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329 lines
15 KiB
Text
329 lines
15 KiB
Text
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==Phrack Inc.==
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Volume Two, Issue 24, File 13 of 13
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PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN P h r a c k W o r l d N e w s PWN
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PWN ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ PWN
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PWN Issue XXIV/Part 3 PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN February 25, 1989 PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN Created, Written, and Edited PWN
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PWN by Knight Lightning PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN
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The Judas Contract Fulfilled! January 24, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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"...the other thing that made me mad was that I consider myself, at
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least I used to consider myself, a person who was pretty careful
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about who I trust, basically nobody had my home number, and few
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people even knew where I really lived..."
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-The Disk Jockey
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The following story, as told by The Disk Jockey, is a prime example of the
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dangers that exist in the phreak/hack community when sharing trust with those
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who have made The Judas Contract.
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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Let me briefly explain how I got caught...
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A hacker named Compaq was busted after someone turned him in for using Sprint
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codes. While executing the search warrant, the state police noticed that he
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had an excessive amount of computer equipment which had origins that Compaq
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could not explain.
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After checking around (I imagine checking serial numbers that Compaq had not
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removed), the police found that the equipment was obtained illegally. Compaq
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then proceeded to tell the police that I, Doug Nelson (as he thought my name
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was) had brought them to him (true).
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Meanwhile, Compaq was talking to me and he told me that he was keeping his
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mouth shut the entire time. Keep in mind that I had been talking to this guy
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for quite a long time previously and thought that I knew him quite well. I
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felt that I was quite a preceptive person.
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As time went by, little did I know, Compaq was having meetings again and again
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with the state police as well as the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
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concerning finding out who I was. He gave them a complete description of me,
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and where I (correctly) went to school, but again, he was SURE my name was
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Douglas Nelson, and since my phone had previously been in that name, he felt
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assured that he was correct. The Police checked with Illinois and couldn't
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find license plates or a driver's license in that name. He had remembered
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seeing Illinois license plates on my car.
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They were stuck until Compaq had a wonderful: He and I had went out to dinner
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and over the course of conversation, I mentioned something about living in
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Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
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After telling the state police this information, they wrote to Bloomfield Hills
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and gave a description and asked for any pictures in their files that fit that
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description.
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The problem was that several years ago, some friends and I were arrested for
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joyriding in a friend's snowmobile while he was on vacation. The neighbors
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didn't know us and called the police. Charges were dropped, but our prints and
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pictures were on file.
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Bloomfield Hills sent back 12 pictures, which, according to the police report,
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"Kent L. Gormat (Compaq) without hesitation identified picture 3 as the
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individual he knows as Douglas Nelson. This individuals name was in fact
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Douglas..."
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A warrant was issued for me and served shortly afterwards by state, local and
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federal authorities at 1:47 AM on June 27, 1988.
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Lucky me to have such a great pal. In the 6 months that I was in prison, my
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parents lived 400 miles away and couldn't visit me, my girlfriend could come
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visit me once a month at best, since she was so far away, and Compaq, who lived
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a whole 10 miles away, never came to see me once. This made me rather angry as
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I figured this "friend" had a lot of explaining to do.
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As you can see I am out of prison now, but I will be on probation until
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December 15, 1989.
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-The Disk Jockey
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Bogus Frequent Flyer Scheme February 13, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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>From Associated Press
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An airline ticket agent piled up 1.7 million bonus air miles via computer
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without leaving the ground, then sold the credits for more than $20,000,
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according to a published report.
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Ralf Kwaschni, age 28, was arrested Sunday when he arrived for work at Kennedy
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International Airport and was charged with computer tampering and grand
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larceny, authorities said.
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Kwaschni, a ticket agent for Lufthansa Airlines, used to work for American
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Airlines. Police said he used his computer access code to create 18 fake
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American Airline Advantage Accounts - racking up 1.7 million bonus air miles,
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according to the newspaper.
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All 18 accounts, five in Kwaschni's name and 13 under fake ones, listed the
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same post office box, according to the newspaper.
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Instead of exchanging the bonus miles for all the free travel, Kwaschni sold
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some of them for $22,500 to brokers, who used the credits to get a couple of
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first class, round trip tickets from New York to Australia, two more between
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London and Bermuda, and one between New York and Paris. It is legal to sell
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personal bonus miles to brokers Port Authority Detective Charles Schmidt said.
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Kwaschni would create accounts under common last names. When a person with one
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of the names was aboard an American flight and did not have an Advantage
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account, the passengers name would be eliminated from the flight list and
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replaced with one from the fake accounts.
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"As the plane was pulling away from the gate, this guy was literally wiping out
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passengers," Schmidt said.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Massive Counterfeit ATM Card Scheme Foiled February 11, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By Douglas Frantz (Los Angeles Times)
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The U.S. Secret Service foiled a scheme to use more than 7,700 counterfeit ATM
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cards to obtain cash from Bank of America automated tellers. After a
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month-long investigation with an informant, five people were arrested and
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charged with violating federal fraud statutes.
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"Seized in the raid were 1,884 completed counterfeit cards, 4,900 partially
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completed cards, and a machine to encode the cards with Bank Of America account
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information, including highly secret personal identification numbers for
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customers."
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The alleged mastermind, Mark Koenig, is a computer programmer for Applied
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Communications, Inc. of Omaha, a subsidiary of U.S. West. He was temporarily
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working under contract for a subsidiary of GTE Corporation, which handles the
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company's 286 ATMs at stores in California. Koenig had access to account
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information for cards used at the GTE ATMs. According to a taped conversation,
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Koenig said he had transferred the BofA account information to his home
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computer. He took only Bank Of America information "to make it look like an
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inside job" at the bank. The encoding machine was from his office.
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Koenig and confederates planned to spread out across the country over six days
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around the President's Day weekend, and withdraw cash. They were to wear
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disguises because some ATMs have hidden cameras. Three "test" cards had been
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used successfully, but only a small amount was taken in the tests, according to
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the Secret Service.
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The prosecuting US attorney estimated that losses to the bank would have been
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between $7 and $14 million. Bank Of America has sent letters to 7,000
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customers explaining that they will receive new cards.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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STARLINK - An Alternative To PC Pursuit January 24, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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STARLINK is an alternative to PC Pursuit. You can call 91 cities in 28 states
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during off-peak hours (7pm-6am and all weekend) for $1.50 per hour. All
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connections through the Tymnet network are 2400 bps (1200 bps works too) with
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no surcharge and there are no maximum hours or other limitations.
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There is a one time charge of $50 to signup and a $10 per month account
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maintenance fee. High volume users may elect to pay a $25 per month
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maintenance fee and $1.00 per hour charge.
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The service is operated by Galaxy Telecomm in Virginia Beach, VA and users may
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sign up for the service by modem at 804-495-INFO. You will get 30 minutes free
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access time after signing up.
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This is a service of Galaxy and not TYMNET. Galaxy buys large blocks of hours
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from TYMNET. To find out what your local access number is you can call TYMNET
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at (800) 336-0149 24 hours per day. Don't ask them questions about rates,
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etc., as they don't know. Call Galaxy instead.
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Galaxy says they will soon have their own 800 number for signups and
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information.
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The following is a listing of the major cities covered. There are others that
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are a local call from the ones listed.
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Eastern Time Zone
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Connecticut: Bloomfield Hartford Stamford
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Florida: Fort Lauderdale Jacksonville Longwood Miami Orlando Tampa
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Georgia: Atlanta Doraville Marietta Norcross
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Indiana: Indianapolis
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Maryland: Baltimore
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Massachusetts: Boston Cambridge
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New Jersey: Camden Englewood Cliffs Newark Pennsauken Princeton South
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Brunswick
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New York: Albany Buffalo Melville New York Pittsford Rochester
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White Plains
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North Carolina: Charlotte
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Ohio: Akron Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus Dayton
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Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Pittsburgh
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Rhode Island: Providence
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Virginia: Alexandria Arlington Fairfax Midlothian Norfolk Portsmouth
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Central Time Zone
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Alabama: Birmingham
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Illinois: Chicago Glen Ellyn
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Kansas: Wichita
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Michigan: Detroit
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Minnesota: Minneapolis St. Paul
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Missouri: Bridgeton Independence Kansas City St. Louis
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Nebraska: Omaha
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Oklahoma: Oklahoma City Tulsa
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Tennessee: Memphis Nashville
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Texas: Arlington Dallas Fort Worth Houston
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Wisconsin: Brookfield Milwaukee
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Mountain Time Zone
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Arizona: Mesa Phoenix Tucson
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Colorado: Aurora Boulder Denver
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Pacific Time Zone
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California: Alhambra Anaheim El Segundo Long Beach Newport Beach
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Oakland Pasadena Pleasanton Sacramento San Francisco
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San Jose Sherman Oaks Vernon Walnut Creek
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Washington: Bellevue Seattle
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STARLINK is a service of Galaxy Telecomm Division, GTC, Inc., the publishers of
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BBS Telecomputing News, Galaxy Magazine and other electronic publications.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Suspended Sentences For Computer Break-In February 20, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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>From Personal Computing Weekly
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"Police Officers Sentenced For Misuse Of Police National Computer"
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Three police officers hired by private investigators to break into the Police
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National Computer received suspended prison sentences at Winchester Crown
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Court. The private investigators also received suspended (prison) sentences,
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ranging from four to six months.
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The police officers were charged under the Official Secrets Act of conspiring
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to obtain confidential information from the Police National Computer at Hendon.
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One of the police officers admitted the charge, but the other two and the
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private investigators pleaded Not Guilty.
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The case arose out of a Television show called "Secret Society" in which
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private investigator Stephen Bartlett was recorded telling journalist Duncan
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Campbell that he had access to the Police National Computer, the Criminal
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Records Office at Scotland Yard and the DHSS (Department of Health & Social
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Security).
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Bartlett said he could provide information on virtually any person on a few
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hours. He said he had the access through certain police officers at
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Basingstoke, Hampshire. Although an investigation proved the Basingstoke
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connection to be false, the trail led to other police officers and private
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detectives elsewhere.
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Most of the information gleaned from the computers was used to determine who
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owned certain vehicles, who had a good credit record -- or even who had been in
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a certain place at a certain time for people investigating marital infidelity.
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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Of course, the actions for which the officers and others were sentenced, were
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not computer break-ins as such, but rather misuse of legitimate access.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Virus Hoax Caused As Much Panic As The Real Thing February 20, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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>From Popular Computing Weekly
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"A Virus Is Up And Running"
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Michael Banbrook gave his college network managers a scare when he planted a
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message saying that a virus was active on the college system.
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Banbrook's message appeared whenever a user miskeyed a password; the usual
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message would be
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"You are not an authorized user."
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It was replaced by the brief but sinister:
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"A Virus is up and running."
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When the message was discovered by the college network manager, Banbrook was
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immediately forbidden access to any computers at the St. Francix Xavier College
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at Clapham in South London.
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Banbrook, 17, told "Popular Computing Weekly" that he believed the college
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has over-reacted and that he had, in fact thrown a spotlight on the college's
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lackluster network security. The college has a 64 node RM Nimbus network
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running MS-DOS.
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"All any has to do is change a five-line DOS batch file" says Banbrook.
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"There is no security at all"
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Banbrook admits his motives were not entirely related to enhancing security:
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"I was just bored and started doodling and where some people would doodle with
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a notepad, I doodle on a keyboard. I never thought anyone would believe the
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message."
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Banbrook was suspended from computer science A-level classes and forbidden to
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use the college computers for a week before it was discovered that no virus
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existed. Following a meeting between college principal Bryan Scalune and
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Banbrook's parents, things are said to be "back to normal."
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Phrack World News -- Quicknotes
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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For those interested in the 312/708 NPA Split, the correct date for this
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division is November 11, 1989. However, permissive dialing will continue until
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at least February 9, 1990.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Anyone who is wondering what Robert Morris, Jr. looks like should have a look
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at Page 66 in the January 1989 issue of Discover Magazine.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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