307 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
307 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
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PHREAKING AMONG THE GAUCHOS
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By Viktor Arevalo <viktare@well.com>
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I told myself I was lucky when I returned to Argentina after
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ten years in Europe. I had read in Ed Krol's The Whole Internet
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that Argentina rated BIUF, an international connectivity rating
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better than Australia and much better than New Zealand.
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Gophering, I even discovered a couple of Argentine addresses:
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the Foreign Ministry and La Plata University. "Argentina equals
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Switzerland as to Internet capacity," I celebrated in advance.
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"An internaut will miss nothing down there." The only minus point
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listed, compared to the USA, was the absence of OSI/ISO
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connectivity, of no consequence whatsoever for TCP/IP or the
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Internet as a whole.
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When I arrived in Rosario on the Parana River, I found
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just a conventional phone jack in my house. I verified the jack
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right away: an old pulse line, with international access only
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feasible through an operator after waiting half an hour or more.
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The next day, I went to the nearest office of France Telecom
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S.A., the telco monopoly. A dour girl with a hare-lip and the
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body of a Greek goddess assured me: "You're fortunate, where you
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live you can tone dial internationally just by paying us $50". I
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signed a form and paid. Then I asked cheerfully, "Can you give
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me the addresses of some Internet access providers in the city?"
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The girl turned red and uttered back angrily, "Please, sir,
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don't make me such proposals! I'm a decent woman, I don't provide
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such things!" I didn't dare to inquire what the Greek goddess
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with the hare-lip had understood I wanted from her.
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I returned home baffled and worried. Nobody I met had the least
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idea about Internet.
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Weeks passed. I noticed one day that I could tone dial
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internationally on that phone. I fired up my modem, called
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halcyon.com in Seattle and opened a common dial-up account
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and a SLIP account in less than 5 minutes. Then I connected to
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pipeline.com in New York and downloaded a file, 1,544,070 bytes,
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with ZModem. The download took 24 minutes, at a speed of
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about 11.000 bps-not bad for a place so far-and away. Before
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jogging, I called the international operator and asked, "How much
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cost per, minute to USA'?" He answered: "3.52".
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"3.52 what, explain, please!" He stressed back: "3.52 US dollars,
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Sir, do you understand Spanish'? Dollars, Sir." The stupid 30
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minute test had cost $105.60. My usual two daily hours on the Net
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would gulp more than thirteen thousand dollars a month. The only way
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to reach Internet from Argentina: dialing international calls at the
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outrageous rate of $3.52 a minute. No way.
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After months of total incommunication and frustration, I met
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Kurt, who described himself as "a German visiting professor in
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Argentina from the University of Leipzig." His specialty was some
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obscure branch of optical links beyond my understanding.
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Even if he weren't a German scholar in such an unnatural and odd
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place like Rosario, Kurt would cut an imposing figure: black suit
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with a neatly knotted tie over a snow white shirt. Hovering over
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the suit were piercing black eyes framed by shoulder length black
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hair and a beard worthy of an Ayatollah.
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When I told him about my isolation because of the phone rates, he
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responded: "Internet, Donnerwetter, my colleagues and pupils pass
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hours and hours on the Internet, they don't pay a cent. Please,
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Herr Kollege, come next Friday evening to our workshop about TCP/IP.
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I'll show you everything. First, I had to help a little bit,
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but they don't need me now anymore. These kids are really smart."
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What an outspoken jerk I'd been. Of course there was Internet at
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the University, like everywhere in the world, with one or several
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64K high speed links and racks of modems. Surely they'll loan me a
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point to point line, if I know how to ask for it. Why not? How
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foolish to have lost so many months with snail mail and faxes!
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Next evening, I went to the Technological University clothed like
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an IBM executive of the old times with my darkest tie and my whitest
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shirt. The facilities reminded me of some cluster-bombed buildings
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in Abadan, South Iran, during the Gulf War. All window panes broken,
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all walls cracked. One could see and smell the decay and dirtiness of
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decades. I asked a fellow, some kind of guard or janitor, about Prof.
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Kurt and he answered with mocking disdain: "Ah,the German that looks
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like Rasputin, yeah, he's down there in the cellar with his lunatics.
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Is there some special show that you come so costumed?"
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I tried to find the cellar, but got lost. All of a sudden, behind
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me,I heard to my relief the metallic voice of Kurt in impeccable
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Hochdeutsch: "Oh, Herr Kollege, you're here, quite early, people
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arrive in Argentina mostly an hour late. Come, please, we are
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about to begin the session." We went down a dimly lit flight of
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stairs. A massive, rusty iron gate, a piece of ancient design,
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offered access to the cellar, a totall underground construction,
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most unusual in Argentina. Perhaps it was the remnant of some
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older building swallowed by the foundations. Six personal computers
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rested on a long table against one wall: cheap clones,mini-tower
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cases, 14" Samsung color VGA screens, rank and file in Argentina
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all running Windows 3.1. I couldn't see any cables and couldn't
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say if they were networked or not.
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The atmosphere of the huge vaulted cellar reflected order, almost
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obsessive order, an cleanliness of the humblest sort. Greenish
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lights shone from side wall niches, indirect lighting perfect for
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working at the computers, but weird for anything else. How the place
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looked, nobody would say we were in Argentina. The setting was
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typical East European.
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Four young Men and two girls, all in their twenties, sat
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before the screens, The acted polite, neat and grave, as though
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they were performing a ceremonial task. All greeted me respectfully,
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too much so for their local customs. They all stood up and gave me
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their hands. One told me: "I'm Nathan, we just assist Prof. Kurt.
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We worked as a team to learn abou the Internet and it's protocol.."
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Nathan explained further: "we now run Windows in a peer to peer
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net. We usually call sirius.com in the USA on our V34 at 28800
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We try at least, sometimes it fails and fails".
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Nathan dialed a common touch phone, and When he heard something on
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the other side, he, threw a sharp screech through the phone
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mouthpiece with a walkman headphone connected to an IBM notebook.
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Then I perceived again the characteristic playing of phone numbers
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in tone. "This is CCITT five"' Nathan said.
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A short modem negotiation of screeches came, sirius appeared and
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popped a SLIP node number, Nathan registered it and jumped to his
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desktop computer. he fed the address into Trumpet Winsock and ran
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Eudora to fetch mail. It suprised me how much mail they received
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and how much they sent back.
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I asked Kurt if We could run Mosaic or NetScape.
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It took no more than a minute to load Mosaic and it's, "What's
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New" page; the speed impressed me. "What's New" suggested a
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new Web page devoted entirely to cats. There we went: a center
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for cat owners and fans, where you can peruse all aspects of
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feline existence and ask counsel about your cat, even if it is
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on drugs like Prozac. We were roaming the Net until late,
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about 5am. An exhilarating experience after, so many months
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of exclusion! I could even log into CompuServe with WinCom through
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the Internet SLIP connection, using a small shareware program
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called comt that emulates a Hayes modem on TCP/IP.
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Mosaic and NetScape brought images lightning quick for such a
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forgotten corner of the world, astoundingly quick. We used the
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Swedish telnet, freeware Ewan for telnet, which was excellent
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For email, Pegasus and Eudora were constantly checking in the
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background. For News they had the classic Trumpet News and Win News.
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All programs ran on all six pc's without a glitch. Time flew.
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My backached, my eyes were swollen and my hands missed the keys.
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It was late, very late. All of a sudden I realized how different
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these people behaved from the hackers and internauts I knew.
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their commentaries were objective, sparse, and unobtrusive:
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about download speeds, better logging scripts for Winsock, or the
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advantages of PPP over SLIP.
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They never bragged about what the accomplished. Kurt sat all those
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hours somewhere in the dark and didn't speak a word. He was working,
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perhaps writing at his tiny Toshiba protege'. Silence could be
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absolute in the cellar for 20 minutes, the mushy keyboards didn't
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even click. sound came only through the walkman, creating an eerie,
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ghastly atmosphere.
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After the amazing session, I invited them all to a coffee breakfast
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in a shabby, dusty bar. All bars were shabby and dusty in these
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surroundings, but the coffee tasted great and the pastry was still
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warm from the ovens.
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I felt exhausted. buoyant and worried. I told Kurt:
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"Great, this technological university seems ahead of all others
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in Argentina. How do they manage the phone bills? Do they enjoy an
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optical link with a flat rate? Where's the backbone?"
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Kurt answered in his too-correct, cacophonous Spanish: "The
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University pays nothing. The cellar itself lies outside the premises
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of the university, it is a leftover of a mansion demolished 30 years
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ago. We use it and nobody objects. We wired and air-conditioned it
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using borrowed materials, the university provides nothing and opposes
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nothing. How do we call long distance? I thought you knew.
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We simply phreak, Viktor, phreak and phreak!
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We have gathered some 135 direct country services, 800 numbers for
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collect calls, we seize one or several trunks and stay online all
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the time we wish".
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"Is it legal?" he continued. " I don't know. Is it fair? Yes. it is.
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We harm nobody. The phone company, a private French monopoly,
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voracious like a school of piranhas, charges $3.52 per minute to the
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USA. University teachers, students, young people, don't have a
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choice: if they want access to the Internet, they must phreak.
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We don't need any special hardware like the old blue boxes or the
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modern demon dialers from Holland. BlueBeep covers all our wishes.
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BlueBeep is a freeware from Hamburg that generates the trunk
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tones through the cheapest SoundBlaster clone. If you have the
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smallest doubt, you phone its author, Uncle Dittmayer, for help
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and he never asks a cent for support. We opened, of course, some
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SLIP and PPP accounts with American service providers on the West
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coast. We navigate the Net at a modest but acceptable speed
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under Windows. Internet is here a matter of survival, not like
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in the USA or Europe ... the university is totally bankrupt in
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Argentina, textbooks in the library are 20 years old, if you can
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find them. All subscriptions to scientific journals were canceled
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a decade ago."
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I was shocked. Where I worked more than ten years in Europe, they
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punished phreaking as a federal offense, a crime. On the contrary,
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Kurt described phreaking in Argentina as the only path to Information
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Justice against the monopolies. The revelation took me absolutely
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unprepared.
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The only backbones I had found where those in my own back and
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they began to ache terribly. I felt depressed and giddy.
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I showed the most sincere mixture of understanding and confusion.
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I slept that Saturday ten hours and dreamed nonstop about Tolkien's
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stuff: elves, dwarfs and orcs with phones but without a happy end.
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I never returned to that cellar.
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I needn't resort to phreaking. Providence, personified by some
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old pupils of mine and friends in Switzerland, rescued me from the
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isolation of the Pampas. After delicate negotiations with German
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and Swiss banks, they hired for me a callback service with no time
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limits and at a flat rate, they say. They pay. The best present I
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ever had. I ignore how much it costs, but it works transparently
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and never lets me down. Kurt didn't comment much on my absolute *callback
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legal solution. He considered it morally inferior compared to
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phreaking and too dependent for his values. He told me: "You have
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to thank somebody for getting your rights, you degrade them to
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privileges and your solution remains purely personal. You harm
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nobody indeed, but you help only yourself."
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At the end of November 1994, I met Prof. Kurt once more in a
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dilapidated pub near the harbor. He wanted me to help him in
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debugging some C++ routines; the problem was tough and we
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worked five hours on it with our notebooks. Then we ate dinner
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together. He commented that evening, "I understand your absolute
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reluctance to phreak. Anyway, what the students do with the
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phones in the cellar is very simple, any kid could do the same and
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phone all over the world without paying a cent.
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But the real possibilities, the great changes, are in the future.
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We could install here a cloaked Internet node with all the facilities
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of a large service provider, say like The Little Garden in the
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States or Rhein-Main in Germany. We could make a clean connection
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with the main optic link, which passes some twenty meters from the
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institute cellar.
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Then the students will enjoy unlimited bandwidth, the bandwidth
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equivalent to 35 simultaneous ISDN connections. And the telcos would
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never know or suspect anything. Even if they knew, they would
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never spot our cable, not in a thousand years."
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It seemed to me that Kurt knew what he was talking about
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up to the smallest technical detail, but ignored completely
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the legal implications and the political realities in
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Argentina. I liked Kurt and was distressed about the
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needless dangers he ran. I told him: "The legal consequences
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of your technical jump could be far reaching, too." And what
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I didn't say, but pictured in my thoughts, was Prof. Kurt
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without his notebook vegetating in some dungeon. But the mad
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all are in God's keeping. Anyway, I admired Kurt: he wasn't
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flashy, but did things in a solid dominating way. Even his
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dreams based on facts, he had a fanatical dedication: he wanted
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to end the Internet isolation of Argentina and the official
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hypocrisy hiding it. He stated to me his principles and
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I could not contend their *morality;
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1) We don't harm anyone
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2) The telcos bar the public from any Internet access, but
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officially declare Argentina as enjoying all Internet
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services.
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3) People need the Internet here much more than in countries
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where the universities really work. Argentine universities
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are hollow shells without any resource or mission whatsoever.
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4) The telcos monopolize so much bandwidth that our calls take
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away nothing, just a little bit of their surplus, the
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discarded dark fiber.
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But principles, and reality need a revolution to coincide.
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Agraule, a graduate from the cellar team, a sad-looking and
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beautiful girl, told him once in my presence:
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"Yes, Prof. Kurt, perhaps you're right, but it's much better
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to keep a low profile, Laws and judges don't have much to
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do with justice in Argentina. We have to prepare ourselves
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for the future. To break into any cable would first make us
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grow in numbers, and then destroy us all. It's too
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dangerous. You know too much for us, your wisdom will burn
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us out if we drink it all in one year. We need limits and
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goals, knowledge can be like rhino ammo and blow us away."
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Sunday mid-afternoon in January, torrid, unbearable hot,
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a deserted city. I almost hate the cicadas now. They are
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funny bugs first, then they batter the eardrums so much
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you cannot think. The people, the few people that remain in
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Rosario, sleep long siestas. I have to avoid siestas at any
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rate, they provoke head-aches and nausea in me, I was typing
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at my notebook and finishing the first draft of this article
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when the doorbell rang. A yawning old maid shuffled into my
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home office saying, "A foreigner, Senor, wants to see
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you".
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Kurt came in: "Viktor, dear chap, I'm going back home
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and want to say good-bye. I hope I'll return next
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winter. But perhaps you don't stay much longer in
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Argentina. You suffer too much isolation, it's not the
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right place for you. Go away as soon as possible!" I
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responded, "Oh, yes, perhaps we meet again somewhere
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else, but I'll have to remain here half a year at least to
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streamline the farm. Do you return to your chair at the
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university in Leipzig'?"
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Kurt answered, "Yes, something of the sort, a lot of matters
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pending." I asked, "How long have you taught at that university
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in Germany?" "When the Democratic Republic ceased to exist, they
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had to send me somewhere," he told me. "They sent me to Leipzig.
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They ordered me to leave Berlin, too, but for legal reasons.
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I'm under some sort of prosecution, you know, such things take
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years and years to clear." I asked, "What the hell, they
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prosecute you there because of phreaking?".
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"Oh no, Viktor:'he said, "I wish it were so simple. I worked
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all my life, even before graduating and habilitating as a full
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professor, at the STASI (the East German Secret Service).
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They paid me as a university professor but my chair was without
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pupils and without university." I said jokingly: "Were you a
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communist James Bond, Kurt?" Kurt answered: "No, I hate spying
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and am not gifted for it. I was the manager of a whole technical
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area for computers and international telecommunications.
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We had to blow all STASI hardware and data before the takeover.
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I obeyed our orders to the letter. Now they try to find fault
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with such actions. That's of no consequence for my life, my
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career's closed, and I'll stay as a professor in Leipzig for
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life. A boring task indeed! Now, listen: I, we, could try to
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crack Intellink. It's easy. It's a quest."
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When Kurt left, I felt I had found the last piece of a puzzle.
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I knew the local phone companies were no match for Herr Professor
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Kurt. Alas! It is a great and terrible world. BIUF or not BIUF,
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what does it matter. Mr. Krol?
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