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448 lines
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448 lines
21 KiB
Text
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==Phrack Inc.==
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Volume 0x0d, Issue 0x42, Phile #0x03 of 0x11
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|=--------------------------------------------------------------------=|
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|=-----------------------=[ Phrack World News]=-----------------------=|
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|=----------------------------=[ by TCLH ]=---------------------------=|
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|=--------------------------------------------------------------------=|
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The Circle of Lost Hackers is looking for any kind of news related to
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security, hacking, conference report, philosophy, psychology, surrealism,
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new technologies, space war, spying systems, information warfare, secret
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societies, ... anything interesting! It could be a simple news with just
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an URL, a short text or a long text. Feel free to send us your news.
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We didn't get any news from the Underground since our last phrack issue,
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it means that one more time all the news reports are coming from
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friends of our's.
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It would be good if people who claim themself "underground" would send
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us their news...
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Is our underground dead? (apparently yes...)
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1. Speedy Gonzales news
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2. Hacker hack thyself
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3. Evolt.org Marks a Decade
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--------------------------------------------
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--[ 1.
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_____ _
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/ ___| | |
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\ `--. _ __ ___ ___ __| |_ _
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`--. \ '_ \ / _ \/ _ \/ _` | | | |
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/\__/ / |_) | __/ __/ (_| | |_| |
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\____/| .__/ \___|\___|\__,_|\__, |
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|_| |___/
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_____ _
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| __ \ | |
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| | \/ ___ _ __ ______ _| | ___ ___
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| | __ / _ \| '_ \|_ / _` | |/ _ \/ __|
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| |_\ \ (_) | | | |/ / (_| | | __/\__ \
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\____/\___/|_| |_/___\__,_|_|\___||___/
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_ _
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| \ | |
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| \| | _____ _____
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| . ` |/ _ \ \ /\ / / __|
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| |\ | __/\ V V /\__ \
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\_| \_/\___| \_/\_/ |___/
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*-[ Phrack 64 0x11 is about the french scene and not a sellout conference... ]-
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http://www.frhack.org/history.html
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*-[ Promise, we are safe... ]-
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http://www.opednews.com/articles/1/US-Spying--Main-Core-PRO-by-Ed-Encho-090202-224.html
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*-[ Is the Pentagone secure? ]-
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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124027491029837401.html
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*-[ Finally, someone is reasonable...]-
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http://www.securityfocus.com/blogs/1908
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*-[ Because we love it ]-
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http://cryptome.org/
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*-[ Silvio is back in the business ]-
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http://silviocesare.wordpress.com/
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http://silvio.cesare.googlepages.com/
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*-[ Because it is funny ]-
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http://www.encyclopediadramatica.com/index.php/The_Unix_Terrorist
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http://www.encyclopediadramatica.com/GOBBLES
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http://www.encyclopediadramatica.com/N3td3v
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*-[ They should know everyone is working for Phrack ]-
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http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/fulldisclosure/2009-01/0324.html
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*-[ Ten years late... ]-
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http://www.dtors.org/papers/malicious-code-injection-via-dev-mem.pdf
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*-[ Fedwire Funds Transfer System ]-
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http://www.federalreserve.gov/paymentsystems/coreprinciples/coreprinciples.pdf
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www.ists.dartmouth.edu/library/216.pdf
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http://www.fedwiredirectory.frb.org/search.cfm
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--[ 2. "Hacker Hack Thyself" ]--
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by Kartikeya Putra <alienbaby@freaknetwork.in>
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"All human beings, all persons who reach adulthood in the world today are
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programmed biocomputers. None of us can escape our own nature as
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programmable entities. Literally, each of us may be our programs, nothing
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more, nothing less."
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-- John C. Lilly, Programming and Metaprogramming in the Human Biocomputer
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In the early 1970's, during the early days of Artificial Intelligence
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research, scientists from the fields of psychology and computer science came
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together to try to develop a new model of how the mind works. Their efforts
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eventually resulted in the discipline now known as Cognitive Science. One of
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the more significant books to come out of this early collaborative effort
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was called Scripts, Plans, Goals and Understanding by Roger Schank and
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Robert Abelson, which is still used by psychologists today to support what's
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called the Information Processing Model of human cognition. I'd suggest that
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anyone with a serious interest in reverse engineering themselves should hunt
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down a used copy of this out-of-print book (try bookfinder.com, or your
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local library). In it, the authors suggest that human thought is based on a
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set of scripts (programs) for meeting personal goals in different
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situations. The example they use throughout the book is a "Restaurant
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Script" that tells people how to behave when eating out in public, in order
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to meet the goal of getting fed. What would you do if you ordered a
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hamburger and the waitress brought you a hot dog? Your scripts tell you how
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to handle this situation, what to do when the bill comes, and how to handle
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all the other transactions that take place in the restaurant environment.
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Scripts People Live by Claude Steiner is a book about a form of
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pop-psychology called Transactional Analysis. Here the author talks about
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how everyone has a sort of running "life script" which is basically the
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story of your own life as you like to tell it. Inside this script there are
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recurring roles that are often learned in childhood, which inform us how
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people are supposed to behave. I doubt that anyone ever reaches adulthood
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with a completely accurate script of their own life story -- but if you can
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become conscious of your script, it's possible to start improving it and
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improving the way you write it as you go along.
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Some of our most basic programming concerns what it means to be "good" or
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"bad." When parents, teachers and other authorities are training us how to
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be "good," often this has very little to do with doing what is right and is
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more about training us to behave in ways that are convenient for them. Today
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the task of programming "reality" has substantially been taken over by
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television, which is like a mindcontrol device that sits in the living room,
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hypnotizing a legion of glassy-eyed zombies. It is sponsored by corporations
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who are not concerned with anything except selling their products. In one of
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my favorite commercials on TV right now, this blonde dude -- who looks to me
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like he knows he is about to become a complete tool -- holds up a McDonald's
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chicken sandwich and proclaims, "Let's hear it for nonconformity!" Are you
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kidding me? It's so phony it's almost avant garde. Andy Warhol would love it
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-- I find it disturbing. I know that there must be a lot of people out there
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who don't see anything wrong with this ad -- and others who even buy into it,
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who think that eating a chicken sandwich for breakfast really is
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"revolutionary."
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When we were teenagers, some of us correctly perceived the system as a
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hypocritical crock of shit and said, "screw this, I'm out of here." As an
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adult with a little perspective now I can see that there's nothing wrong
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with wanting to do your own thing, but rebellion against the system is still
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a part of it. Maybe we found a peer group who claimed to represent "the
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resistence," the anti-system -- but it's a trick, the anti-system is still
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part of the system. By joining it you think you are becoming free, but it's
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just a trick. As an "outsider," if you break laws or do things that hurt
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yourself or others, you're just playing in to the role the system wants you
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to play -- you're doing exactly what you are supposed to do as an "outsider."
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The anti-system system is there because they need "bad guys," so that they
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can play the "good guys" in comparison. If you are good and not one of them,
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the whole system collapses. That is revolutionary!
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The foundation on which this whole sado-masochistic world system is erected
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is the perception of yourself as a victim. A lot of people are starting to
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figure this out, and when that number reaches a certain tipping point it is
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going to alter the structure of the matrix. Seeing yourself as the world's
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victim is profoundly disempowering and keeps you locked in a cycle of
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self-created pain and misery. We break free from this cycle by making a
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conscious decision to accept complete responsibility for our own reality.
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Get a copy of The Anger Habit Workbook by Carl Semmelroth and study it like
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a bible. Drs. Barry and Janae Weinhold have an excellent series of six
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e-books titled Breaking Free From the Matrix. There are a lot of wonderful
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books out there to help us take control of our minds and emotions and break
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free from the matrix of social power -- find them, and free your mind.
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-[ 3. Evolt.org Marks a Decade ]-
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by mstrix
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:: 1998 :: ORIGINS
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:: 1998-2000 :: RAPID GROWTH
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:: 2000-2002 :: GROWING FLAMES
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:: 2003-2005 :: SEEKING BALANCE
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:: 2006-2008 :: FACING INERTIA
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:: 2008 AND :: OUR FUTURE
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The internet is the most reliable machine ever made.
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It's made from imperfect, unreliable parts, connected
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together, to make the most reliable thing we have."
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- Kevin Kelly, Wired founder
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Evolt.org is a world community for web developers and other internet
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professionals. We host discussion lists, publish articles on our
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website, and maintain a browser archive offering downloads of everything
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from Mosaic to Flock. From the beginning, our community has been
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international, anarchistic, and volunteer-run. If there is one thing
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that makes us stand out from other web development organizations, it has
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been our long-term focus on cultivating community. Yet as much as we
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have worked together, evolt.org's history is marked by heated turf
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battles interspersed with periods of inertia. We have struggled for
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years to find a balance between process, production, leadership and
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decentralization, while steadfastly maintaining our ideals and
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integrity. On December 14, 2008, evolt.org turns ten years old.
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This is the story of our first decade, from the perspective of someone
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who has been a part of evolt.org since the early days.
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
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1998 : ORIGINS
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
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Evolt.org began as a 1998 copyright dispute between Wired Digital's
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Webmonkey and some members of Webmonkey's web dev discussion list,
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monkeyjunkies. The high-volume list had been operating since 1997.
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Active monkeyjunkies members wanted an online list archive, so they
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could search for and reference past posts, but Wired (who had recently
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been purchased by Lycos) did not provide one. When one member, Dan Cody,
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as a service to fellow list members, published his own archive of the
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list, Wired's attorneys ordered him to stop, explaining they were
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reserving their rights to the list posts. Wired further explained that
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they hoped to post the archives at a later date, and include banner ads.
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A number of the community raised a protest, and on December 14, about
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thirty people from the monkeyjunkies community left Webmonkey to form
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their own community-run list, and later, website, evolt.org.
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Evolt.org was both an emulation of, and a response to, Wired Digital and
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Webmonkey. Pre-Lycos Webmonkey featured a regular staff of writers and
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web developers living and working in San Francisco, California,
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producing articles that were both informative and humorous. Silly
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analogies and crazy story lines made tech tutorials entertaining and
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accessible. Advertising was always prominent; in fact, Wired founder
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Kevin Kelly, has said that Wired "co-invented the banner ad."
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Monkeyjunkies, the mailing list, almost seemed an afterthought,
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bolstered no doubt by the magnetic draw of the groundbreaking sites with
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which it was associated.
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Evolt.org began not with a website, nor with an organizational
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structure, but with thelist, a general web development list, in the vein
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of monkeyjunkies, but non-corporate, non-commercial, and archived
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online. Some of the original evolters had internet community experience
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going back to usenet, and more than anything, it was the idea of
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creating an online "community" to which they were drawn, and the idea
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that web developers could assist each other, peer to peer, on a
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worldwide basis.
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In addition to the attention paid to a community-oriented model,
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evolt.org distinguished themselves from Wired and other corporate web
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development sites by eschewing advertising. Finally, evolt.org would not
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claim copyright on anything written by any of its contributors, beyond
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what is granted by the contributor when he or she publishes on an
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evolt.org list or site. In the spirit of open source, we were, and are,
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"a world community for web developers, promoting the mutual free
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exchange of ideas, skills and experiences."
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
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1998-2000 : RAPID GROWTH
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
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Evolt.org members organized themselves entirely through email at first,
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with direction taking place on the admin list, which was archived, but
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closed to all but admins.
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Our main web development list, thelist, was up and running by early
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1999, and by June we were also running a content-managed site to which
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members could submit, rate, and comment on articles posted into several
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"centers" or web development categories. Adrian Roselli offered his
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personal collection of browsers, and thus browsers.evolt.org was born.
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The admin group maintained systems, managed development, and acted as
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editors, still with no formalized structure. Some members would gather
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to code the CMS and other applications at codefests. Later we would
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gather for purely social purposes as well (aka "beervolts.") Admins
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worked hard at everything from evangelizing to coding to creating
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content. List and site traffic grew rapidly.
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
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2000-2002 : GROWING FLAMES
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
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In early 2000, Webmonkey experienced an exodus of editorial staff, and
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later that year, monkeyjunkies shut down, with scores of displaced
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"monkeys" moving to evolt.org's thelist. Things were going great for
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evolt.org.
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We tended to organize ourselves by list. After thelist was
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well-established, thechat began in 2001 as a place to chat about
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anything that was neither related to evolt.org or the web development
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business: "imagine yourself round a table in a pub." Admins continued
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to communicate with each other via a closed list. In late 2000 admin
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began a new list for issues specific to the website. This new list,
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thesite, was open to all interested evolt.org members.
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In early 2001, about a dozen the evolt.org admin group gathered at the
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SXSW interactive conference in Austin, Texas. The group included members
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from both US coasts, the midwest, Texas, the UK, and Iceland. It was
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cozy, with a dozen of us sharing two hotel rooms. And it was at this
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time that we began to attempt to organize ourselves into something
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resembling a traditional non-profit organization. We elected a board of
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directors; Dan Cody was elected chairman.
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Shortly thereafter, the admin group broke out into a series of power
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struggles.
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While we had been able to do a certain amount of big-picture planning in
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Austin, it was difficult to keep track of things once we had spread out
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again. We were still communicating mostly by email (on- and off- lists),
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by phone, and occasionally by IRC chat (a challenge, since we were
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spread over so many timezones worldwide), with rare face-to-face
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meet-ups as folks were able. However we ran repeatedly into walls, since
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we all came from different cultures, we weren't all always the best
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communicators, and our vision wasn't always consistent. Trying to make a
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motion and vote on it was an often cumbersome (and sometimes divisive)
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practice.
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As 2001 drew to a close, the evolt.org admin community had many
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challenges to face, not the least of which was "process." How do you
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govern yourselves when you are unable to sustain a traditional
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organizational structure, and when can't meet face to face?
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In early 2002 the organization learned that Dan was personally
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supporting evolt.org's site and high-bandwidth browser archive at the
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rate of $1000 a month. Many were concerned because evolt.org wanted to
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be able to survive as an organization regardless of whether any one
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member were available to shoulder his or her portion of the load. Long
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term survival of the organization became a key concern, known in
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shorthand as "the bus question." If any one of us were hit by a bus, how
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would the rest of us make it? Unfortunately, the ongoing discussion
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around power and leadership issues caused such a rift in the admin group
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that Dan Cody, our first and last official leader, resigned in May 2002.
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Remaining members continued to struggle with organizational and
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financial issues. By this point, several of those elected in Austin had
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resigned posts for one reason or another. For the rest, it seemed that
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the offices held no real meaning in the context of evolt.org.
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In search of order, we divided ourselves into committees, and continued
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attempting to establish voting and other processes. The closed admin
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list dissolved, and long-term planning moved to newer openly-archived
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list called "theforum." Seeking order, we hoped to solve some of the
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boundary and accountability issues that had led to the fracturing of the
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community. Yet the quest for process and organization itself became
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frustrating to many, because it often seemed like the majority of our
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energy was being spent on process and power issues rather than on
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achievement and moving forward as a group. At the same time, world
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events from the dot com crash to 9/11 to the 2003 US-led invasion of
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Iraq fueled emotional responses to exisiting tensions. Once thriving,
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thechat erupted in flames, then slowed down considerably.
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
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2003-2005 : SEEKING BALANCE
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
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By 2003, evolt.org had over 3,000 members subscribed to thelist. We
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continued to maintain the browser archive, and a community web resource
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directory, and for the past year and a half, had been offering all our
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members free web hosting as well. We still had essentially no budget,
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though by this point fundraising had become a serious focus. In 2003
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evolt.org stopped offering free webhosting, and we finally allowed some
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google ads to be placed on our browser archive in order to help pay for
|
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|
our hosting costs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Eventually most of the committees and smaller lists were shut down, and
|
||
|
their duties folded back into theforum. We continued publishing
|
||
|
articles, and hosting our main lists, but discontinued the directory.
|
||
|
Meanwhile, it was becoming increasingly clear that evolt.org's custom
|
||
|
Cold Fusion-based CMS was vulnerable to the bus scenario. By 2004 we
|
||
|
were down to one active CMS developer/webhost (lists.evolt.org at the
|
||
|
time, was hosted the UK). As always, the heavy amount of responsibility
|
||
|
taken on by a single person became a concern to others in the
|
||
|
organization. The group voted to move out of our custom CMS and into an
|
||
|
established open-source CMS, Drupal. We found low-cost dedicated hosting
|
||
|
at The Planet, and mirrors helped relieve some of the bandwidth pressure
|
||
|
on the browser archive. The new Drupal-driven site went live in 2005.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had finally managed to decentralize evolt.org to the point that it
|
||
|
could survive the sudden departure of any one of its caretakers.
|
||
|
Ironically, the rocky road to that place resulted in the loss of some
|
||
|
high-contributing admins.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As for governing structure, evolt.org ultimately settled on an ad hoc
|
||
|
consensus process. One of us will propose an idea to theforum, ask if
|
||
|
there are objections, and wait a few days for responses. If there are no
|
||
|
objections, one assumes consensus and moves forward. If there are
|
||
|
objections, we try to talk through them, rather than fight. Also, we
|
||
|
are no longer concerned with formalizing a hierarchy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Those who have lasted through the years have progressed a great deal in
|
||
|
their ability to work together. While we still face communication
|
||
|
challenges, we are more familiar with the territory now.
|
||
|
|
||
|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|
||
|
2006-2008 : INERTIA
|
||
|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|
||
|
|
||
|
As evolt.org admin has worked to put our organization in order, web
|
||
|
progress has lagged. The patched-together 2005 design was intended to be
|
||
|
temporary, but has yet to be replaced. In 2006 there was a failed
|
||
|
movement toward redesign, and by 2008 our article submissions and web
|
||
|
traffic had dropped noticeably. Activity on thelist remained steady, but
|
||
|
at a lower volume than in years past.
|
||
|
|
||
|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|
||
|
2008 AND : OUR FUTURE
|
||
|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we move forward into our tenth year, a few large projects lie before
|
||
|
us. We are taking a step back, looking at how we are serving our
|
||
|
community, and asking how we can do better. To that end we are surveying
|
||
|
our community for input. In addition, we continue to work on improving
|
||
|
our browser archive by adding more mirrors, and hopefully also adding
|
||
|
more information about some of our unique and interesting browsers.
|
||
|
Finally, we are taking steps toward truly internationalizing our site,
|
||
|
so that we have the foundation on which to build localized versions of
|
||
|
evolt.org, a vision we've had, but kept on the backburner, since 2001.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though the journey has been far from smooth, we've managed to maintain
|
||
|
the integrity of our organization, our community, our purpose, and our
|
||
|
archives. We continue to welcome new members who want to contribute
|
||
|
their talents and energy to the community, while learning new skills
|
||
|
along the way. Like the internet itself, evolt.org is made of
|
||
|
"imperfect, unreliable parts, connected together to create the most
|
||
|
reliable thing we have."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here's to a harmonious, productive, and successful next ten years.
|
||
|
|
||
|
--------[ EOF
|