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845 lines
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Computer underground Digest Wed Sep 23, 1992 Volume 4 : Issue 45
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Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
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Shadow-Archivist: Dan Carosone
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Copy Editor: Etaion Shrdleau, Srr.
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CONTENTS, #4.45 (Sep 23, 1992)
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File 1--XmasCon Problems: HoHo's from HoJo's
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File 2--The Background on HoJo's/Xmascon
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File 3--How to Talk to the Press
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File 4--CPSR Sues FBI for Wiretap Proposal Information
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File 5--News Blurbs (INSLAW & CITIBANK)
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Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
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available at no cost from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The editors may be
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contacted by voice (815-753-6430), fax (815-753-6302) or U.S. mail at:
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Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL 60115.
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
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LAWSIG, and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM; on Genie in the PF*NPC RT
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libraries; from America Online in the PC Telecom forum under
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"computing newsletters;" on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210; and by
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anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) and ftp.ee.mu.oz.au
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Back issues also may be obtained from the mail server at
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mailserv@batpad.lgb.ca.us
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European distributor: ComNet in Luxembourg BBS (++352) 466893.
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
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information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
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diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
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as the source is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and
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they should be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that
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non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
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||
specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
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relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
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preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
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unless absolutely necessary.
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DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
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the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
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responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
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violate copyright protections.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 17 Sep 92 01:08:27 CDT
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From: Jim Thomas <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
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Subject: File 1--XmasCon Problems: HoHo's from HoJo's
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For the past few years, a conference called "XmasCon" (or HoHoCon) has
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been held in Texas in December. As reported previously (CuD #4.40), it
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will be held again this year from 18-21 December. For those unfamiliar
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with it, XmasCon is a national meeting of curious computer
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afficianados, journalists, scholars, computer professionals, and
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others, who meet for three days and do what people do at other
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conferences: Discuss common interests and relax.
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XmasCon is approaching in a few months, so I called down to the
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Houston Airport Howard Johnson's where conference arrangements
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apparently had been made to check out reservations. I encountered the
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most bizarre and crude interactions I have ever experienced with
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reservation-making. The bottom line, it seems, is that XmasCon will
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not be at HoJos this December. It will be located elsewhere. But,
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we're getting ahead of the story.
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My call to the HoJo receptionist began routinely. I indicated that I
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would like to make reservations for a December conference. The
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receptionist asked for some preliminary information, including my
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name, phone number, dates, how long I would be staying, and what type
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of room I wanted. I asked her what the conference rates were, and she
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asked which conference I would be attending. I said, "XmasCon." Her
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tone changed, and the mood dramatically shifted. She paused for a few
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seconds, and said: "We don't take no reservations for XmasCon." Her
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initially polite behavior (and attention to grammatical conventions)
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had changed. Aha, I thought, what an odd response. So, I mustered up
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the only intelligent question I could think of to a double negative:
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"What?" "That conference has been cancelled," she replied.
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Her response surprised me, because I had heard nothing of a
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cancellation. "Cancelled?" I asked? "Yes," she repeated, "That
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conference has been cancelled." I asked if she meant that the
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conference had been cancelled or whether it was being held elsewhere.
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She said she didn't know, and she wasn't allowed to give out any
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information about it. A most unusual twist of phrase and a rather odd
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turn of events, I thought. So, suspecting something was not quite
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right, I thought it wise to obtain additional information. So, I
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asked if I could talk to a supervisor. I was connected to "Gloria"
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(who refused to provide a last name). The encounter began politely. I
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gave her my name and affiliation and explained that the receptionist
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had informed me that XmasCon was cancelled, but would give out no
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further information. Gloria said that the receptionist was correct,
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the conference was cancelled. I asked (the conversation was still
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routine and polite) whether she knew if it was cancelled or simply
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being held elsewhere. She said it that it would not be held at Howard
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Johnsons; it was cancelled. Now, there's a rather substantial
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difference between cancelling a conference and holding it elsewhere.
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The conversation was still polite and routine, and I asked whether she
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meant that the conference itself was cancelled or simply that the
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original arrangements with HoJos were cancelled. The fit hit the shan!
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"WHY DO YOU PEOPLE KEEP DOING THIS?!??" she screamed!
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Uh oh. This was no longer a normal routine conversation. Either I
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was dealing with a psychotic terrorist who had taken over the office,
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or else something was going on that I didn't know about. I suspected
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the former, so I thought tact the best approach. I asked "what people"
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she thought I was, and what it was that "we people" kept doing. She
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never did explain what "we people" she thought I was. I explained that
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if by "we people," she meant criminology professors, we normally to
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"this" to reserve a room in exchange for our money. She seemed to
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care little who or what I was, and angrily explained that she was
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instructed not to talk about XmasCon because "you people" had lawyers
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calling. Uh, lawyers? What *is* going on, I began to wonder. So I
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asked. She repeated that she couldn't talk about it. Actually, I
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wasn't given the opportunity to ask much, because she talked over me
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and cut me off whenever I tried to ask a question. Gloria tersely
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informed me that if I wanted any information, I would have to obtain
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it from the manager, James Marx, on Monday. Thank you Gloria. <click>
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Having seen no reports of psychotic terrorists in the Houston area on
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the news, I can only conclude that Gloria was, sadly, a representative
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of HoJos. Normally, receptionists and supervisors don't freak-out on
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callers, especially when no ostensible behavior triggered the assault.
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In my substantial experience with conference hotels, the policy of
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reputable sites when conference venue has been changed (especially by
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the original hotel) is to inform an inquirer that the conference will
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be held elsewhere and identify that location. If the original site
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does not know the location, they so-state and suggest that the caller
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inquire with the organizers. In this case, however, I was informed
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that the conference was cancelled. Even though Gloria ultimately
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indicated that she did not know if the conference was cancelled or
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not, and finally indicated that she only knew that it would not be
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held there, it took the entire conversation to obtain this nugget of
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information and only after considerable verbal abuse.
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Now, I'm not one to fall back on professional status. But, even though
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I *politely* explained that I was a criminal justice professor at
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Northern Illinois University and was simply trying to obtain routine
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information, she continued to subject me to discourtesy. Not even an
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"I apologize" at the end. Not even a softening. Odd. Very odd, I say
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to myself. Something, however, is going on, so my next step was
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calling James Marx.
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I again called the airport HoJos (713-644-1261) and asked to speak to
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Mr. James Marx. I was connected to his office. The call to James
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Marx was less than satisfactory. The conversation began:
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JM: "This is James."
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JT: "Mr. Marx, my name is Jim Thomas, a criminal justice
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professor at Northern Illinois University. I'm calling in regards
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to XmasCon, about which I have a few questions and what I
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consider a serious complaint."
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JM: XmasCon will not be held here.
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JT: I understand that, sir, but I have several questions and I
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have a complaint about my treatment by one of your employees.
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JM: What are your questions?
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JT: I understand the conference was cancelled....
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JM: They cancelled it.
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JT: *They* cancelled it?
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JM: Yes....
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JT: Voluntarily?
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JM: Uh, no.
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JT: May I ask, sir, the circumstances of the cancellation?
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JM: No, you may not.
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The conversation was downhill from there. I **POLITELY** attempted
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several times to inquire about the nature of the cancellation. He
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indicated that he would not give me any information, and that I would
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have to ask the conference organizers. Although indicating that "the
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hotel decided to cancel it," he offered nothing further. He indicated
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that the conference organizers did not inform him of the new site, so
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HoJos could not direct callers elsewhere, and were therefore telling
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callers that the conference was cancelled. I attempted to ask why they
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used that choice of words, rather than indicate to callers that the
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conference was not, in fact, cancelled. Why not say that it was
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elsewhere and they simply didn't know where it was. I suggested that
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the phrasing of the response was misleading to people like myself. He
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said, "I told you. *No more questions*!"
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Ok, fine. Now to voice my complaint about "Gloria." So: "I would also
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like to discuss with you my complaint." "What is it?" he grumbled. I
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explained that, in the middle of a routine conversation, Gloria,
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without provocation, screamed at me: "Why do you people keep doing
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this?" Says he, interrupting, "I told you, I'm *not* going to answer
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any questions!" He threatened to hangup. Uh, Mr. Marx, I tried to
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explain, I'm not asking you a question, I'm describing an event. You
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just asked me a question, says he. Hmmm, this gets stranger. "Sir," I
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said, realizing that the normal conventions of communication had
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disintegrated, "That's not *my* question. That's the question Gloria
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screamed at me! I'm not really the type to tolerate this kind of
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unprovoked rudeness, and I'm simply telling you what happened. I'm a
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criminal justice professional, and not used to being treated so
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shabbily without provocation when discussing reservations in good
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faith."
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Wrong thing to say. "Sounds like you're threatening me," says he. Uh
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oh. "Mr. Marx, what have I said to threaten you?" I was genuinely
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surprised. "You people" (ah, that term again) "have threatened us with
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law suits." Hmmm....attempting to describe the discourteous behavior
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of an employee to the manager in polite, matter-of-fact discourse is
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threatening a lawsuit? Did I miss something somewhere? Before I could
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respond, I was cut off with: "You'll have to talk with the conference
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organizers. I told you! No more questions!" But, how could the
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conference organizers tell me why Mr. Marx thought I was threatening
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him? Ooops---that's a question. "You'll just have to talk to them, I
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told you." Still curious about why he thought I was threatening him,
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it turns out that the fact that I identified myself as a criminal
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justice professor was the threat. Now, it's generally my habit to
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identify myself so the people at the other end know who they're
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talking to. This is the first time in 13 years as a crim justice type
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that anybody ever was threatened by my occupation. Why was that
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threatening and how did he infer a lawsuit from my mentioning on
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introduction that I was a CJ prof and a second time, during explaining
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the complaint, making an off-handed reference that I was a CJ
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professional who found rudeness unacceptable? Turns out, it seems,
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that "you people" (another reference to "us") keep calling and
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identifying "yourselves" with the legal profession and threatening
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suits. In a rather nifty bit of paralogia, he explained that criminal
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justice has something to do with law, right? "And you can't tell me
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that it doesn't!" Uh, right. Guess he's got me there. Criminals break
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the law, I study criminals, so guess that means I'm threatening a law
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suit.
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He then indicated that I should put whatever complaints I had about
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his employees in writing and send them to the owner, Mr. Henry Woo, at
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the HoJo airport address, and that he was going to terminate the
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conversation. Ok, 10 minutes of weirdness is about all I can take in a
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day, so it seemed best to say, "Thank you for your time" and end it.
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Click.
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Had I been in set: snippy mode, I could better understand the HoJo
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response to me. However, I had donned my politest professional
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persona. I do not know what the background is to the cancellation,
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but it is clear that the hotel "decided not to have it." But I do know
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that something went awry at HoJos instigation, and I do know that
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neither Gloria or Mr. James Marx are people to whom I want to give my
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money. I'm not sure what their problem is, but I'll sleep in my car
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before I ever patronize another Howard Johnson's hotel, in Houston or
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anywhere else.
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If I could ask a few questions of Howard Johnson's in Houston, I would
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be especially interested to learn:
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1) Why did the hotel cancel arrangements after they were already made?
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2) Why not have a standard and courteous reply to callers, rather than
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put them through a ritual of abuse when they attempted to obtain
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further information?
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3) Why did Gloria "freak out" for no explicable reason?
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4) What "people" am I, and what is it "we keep doing?" If they have a
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thing against criminology professors, it would be useful to know for
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future reference.
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5) What possible rationale could justify abusive behavior to strangers
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attempting routine inquiries?
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6) Why could not James Marx listen to my original complaint of abusive
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behavior without himself becoming abusive?
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7) Why is it necessary for the hotel manager to belittle and criticize
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my profession without cause or provocation?
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8) What's with the Airport Howard Johnson's in Houston?
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I am hoping that Mr. Henry Woo, the owner of the Airport Howard
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Johnson's Lodge and the home office in Phoenix can provide some
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answers.
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 22 Sep 92 01:41 CDT
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From: dfx@NUCHAT.SCCSI.COM(dFx International Digest)
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Subject: File 2--The Background on HoJo's/Xmascon
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From--Kenneth Wood
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Date--September 15, 1992
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Some of you may have read about this year's HoHoCon conference in CuD
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4.40. Some of you may also know that since the announcement ran in
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that issue, conference details have changed under somewhat
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"mysterious" circumstances. Unfortunately, not everyone knows of these
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changes and they've yet to be presented in the public forum. There
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seems to be a lot of people, including myself, who are eager to
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receive the new conference details as well as an explanation of why
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things changed so suddenly.
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After talking with a few of the conference organizers and realizing
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how busy they were, I asked if they needed any help and they mentioned
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possibly writing something up to tell everyone what's going on and
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shooting it over to CuD. Rather than have me try to remember what they
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told me and put it in my own words, we agreed on transcribing a brief
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phone interview.
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(KW = Me)
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(DF = Drunkfux)
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KW: What exactly is HoHoCon?
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DF: It's our big yearly anarchistic get-together where we worship the
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'SpamGod' and slaughter cows in his honor. Oh, and we trade codes
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too. Most of all, it's really el8. Spell that with an 8 please.
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KW: Seriously now.
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DF: Oh, all right. I honestly don't know really. The best way to describe
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it is probably what it says in the announcement. Basically, it's a
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three day gathering of people associated with what is commonly
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referred to as the computer underground, the majority of which are
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just people who are currently active in the "scene", whether they be
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actual hackers or crackers (choose your preferred definition),
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journalists, security professionals, or those who are just plain
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interested.
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KW: Does the conference actually last three days?
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DF: Oh, no. The conference itself is held on Saturday. The rest of the
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time, everyone does their own thing, although that generally is the
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same thing. This is one of the few times each year when all us
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compu-nerds can actually see each other face to face and sit around
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and laugh at one another. Usually, the attendees break off into
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groups and within time, there's a few dozen things happening at
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once. Like last year, every few feet there was something different
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going on. Sort of the Lollapalooza of hacking.
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KW: What happens at the conference on Saturday?
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DF: Everyone piles into the conference room, we say a few introductory
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words, get things settled and proceed to let the speakers take over.
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A general outline would be: introduction, speaker speaks then
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answers questions from the audience, speaker shows any materials
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he/she may have brought with him/her, including videos and the such,
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speaker ends his speech, people clap, other people wake up, next
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speaker gets on the mic and rocks the house. At both the beginning
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and ending of the conference, journalist/editor type people pass out
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reading materials and budding entrepreneurs sell everything from
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t-shirts to back issues of magazines to sushi on a stick.
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KW: What about Friday and Sunday? Do you have anything planned for then?
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DF: Nope, not at all. That's the beauty of it. You really have to attend
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one of these things to understand it. It's totally free form,
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everyone does whatever they want to. It's not like your typical
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stuffy, big room, security suit fest. All you have to do is be
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yourself, unless you really feel like kissing someone's "booty".
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KW: Does much happen during the non-conference times, like on Friday and
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Sunday?
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DF: Definitely. In fact, that's when people seem to have the most fun.
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The conference is cool and all, no doubt, but it's more of a learning
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and listening experience. You kinda have to sit there for a while.
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Again, like I said before, everyone does their own thing. Some folks
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sit around and talk about whatever or watch videos, others venture
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off and "explore" the city and its establishments, some do actual
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computing, and some try to do it all.
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KW: Sounds good. Let's move on to the details of what happened with the
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hotel this year. Can you tell us exactly what's been going on?
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DF: No, because I don't know it all myself. I'll do my best to briefly
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tell what I know. Here's the just of it -
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We had been planning the conference for a while before we had even
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found a hotel, which is always the hardest part. After deciding on
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dates and the such, we proceeded to hunt down a conference site.
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Howard Johnson's was definitely NOT our first choice. The name alone
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was a turn off and we didn't know how people would take to it, but
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they seemed nice and were semi-helpful as far as room pricing and
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organizing went. Because not all of us have a lot of free time to fly
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around and inspect hotels, we agreed to go with HoJo's mainly due to
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the fact that almost every other hotel in town was booked conference
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wise for that weekend. They agreed to take the conference in over
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the phone and roughly 3 weeks later, a few of the conference
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planners went to the hotel and were given the "grand tour" by a lady
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named Shirley, who is believed to be the sales director. She showed
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everyone the whole hotel, including the restaurant, bar, conference
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room, pool, and the building which housed the rooms where, in her
|
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own words, "we would be staying." Everyone agrees that she obviously
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had the intention that we would be staying there. She had already
|
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picked which building we would be in, as well as which conference
|
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room. She also said things like, "this is where you'll be staying,"
|
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"this is where we're gonna put you for your conference," etc.
|
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After the tour, she brought everyone into her office and in the
|
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people's opinion that were there, proceeded to ask some
|
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semi-personal questions that seemed fairly unnecessary. Whether she
|
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was being nosy or just trying to make conversation, it's not known.
|
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Anyway, after all this chit-chat, she got back to discussing the
|
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conference details and this is where she said things like "ok,
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you'll have the conference room on Saturday from 10am until 5pm.",
|
||
and "I have you down for the one building that holds 40 rooms for
|
||
now, and if we need more later, it won't be a problem." She also
|
||
quoted room and tax rates, restaurant hours, reservation information
|
||
which included pointing out the 800 number that "you can start
|
||
giving to your people so they can make reservations", check in/out
|
||
times, and other assorted items. The last thing she said was
|
||
something close to "Well, everything is fine, I'll go ahead and
|
||
write you in here for December 18th through the 20th and we'll plan
|
||
on seeing you then." She also handed over a large stack of hotel
|
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brochures to be distributed with advertisements for the conference.
|
||
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Now, you tell me, doesn't it sound like agreed and confirmed that we
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would be staying there?
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KW: That's exactly what it sounds like to me.
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DF: We thought so too. Everyone breathed a big sigh of relief knowing
|
||
that everything with the hotel was finally out of the way and we
|
||
could move on to the actual conference planning and advertising, as
|
||
in letting people know what the deal was. A number of people wrote
|
||
up announcements regarding the con as well as called around to let
|
||
people know the details. I put up the money to have one version of
|
||
the announcement printed out and duplicated a very large number of
|
||
times, and it was then bulk mailed out to people on a certain
|
||
collective mailing list. Oh, I mean snail mail too, not e-mail.
|
||
Chris Goggans also printed and mailed announcements, to a great
|
||
number of people. That same announcement was published in CuD and
|
||
also, somehow or other, appeared in comp.dcom.telecom. Needless to
|
||
say, by now, a lot of people knew about the conference and started
|
||
making plans to attend, which included making hotel reservations and
|
||
purchasing plane tickets.
|
||
|
||
KW: Wait. Did the hotel accept reservations for HoHoCon?
|
||
|
||
DF: Yep. More than 15 of them. Quoted them the room rate and the whole
|
||
deal and kept all their names together. One guy I spoke with
|
||
recently told me that he actually sent money to the hotel to
|
||
guarantee a room.
|
||
|
||
KW: Hell, it sounds like they must have been planning on having the
|
||
conference there. Did the guy get his money back?
|
||
|
||
DF: I don't know. He told me he had called the hotel and they said they
|
||
would send him back his money. Whether or not they did, I'm not
|
||
sure.
|
||
|
||
KW: What happened next?
|
||
|
||
DF: Well, I had ventured off to the west coast with my band for a few
|
||
weeks and upon returning, I received some beautiful news from Howard
|
||
Johnson's. It appears that there is a certain someone out there that
|
||
owns a Howard Johnson's up "north" we'll say. That someone also
|
||
happens to read CuD (or ordered an LoD t-shirt). After seeing the
|
||
announcement, he took it upon himself to fax it to the HoJo's down
|
||
here as well as call them and tell some sort of warped tale of how
|
||
everyone associated with the "computer underground" were nothing more
|
||
than raving, chaotic, unintelligent code maniacs who only lived to
|
||
destroy hotels. Unfortunately, the people down here believed this and
|
||
with the added factor of seeing "Cult Of The Dead Cow" as a
|
||
conference presenter, decided to breach their oral contract and
|
||
inform us that we could not stay at their hotel.
|
||
|
||
KW: Just like that?
|
||
|
||
DF: You got it.
|
||
|
||
KW: Do you know who the person was that faxed them the announcement?
|
||
|
||
DF: Yes, for the most part.
|
||
|
||
KW: Can I ask who it was?
|
||
|
||
DF: No. Not yet at least.
|
||
|
||
KW: How did you find out who it was?
|
||
|
||
DF: Let's just say some people don't cover their tracks too well. The
|
||
HoJo's employees down here are no wizards at keeping private things
|
||
private either. I found that out when they started giving our
|
||
studio's office number out to people who were trying to make HoHoCon
|
||
reservations after they decided to pull the plug.
|
||
|
||
KW: That's unbelievable. Those people really don't have their act
|
||
together, do they? Did you tell them to stop?
|
||
|
||
DF: We tried. After receiving about eight calls from different people all
|
||
telling us they got our name and number from HoJo's, I called them up
|
||
to politely ask them to stop and got nowhere. The lady I spoke with
|
||
was just some idiotic uneducated receptionist who kept telling me,
|
||
"Nobody's here, I don't know what to do! Can you call back?" So, the
|
||
next day, our attorney called and tried to explain the situation in a
|
||
very legal manner. The receptionist obviously freaked out and
|
||
transferred the call over to a lady named Gloria, who we thought must
|
||
have been the manager on duty or something close. Why else would they
|
||
transfer the call to her? Anyway.. Gloria was nothing less than a
|
||
unprofessional rude joke. After our attorney started explaining the
|
||
situation and asking that something be done to insure it didn't
|
||
continue to happen, she just started spewing out senseless sentences
|
||
that all basically said the same thing - I'm old and stupid and don't
|
||
want to take responsibility for any of this, call back tomorrow and
|
||
talk to someone else. We were recording the conversation and our
|
||
attorney told her and proceeded to try to say things for the record
|
||
and Gloria, who must have been smarter than she sounded, would
|
||
constantly say things really loud making it near impossible to get
|
||
things he needed to on tape. He would ask her to stay quiet for 5
|
||
seconds so he could ask us questions, and she'd say ok, and two
|
||
seconds later start belching out, "You'll have to call back tomorrow
|
||
and talk with somebody else besides me." It was kinda funny because
|
||
it really pissed off the attorney. So much so that I doubt he'll
|
||
forget about it for a long time.
|
||
|
||
KW: Did they stop giving out your information?
|
||
|
||
DF: Yeah, it looks that way. But now they tell people the conference has
|
||
been canceled, which is nothing more than a lie.
|
||
|
||
KW: Has anything else happened with the hotel?
|
||
|
||
DF: Yeah, but too much to get into and nothing extremely important to
|
||
anybody else. At this point, we're just trying to get everything
|
||
worked out with the new location.
|
||
|
||
KW: Which is?
|
||
|
||
DF: Well, I can't say as of yet because we haven't received the written
|
||
confirmation. As soon as we do, we'll release all the new
|
||
information.
|
||
|
||
KW: So the conference hasn't been cancelled?
|
||
|
||
DF: Definitely not. It'll be happening in Houston on December 18th
|
||
through the 20th no matter what. Even if we have to hold it at the
|
||
Squeaky Springs motel, it'll happen.
|
||
|
||
KW: Will the new hotel be near the old one?
|
||
|
||
DF: If we go with the one we're counting on, then no. Here's where some
|
||
of the changes come up. Some good, most bad.
|
||
|
||
First, one of the good things, if we get this hotel, it'll be a hell
|
||
of a lot nicer than HoBlo's. It is not located next to an airport,
|
||
but there is shuttle transportation to and from both airports, which
|
||
is good in case people have to fly in to Intercontinental.
|
||
Unfortunately, the shuttle isn't free, but we're trying to get
|
||
something worked out. The room rates are also going to be a bit
|
||
higher, around $49.
|
||
|
||
KW: Is everything going ok with the planning?
|
||
|
||
DF: I guess so. It's just been a bitch and a half to find a new hotel and
|
||
get all the details worked out. Plus, one of the main problems now is
|
||
the money thing. One of the downfalls for us is the fact that the
|
||
conference room rental at the new hotel is quite a bit more than it
|
||
was at BloJo's and I'm the one who gets to prepay it. So, we've been
|
||
discussing asking for small monetary contributions, like under five
|
||
bucks, at the conference door. But that's not something I really want
|
||
to do. We'll have to see what happens. That's not the only cost
|
||
related to this whole deal either, far from it. Last year, between
|
||
Judge Dredd of NIA and myself, we managed to rack up some nice phone
|
||
and postage bills getting the information out to people, which
|
||
included faxing the announcement out to the media and mailing hotel
|
||
brochures to those who asked for them.
|
||
|
||
The other problem is keeping in touch with people. The address that
|
||
people have been corresponding with - dfx@nuchat.sccsi.com - the one
|
||
that appeared in the announcements may not make it past September 30
|
||
because the site is fixing to start charging at a rate that would
|
||
make it quite hard to afford with the amount of time we have to spend
|
||
online. Hopefully, at the worst, we can get the admins to keep the
|
||
account active with a mail forward and not have to shell out mongo
|
||
dollars to do so. One of the things we could use now is a new account
|
||
somewhere else where we don't have to worry about how long we take to
|
||
reply to someone's mail when they're asking for information. I guess
|
||
the account would have to be in Houston also. I'm sure we'll figure
|
||
out a way to get the announcements and updates out to people even if
|
||
something doesn't turn up.
|
||
|
||
Luckily, we do have a slug-mail address that people can write to -
|
||
|
||
Fennec Information Systems
|
||
Attn: HoHoCon/dFx
|
||
11504 Hughes Road
|
||
Suite 131
|
||
Houston, Texas
|
||
77089
|
||
|
||
The only other thing I can think of that we would need as far as
|
||
communications go, is some fresh virgin codes. Just kidding. We could
|
||
use a vmb of some sort, and not one that was hacked out and will die
|
||
2 weeks down the line. Something that will stay up until the
|
||
conference happens so that people can just call and get all the
|
||
updated information. It's a long shot, but if someone is willing to
|
||
donate one, we're willing to accept one.
|
||
|
||
KW: Do you have anything lined up for the conference yet?
|
||
|
||
DF: You mean along the lines of speakers?
|
||
|
||
KW: Speakers or activities. Whatever you have planned.
|
||
|
||
DF: Yeah, we've got a few speakers lined up so far. We'll announce them a
|
||
little later on when they give a definite attendance confirmation. As
|
||
far as activities go, I don't really know of anything yet but I'm
|
||
sure there'll be some video viewing happening at some point.
|
||
|
||
KW: Are you expecting a lot of people to show up?
|
||
|
||
DF: At first, I didn't really know what to expect. I honestly didn't
|
||
think as many people were going to show as last year, just because so
|
||
many of them did. That was a total surprise. But after the response
|
||
we've received, it looks as if there'll be even more this year. I
|
||
think the word getting out early and the stories still lingering from
|
||
last year as well as the support from people like CuD has helped a
|
||
great deal.
|
||
|
||
KW: I can't think of too much more. Is there anything else you think
|
||
people should know or that you wanted to say?
|
||
|
||
DF: Not really. This is dragging on a bit anyway. Boycott Howard
|
||
Johnson's as well as it's manager, James Marx, and owner, Henry Woo.
|
||
The conference is still happening, December 18, 19, and 20. See CuD
|
||
4.40 for details, excluding location. Come to the conference,
|
||
everyone's gonna be there. It'll be swell. Eat spam. Code it up. Call
|
||
d.r.u. Don't count your chips before they're all cashed in. Traxster
|
||
for president. Donate to the cause. Eighteen on the fairway and when
|
||
the dog is gone, the cat will play. Monday, Tuesday, Happy Days...
|
||
|
||
KW: Ok, ok. I think that's enough.
|
||
|
||
DF: Use the force jedi master. Yeah Ocean. New lime flavor...
|
||
|
||
KW: Alright, end of discussion. I'm hanging up now.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Thu, 17 Sep 92 19:30:08 EDT
|
||
From: Mike Godwin <mnemonic@EFF.ORG>
|
||
Subject: File 3--How to Talk to the Press
|
||
|
||
((It was rumored that, immediately after his appearance on
|
||
an NBC news show, that John (Cap'n Crunch) Draper was
|
||
released from his job for reasons of fiscal expediency.
|
||
Whether true or not, this seems like a good time to reprint
|
||
Mike Godwin's advice on "How to Talk to the Press" for those
|
||
who are in the rolodexes of media folk)).
|
||
|
||
This is a file I posted to an Austin BBS back when I gave the SJG
|
||
story to the local papers.
|
||
|
||
104: Talking to Media, part 1
|
||
By: Johnny Mnemonic [54]
|
||
Date: 11:07 3/18/90
|
||
|
||
As I've promised on another message base, here's the beginning of
|
||
discussion of how to bring stories to the media.
|
||
|
||
Since I keep thinking of different things people ought to know about
|
||
how to take a story to the media, I'm going to make this a multi-post
|
||
discussion.
|
||
|
||
1) TRY TO THINK LIKE THE REPORTER YOU'RE TALKING TO.
|
||
|
||
One of the things that happens when people know about an event or
|
||
series of events that may make a good news story is that they assume
|
||
the importance of the story will be obvious to anyone.
|
||
|
||
Sometimes this is true (when the tipster knows about a murder, for
|
||
example). Often it's not.
|
||
|
||
So, when I tell a reporter about a story I think she should want to
|
||
cover, I make sure to stress the aspects of the story that are likely
|
||
to interest that reporter and/or the readers of her publication. For
|
||
example, when I spoke to Kyle Pope about the Illuminati seizure, I
|
||
stressed the following:
|
||
|
||
a) Steve Jackson Games is an Austin business that may end up being
|
||
damaged by the seizure.
|
||
|
||
b) Nobody has given this story anything like major coverage in the
|
||
national media, or (so far as I knew) in other geographic areas. (I
|
||
was telling him he had a major "scoop" opportunity.)
|
||
|
||
c) There are some very dramatic aspects to this story. (I told him
|
||
about the 20-year-old LoD member who woke up on the morning of March 1
|
||
with a gun pointed at him by a Secret Service agent.)
|
||
|
||
2) IF YOU'RE GOING TO MEET THE REPORTER IN PERSON, TRY TO BRING
|
||
SOMETHING ON PAPER.
|
||
|
||
There are lots of good reasons to follow this rule:
|
||
|
||
a) Believe it or not, but people take stuff on paper a little more
|
||
seriously than the spoken word. It's nice to give the reporter
|
||
something that lends substance to what you're saying, even if the
|
||
substance is printouts from your own computer.
|
||
|
||
b) It makes life easier for the reporter, who doesn't have to write
|
||
down every single thing you tell her. Reporters like to have materials
|
||
they can use for reference as they research and write their stories.
|
||
|
||
c) It helps you remember to say everything you want to say. Nothing is
|
||
more frustrating than trying to get a reporter interested in your
|
||
story, getting inconclusive results, and then realizing later that you
|
||
should have told the reporter about something. (E.g., "Damn! I forgot
|
||
to tell him what 'cyberpunk' means, so he won't know how the federal
|
||
agents misinterpreted the manual.")
|
||
|
||
When I went to the Statesman, I took edited printouts of discussions
|
||
from Flight, from SMOF, and from comp.dcom.telecom on Usenet. I also
|
||
took some private Email I had received, with the names of the senders
|
||
deleted. And I took my copy of the WHOLE EARTH REVIEW with the article
|
||
on Usenet. My object was to convey to him the scale of concern about
|
||
the seizures, plus give him enough background to be able to ask
|
||
reasonably informed questions of the people he talked to.
|
||
|
||
3) GIVE THE REPORTER OTHER PEOPLE TO TALK TO, IF POSSIBLE.
|
||
|
||
Two basic justifications for this rule: First, it'll help your
|
||
credibility (especially if you don't already know the reporter
|
||
personally). Second, multiple sources or witnesses usually enable the
|
||
reporter to filter out what is mere opinion or speculation from what
|
||
everybody actually knows for a fact.
|
||
|
||
4) DON'T ASSUME THAT THE REPORTER WILL COVER THE STORY THE WAY YOU'D
|
||
LIKE HER TO.
|
||
|
||
Reporters' accuracy and focus in a story are constrained by several
|
||
factors:
|
||
|
||
a) The amount of available time. Reporters have to be quick studies,
|
||
and often have to assimilate a complex story in a hurry. This
|
||
necessarily increases the risk of inaccuracy in a story, and gives you
|
||
an even greater reason to follow Rules 1 through 3.
|
||
|
||
2) The reporters' obligation to be fair. This means they have to talk
|
||
to people on the other side of the issues from you. This in turn means
|
||
that you're unlikely to get a story that represents or promotes your
|
||
point of view at the expense of those who oppose you.
|
||
|
||
<More on this topic as I think of things. Please feel free to comment.>
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Fri, 18 Sep 1992 10:41:55 EDT
|
||
From: Dave Banisar <banisar@WASHOFC.CPSR.ORG>
|
||
Subject: File 4--CPSR Sues FBI for Wiretap Proposal Information
|
||
|
||
CPSR Sues FBI For Information About Wiretap Proposal:
|
||
Seeks Reasons for New Plan
|
||
|
||
PRESS RELEASE
|
||
WASHINGTON, DC
|
||
September 17, 1992
|
||
4:30 pm
|
||
|
||
Contact:
|
||
Marc Rotenberg, CPSR Director (202/544-9240)
|
||
rotenberg@washofc.cpsr.org
|
||
David Sobel, CPSR Legal Counsel (202/544-9240)
|
||
sobel@washofc.cpsr.org
|
||
|
||
Washington, DC - Computer Professional for Social Responsibility
|
||
filed suit today against the FBI for information about a new wiretap
|
||
proposal. The proposal would expand FBI wiretap power and give the
|
||
Bureau authority to set technical standards for the computer and
|
||
communications industry.
|
||
|
||
The suit was filed after the FBI failed to make the information
|
||
public. In April, CPSR requested documents from the Bureau about the
|
||
reasons for the proposal. The FBI denied that any information existed.
|
||
But when CPSR pursued the matter with the Department of Justice, the
|
||
Bureau conceded that it had the information. Now CPSR is trying to
|
||
force the Bureau to disclose the
|
||
records.
|
||
|
||
The proposal expands the FBI's ability to intercept communications.
|
||
It would mandate that every communication system in the United States
|
||
have a built-in "remote monitoring" capability to make wiretap easier.
|
||
The proposal covers all communication equipment from office phone
|
||
systems to advanced computer networks. Companies that do not comply
|
||
face fines of $10,000 per day.
|
||
|
||
The proposal is opposed by leading phone companies and computer
|
||
manufacturers, including AT&T, IBM, and Digital Equipment Corporation.
|
||
Many charge that the FBI has not been adequately forthcoming about the
|
||
need for the legislation.
|
||
|
||
According to CPSR Washington Office director Marc Rotenberg, "A full
|
||
disclosure of the reasons for this proposal is necessary. The FBI
|
||
simply cannot put forward such a sweeping recommendation, keep
|
||
important documents secret, and expect the public to sign off."
|
||
|
||
In a related effort, a 1989 CPSR FOIA suit uncovered evidence that
|
||
the FBI established procedures to monitor computer bulletin boards in
|
||
1982.
|
||
|
||
CPSR is a national membership organization of computer professionals
|
||
with over 2,500 members based in Palo Alto, California with offices in
|
||
Washington, DC and Cambridge, Massachusetts and chapters in over a
|
||
dozen metropolitan areas across the nation. For membership
|
||
information, please contact CPSR, P.O. Box 717, Palo Alto, CA 94303,
|
||
(415) 322-3778, cpsr@csli.stanford.edu.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: 17 Sep 92 19:48:32 EDT
|
||
From: Gordon Meyer <72307.1502@COMPUSERVE.COM>
|
||
Subject: File 5--News Blurbs (INSLAW & CITIBANK)
|
||
|
||
As reported in Information Week 9/14/92 pg 8
|
||
|
||
INSLAW:
|
||
The House Judiciary Committee is still looking into whether the
|
||
Justice Department stole and illegally copied a database management
|
||
program from Inslaw. Last week 20 Democrats on the committee asked
|
||
the US Attorney General thirty days to appoint a special prosecutor or
|
||
explain why one isn't needed.
|
||
|
||
CITIBANK:
|
||
A New Zealand computer dealer, Paul White, tried to extort over
|
||
$90,000 dollars from Citibank by threatening to release confidential
|
||
files stored on 88 floppy disks. White had obtained the disks after
|
||
purchasing some used computer equipment that Citibank had sold to a
|
||
clearinghouse. Citibank obtained a court order against that release
|
||
of the data, and police seized 86 of the disks. White turned over the
|
||
other two disks as part of a nearly $30,000 settlement. The day after
|
||
turning over the remaining disks White died in a traffic accident.
|
||
News stories about the case indicated that the disks contained
|
||
incriminating information on Citibank customers, but Citibank claims
|
||
is was merely outdated administrative data.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
End of Computer Underground Digest #4.45
|
||
************************************
|
||
|
||
|
||
|