852 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
852 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
|
||
Computer Underground Digest--Fri Aug 23, 1991 (Vol #3.31)
|
||
|
||
Moderators: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
|
||
|
||
CONTENTS, #3.31 (AUGUST 23, 1991)
|
||
File 1--Moderators' Corner: Blurbs
|
||
File 2--Request info on suggestions for a class
|
||
File 3--New BBS for CuD back issues and other services
|
||
File 4--Moderators' Corner: Blurbs
|
||
File 5--BOARDWATCH Magazine
|
||
File 6--NREN Boondoggle?
|
||
File 7--Inslaw Death Investigation Continues (NEWSBYTES REPRINT)
|
||
File 8--Memes, Gurus, and Viruses
|
||
|
||
Issues of CuD can be found in the Usenet alt.society.cu-digest news
|
||
group, on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of LAWSIG,
|
||
and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM, on Genie, on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414)
|
||
789-4210, and by anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.widener.edu,
|
||
chsun1.spc.uchicago.edu, and dagon.acc.stolaf.edu. To use the U. of
|
||
Chicago email server, send mail with the subject "help" (without the
|
||
quotes) to archive-server@chsun1.spc.uchicago.edu.
|
||
|
||
COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
|
||
information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
|
||
diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted as long as the source
|
||
is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and they should
|
||
be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that non-personal
|
||
mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise specified.
|
||
Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles relating to the
|
||
Computer Underground. Articles are preferred to short responses.
|
||
Please avoid quoting previous posts unless absolutely necessary.
|
||
|
||
DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
|
||
the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
|
||
responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
|
||
violate copyright protections.
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Wed, 22 Aug 1991 10:00:00 CDT
|
||
From: "Jim Thomas" <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
|
||
Subject: File 1--Moderators' Corner: Blurbs
|
||
|
||
The address for contacting INTERTEK disappeared from our review of it.
|
||
|
||
You can email steve steinberg at steve@cs.ucsb.edu (he's quite good
|
||
about answering mail) or
|
||
|
||
Steve Steinberg
|
||
325 Ellwood Beach, #3
|
||
Goleta, CA 93117 (805) 685-6557 is the phone)
|
||
|
||
Subs are $8 a year.
|
||
|
||
+++++++++
|
||
|
||
NIA #72 is out and it's available in the CuD ftp archives. The latest
|
||
EFFector is also available there.
|
||
|
||
+++++++
|
||
|
||
Because of conferences, the start of school, and other craziness, CuD
|
||
editors will take a week off, over labor day. We'll be back in about
|
||
two weeks with a special issue of _Cyberpunk_ by Katie Hafner and John
|
||
Markoff.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Mon, 19 Aug 91 17:15 EDT
|
||
From: I'm hunting wabbits! - Elmer Fudd <ATKINSON@VCUVAX.BITNET>
|
||
Subject: File 2--Request info on suggestions for a class
|
||
|
||
It looks like I may be teaching an introductory course in information
|
||
systems this fall. What I would like to do, is point out and discuss
|
||
as many issues as possible. Two big ones are in the areas of computer
|
||
crime, and the issues of Right to Privacy, and such that are being
|
||
discussed in CU digest these days.
|
||
|
||
I would like to ask the readership for their favorite top 10 articles,
|
||
magazines, books, excerpts, etc. in some form of bibliographic format
|
||
so that I can compile a suggested reading list for the class.
|
||
|
||
I will happily summarize, remove duplicates, alphabetize, etc. and
|
||
re-post back to the list.
|
||
|
||
Would prefer that replies be sent directly to me.
|
||
|
||
Thanks,
|
||
Luther
|
||
Atkinson@vcuvax (bitnet)
|
||
Atkinson@gems.vcu.edu (other)
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Wed, 21 Aug 1991 00:20:30 -0400
|
||
From: Mike Neuliep <mike@CS.WIDENER.EDU>
|
||
Subject: File 3--New BBS for CuD back issues and other services
|
||
|
||
Mike Neuliep recently put up a new BBS which will be a distribution
|
||
site for CuD as well as for other online publications. When he saves
|
||
up enough money for another harddrive it will be a mirror of the
|
||
widener ftp site. The number is 708-672-5426 and the location is Crete
|
||
Illinois which is about 35 miles due south of Chicago. To download
|
||
back issues users must exit from the user-friendly menu to c-shell and
|
||
then cd to /hd20/cu/cud which is where all the files are archived.
|
||
The software is Pro-Line running on an apple //e it is running a
|
||
single user unix-like shell but is also somewhat networked
|
||
(pro-mopar.cs.widener.edu on the internet). The name of the BBS is The
|
||
World Trade Center. Users can store files in their home directories
|
||
like on chi-net, and other services are also available. It's worth a
|
||
look, especially for those in the 708/312 area.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Mon, 20 Aug, 1991 04:18:31 EDT
|
||
From: "Anonymous" <deleted@by.request.etc>
|
||
Subject: File 4--Federal abuses of Seizure Law
|
||
|
||
The complaints against Federal agents for their abuses in seizing
|
||
equipment and not returning it pale against the seizure of property in
|
||
drug busts. The Chicago Tribune ran a story (August 11, 1991, p. 1,
|
||
13, "Drug Law Leaves Trail of Innocents: In 80% of Seizures, no
|
||
Charges by Andrew Schnieder and Mary Pat Flaherty of The Pittsburgh
|
||
Press) that illustrates the abuses of Federal seizure law and
|
||
practices. Excerpts include:
|
||
|
||
"Thousands of ordinary Americans are being victimized each year
|
||
by the federal seizure law, which was meant to curb drugs by
|
||
causing financial hardship to dealers.
|
||
|
||
A 10-month study by The Pittsburgh Press shows that 80 percent of
|
||
the people who lost property to the federal government were never
|
||
charged with a crime. And most of the seized items weren't the
|
||
luxurious playthings of drug barons, but modest homes and simple
|
||
cars and hard-earned savings.
|
||
|
||
Those goods generated $2 billion for the police departments that
|
||
took them.
|
||
|
||
Said Eric Sterling, who helped write the law a decade ago as a
|
||
lawyer on a congressional committee: "The innocent-until-proven
|
||
guilty concept is gone out the window."
|
||
|
||
Under the government's seizure law, police can seize cash and
|
||
belongings if a person fits a vague description of a drug runner,
|
||
which is heavily weighted against minorities; or if a person has
|
||
cash tainted by drugs, which is true of almost all U.S. currency,
|
||
or if someone has property used in the commission of a crime,
|
||
even if that person was not involved in the crime. To try to get
|
||
it back,owners have to hire an attorney and sue the federal
|
||
government. Cases usualy takes (sic) months or years, and there's
|
||
no guarantee of success.
|
||
|
||
The article lists several outrageous horror stories of people
|
||
(mostly Black) detained for how the looked or for other
|
||
"suspicious" but innocent acts. They broke no law, but their
|
||
money or property was confiscated.
|
||
|
||
Seizure laws originally intended to curb organized crime and
|
||
substance abuse has had virtually no success in curtailing either
|
||
drug use or the violence and other crimes associated with it.
|
||
Yet, the laws have been expanded, and give the government what
|
||
amounts to the power of totalitarian dictatorships in seizing
|
||
property. This is a throwback to the dark ages where "might makes
|
||
right," and it is a power that is expanding and being used
|
||
less discriminately.
|
||
|
||
The story concludes:
|
||
|
||
((One victim's)) lawyer, Jenny Cooke, calls the
|
||
seizure "extortion."
|
||
|
||
She said: "There is no difference between what the police did to
|
||
((her client)) or what Al Capone did in Chicago when he walked in
|
||
and said, 'This is a nice little bar and it's mine.' The only
|
||
difference is today they call this civil forfeiture."
|
||
|
||
The confiscation of computer equipment is part of a larger trend
|
||
toward "punishment without trial," and punishment allotted all too
|
||
often to those who have committed no crime. The computer community is
|
||
as apathetic to many of these issues--and some actually laud them--as
|
||
the general public, but injustice in the name of justice is as
|
||
criminal as any act of hackers.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Sat, 24 Aug 1991 01:29:20 -0600
|
||
From: Moderators <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
|
||
Subject: File 5--BOARDWATCH Magazine
|
||
|
||
We've been hearing lots of good things around the country about a
|
||
magazine called BOARDWATCH from a cross section of cyber hobbyists and
|
||
professionals. It's been around for awhile, but has only recently
|
||
started drawing national attention for its content and perspective.
|
||
|
||
Boardwatch Magazine is a monthly newsletter/magazine done by Jack
|
||
Rickard out of Littleton, Colorado. It covers the online world with
|
||
an emphasis on electronic bulletin boards, product support BBS,
|
||
government data services, and unique or odd applications of BBS
|
||
technology (i.e. BBS for Cockatiel owners, BBS for sailing/yachting
|
||
race results, etc.). It includes a good dose of technology update on
|
||
modems, ISDN, BBS software, and the odd but useful shareware utility.
|
||
|
||
Starting as a regional publication in 1987, Boardwatch has grown to
|
||
international proportions and amassed a readership of about 18,000 with
|
||
subscribers in 56 countries based on a startling new marketing
|
||
concept: if you can track it down, find the publisher, and talk him
|
||
into taking your $36, he'll add you to the mailing list. Some
|
||
highlights:
|
||
|
||
May 91 issue - List of 37 Soviet BBS - coverage of Computers Freedom
|
||
and Privacy Conference with Mitch Kapor of EFF as cover girl. Review
|
||
of $399 GVC V.32 9600 bps modem. Discussion of 16550 UARTS. Unicode as
|
||
ASCII replacement. Multitech V.32bis modem. Publicly available
|
||
Internet access sites. Boston Computer Society to join Internet.
|
||
Book review of !%@:: A Directory of Electronic Mail Addressing and
|
||
Networks. Massachusetts Commission for the Blind BBS. Photo of Bob
|
||
and Tracey Mahoney and story on their new EXEC-PC chatline service.
|
||
Astronomy BBS.
|
||
|
||
June 91 Issue - "Cover Girl" was Cliff Figallo, administrator for THE
|
||
WELL. ATT Packet/Cellular laptop. Article on NeXT computers.
|
||
Discount on TBBS bulletin board software. Windows application for
|
||
TCP/IP. Announcement of Wildcat! sysops meeting in California.
|
||
Medical Physicians computer resource guide on diskette. Photo and
|
||
story about Hayes ISDN 1 external terminal adapter. U.S. Robotics
|
||
acquires Touchbase Systems and the Worldport pocket modem line.
|
||
Detailed article on Prodigy's STAGE.DAT woes. Review of America
|
||
Online. Article by Lance Rose on Law in CyberSpace. Reprint of a
|
||
January 1980 Kilobaud Microcomputing article by Frank Derfler with
|
||
first printed BBS list - 3 systems - ONE IS STILL UP. CERFNet dialup
|
||
Internet access program. Knowbot Online E-Mail Directory Source of
|
||
26000 Voyager images on CD ROM for $99. Library of Congress online via
|
||
Internet. Ciarcia's Circuit Cellar BBS. Order flower delivery online.
|
||
|
||
July 91 Issue. Announcement of FidoCon 91 BBS Conference in Denver.
|
||
List of all 400+ FidoNet network coordinators worldwide. K12Net
|
||
educational network. Tokyo BBS Systems with a review of Tympas X.25
|
||
network allowing access to Japan at $8.40 per hour. Review of
|
||
Heartland FreeNet offering free Internet e-mail boxes. List of BBS
|
||
Software Vendors support BBS. Announcement of a 9600 bps V.32 modem
|
||
available to BBS operators at $199. Eight-line caller ID interface
|
||
for PCs. HP intros two plain paper faxes. Internet mailing lists -
|
||
where to find them and what they are.
|
||
|
||
The magazine has a regular national list of some 200+ selected BBS,
|
||
and a standing "List of Lists" noting BBS where you can get electronic
|
||
lists of BBS for particular area codes, topical BBS lists, etc. The
|
||
art and layout are a little cramped and a little odd - NOT what you
|
||
normally see on the newsstand. But a quick take on the editorial
|
||
style explains why Rickard has gained a following with this monthly
|
||
publication. July issue was 56 pages. $36 annual domestic - $99
|
||
overseas. BOARDWATCH is available at at all Software Etc. and Comp
|
||
USA stores among others.
|
||
|
||
Boardwatch Magazine's address is:
|
||
|
||
5970 South Vivian St.
|
||
Littleton, CO 80127
|
||
Fax (303)973-3731.
|
||
Voice subscription line 800-933-6038.
|
||
Rickard can be reached at jrickard@csn.org
|
||
|
||
Check it out. BOARDWATCH, MONDO 2000, INTERTEK, and 2600 illustrate
|
||
that cyberspace is expanding, and these 'zines will help us
|
||
navigate through it.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Sat, 3 Aug 91 22:11 EST
|
||
From: "Michael E. Marotta" <MERCURY@LCC.EDU>
|
||
Subject: File 6--NREN Boondoggle?
|
||
|
||
GRID News. ISSN 1054-9315. vol 2 nu 21a August 03, 1991.
|
||
World GRID Association, P. O. Box 15061, Lansing, MI 48901 USA
|
||
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
(73 lines) Summa Contra NREN -- Part 1. The Boondoggle
|
||
(C) 1991 by Michael E. Marotta
|
||
|
||
NREN is the National Research and Education Network, a proposed
|
||
two-gigabit/second fiber-optic network to connect all national
|
||
research and educational facilities. Publicly, NREN is the brainchild
|
||
of Senator Albert Gore of Tennessee. In reality, Gore's proposals
|
||
draw heavily on the work of Robert E. Kahn, founder of the
|
||
Corporation for National Research Initiatives. Dr. Kahn worked on
|
||
ARPANET for Bolt Beranek Newman in 1966. Later, he helped set up
|
||
Telenet. (see "Bob Kahn Wants to Wire the Nation" BUSINESS MONTH,
|
||
April 1987, and "Networks for Advanced Computing", SCIENTIFIC
|
||
AMERICAN, October 1987.)
|
||
|
||
NREN's primary beneficiaries will be university researchers who use
|
||
supercomputers to model colliding neutron stars, an example provided
|
||
by the Coalition for NREN, 1112 16th Street NW, Suite 600, Washington
|
||
DC 20036. Other "Grand Challenge" scientific problems such as global
|
||
warming and mapping the human genome are also mentioned in NREN
|
||
literature. Companies that make supercomputers (IBM, CDC, Cray) will
|
||
also profit from NREN. Other businesses are offered positive
|
||
incentives. They are promised access to marketing data, access to
|
||
industrial development and the ability to sell data in an
|
||
information-based economy. More benefits to businesses include
|
||
access to satellite imaging, high definition television conferencing,
|
||
and contracts to "wire the nation." NREN proponents also claim that
|
||
doctors in rural areas could communicate with major healthcare
|
||
facilities. Children in small towns could reach the Library of
|
||
Congress.
|
||
|
||
However, the truth is less exciting than this. As defined in Senate
|
||
Bill S.272, introduced on January 24, 1991, NREN is a $2 billion
|
||
study. It is ONLY a STUDY. The overall plan is for Congress to
|
||
allocate funds which NASA, the Departments of Energy and Defense, and
|
||
the National Science Foundation would spend on supercomputers and
|
||
high performance computing networks. There is no plan to connect
|
||
rural children with the Library of Congress.
|
||
|
||
In fact, when in Washington for the White House Conference on Library
|
||
and Information Services, I visited the Library of Congress. They
|
||
don't want children doing their homework to dial in and request
|
||
"everything you have on Thomas Jefferson." That service can be
|
||
provided online at the local level. And in fact, it already is in
|
||
many places. That it is NOT provided in MORE places is significant.
|
||
A more correct priority would be to put dialup catalogs in every
|
||
library.
|
||
|
||
The thought of a rural doctor accessing an urban medical center
|
||
sounds compelling. Such technology is offered by CATV companies
|
||
already and cable is very affordable. The reason that this is not
|
||
more common is that it is not demanded by the doctors and hospitals.
|
||
|
||
You are reading this file because you are already in cyberspace. You
|
||
are a netrunner on the electronic frontier. FidoNet is possible
|
||
because of individuals like Ward Christensen, Michael Hayes, and of
|
||
course Tom Jennings. Your sysop is a private individual who donates
|
||
time and materials to making FidoNet possible. When it was founded,
|
||
CompuServe ran on a PDP-11 and today their platform is a VAX Cluster.
|
||
WELL, the Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link, runs on a multi-processor
|
||
Fujitsu. Hobbyists enjoy modem speeds of 9600 and 19.6K baud. If
|
||
there were really a demand for NREN, the private sector would
|
||
overcome all obstacles to provide it.
|
||
|
||
In the 1800s, governments financed canals just in time for railroads
|
||
to come along. Then governments got into the railroad game, spending
|
||
public money on private ventures just in time for the invention of
|
||
the automobile. Those governments then built highways for the auto
|
||
industry just as computing was sprouting. NREN promises to be
|
||
another boondoggle.
|
||
|
||
Next file: NREN vs. the First Amendment
|
||
|
||
(GRID News is FREQable from 1:159/450, the Beam Rider BBS)
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date:
|
||
From: jmcmullen@well.sf.ca.us
|
||
Subject: File 7--Inslaw Death Investigation Continues (NEWSBYTES REPRINT)
|
||
|
||
INSLAW DEATH INVESTIGATION CONTINUES (NEWSBYTES Reprint)
|
||
(By Barbara E. McMullen & John F. McMullen)
|
||
|
||
Martinsburg, West Virginia, the scene of the death of Washington,
|
||
D.C. journalist Joseph D. "Danny" Casolaro, has received more press
|
||
attention than ever before in its history as reporters from ABC-TV,
|
||
Newsbytes News Network, and the Washington Post roamed the halls
|
||
interrogating bell-hops, waitresses, and desk clerks for information
|
||
regarding the death of Casolaro.
|
||
|
||
Employees, supposedly under the cloak of Sheraton-forced silence,
|
||
told Newsbytes that, while some prospective guests have specifically
|
||
requested the room in which Casolaro died, their instructions have
|
||
been to leave the room vacant for an unspecified time.
|
||
|
||
Casolaro, 44, had been investigating the "Inslaw" case, a rather
|
||
tangled web of allegations relating to the charges brought by Inslaw
|
||
Inc., that the Justice Department had first stolen its software
|
||
product, "Promis," and then driven the firm into bankruptcy. Casolaro
|
||
had told friends and family that he was about to receive material
|
||
that would provide him with documentation linking Inslaw to other
|
||
alleged incidents of Reagan-Bush administration wrong-doing. Casolaro
|
||
was said to have referred to the alleged conspiracy as the "Octopus"
|
||
and stated that there were links between the Inslaw theft, the
|
||
"October Surprise," and Iran-Contra allegations.
|
||
|
||
The "October surprise" refers to allegations that representatives of
|
||
the Reagan-Bush campaign team, through meetings with Iranian
|
||
representatives, delayed the release of the hostages in Iran until
|
||
after the 1980 elections. These charges are currently being
|
||
investigated by Congressional committee. Casolaro was found dead, an
|
||
apparent suicide, in Room 517 of the Sheraton on Saturday, August
|
||
10th, two days after his arrival in Martinsburg. He was found in the
|
||
bathtub at approximately 1:00 pm with both wrists slashed. His body
|
||
was released within three hours to a local funeral parlor for
|
||
embalming, an action that Berkeley County Medical Examiner Sandra
|
||
Brining was quoted as saying was normal in the case of a suicide.
|
||
"Everything was consistent with a self-inflicted wound."
|
||
|
||
When Casolaro's family became aware of his death on Monday, August
|
||
14th, it immediately called for an expanded investigation and his
|
||
brother, Dr. Anthony Casolaro, an Arlington, Virginia physician, was
|
||
quoted as saying, "In my heart I remember Danny telling us that in
|
||
case of an accident, don't believe it." Dr. Casolaro also discounted
|
||
statements made by his brother in a letter to a publisher in which he
|
||
seemed financially strapped and despondent. Dr. Casolaro attributed
|
||
Casolaro's remarks to a desire to convince the would-be publisher of
|
||
the importance of extending a book contract to him. Casolaro had been
|
||
immersed in the Inslaw case for over a year and had been unsuccessful
|
||
in two proposals to the publishing firm of Little, Brown & Co.
|
||
|
||
The clamor for a fuller investigation caused an autopsy to be
|
||
subsequently performed on Casolaro, an action that Assistant Berkeley
|
||
County prosecutor Cynthia Gaither said was not hindered by the
|
||
previous embalming.
|
||
|
||
Casolaro was buried on Friday, October 16th after a funeral service
|
||
at St. Ann's Catholic Church in Arlington, Virginia attended by over
|
||
100 people.
|
||
|
||
At a press conference held on Thursday, August 15th, Dr. James Frost,
|
||
assistant West Virginia medical examiner, said that, while the
|
||
results of the examination bore out the preliminary findings of
|
||
suicide, the investigation would be continued. Brining and Gaither
|
||
also participated in the hour-long press conference held in the
|
||
meeting room of the Martinsburg City Council.
|
||
|
||
Newsbytes has obtained conflicting reports on the state of Casolaro's
|
||
mental condition. A California free-lance journalist, Virginia
|
||
McCullough, with whom Casolaro had allegedly shared information, told
|
||
Newsbytes, "It is ludicrous to think that Danny took his life. He was
|
||
excited about his new contact and said that 'For the first time I
|
||
really believe that the government was involved.'" McCullough,
|
||
herself, claims to be the victim of a government action that drove
|
||
her electronics firm into bankruptcy and she is presently writing a
|
||
book on her case and other similar cases, including Inslaw.
|
||
|
||
McCullough's comments on the unlikelihood of a Casolaro suicide were
|
||
echoed in quotes from Pat Clawson, president of Washington-based
|
||
Metrowest Broadcasting Co., and Richard O'Connell, editor of the
|
||
Washington Crime News, a newsletter published in Arlington, VA. Nancy
|
||
Hamilton, vice president of Inslaw, also took issue with the suicide
|
||
finding telling the Martinsburg Morning Journal, "We don't accept
|
||
that. They are saying that here is a man, totally sober, mutilating
|
||
himself."
|
||
|
||
Martinsburg residents interviewed by Newsbytes paint a slightly
|
||
different picture and depict Casolaro as seemingly depressed and
|
||
drinking pitchers of beer by himself in a local Pizza Hut on the
|
||
Thursday evening before his death (although a wine bottle was found
|
||
in his room, there was no evidence of alcohol found in the body by
|
||
the autopsy). Additionally, a Washington Post piece of Saturday,
|
||
August 17th by Gary Lee and Robert O'Harrow, Jr., shows Casolaro to
|
||
be debt-ridden and despondent. According to the Post report,
|
||
"Casolaro had no independent means of income and had invested heavily
|
||
in the book project for at least eight months, financing several
|
||
trips to the West Coast and long-distance telephone calls."
|
||
|
||
The Post article also revealed that Casolaro's sister had committed
|
||
suicide in California 20 years ago. While confirming the sister's
|
||
suicide and his brother's financial difficulties, Dr. Casolaro said
|
||
that these facts still did not support a conclusion of suicide for
|
||
his brother. He told the Post, "Danny was the sort of guy who was
|
||
always broke but he knew that he had a lot of resources for money in
|
||
the family if he needed it."
|
||
|
||
Dr. Casolaro also told the Post that he had received a call from a
|
||
man who purported to have met with Casolaro in Martinsburg on the day
|
||
before the death and turned over documents relating to computer
|
||
hardware thefts. Dr. Casolaro said that the man was willing to meet
|
||
with investigators under the cloak of anonymity. Newsbytes has
|
||
confirmed, from multiple sources, the existence of the
|
||
contact, a man called "Bill," but has not yet obtained information
|
||
concerning the content or the validity of the purported
|
||
documentation.
|
||
|
||
The so-called "Inslaw Case" began in 1982 when Inslaw signed a $10
|
||
million contract to provide an enhanced version of its case tracking
|
||
software to the U.S. Department of Justice. According to Inslaw,
|
||
shortly after it rebuffed attempts by a company owned by Earl Brian,
|
||
a close friend of former US. Attorney General Edwin Meese, to buy
|
||
Inslaw, the government stopped its contract payments and eventually
|
||
forced the firm into bankruptcy. In January 1988, a federal
|
||
bankruptcy judge upheld the claims of Inslaw President William
|
||
Hamilton and awarded Inslaw damages of $6.8 million, saying that the
|
||
Justice Department has stolen the Promis software by "trickery, fraud
|
||
and deceit." A second federal judge later upheld the ruling.
|
||
|
||
The Justice Dept. continued to appeal the verdicts and, on May 7,
|
||
1991, was successful when the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that the
|
||
bankruptcy court had claimed extraordinary and improper jurisdiction
|
||
in the case. The court said that Hamilton was free to pursue his
|
||
claims in the proper federal court and that the Justice Department's
|
||
"conduct, if it occurred, is inexcusable."
|
||
|
||
During the appeal process, Inslaw broadened its charges to claim that
|
||
Iran Contra figures Robert McFarlane and Richard Secord had played a
|
||
role is disseminating the software to intelligence agencies of
|
||
Israel, Libya, Iraq, South Korea, and Canada. These charges were
|
||
substantiated by Ari Ben-Menashe, who claims to be a former Israeli
|
||
intelligence officer, Iranian arms dealer Richard Babayan, and
|
||
Michael Riconosciuto, who said that he was hired to modify the
|
||
software for use in law enforcement and intelligence agencies
|
||
worldwide.
|
||
|
||
Riconosciuto, who was arrested in March of this year and is being
|
||
held in the state of Washington, also claimed to be involved in a
|
||
now-defunct joint venture between the Wachenhut Corp. of Coral
|
||
Gables, FL and the Southern California Cabazon Indian tribe.
|
||
According to Riconosciuto's affidavit, the joint venture developed
|
||
sophisticated weapons for the Contras. McFarlane and Brian have
|
||
denied all charges.
|
||
|
||
There have also been reports that the software, allegedly used by the
|
||
foreign intelligence services for maintaining dissidents, contained a
|
||
"Trojan horse" that would allow U.S. security agencies to have
|
||
undetected access to the computer system of the foreign agency. It
|
||
was also revealed during this time that Inslaw President Hamilton is
|
||
a former employee of the National Security Agency (NSA).
|
||
|
||
As the long appeal process continued, the House Judiciary Committee
|
||
under Chairman Jack Brooks (D-Tex.) began its own investigation of
|
||
the case and became embroiled in a year-long battle with then
|
||
Attorney General Richard Thornburgh who refused to turn over Justice
|
||
Department documents to the committee. Shortly before Thornburgh's
|
||
departure to run for the Senate from Pennsylvania, an agreement was
|
||
reached between the committee and the Justice Department on the
|
||
release of certain documents and the investigation is now continuing.
|
||
During the controversy, another former U.S. Attorney General, Elliot
|
||
Richardson, now serving as counsel for Inslaw, said, "Evidence of the
|
||
widespread ramifications of the Inslaw case comes from many sources
|
||
and keeps accumulating. It remains inexplicable why the Justice
|
||
Department refuses to pursue this evidence and resists cooperation
|
||
with the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives."
|
||
|
||
On Wednesday, August 14th, Richardson called for a federal
|
||
investigation of Casolaro's death and was quoted as suspecting murder
|
||
in the case.
|
||
|
||
In an interview with Newsbytes, an investigative reporter who has
|
||
been tracking Inslaw and related cases for a few years said that he
|
||
had met with Casolaro within the last six months and that Casolaro
|
||
had no material at that time that the investigative reporter deemed
|
||
as new. The reporter, speaking to Newsbytes under the promise of
|
||
non-attribution, also said, "I believe that the Justice Department
|
||
stole Inslaw's software. I have not seen, however, compelling
|
||
evidence to support the charges that it was linked to the so-called
|
||
'October Surprise.'"
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Thu, 21 Mar 91 20:39:31 PST
|
||
From: hkhenson@CUP.PORTAL.COM
|
||
Subject: File 8--Memes, Gurus, and Viruses
|
||
|
||
//Moderators' note: Keith Henson wrote the following, and we liked it
|
||
so he gave permission to print it. He subtlely addresses the issue of
|
||
information processing and power, which directly raises some of the
|
||
political and cultural dangers of cyberspace. There are many issues
|
||
to develop further here, and we encourage readers to develop them and
|
||
send them over//.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Guru Trap
|
||
Or
|
||
What Computer Viruses Can Tell Us About Saddam Hussein
|
||
(By H. Keith Henson)
|
||
|
||
Over the past 10 years Iraq started two disastrous wars. Making an
|
||
incredible error in judgment, they invaded Iran, a country with almost
|
||
three times their population. With Kuwait, they picked a smaller
|
||
country, but failed entirely to predict the response from the rest of
|
||
the world. They continued to delude themselves, believing that other
|
||
countries would not fight, even up to the eve of the ground invasion.
|
||
As irrational as their actions were, they were far from unique. Most
|
||
wars of this century have similar origins, origins which I propose can
|
||
be understood, and perhaps avoided in the future.
|
||
|
||
Many people hold the informal opinion that Saddam Hussein is insane.
|
||
In a company which includes Hitler, Pol Pot, and Jim Jones, I believe
|
||
this opinion is technically correct. In my view Saddam is a victim of
|
||
a group situational psychosis called "the Guru Trap." The people
|
||
around Saddam, and to a lesser extent the whole population of Iraq,
|
||
are also direct victims of the group psychosis. The population of
|
||
Kuwait and the rest of the world are indirect victims of the effects
|
||
of the trap.
|
||
|
||
I cannot explain how groups of people fall into the Guru Trap without
|
||
introducing a number of concepts from memetics. Memetics (from meme,
|
||
a word coined by evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins) is the study
|
||
of why and how information patterns are replicated in human minds.
|
||
The patterns themselves are called memes (rhymes with schemes). You
|
||
can think of a meme as an idea (or sometimes a connected set of ideas)
|
||
which are passed on from person to person. A passing idea which is
|
||
not communicated to another fails to be a meme. A really successful
|
||
meme spreads out to vast numbers of human minds, and some memes have
|
||
major effects on the behavior of the people so infected.
|
||
|
||
Consider baseball as a meme. You could determine that a certain
|
||
person had (or was infected with) the baseball meme if they were able
|
||
to teach a group of children who had never seen baseball to play a
|
||
recognizable game.
|
||
|
||
To explain why information is replicated in human minds requires a
|
||
little background in human evolution, and the strategies we
|
||
large-brained, tool-using primates have used so successfully to spread
|
||
all over the world.
|
||
|
||
However far back this discussion reaches, the goal of understanding
|
||
the origin(s) of war is certainly worth the trouble. It is virtually
|
||
impossible to make progress on problems we do not understand. It is
|
||
historical fact that no significant progress was made in controlling
|
||
the epidemics which, time after time, swept over the world until it
|
||
was at long last understood that epidemics are caused by
|
||
microorganisms. Without an understanding of the root causes of war,
|
||
activities we undertake to prevent war are unlikely to have the
|
||
desired effect. Demonstrations strike me as about as effective as
|
||
praying for relief from the plague in a 14th-century, rat-infested
|
||
church, and as likely to succeed.
|
||
|
||
How should we go about trying to understand the origin of wars? Marvin
|
||
Minsky (one of the founders of the field of artificial intelligence)
|
||
contends in Society of Mind that the expansion of human knowledge
|
||
comes about almost entirely through analogy. I agree with him. We
|
||
come to a crude understanding of some phenomenon by saying that it is
|
||
similar to something we already understand. We then reduce the
|
||
differences between our rough model and what we are trying to
|
||
understand by a process of refining. After a while, we may be able to
|
||
use our new understanding as an analogy to help understand some new
|
||
problem.
|
||
|
||
Another advantage of analogy is that it allows us to roughly
|
||
understand problems which are very complex or so close to us that they
|
||
are hard to see. Computers (at this stage of their development) are
|
||
much simpler than humans. And yet, they are plagued by parasitic
|
||
"worms" and "viruses" which share many of the properties of a
|
||
dangerous class of memes. These computer parasites are patterns of
|
||
information which instruct the computers they find themselves in to
|
||
replicate the worms and viruses in ways that will sooner or later
|
||
infect another computer. In a very similar fashion, some memes
|
||
include explicit or implicit instructions of "teach me to others" (or
|
||
sometimes "impose me on others!").
|
||
|
||
Computer parasites can replicate in computers because computers have
|
||
been designed to (among other things) make copies of data and
|
||
programs. The parasites take advantage of these features. Some
|
||
computer viruses (after a certain number of replications) wipe the
|
||
hard disk. That is a fairly close analogy to suicide!
|
||
|
||
Human minds have been wired up by evolution to copy information as
|
||
well. The origin of this skill is apparent in our closest relatives,
|
||
the chimpanzees. As Jane Goodall has documented, chimpanzees groups
|
||
have primitive cultures. They pass on complex skills such as fishing
|
||
for termites which even involve making tools. It takes many years of
|
||
imitating, that is, copying the behavior of other chimpanzees, before
|
||
a young chimpanzee becomes proficient at living in the wild.
|
||
|
||
Our line's success in living all over the world is directly dependent
|
||
on our ability to pass on a great deal of information about how to
|
||
cope with the local environment from one generation to the next. In
|
||
other words, the success of humans is dependent on memes, which in the
|
||
aggregate constitute culture.
|
||
|
||
The great majority of the memes we pass from generation to generation
|
||
are helpful, just as most data copied by computers is intentional.
|
||
These are memes that direct behaviors such as how to chip rocks, make
|
||
shoes, or which berries to pick. Other memes, such as tunes and fads,
|
||
seem to be mostly harmless. Rumors are another class of sometimes
|
||
harmless memes. Long established religions can be considered as
|
||
defenses against some harmful memes.
|
||
|
||
Like computers, our strongest point is also a serious weakness. We can
|
||
be infected with memes which (like a computer virus) can do serious
|
||
damage to us, kill us, or induce us to kill others. Here the analogy
|
||
between computer viruses/computers and memes/humans is limited.
|
||
Computers almost never make an error copying a virus; memes,
|
||
especially those committed to paper, can be copied into new minds
|
||
fairly accurately, but they can also mutate wildly, sometimes at every
|
||
transfer. So, a relatively harmless belief (i.e., some complex of
|
||
memes) which is passed around in a close group can become more
|
||
destructively out of step with reality at each turn. This is
|
||
especially true when the memes are cycling between a leader and a
|
||
group of followers who for one reason or another are strongly
|
||
motivated to please the leader. This is the Guru Trap. (And also the
|
||
classic "kill the messenger who brings bad news" problem.)
|
||
|
||
An example of the distortion information can go through in just one
|
||
transfer comes from the example just before the invasion last August.
|
||
Saddam asked the US Ambassador if the US had any opinion on the border
|
||
dispute between Kuwait and Iraq. The Ambassador said that was
|
||
considered an Arab problem, which Saddam took to mean that it didn't
|
||
matter to the US if they moved their border over to Saudi Arabia.
|
||
|
||
Runaway infectious craziness episodes are not too common because
|
||
humans and their cultures have evolved some defenses against
|
||
pathological accumulations of memes. Laughter is one defense when
|
||
someone starts stating ideas wildly out of line with reality. It is
|
||
easy to understand why this defense failed to control weird ideas in
|
||
Hitler, Pol Pot, or Jim Jones, and hard indeed to imagine someone
|
||
laughing (more than once) at one of Saddam's ideas. In some cases,
|
||
almost anything the leader utters becomes a meme, is written down, and
|
||
transmitted to large numbers of followers.
|
||
|
||
Just like infectious diseases, Guru Trap episodes seem to be less
|
||
common in the more advanced countries of the world. When they do
|
||
occur, they tend to be labeled "religious" instead of "political." It
|
||
is only preliminary speculation, but "meta- memes" may be involved.
|
||
Meta-memes are reasoning skills such as logic and the scientific
|
||
method. These "memes-people-use-to-judge-other-memes" are relatively
|
||
wide spread in the more advanced countries.
|
||
|
||
There are several conditions which seem to predispose a leader go fall
|
||
into the Guru Trap. A low level of education is one of them. It
|
||
seems to be harder for an educated person to accept being worshipped
|
||
for very long, perhaps because education conveys to people just how
|
||
little they do know. Most examples of the Guru Trap I have noted in
|
||
western countries tend to have relatively uneducated followers as
|
||
well. There are exceptions; the Rajneesh cult was one.
|
||
|
||
Economic dislocations seem to be a factor in the rise of some memes.
|
||
Nazism originated in an economic hard times; and closely related memes
|
||
began to infect more people during recent hard times in the Western
|
||
US. There may be very simple reasons, having to do with resentment
|
||
against "them" for job loss, combined with a lot of idle time to
|
||
contract an information disease.
|
||
|
||
I suspect that exposure to a lot of modern advertizing may raise a
|
||
population's resistance to being sucked into the Guru Trap. A
|
||
culturally uniform population should be more susceptible than a
|
||
heterogeneous one for the same reasons a heterogeneous genetic
|
||
population is less susceptible to being wiped out by epidemic disease.
|
||
|
||
It is a common occurrence for leaders and followers deep in the Guru
|
||
Trap to become lawless. The central meme(s) they are infected with
|
||
become so important in their minds that matters of legal conduct drop
|
||
out of their consideration. This seems to be an almost universal
|
||
problem with gurus and their followers in intense "cult"-type
|
||
situations. Lawlessness by a small cult leads to the legal process
|
||
being invoked, a fairly common end to many small-scale cults. This
|
||
was the fate of the LaRouche cult. On the nation-state scale,
|
||
lawlessness eventually provokes a response from other nations.
|
||
Because the system was primed by the example of Hitler, the response
|
||
came sooner rather than later for Saddam.
|
||
|
||
Intense positive feedback in guru-trap situations leads to memes that
|
||
get entirely out of step with reality. This makes leaders (and
|
||
groups) in the trap unpredictable. Hitler's successes and later
|
||
downfall were both dependent on making illogical (and therefore
|
||
unexpected) military moves. The blitzkrieg through a forest against
|
||
France was unorthodox--and worked. Opening a second front by
|
||
attacking the Soviet Union, and then dithering till winter set in to
|
||
go after Moscow was monumentally stupid. It would not have been
|
||
tolerated by his generals except for the fact that Hitler's previous
|
||
unorthodox orders had worked.
|
||
|
||
Saddam's behavior in occupying and trying to hold Kuwait against the
|
||
forces which took it back was pathologically divorced from reality.
|
||
This is an effect of circular information flow. Real information on
|
||
the state of his military machine, especially after being mauled from
|
||
the air, was either not presented or not believed by Saddam. I
|
||
suspect that as you got closer to the bottom of the hierarchy the true
|
||
conditions became more and more apparent. If they had not been
|
||
worried about reprisals on their families back home, the Iraqi troops
|
||
might well have given up before the ground assault. (Some did
|
||
anyway.)
|
||
|
||
The end game of a nation-state Guru Trap varies. Sometimes, as
|
||
happened to the USSR, the original guru(s) hang on till they die and
|
||
are replaced. Eventually information started leaking into the system
|
||
from outside. A society divorced from physical and social reality
|
||
falls further and further behind societies which are not trapped. It
|
||
was the discovery of the true economic state of the Soviet Union by
|
||
Gorbachev which kicked off glasnost and perestroika. From what one
|
||
can see at this distance, Gorbachev has managed to stay out of the
|
||
Guru Trap, a feat which impresses me as much as anything else he has
|
||
done.
|
||
|
||
In other cases, reality comes down hard, as in bombs and artillery
|
||
shells. One class of response is the "Gotterdamerung" response: "if
|
||
I can't be the guru, nobody else will either." Hitler and the Rev. Jim
|
||
Jones took that route. Once it became unavoidable knowledge that they
|
||
were going to be beaten, Hitler ordered the entire country wrecked.
|
||
He was thwarted by Albert Speer, who felt guilty at the time for not
|
||
obeying his guru. Hitler ended his days with poison and a gun in a
|
||
bunker.
|
||
|
||
The Jim Jones affair came to a similar end. A US senator showed up to
|
||
investigate reported gruesome conditions in a cult in the jungle.
|
||
After having the senator shot, Jones ordered a long- rehearsed mass
|
||
suicide, where over 900 people drank poison and died. (Jones took
|
||
poison, but shot himself before it had time to act.)
|
||
|
||
This is not the only possible outcome, but it is a likely one given
|
||
Saddam's history. If Saddam does not end his days like Hitler and Jim
|
||
Jones, he may be tried and possibly hanged by a Nuremberg-type court.
|
||
However, if I were in charge of his defense, I would try to get him
|
||
off as insane, a victim of his own brutal and unstable nature and the
|
||
overpowering amplification of the Guru Trap. (It probably wouldn't
|
||
work, but it might get the "meme about memes" more widely known.)
|
||
|
||
Perhaps an understanding of memetics would permit organizations,
|
||
including governments, to watch for emerging Guru Trap situations.
|
||
They might issue "memetic epidemic warnings" reports for places around
|
||
the world the way the Center for Disease Control does for cholera. If
|
||
we were able to see dangerous conditions emerging, we might be able to
|
||
take reasoned and effective actions before a war grows out of a Guru
|
||
Trap gone lawless. Even if we cannot take positive actions, at least
|
||
we would know which emerging gurus we should quit helping. (Though it
|
||
might not have helped in the case of Saddam. There were about 2-1/2
|
||
Guru Traps going in adjacent countries, and it was not obvious at the
|
||
time which were the most dangerous.)
|
||
|
||
Understanding memetics and the Guru Trap gives me more of an
|
||
appreciation of the empirical progress we made in creating good
|
||
government. It has been a very long time since a western democracy
|
||
went to war with another western democracy. When they do go to war,
|
||
it usually requires considerable provocation. This was true even in
|
||
the case of Vietnam. Not the Gulf of Tonkin event, the provocation
|
||
was in the form of the grisly stories which came from the people who
|
||
fled from North Vietnam when those infected with the local version of
|
||
the Marxist-Leninist meme took over. (For extra credit the reader can
|
||
do a memetic analysis of the Vietnam war. Use at least three
|
||
meme-infected groups and two Guru Traps in the analysis.)
|
||
|
||
The knowledge that epidemics are caused by microorganisms allowed us
|
||
to control them. In the last hundred years we have come a long way
|
||
toward keeping germs out of people through sanitation and clean water.
|
||
We have also built up resistance to germs by vaccinating people. The
|
||
result has been a massive reduction in human misery.
|
||
|
||
If, as I have proposed here, most wars are an outcome of a Guru Trap,
|
||
a similar reduction in human misery could come about from an
|
||
understanding of memetics and human vulnerability to memes. Educating
|
||
people about these topics should raise the resistance of leaders and
|
||
followers alike to being sucked into the Guru Trap. It is my hope
|
||
that the conditions leading to wars could be detected early, or better
|
||
yet, never happen.
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
Mr. Henson is a local hardware/software consultant. He has been
|
||
infected by a number of memes including the space colony meme which
|
||
originated with Dr. O'Neill of Princeton in the early '70s, the
|
||
nanotechnology/cryonics meme reported on in West Magazine recently,
|
||
and, of course, the meme about memes. He is a founder of the L5
|
||
Society, a Senior member of IEEE, and has been widely published on a
|
||
number of topics--including memes.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
End of Computer Underground Digest #3.31
|
||
|
||
|
||
|