents set up for sleeping. Running all over the campground were cables | |
| for the conference's LAN. | |
| It was impressive so say the least. | |
| One of the first people I ran into at the con was KCrow. He helped me | |
| try to find a safe place to stow some of my crap. (Again, me and my | |
| fucking bags. I'm such an asshole.) We tried to place them in | |
| the network control room, but Bill SF told me to "get the hell out | |
| of there," so I did. And this of course, has left me with a wonderful | |
| opinion about Bill SF. (Bill, I love ya!) Several people tried to | |
| make excuses in his behalf such as "he hadn't slept in days," or | |
| "Bill isn't ever so rude," and "He's got a lot on his mind." | |
| Yeah, right. | |
| (And I didn't even say ANYTHING about how shitty it would be to try to | |
| make millions counterfeiting something, then let one of your friends take | |
| the fall for you, while you left the country. Nope. I would never be so | |
| rude. There is a difference between a true hacker and an opportunistic | |
| technologically literate criminal. But I didn't say that.) | |
| I finally just stuck my stuff behind the merchandising area and prayed | |
| that there was still honor among thieves. | |
| I then ran into Damiano. He told me who was around. Several CCC people | |
| had arrived in a convoy of odd urban assault vehicles. The Germans | |
| (other than Damiano) kind of made me uneasy. They seemed to hang | |
| together and didn't talk to many non-germans. I suppose maybe some | |
| of them didn't speak English, or maybe I was just thinking odd | |
| Nazi fantasies. I dunno. Of all the people that were supposedly | |
| there, I kept missing Pengo. It was like some kind of weird trick. | |
| "Did you see him? He was just here." I never saw him. | |
| That afternoon I only made it to one "workshop." I was to find out | |
| later that all of the really technical workshops had a common thread. | |
| "Here's this cool technology, now go buy it from Hack-Tic for several | |
| hundred dollars." | |
| The first example I had of this was in the "It came out of the sky" | |
| workshop where Bill SF talked about a device they had made that | |
| received pager information. They presented a few scenarios in which | |
| police or other nasties might watch pagers, or always page certain numbers | |
| right before raids, etc... | |
| The concept was neat, but certainly nothing new. For a few bucks more | |
| than they were asking for the Hack-Tic model, you can buy a multimode | |
| decoder from Universal Radio (model M-400). It not only does POCSAG but | |
| also GOLAY (for pagers), ACARS, ASCII, Baudot, SITOR A & B, FEC-A, SWED-ARQ, | |
| FAX, CTSS, DCS & DTMF! Now that's a decoder. | |
| Additionally, a company called SWS security makes a similar device for | |
| law enforcement people at about $4,000 that does nothing but decode | |
| pager information. | |
| If it came right down to it, all you would have to do is open up your beeper, | |
| dump the rom, and tell it to display info for ALL cap-codes rather than | |
| just yours. Your cap-code is written on the back of your beeper, and is | |
| stored in non-volatile memory somewhere. Look for the call to it, and have | |
| it always branch to the display routine rather than do a comparison. | |
| I asked Bill about re-crystaling the device, since it there's would only be | |
| able to pick up one pager channel as is, and about whether or not anyone had | |
| played with any of the 8-bit paging types such as is used in America on | |
| services such as EMBARC. Bill looked at me as if I was on crack, and | |
| asked, "Are there any other questions?" Sigh. | |
| After that workshop, I took off with Andy of the Chaos Computer Club | |
| back to the German enclave. These guys were nuts. They had several | |
| winnebagoes totally decked out with all kinds of archaic electronic | |
| gear. They had all kinds of odd radio equipment; weird shit | |
| with Russian lettering was strewn about. The guys hanging about | |
| were jamming out really loud hard techno. I leeched a few programs | |
| from Andy and then took off back to the main area. | |
| Sometime later, a guy who said he knew me from way back named | |
| Mr. Miracle came up to say hello. I had no idea, but since I rarely | |
| remember my own name, I took him for his word. Mr. Miracle was at the | |
| con with his friends Wim and a Tasmanian Amiga Dude named XTC. | |
| We hung out the rest of the afternoon bullshitting and talking about | |
| all kinds of stupid things. | |
| As it grew dark, everyone moved into the Barn. Me, Carl, Mr. Miracle, XTC, | |
| Wim, and another Dutch Hacker named The Dude sat down to drink. We were | |
| joined for a bit by another Dutchman named The Key. He was totally | |
| into lock picking, and had a plethora of picks. (Car masters, traditional | |
| rakes, tube lock picks, and a weird looking pick for all new model fords.) | |
| The Key was a large, sinister looking guy who never took off his extremely | |
| dark sunglasses. I don't know if it was only for effect, but it certainly | |
| worked. | |
| I decided it was high time to introduce the Dutch to that quaint American | |
| custom, Quarters. We must have gone through some 200 glasses of beer, and | |
| were extremely loud, drunk and obnoxious. One woman (I think it was a woman) | |
| wandered over to us and said, shouldn't you all be on the computers or | |
| something. We cursed until she left. | |
| Mr. Miracle invited Carl and I to stay at his place for the rest of the con | |
| so we wouldn't have to go all the way back to our hotel. This was a godsend. | |
| We all piled into The Dude's car for a ride to the apartment that made | |
| Busch Garden's "Kumba" look like a merry-go-round. We were quite happy | |
| to make it home alive. | |
| Xtc was also staying at Mr. Miracle's. We all spilled onto the floor | |
| upstairs in his townhouse. While we were all getting ready to pass out, | |
| Xtc yakked all over a bathroom. Needless to say Mr. Miracle and | |
| his girlfriend were pissed. We all thought there was going to be a death, | |
| but somehow Xtc lucked out. | |
| The next morning we all took off over to check out of the Hotel | |
| Carl and I had rented. Carl had put some money in their safe. | |
| Of course, the safe broke, and it took them nearly an hour to destroy | |
| the safe completely so Carl could retrieve his 300 in traveller's checks. | |
| Mr. Miracle remarked, "Where's The Key when you need him." | |
| When we finally ended up back at the con, there was a large meeting | |
| going on about Phone Phreaking. Emmanuel Goldstein, Bill SF, Rop, | |
| KCrow (KCROW??) and others were babbling on the panel. Phiber Optik was | |
| on a speaker phone adding commentary. I toyed with the idea of getting | |
| on the phone and wishing him well and telling him how cool it was in Holland, | |
| but I decided that would be too mean. | |
| I sat outside the panel listening to everyone complain about the evils | |
| of the phone company. Many got up and argued that what they were doing | |
| was morally right, because the phone company charges too much. They also | |
| argued that since the lines were already there they should be able to use | |
| them for free. I got disgusted and began yelling about how there were | |
| chairs in the tent not being used and I wanted my hundred guilders back. | |
| Several people gathered around and I kept ranting. Mr. Miracle joined | |
| in on the spree and began challenging just how much Hack-Tic was | |
| making off of the conference. He estimated at minimum 500 people | |
| at 100 guilders a piece. 50000 guilders. That's a lot of money. | |
| The crowd gathering around us began questioning the whole situation too. | |
| It got ugly, but none of us had the balls to say anything about it. | |
| Later that day I sat down to hear Fidelio and RGB give a talk about | |
| Unix Security. I had asked them beforehand if they were going to talk | |
| about anything that I wouldn't know. (God, afterwards, I realized | |
| just how snotty that sounded. I'm a prick.) It went pretty good | |
| since most of the people in the crowd weren't gurus and this gave | |
| them a good overview. | |
| Afterwards, Bill SF was holding a workshop about Wireless LANs. I was | |
| thinking this would be a tutorial about wireless lan theory and | |
| how their security was handled, etc. WRONG! Hack-Tic is supposedly | |
| building a frequency hopping wireless ethernet adaptor. (Soon to | |
| be available at a store near you.) | |
| I asked Bill why they went with frequency hopping rather than | |
| direct sequence. There are basically two schools of thought about | |
| spread spectrum, and both have their plusses. Bill said | |
| their device would be hard to jam. I replied that if I pumped | |
| as little as 1 watt over a particular range, maybe like a 15 Mhz | |
| range, their device would be just as hosed as anyone else's. | |
| As an afterthought, I hope they build it in the 2.4GHz range, because | |
| that's the only frequency block that is legal everywhere for | |
| this type of application. | |
| Sometime later Bill SF was to give a phone phreaking tutorial. He trudged | |
| off in the woods to hold a secret workshop. Unfortunately, I wasn't | |
| among the privileged audience members, but I hear rumors that the | |
| Demon Dialer is available for sale. Sigh. | |
| I have no idea what I did for the next few hours. I think I was | |
| abducted by aliens. The final panel of the evening was a | |
| social engineering panel being led by The Dude. Let's just say that | |
| a European idea of what to use your bullshitting skills for is | |
| a little bit different than that of your American hacker. | |
| The Dude offered advice like "Say you are with the news or a tv star and | |
| maybe they will give you a guest account," or "Once I called up and said I | |
| was doing a story, and they told me information about their computers." | |
| WOW! Pretty radical stuff. I remember a certain boy holding up a 7-11 by | |
| phone. I remember someone turning my phone into a payphone by bullshitting | |
| an idiot at the switch. I remember people getting root passwords from | |
| system admins by social engineering. Where were Chasin, RNOC & Supernigger | |
| when you needed them? These are the true greats. I don't know what these | |
| people at HEU were all excited about, but they all loved it. Ahhh, | |
| ignorance IS bliss. | |
| After dark for some reason we were all drawn once again to the quarters | |
| table. It was brutal. They ran out of glasses. We made pyramids with | |
| the empties. We played chandeliers. We belched, we hollered, we were | |
| manly men doing manly things, and we mocked those playing computer | |
| games just a few yards away. We laughed at them with manly laughs. | |
| And I don't think anyone threw up that night. | |
| We got a ride home that night from The Key. He never took off his glasses. | |
| There are no lights along the highways in Holland. Luckily I was | |
| drunk, or I would have been scared shitless. | |
| The final day of the conference we arrived in time to see the "hacking and | |
| the law" panel. Emmanuel Goldstein, RGB, Rop, Ray Kaplan, Wietse Venema, | |
| Andy from the CCC, a Dutch CERT guy and a few others were on the panel. | |
| It started very well but went sour quickly. It was supposedly being moderated | |
| by this asshole of a journalist who apparently didn't understand what it | |
| meant to moderate. He would answer EVERY question addressed to the | |
| panel, whether or not he even knew what the question was about. | |
| This shithead gave journalists a bad name. Finally this guy got so | |
| annoying that I finally got up and left. | |
| We decided not to hang out for the party at the end of time. We figured | |
| that the party would be much more fun in Amsterdam, so we cut out. It | |
| was time to get into the city and cause problems. | |
| EB's Handy Travelling Tip #5: Don't buy drugs in other countries. | |
| Drugs are illegal in Holland, despite what everyone says. Despite this | |
| fact, they are plentiful and every swinging dick on the street has | |
| a few pills or joints to sell you. Now the way I looked at it, | |
| why in the world would you go a zillion miles away to see another | |
| country and spend your time wasted? | |
| It reminded me of walking in the Height after dark, or going down | |
| the Drag in Austin a few years back. Every three steps we took in | |
| Amsterdam, some joker would run up and say, "You want good smoke? | |
| Ecstasy? Cocaine? You want good coke? How about some good hashish?" | |
| I should have asked for DMT, but I just blew everyone off. | |
| On top of all this, there are like 5 or so bars in Amsterdam that | |
| actually sell hash in the bar. They are very easy to spot. They are | |
| the ones with the pot plants in the window and the tell tale dope smell | |
| permeating every pore of your body when you walk past. The big ones | |
| are the Bulldog and High Times. Save your money for better things, | |
| like t-shirts or smut. | |
| At the con, several people were selling "Space Cakes" which were essentially | |
| hash brownies. If you've never eaten dope, you might not like it. It | |
| comes on slower, lasts longer, and generally puts you to sleep. This was | |
| not what I'd want at a Hacker Con. We needed stimulants, damnit! I | |
| drank lots of jolt instead. | |
| EB's Handy Travelling Tip #6: Go to the Red Light District in Amsterdam. | |
| Even if you are too cheap (or too moral) to shell out the 25 bucks, you | |
| should go check out the Red Light District. Be forewarned, all those | |
| people who tell you that the women are all "so fine" are either fucked up | |
| or have bad taste. | |
| In the Red Light area the women hang out behind windows in their underwear | |
| and try to coerce you into sleeping with them by taunting you, flashing you, | |
| or making other sexual innuendoes. | |
| Unfortunately, the vast majority of these "women" look like out-takes from | |
| "The Crying Game." We are talking adam's apples and big hands here. Large | |
| boned Asian creatures that scared the shit out of me. These things were | |
| NASTY. | |
| Mr. Miracle, Wim and I must have walked around for an hour looking for | |
| decent women. Finally we came across two. TWO. Out of hundreds, there | |
| were two. One was a tall blonde in her twenties. One was a short, tan | |
| brunette who looked, uh, young. | |
| 17:10. I'll spare you the details. Let your imaginations run free. | |
| EB's Handy Travelling Tip #7: There's no place like home. | |
| I was very happy to hop on that plane back to the USA. As much as I hate | |
| to admit it, I really wouldn't know what to do with myself if I didn't | |
| live in America. | |
| Maybe an England or Australia trip would have been totally different. It | |
| really sucked not being able to speak the language. I also got real | |
| tired of trying to find food I could eat. [I gave up red meat almost a | |
| year ago, and Europeans LOVE THEIR MEAT. Trying to find chicken was | |
| a nightmare. The Dutch word for chicken is KIP. Remember that.] | |
| The TV sucked, there weren't really any good places for live music, | |
| the women weren't interested in a scummed-out, long-haired American | |
| tourist and I missed my cat. I met some really cool people and | |
| had a blast for the week I was there, but I was real happy to land | |
| in the USA. | |
| *Epilogue* | |
| EB's Handy Travelling Tip #8: If you think customs is going to search you | |
| they won't. | |
| Me, being stupid, left all my good smut in the Netherlands because I was | |
| afraid I'd get arrested for it. I envisioned the conversation. "What are | |
| you doing with all these nasty things, boy? You are one sick fucker! | |
| Lookie here Bob, this here hippy has pictures of gals a pissin' on one | |
| 'nuther." So what happens? They smile and wave me through. Fuck. | |
| ******************************************************************************* | |
| Hacking at the End of the Universe | |
| by Nimrod Kerrett, zzzen@math.tau.ac.il | |
| "A Techno-Anarchist Convention" -- August 3-6, Larserbos, HOLLAND. | |
| The announcement in Computer Underground Digest committed its viral act, | |
| erasing all the neatly ordered schedule entries for the first week of | |
| August from my old, grey memory cells, to be replaced by a neon light | |
| flashing "You deserve a vacation in Holland." Away we went... | |
| Most of us European/Third-World dwellers don't get to see much of the | |
| physical manifestations of Gibson's self-executing prophecies. OK. The | |
| Matrix is there, but to witness street-culture one must live in San | |
| Francisco or somesuch. HEU -- Hacking at the End of the Universe -- looked | |
| like the only chance to surface on the physical side of a phone plug and | |
| experience cyber-culture in form of faces, fashion and body-lang. How naive | |
| I was to presume this. Compared to most of the kids there, I looked | |
| dangerous (a timid, Swiss-bank sysadmin)... But don't get me wrong, I DID | |
| have fun -- failing to do so in Holland requires quite a unique | |
| body-chemistry -- but I had a nagging feeling that European hackers still | |
| live in the Seventies. | |
| First, A Few Positive Notes | |
| The most important lecture addressed electronic money. I won't go into | |
| sci.crypt-style details, but this was the most exciting thing I've ever | |
| heard since public-keys were first explained to me. The president of a | |
| Dutch firm called DigiCash described a crypto scheme where a bank can issue | |
| electronic credit-certificates which can't be forged, and yet are immune to | |
| traffic analysis. Their digital cash is just like physpace cash: it has no | |
| smell. You get a "virtual $100 bill" from the bank that you can't forge or | |
| spend more than once, and which the bank can't trace -- e.g. to the | |
| specific person who requested it. | |
| Ever since society devolved from cash to credit cards, people have become | |
| used to the idea that our shopping-histories are readily subject to | |
| electronic surveillance. At HEU I learned this was all hype: we CAN evolve | |
| economic systems to enjoy advantages of digital communication without | |
| sacrificing our privacy. | |
| Another interesting issue was a lecture by an ex-CIA executive who went | |
| private [ed. note: positively identified as a net.personality on the WELL] | |
| and now tries to preach for open-source approaches: instead of creating | |
| your own locks and picking the ones of your neighbor, the idea is to use | |
| information-gathering/analysis techniques -- one of those things in which | |
| "intelligence" bodies specialize -- to derive content from the info-swamp | |
| we seem to be sucked into... and then sell it. This guy made arguments | |
| similar to what Barlow said before the hush-hush community a few months | |
| ago, but seems to refocus everything on enterprise. Mighty exciting. BTW, | |
| I've noticed how the concept of profit makes bleeding-heart European | |
| anarchist types wince... | |
| The network built onsite also impressed me. In a campground setting, | |
| subject to occasional rainstorms, they erected three LANS connecting nearly | |
| 100 computers of all sizes and shapes, plus terminal servers for the | |
| Etherless. Computers were placed in our private tents, and the field | |
| bloomed with PC/XTs-turned-repeaters covered in wet plastic sheets. This | |
| monstrosity connected to the Internet over three shaky SLIP dial-up lines | |
| and it actually WORKED -- it cost some sleepless 36 hours, but still, WOW. | |
| Switch To Poison Ink | |
| Hacker (n) -- (1) One who derives pleasure from making systems do things | |
| they're not supposed to do. (2) A nerd who does word-processing in | |
| hexadecimal, is allergic to color or windows and hates being called a | |
| "user" in ANY context. | |
| Most of the hackers I met at HEU fell under the second definition. I was | |
| even scolded for using "Wintendo" and wasting the precious power of my 486 | |
| notebook. Let's start with the local network -- having all the tents | |
| connected was a wonderful idea, and symbolized constructive techno-anarchy. | |
| Unfortunately it lacked cultural content. To begin with, you had to login | |
| as a guest -- if you'd figured out the IP number of a server working at the | |
| moment. You had no identity handle, so there was no use in talking about | |
| site-specific newsgroup for follow-ups on topics. Even local email was | |
| impossible; to whom would you email? Since everyone got a badge on | |
| entrance, why didn't we also receive user-ids, perhaps written on the | |
| badges? Even administrative announcements (e.g. schedule changes) were only | |
| available on a PHYSICAL bulletin-board in the bar... ever tried to scan | |
| manually over 200 paper scraps? | |
| Another side effect was that to justify dragging your portable all the way | |
| to Holland, you just HAD to hog the SLIP lines and telnet outside, which | |
| made life hard for all of us, but much harder for the networking crew. In | |
| my humble opinion, excessive telneting is like saying "Nothing to do here, | |
| let's try somewhere else." I LIVE somewhere else; I took a plane in order | |
| to check out THIS place. Telneting was also a problem since the | |
| IP-resolving system didn't work and we had to apply hacking techniques to | |
| find the IP numbers back home. | |
| The most frustrating thing was the social/political discussions. In a | |
| discussion titled "Networking For The Masses" someone dared suggest | |
| user-friendliness as a key to resolving computer illiteracy. "No shit, | |
| Sherlock" -- I hear you mumble. Well, here's how another panel-member | |
| replied: "A revolution is not a user-friendly thing. Activists shouldn't | |
| count on the computer community to make stuff easier for them". Watch out, | |
| masses... prepare for computer military-training once the Revolution is | |
| over. | |
| Let's take another trendy political subject -- cryptography. One would | |
| assume that any techno-anarchist convention in '93 would feature a nice | |
| level of heated, political, crypto-discussion. Well, nada. The only | |
| crypto-related subject was the "electronic cash" mentioned above. Although | |
| it's quite exciting for the crypto-enlightened, 90% of the HEU audience | |
| lost contact after the first three cube-roots, returning to their tents to | |
| telnet elsewhere. I was left in a small group of highly-technical | |
| Cypherpunks who didn't give a fork whether New Delhi housewives would ever | |
| understand the switches of PGP; they seem to ENJOY their wizardly "elite" | |
| status. | |
| Even in discussions about hacker-paranoia, the audience disliked the idea | |
| of demystifiyng the almighty-hacker image to make your average, | |
| trigger-happy policeman relax a bit. Does Europe need an equivalent of | |
| USA's "Operation Sun-Devil" to knock sense into its collective skulls? FTP | |
| to ftp.eff.org:/pub/cud/papers/crime.puzzle to learn from the bitter | |
| experience of others (I don't know the IP number!). | |
| Epi-Travel-Log | |
| Before the convention, I naively believed that at least the HACKERS could | |
| Read the Writing on the Wall... Since I'm sober now, I'll spell it out for | |
| you: | |
| When the world finally adopts strong public-key cryptography (I hope it | |
| does, since I've seen too many wars and acts of human-rights | |
| infringement in my life), two things will become virtually impossible: 1) | |
| seeing what you're not supposed to see; and 2) changing what you're not | |
| supposed to change, unless you want to cause brute-force damage. | |
| These two anachronistic activities represent the basis for most | |
| hacker-culture I encountered at HEU -- so my advice is: switch to the first | |
| dictionary-definition of "Hacker". Try being less techno and more | |
| anarchist. There's a revolution going on... in case you've missed out on | |
| some Usenet recently. | |
| ---- | |
| Reprinted from Fringe Ware Review #2, ISSN 1069-5656. | |
| Published by FringeWare Inc., fringeware@illuminati.io.com | |
| Copyright (C)1993, Nimrod Kerrett. All rights reserved. | |
| ******************************************************************************* | |
| Hackers Play The Field July 26, 1993 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| (Newsweek) (Page 58) | |
| [A Newsweek reporter packs for, and dreams about, HEU in the Netherlands. | |
| As you can tell, it was written before the actual con] | |
| There's no guarantee of a large turn-out, but if thousands show up, it may | |
| help demonstrate how far hacking has moved out of the bedrooms of smelly | |
| adolescents. If so, there's likely to be less geeking and more dancing in | |
| the Dutch summer night. Programmers may one day be able to lean back from | |
| their terminals, pat their pocket protectors and say, "I was there." | |
| ******************************************************************************* | |
| A Woodstock For Hackers and Phreaks August 16, 1993 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| by Barbara Kantrowitz and Joshua Ramo | |
| It was billed as "Woodstock for the Nintendo Generation" The techno-freaks | |
| who gathered at the Hackers at the End of the Universe in the Netherlands | |
| last week had at lease one thing in common with their '60s counterparts: | |
| they believed rules were made to be broken. | |
| Some were there only electronically, communicating through networks around the | |
| world. The rest--the vast majority of them males in their late teens and | |
| early 20s--gathered in hundreds of multicolored tents clustered around | |
| power outlets and portable toilets in an area the size of six football fields. | |
| Many had computer terminals in their tents, with the monitors nestled | |
| between sleeping bags and guitars. | |
| No one was surprised by the white van bristling with antennas that trolled | |
| up and down the road leading to the campground. Everyone seemed to agree | |
| that it belonged to the Dutch Secret Service; everyone also assumed the | |
| meeting was being monitored by the CIA and Britain's MI6. But no one | |
| knew for sure; paranoia is popular among hackers. | |
| ******************************************************************************* | |
| Pump Con 94 | |
| "The Legacy Continues" | |
| by Erik Bloodaxe | |
| Travelling sucks most of the time. People like to glamorize it as if | |
| it's some kind of status unobtainable to the "Average Joe" but | |
| nine times out of ten its just a pain in the ass. | |
| My trip to Philadelphia for the second PumpCon fell well within the | |
| aforementioned nine of ten. I was sick as a dog, coughing up | |
| large blood-soaked clots of phlegm at a steady pace. This was | |
| either due to some undetected immune system failure or due to my | |
| previous weekend's fiasco which dealt with chemical overindulgence, | |
| alcohol abuse and some kind of strange creatures that tried to pass | |
| as female...but that's another story. | |
| (We will assume that my ill-health stemmed from the latter.) | |
| I showed up at the Comfort Inn to find a lobby full of what had to be | |
| conferees. (They had been saying to many people they were "Campus | |
| Crusaders for Christ.") | |
| After checking in I stumbled over to the group to see who was who. | |
| I introduced myself and asked if Dr. Who or Mark Tabas had showed up. | |
| They had not. (And as it turns out, they would never show up. Dr. Who | |
| I can forgive since he had no way in from Boston, but Tabas...obviously | |
| he had better things to do than drive a few miles across town to say | |
| hello. Remind me to reciprocate at HoHo Con.) | |
| I was immediately pulled away by GrayAreas and Ophie, who both bestowed | |
| upon me warnings of impending doom. Ophie relayed that The Wing had | |
| told her the previous night that he was going to come to the con and | |
| "get me." | |
| GrayAreas informed me that an unscrupulous character had been | |
| asking for me earlier. After she described him, it was obvious that | |
| Rogue Agent had made it to the con. (Unscrupulous...haha) | |
| Up in my room, I dove into my bag of medical goods and felt pity upon | |
| myself. Congested, contagious, feverish and now being stalked by | |
| some unknown person. Great. I never much paid any heed to the threats | |
| given by unknown typists over the net, as people's bravado multiplies | |
| exponentially in direct proportion to the distance they are separated | |
| behind a phone or computer screen. During the week prior to the con | |
| I had been threatened by at least 2 different people under a variety of | |
| nicks and addresses. One promised to crack me over the head with a bat. | |
| I figured with my luck, being sick, this would be the ONE time someone | |
| would make good on such a promise, as my timing and coordination would | |
| obviously be impaired. Swell. | |
| I went on back downstairs to jump in the conversations in the lobby. The | |
| group had grown a bit in my absence. I sat down and began talking to | |
| Shortwave & C-Curve about ham radio and archaic computer equipment. | |
| Shortwave offered to send me a Commodore PET to add to the Erik Bloodaxe | |
| Memorial Computer Archive. (The EBMCA is a non-profit organization | |
| devoted to maintaining the history of personal computing. Our museum | |
| will open soon. Hold your breath!) | |
| I then noticed that it appeared that damn near every IRC denizen from the | |
| Washington DC area was at this damn con. (sans KL & Strat, but they | |
| were to appear the following day.) A bunch of us took off wandering around | |
| later on to see what the hell was up at some of the other hotels. | |
| The area was laid out in such a manner that there were like five hotels | |
| immediately next door to one another with two cheesy restaurants between | |
| them. | |
| We took off to the Knights Inn and ended up hanging out in the parking | |
| lot staring at the moon, bullshitting about really lame stuff. While | |
| hanging out like retards in the near freezing winds, Dark Tangent came | |
| over and told us that Zar had been thrown off a bus for the 2nd time | |
| and was stuck in DC and needed someone to pick him up. No one wanted to | |
| road trip it to DC since we were all having SOOO much fun freezing our | |
| asses off, so Zar had to wait it out for the next bus. | |
| In one room in the Knights Inn a bunch of people were busily smoking | |
| their brains out. Their little gathering was dubbed "Hemp-Con." | |
| Finally, sanity rested upon me and I decided that the cold would not | |
| help nurse me back to health, so I took off back to my room. Ophie was | |
| in the room next door to mine with a bunch of people drinking. Well, | |
| I think Ophie was doing most of the drinking actually. :) | |
| I wandered in and gave her a hard time about being drunk. She responded | |
| by telling everyone in the room intimate details about her marriage | |
| and her sexual involvement with the entire DC hacker scene. Then she | |
| took off all her clothes and ran around throwing Miniature chocolate | |
| bars at everyone. I'm making this up, but she probably wouldn't remember. | |
| it anyway. Hehe. | |
| As I went to open my door I noticed that someone had written "DIE NARC" | |
| on it with a cigarette. On the floor was the cigarette, a Camel filterless. | |
| Well, it appeared that The Wing had arrived. [Oh frabjuous day. Calloo, | |
| Callay. I chortled in my joy.] | |
| Just as I was about to go to bed, people were banging on my door. When I | |
| opened it, it looked as if everyone from Ophie's room had staggered over | |
| for a visit. One guy in the back, kinda tall, kinda thin, wearing a purple | |
| shirt, was smoking a Camel stub. I smiled a him and said, "How's it going?" | |
| He seemed a bit put off but said, "Do you know who I am?" I replied, "Of | |
| course I do Alan, how's it going?" | |
| This seemed to piss him off for some reason. | |
| "You might be all happy tonight, but just wait until tomorrow," he said. | |
| "Oh?" I replied, "you got something in store for me? Cool. Could you | |
| play those Ken Shulman tapes for the con?" | |
| (For those of you who don't know, once upon a time, I had a little company | |
| called Comsec. One of my partners was Ken Shulman, a rather complex | |
| new money piece of @#!*. Well, things didn't work out with us and Ken | |
| for a number of reasons, so we fired him. Ken got mad at us. He tried to | |
| fuck over each of us in devious little ways. To get even, I gave his | |
| private number out to MOD via the MOD information conduit Renegade Hacker. | |
| One day, "little shulow" was called up by Wing and Corrupt. According to | |
| several people, this call was recorded by MOD. On this now legendary | |
| tape, allegedly a disgruntled Shulman proceeded to tell MOD the story | |
| of how we at Comsec were involved in crimes, drugs and were turning in | |
| everyone to the feds. This is the same Ken Shulman who lost his BMW to the | |
| Houston Police when it was found with 400 hits of X in the trunk, and went | |
| into seclusion. But I digress. I've been trying to get a copy of this | |
| tape for about two years to see if he said anything actionable about | |
| Comsec, and to it give to the FBI if he may have been interfering with | |
| an ongoing federal investigation. Yes, I do hate him.) | |
| This seemed to make Wing mad too. I guess I might have spoiled the surprise | |
| or something. "I'm not gonna play any tapes so you can sue Shulman." | |
| "Oh, that's too bad." I said. | |
| "Well, I just want you to know, that tomorrow when it happens, you'll know," | |
| he said. | |
| "Well, I guess we'll just wait till tomorrow then." | |
| "Yeah, we will." | |
| "Yup. I guess we will." | |
| "You think you're so cool, but YOU'RE A DICK!" he screamed. | |
| Oh great, this is where I get punched. "Well, it's nice you have | |
| your opinions." | |
| "YOU'RE A FUCKING DICK!" | |
| Maybe I was supposed to be the one getting mad and doing the punching | |
| but I wasn't getting anything but tired and was ready to take a shitload | |
| of aspirin and slam a bottle of night-time cold syrup and antibiotics. | |
| "Well, I'll see you tomorrow." | |
| By now, I guess everyone had figured out that there would be no | |
| bloodsport, so someone grabbed Wing and they left. Ophie yelled | |
| after him, "Some people are such assholes." | |
| "Well, wasn't that fun," I said to those still hanging around. "But, | |
| alas, time for me to get some sleep." I went down to bum some | |
| aspirin from Noelle and told her the sordid tale, then went back to my room | |
| and crashed out. | |
| AND THAT'S THE INFAMOUS ERIKB vs THE WING STORY. AREN'T YOU EXCITED? | |
| That night, VaxBuster and others tried to get in the electrical box, but | |
| were thwarted by a concerned citizen. "I'M GOING DOWN TO THE FRONT DESK | |
| RIGHT NOW!" | |
| Meanwhile, Sabre sat in the cold all night drinking himself into oblivion | |
| while keeping a sharp, albeit bloodshot, eye out for potential feds. | |
| The next day everyone congregated in a room at the Red Roof Inn that had | |
| been rented as the Conference Room. (How crafty, we'll have it in a | |
| hotel room, and SAY its a conference room.) | |
| Everyone piled into this room anxious for everything to begin. We waited. | |
| And waited. And waited. Several newcomers had arrived such as Strat and | |
| his woman, Dr. Freeze (who used to be the Wizard 703 of rolodex fame. | |
| Keep on Phreakin!), and Zar who had arranged to get kicked off of his | |
| 3rd bus right near the hotel by slamming a 40 and lighting up | |
| cigarettes right next to the bus driver. | |
| Finally, after about 7 hours, I figured that maybe I should just go | |
| say something. I hopped up and gave a quick and dirty overview of | |
| commercial packet radio technology. I talked briefly about RadioMail | |
| and CDPD, and also talked about EMBARC and demonstrated sucking messages | |
| out of a Newstream pager. Then I sent a message from my notebook from ARDIS | |
| to a Sprintnet gateway, thru an outdial to a dialup to a terminal server | |
| on the Internet, and from one account mailed myself at RadioMail | |
| which then sent it back to me on my HP95 over RAM. I dunno...I thought | |
| it was cool. | |
| After speaking, I was presented with an award: an empty porno video box. | |
| The buttheads didn't even have the decency to give me the tape! | |
| I put the bible in it instead and placed it back in a drawer. | |
| GreyAreas got up next and talked a bit about her magazine and then | |
| in a heartfelt plea, asked whoever was bothering her to stop. | |
| Many in the audience seemed indifferent to her cause, which upset | |
| her greatly. She had to leave immediately afterwards. I hope I | |
| wasn't the only person who felt kind of sorry for her. | |
| Now, I'm not one to rain on anyone's parade, but kids, fun and games | |
| on the net are one thing, but the minute you start fucking with people's | |
| businesses they will go to the FBI. Remember this. [Personally, | |
| I think there are about 4 or 5 specific people on the net who need to | |
| fucking grow up before they find themselves sharing a cell with Phiber, | |
| although that seems to be what they want.] | |
| To be fair, people who decide that they want to get on the net need to | |
| be reminded that THE NET IS NOT REAL! THE NET IS NOT REAL LIFE. IF | |
| THE NET SCARES YOU OR WORRIES YOU, TURN OFF THE FUCKING COMPUTER! GO | |
| HANG OUT ON ANOTHER CHANNEL! GO PLAY ON A MUD! GO READ NEWS! If that | |
| doesn't placate you, go to AOL. | |
| Next up was someone I didn't know, and unfortunately didn't meet. | |
| But his girlfriend was HOT! [If he's reading this, tell her I said "hi."] | |
| He gave everyone a rundown of the troubles from last year's Pumpcon. | |
| I noticed during his recap that the trouble last year didn't really start | |
| until they all read The Visionary's file. I suggested that we hold | |
| a midnight seance and read it aloud so we could all get busted too. | |
| Ixom finally made it to his own con and said a few syllables about | |
| the folks still waiting to be sentenced from last year. | |
| Up last was VaxBuster who talked about the wonderful world of Blue | |
| Boxing. Yes, Virginia, there is a way to box. People are so silly. | |
| Obviously I'm not the only one who has looked at CCITT manuals and | |
| knows signalling frequencies in other countries, or who knows about | |
| the "International Direct" numbers. Wow. | |
| After the conference several of us had pizza and got the worst service | |
| I have ever had in my entire life of dining out. Grand. We made up for | |
| it by amusing ourselves spotting "victims" with laser pointers, laughing | |
| like idiots as we placed the dots on their foreheads. | |
| Once we got back from chowing, everyone had already begun drinking. | |
| People were going off to congregate at the conference room for a central | |
| party location. As I was leaving to go over there, The Wing walked up | |
| to me, and said he needed to talk to me. We went into my room and | |
| he said he had heard what GrayAreas said earlier in the day, and he wanted | |
| to say that it wasn't him. I told him, he needed to tell her that, and | |
| not me. | |
| I went on to tell him that if he wasn't involved in all the crap going on | |
| all over the net, then I had no problems with him. I said he had some | |
| really poor choices in friends in the past, but hopefully he would | |
| exercise better judgement in the future. | |
| We all went back over to the conference room. Wing pulled GrayAreas outside | |
| to talk to her. While they were talking, I caught some talk about | |
| payphones. | |
| [no names from here on] | |
| It seems this guy had a lot of phones and several people too off to go | |
| buy a few. They ended up at the lamest party in Pennsylvania. Four | |
| people and a keg. The phones allegedly were sold for 75 bucks and | |
| were still in the box. Brand new. | |
| Back at the con, one of the hapless phone buyers decided to take his phone | |
| up to the conference room to show it off. Once there, everyone giggled | |
| and gawked over it, and then he took it back down to put it in a car. On the | |
| way there, a cop grabbed him and arrested him. The cop then searched | |
| the car he was about to put it in and found some pot and arrested the | |
| car's owner too and had the car impounded. | |
| [anonymous portion ends] | |
| Now the cops converged on the conference room and began hounding people | |
| in there. One wonderful cop discovered my Porno-Bible creation and | |
| screamed at the crowd, "You heathens! How could you do something like this? | |
| You people are sick!" | |
| Ixom, ready for a fight, began yelling at the chief of police over the phone. | |
| The police chief told him that maybe he would like for the nice officers | |
| to bring him downtown to go over his complaints. Ixom decided that | |
| would not be necessary. | |
| After the police interaction, people scattered from the conference room | |
| back to their individual rooms. No sooner than they got there, the police | |
| decided to investigate a "few noise complaints" at the Comfort Inn. | |
| Ophie's room, the Dope Room on the 1st floor and a few others got searched. | |
| While all of this mayhem was ensuing in the outside world, I was up in my | |
| little room being interviewed by GrayAreas for her magazine. This was | |
| probably the longest interview I've ever done. I hope I don't turn out | |
| looking like a bigger fuckhead in it than I already am. | |
| After the interview, I got the story of all the police interaction from | |
| the throngs of people who gathered outside my room. A few people | |
| remarked, "how come YOUR room didn't get searched?" I didn't have an | |
| answer for that, except maybe because it was paid on a corporate AmEx | |
| and might not have looked like a "hacker" was in there. (No, it was | |
| because I work for the government...just ask Agent Steal. Geez.) | |
| After this mess I went to bed. Yup. | |
| The following morning while waiting to get a table at Denny's, we noticed | |
| that the old dudes with the beer were going into the "conference room" | |
| and taking stuff out. A bunch of the crew ran over there to check it | |
| out and guess what? The old guys weren't just any bunch of drunken | |
| old dudes, they were the Pennsylvania State Police's Computer Crime | |
| Division. They had been staking out the conference from the room next | |
| door and had listened in to everything. Rad. Two years and running. | |
| Maybe next year the CIA and NSA will want to stake it out too. I can't | |
| wait. | |
| Then I went home. | |
| ******************************************************************************* | |
| - Top 10 things learned at PumpCon - | |
| - The Wink - | |
| 10) Hotel's don't like over 40 people in their lobby | |
| 9) Its not Ma'am, its Doris | |
| 8) "GrayArea has quite a few gray areas" | |
| 7) Greyhound hates Zar | |
| 6) Who needs speakers who show up? | |
| 5) SnatchBuster ! | |
| 4) "You heathens, how can you put the Holy Bible in a pornographic | |
| movie case !" | |
| 3) Geezer Narc ! | |
| 2) Don't put condor and erikb in the same space | |
| 1) Don't carry open payphones around the con | |
| ******************************************************************************* | |
| P U M P C O N ][ | |
| Informal Attendance List | |
| <Disclaimer> I cranked this thing out over the weekend, and some people I | |
| know were there, but I didn't get their names. Some people might be listed | |
| twice. It's up to you to figure it out. | |
| As we were waiting for people to arrive we came up with a lameness scale. If | |
| you got a "+l" that mean you got a lame point for saying someone's real name | |
| or info. Basically spouting off real stuff to people who shouldn't hear it. | |
| Sure it's easy when you all know each other, but if I was really trying I would | |
| have generated so much real data on people it would be scary. On the other | |
| hand if you were real slick and tricky, you got a "+e", or elite point. As | |
| more and more people showed up I stopped doing this 'cuz we all broke up and | |
| only the people I was around would have to suffer the wrath of the +l. Think | |
| of it as a security rating. The more +l the easier it was to get info out of | |
| people. | |
| The List is in the order of when I ran into people. Basically the first half | |
| is in chronological order, but after that I lost track and got names when I | |
| could. | |
| Grayarea | |
| Noe11e (Yes, she exists) | |
| Okinawa (+e) | |
| Reive (assigned to Fed-Man) | |
| Ophie (+l+l+l+l+l+l.. you get the idea) | |
| Lgas (+l) | |
| Loki (+l, but he was trying hard..) | |
| Jello Man | |
| Evak | |
| CarlCory | |
| SubEthan (+l) | |
| Bernie S. (+l, Elite handset dude) | |
| Jamie | |
| DRobinson | |
| iXom (5 hours late) | |
| Nick-O (+e, worked that stewardess) | |
| FreeJack | |
| MadCap (With the elite hat) | |
| Condor | |
| Jay Farnam | |
| ShortWave | |
| ErikB (+e, good speech) | |
| C-Curve (+e) | |
| Cuttle Fish | |
| Vax Buster (+e+e for protecting personal data, Good speech) | |
| Syntor | |
| LudiChrist (+l,+e for evading officers) | |
| Optic Nerve | |
| Scourge (+l) | |
| Great One (+l, +e for staying cool at police station) | |
| Dave (+l+l, Don't use your real name) | |
| Phil (+l+l, what's this, Real Name con?) | |
| Juanka (+l This guy was acting strange..) | |
| Rogue | |
| NtStriker (+e for being shot by the police) | |
| Wierdo | |
| DreamScriber | |
| Randy S. Hacker (+e for cool car and free beer) | |
| Count Zero | |
| Typhoid Mary (She locked onto TaquilaHeadPaint) | |
| Ragent | |
| The Wing | |
| Stranger (+l for believing NtStriker was shot) | |
| RedAlert | |
| Zar (+l for getting kicked off three busses) | |
| Dr. Freeze | |
| Strat | |
| Anonymous Caller | |
| KL (+e for staying at the Knights Inn) | |
| Mad Dog | |
| Odd Ball | |
| Hoog | |
| Decimator (+l, real name) | |
| Time Lord (+e, good speech) | |
| Albatross | |
| Saber | |
| Tristan | |
| Grimm | |
| Male Havoc | |
| MrG (+l+l for getting arrested, +e for not narking) | |
| The Dark Tangent (+l, for making this list) |