1029 lines
48 KiB
Plaintext
1029 lines
48 KiB
Plaintext
Cybertek Electric: Issue #3 2/2/96
|
||
|
||
¢ss es flestra ferdha f”r; en sk lpr es sverdha
|
||
/ |\ /| /|\ |\ |\ /| |-\ \ /
|
||
/ | \ / | / | \ | \ | \ / | | \ \ /
|
||
/ | \ / | / | \ | \ | \ / | | > / \ /
|
||
/ | \/ | / | \ | / | \/ | | / / / /
|
||
\ | | | | < | | | \ / / \
|
||
\ | | | | \ | | | > \ / \
|
||
\ | | | | \ | | | / \ \
|
||
\ | | | | \ | | |-/ \ \
|
||
I know a fifteenth, which Thiodhroerir the dwarf sang before Delling's door.
|
||
He sang might to the Aesir, power to the elves, and understanding to Odin.
|
||
|
||
Cybertek Electric: Issue Three
|
||
February 1st., 1996
|
||
edited by Thomas Icom/IIRG
|
||
<ticom@l0pht.com> <thomas.icom@iirg.com>
|
||
|
||
Complements of OCL/Magnitude's Project Blackthorn,
|
||
and The International Information Retrieval Guild (IIRG)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Table of Contents
|
||
=================
|
||
- Scanning Cell Phones With a TV Set, by Deprogram
|
||
- Programming the Motorola Radius SP10, by R.F. Burns
|
||
- Hackers Versus Politicians, by J. Orlin Grabbe
|
||
- Capturing Redial, by oleBuzzard
|
||
- Hacking on The Highway, by Joshua Tower and The Men From Mongo
|
||
- Poetry from Spiral Chambers #9
|
||
"Fleeting Love", by Alan C. Dougall
|
||
"Beauty Sleep", by Leilani Wright
|
||
"Touch of Light", by Michael Morain
|
||
"Did They Wonder?", by Dominick Freda
|
||
|
||
---/////---
|
||
|
||
*******************************************************
|
||
The Real Truth About Scanning Cell Phones With a TV Set
|
||
By Deprogram
|
||
*******************************************************
|
||
|
||
We've all heard the rigamarole about cellular capable radio scanners. We all
|
||
know about the ridiculous steps the cellular industry has taken to try to
|
||
prevent their use. But really, there's no need to go to that much trouble. You
|
||
can do cellular monitoring pretty well with an ordinary and entirely legal TV
|
||
set! Of course, it's still a federal offense to monitor cellular, so this
|
||
information is only for your entertainment and is not to be used in any
|
||
illegal way, duh.
|
||
|
||
What you need first of all is anything that has a UHF TV tuner built into it.
|
||
This includes VCRs as well as TV sets. See, TV channels 14 to 83 are the UHF
|
||
TV band. Think about this: all of these channels could have been used by over
|
||
the air TV stations! Actually, the top 12 or so channels in the UHF TV band
|
||
aren't available for tv anymore as far as I know. The frequencies have been
|
||
reassigned to Land Mobile use, or cellular telephones.
|
||
|
||
On old TV sets there is a second knob for UHF. You put yer VHF knob on "U" and
|
||
tweak your UHF knob up to the very end of the band. If you have a VCR or some
|
||
other sort of tuner, just make sure that you're on "TV" and not "CATV",
|
||
because the channel allocations are different. Once you get up to channel 14,
|
||
broadcast (UHF) channels and cable channels are NOT the same. If you can see
|
||
that you are tuning above channel 83, then you are on cable and you're not
|
||
going to pick up anything.
|
||
|
||
Look around on channels 80 through 83. When you don't hear people talking, you
|
||
will hear an obnoxious buzzing sound. I think this is the tower holding the
|
||
channel, but I'm not sure. In any case, conversations will come and go as they
|
||
are handed off to another tower. If you use common sense about when and where
|
||
more people are using their cellular phones, you should be able to determine
|
||
the best times for listening.
|
||
|
||
If you really, really have no luck pulling anything in, your tuner may be a
|
||
newer one which simply won't do it. Many new TV tuners have been manufactured
|
||
so as to not pick up this cellular "interference". Rumor has it that a
|
||
restoration is possible.
|
||
|
||
Anyway, if your TV is a new one, use an old junky one instead. In fact, the
|
||
best TVs for monitoring purposes are old, cheap, black-and-white models which
|
||
aren't good for much else. The picture tube could be entirely broken and the
|
||
set could still be useful! (In fact, you might want to turn the brightness
|
||
down on the screen while monitoring.) In order to fish around for phone calls,
|
||
it's really best if you can fine tune. Even better, many old TV sets have a
|
||
UHF knob that does not click at all.
|
||
|
||
The next thing you need is an ANTENNA. (Novel idea, huh? An antenna to pick up
|
||
radio signals? But seriously, some of this may be obvious to a hacker, but I
|
||
am trying to cover all the bases here.)
|
||
|
||
Take a look at the back of your TV set, and you'll probably find two posts
|
||
marked UHF (to go along with the doohickey that says VHF). You'll want to plug
|
||
your cell-capable antenna into UHF. The easiest thing to do at this point is
|
||
go get a UHF tv loop. They cost about a dollar, many supermarkets have them,
|
||
and they will work quite well. The BEST thing to do is ...get a 800mHz
|
||
cellular antenna! These are also getting pretty darn cheap, and they are
|
||
tuned to just the frequencies you are interested in. I think it's okay to just
|
||
run a wire from the 800 MHz antenna to one of the UHF posts. I'm sure there
|
||
are many other 819 to 890 MHz antenna setups you can think of if you are
|
||
creative.
|
||
|
||
You can even use a second TV set (or other tuner) to create an "RF well" and
|
||
hear even more. Put the second TV set right next to the first. With the first
|
||
TV, tune something in. Then with the second TV, fish around channels 72-76.
|
||
Apparently you are tuning in the base frequency to go with the mobile, or
|
||
something like that. I think you will find that many of the signals you have
|
||
already been picking up will become more coherent. Single coverstions will
|
||
emerge from what was previously a mess. Anyhow, just experiment and you'll get
|
||
the idea.
|
||
|
||
I can certainly envision a cellular monitoring device consisting of a couple
|
||
of stripped down TV tuners built into a box. In fact I wonder if someone
|
||
hasn't done this. Of course, this would just be a way to make it all look
|
||
pretty and it isn't necessary at all. Well, cellular providers these days are
|
||
going digital and taking other steps to provide something resembling security.
|
||
So the time may come when all of this info is obsolete, if you believe some
|
||
people. But I myself think there will always be cell companies who are too
|
||
cheap or lazy to protect their signal.
|
||
|
||
/////
|
||
|
||
Programming the Motorola Radius SP10
|
||
by R.F. Burns
|
||
|
||
The SP10 is a 1 watt handheld radio transceiver designed to operate on one of
|
||
16 different frequencies assigned to low power/itinerant communications in the
|
||
VHF-hi business band (150.775-174 Mhz.). While this is one of Motorola's "low
|
||
end" radios, the quality is still up to Motorola's excellent standards. The
|
||
SP10 is commonly available; even being sold by Radio Shack, and a preliminary
|
||
inspection indicates that the unit should offer many opportunities to the RF
|
||
hacker. A full review of the SP10 appears in the February 1996 issue of
|
||
Popular Communications magazine.
|
||
|
||
To program the radio, remove the battery compartment cover, battery, and
|
||
plastic cover underneath the battery. On the bottom right hand side of the
|
||
radio you will see four dip switches. The position of the dip switches is what
|
||
determines the operating frequency. Use the table below to determine what dip
|
||
switch settings pertain to what frequency; where 0=ON and 1=OFF.
|
||
|
||
Frequency Switches Frequency Switches
|
||
--------- -------- --------- --------
|
||
151.625 0011 151.655 1000
|
||
151.685 0101 151.715 1010
|
||
151.775 1001 151.805 0110
|
||
151.835 0010 151.895 1101
|
||
151.925 0001 151.955 1100
|
||
154.490 1011 154.515 0111
|
||
154.540 1110 154.570 1111
|
||
154.600 0000 158.400 0100
|
||
|
||
If someone wanted an "on the fly" programmable radio, they could bring a four
|
||
bit dip switch up to the case of the radio, and be able to switch between the
|
||
16 different frequencies without having to dismantle the radio every time they
|
||
wanted to change frequencies. There's plenty of space inside the radio for an
|
||
aspiring RF hacker to do a little experimentation, and Motorola's gear has a
|
||
reputation of being very workable, hacker-wise.
|
||
|
||
/////
|
||
|
||
Hackers Versus Politicians
|
||
by J. Orlin Grabbe
|
||
|
||
The December 1995 Media Bypass magazine article, "The Still Before the Storm,"
|
||
by James Norman, details how a group of "Fifth Column" hackers have initiated
|
||
a campaign to clean up political corruption, resulting so far in the announced
|
||
retirement of over thirty politicians (who have received packages of
|
||
information detailing their financial shenanigans). Norman calls this group
|
||
"CIA computer hackers", though in fact the group is * totally outside
|
||
government.* (One member is ex-NSA, an agency that member now despises, and
|
||
another member is ex-CIA.) But, anyway, as Norman notes:
|
||
|
||
". . . the Fifth Column has managed to penetrate Swiss and other foreign
|
||
banks to quietly withdraw what is now an astounding $2.5 billion in illicit
|
||
money from coded accounts they have identified as belonging to government
|
||
figures.
|
||
|
||
"Starting in 1991, this five-man Fifth Column team has been using its own Cray
|
||
supercomputer to break into foreign bank computers, download vast libraries of
|
||
data and trace this money to a wide range of illegal activities, from
|
||
kickbacks on drug and arms deals to insider trading profits, software piracy
|
||
and the sale of state secrets. Oh yes, don't forget tax evasion."
|
||
|
||
What I like about the Fifth Column campaign is that it simply asks politicians
|
||
to live by their own rules. If they want to launder money themselves, then
|
||
they should get rid of the money-laundering statutes and let the rest of us
|
||
have the same privileges. If they don't want to pay taxes, then let them
|
||
get rid of the tax laws. If they want to continue the insane "war on drugs,"
|
||
then they shouldn't be taking payoffs from drug lords. (It is amazing how
|
||
non-authoritarian people become if forced to practice what they preach.)
|
||
|
||
This article is an introduction to the political possibilities of hacking. It
|
||
will present a brief how-to for the enterprising hacker to (legally) prepare
|
||
his or her own background report on any given politician (sorry, Senator Exon
|
||
has already received an envelope). Let's face it: journalists are too
|
||
technically incompetent to do the job.
|
||
|
||
Politicians are those annoying people who--drink in hand--can stare at a
|
||
uuencoded file for hours, fall into a sexual reverie involving ASCII entities,
|
||
and then weave their way to the nearest TV camera to pontificate about
|
||
pornography on the Internet.
|
||
|
||
But, you ask, if they are so dumb, why are they so rich? Sometimes the latter
|
||
*is* a mystery, reminiscent of the miracle of the loaves and the fishes.
|
||
|
||
Take the case of a man who can hardly pay his bills, but who gets elected to
|
||
national political office and goes off to Washington for a few years. Then--
|
||
lo and behold!--on his simple politician's salary, he suddenly manages to
|
||
maintain two fine homes, one inside the beltway in Chevy Chase and another
|
||
in his home town community of Rat's Ass, to purchase new cars for his wife and
|
||
himself, to accumulate lakefront property in a neighboring county, and to
|
||
stash away a nice sum of cash in a foreign bank account.
|
||
|
||
If the "simple politician's salary" bit sounds improbable, it probably is.
|
||
Let's face it: many politicians are on the take. They may have hidden
|
||
sources of income involving illegal payoffs from corporations, lobbying
|
||
groups, or individuals. Are you a student? Then you will be proud to know
|
||
that educational commissions and associations are also a hot new conduit for
|
||
political bribes.
|
||
|
||
This article suggests a few basic procedures for finding out whether that
|
||
special politician you have in mind is getting more on the side than ASCII
|
||
sex. Honest politicians, of course, will have nothing to fear from any of the
|
||
following.
|
||
|
||
Is what I am about to do legal? you ask. Of course it is. To reassure
|
||
yourself, pull out your world-wide web browser and take a peak at one of the
|
||
many data service companies, say Insights, Inc. (located at
|
||
<http://isis.iah.com/insights/ background/>). They promise, using only an
|
||
individual or business name and/or address, to provide sufficient information
|
||
for:
|
||
|
||
*Preparing Due Diligence Reports
|
||
*Locating People or Businesses
|
||
*Exposing and Controlling Fraud
|
||
*Uncovering & Verifying Background Information
|
||
*Identifying and Verifying Assets
|
||
|
||
How do they get away with this? Simple. They legally search public records.
|
||
Much of this public-record information is computerized, although some of it is
|
||
not. In any event, I do not advocate illegal or questionable access methods,
|
||
or the breaking of any laws. Checking up on the (possibly criminal)
|
||
politician of your choice doesn't have to be a crime.
|
||
|
||
Still not convinced? Hop over to Infonet
|
||
<http://www.infi.net/~dgs.assc/locator/bgrndnfo.html>,
|
||
which for a fee will mine public records for nuggets like:
|
||
|
||
*Felony and Misdemeanor Criminal Filings--"Search any court in the nation for
|
||
a seven year history of criminal filings and possible convictions." (Many
|
||
politicians wait until they reach office to work on this part of their resume,
|
||
but some are early starters.)
|
||
|
||
*Driving Histories--"Search a three to seven year history of an individuals
|
||
driving performance, including tickets and accidents." (So you don't really
|
||
care if your politician speeds a little now and then. But, on the other hand,
|
||
did that official who helped him get out of a DWI expect a quid pro quo?)
|
||
|
||
*Upper and Lower Court Civil Filings--"Obtain a civil litigation history of
|
||
any individual in any court in the United States." (Is there some hidden
|
||
reason this guy is getting sued all the time?)
|
||
|
||
*Social Security Number Tracking--"Access all three credit bureaus to verify
|
||
the user of a social security number and the addresses being used." (Having
|
||
your politician's social security number is the next best thing to having his
|
||
Swiss bank account number.)
|
||
|
||
*Professional Licensing--"Verify the existence and status of an entity's
|
||
license in a specific practice area, such as private investigation, medicine,
|
||
real estate and more." (Was your politician really a world-renowned physicist
|
||
before returning home to run for mayor of Rat's Ass?)
|
||
|
||
*Consumer and Business Credit Reports--"Review account balances, credit terms
|
||
and payment histories for an individual or business." ("So, before he went to
|
||
Washington, he couldn't pay his bills . . .")
|
||
|
||
Well, if they can do it, so can you.
|
||
|
||
So where do you start? Well, first see what the politician him/herself has to
|
||
say about the money flows. Federal law (5 USC app. 6, section 101 et seq.)
|
||
requires members of Congress to file *Financial Disclosure Statements* yearly.
|
||
The Financial Disclosure form has nine parts:
|
||
|
||
Schedule I: Earned Income
|
||
Schedule II: Payments in Lieu of Honoraria Made to
|
||
Charity
|
||
Schedule III: Assets and "Unearned Income"
|
||
Schedule IV: Transactions.
|
||
Schedule V: Liabilities
|
||
Schedule VI: Gifts
|
||
Schedule VII: Fact-Finding, Substantial Participation,
|
||
and Other Travel
|
||
Schedule VIII: Positions
|
||
Schedule IX: Agreements
|
||
|
||
Want to see Newt Gingrich's personal finances for the year 1993? Direct your
|
||
web browser to <http://www.cais.com/ newtwatch/93sei.html>.
|
||
|
||
Many state, county, and city elections have similar requirements, either on a
|
||
personal or a campaign basis. Want to see a copy of the *Candidate Campaign
|
||
Statement-Long Form-Form 490* for Joel Ventresca, candidate for Mayor of
|
||
San Francisco? Visit Campaign Net at <http://tmx.com/sfvote>.
|
||
|
||
These statements represent what a politician says he or she has or gets. But
|
||
the really interesting items--like those kickbacks from the Cali cartel--not
|
||
surprisingly go unreported. To get the good stuff, you will need your full
|
||
hacker armor.
|
||
|
||
The first thing to get is your politician's *social security number (SSN)*.
|
||
It's not difficult. Your politician loves to be photographed doing his/her
|
||
civic duty of voting. Which means he or she fills out a *voter's
|
||
registration card* (public information) which will contain said politician's
|
||
name, address, date of birth, party affiliation, and--usually--social security
|
||
number. Voter files may be obtained at your politician's local county court
|
||
house, as well as on many on-line data bases. A person's SSN is the common
|
||
key that links together many commercial and government data bases.
|
||
|
||
Can't find the SSN number on the voter's registration card? Then try *DMV*
|
||
records. The insurance lobby has made sure that driver's records are easy to
|
||
get, along with the details of any accidents, and critical driver information
|
||
such as height, color of eyes, address--and social security number, if the
|
||
latter was required information on the form. (California won't give out
|
||
addresses, if a request has been filed not to do so--the "movie star"
|
||
exemption.) In about 20 states the individual's social security number is the
|
||
driver's license number.
|
||
|
||
Still searching? Then go with the triple whammy of the major credit bureaus--
|
||
TRW, TransUnion, and CBI/Equifax. The Fair Credit Reporting Act essentially
|
||
implies you must be contemplating a business relationship--such as selling a
|
||
car, renting an apartment, giving a loan, or attempting to collect on a
|
||
judgment--with a party to request his credit report. But the *header*
|
||
information in the file--such as social security number, date of birth,
|
||
address, and spouse's name--is legally available to anyone, and your inquiry
|
||
(unlike an actual credit report) will leave no footprints. The addresses and
|
||
phone numbers are:
|
||
|
||
TRW
|
||
660 N. Central Expressway, Exit 28
|
||
Allen, TX 75002
|
||
Automated phone: 800-392-1122
|
||
Phone: 800-422-4879
|
||
|
||
CBI/Equifax
|
||
5505 Peachtree Dunwoody, #600
|
||
Atlanta, GA 30374-0241.
|
||
Automated phone: 800-685-1111
|
||
Phone: 800-685-5000
|
||
|
||
Trans Union
|
||
P.O.Box 7000
|
||
North Olmsted OH 44070-7000
|
||
Automated phone: 800-851-2674
|
||
Phone: (714) 738-3800, ext. 6450
|
||
|
||
Are you a hacker-journalist? Then take a peak at the National Institute for
|
||
Computer-Assisted Reporting (NICAR; located at <http://www.nicar.org/>).
|
||
Their bylaws prohibit them from selling data to nonjournalists (not that you
|
||
want to *buy* data anyway--we're just exploring *possibilities*). But
|
||
data is "sold at or below costs to journalism organizations or individuals for
|
||
legitimate journalism uses only." (Doing your civic duty to keep tabs on your
|
||
politician is, naturally, a legitimate journalistic use of the data.) Their
|
||
data bases include these publicly-available information sets, among others:
|
||
|
||
Organization: Government Services Agency
|
||
Databases: Federal Procurement Contracts for 1992-1994.
|
||
|
||
Organization: Federal Election Commission
|
||
Databases: Campaign Contributions for the 1991-1994
|
||
election cycle.
|
||
|
||
Organization: Federal Reserve Board
|
||
Databases: home mortgage loans covered by Home Mortgage
|
||
Disclosure Act (for 1992-1994)
|
||
|
||
Organization: Federal Aviation Administration
|
||
Databases: Service Difficulty Reports, Airman Directory,
|
||
Aircraft Registry
|
||
|
||
Organization: Federal Bureau of Investigation
|
||
Databases: Uniform Crime Reports
|
||
|
||
Organization: Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
|
||
Databases: Gun Dealer Licenses
|
||
|
||
The existence of such data immediately brings to mind a barrage of possibly
|
||
relevant questions:
|
||
|
||
Is there an incestuous relationship between the donors to your politician's
|
||
campaign and subsequent federal government contracts? (It always starts
|
||
somewhere . . .) To find out, compare federal procurement data with campaign
|
||
contributions. Campaign contribution data from the Federal Election
|
||
Commission are supposed to include all contributions by individuals and
|
||
political action groups (PACs) to a politician's federal election campaign.
|
||
The Government Services Agency, meanwhile, keeps Individual Contract Action
|
||
Reports (ICARs), which has information about the federal agency granting a
|
||
government contract, the identity of the contractor, and the contract dollar
|
||
amount.
|
||
|
||
Has your politician recently purchased a new home? What is its value? What was
|
||
the down payment? Is he or she living suspiciously beyond his or her means?
|
||
What is your politician's race or gender (DNA sequence?)? To start to answer
|
||
these questions, look at home mortgage data. The Federal Reserve Board
|
||
started keeping data like this in order to check on "fair" lending practices.
|
||
So the Fed began tracking home and home-improvement loans, as well as bank-
|
||
purchased loans. (And just to help the enterprising hacker, when your
|
||
politician is buying, or possibly refinancing, a house, most banks will now
|
||
ask for his Social Security Number on the Deed of Trust, especially as the
|
||
Federal National Mortgage Association now requires it.)
|
||
|
||
Does your politician own an aircraft? What's its value? Did he purchase it
|
||
with cash? Check the FAA's aircraft records.
|
||
|
||
Does your politician own a gun even while advocating gun control? If he
|
||
bought the gun from a dealer, ATF records can help out here.
|
||
|
||
And so on.
|
||
|
||
Now let's get to the nitty-gritty: *city, county, and state records*. The
|
||
*City Clerk* in your politician's home town will have a list of business
|
||
licenses (name, address, date) and building permits (name, address, cost of
|
||
construction). The *County Clerk* or *County Recorder* should have liens on
|
||
file (lien holder, payment agreements), a Probate Index (estate settlements),
|
||
records of lawsuits and judgments, powers of attorney with respect to real
|
||
estate, records of mortgages on personal property, and bankruptcy papers. Here
|
||
you can find out not only the value of your politician's property, but also
|
||
the names, addresses, and property values of everyone who lives on his street.
|
||
*City and County Courts* will also maintain a Civil Index (civil actions,
|
||
plaintiffs and defendants, as well as civil files: description of any disputed
|
||
property or valuables), a Criminal Index (criminal cases in Superior Court,
|
||
as well as criminal files), and voter's registration files.
|
||
|
||
The *county tax collector* will have a description of any property owned, as
|
||
well as taxes paid on real estate and personal property. The *county
|
||
assessor* may also have maps and photos, or even blueprints showing the
|
||
location of your politician's hot tub. The *Secretary of State* will have
|
||
corporation files and possibly annual reports of your politician's company.
|
||
|
||
Okay, let's go over it again, taking it slow. With your politician's social
|
||
security number in hand, you can get header information from the major credit
|
||
bureaus. This will give you a seven to ten year history of addresses, as
|
||
well any spousal name or names. The latter is very important, since your
|
||
average politician's instinct will be to keep questionable sums of money
|
||
and suspect personal assets in the name of his or her spouse, sibling,
|
||
business associate, or girlfriend.
|
||
|
||
Next you go to the state Department of Motor Vehicles, to find out your
|
||
politician's tastes in cars, trucks, motorcyles, boats, trailers, and
|
||
recreational vehicles. Of course if your politician leases any of the above,
|
||
he or she will not show up as the vehicle owner. So the next thing to do is
|
||
to run the license plate number of that Caddy parked out front, since this
|
||
will give you the name of both lessee and lessor.
|
||
|
||
Next you talk to someone who does business with your politician, and who thus
|
||
has a permissible reason under the Fair Credit Reporting Act to run a credit
|
||
check. This will give you a listing of all your politician's credit accounts,
|
||
current balances, payment history, and payment terms. Any bankruptcies in the
|
||
last ten years, or liens or judgments in the last seven years, will be listed.
|
||
Did your politician suddenly receive a huge campaign contribution from some
|
||
source, soon after your politician found himself stuck with a quarter million
|
||
dollar judgment against him? If so, he won't be the first person who has sold
|
||
out his country to pay off a personal financial debt.
|
||
|
||
What property does your politician own? The offices of County Recorder and
|
||
County Tax Assessor will give you the land value, improvement value, and total
|
||
assesssed values for any property. They will frequently have also the amounts
|
||
received for any sales, the sale dates, as well as information on the
|
||
mortgage-holder or other lender. Did your politician get a large loan from
|
||
Washoe International State Bank just about the time Washoe International State
|
||
Bank was having trouble with state banking regulators, who are overseen by a
|
||
legislative committee on which your politician sits?
|
||
|
||
Does your politician own a business of any consequential size? Then run a
|
||
business credit check. Who are (were) your politician's business associates?
|
||
Who are the company officers and principals? Or--if as is commonly the
|
||
case--your plitician is a lawyer, who are the law partners? Look also for
|
||
bankruptcies, tax liens, public records filings, judgments, and UCC (Uniform
|
||
Commercial Code) financing statements. These documents may turn out to be
|
||
filled with all sorts of unexpected names, dates, and activities.
|
||
|
||
On what honorary commissions does your politician serve? Do the commission's
|
||
audited financial statements show any payments for services not rendered?
|
||
This was apparently what New York Attorney General Dennis Vacco was
|
||
wondering, when he noted, on January 9, 1996, in a letter to the National
|
||
Center on Education and the Economy: "Statement 11 on your 1990 Federal 990
|
||
and Note 5 on your 1990 audited financial statements indicate that the Center
|
||
had retained the services of Hillary Rodham Clinton, a member of the Rose Law
|
||
firm, to direct your Workforce Skills Program while she also served as a
|
||
member of the Center's Board of Trustees. Statement 11 of the 1990 filing
|
||
indicates that Mrs. Clinton received $23,000 for unspecified services. The
|
||
1990 filing also refers to a second contract, which was reported to be in the
|
||
amount of $150,000 covering the period February 1, 1991 through January 31,
|
||
1992, and a similar statement appears on Statement 11 attached to the 1991
|
||
Federal 990."
|
||
|
||
Moreover, did either Hillary Clinton or the Rose Law firm pay taxes on the
|
||
sums received? (A little birdie tells me neither one did.)
|
||
|
||
The office of the Secretary of State in any of the 50 states can be a source
|
||
of UCC searches. UCC Indices will show whether your politician is listed as
|
||
either a debtor or secured party. (Okay. So your politician is up to his
|
||
neck in debt to Jackson Stephens. That doesn't mean he listens to a word of
|
||
political advice Stephens gives him. No way.)
|
||
|
||
Superior Courts, Federal Bankruptcy Courts, Small Claims Courts, and city,
|
||
county, and state tax authorities keep records of tax liens, court judgments,
|
||
and bankruptcy filings. These reveal not only outstanding financial
|
||
obligations, but also personal and company affiliations, partners,
|
||
subsidiaries, and dependents. (Is there a Don Lasater or Don Tyson in your
|
||
politician's background?)
|
||
|
||
Does your politician really have those degrees he claims? Call the college
|
||
registrar. Despite what you think, many politicians don't believe in their
|
||
own "self-made man" rhetoric, and will enhance their resumes with unearned
|
||
degrees. This in itself may only be a venal sin, but someone who records
|
||
falsehoods in this area will likely also lie in others.
|
||
|
||
Has your politician been in the news? Check your library's newspaper file,
|
||
along with reader's guides, and other news indexes. On the Internet, you can
|
||
quickly search for your politician's name among the 8 billion words on 16
|
||
million WWW pages, using the new Alta Vista search utility created by
|
||
Digital Equipment Corporation. You can also do a name or keyword search
|
||
through all 13,000 Usenet groups. Alta Vista is located at
|
||
<http://altavista.digital.com/>.
|
||
|
||
Be sure to read Lee Lapin's book The Whole Spy Catalog (Intelligence
|
||
Incorporated, 2228 S. El Camino Real, San Mateo, CA 94403; ISBN 1-880231-10-7)
|
||
for literally dozens of names, addresses, and phone numbers of data
|
||
information providers, along with an evaluation of their services. You don't
|
||
need to patronize these services in order to steal ideas from them.
|
||
|
||
Basically none of these providers specializes in politicians, so after a
|
||
little self-education and set-up, you may be in a position to start your own
|
||
business in political investigations. Bill yourself as a 21st Century
|
||
Sherlock Holmes. (*Somebody* has to stop the nefarious influence of
|
||
DigiCrime, Inc., found at <http://www.digicrime.com/>.)
|
||
|
||
Oh. About those foreign bank accounts. Well, I'll leave that to your
|
||
imagination. But a little birdie told me if you call a military base computer,
|
||
find an out-dial number, call another military base, and so on, going through
|
||
a *minimum* of three military bases, any trace back will stop at the third
|
||
military base.
|
||
|
||
Whatever you do, don't do anything illegal.
|
||
|
||
/////
|
||
|
||
=============================
|
||
CAPTURING REDIAL
|
||
Quick & Dirty by oleBuzzard
|
||
Written Today / 03-JAN-96
|
||
(c) 1996 <k0p> Communications
|
||
=============================
|
||
|
||
INTRO
|
||
|
||
Ok, here's the scenario: You're at someone's house. That someone pick's up the
|
||
phone, dials, and...
|
||
|
||
"Hey Billy, how's the Missus?....Great glad to hear it. And How's
|
||
Chelsea?...Oh really, thats fabulous. And how's Roger doin'?...Great, glad
|
||
to hear it. I was just calling to see how you all were doin. Is Al or
|
||
Tipper around?"
|
||
|
||
The phone call's over and you're sayin to yourself "man, I wish I had that
|
||
number." Well you could ask your friend point blank for it, but we both know
|
||
that as two-faced and shallow as your so-called friendship with this guy is,
|
||
theirs NO WAY he'd give you the number to information let alone to the White
|
||
House. But that's alright, cuz you're pretty good at...
|
||
|
||
CAPTURING REDIAL
|
||
|
||
The principle behind Redial Capturing is simple. You basically capture the
|
||
last number that was dialed from a TouchTone(c) phone and keep it for later
|
||
use. So now the question is, how do you do the capture. Well there's a number
|
||
of way you can do it, but after some consideration, I think I've come up with
|
||
a method thats both fairly inexpensive, VERY effective, and quite practical.
|
||
Heres what you need:
|
||
|
||
* Radio Shack Pocket Dialer w/Memory
|
||
Catalog Number: 43-146
|
||
Price: $24.99
|
||
|
||
* Any Brand Pager.
|
||
|
||
Alrght, here it is, plain, simple, and effective:
|
||
|
||
1. Take your Radio Shack Dialer and program it with the number to your
|
||
pager.
|
||
|
||
2. Keep your dialer with you at all times. (Every good phreak should have
|
||
one anyway.)
|
||
|
||
3. When you need to make a Capture, wait for the person who has made the
|
||
call to get off the phone (obviously.)
|
||
|
||
4. Pick-up the same phone the person has made the call from.
|
||
|
||
5. Hold the Pocket Dialer up to the Mouth Piece of the phone, and press the
|
||
Memory button (assuming you did like I said and programmed the Dialer
|
||
with your pager number. If not dial you're a bonehead and you have to
|
||
dial your Pager number manually with the Pocket Dialer.)
|
||
|
||
6. Once your Pager answers and requests you to "[E]nter the number you are
|
||
dialing from at the tone," hit REDIAL on the phone. Once the phone has
|
||
redialed, hang-up.
|
||
|
||
7. Beep-beep. Check your pager. You have just captured the last number
|
||
dialed from that phone.
|
||
|
||
Like I said, plain, simple, and cool enough to be in a James Cameron flick.
|
||
|
||
WHAT DUMBASS?!?
|
||
|
||
By the way, I've already been asked the Ingenious question: "how come you need
|
||
a Pocket Dialer to do this? Why can't you just call your Pager and then hit
|
||
Redial on the phone and Capture the Redial that way?" Well you can, but the
|
||
only Number you'll be capturing is your own pager number you just dialed.
|
||
(Duh!) If you wan't to Capture the redial you have to find away to dial a
|
||
source which will decode the DTMF tones, and you have to be able to preserve
|
||
the tones in the first place. The closest alternative to the method described
|
||
in this file, is to call your Pager on one phone in the house, and once your
|
||
page answers, pick-up the phone you want to Capture from and hit Redial.
|
||
This'll work fine, but you might have a little trouble remaining inconspicuous
|
||
about the whole thing--running back and forth and all.
|
||
|
||
OUTRO
|
||
|
||
Anyway, that's it. Thanx to Hades (IIRG-Net) for pointing out the obvious to
|
||
me. Look for more oleBuzzard philez at kn0wledge phreak BBS or any UnionNET or
|
||
IIRG-Net System
|
||
|
||
****************************************************************************
|
||
*** oleBuzzard's kn0wledge phreak ** kn0wledge phreak World Wide Web Site **
|
||
** AC 719.578.8288 / 28.8oo-24oo ** http://www.uccs.edu/~abusby/k0p.html ***
|
||
****************************************************************************
|
||
|
||
/////
|
||
|
||
Hacking On the Highway: An Introduction
|
||
by Joshua Tower and The Men From Mongo
|
||
|
||
Caller ID, ANI, DNRs, AMA, data taps, and ignorantly conceived totalitarian
|
||
legislation has made the art of hacking much more dangerous than it was only a
|
||
few years ago. Back in the days of (the old YIPL originated) TAP magazine,
|
||
Fred Steinbeck wrote "The Ten Commandments of Phone Phreaking"; the first of
|
||
which was (paraphrased) "Do nothing over any phone traceable to you." This
|
||
should be common sense to anyone who hasn't just crawled out from under a
|
||
rock. Yet, we see so many dumb shits out there who continue to hack over their
|
||
home phone lines. If you are one of these people, you are an idiot and
|
||
probably deserve to get caught. While we call BBSes and occasionally get a
|
||
conference call into our lines from some LLs out on the Left Coast, We pay our
|
||
hefty phone bills on time every month and do nothing illegal on the line.
|
||
They can DNR it all year long. All they'll find out is that Josh only calls
|
||
his parents once a week and that we order a lot of Chinese take-out.
|
||
|
||
The idea is to hack on the highway (the pavement kind for those of you who've
|
||
read too much Wired). This isn't as difficult as you might think, and doesn't
|
||
require you to spend $2000 on a new laptop. Yes, you're going to have to spend
|
||
some money, but not that much. If you don't have a job we suggest you get off
|
||
your ass and find something to bring in some cash. Besides, the authorities
|
||
tend to look at you in a slightly better light if it looks like you're a
|
||
responsible member of society, especially if you're a "good responsible kid
|
||
who works after school." This we know from experience.
|
||
|
||
The main items that are required are a laptop or similar portable system and a
|
||
modem. A brand-new state-of-the-art laptop can cost upwards of $2000 depending
|
||
on what you buy, but you don't need state-of-the-art for porta-hacking. All
|
||
you really need is something that you can hook a modem to, run terminal
|
||
software, and do a little data storage. One can find older laptops for under
|
||
$100 in the classified ad sections of newspapers and in the Pennysaver,
|
||
Bargain News, or whatever the ad paper is called in your locale. Hamfests and
|
||
computer shows are also a good source. One of us saw an 8088 laptop at one for
|
||
$15. Just make sure the unit either has an internal modem (even a 1200 will
|
||
do for most hacking purposes) or has an RS-232 or PCMCIA port to add an
|
||
external modem. If you're going the external RS-232 modem route, the modem
|
||
will need to able to run off batteries. Make sure that the power supply that
|
||
goes with the modem is a DC output supply. Many modems use AC output
|
||
supplies, and the modem will be much more difficult to convert to battery
|
||
operation. For a while there were these "pocket modems" being sold which were
|
||
the size of a pack of cigarettes and ran off a 9 volt battery. We haven't seen
|
||
them offered lately, but they still should be available on the used and
|
||
surplus equipment market.
|
||
|
||
For complete connectivity, acquire an acoustic coupler for your modem. This
|
||
device attaches to the handset of any phone and plugs into your modem's RJ-11
|
||
jack. It is essential for modeming from payphones; where in most instances you
|
||
don't have access to a terminal block or phone jack. Two devices of interest
|
||
are available from Konexx/Unlimited Systems Corp. (http://www.konexx.com/ for
|
||
product information). The first is the Model 204 "Konexx Koupler" ($140). It
|
||
plugs into the RJ-11 jack of a modem and provides acoustic coupling between
|
||
the modem and a telephone handset. According to company literature it
|
||
operates up to 14.4K baud on electronic phones, and up to 2400 baud on
|
||
payphones and other phones that use a carbon microphone. The second is the
|
||
Model 305 "Modem Koupler" ($300). This is a 2400 baud acoustically coupled RS-
|
||
232 modem. Both units are powered off a 9V battery. Our personal preference is
|
||
towards the Model 204. It is less expensive overall when bought with a modem
|
||
(14.4K PCMCIA modems are down to $130 new. RS-232 modems are even less.),
|
||
enables one to communicate at higher speeds than does the Model 305, and
|
||
offers greater overall versatility.
|
||
|
||
There are also a few other things that you should also throw into your porta-
|
||
hack kit:
|
||
|
||
- Can wrench or 7/16" nutdriver - The tool that is needed to open up bridging
|
||
heads, pedestals, demarc points, and other places where you can hook in to
|
||
receive a dialtone
|
||
|
||
- RJ-11 to alligator clip adaptor - a/k/a "Beige Box". Go the deluxe route and
|
||
make one with piercer clips (what lineman test sets are equipped with) so
|
||
you can also hook into a single pair drop wire if needed.
|
||
|
||
- Phone cords - You will probably run into many instances where you will be
|
||
able to use one; so keep 'em handy. We keep a 12 foot modular line cord in
|
||
our kits for when a conventional hook-up presents itself. Those retractable
|
||
50 foot units is very handy for running a line from a phone can to a nearby
|
||
place of concealment, and takes up little space.
|
||
|
||
- Leatherman Tool, Gerber Multi-Plier, et. al. - The standard hacker tool.
|
||
Don't leave home without it.
|
||
|
||
- Lineman test set or one piece phone with "beige box" adaptor
|
||
|
||
- Wireless phone jack system - This system appears to have great potential. It
|
||
costs about $100 and consists of a base unit and an extension unit. The base
|
||
unit is plugged into any AC outlet near an existing phone line and connected
|
||
to the line. The extension unit is plugged into any other outlet and gives
|
||
you a phone line without the need to run cable. As long as both outlets are
|
||
on the same transformer feed from the electric company, you should be able
|
||
to hook this system up to a phone line and AC outlet in a utility room, and
|
||
then go to another room with an AC outlet and have a phone connection. This
|
||
could even be extended from one building to another provided both buildings
|
||
were on the same transformer feed. With the electric company bridging
|
||
transformers for remote meter reading, the range could be longer.
|
||
|
||
- Prepaid Calling Cards - Currently the safest and best way to make modem
|
||
calls from a payphone. Since the calls are paid for, there's no toll fraud
|
||
flag that can come up to trip you later. Most prepaid calling card services
|
||
don't forward CID information as well; although you will still have to
|
||
contend with the service's WATS line getting your ANI data if you call it
|
||
direct.
|
||
|
||
- Proper attire and demeanor - In many places and instances it's a big help to
|
||
look and act like you belong there. One should also have a plausible story
|
||
set straight in advance in case they are questioned.
|
||
|
||
Some Notes on Payphone Usage
|
||
|
||
The problems with payphones (whether Bell or COCOT) are that they are
|
||
difficult to hook a modem up to and interrupt the connection every few minutes
|
||
in order to tell you that you have to put more money in. The solution is to
|
||
use your acoustic coupler and a calling card of some sort.
|
||
|
||
COCOTs usually have a modular jack at the demarc point (standard telco
|
||
arrangement since the COCOT's wiring is the responsibility of the customer,
|
||
just like with a residential line), and since they require external power
|
||
there is usually an AC outlet somewhere nearby as well. DTP a sticker that
|
||
says "Property of Dingleberry Telecom" (or whatever the name of the COCOT
|
||
company is) put it on the base unit of a wireless phone jack system, and hook
|
||
up the base unit to the COCOT's phone line and AC outlet. Find a nice secure
|
||
place somewhere nearby which has a handy AC outlet off of the same transformer
|
||
feed. Plug in the extension unit and have fun. Anybody who might notice the
|
||
little adjunct you've added to the COCOT line will see the official-looking
|
||
sticker on it and think it was something the company installed.
|
||
|
||
Things To NOT Do
|
||
(Taken from actual stories we've heard over the years.)
|
||
|
||
* Don't drive up to a phone can, park next to it, and run a phone cable into
|
||
your car to porta-hack.
|
||
|
||
* Don't porta-hack from a hotel room after renting it under your real name.
|
||
This applies doubly when the hotel is either currently a host to, or has
|
||
previously hosted a hacker con.
|
||
|
||
* Don't porta-hack off your neighbor's phone line(s). In particular, don't
|
||
run a length of twisted pair from the neighbor's demarc point through your
|
||
bedroom window to your box.
|
||
|
||
* Don't try to hook into any pedestal box that has the local electric
|
||
company's logo on it.
|
||
|
||
* Don't fuck with any of the equipment at the connection points you leech
|
||
service off of.
|
||
|
||
* Don't go visiting manholes in order to porta-hack.
|
||
|
||
* Don't porta-hack in public places wearing a "2600" t-shirt or wearing the
|
||
same outfit you go to Marilyn Manson shows in. Clown make-up, however, is
|
||
acceptable.
|
||
|
||
* Don't tell the whole fucking world (or even non-implicated friends) about
|
||
last night's porta-hacking session.
|
||
|
||
* Don't porta-hack at the phone can in the front of your local gun range.
|
||
|
||
* Don't bring your entire gang of friends and a keg while porta-hacking. A
|
||
girlfriend and a bottle of Wild Turkey is acceptable. However, indulge in
|
||
both in moderation.
|
||
|
||
* Don't go porta-hacking on roller-blades. This is not the movies. Don't use
|
||
skateboards, mountain bikes, or lame four-cylinder compact cars either.
|
||
Real Cyberpunks go porta-hacking in Ford Crown Victorias, Chevy Caprices,
|
||
Dodge Diplomats, and other big cars that have V8 engines under the hood.
|
||
This also applies to hackers who are under 16, as we consider drivers'
|
||
licenses optional.
|
||
|
||
* Do not carry a flare gun while porta-hacking. Refer again to THAT fucking
|
||
movie if you don't understand what we're talking about. Carry a .357
|
||
instead.
|
||
|
||
How To Porta-Hack
|
||
|
||
What the hell do you think this is? The alt.2600 FAQ? Get a fucking clue.
|
||
|
||
Respectfully submitted,
|
||
Joshua Tower and
|
||
The Men From Mongo
|
||
(Icky bo-bo to you too, asshole.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
/////
|
||
|
||
"Fleeting Love"
|
||
--------
|
||
by Alan C. Dougall
|
||
|
||
Friendly concerning love
|
||
pleases and delights, with
|
||
responses intent on fun.
|
||
|
||
Warm affectionate love
|
||
comforts and listens, but
|
||
secretly expressed burns.
|
||
|
||
Selfish shameful love
|
||
impresses and flatters, but
|
||
considers only the moment.
|
||
|
||
Impatient passionate love
|
||
dreams and devours, yet
|
||
boiled fast cools quickly.
|
||
|
||
Shared longing love
|
||
creates and destroys with
|
||
the same words wheels turn.
|
||
|
||
Realistic practical love
|
||
challenges and defends; so
|
||
conscience deprives its end.
|
||
|
||
Final opportunistic love
|
||
seeks and sows desires, yet
|
||
knows time will steal it away.
|
||
|
||
Restrained parting love
|
||
lingers and grieves, yet
|
||
pretends life goes on.
|
||
|
||
Separated solitary love
|
||
wallows or diverts, to
|
||
feed or choke the past.
|
||
|
||
Patient considerate love
|
||
allows space and time, and
|
||
hopes pause in anguish.
|
||
|
||
Selfless undying love
|
||
surrenders and frees, and
|
||
dies to bring rebirth.
|
||
|
||
Responsible decisive love
|
||
cannot rest (forgive me)
|
||
until you are safe and found (in Him).
|
||
|
||
Deepest love (He knows)
|
||
requests (if you permit) to
|
||
hear from you and pray.
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Beauty Sleep"
|
||
--------
|
||
by Leilani Wright
|
||
|
||
I feel I ought to warn you about dreams.
|
||
They do not always mean
|
||
what you would like them to.
|
||
Take my advice;
|
||
lie on your right side,
|
||
furthest from your heart
|
||
and not on your back,
|
||
where the vitals are always too exposed.
|
||
If symbols reoccur,
|
||
like a train, gun, or snake at a station,
|
||
do not assume a sexual slant.
|
||
Roll over quietly. Stop snoring.
|
||
Do not identify with the murderer
|
||
who descends to the platform.
|
||
He is rarely you
|
||
and will only disturb the warm
|
||
body sleeping at your side.
|
||
Let the danger pass; you can always
|
||
use another form of transportation,
|
||
like your own legs
|
||
when you walk in your sleep
|
||
and wake up naked
|
||
in the neighbor's flowering plants.
|
||
This means fresh air and plenty of exercise.
|
||
And you will be fortunate
|
||
to remember so little by morning.
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Touch of Light"
|
||
--------
|
||
by Michael Morain
|
||
|
||
The whiteness of the dawn
|
||
Soft like a cloud against the dark
|
||
Moving like an ocean
|
||
Quietly, stealthily, carefully
|
||
With fingers of light caressing
|
||
Touching, holding, tasting
|
||
Tracing our outlines against the sand
|
||
Measuring our footprints
|
||
Against the shadows
|
||
Like a wind shining and sparkling
|
||
Cleansing the dust motes of our atoms
|
||
Warming us, holding us
|
||
And in a moment
|
||
Gone.
|
||
|
||
"Did They Wonder?"
|
||
--------
|
||
by Dominick Freda
|
||
|
||
What are we here for?
|
||
The question has been asked
|
||
Endless times,
|
||
Contemplated over and over
|
||
With never an answer.
|
||
As long as I can remember,
|
||
Reaching the height where
|
||
I could see myself reflected
|
||
In a mirror,
|
||
I have stared at that antithetical being,
|
||
Asking him, "Who are you?
|
||
"Why are you here?"
|
||
He doesn't know the answer.
|
||
|
||
Religion tells us just to serve.
|
||
Politicians tell us to lead or follow.
|
||
Dichotomies ramble and force division.
|
||
Economists say we should be rational.
|
||
Societies say we should be normal.
|
||
Why?
|
||
|
||
Do we exist just to give life,
|
||
Propagate, be fruitful and multiply?
|
||
Or are we here to hate, and kill;
|
||
Give off deadly fumes so that
|
||
One day we will end our wonders,
|
||
In search of that ideal, that eternal progression?
|
||
|
||
Millions of years ago a spark
|
||
Created all life
|
||
From some thoughtless phenom,
|
||
Some unfathomable chasm,
|
||
Of nothing and everything;
|
||
The Alpha and Omega,
|
||
Nameless and unconscious.
|
||
And Pop lost his tail.
|
||
And Mom stood and walked.
|
||
And they saw that IT WAS GOOD.
|
||
|
||
But did they wonder?
|
||
Did they dream of successes?
|
||
Or fear demons in the night?
|
||
Huddle in the cold,
|
||
Loving to embrace?
|
||
|
||
Did they wonder?
|
||
|
||
Did they ever think of their
|
||
Children's tomorrow?
|
||
And could they imagine a
|
||
Beautiful and terrible world
|
||
Of Darwinian technology,
|
||
Knowing that each step taken,
|
||
Each triumph, each fall,
|
||
Counted the dying
|
||
Of mankind?
|
||
|
||
Did they wonder?
|
||
|
||
|
||
Reprinted from Spiral Chambers #9. Poems are Copyright (c) 1996 by their
|
||
respective authors. Unedited and properly attributed reproduction is
|
||
encouraged.
|
||
|
||
Original poems may be included in Spiral Chambers by sending the work to:
|
||
|
||
Spiral Chambers
|
||
P.O. Box 772
|
||
Mentor, Ohio 44061
|
||
|
||
or
|
||
|
||
RepsiSK@AOL.com
|
||
|
||
---/////---
|
||
|
||
Unless otherwise noted Cybertek Electric is Copyright (C)1995,1996 by
|
||
OCL/Magnitude, P.O. Box 64, Brewster, NY 10509. All Rights Reserved.
|
||
Noncommercial reproduction is encouraged provided this electronic publication
|
||
is redistributed in its entirety with credits intact. Cybertek Electric is
|
||
published for educational purposes only; under The First Amendment of The
|
||
United States Constitution. No illegal use is implied or suggested. If you
|
||
have a problem with this, too fucking bad. SUBMISSIONS WANTED. If you can read
|
||
and understand this e-zine then you should know what we're interested in.
|
||
Please send any feedback, questions, and/or submissions to either of the email
|
||
addresses in the signature below.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|\ /| /\ / |\ | Thomas Icom/IIRG
|
||
| >< | < > / | \ |\ <ticom@l0pht.com>
|
||
|/ \| \/ < | | > <thomas.icom@iirg.com>
|
||
| | /\ \ \ | |/ International Information Retrieval Guild
|
||
| | / \ \ \| | "May Odin guide your way!"
|
||
Madhr er manna gaman, ok moldar auki, ok skipa skreytir.
|
||
|
||
<End of Text> |