176 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
176 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
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Msg #8885 on 10/12/84 @02:17 (132)
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Subj: New MogUr twist, To: All
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From: Matt Yuen, Los Angeles, CA ->FWD
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The following is a transcript of John Dvorak's column in the
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Sunday October 7 issue of the San Francisco Examiner-Chronicle.
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John Dvorak
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Periscope
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KEYSTONE KOPS CAPER IN COMPUTER COMMUNITY
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It was supposed to be the computer "crime" of the year. It will
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turn into an embarrassment for everyone.
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It started with a May 16 Los Angeles Police Department raid of an
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innocuous computerized community bulletin board in Grenada (sic)
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Hills. The cops were prompted by Pacific Bell to bust a guy named Tom
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Tcimpidis (pronounced Sim-pedis). Somehow, somebody posted a telephone
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calling card number on his system.
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Basically, anyone hooked into a computerized community bulletin
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board can post messages that can be read by others on the system. All
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it takes is a home computer coupled to a modem, which links the
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computer to the telephone line, and the password. State law prohibits
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board users from posting telephone credit card numbers and calling
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card numbers. (That's what the telephone company gives you to charge
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calls nowadays.)
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In fact, it's a felony if someone posts a number on your bulletin
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board because it's considered a conspiracy. If you're the operator of
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the board and you post the number yourself, it's only a misdemeanor.
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You don't even have to know who posted the number to be charged with a
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felony. That's what happened to Tcimpidis, or so it seemed.
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This case has become *the* cause celebre of the microcomputer
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community. The L.A. Times, L.A. Herald-Examiner, InfoWorld, the
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Associated Press have written stories. And like falling dominoes,
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users and operators of the thousands of bulletin boards around have
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found out about the shutdown, and everybody is mad as hell at the
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phone company.
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A lawyer's special interest group involved in computers is
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preoccupied with the case. Lawyers are volunteering their time to
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defend Tcimpidis. Among other things, they say there's a freedom of
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speech issue. If you run an open community bulletin board, are you as
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the owner responsible for all its contents? The whole Pac Bell
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approach seemed like much ado about nothing. Hey, there was only one
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card number posted, and Tcimpidis says he didn't even see it.
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OK, so it's a big deal. But everyone, and I mean everyone, has
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screwed up like nothing I've ever seen. Sure, the applicable law is a
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disaster. But is this the case to rally around? Let's start out with
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the fact that the owner of the number posted on the bulletin board
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knew Tcimpidis and Tcimpidis knew him. This is a critical fact that
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has been overlooked by the police, the media, the angry computerniks,
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the attorneys, the district attorney, everyone. Why? Because nobody
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bothered to call the number that was posted and see who the heck this
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guy was!
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So I did.
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I did it because I checked the bulletin board and it looked
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pretty harmless. (There are "phone phreak" boards that do carry a lot
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of questionably legal information.) So I called the number and got
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hold of a fellow named Murray Krow of Murray Krow Productions, a video
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production company in Los Angeles. Hey, what do you know--Tcimpidis
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works in video, too!
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It turns out that Tcimpidis worked for Krow back in March--just
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before the number was posted on Tcimpidis's board. According to Krow,
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Tcimpidis was hired as a video engineer by a subcontractor named Terry
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Donahue to work on a production for IBM, some industrial training
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tape. Krow claims, he "had trouble with Tcimpidis." There were
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"technical errors" that luckily turned out not to be a problem. Krow
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indicated that he wasn't satisfied with Tcimpidis, and Tcimpidis
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hasn't worked for Krow since.
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Krow told me that he never lost his calling card or had it
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stolen. During a shoot, though, the card number got used by all the
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staffers and maybe 100 or so calls were made on it. According to Krow,
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it is possible that anyone could have used the card.
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Soon after the number was posted on the bulletin board, Krow got
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a phone bill with a couple of weird calls to Australia and Israel and
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a lot of short, unexplainable five-minute calls. "It was less than
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$100 worth of phony calls," Krow told me. Krow didn't remember when
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the bum calls took place. Pac Bell can figure it out.
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Krow was flabbergasted that his number appeared on Tcimpidis's
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bulletin board. (Actually, Pac Bell did call him, but Krow at that
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time said he didn't recognize Tcimpidis's name.)
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When I confronted Tcimpidis with this unusual coincidence, at
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first he didn't remember working for Krow. "Doesn't ring a bell," he
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said. He did remember working for Donahue on the IBM job, though. When
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I got more specific, then he remembered Krow. He recalled the shoot at
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some boring management-oriented video. He said he doesn't know
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anything about any "technical errors" and has worked for Donahue since
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then.
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Tcimpidis goes on to say that he, too, is shocked by the
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coincidence, claiming that he didn't know the number belongs to Krow
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until I told him.
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Tcimpidis also claims that soon after he was shut down he checked
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a bunch of other bulletin boards and found the same number posted on
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one of them. The date of the posting, according to Tcimpidis, was 45
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days earlier than the posting on his board. (Tcimpidis was raided
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after his message was on his board for 70 days.) Tcimpidis surmised
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that since Krow was passing the card around and making hundreds of
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calls, anyone could have noted the number. After all, the video
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technician community is loaded with computer-types, right?
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Why didn't Tcimpidis see the message on his board? "It got by
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me," he said.
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But who cares, anyway? The cops sure don't. They resent doing Pac
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Bell's dirty work and certainly haven't been very diligent in
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gathering material on which to build a case. When they raided
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Tcimpidis's house, they left evidence behind and took the wrong
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diskettes. The district attorney's office can't make up its mind what
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to do. And all along, the media meekly parrot Chuck Lindner's
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(Tcimpidis's attorney) complaints about the phone company. (One L.A.
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Times reporter called Tcimpidis to find out why Tcimpidis was busted
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for running a prostitution line from his bulletin board. Great
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reporting.)
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What it comes down to, and this is pathetic, is that this is a
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high-profile case that could turn out to be a big zero because of
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trumped-up felony charges, Keystone Kop antics, buck passing, and
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dubious coincidences. This isn't the case for thousands of users and
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hords of gung-ho lawyers to get behind. It's been too poorly handled
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by everyone to be a good test case for anything.
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More importantly, it's liable to cause a legislative ruckus.
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Well-meaning zealots, who lack a basic understanding of simple
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microcomputer technology, are going to try (to) pass laws that are far
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worse than the current statute (Cal PC502.7.). Stir into this witch's
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brew a naive and technophobic public with the dull-witted, antsy and
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technologically naive politician, and you've got trouble in River
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City.
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The answer is, of course, a sincere effort at self-policing these
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boards by the people who run them. Unfortunately, there has been no
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real movement in that direction.
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And here is the response from Tom Tcimpidis's attorney, Chuck Lindner:
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---------------
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10/7/84
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From Chuck Lindner:
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Everyone....This is important!!! Please give this message maximum
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distribution on all bbs systems. There is an article by john dvorak
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in the sunday san francisco "chronicle" & "examiner" that tom
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tcimpidis apparently worked as a television engineer for a producer
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named murray krow. It appears that it was krow's number that was the
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att credit card number used....Tom denies knowing it was krow's
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number....I have interviewed tom and am satisfied that he is telling
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the truth....Now, for the hard part....Because of mr. Dvorak's
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revelation (which we did not know), I am compelled to disclose defense
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evidence.....We have absolute and utterly concrete evidence that mr.
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Krow's credit card was in circulation on the los angeles bbs network,
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on numerous boards, more than a month before it found its way to
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mog-ur, and well prior to tom's working with or meeting mr.
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Krow....Mr. Dvorak regrettably thought he was solving a mystery.
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Unfortunately, as a defense attorney, I could not tell him all of our
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evidence before trial...But since he has chosen to create innuendoes
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..I thought it necessary to clear tom's name...The defense of
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tcimpidis and mog-ur will proceed as before. I would appreciate it if
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this message could find its way to mr. Dvorak.
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CHUCK LINDNER (213)-680-4435
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ATTORNEY FOR TOM TCIMPIDIS
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