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388 lines
20 KiB
Text
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(* *) Phrack #64 file 15 (* *)
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| | International scenes | |
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| | By Various | |
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| | various@nsa.gov | |
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(____________________________________________________)
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More or less 10 years after the last "International scenes" in
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phrack 48, the resurrection arrives. The purpose of this article
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is to present you hacking/cracking/phreaking scenes of different
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countries. This article is not writen by a single people but by
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people from all these differents counties. It's why we ask you
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to send us descriptions of your scenes. It could be about groups,
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busts, technologies, great hackers or anything you think is
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interesting.
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-----------------------------
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There was once a time when hackers were basically isolated. It was
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almost unheard of to run into hackers from countries other than the
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United States. Then in the mid 1980's thanks largely to the
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existence of chat systems accessible through X.25 networks like
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Altger, tchh and QSD, hackers world-wide began to run into each other.
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They began to talk, trade information, and learn from each other.
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Separate and diverse subcultures began to merge into one collective
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scene and has brought us the hacking subculture we know today. A
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subculture that knows no borders, one whose denizens share the common
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goal of liberating information from its corporate shackles.
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With the incredible proliferation of the Internet around the globe, this
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group is growing by leaps and bounds. With this in mind, we want to help
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further unite the communities in various countries by shedding light
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onto the hacking scenes that exist there. If you want to contribute a
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file about the hacking scene in your country, please send it to us
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at phrack@well.com.
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This month we have files about the scenes in France, Quebec and Bazil.
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---------------------------------------------------------------
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A personal view of the french underground [1992-2007]
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+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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by Nicholas Ankara
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The french scene has evolved a lot since years 1980'. Before 1993, there
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was no internet provider in France, which explain why the hacking scene
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in France has been mostly focused on phreaking and hardware-related
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hacking before this date. The first ISP (Worldnet) was founded by an
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influent hacker so-called NeurAlien. I am not sure that his identity
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was of public knowledge at this time, but I dont think Im taking too
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many risks by revealing this.
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NeurAlien was also the founder of what is known to be the first electronic
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french ezine about hacking, widely reknown as NoWay. NoWay started to be
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published in 1992 and did not deal so much with Internet Hacking, but
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more about the hacking on the MiniTel network. MiniTel is the ancestor
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of the Internet in France, and its use seems to have justified the late
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of using the Internet in this country. However, MiniTel was extremely
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slow and expensive, which incitated a wide amount of hacking to be
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developped around this. NeurAlien wrote at that time many philes about
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minitel hacking, most of them published in NoWay. He also participated
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in the writing of an International Scene article in Phrack #46 where he
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explained the early hacking movement in France.
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NoWay inspired a lot of french hackers in the 90' and many other ezine,
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such as NoRoute, were born after NoWay stopped publication, around
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1994. NoRoute was (afaik) the first french ezine dealing with Internet
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hacking as a main topic. Unlike NoWay, NoRoute was done by multiple
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authors, who confirmed to be highly-skilled hackers in the future,
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since some of them founded one of the most influent international hacking
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group in the 90', known as ADM (Association De Malfaiteurs, that could be
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translated to 'Criminals Association'). That same group, under additional
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influences, gave a new life to the antisecurity movement in the early
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2000, by creating public web forums to justify the non-disclosure of
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exploit software.
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Affiliated to these peoples, another old school hacker named Larsen
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pioneered Radio Hacking in France. Larsen founded the CRCF (Chaos
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Radio Club of France), whoose research was compiled into an ezine
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called HVU. HVU gave lots of information about frequencies used by
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various services in France, including the police and other military
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groups of the country. Unfortunately, Larsen got busted later on, as
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he was getting out of his home in bicycle, by weaponed authorities who
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considered him as a terrorist, while he was just a happy hacker making
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no profit from his research. After this episode, it got more difficult
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for him to continue underground activities related to this topic, more
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precisely it was way more difficult to publish about it with the treat
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of a new so-called antiterrorist raid. This story reflects without any
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doubt the total incomprehension between hackers and national services of
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the country. It is more and more difficult to find contacts in publicly
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known meeting such as the 2600-fr which happens in Paris every month
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because of these reasons.
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Another major underground ezine that demarked itself by its technical
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quality was so called MJ13 (Majestic13). It was mostly written by french
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hackers, also students in reknown french computer universities. MJ13
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contained material about virii, cracking, hardware hacking, and other
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related topics, but ceased publication after only 4 issues. There
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were also attempt to group hackers for legal reasons (as in creating
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a syndicate of hackers somehow) by the Hacker Emergency Response Team
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(HERT) founded by Gaius. Gaius (ACZ) was a french hacker of the early
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90' reknown for his social engineering hacks into FBI and CIA telephone
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network. Surprisingly, he never got jailed but at some point he had to
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move from the country, officially to escape authorities. HERT was never
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a hacking group but included a lot of hackers from other international
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groups such as ADM, w00w00, TESO, and others.
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As already stated, a major burden that always made the french hacking
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scene to suffer was the omnipresence of the french secret service
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(DST: Direction de la Surveillance du Territoire) and their voluntee
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to infiltrate the french hacking scene by any mean. A good example of
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this was the fake hacking meeting created in the middle 1990' so called
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the CCCF (Chaos Computer Club France) where a lot of hackers got busted
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under the active participation of a renegate hacker so called Jean-Bernard
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Condat. Since that time, the french hacking was deeply armed and a very
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suspectful ambiant spirit is regning for more than 10 years. Most of the
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old school hackers decided to stop contributing to the scene, which went
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even more underground, to avoid infiltration of services.
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As the Internet was getting democratized in the late 90', a new generation
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of hackers, ignorant of what happened with the CCCF, started to recreate
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a public face for the french hacking scene, and new phreaking and hacking
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groups started to create new influential ezines. The most reknown new
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school phreaking ezine was called Cryptel but had to cease publication
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because of major busting at the beginning of 2000' . A lot of other ezines
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were born from unexperienced hackers but mots of them were ripped from
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existing material, or brang a very poor technical quality, which made
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them not worth mentioning any further.
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During the late 90' / early 2000, other groups such as RTC created
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an ezine which dealt mostly with network oriented hacking, but ceased
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publications after a few issues. Another group was created under the
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name Exile, which grouped french, canadians, and belgians young hackers.
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This group started as unexperienced but soon got quite a reputation
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by writing a lot of highly technical articles for various ezines such
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as the canadian quebecer magazine IGA, and later into Phrack. As the
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group evolved into another one under the name Devhell, their articles
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about new techniques of exploits, reverse engineering, never got into
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a dedicated ezine. There was once an attempt to create such an ezine
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but the difficulties of finding serious collaborators made it impossible.
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Last but not least, an international group of (partly french)
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highly-skilled hackers was created at the beginning of years 2000 also
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known as Synnergy Networks. This group got very known by publishing
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exploit software that were seemingly very hard to write (such as the first
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publications of heap overflow exploits) and writing references articles
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about the subject, some of them being published in Phrack Magazine. Just
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as other mentioned groups, it is very hard for a non-hacker to know
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if those groups are still in activity because of their closed-door
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nature by default and the absence of any up-to-date information on the
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web about them. It is safer for everyone serious about hacking to stay
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low-profile to avoid miscellanous troubles and keep the necessary freedom
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on performed activities. Nevertheless, it can be mentioned without fear
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that hacking is not closed to a given group, and the most active hackers
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in each group got in collaboration at some point to create a stronger
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manpower in order to face the merchandization of computer security and
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the increasing difficulty of succesfull computer networks intrusions.
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The french underground is also very active in the field of software
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cracking and many very skilled french crackers are still in activity. Just
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as their hackers alter-egos, french crackers learnt to stay very paranoid
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about their activities to avoid busting, and for this reason I will not
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mention any names of group or persons active on that topic. Actually I may
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be able to quote only one young group of reverse engineers who slightly
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overlap with the cracking community : the French Reverse Engineering Team
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(FRET). FRET holds a public forum on the topic of reverse engineering
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and none of their activities appear to be illegal. This forum stands
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for an educational place for the young generation of coders to learn
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low-level information about closed-source software.
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There were also a lot of other groups but I would not define them
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as hacking groups, as most of them were created by beginners or
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profit-oriented associations for other reasons than fun with hacking.
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Generally, those groups did not help to renew the hacking underground
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mindset and thus do not have a place in a file about the french
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underground history. The underground exists and remain very active. It is
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up to each hacker to enter the underground by providing material to other
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hackers. Hacking is not about disclosure of exploits or fame-seeking
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on public forums or mailing lists. It is about having fun by learning
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what you are not supposed to learn. Because of this, the underground
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will always exist, even if no trace of it remains on the WWW.
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--------------------------------------------------------------
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The Quebec scene
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================
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by g463
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Yesterday ...
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-------------
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NPC (Northern Phun Co.) is believed to be the first hacking and phreaking
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group in the history of the Quebec scene. One of their member, known as
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Gurney Halleck, has already wrote on the 418 scene in the "International
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scenes" article in Phrack 44. NPC has released a bunch of good quality
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ezines back in 1992 to 1994 about phreaking, hacking and anarchy.
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Active around 1994 to 1997, the second big hacking and phreaking group was
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C-A (Corruption Addicts). This group was pretty active back then and they
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had the reputation to do some blackhat activities. They have hacked high
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profile organizations, such as the GRC, FBI, SCRS, DND and 11 banks, like
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the National Bank of Canada.
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After C-A dissolved, two other groups took the lead of the Quebec scene
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around 1995, Total Control and FrHack. Both published a couple of ezines.
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Then, around 1998, these groups left the scene, and at the same time they
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made room for Pyrofreak and IGA.
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In 2000, there was the reborn of sector_x. The goal of this group was to
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bring the best hackers that the province of Quebec had to offer under the
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same roof. The idea was great, but ultimately, it failed. There were a
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lot of really good conversations and interesting exchanges between people,
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but there were no concrete and constructive projects at all. In fact, this
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was always one of the major problem of the Quebec scene ...
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... Today
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---------
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Today, the Quebec scene still exists even tough it has changed a lot during
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the last years. The rapid growth of the Internet has made meeting people a
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lot easier than before, and it helped the community to grow larger.
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Consequently, a lot of people , such as computer geeks, adepts of
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technology, gamers and web programmers began to hang around hacker groups.
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As of today, there is still a couple of hackers left in the dark corners of
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the Quebec scene, but you need to scratch the surface a little bit to find
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them ...
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Mindkind is one of the only hacking group that still releases ezines on a
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regular basis. They have their own particular style of writing, that could
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be defined as eccentric and delirious. To date, they have published 10
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ezines, talking about different subjects such as phreaking, hacking and
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philosophy. Through the years, many people joined this group and a lot
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have left also, but there is still the same group of fanatics that remains
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to keep the group alive.
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The new millennium has also brought a lot of meetings, conventions and get
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together. Among those events, there were the Hackfests, organized by the
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Centinel. Hackfests are conventions on hacking that last a full weekend
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and they are hosted at University Laval, in Quebec city. A few dozens of
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hackers meet during this time to hack, learn and of course party. On the
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schedule, there are various activities, such as hacking contests,
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conferences and wargames, with a nice music ambiance provided by the
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31337radio internet talk show.
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The 2600 group has also its meetings in Montreal. Each first Friday of
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every month, a small group of computer freaks meet downtown Montreal to
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talk about different subjects such as computers and electronics. Among
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those conversations, you can sometimes ear some interesting discussions
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about computer security.
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There is also the famous reverse engineering conference better known as
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Recon that takes place in Montreal. This event is organized by three
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Quebecers, passionate about reverse engineering and security. This
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conference had a lot of good and highly skilled speakers in the past. The
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next conference is planned for the year of 2008.
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Finally, since a couple of years, the corporate world has changed a lot of
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things in the Quebec scene. Now, some hackers are getting paid to do what
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they love to do. Consequently, this movement altered the motivation of a
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lot of hackers over time. I still think it's possible to stay true to your
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roots even if you earn your living this way, but too many people are
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getting corrupted by the money. Also, a lot of opportunists, with
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absolutely no knowledge of hacking and security, are attracted by the easy
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money you can do in the corporate world of the security, but this is
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another story ...
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Busts
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-----
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To my knowledge, one of the first bust to happen in Quebec was back in
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April 1993. Coaxial Karma, from NPC, was arrested for hacking into a
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VAX/VMS cluster of University Laval. He did his prowess by brute forcing
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usernames and passwords. Then, an administrator saw the logs by chance,
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and called the police. Since he was a juvenile at that time, he got by
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quite easily.
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June 8th 1998, three members of C-A got arrested. They got charged with
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possession of password lists, possession of bomb recipes and hacking. Two
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people got away with it, but phaust, the founder of the group, was
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sentenced to 12 months of community service and placed on probation for 12
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months.
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Back in February 2000, one of the most publicized denial of service attack
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happened. I don't think it's an exploit that the Quebec scene needs to
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remember, but it's still something important that needs to be talked about.
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Mafiaboy was the individual who performed those denial of services attacks
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against high profile corporations such as Yahoo, Amazon, Dell, eBay and
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CNN. After bragging about it on IRC, he got the attention of the
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authorities. In September 2001, he was sentenced to eight months of open
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custody, one year of probation, restricted use of Internet and a small
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fine.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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PHRACK INTERNATIONAL SCENE ON BRAZIL
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by sandimas
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Since last 'Phrack International Scene on Brazil', over than a
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decade ago, there were lots of changes on the hacking subject
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in 'coconut land'. Here is a very brief historical retrospective
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on the evolution of brazilian hacker scene.
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[ -- The initial mark
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Back on that time Internet access in Brazil was somewhat restrict
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only to academicists or rich people. The BBS scene was quite popular
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and still existed. The very begining of the scene was developed on
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this environment, although there is a few information and
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documentation about this time.
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In 1995 when Embratel (our AT&T) authorized commercial access
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to the net, there was the kickstart of an rehearsal to a more robust
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hacker scene. In this same year the first brazilian hacking e-zine
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called Barata Eletrica appeared, although being lame it can be
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considered the real initial mark of the scene in Brazil.
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[ -- Heading to a more robust scene
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In subsequent years, due to lower prices of equipments, there was
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a significant expansion of hacking in the country. Many people and
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groups got united altogheter to exchange knowledge and spread it
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through many e-zines. Although not all publications were that good
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and hackers were not that skilled, these people helped out to pave
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the road to an even large scene. It was the most active time
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brazilian hacking has ever seen.
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[ -- 1999: The rise of the script-kiddies
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At the end of 90's hacking achieved a "pop" status in Brazil. Being
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a hacker was "cool". Without much knowledge you could brag and boast
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to your friends and impress chicks. With half-dozen public exploits
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you could break into computers belonging to the government and other
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high-profile targets. The (always) uniformed media gave so much
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attention to these 'hackers' and because of this it was easy to have
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your nickname on the most-watched tv news or major newspapers and
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magazines.
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This banalization drawed attetion of the authorities and anti-hacking
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laws were built but they never got through. And, going with the flow,
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many computer security firms were created. Some kids who had grown up
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from the early underground scene went corporate and created their own
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companies. But also there are many other companies that took advantage
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of the fear spread by the media and increased their stock market shares
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by selling lies and offering snake-oil consultancy.
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Needless to say in this Dark Ages few or none worthwhile knowledge was
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produced and published to the national scene.
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[ -- ...and everything after
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Just like after the Dark Ages, we also had our Ages of Englightment,
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shedding a light at the brazilian scene. New groups and a bunch of new
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people and mailing lists committed themselves to study and experiment
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new horizons of computing were formed, quite good papers and tutorials
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in portuguese were published and a scene seemed to be flourishing again,
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even with strange highs and strange lows.
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After a few years of almost nothing interesting occurring here we had
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Hackers 2 Hackers Conference I in 2004, the very first hacker conference
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held in Brazil. H2HC is now moving toward its fourth edition and getting
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better every year.
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Currently in Brazil we have two or three well known teams and a bunch of
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skilled people getting along in close-knit circles. We also have two active
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e-zines, MOTD Guide, aimed to beginners, and The Bug! Magazine, with more
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sophisticated articles and oriented to people with medium level skills.
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[ -- Few words about phone phreaking in coconut land
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There is no phreaking in Brazil. Period. In late 90's we had only two
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serious groups, a few hangers-on who used to blue box, a guy called Tom
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Waits and a magazine called Brazilian Phreakers Journal dedicated to
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phone phreaking but they are dead and gone now.
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Apart from some tricks to make free phone calls and calling card abuse,
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there seems to be no real phreaking here. Our phone system has been kept
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secret for many years and no one really understands it deeply.
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