677 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
677 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
Note: The following article is reprinted from the
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autonomist/anarchist publication Wind Chill Factor, issue #9.
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WCF tends to have a chaotic layout, lots of graphics, and
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reprints many stolen (photocopied) tidbits & articles, so
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reprints like this one in a dry electronic format are usually
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paler in comparison. Just a creative disclaimer. Contact WCF
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at:
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mail: POB 81961, Chicago, IL 60681, U$A
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phone: (312) 384-2991 or (312) 384-9129
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fax: (312)252-8269 (call first)
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email: thak@midway.uchicago.edu
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single copies are $1, a 6-issue sub is $6 plain/$9 in envelope
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w/extras.
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A DISCUSSION ABOUT HACKING
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Lately i've wandered further and further into the realm of
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cyberpunx. After several months of hitting underground bulletin
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board systems (flame it, baby), hanging out at 2600 meetings
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(lesssons in paranoia), getting access to internet (jack into the
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matrix...), dumpstering trash from IL Bell (dumpster nation!),
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building and using red boxes (free fone fun), and various other
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sundry pasttimes, i've started to get a feel of what the hacker-
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phreak community is like, and what possibilities and dangers
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cyberspace has to offer...
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I decided to have this conversation with Lvx and Sarlo, so
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you and i could get an idea of how joe hacker sees things...
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Wind Chill Factor: So define Hacking & Phreaking in your own
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view.
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Sarlo: Basically exploration. Hacking is more computer-oriented,
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the exploration of computer networks, learning about computer
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software, learning how to manipulate it, changing it to fit our
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needs. Phreaking is the exploration of the telephone system,
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signalling, how to manipulate so we can jump to other circuits.
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The phone network & the computer network are becoming one,
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telephones & computers are now basically the same thing. And
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we're just trying to learn as much about it as we can, trying to
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get something for nothing.
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Lvx: I'd say free phone calls is a big factor in phreaking,
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because, as it stands now, calling anyone not in your little part
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of the world is incredibly expensive. The actual manipulation of
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the phone system has fallen under the Hacking heading...
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WCF: Well, why did you get into it?
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Sarlo: When i first started, i saw it as a real cool thing where
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i could get into & see things that other people normally couldn't
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using the phone system.
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Lvx: Getting something for nothing. We can use things that other
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people generally can't use cuz they dont have the right mindset.
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They don't get the opportunity...they never find out about all
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the little scams you can pull to get phree stuff. To really
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hack, you have to go against established norms of
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behavior...especially with regards to "property". So, people who
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are already supposed to doing unacceptable things, namely more
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subversive and criminal individuals, get into it...
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WCF: What do you think 2600 is trying to do with these public
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meetings?
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Sarlo: Get people together & allow them to finally connect a face
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& a voice to the words they see on the screen, plus to let people
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realize they don't have to hide behind a computer screen or a
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telephone. They can actually come out there & meet each other &
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not have to worry perpetually about being raided, as has been the
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case recently.
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Lvx: It's sort of a way to thumb our nose at authority and say
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"We're not afraid of you. What we do is not wrong!"
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WCF: Do you think there is a H-P "community"? It seems there's
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some polarization, with some being in it for money, others for
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scamming (Code Kidz!), and most for the exploration and learning.
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But can anyone, like, say there is a hacker "ethic"?
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Lvx: Community! Ha! Too many folx in it for the notoriety,,,not
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the subject matter. Ethic, tho? Sure! But, no one claims they
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ever truly follow that ethic. It's sort of a medeley: learning
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how to scam, exploration to learn, etc. There is little money in
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hacking. I was personally just offered money to hack into a
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company's computers...however, since the company does not
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interest me, and since i don't believe in taking money for what i
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do anyway (not to mention receiving money to commit a
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felony...entrapment city), the ethic comes into play. In this
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case it is sort of a backwards thing...but, in general, there is
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a hacking ethic. It sez: get in, play around, but don't damage,
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and don't profit. The learning is all, ya see. In the case of
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getting calls for free---a very dark grey area. Technically,
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it's profitting, but since it's at the expense of the Phone
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Nazis, it evens out. They rob from us, we rob from them--it all
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comes out ok conceptually.
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Sarlo: Yes, in most cases, its something inbred in us--don't
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destroy information, don't gain monetarily from the information
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found, and of course, "yield to the hands on imperative!"
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Whenever possible, USE the machine, don't just read about it!
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WCF: Would you say 2600 is about info-sharing? If so, why aren't
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the meetings organized more towards skill-sharing? People seem
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to let the paranoia rule the meetings...
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Lvx: No, not at this stage. The kind of info you can share is
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the kind of info that will get you busted--a public disclosure is
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generally not a smart move. The skill-sharing sort of happens,
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behind the scenes. It is difficult to explain hi-brow advanced
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concepts to people who lack a solid (if any at all) background in
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the subject. And, relying on elementary skills becomes tiring
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for the teacher (who often has little skill in teaching) to
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rattle off and the student to digest. There is a wealth of
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learning materials free for the taking (or stealing) about
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computers in general...in a basic sense. It is the advanced
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topics that are hard to find about...and that is what gets kicked
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around between the players that can understand it.
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Sarlo: The meetings are based on total freedom--there's no
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agenda, no formal speakers (usually, this may change soon,
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however). The information sharing usually takes place after the
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meetings, in private discussion. But the meetings also provide a
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human side for what we do. We see each other as text across the
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screen. Its great to see faces to the name. But as for the
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spreading of information, we often forget what its like for
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someone to begin, or at least i do, and i tend not to actively
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shove the info in their faces. But if they choose to come up and
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ask how to start, what are good places to check out, etc., then i
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doubt you will find anyone more willing to give you the
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information, or if we don't have it, where you might find it, but
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they have to make an effort as well. Besides. Nobody ever went
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to jail for being paranoid.
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WCF: Do hackers & phreaks, or the people involved in 2600 see
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themselves in opposition to big brother, the government, the
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corporations?
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Sarlo: I dont think its so much institutions, like the govt or
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corps, so much as its an idea they hold. Our idea is that
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information should be free, that information shouldn't only be
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given out to a select few. A company believes that when they
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stamp confidential on a document, then the person who may come in
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contact with it has agreed with the company that they won't
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disclose the information, that it's private. Well, we've made no
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such agreement.
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Lvx: Well i think that by necessity, yes, we are in opposition
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becuz information is turning into this same property thing where
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people try to OWN it. I personally don't see it that way--how
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can it be property when information isn't even physical? I don't
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know, the whole hacking thing is kind of opening up the door so
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that it goes out rather than in for profit.
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Sarlo: Security is a joke. Intellectual property just a
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handjob.
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WCF: I've heard talk about using technology to decentralize the
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control over information, but don't you think it only
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decentralizes it to the people who have access to it? Access to
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that technology?
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Lvx: Information, in the useful sense, is a lot like heinz 57
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sauce. You can't keep it bottled up. It never gets used up, and
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it keeps getting copied (thru brainz or otherwise), so eventually
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even the most carefully guarded secrets get spread around. A
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good library, for instance, has an incredible amount of
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information about almost everything. Technology moves that
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information into a more user-oriented mode...the hard part of
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searching and finding is done for you by computer..to your specs.
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WCF: Do you see technology as aiding citizen participation in so-
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called democracy? Like TVs were originally supposed to have been
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used for?
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Lvx: No. It might help people make more informed decisions, but I
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think as a whole democracy is going to hell. Soon.
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WCF: So, in terms of communication thru nets, don't you see a
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danger in them being created and sustained by corps & govts?
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Internet was started by the Dept. of Defense, right? In the
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future, do you see them tightening their control over these nets?
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Lvx: IRC [Internet Relay Channel] is maintained by no one. It's
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a self-serve thing. As for internet...it has evolved far beyond
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the makers hopes (and wants). No one controls internet. It is a
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symbiosis...information creators and info carriers.
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WCF: I have here an article by Feral Faun on the "Cybernet of
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Domination", which argues that these new forms of tehnology which
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supposedly "decentralize" power and promote direct democracy and
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have the appearance of being liberating, are actually a more
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subtle form of social control. Already the cybernet permeates
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our homes, workplaces, schools, hang-outs...
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Lvx: Yep, and it will never go away. Control it, or be
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controlled thru it.
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Sarlo: Well one thing i personally would like to see is
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everybody in the world having access to computers. But everybody
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goes "Oh no, oh no my god! This is horrible, we're going to have
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commie people in here!..."
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Lvx: It also seems that this central control is not just one big
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sprawling thing...its decentralized, there is no single final
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authority or group of authorities. Even the manufacturers have
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to get together to compromise on standards to maintain
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compatibility...
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Sarlo: That's the whole thing about the network.
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Lvx: There's so many networks...
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WCF: I think what its saying by control is that you have to
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participate in the network in order to work within and take
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advantage of it...so you're bound by the network.
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Lvx: Nah, you can expand it easily. Just look at your mailing
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list for anarchy [the anarchy-list]...that is a network in and of
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itself. It's not about control its just another medium...
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Sarlo: What we're looking at is not so much control over...well
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there is control over access but a lot of it nowadays is social
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control. There's all these special interest groups that are
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self-important, that want a say in where the industry
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goes...there was a forum for Harpers Magazine on a computer
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system called the Well. It was originally created to be a kind
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of town hall forum, a free speech thing...
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Lvx: Run by older hippies.
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WCF: The electronic town hall idea is a way some people have put
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forward as a way to make democracy more direct..everyone have a
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computer and communicate through your computer.
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Sarlo: What Ross Perot wanted to do. But the way he wanted it
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set up, you could only hit 1 for yes, there was no no option. If
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you said no it wouldnt allow you to voice your opinion...
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Lvx: How are you going to get 250 million people with computers?
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That's an impossible logistics task, but also you wouldnt be able
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to talk at the same time. Everyone voicing their opinion is just
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too much noise. And i dont think that that sort of "democracy"
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could really exist, except in principle.
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Sarlo: We have what, 32 billion people in the US...if Ross Perot
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ever got power and put a system like that into effect, the
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temptation to change or delete the messages, in effect squelch
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the american public...theres no doubt in my mind, the same goes
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for Clinton. Abuse of power.
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WCF: It seems that already happens today.
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Sarlo: Yeah, to an extent.
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Lvx: Doing it on computers would be even more lame.
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WCF: This kinda relates to another criticism of electronic
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direct-democracy...that while it may help facilitate-control
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decision making (albeit with the usual separation of decision and
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action), the system itself cannot be questioned because it
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controls the questioning. Its like voting, you can vote for this
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government or that govt, but you cant choose an alternative to
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govt by the nature of the process.
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Lvx: Agreement here. Just a facade of self-determination.
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Freedom of Choice is no freedom at all.
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WCF: When your choices are limited...Well, coming from the
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anarchist perspective, there's a lot of questioning technology,
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and a fundamental question is is technology neutral? Obviously
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computer networks can be used and in terms of hacking taken
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advantage of...but isn't that even only partially offsetting the
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overall negative impact of these networks, as they're used by
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corps and govts to fuck people over?
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Sarlo: They use us as scapegoats to say "Oh, we have to tighten
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security so we have to look thru your mail to make sure your not
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doing something wrong." Big Brother. Anybody who says that big
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brother doesn't exist is either part of the conspiracy or isn't
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paying attention. Look at the IBM building downtown. There's
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cameras all around the building. Why?
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Lvx: What do they have to hide?
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Sarlo: Not that so much as why are they so interested in the
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people walking down the street for? The potential for abuse by
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our side--which i'm not going to say hasn't happened--people have
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disconnected phone lines on a whim (ahem)--there have been people
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like that on our side...but the govt also uses us as an excuse to
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intrude on everybody elses privacy.
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WCF: Everybody "else"?
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Sarlo: The common people. They listen in on your phone
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conversations. When you make an international call, there's a
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computer that listens in on the call for key words: drugs, guns,
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terrorism, assassination, president...i mean they listen for
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those words and when they hear them they'll just start recording
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your conversation..then that recording goes to the NSA, the NSA
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takes the info and determines what department it should go to, if
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it should go to the FBI, etc. It may take months but it still
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gets filed and goes to an organization.
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Lvx: Yeah, i see what you mean by how tech is used to control but
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i don't know, it's mostly because there's people with the
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resources to design it & implement and they get it first. This
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hi tech started with people with lots of money, lots of power,
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lots of resources, and they'll always stay one step ahead. You
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can buy a PC now for real cheap but you can't buy the cutting
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edge real cheap because it's not for you. Look at radar
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detectors. The tech becomes obsolete once it's in wide use, and
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the same company is marketing a new product.
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Sarlo: Talk about companies, they're 6 generations ahead with
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microchip technology, they just won't release it, it's a
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marketing ploy. They wait 6 months for everybody to get
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something and then say "Oh, that's obsolete now, get this". And
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i dont even need the newest thing on the market i just need
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something that suffices for now.
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Lvx: What can i do argue that technology is not used to control?
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Lots of things about it are evil...
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Sarlo: Like a knife, it can be used as a tool to carve something
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out or to kill someone. It all depends on how it's used.
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Lvx: But the people with the biggest power and resources make the
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biggest knives and can use them the best.
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WCF: So you kind of see your role in society to be keeping
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Orwellian police-state society in check.
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Sarlo: Not even so much in check so long as i'm able to keep
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myself and my friends outta trouble and let them know whats going
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on...i dont really feel an allegiance to the rest of the world
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where i feel i must let everybody know that this Orwellian future
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isn't just fiction. It's a dark future. Technology is going to
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be abused by both sides. I see all these people who drop acid,
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do shrooms and read Mondo 2000 and think computers are going to
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be the greatest thing on earth. It's going to be this magical
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superb thing and the thing is it's just not going to be.
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WCF: Actually a big section of the Green Movement, of all people,
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does see technology as being useful in stopping eco-destruction
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and making society more democratic. Kind of a green techno-
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utopia.
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Lvx: I am suspicious of the word utopia. It implies some sort of
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platonic ideal, and as we all know, plato just plagiarized
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socrates.
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WCF: Well do you see this as a losing battle then?
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Sarlo: Not so much a losing battle as a battle that can't ever be
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won by either side.
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WCF: So do you see the future becoming a police state or social
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chaos?
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Lvx: The world's not getting any bigger and the population's not
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getting any smaller and we can't seem to control it. The more
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people the more things get fucked up. I can't see a police
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state--they hate each other, the FBI, police, CIA...they work
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together but they each try to sabotage one another. The security
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forces have rebelled and have their own agendas now.
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WCF: How about nation states breaking down? That's common in
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cyberpunk fiction. Will technological decentralization lead to
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state decentralization? Look at Eastern Europe right now,
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Russia, Bosnia. Already states seem to be getting more and
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subdivided. Often along ethnic, tribal lines.
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Lvx: I hope so. I want the nation of Lvx...a nation of one...I
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figure most decisions would be unanimous!
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WCF: Tell me about information services.
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Sarlo: There's a service called Information On America which is
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basically a database on every single person in america. If
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you've ever filled out a form, it'll provide your home address,
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phone #, phone bills, payments, info on up to 10 of your
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neighbors...
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WCF: Who has access to it?
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Sarlo: It's $95 an hour to anybody. Some hackers have learned
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how to crack the system however.
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Lvx: It's like Big Brother's subcontractor. There's so many info
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services. It's mostly info gathered for marketing.
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WCF: In other countries people will refuse to take the census but
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in this country there is more control, there is more technology.
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Credit card records show everything you've bought, phone
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companies know everybody you call...
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Sarlo: It's getting so you can't wipe yer ass without some agency
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knowing you're doing it.
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Lvx: And what the breakdown of yer feces is.
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WCF: Something interesting too is like the Museum of Science &
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Industry here in Chicago, like every little section they have is
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sponsored by some company that has an interest in pushing that
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topic. Like there's a big thing about petroleum and how great it
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is--sponsored by Amoco. Nothing about the Exxon Valdez or going
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to war for oil. They have really simplistic info, a lot of
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packed truths...
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Sarlo: I've occasionally gone to the Illinois Bell section at the
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museum and passed out flyers about red boxes and how to make
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them. A museum is nothing more than a big cultural conditioning
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store.
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WCF: Besides D.C. and the Bellcore incident, what other kinds of
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pressure has 2600 gotten?
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Lvx: I think there's been some random incidents of harrassment,
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just people getting raided, and when people get raided especially
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by the SS, your stuff gets confiscated, no charges get
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filed...it's not so much to prosecute so much as to harass you
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and develop scare tactics...
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Sarlo: Boards containing "anarchist" material on creating
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explosives have been shut down for threatening social
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disruption...
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WCF: A lot of "anarchist" material on bbs's that i've seen has
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been stupid chaos i-wanna-be-anarchy-blow-shit-up stuff, but
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there's also a fair bit of radicalism and anarchist influence.
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Lvx: Sucks, doesn't it? It's a matter of public opinion. In the
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opinion of the public, anarchy=bombs & guns.
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WCF: On the 2600 teleconference the other day i was talking to 2
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hackers who were in the military, and i was thinking on one hand
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they work for the govt but on the other hand their hobby is
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something the govt finds criminal...
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Lvx: Maybe they're saying you can work for the govt but still be
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against it?
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Sarlo: It's the same thing with telephone company employees.
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Commmunications workers are getting fired left and right & the
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way they're being treated...and it's gettinng easier and easier
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to get into their computers! You can ask them for their password
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and say "Yeah, i'm a hacker" and they'll give it to ya!
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Lvx: Yeah, lots of phone company employees really hate the phone
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company.
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Sarlo: And that's something--a lot of computer crime is committed
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by disgruntled employees...
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WCF: You've said before that the Tribune wanted to interview you
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but you refused. Why, and what do you think of the media's
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portrayal of hackers?
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Sarlo: Newspapers will try to make things be as interesting as
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possible. Well, hackers can do cool things but...they say we
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break into credit agencies, find out all this info, shut down
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phone services...well, what they never point out is, yeah, we can
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do this but why shut things down? We're hackers not
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criminals...they never point out that we're out exploring. News
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is a lot of sensationalism, society gets off on negative things,
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and exploration is really unexciting especially in the realm of
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computers.
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WCF: What do you think about tech being used in warfare on other
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countries? Like the supposed virus the US allegedly fed to iraqi
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computers to crash their air defences. Sarlo, you have a pretty
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individualistic approach to using tech to defend yourself, but
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what about you, Lvx? Are you a hero of the revolution?
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Lvx: Well i'd protect anyone from it. I'm kinda the helpful
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sort, but yeah that kind of stuff sickens me. The government
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couldn't field any decent talent in the way of hacking. Hacking
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is an expression of defiance against the law, government is based
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on law. No good hacker could work for the man.
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WCF: How would you suggest someone get started at hacking?
|
|
Sarlo: Buy a computer.
|
|
Lvx: Or steal a computer.
|
|
Sarlo: Rule #1 is get access. Or just start dialing numbers,
|
|
pick an obscure prefix (the first 3 numbers) and just start
|
|
dialing from 0000 to 9999. You'll find a lot of really
|
|
interesting things usually from in prefix 99 and from 9900 to
|
|
9999.
|
|
Lvx: I started by going to the library and picking up some books,
|
|
first on digital switching. It might not make any sense at first
|
|
but just start playing around. Most of my starter info i got
|
|
completely legally.
|
|
Sarlo: Things have changed tho, if you start asking questions
|
|
about digital switching or ISDN, you'll get the hairy eyeball.
|
|
Unless you're well known in telecom circles, if you start asking
|
|
questions about how certain tones work or anything people won't
|
|
trust you.
|
|
Lvx: And i think it's a damn shame, we're all supposed to have
|
|
phones and computers without knowing the secret workings...
|
|
Sarlo: It's all completely mindless. When you scan numbers, the
|
|
telephone central office just goes nuts, they go "What the hell
|
|
are you doing? Why are you scanning these prefixes? You
|
|
shouldn't be doing this! Don't explore! You'll break our phone
|
|
system!" It shouldn't cost 5 cents a minute to call 3 miles away
|
|
either.
|
|
Lvx: There's so many things, stuff you're not ever supposed to
|
|
find out, like where their operations are at. Their central
|
|
offices are set up like fortresses--steel doors, cameras, you
|
|
have to phone in to gain entry...I can see wanting to protect
|
|
from random stuff, i mean it is everyones phone network even tho
|
|
Illinois Bell thinks its theirs...and it's all fucked up...It's a
|
|
fact of life now...not a luxury!
|
|
Sarlo: I don't think phone bills should exist, i think once we
|
|
have a technology that's so integrated that we practically can't
|
|
live without it then things need to be changed...electricity,
|
|
gas, water,...this country needs an overhaul.
|
|
Lvx: I totally agree. If it's a necessity, i can see charging a
|
|
little to provide for costs, but...pay for upkeep, pay for
|
|
advances, but not so rich wanks can pad the ole portfolio.
|
|
Sarlo: It's just profiteering gluttons serving themselves.
|
|
WCF: Where's 2600 going?
|
|
Sarlo: Word is getting out, it's really easy to set up a meeting.
|
|
The thing to remember about 2600 meetings is there's no rules,
|
|
that's what's really cool about this network of computers where
|
|
people communicate without racial bias, without gender, yer just
|
|
judged by who you are & what you do, how you act...and we have
|
|
corporations and govt coming in and saying what we can and
|
|
cannnot do. They're going to regulate everything. Why do credit
|
|
rating companies even have info on whether you're white or black,
|
|
why should it matter?
|
|
WCF: You have to admit that computers are still mostly used by
|
|
white, male, middle class types. And i've seen lots of sexism on
|
|
bbs's, which are mostly playgrounds for boys it seems. And i've
|
|
seen bbs's with racist material--right-wingers use the nets too.
|
|
Lvx: Yep, gotta have money and an introduction to play. I'll be
|
|
the last person to deny that BBS's are lame. A great majority
|
|
are just little playgrounds. Occasionally, there are decent
|
|
forums where actual OPINIONS and IDEAS are argued rather than
|
|
childish insults...and it is these few places that make it semi-
|
|
worthwhile.
|
|
WCF: So while hackers are eager for equality in the net, why
|
|
don't they fight for equal acces to the net?
|
|
Lvx: We do. Every time you steal an account, you increase access
|
|
to the net. If you want in, you have to grab it. When you crawl
|
|
to Papa Gore and say "Oh, please, can we have access to the
|
|
future?", the reply is "Of course! Money permitting! If no one
|
|
minds!" with an unsaid "On our terms, where we let you, when we
|
|
let you, and with us watching every step. "Access for all" means
|
|
access to little, if any at all.
|
|
WCF: Do you feel dealing with just a computer for communication
|
|
is dehumanizing? Its much more impersonal than direct contact,
|
|
and look at the tendency of people to "flame up".
|
|
Lvx: Not any more than the telephone. Text communication allows
|
|
more thought to be taken in how you reply to things...some people
|
|
just don't take that time...
|
|
Sarlo: Not so much dehumanizing as treating people as
|
|
individuals...sort of like 2600 meetings are big but not
|
|
gigantic, and they still allow people to be individuals. On the
|
|
computer, if you log on and you see lots of people on there--its
|
|
words. It's not just words so much as ideas and peoples actions.
|
|
And people on computers produce real tangible results. I think
|
|
one of our greatest vulnerabilities to computers is our reliance
|
|
on them. We rely on them blindly. We assume they're always
|
|
going to be there. Our reliance on technology is going to be our
|
|
downfall. Computers are great to explore and all...but look at
|
|
people and television. Hell, they can't even change a channel
|
|
without a remote control and can't even figure out how to hook up
|
|
the vcr...
|
|
Lvx: Technology being used even as a convenience that other
|
|
people can control--and they know how to, and they have all the
|
|
specs, all the ins and outs, but they don't want to let anyone
|
|
else to know the ins and outs, cuz that would empower them.
|
|
Sarlo: Look at how manuals are written...incredible
|
|
bureaucracy...virtually no way to right off the bat understand it
|
|
all. They make it so that they can keep the common person in
|
|
check, so that they suddenly don't come up with the inspiration
|
|
to create something. They want to monopolize it.
|
|
Lvx: Information as property, this is mine, you can't know it.
|
|
Sarlo: Intellectual property is a joke. The idea that you can go
|
|
to prison for looking at a document is absurd. I've learned
|
|
security holes out of necessity because i want to learn how to
|
|
use the computers, but i could live quite comfortably without any
|
|
type of security, being able to log right in i would love it.
|
|
The only problem with security i see is enormous databases like
|
|
TRW & Info On America, where info is being harmfully abused. I'm
|
|
totally against the amassing of that kind of data anyways. If
|
|
you break into TRW and look at your own credit report, you're in
|
|
violation of law, but they can amass all this info on you without
|
|
your permission and sell it to other people.
|
|
WCF: Do you think elite BBS's are necessary? Are you "elite"
|
|
enough?
|
|
Lvx: I am so 3leeT it hurts. There will always be a separation
|
|
between the tourists and the dwellers. Computers are not without
|
|
risks...so until one can individually make progress, it is
|
|
pointless to give out sensitive information. You don't let
|
|
children play with the guns until they know what the guns can do.
|
|
WCF: Do you consider "ego" to be a problem in the h-p community?
|
|
Lvx: Ego ain't so much of a problem once you meet people face to
|
|
face. It kills a lot of the supposed superiority one feels.
|
|
WCF: Are you cyberpunks?!
|
|
Lvx: No. I am a technarchist...in the techno, anarchist, and
|
|
narccistic sense of the word...
|
|
WCF: Any last words?
|
|
Lvx: Buy our record.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is of course, just the beginning...we will have more on this
|
|
in future issues, and we encourage those of you who can to use
|
|
this information and get started...
|
|
|
|
|
|
GETTING ONLINE
|
|
First acquire a computer and modem. If you can't steal or scam
|
|
one, you can usually buy a cheap used IBM PC-compatible for about
|
|
$300 plus $60 for a modem. If you're a student (or your friend
|
|
is), you can probably get a free internet-access account at your
|
|
college/univ. If not, there are various services that cost. The
|
|
best in Chicago is Gagme (312)282.6806, info@gagme.chi.il.us.
|
|
$50/yr, $35 students. For a list of such services around the U$,
|
|
contact Todd at Love & Rage (email address below).
|
|
|
|
Some interesting local BBS's to check out:
|
|
(708)265.1984 Room 101: H/P, lots of message and file bases
|
|
(312)463.0252 Red October: H/P
|
|
(312)262.7125 Woodge City: Mac-oriented. Kinda dull.
|
|
(708)459.7267 Hell Pit: Viruses, social issues.
|
|
(708)587.2398 Security: Survivalism. Some right-wing crap.
|
|
(708)934.6224 Far Post: Music and attitude.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some worthwhile e-mail addresses:
|
|
thak@midway.uchicago.edu Wind Chill Factor
|
|
loveandrage@igc.apc.org Love & Rage anarchist network/newspaper
|
|
iww@igc.apc.org Wobbly IWW syndicalist union
|
|
nlns@igc.apc.org New Liberation News Service
|
|
anarchy-list-request@cwi.nl Anarchy mailing list
|
|
spunk-list-request@lysator.liu.se Spunk Press electronic @
|
|
archive
|
|
activ-l@mizzou1.missouri.edu Activist mailing list
|
|
nyt!nyxfer@speedway.net NY Transfer News Collective, way-cool
|
|
non-profit activist news distribution service
|
|
|
|
RESOURCES:
|
|
2600, the Hacker Quarterly, PO Box 752, Middle Island, NY 11953,
|
|
(516)751-2600, $21/yr. An excellent magazine that has spawned a
|
|
H-P network. There are 2600 meetings in 20 U$ cities and Munich,
|
|
Germany the first Friday of every month, 5-8pm local time. Often
|
|
people teleconference with groups in other cities. Call 2600 to
|
|
find out about meetings in your area or starting your own.
|
|
PHRACK, phrack@well.sf.ca.us, an on-line H-P publication.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is our world now--the world of the electron and the switch,
|
|
the beauty of the baud. We make use of a service already
|
|
existing without paying for what could be dirt-cheap if it
|
|
werten't run by profiteering gluttons, and you call us criminals.
|
|
We explore--and you call us criminals. We seek after knowledge--
|
|
and you call us criminals. We exist without skin color, without
|
|
nationality, without religious bias--and you call us criminals.
|
|
You build atomic bombs, you wage wars, you murder, cheat, and lie
|
|
to us and try to make us believe its for our own good, yet we're
|
|
the criminals.
|
|
Yes, I am a criminal. My crime is that of curiosity. My crime
|
|
is that of judging people by what they say and think, not what
|
|
they look like. My crime is that of outsmarting you, something
|
|
that you will never forgive me for. I am a hacker, and this is
|
|
my manifesto. You may stop this individual, but you can't stop
|
|
us all.
|
|
--Manifesto of The Mentor, one of loose alliance of expert
|
|
hackers known as the Legion of Doom.
|
|
|
|
|
|
PIRATE TV
|
|
All you need is a vcr and a tv antenna. Plug the antenna into
|
|
the out socket and either throw in a tape or do a live
|
|
transmission with a camcorder. The range for this is about 3-5
|
|
city blocks, sometimes farther. It comes in on channel 2 or 3,
|
|
below 100 mWatts so its legal! So start your own community TV
|
|
network!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RED BOXING
|
|
A red box is a device that simulates the tones a quarter makes in
|
|
a Bell telephone, thus enabling one to make free, fraudulent,
|
|
long distance or international phone calls. While we at WCF
|
|
would never conceive of defrauding Ma Bell, we thought it was
|
|
pretty nifty how these things are made, and thought we'd share
|
|
the info. The easiest way is just to buy yourself a Radio Shack
|
|
33-memory pocket tone dialer (about $25), and a 6.5536 mHz
|
|
crystal. Open up the tone dialer, and first remove the little
|
|
white disk speaker cuz its kinda unneccessary, and you need that
|
|
room for the new crystal. Then remove the old crystal and attach
|
|
the new one, using the white speaker wires if you want. Just
|
|
solder to the spots the old crystal was connected too. Be
|
|
careful you don't solder them together! Now seal it back up, and
|
|
program 5 * (star) buttons into the memory. When you press the
|
|
button, it emits tones close enough to simulate the tones you
|
|
need and fool Ma Bell.
|
|
TIPS FOR USE: First, red boxes only work on Bell phones.
|
|
Second, they are good for long distance & international calls
|
|
usually. You can sometimes scam a local call by going thru the
|
|
long distance carrier (dialing 10288-number for example) or by
|
|
asking the operator to dial the call for you. You can also
|
|
program dimes (2 stars) and nickels (1 star). Don't abuse the
|
|
same payphones repeatedly, as you will get them "adjusted" or
|
|
worse, get caught. While skimming a bit off of Ma Bell's
|
|
profits isn't a bad thing, red boxes are first and foremost a
|
|
tool for phreaking--exploration of the phone system. Besides,
|
|
overabuse will just get Bell to switch the systems so red boxes
|
|
don't work, as is already the case in some parts of NY and CA.
|
|
So have fun, but be careful.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mr. Dan Carver, the Grand Wizard of the KKK in Tennesee got a
|
|
surprise on his phone bill during the month of February. Seems
|
|
someone called an anti-apartheid hotline in S. Africa and 3-wayed
|
|
the $4000 bill to Carver. Sometimes there is justice.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In an attempt to teach computer crime prevention, children in a
|
|
Berkeley elementary school are being shown a 30 minute
|
|
presentation on ethics and security. The program consists of
|
|
several skits using puppets...in one episode, Gooseberry, a naive
|
|
computer user, has her files erased by Dirty Dan, the malicious
|
|
hacker, when she neglects to log off.
|
|
--SF Chronicle
|
|
|
|
|
|
The BATF reported 958 bombing incidents last year, the highest in
|
|
15 years. Police blame teens gathering information on explosives
|
|
recipes via computer and modem. There was a 50% increase in the
|
|
number of homemade explosives found this year.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE HACKER CRACKDOWN:
|
|
recent attacks on hackers:
|
|
1990 An "acquired" BellSouth document, E911, makes its way
|
|
through various underground bbs's and online papers. The Secret
|
|
Service, eager to bust, uses it as an excuse to launch Operation
|
|
Sun Devil, resulting in several raids and the confiscation of
|
|
computer equipment. BellCore feeds the hype by saying the E911
|
|
document is worth over $79,499 (it can be ordered from them by
|
|
mail for $23) and could be used by hackers to crash the 911
|
|
emergency system (a lie). The SS, investigating The Mentor,
|
|
raids his work, Steve Jckson Games, despite evidence, and seize
|
|
and keep for months all their equipment and files. The pretext:
|
|
that the soon to be released SLG roleplaying game GURPS Cyberpunk
|
|
was a "manual for computer crime". The raid devastates SJG, who
|
|
are forced to reduce their staff by nearly half.
|
|
Summer 1992 Bellcore threatens 2600 with a lawsuit for printing
|
|
information from an internal Bellcore document that detailed a
|
|
security hole that could have been used to eavesdrop on phone
|
|
conversations. 2600 doesn't even think about backing down.
|
|
Nov.1992 The Washington DC 2600 meeting was disrupted by
|
|
Pentagon Mall guards who, at the behest of the SS, took pictures,
|
|
harassed the hackers, conducted illegal searches, confiscated
|
|
equipment, and coerced id's from the group.
|
|
1993 With the help of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, SJG
|
|
wins a court case against the SS, who must pay more than $50,000
|
|
in damages plus legal fees for violating privacy laws and for
|
|
lost profits as a result of their mismanaged raid.
|
|
|