613 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
613 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
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Reprinted from SPIN (5:12 pg 25) - March 1990
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*Typed by Ninja Star*
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CYBERThrash
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by
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Julian Dibbell
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*Everyone thinks that they're nerds, but these teenage beer guzzling hackers
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in their Megadeth t-shirts are the new heroes of the information age.*
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Eleven o'clock Saturday night, and I was headed for the DMZ again. I
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had the feeling the Big Kahuna would be there-and that he'd know what the
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hell was going on with the Cardboard Box. I sure didn't, and it was making
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me nervous.
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On the TV set outside my dim Brooklyn bedroom, and Cold War was ending.
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Furious Czechs gathered in plazas, East Germans ogled West Berlin shop
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windows-great infotainment, if you like rubble. I was after a different
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story. No broken bricks, no raging crowds, just phantom signals playing
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hide-and-seek through a fiber-optic maze that slithered across the world.
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On the TV screen the present was crumbling into the past. On my computer
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screen a future was taking shape, and the Big Kahuna was somewhere inside
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it.
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Amber glow brightened the room as I fired up my bargain-basement
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IBM clone and dialed into Telenet. The modem shrieked and crackled and
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suddenly I was in, gliding down the Main Street of the world's computer
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networks. I typed in a series of numbers charging the call to a hulking
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defense contractor somewhere in the Midwest, then I entered the 12-digit
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network-user address that routed my connection across the Atlantic to a PC
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in France.
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The cursor sat panting for a moment, then slid across the screen,
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spelling out the welcome logo: big block letters D, M, and Z. I entered a
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handle and dropped on in. It was the usual scene. A chat system capable of
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taking 25 callers at once, the DMZ was a hangout for hackers and phone
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phreaks from all over the world. A list of their handles glowed out at me
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from my monitor, silent and serene, but behind it a phreak/hack Casbah
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seethed. All those handles were passing private messages back and forth,
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cutting deals, trading short-lived codes, passwords, and other fetishized
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bits of information that are the illegal tender of the hacker economy.
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But I wasn't here to cop. I was here to find the Big Kahuna, and he was
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nowhere in sight. The list of handles glowed on, losing or adding a name
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now and then.
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There was nothing to do but wait.
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In France? Wait in France for a kid who lives an area code away from me?
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Things had gotten weird so fast I'd barely noticed.
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In the beginning it was all as simple as the headline: On October 4, 1989
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, Grumman Aerospace Corporation, a key supplier of combat aircraft to the
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Pentagon, sent police to arrest a 15-year-old boy for slipping into the VAX
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mainframe at Grumman's Long Island plant from his bedroom in Levittown, New
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York.
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It wasn't much. Just another hacker story in a year bursting with them.
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The biggest was on its way to court: Robert T. Morris Jr., who had loosed a
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worm into the defense department's national research network,
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unintentionally paralyzing over 6000 computers, faced five years and a $250,
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000 fine. Earlier in the year a federal judge had sentenced 18-year-old
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Herbert Zinn Jr., a/k/a "Shadow Hawk," to nine months in prison plus a
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$10,000 fine and two and a half years' probation for sneaking into phone
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company systems and copying "highly sensitive" software. On the book-tour
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circuit, computer security hero Clifford Stoll was out plugging The Cuckoo's
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Egg, his nonfiction account of KGB-backed West German hackers snooping for
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secrets in American networks.
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Nineteen eighty-nine was shaping up into the year of the hacker, and I
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wanted a piece of it the way some people wanted a piece of the Berlin wall.
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I'd been getting more obsessed with computers every day since I bought my
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PC, and more fed up with writing record reviews. As things went, the Grumman
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bust was small potatoes, but by the conventions of the emerging media
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subgenre of the hacker story, it had the earmarks of a minor classic- crime,
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punishment, feds, teenager, suburbia. I wanted to write it.
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Looking for dirt, I opened the latest issue of 2600, "The Hacker
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Quarterly," a Long-Island based 'zine. It was filled with how-to briefs,
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updates on worldwide hacker feats and busts, and a tough, political-minded
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defense of hacking and its constant companion, phone phreaking the high-tech
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defrauding of Ma Bell). No mention of Grumman, though.
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But hidden among all the other goodies was a list of computer bulletin
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boards or BBSs) loosely affiliated with the magazine. I switched on the PC,
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called one of the numbers- a Westchester exchange- and browsed a bit.
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I'd been riding the tri-state boards for over a year, and at first didn't
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see anything so different about this one. There was the usual pile of
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messages, friendly exchanges and occasional swipes, points of information
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and wisecracks. Subjects ranged from politics and music to personal-computer
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tech- with some notable additions, including general discussions of hacking
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and phreaking. But as the posted messages scrolled up my screen I could see
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that the tone here was unusual in the generally conservative world of BBSs.
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Talk was looser here, more anarchic, people used handles rather than real
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names and actually swore without fear of getting booted by the folks who
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ran the board, the sysops (systems operators). There was a muted festivity
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to the place, as if somewhere nearby, maybe in a back room no one would tell
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me about, one motherfucker of a party was going on.
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But there was nothing on the Grumman bust, so I scrolled through the
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section devoted to hyping other BBSs. There were some well-pitched appeals
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for calls, but the ad that caught by eye only needed its Long Island area
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code to bait the hook:
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*89Jul20 from the Wintermute @ YOYODYNE
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Call: The Cardboard Box. 516-742-0801*
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My computer dialed the number, the modem connected, and then suddenly I was
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facing the heaviest dose of paranoia I'd ever encountered on a board. The
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BBS program asked for my handle (Dr. Bombay) and then slapped me with a
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questionnaire asking me to (a) declare that I was not an employee of
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any long-distance phone company or any local, state, or federal law
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enforcement agency, (b) identify a series of cryptic technical terms and
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acronyms, and (c) leave a note to the sysop, Wintermute, and his cosysops
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the X25 Warrior and the Big Kahuna, describing some of my hacking exploits.
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I passed the first part with flying colors, bullshitted my way miserably
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through the second, and confessed in the third that my greatest exploit was
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subscribing to 2600. So much for that board. After that performance they'd
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never let me in. I was back to square one.
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A few days later I checked the board to see whether I'd been validated.
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I keyed through the login procedure and waited for the brush-off. It didn't
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come-I'd been granted full access. I was in.
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I cut straight to the message base and worked my way down the menu. The
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email section was unreadable, nothing but private messages. The PHREAKING
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section was full of phone company techno-lore and strange tales of making
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pay phones do things that they weren't designed to. In HACKING the messages
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listed phone numbers and passwords for all kinds of computers-university,
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corporate, NASA. PIRATES' LAIR was the "wares" section, a place to trade
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illegally copied commercial software. In CARDING there were messages on how
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to scam other people's credit card numbers and use them safely. The more I
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read, the wider my eyes bugged. Whoever these people were- The Signal Jockey
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, Dan Hackroyd, Exile- they were hardcore.
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I shook my amazement and headed for the HACKING NEWS/BUSTS section. A
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good idea: the second message that scrolled up brought the news of the
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Grumman bust to the board, and in the third Wintermute dropped the bomb
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that the unnamed minor in the papers, on TV, on the radio, was most likely
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A-TNT, until recently a regular at the Box. With this the conversation
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quickly heated up. How could they be sure it was him? Would he narc? Would
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they bust the board? As the days and messages scrolled by, though, it became
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clear that the board was safe, and the questions grew more philosophical.
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For instance: was A-TNT, or was he not, a lamer?
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Lameness, it seemed, was the ultimate sin around here, and not everybody
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was sure A-TNT was guilty.
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*"He wasn't such a bad guy. He was just getting started,"* wrote the
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Mechanic. *"It's too bad."*
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*"People get busted because they get lazy,"* Mirage suggested.
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But the Watchman wasn't going for it: *"Lazy...lame...I don't see much
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difference. If you make a mistake you're lame. So we're all lame to an
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extent...but, whether you're the eLiTeSt hacker or the lowliest k0dez d00d,
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it takes a BIG fuck-up to get busted."*
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Whatever A-TNT was, though he sure wasn't the whiz kid the media was
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calling him. *"Shit, he was asking ME for help,"* cracked the Mechanic,
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*"so you KNOW he wasn't no genius."* But what else was new? The media got
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it wrong again. Pretty soon the little lamer would be on "Gerlado,"
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repenting his evil ways, frightening the old folks with tales of
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sneaker-worshipping and skinhead hacker cults.
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*"Why is it when you see a computer user on TV it is always some total
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fucking modem-GEEK?"* asked the Watchman, clearly pissed-off. *"Why don't
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they ever show computer usrs like us, chugging Buds and dragging on
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Marlboro 100s in our Megadeth t-shirts and hacking k00l shit?"*
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I was starting to wonder myself. The moment I dropped in here I knew I
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had found that back-room party at last. These people were having the time
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of their adolescent lives, and they were doing it with enough style and
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attitude to qualify for a full-fledged MTV-sanction youth subculture status.
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All right, so maybe A-TNT wasn't a lamer, but who wanted to read another
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morality play about a computer delinquent scared straight by a brush with
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the law? The real story was still on the loose, and I was staring right at
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it.
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The only problem was that a mountain of hacker paranoia was standing
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between me and the story. There were good reasons trust is such a hard-won
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and fragile commodity down in the computer underground. Since the breezy
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"War Games" days of the early 80s, the federal and state governments have
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criminalized the shit out of hacking-by last year every state by pinko
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Vermont had passed laws against computer trespassing and "theft" and the
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federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986 had made hacking punishable by
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anywhere from one year to 20.
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After a brief period of relative impunity, hackers were beginning to go
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to jail. That kind of atmosphere tightens definitions of common sense. On
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boards around the country, the elite hacker group Legion of Doom was
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circulating a novice's guide that warned against leaving your real phone
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number on any BBS ("no matter how k-rad it seems") or sharing real-life
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information with any one you didn't know too well.
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"Don't be afraid to be paranoid," the guide concluded. "Remember, you
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*are* breaking the law. It doesn't hurt to store everything encrypted on
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your hard disk, or keep your notes buried in the backyard or in the trunk
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of your car. You may feel a little funny, but you'll feel a lot funnier
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when you meet Bruno, your transvestite cellmate who axed his family to
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death."
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Still, I got the feeling that even if the dangers didn't exist at all
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hackers would have to invent some. The main thrill of the hack may indeed
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be, as the LOD intro insists, "the pursuit and capture of knowledge," but
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paranoia is at least part of the kick. As the pop culture industry is quick
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to recognize (see horror-writer Chet Day's new book The Hacker for a
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deliciously schlocky tale of an elite hacker board infiltrated not by the
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feds but by a terrorizing demon handled "The Succumbus"), the technology
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just lends itself to cloak-and-dagger drama.
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So it wouldn't do for me to start asking pesky-reporter questions. If I
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spooked the phreak/hackers who populated the place they might scatter,
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leaving me with the blood of a dead BBS on my hands. I decided to approach
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the sysops instead. On my computer I carefully composed a text-file
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suggesting we meet and explaining my intentions and my sympathy towards
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hackers. Then I called the Box, uploaded the text to Wintermute in the
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private file-transfer section, logged off, and crossed my fingers.
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I called back the next day, adrenaline rushing as soon as I saw hat I
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had private mail from the sysops. But it was only a message acknowledging
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that they'd received the file. I called back again the following day. No
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answer. I called later in the week. Still nothing.
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My nerves were frazzling, but at least the waiting gave me time to
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browse the message bases and get a better picture of the board. Slowly I
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began to figure out what any seasoned member of the computer underground
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would have sussed at first glance: the Cardboard Box was not to be confused
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with a pirate board. This was a hack/phreak board, dedicated primarily to
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the mutual education of its members in the arts of second-story
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telecommunications. According to Northern Illinois University criminologist
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Gordon Meyer (I downloaded his master's thesis from the Box's database),
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there are roughly a hundred such board in existence, varying widely in
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quality (the wares boards, where uploading and downloading pirated software
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is the main activity, outnumber the h/p's by about 20 to one).
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I also got to know the players. There was the Fone Ranger who called in
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regularly from Chicago to rant about the lameness of "warez d00dz." There
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were one or two other out-of-staters, and occasionally someone would drop
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in from England or Switzerland. The rest of the 20 or so regulars were
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spread out between deep Long Island and far Manhattan- not a huge area, but
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diverse. When Exile, and inner-city color of color, referred to A-TNT with
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the generic "nigga," he got back a clueness explanation from the 'burban
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Big Kahuna to the effect that the kid didn't appear to be black in any of
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the pictures he'd seen. In the obligatory MUSIC section, similar culture
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clashes flared an fizzled- the Mechanic. calling from the heart of the
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Boogie-Down Bronx, went toe-to-toe with the metalheads and prog-rockers for
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a while in fuck-you defenses of hip hop, house, and reggae. Then he gave up
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in a confession of secret love for Genesis and Phil Collins.
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I was learning all kinds of things. Except why the sysops weren't
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responding to me letter. A week had passed since I uploaded it. I called
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again, planning to leave another anxious, nudgy message. Instead, there it
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was. Contact:
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*FROM: WINTERMUTE
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TO: DR. BOMBAY
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SUBJECT: ARTICLE...
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A REPLY TO #284
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------------------
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UMM..Well..OK I might be able to manage me X25 Warrior and Big Kahuna
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meeting you (sorry we cant give out addresses or phone #s)...I have a few
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conditions...dont put any real handles or board names...also...I would
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appreciate it if you would say clearly that hackers dont destroy anything
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on a system, they just want to learn how to use it...also...A contribution
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to the BBS for a 38,000 BAUD modem would be appreciated!*
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I didn't kick my heels because there wasn't room under my desk. I just
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sent Wintermute a message saying I didn't think SPIN would cough up
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modem-money but the other conditions would be no problem.
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After all, why not help clean up the hackers' public image? It was sad
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but true enough that the "threat" of computer viruses has obsessed the
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media, which had in general been too lazy to find out that in the
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hack/phreak community planting a destructive virus was something you might
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do to a rival bulletin board but never to a hacked system. And why wouldn't
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the media call bullshit on corporate claims of huge losses to the computer
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underground? The software industries were claiming they lost billions of
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dollars a year to piracy. The phone companies claimed a million a day bled
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to phreaking. No one ever pointed out that they were talking about "theft"
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of goods that didn't disappear from the shelves when stolen and would not
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have been used anyway if they had to be paid for. Information technology
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had a tendency to make us information peddlers-journalists like me- look
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stupid, and it was hardly fair that hackers suffered for our lameness.
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So sure, I would gladly do what I could to make amends, I told Wintermute
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- as long as we could meet and talk. *"Just give me a time and place."* I
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said.
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Another long week passed. Finally I got this message:
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*FROM: WINTERMUTE
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TO: DR. BOMBAY
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SUBJECT: ARTICLE
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A REPLY TO #339
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------------------
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I am having problems...Nobody want to meet you, they think you are gonna
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appear with a dozen cops or something...*
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For Christ's sake. I signed and typed out a reply:
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*FROM: DR. BOMBAY
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TO: WINTERMUTE
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SUBJECT: ARTICLE...
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A REPLY TO #341
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------------------
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Would would it take to convince you i'm not a narc? What do you want? My
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American Express card number so you guys can fuck my life up if I double
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cross you? I don't know. This is a little depressing. I mean, I only have
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about half a story if I can't meet with anybody. What would it take?*
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The next day's e-mail brought this:
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*FROM: WINTERMUTE
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TO: DR. BOMBAY
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SUBJECT: ARTICLE...
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A REPLY TO #348
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-----------------
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Well...If we wanted yur AMEX # we could have it already...As soon as I talk
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to Kahuna we will call you and see what happens...*
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The bravado was gangster-movie perfect. I had to laugh.
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But nobody called. After a couple days I logged onto the Box again and
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got a message from Big Kahuna asking for my social security number. I
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thought about it: I'd already given them my real name and real phone number.
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What more could they do with the SS#? I typed it in. Then I downloaded some
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bedtime reading from the board's library of text-files and logged off.
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I could have picked better bedtime reading. The file I'd leeched turned
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out to contain two brief Newsweek articles by a reporter named Richard
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Sandza. The first recounted his undercover adventures as "Montana Wildhack"
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on hack/phreak boards around the country. The second described the hacker
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response to the first story after it appeared: Sandza was vilified
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throughout the hacker world, inundated with crank calls, and found his
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credit history fucked with and his card numbers posted all over the BBS
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nation. Not a soothing tale. I managed to convince myself that the reason
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he had caught so much hell was that he had used real board names and
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handles. Even so, there was no telling what might piss off some small group
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of hackers somewhere and set me up for the same bitch of a time. I went to
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sleep sorry I'd given up my social security number.
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Four days later I called the board. Email: the Big Kahuna had discovered
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my address. Big deal. They already had my name and phone number; they could
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have gotten the address out of the phone book. I dashed off a quick dis and
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moved on to the next letter waiting for me. It went a little something like
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this:
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*FROM: WINTERMUTE
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TO: DR. BOMBAY
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SUBJECT: CHECK THIS SHIT OUT
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----------------------------
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Y365 - PROCEED
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NM-DIBBELL, JULIAN
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*DIBBELL,JULIAN SINCE 11/15/88
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*FAD 11/8/89 FN-302 TAPE RPTD 11/88
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*SUM-08/88-10/89,PRIOI-NO,FB-NO,
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ACCTS:2,HC$0-470, 2-ONES.
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*BUS/ID CODE RPTD OPND H/C TRMS BAL
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P/D RT 30/60/90 MR DLA/ACCOUNT NO
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01 I*9060N259 10/89 08/88 470 470 01 00
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00 00 01 3719355233500
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02 I*9060N25 09/89 10/88 0 0 01 00 00
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00 10 3712389469900
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END OF REPORT*
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My mouth flapped open. It was brief and pathetic, but it was my credit
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history, and my American Express card numbers gleamed in its midst like a
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pair of hot rhinestones. This should only have intensified my fears of a
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few nights earlier, but all I felt was a mixture of astonishment and
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admiration.
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My hands groped to the keyboard to enter a reply. I didn't know what to
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say. Suddenly the cursor jumped out of my control and started spelling:
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*Hey doc,* it said.
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In a bedroom or a basement somewhere in the 516 area, Wintermute had
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broken into chat mode. I typed back:
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*-HI. That is sum impressive stuff.
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-Hey. It is no big shit...don't worry I wont post yur card #s all over the
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place...*
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We got talking.
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*-Uh, u mind my asking how old u are?
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-Why u wanna know!
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-Just being a reporter
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-Well...should I make the story dramatic and say I am 11 or should I tell
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you my real age?
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-The truth would be fine
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-Oh. Well....I just turned 15 in September*
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Fifteen. Jesus.
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*-How bout the other sysops?
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-Well X25 Warrior is 14 and Big Kahuna is 16-17 (I really dont know)
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-u guys ever meet in person?
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-Yeah...me and the Warrior hang out all the time. As for Kahuna, we've never
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met
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-U never met him and you let him run the board with you? how can you trust
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him?
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-I trust him more than I trust you. I can tell you that...*
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But he kept talking. He told me hacking was fun and I should try it. He
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gave me the numbers of some hacked-out systems to call. This all took a
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long time. The cursor crawled across and down the screen like a maddeningly
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slo-mo game of Centipede. Two hours later my eyes were bloodshot rheumy
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puddles from staring at the monitor and the conversation was ending on a
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sour note. My questions had gotten too personal and Wintermute suddenly
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wanted every detail worth printing off the record. As we said goodbye and
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signed off I though it might be the last time I heard from him. I could see
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the whole story disappearing back into the electronic depths it had emerged
|
|
from.
|
|
I turned off the computer and shuffled out of my bedroom in a daze. On
|
|
the TV in the kitchen Ted Koppel was announcing the fall of the Berlin Wall.
|
|
Right now it was history, but in a few weeks big fat AT&T, every
|
|
phreak/hacker's favorite long distance company, would be using this same
|
|
footage in adspots, as if it had been some basic urge to telecommunicate
|
|
that had smashed the wall. They weren't entirely wrong. People were fighting
|
|
for a number of things in Easter Europe, but would anyone deny that the
|
|
free circulation of news, stock market prices and music videos were high on
|
|
the list?
|
|
On the TV in the kitchen the nuclear age was completing its transition to
|
|
the information age. War, peace, commerce, fun- none of these would be the
|
|
same anymore. It was still possible of course that the new age would turn
|
|
out to be just a digital remastering of the old one. We would measure the
|
|
stockpiles in megabytes rather than megatons, but they'd be stockpiles
|
|
nonetheless- endless lists of data, names and numbers and the power that
|
|
goes with them. Still, as long as three teenagers on a telecomm joyride
|
|
could pick the corporate lock on those lists, there was a chance things
|
|
might be different this time around. I might never speak to Wintermute
|
|
again.
|
|
But it was reassuring to know he was out there.
|
|
|
|
Wintermute didn't disappear. In a few days he and the Big Kahuna and the X25
|
|
Warrior started conference-calling my apartment. I was never home when they
|
|
called- I'd get in and find a series of extended messages on my machine,
|
|
three high-keyed adolescent boy voices cracking jokes, chattering among
|
|
themselves, laughing uncontrollably and making rude comments on my taste in
|
|
outgoing-message music. It was like the Beastie Boys had taken over my
|
|
answering machine.
|
|
Finally they left a number I could call and leave a voice-message at.
|
|
They had pirated a voice mailbox. VMBs are those automated answering-machine
|
|
systems you get nowadays when you call big firms, and it turns out they are
|
|
eminently hackable: find an unused box in the system, hack out its password,
|
|
and it's yours (most phreak/hackers use them as safe places to trade phone
|
|
codes)- until somebody at the office discovers your coup and kills the box.
|
|
|
|
The boys' VMB was still good. I left a time they could definitely get
|
|
hold of me. They called back. We talked for two hours. I was full of
|
|
questions:
|
|
|
|
Like, what was the point? What did you do once you got inside a forbidden
|
|
computer?
|
|
|
|
Well first of all you didn't destroy anything. That was rule number one.
|
|
But that left a lot of room. You could take a look at some pretty
|
|
interesting things (the boys claimed that on a NASA computer once they
|
|
found a report about a fatal crash that never made it to the press). You
|
|
could also use some systems as gateways to networks brimming with other
|
|
computers. You could even set up a hidden, parasite BBS. The Mechanic, they
|
|
told me, was in the process of doing just that on a Vax he'd hacked down in
|
|
New Jersey. But all these things merely iced the cake. The big challenge
|
|
was getting in. "Once you're in, " said the Kahuna, "it's like, 'Ho-hum.
|
|
That was fun. What now?'"
|
|
And what were the easiest systems and networks to hack into?
|
|
Well, Arpanet, the defense department's research network, was certainly
|
|
one of them. Then there were the credit report companies- CBI, TRW. There
|
|
were three good ways to get passwords for their computers. One was to go
|
|
"trashing," poking around in the garbage of a credit-database client to see
|
|
what carelessly discarded printouts might reveal. Another was "social
|
|
engineering"- calling up database-users and putting on your best grown-up
|
|
voice to bullshit a password out of them. If neither of these suited your
|
|
style, you could always just trade for the passwords with whatever cool shit
|
|
you might have- a pile of codes, some VMBs.
|
|
And what about the stereotypes of hackers? Were they math prodigies?
|
|
No, not really. The Kahuna sucked at math infact, did much better in
|
|
English. And none of the three knew much about programming. Knowing how to
|
|
program would help, of course, and the most elite hackers knew at least one
|
|
programming language, but it wasn't necessary- hacking wasn't a system of
|
|
rules, it was a craft.
|
|
Well, were they loners then? Troubled kids?
|
|
Loners, no- they all had plenty of friends, Kahuna went to parties on
|
|
the weekends, played a lot of pick-up football. But troubled? Well, they
|
|
were teenagers. "All my friends are troubled," said the Warrior, "and most
|
|
of them don't know anything about computers."
|
|
The boys were sharp. They were funny and in a gruff teen-boy way they
|
|
were friendly too. I liked them and I looked forward to their phone calls,
|
|
which began coming fairly regularly after the first contact. I remained
|
|
uneasy though. Every time I pushed for a face-to-face meeting, they would
|
|
cagily put me off. My deadline loomed and I still hadn't clinched the story.
|
|
|
|
It never even occurred to me that they might know the story better than
|
|
I did, but they did, and they'd been feeding it to me in little doses all
|
|
along, a code here, a password there. The sly little bastards were trying
|
|
to show me how easy it was to get hooked on hacking, and they were doing a
|
|
pretty good job. The rush I got when I first called the DMZ (called fucking
|
|
France! and didn't pay a penny!) kept me coming back for more. And when I
|
|
slipped into the Mechanic's Jersey Vax, my first actual illegal entry, I
|
|
suddenly had a glimpse of what it was all about. These were low-grade
|
|
borrowed buzzes, sub-warez d00d activity, but they were heady enough that I
|
|
finally understood Wintermute's uncharacteristically rapturous declarations
|
|
that he would never give up hacking as long as he lived.
|
|
But I still had to meet the boys.
|
|
|
|
The one week they didn't call. Caught up in other assignments, I didn't have
|
|
time to drop by the Box, but the silence was making me jittery. I was
|
|
jonesing for the underground. It couldn't hurt, I decided at the end of the
|
|
week, to give the board a quick call and see what was up. I switched on the
|
|
computer and dialed up the Cardboard Box. There was no answer. That wasn't
|
|
good. If the hard disk on Wintermute's computer had failed, it could be
|
|
hours before he got the board back up. When I called later that night the
|
|
board was still down. Fuck! Well, it would be back up the next day.
|
|
But the next day there was still no answer from the Cardboard Box. I was
|
|
really uptight now. The boys' VMB had died and I still didn't know any of
|
|
their home phone numbers. The story was disappearing again. There was only
|
|
one way left to get in touch with them. It was a long shot, but fuck it, at
|
|
least it would give me some kind of hackerworld fix.
|
|
So there I was, eleven o'clock Saturday night, back in the DMZ again.
|
|
I'd bumped into the Big Kahuna there a couple times before. Maybe he'd be
|
|
there tonight. The list of handles was long, but no Big Kahuna. There was
|
|
nothing to do but wait.
|
|
Which wasn't so bad. The DMZ was a fun place to hang out. You just sat
|
|
there and people sent you messages. Occasionally you got a racy one from
|
|
one of the gay French locals who seemed to be drawn to the DMZ by its high
|
|
teenage testosterone count. No doubt their presence flustered the hackers,
|
|
who in general like a fag joke as much as the next American adolescent, but
|
|
the hackers' own approaches didn't seem a lot less prurient sometimes. "Got
|
|
any codes?" was the standard opening line. It could spark a nice
|
|
conversation, but as often as not it led straight to a quick and dirty
|
|
exchange of digits.
|
|
There was a lot of codes-cruising going on that night. I was having a
|
|
hard time keeping up since I didn't have any to offer. Finally I decided to
|
|
just go ahead and identify myself as a reporter and see what happened. The
|
|
results were good: within 10 minutes I was carrying on two full-blown
|
|
conversations at the same time. One was with Gestapo, a 16-year-old New Age
|
|
anarchist Dokken fan from Phoenix. The other was with a guy whose handle
|
|
identified him as the sysop of the DMZ, said he was a 28-year-old
|
|
French-based U S Air Force lieutenant colonel who'd been running the system
|
|
out of his home for two years.
|
|
Identity here was even more fluid than on regular boards, since you could
|
|
log on with any handle you felt like, and even change your handle as often
|
|
as you cared to within a single session. I was logged on a "Scrump" at the
|
|
moment. Last session I was "Scratch." Before that I was "Richard Marx."
|
|
Scrump was getting sleepy. I was sending farewell messages to Gestapo
|
|
and the sysop when a message came through from someone tagged Internet, and
|
|
plainly identified as calling from the USA:
|
|
|
|
*Hell-o
|
|
HI,* I typed. *Where u calling from?
|
|
The USA*, came the reply.
|
|
Great. More paranoia. Well, this would take care of Internet: *Uh huh.
|
|
Well, dont mind the questions. It's my job. I'm a reporter for SPIN
|
|
magazine.*
|
|
|
|
The reply took a little while to get back to me:
|
|
|
|
*-Dr Bombay?
|
|
-Big Kahuna????
|
|
-OH...No this is Wintermute. Hi.
|
|
-OH HI, man. Sorry I've been out of touch for so long...
|
|
-Well, its no problem. But you missed it...big shit at the Signal Jock's
|
|
house with Grumman security...*
|
|
|
|
The news was bad. Sort of. Grumman security had traced the Signal Jock and a
|
|
number of other local hackers trying to log onto the same Grumman Vax that
|
|
had been A-TNT's undoing. And now they were making house calls in the
|
|
company of Nassau County police officers and an unidentified guy with "fed"
|
|
written all over him. They didn't have a lot on the Signal Jockey so it
|
|
didn't look like they were going to press charges, but the story didn't end
|
|
there. The jock's mom knew the Big Kahuna's mom and told her about the
|
|
visit. After that it didn't take long for Mr. and Mrs. Kahuna to figure out
|
|
why their son had been spending so much time with his computer, and boy were
|
|
they pissed. They took his modem away and grounded him for a year.
|
|
It got worse. One of the kids Grumman had swooped down on was cosysop
|
|
for Quiet Riot, a board in the neighboring 718 area. Right away the other
|
|
sysops pulled the BBS down, and Wintermute, scared shitless Grumman would
|
|
be coming for him next, took the hint. He wiped all the BBS files off his
|
|
hard disc and retired the board indefinitely.
|
|
|
|
The Cardboard Box was dead.
|
|
|
|
In the week that followed Bush met Gorbachev at Malta, and the boys agreed
|
|
to meet me in Manhattan.
|
|
It was a strange and beautiful world. The military-industrial complex
|
|
had succeeded in killing the Cardboard Box, but there was suddenly a good
|
|
chance it wouldn't survive the century itself. The postwar national security
|
|
state was scrambling to find a new rationale for its undercover shenanigans,
|
|
but hackers were already living in a world in which covert action was
|
|
nothing more than a game children played. The future was rushing towards us
|
|
faster than the past could get out of the way.
|
|
Appropriately enough, the boys and I agreed to rendezvous in front of a
|
|
science-fiction bookstore we all knew. The Kahuna wouldn't make it of
|
|
course. He was still under house arrest.
|
|
There was some doubt about how we'd recognize each other, but when the
|
|
time came I spotted them before I'd gotten within two blocks of the
|
|
bookstore: two sweet-faced, slightly chubby generic white teens, working
|
|
hard at looking inconspicuous. One of them looked like he had a couple of
|
|
growth spurts to go. Both of them had their hands deep in the pockets of
|
|
clothes that looked like last year's Christmas presents. I sidled up and
|
|
muttered, "Got any codes?" The boys laughed, and we all tried to quickly
|
|
get over the weirdness of having faces stuck to our names. The short one
|
|
was the X25 Warrior, the taller blond kid was Wintermute.
|
|
I took them to lunch. The Warrior got a cheeseburger; Wintermute ordered
|
|
ribs and insisted on Pepsi over Coke. The cracked jokes with the waitress,
|
|
awkward and wise-assed at the same time. We talked about how they got into
|
|
hacking, about the superiority of their k-rad Amigas to my boring IBM,
|
|
about the Big Kahuna's bad luck. We talking about the Cardboard Box.
|
|
Neither of them seemed too sorry it was down. It had been going for over a
|
|
year, a ripe old age for a hack/phreak board. And with the modem freed up
|
|
Wintemute could do more of his own hacking now, spend hours scanning out
|
|
entire 800-number exchanges, shit like that.
|
|
After lunch we walked around. We looked in computer-store windows. We
|
|
dropped by a magazine shop that sold 2600. I bought two copies for some
|
|
friends, the Warrior bought one for himself, and Wintermute shoplifted
|
|
another.
|
|
It was getting late, I'd have to head home soon. "OK," said Wintermute,
|
|
"but first you have to do something for us."
|
|
"Whatever," I said.
|
|
"Well, OK. Well we'll give you the money, but um..."- his feet shuffled
|
|
nervously- "OK, can you buy us a copy of Playboy? The one with Kimberly
|
|
Conrad on the cover?" The Warrior giggled.
|
|
We went to three different newsstands looking for that issue, but none
|
|
of them had it yet. Finally the boys decided they would settle for a quart
|
|
of Foster's. I'd never bought alcohol for the underaged before, and
|
|
certainly never dreamed the first minors I did it for would be capable of
|
|
altering my credit history, but I didn't blink. They waited outside the
|
|
store while I made the buy.
|
|
When I came out we opened the can right there on the street and headed
|
|
for the subway swigging. We were all grinning like idiots.
|
|
At the subway entrance I turned and said goodbye, and the boys walked
|
|
off. They were going to catch a movie maybe, they didn't know. I watched as
|
|
they made their way past a nearby newsstand. No Kimberly Conrad, but lots
|
|
of headlines that supposedly added up to the end of history.
|
|
From where I stood it looked like the beginning. New struggles were
|
|
brewing. Information capital was accumulating like crazy, and the gap
|
|
between the info-haves and the info-have-nots was gaping wider all the
|
|
time. Sooner or later it would come down to a fight, and whether they knew
|
|
it or not, kids like the Big Kahuna, the X25 Warrior and Wintermute were
|
|
among the first people to be on the right side.
|
|
I saw Wintermute take one last gulp of beer. Then the boys disappeared
|
|
into the city crowds.
|
|
|