mirror of
https://github.com/fdiskyou/Zines.git
synced 2025-03-09 00:00:00 +01:00
487 lines
22 KiB
Text
487 lines
22 KiB
Text
==Phrack Magazine==
|
|
|
|
Volume Seven, Issue Forty-Eight, File 5 of 18
|
|
|
|
-:[ Phrack Prophile ]:-
|
|
|
|
This issue, we have a "very special episode" of the Phrack Prophile. As
|
|
everyone knows, Phrack is once again in flux, and an entirely new editorial
|
|
staff is coming on board. In an effort to introduce everyone to these three
|
|
hackers, we've had them do profiles. Ladies and Gentlemen (yeah, like any
|
|
ladies OR gentlemen read Phrack), meet your new editors: Daemon9, ReDragon
|
|
and Voyager.
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Prophile on Daemon9
|
|
|
|
|
|
Personal
|
|
~~~~~~~~
|
|
Nomenclature: daemon9/route/infinity
|
|
In real life: Mike D. (as in David, not Diamond) S.
|
|
DOB: 10.05.73
|
|
Likes: Women who aren't afraid to cry.
|
|
Dislikes: Hippies. GOD, I hate hippies...
|
|
Ink: Large back piece, and growing... (It's the outline of
|
|
a die. (No, not as in a pair of dice, but as in a
|
|
computer chip...)
|
|
Other: Glock 19 with trigger-guard mounted laser-site.
|
|
Passions: Computers. Computer Security (or lack there of).
|
|
Health. Mental and Physical aptitude.
|
|
Main URLs: http://www.infonexus.com/~daemon9
|
|
ftp://ftp.infonexus.com/pub
|
|
mailto://route@infonexus.com
|
|
mailto://daemon9@netcom.com
|
|
Hardware
|
|
~~~~~~~~
|
|
Years with Computers: 14ish
|
|
Computers Owned: Towers: P90/32MB/3GIG (Windows NT/Solaris/DOS-WFW)
|
|
Mids: P120/32/2GIG (Linux), 486-66/16/700MB (FreeBSD),
|
|
486-50/16/540 (Linux)
|
|
Laptops: P133/16/800, (Windows NT/Linux)
|
|
486-75/16/500 (DOS/WFW)
|
|
Networks Owned: The Information Nexus (infonexus.com)
|
|
|
|
Media
|
|
~~~~~
|
|
Music: Front242, FLA, The Goats, NIN, Diatribe, 16Volt,
|
|
Morphine, etc...
|
|
Movies: Usual Suspects, Miller's Crossing, Sneakers, Fletch
|
|
Army of Darkness, True Romance, NBK, etc...
|
|
Books: TCP/IP Illustrated vols. I-III, UNP, Applied
|
|
Cryptogrpahy 2nd edition, Computers and Intractablity:
|
|
A Guide to the Theory of NP-Completeness, and so on...
|
|
|
|
A Bit of History
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Ah, the days of my youth... Carefree, happy-go-lucky, life was a big
|
|
open door to me. One spring a very good friend of mine told me I should get
|
|
an ``Internet'' account to write him mail while he was away at school.
|
|
"Huh...?"
|
|
...Was my concise reply. I was deep into the computer thing at that time,
|
|
but I had not gotten into the Internet yet. Well, we went out and bought
|
|
a (at the time) $200 2400 BPS modem and got me hooked up with this brand new
|
|
service provider, NetCom Online... At first I merely used the thing for
|
|
email, but soon after I taught myself all about Unix, I discovered all the
|
|
wonders of Usenet and IRC (AKA the Big Waste). Most people know me from my
|
|
frequent alt.2600 presense. That's where I met Voyager. We quickly found
|
|
that we had the same interests as far as computers and hacking went. The
|
|
rest is history... Sorta.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Theory Behind It All
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
When I look back and try to figure out how the hell I got here, I have
|
|
one person to thank. My father. He bought me my first Commodore 64. I can
|
|
remember hooking that archaic thing up to my TV, writing my own adventure
|
|
games in basic, and saving them to a tape drive. My computer time line goes
|
|
something like this:
|
|
|
|
c64 Apple IIc IBM XT IBM 286 486/33 486/66 P90 486/66 486/50 P120 P133...
|
|
1982 1984 1986 1987 1991 1992 1994 1995 1996 1996 1996
|
|
|
|
I am not happy unless I am bathed in a contstant stream of extraneous
|
|
RF radiation. My room is alive with a myriad of blinking and flashing lights,
|
|
several humming fans, and hundreds of feet of fire-hazard-inducing cables.
|
|
I have to put tin-foil on all of my windows just to keep the sun out and the
|
|
temperature down. You'd be amazed how well that works.
|
|
|
|
The pursuit of knowledge is what led me down the path I am following.
|
|
I am simply not satisfied with knowing that something works. I need to
|
|
know why and how, and how to break it and then how fix it... I do not solve a
|
|
problem by merely finding a work-around. I slam head on into the fucking
|
|
thing and work with it until a solution presents itself.
|
|
|
|
Intelligence, to me, is not what you know, or how much you know. It is
|
|
the ability to reason logically and rationally when the need arises and, if
|
|
pragmaticism is not the best approach, let intuition and chaos guide you.
|
|
Intelligence is adaptive and ever-changing... Memory capacity is too often
|
|
mistaken for smarts...
|
|
|
|
|
|
People I Know
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Linenoiz: The reason I fell into the whole Internet scene to begin with.
|
|
Best friends for 12 years, I would not be where I am now
|
|
without him. He is one of the most intelligent people I know.
|
|
|
|
Nihil: The reason I fell into the whole hacking scene to begin with.
|
|
We have had our differences over the years, but our computing
|
|
interests are too similar to let petty squabbles come in the
|
|
way of our friendship. The other one of the most intelligent
|
|
people I know.
|
|
|
|
Mythrandir: I met Myth about 2 years on alt.2600. Sharp kid. Very sharp.
|
|
We think so alike on some things it's freaky. We'll get going
|
|
on that Tiger Team soon enuff, Jeff...!
|
|
|
|
Alhambra: Strong coder. We did the DemonKit for Linux (and are still
|
|
working on it..;)). Jeremy and I also have very similar
|
|
interests as far as hacking goes. I am glad he is here
|
|
with me in the Guild. I need more people like him. Not a
|
|
risky gambler, but hey, I took care of that for both of us...
|
|
|
|
Halflife: Coder supreme.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shouts Out To
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Brent, Carrie, ColdFire, Crow, Halflife, Heather, Jason, Jen, Kev,
|
|
Ka_mee, MikeP, Mudge, Shawn, SirSyko, Tim, Tom, Topher, Xanax, Vision
|
|
|
|
|
|
What I Have Done
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
alt.2600
|
|
--------
|
|
It used to be that you could find me in that group like clockwork. I
|
|
was always there. Reading, posting, flaming, lurking. That was me. For
|
|
years. This is where most people probably first remember me from. I took
|
|
it upon myself to self-moderate and answer all the questions I could possibly
|
|
handle... I usually posted several times daily. At last count, I posted over
|
|
2100 times (according to ~/.tin/posted). I was prolific. I have fond memories
|
|
of back then... But, times have changed. That group has gone almost completely
|
|
to hell (AKA the way of #hack). Thesedays, it's a fucking miracle if I find a
|
|
worthwhile thread to follow-up to... These days, look for me on comp.security.*,
|
|
comp.protocols.tcpip, sci.crypt, alt.security.pgp and so on...
|
|
|
|
|
|
zines...
|
|
--------
|
|
Oh yeah, I wrote some code and a few rag-tag articles for some Zines
|
|
out there. Can't remember the names...
|
|
|
|
|
|
the Guild
|
|
---------
|
|
The Guild is my group of roudy Internauts. I started the group about
|
|
20 months ago for several reasons, some of which are just *now* becoming
|
|
clear to me. For a while there, we were putting out a zine, The Infinity
|
|
Concept, but that is on hiatus while I do Phrack. Various members have done
|
|
coding and exploits. Look for more to come from the Guild...
|
|
|
|
|
|
ftp.netcom.com/pub/da/daemon9
|
|
-----------------------------
|
|
Somewhere along the line about 2 years ago, I started to take
|
|
advantage of netcom's free 5 megs of ftp space. I put together a modest
|
|
collection of tools and whatnot (under 6 megs of stuff). For some yet
|
|
undiscovered reason, people flocked to the site. I have no clue why. It
|
|
wasn't *that* great. What I find even more fascinating is the fact that
|
|
to this day people *still* go looking there for hacking paraphenelia.
|
|
The site has been vacated for almost a year now. If you are reading this
|
|
and still have a link to my O-L-D netcom ftp site, UPDATE it to point to
|
|
ftp.infonexus.com. I am *much* more proud of this site... Hundreds of megs
|
|
of top-notch stuff here. Anyway, the netcom site went down because Brian
|
|
Smith (at the time the only member of the netcom security staff) told me I
|
|
couldn't have certian tools there for distro. When I ignored him, he froze
|
|
my account. This was the final catalyst in me deciding to start the
|
|
Information Nexus...
|
|
|
|
|
|
the Information Nexus
|
|
---------------------
|
|
Ah yes... The InfoNexus... My frustration with Netcom led me to do
|
|
what I had been wanting to do for some time, start my own site. This site
|
|
would be a Haven for hackers, a place where they could come and be sure to
|
|
find only the finest in technologies and tools. A place of much learning and
|
|
information trade. A knowledge dumping ground. Thus was born the Information
|
|
Nexus. With anywhere from 6-10 machines the Nexus is a heterogenous
|
|
environment: the OS's range from several Unix flavors, several versions of
|
|
Windows NT, and, of course, the mundane stuff (like DOS/WFW). The main box,
|
|
Onyx, is a heavily tweaked Linux machine. It is a P120 with 32MB RAM and 2
|
|
GIGs of HD space.
|
|
As it stands now, accounts are given on restricted basis, only to
|
|
friends and people I know (or people whose reputation precedes them). As soon
|
|
as I upgrade the link from a 28.8 modem I will start offering accounts to the
|
|
masses, at a nomial fee. I will also open up ftp access, allowing a greater
|
|
number of users at all hours.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Infinity Concept
|
|
--------------------
|
|
TIC is the zine the Guild put out. Some of the noteworthy subjects
|
|
written on: Cryptography, Windows NT security, Unix security,the security
|
|
of PGP, and several coding projects... We have done 3 issues to date, but
|
|
I have stopped further production of the zine to devote my full attention to
|
|
Phrack magazine.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Phrack Magazine
|
|
---------------
|
|
Several months back, I hopped on IRC with some of my Guild-mates and
|
|
was having a wonderous discussion on, oh, nothing. Well, Voyager was on, and
|
|
he dragged me into a private chat. He told me about ErikB stepping down, and
|
|
told me he and ReDragon were to take over as the new editors... I was very
|
|
happy for him, and told him I would have jumped at the chance to do it. That
|
|
was his next question... Since then, ReDragon, Voyager and I have been
|
|
salivating like dogs waiting to get our hands on the legend that is Phrack
|
|
Magazine.
|
|
My pledge is twofold: Timely distribution and nothing but the highest
|
|
quality articles. We will be distributing Phrack on a regular seasonal
|
|
rotation and will weed out all but the top-notch articles. I plan to write
|
|
at least one article per issue. I promise this much: You will not be
|
|
disappointed...
|
|
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Prophile on ReDragon
|
|
|
|
|
|
Personal
|
|
~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Handle: ReDragon
|
|
Call Him: Dave
|
|
Past Handles: Dr. Disk (circa '84), The Destroyer (circa '88)
|
|
Handle Origin: Thomas Harris Book, Saab insignia, D&Dish sort of
|
|
name, then I decided it would be cooler (and original)
|
|
if it was all one word and one D.
|
|
Date of Birth: 12/30/75
|
|
Age of current date: do the math yourself
|
|
Height: 5' 11"
|
|
Weight: 175
|
|
Eye Color: Green
|
|
Hair Color: Brown
|
|
Computers: Apple ][e, Atari 800, 8088, 386sx/16, 386dx/40, and
|
|
right now a 486/33
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
I got my Hayes Micromodem //e in the summer of '84. I was eight years old
|
|
and with the help of my babysitter begged my way onto an H/P board. I used
|
|
to read Phrack and write BASIC code, I was quite the clueless newbie for a
|
|
while. People say age doesn't matter, but it does when you are that young.
|
|
My lameness continued, I learned Pascal, the years passed, and I started to
|
|
figure out how things worked. I discovered Unix, it was cool. I learned
|
|
what Crack was, I used it. Years passed I started to figure out how things
|
|
worked. I would go into more detail but I don't really care to tell the
|
|
world about my life, ask me privately if you care.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ReD's Favorite Things
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
Women: yes
|
|
Cars: Saab
|
|
Foods: Taco Bell (doesn't everyone?), Young animals killed cruely
|
|
Music: Pink Floyd, Beatles, anything not techno
|
|
Leisure: IRC is bad for you, just say no.
|
|
Alcoholic Fun: Bottled beer, Jaegermeister, Long Island Iced Teas
|
|
|
|
|
|
Most Memorable Experiences
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Saab car trouble in Queens on the way to HOPE.
|
|
Saab car trouble on PA Turnpike on way back from Pumpcon.
|
|
Saab stranded on George Washington Bridge on way to SummerCon '95.
|
|
Saab finally breaks down on NY Turnpike on way home.
|
|
SummerCon '95 (memorable that I don't remember any of it)
|
|
SummerCon '96 (the worst organized con I have ever been to)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some People To Mention
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The Green Machine (for altering my life more than I can imagine)
|
|
Acker (even though you gave up on it all, wish I knew what you were doing now)
|
|
Bluesman (why didn't you tell me about C earlier?)
|
|
Zorgo (for ruining my life showing me IRC)
|
|
Wozz (I still don't believe you grew up there)
|
|
r00t (you're all a bunch of idiots, but i love you)
|
|
Asriel (we are pretty similar people, except I'm not a narq)
|
|
Max-Q (screaming at me "Nice Fuckin' Con!" after Summercon '96, I was touched)
|
|
Taran King (you were cool to me when I was nobody, I was impressed)
|
|
Sirsyko (only hacker I know that I actually trust)
|
|
ErikB (annoying him enough made for an interesting summercon and a new phrack)
|
|
l0pht (for bringing back what hacking is really about)
|
|
b (stuff?)
|
|
|
|
Why Phrack?
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
I have been in one way or another involved in the "hack scene" for more
|
|
than half my life. I spent a large part of that on the lower end of the
|
|
knowledge ladder, and throughout it all few people helped me along directly.
|
|
What I recognize though is that there have been scores of people that have
|
|
spent their time, at no personal gain to themselves, to help educate others
|
|
about something that they know a bit more about than the rest of us.
|
|
I read a lot of books to learn about hacking; I paid for them and the
|
|
authors have gotten the money they deserve. I learned quite a bit from
|
|
college; I paid quite a lot for college. But I have learned about hacking
|
|
most of all from hackers. How can I repay those that have given me so much?
|
|
We are rather fortunate to be in a position where we actually can give
|
|
something back to them. We can give them a new generation of hackers that
|
|
have the same opportunities to learn and to share their knowledge that we
|
|
had. We can show them that we haven't forgotten about where we started; we
|
|
haven't forgotten about why we are hackers; and we haven't forgotten that
|
|
to be a hacker is a passion, and it is something we are proud of.
|
|
To my peers, consider giving something back to the community. To the next
|
|
generation, learn from what we give and explore from what you learn; it will
|
|
soon be your turn to take our place. And to those that made this all possible,
|
|
to those that gave their own knowledge in the name of the community, the
|
|
hundreds of authors, the ten editors, and most of all the readers: Thank You.
|
|
|
|
-ReDragon
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
Prophile on Voyager
|
|
|
|
Personal
|
|
~~~~~~~~
|
|
Handle: Voyager
|
|
Call him: Will
|
|
Date of Birth: 06/23/69
|
|
Age: 27
|
|
Height: 6'
|
|
Weight: 200lb
|
|
Computers owned: 486DX4-100(FreeBSD), 486SX25(OS/2) and P-75 laptop(PC-DOS)
|
|
|
|
|
|
How did this handle originate? I jumped on IRC one day and didn't want
|
|
to use my real handle, so I made this one up on the spur of the moment.
|
|
|
|
|
|
How I Got Started
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
I didn't start hacking computers until I went to college. I taught
|
|
myself to use PRIMOS and I started hacking because the 150k disk quota I
|
|
was given wasn't large enough for me to compile decent sized programs.
|
|
|
|
I started hacking in '87 and didn't run into another hacker until '91.
|
|
I got Internet access and I found Phrack on ftp.eff.org. Wow! I
|
|
thought, these people are serious. Shortly thereafter, I compiled the
|
|
VMS client for IRC and I was talking to other hacker types on a regular
|
|
basis.
|
|
|
|
About that time, I put up a BBS. The system is now known as "Hacker's
|
|
Haven." The system has become fairly popular, with over 1,400 users
|
|
surviving the last 90 day purge.
|
|
|
|
In '92, I wrote a "bot" in the IRC scripting language and called it
|
|
"HackSrv." HackSrv distributed H/P files on demand and also opped all of
|
|
us regular #hack cronies.
|
|
|
|
Late in '92 I moved to Atlanta and started organizing 2600 Meetings. We
|
|
had a blast. We held them at my apartment. I can't imagine what my
|
|
neighbors thought. I still remember 40 people in my tiny living room
|
|
huddled around the TV watching sneakers. One week, we were hacking on
|
|
one terminal, IRC'ing on another, watching a lockpicking demo on the
|
|
front door, sorting trash on the balcony, having firearms instruction in
|
|
the bedroom, and setting off bottle rockets from the kitchen to the
|
|
living room. The last is not a good idea, by the way.
|
|
|
|
Over the course of the next few years, #hack went completely to hell.
|
|
The place became littered with clueless newbies asking clueless newbie
|
|
questions. Other people, usually even less clueful newbies, would kick
|
|
and ban people for asking questions. This effectively stopped all useful
|
|
conversation on #hack, as anyone who brought up a technical topic was
|
|
likely to be kicked immediately. This led to a group of #hack ChanOp's
|
|
who had absolutely no technical knowledge and instead wasted away the
|
|
hours stroking their egos. I was annoyed by the incredible cluelessness
|
|
that had taken over the once fine channel and decided to do something
|
|
about it.
|
|
|
|
Towards that end, I wrote the #hack FAQ. The #hack FAQ was to be given
|
|
to new people to bring them up to speed in a short amount of time. This,
|
|
I reasoned, would raise the intellectual level on conversation on #hack.
|
|
It would also set the tone for conversation on #hack back to the technical
|
|
atmosphere I had known just a few years earlier. Later, the #hack FAQ
|
|
became the alt.2600/#hack FAQ and it's purpose was expanded to cover
|
|
the newsgroup alt.2600.
|
|
|
|
In the Summer of '94 I moved to Denver and joined up with TNO. TNO is a
|
|
group of friends who share an avid interest in computer and telephone
|
|
security. Today, TNO consists of Cavalier, DisordeR, Major, Edison and
|
|
myself.
|
|
|
|
Over the last few years, I've written for Phrack, 2600, CoTNo and FUCK.
|
|
I've wanted to be Phrack editor since Taran King retired. When ErikB
|
|
told me he was looking to retire from the job, and that I was being
|
|
considered as the next Phrack editor, it hit me just how big of a
|
|
responsibility this was. I spoke with ReDragon (Editor of FEH) and
|
|
daemon9 (Editor of The Infinity Concept). Together, we agreed to set
|
|
aside our current e-zine's (I was the current Editor of CoTNo) and focus
|
|
all of our attention on Phrack. We have received offers of support from
|
|
many old and new people in the hacking community. I am looking forward
|
|
to a bright future for Phrack.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interests
|
|
~~~~~~~~~
|
|
Women: Sharp and quick
|
|
Cars: Big and fast
|
|
Food: Spicy to the point of pain
|
|
Music: Rock and Roll
|
|
Favorite performers: Jimmy Buffett, The Eagles
|
|
Favorite author: Joel Rosenberg
|
|
Favorite Book: Unix Power Tools
|
|
|
|
|
|
Most Memorable Experiences
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
KL kicking me off #hack for saying that hacking was wrong.
|
|
|
|
Captain Hemp hiding my address and phone number in a bag of trash.
|
|
|
|
Reading my first sniffer log.
|
|
|
|
Getting arrested with Captain Hemp outside of a Southern Bell facility.
|
|
|
|
Finding the switch with the unpassworded root account.
|
|
|
|
Being pulled over on the way to HoHoCon while we were moshing in the
|
|
van.
|
|
|
|
DeadKat and Cavalier doing the root dance.
|
|
|
|
Being followed by the security guard with the baby seat.
|
|
|
|
Major and I *not* getting mugged and beaten by the gang of thieves, even
|
|
though he could barely stand up and neither of us were carrying at the
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some People To Mention
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Major : You are, at the same time, one of the best people I have
|
|
ever known and one of the worst people I have ever
|
|
known. I am just glad I am on your side, and you mine.
|
|
I trust you with my life, and with a few of the
|
|
situations we've been through, that's not just talking.
|
|
|
|
Cavalier : You taught us all what was important in a group. Your
|
|
steadiness and common sense has helped carry TNO through
|
|
the dark times. As always, I'm glad to have you here.
|
|
You can always be counted on, and that means a great
|
|
deal to me.
|
|
|
|
The Presence : It is always a pleasure to talk to you. You have taught
|
|
me more than anyone else in the scene. You will always
|
|
be one of the best. The strength of your ethics will
|
|
guide you through where lesser men would fail.
|
|
|
|
Captain Hemp : There's no one I'd rather be arrested with.
|
|
|
|
NoCar / K : Congratulations on your new system!
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Final Question
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
I have met quite a few hackers. Very few have been "geeks" in the
|
|
traditional sense of the term. I have met hacker business people,
|
|
hacker jocks, hacker criminals, hacker stoners, hacker programmers, and
|
|
hacker skater punks. It's a sport for just about anyone with
|
|
intelligence, dedication, and absolutely no respect for authority.
|
|
|
|
_______________________________________________________________________________
|
|
|