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370 lines
16 KiB
Text
370 lines
16 KiB
Text
----[ Phrack Magazine Volume 8, Issue 53 July 8, 1998, article 04 of 15
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-------------------------[ P H R A C K 5 3 P R O P H I L E
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-----------------[ Personal
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Handle: Glyph
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Call him: Yesmar
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Reach him: glyph@dreamspace.net
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Past handles: The Raver (cDc), Necrovore (Bellcore),
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Violence (The VOID Hackers)
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Handle origin: Egyptian mythology: glyph \'glif\ n [Gk glyphe^-
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carved work, fr. glyphein to carve -- more at
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CLEAVE] (ca. 1727) a symbol that conveys information
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nonverbally (e.g., heiroglyphics).
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Date of birth: Late 60's
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Age at current date: As old as the lunar landing
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Height: 5'10" or so
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Weight: Skinny (I hate fat people)
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Eye color: Blue
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Hair color: Brown
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Computers: Started with a TeleVideo 920 dumb terminal and worked
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my way up to a small collection of SGI and NeXT boxes.
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Sysop/Co-Sysop of: Nothing that you've ever heard of (limited lifespan
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hacker boards on Prime superminis and VAX mainframes
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located on the X.25 global data networks).
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Admin of: Go look in the InterNIC databases yourself.
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URLs: I am not going to support the World Wide Waste of time
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in my Pro-Phile.
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I first started playing with computers when I was nine years old. I started
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by learning FORTRAN on a Prime supermini at the local university where my
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parents worked. Later I learned BASICA on the original IBM PC (what hulks
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those were). Then a shipment of Apple ][+'s arrived and I learned about
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the joys of warez. Ultima ][, Wizardry, and all the rest kept me busy for
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a couple of years. I never had my own computer, so I had to hike down to
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the university computer center to frotz around.
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Around 1984 I was loaned a TeleVideo 920 dumb terminal and a 300 baud USR
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modem. I used it to connect to the university's PRIME cluster. A hacker
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was born. I had a legitimate account, but managed to obtain additional
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user IDs by exploring the filesystem. I had also begun tinkering around
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with the telephone network by this time.
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Later I got an Apple //c and eventually a //gs. These computers got me
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back into the warez scene. One month I got a $500 phone bill. The next
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month the phone bill was back to $0. The only difference was that the
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warez intake had nearly doubled. Indeed, I had learned about codes. I
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spent a lot of time calling warez boards around the country. Ultimately
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I tired of the pirate scene, mainly because of all the inane bickering.
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I also stopped phreaking because I had gotten scared. I disappeared for
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a year or so.
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Eventually I made a comeback. I wanted to continue to play with computers
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and networks, but I wanted to avoid the phreaking scene. I decided that
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I needed a name. I decided to call myself 'The Raver' after Turiya Raver
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from _The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever_. (Note: the rave
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scene was unknown in the U.S. at the time). I spent a lot of time calling
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hack/phreak boards and learning.
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I discovered that I really liked this new communications medium known as
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tfiles: files containing pure ASCII text. Tfiles could be about hacking,
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phreaking, anarchy, or best of all, DEAD COWS WHO RULE THE WORLD. Yes, I
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had discovered a rare beauty on the BBS landscape of the 80's: cDc --
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the Cult of the Dead Cow. I was entranced. These people of the cow were
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like digital punks, espousing their wild views without a single care. I
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was instantly hooked. I started writing tfiles. Before long, I found
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myself invited to join the forces of the Cow. How could I decline Bob and
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Elsie? So it came to pass that I contributed to what I consider a class
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movement in the telecom scene of the late 80's. cDc fulfilled my need to
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communicate and hang with open-minded people in a BBS context.
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In time, my desire to hack started to come back. At first it was merely
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an 'itch' to poke at a system. Later it developed into a full-blown need
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to get into everything I could. It was around this time that I started
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exploring TELENET and the global X.25 data networks. I met ParMaster,
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the original members of Bellcore, and LOD/H on altger in Munich. I was
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hooked. Par and I, considering ourselves lame at the time, formed a group
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named XTension. The group flourished on the European networks.
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Eventually half of XTension were invited to join Bellcore. This was the
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first time any of us had experienced a rift in friendship over the digital
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medium. It was a painful learning experience. I would not talk to Par
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again for many years. In the meantime, I began working at learning even
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more under the wings of Bellcore. I hacked Primes for Bellcore. Under the
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tutelage of Chippy I discovered the ways of UNIX and TCP/IP networking.
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I changed my name to Necrovore in order to make clear the changes that had
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occured. The name comes from the fact that I was very much into death
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metal at the time. Naming myself after the 'Eater of the Dead' seemed like
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a very reasonable thing to me at the time. (God, what was I thinking!?)
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At any rate, the Mentor of LOD and I used to pick fights with each other
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online across the world, so it isn't surprising that 'Necrovore' found its
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way into a Steve Jackson Game's GURPS Supers module as one of the super
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villains. Heh.
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Eventually Bellcore fell apart, as did so many groups. It became 'cool'
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and then too many people were invited to join, and then the trust fell
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apart. If there is a lack of trust, how can work be accomplished? Bellcore
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was done. It depressed me a lot because LOD continued strong. Was what
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I had fought for worthless? I thought not. At that time I decided that
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the days of Big Groups were over. Now it was time for the Small Cell.
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The VOID Hackers were created by myself and The Usurper, now Thrashing Rage,
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a fellow ex-Bellcore member. We recruited Dr. Psychotic, a class assembly
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language hacker, and The Scythian, another hacker with a famous past, and
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started in after Primes and VAXen around the world. I wrote a lengthy series
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of articles on hacking Primes and submitted it to 2600. I got yelled at
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later by TK and KL for not submitting it to Phrack. To know the truth, I
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didn't think it was good enough for Phrack, which had been the soul of the
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scene since its inception. I never heard back from 2600. (Go figure.)
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The VOID Hackers surpassed my wildest expectations. We hit systems across
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the planet. We had hundreds and hundreds of systems at our beck and call.
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It could only get better, or so I thought. Imagine my surprise then, one
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day, when my mom picked me up from school and told me that there were
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'security people' at the house right then. 'FUCK,' I thought. Fuck,
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indeed. I was popped at age 20.
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I managed to avoid a multiple felony rap and retired right away. I used
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contacts to make it clear to government intelligence people and others
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that I was finished. I went to university and majored in English, then
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Anthropology, and ultimately settled on Computer Science. Instead of
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criminal hacking, I delved into hacking from the MIT perspective. I
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explored the UNIX system and sharpened my programming skills.
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Eventually I left the protected world of academia and made my way into the
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computer industry. With the heavy advent of the Internet I reappeared on
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the scene as glyph. It was interesting running into old friends (and
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enemies) and meeting new hackers on the scene. I went to several cons and
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continued to frolic in the security domain. By this time, however, I had
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pretty much ceased to engage in criminal hacking, spending my time instead
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developing security tools. Now I am completely retired. You may still
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see me as glyph from time to time, however. Undoubtedly, there are more
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of 'me' out there. grep. It's been a long, strange ride. I'd do it all
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over again if I wasn't so old. 8)
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----------------[ Favorite things
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Women: Australian chicks rule.
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Cars: I don't drive. I might if I could recompile traffic algorithms,
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however this doesn't seem all that likely. I definitely would
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not drive a BMW. There are too many of those around as it is.
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I used to drive a skateboard. That was a long time ago, though.
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Brains and computers are still good to drive, however. Vrooom.
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Foods: Shrimp Vindaloo, please. Hot and spicy ethnic. Non-processed.
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Alcohol: Fine Italian Chianti. Vodka. Exotic imported beer. More Vodka.
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Music: Scorn, ClockDVA, My Life With the Thrill Kill Kult, Coil, Slint,
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Killing Joke, Chrome, Kraftwerk, Jane's Addiction, Zillatron,
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John Zorn, Praxis, Lard, Meat Beat Manifesto, Eat Static, Suede,
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Bill Laswell, Sepultura, Grotus, Mr. Bungle, Ozric Tentacles,
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Pink Floyd, Frontline Assembly, Dayglo Abortions, Dead Kennedys,
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Metallica, Slayer, Kreator, and lots and lots of other stuff.
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Movies: The Stepford Wives, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Brazil,
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Marathon Man, Blade Runner, anything by Akira Kurosawa,
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Memoirs of An Invisible Man, The Usual Suspects, Aeon Flux,
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Heavy Metal, Light Years.
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Authors: Jorge Luis Borges, J. R. R. Tolkein, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Sun Tzu,
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Stephen R. Donaldson, H. P. Lovecraft, Gabriel Garcia Marquez,
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Clark Ashton Smith, Umberto Eco, George Orwell, Thomas Ligotti,
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Douglas Adams, Robert Anton Wilson.
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Turn Ons: Intelligence, algorithms, open mindedness, guitars, see "Women".
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Turn Offs: Arrogance, stupidity, shallowness, closed mindedness, media whoring.
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----------------[ Passions
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Music. Listening to it as well as making it.
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Reading and writing.
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Programming algorithms and data structures.
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I have this rock that I found in the creek next to the elementary school I
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used to attend when I was in 3rd grade. The rock weighs over 7 pounds and
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is shaped like a pebble. I hefted it from the waters and proclaimed it as
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'Herman', my pet rock. I've had it ever since I was 9 years old. That was
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the same year I first experienced computers. Holding on to this rock all
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these years has definitely been a passion of mine.
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Slowly becoming a social recluse. I actually think this is healthy for me.
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----------------[ Memorable experiences
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Watching Wargames for the first time. Yes, I admit it. It affected my life.
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Being lame and creating the group XTension with ParMaster. It was the first
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group for both of us. We thought it was pretty cool at the time.
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Backdooring PRIMOS Rev. 22.0... yes, the actual source code repository. 8)
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Trashing. Hiding in the dumpster while the janitor dumped trash on my head.
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Hacking Europe, South America, and parts of Asia. Globe travelling...
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Altger (NUA 026245890040004). Sigh. I liked it a lot better than irc.
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SummerCon '95. Other than knowing The Usurper and Hyperminde, and having
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Byteman visit from New Jersy for two weeks, I hadn't ever really met other
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real, live hackers before. Very cool.
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chuck and edward.
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The l's. Bastards. 8)
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Cytroxia on acid. Way to go, Danny.
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The great 7-day Alliance Teleconference. I remember waking up to blasts of
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DTMF tones and raucous laughter.
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TELENET. PAD to PAD. NUIs. TELENET THINGIES!!!1!! DNIC scanning.
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That VAX cluster. Hey Par, remember *that* VAX cluster?
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PROTEON.
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XTension being rent asunder as half the members were invited into Bellcore
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and the other half being politely told to fuck off.
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Novation AppleCat modems.
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Watching a CERT advisory happen--from the inside. It was advisory CA-89.03.
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Hiya, Chippy! Where are you?
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Social engineering for the first time. It worked, go figure.
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The Richard Sandza teletrial.
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Getting busted. I missed SummerCon '89 as a result. From Phrack #28 PWN:
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Violence and The Scythian: "We got busted by SoutherNet, but we'll be there!"
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Backdooring a major network entity for the first time--the exhilheration.
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PC PURSUIT. Oopsy.
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Discovering I was published in 2600--almost 7 years after the fact!
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Hey, I got my free issues and t-shirts!
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Fuck QSD channel.
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Outdials.
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The TCP/IP Drinking Game. Version 1.0. SummerCon '96 in D.C. Talk about a
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quick buzz. NeTTwerk gave the speech. BioH, .mudge, ReDragon, myself, and
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a few others drank, and drank, and drank. A good time, to be sure. If anyone
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reading this has video footage of the event, please mail me.
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Backdooring a major VAX application using a hex editor.
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Jamming on Control-C and falling through the login command processor into old
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Primes. ROTFL.
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Hacking from Dataphones in Boston.
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My first buffer overflow. I remember talking on the phone with .mudge as I
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worked out the details.
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Falling in love.
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Falling out of love.
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----------------[ People to mention
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In no particular order:
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Dr. Who, BioHazard, Alhambra, .mudge, Dr. Cypher, Asriel, Bill From RNOC,
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_*Hobbit (still reading flammage after all these years), Swamp Rat, N8,
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The Dictator (AKA Dale Drew), Frankengibe, The Mentor, FryGuy, Garbage Heap,
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The Scythian, Mr. Xerox, MasterMicro, 0x486578, Tim N. (love your code),
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Bika (dig that hair), Grave45, Shewp, SkyHook, Blade Runner, Mycroft,
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Shatter, Sir Hackalot, Nirva, Crimson Death, Par, Taran King, Thingo It,
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Knight Lightning, Enkhyl, CheapShades, The Force, Byteman, The Leftist,
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Chippy (la la la), Mad Hacker (the *real* one), The Usurper/Thrashing Rage,
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Kewp (NOT!), Touch Tone (My voice isn't *that* hiiiigghhhh!!! CONNECT 1200),
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The Urvile/Necron 99, Hyperminde/Dr. Psychotic (Remember, until there is a
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cure for Assembly Language Brain Fry, there will always be the N.C. Home
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for Deranged Programmers), ReDragon, B, Route, GyroTech, Epsilon,
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Control-C (thanks for all the prank calls!). Lastly, I *must* mention that
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cool ass M.I. guy who tried to bust me--you were rad! (It was a truly good
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game. You told me to go to college, and I did. You also taught me not to
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under-estimate the enemy, because I did.)
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----------------[ Boards to mention
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Elite Boards: Phoenix Project, Digital Logic, Pirate-80, Speed Demon Elite,
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the various Metalland systems, The Metal AE, Demon Roach Underground, upt.org,
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The Polka AE, The Lost City of Atlantis, Lunatic Labs, The Dead Zone, Ripco,
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Broadway Show/Radio Station, The Central Office, The Missing Link, Lutzifer,
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The Works, upt.org, and the L0phT BBS. There are undoubtedly more, but these
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are the ones I remember to this day.
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Local Boards: Never a fan of 'local' boards, there are only two that I can
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recall as being k-interesting to any degree: The Padded Cell and Pandemonium,
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both of which were in the 919 NPA.
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----------------[ Quotes
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Gimme sum PR1MEZ!1!!
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May the Forces of Darkness become confused on the way to your house.
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<SN> WERE THE SEKRATARIES THAT R00L CYBERSPACE
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<SN> WE SKRIBBLE GFILES IN SHORTHAND
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<SN> HEY THE RAVER EYE HEAR U PACK A MEAN LUNCHBoX
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<SN> HEY ITS THE RAVER 0F CDC @#$@#
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<SN> HEY RAVER OF CDC @$@#$
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<SN> RAVER COME OVER HERE AND POSE WITH ME AND GHEAP F0R A PH0T0
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<SN> I CANT BELIEVE EYEM ON IRC WITH THERAVER OF CDC
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<SN> @$)%(&@*($&#*
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<SN> HEY LADYADA, IM ON IRC WITH THE RAVER OF CDC
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<SN> CAN YOU BELIEVE IT?!
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<SN> IM ST00PID NIGGAH oF M0D
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I don't think that was really SN, but it was funny as hell anyway.
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* glyph is away - vomiting binary - all Lame messages will be ignored.
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<n8> I actually vomit hex, but that always seems to break down into binary
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if it sits on the floor for a while
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When I was a kid, nobody ever picked me to play dodge ball, kick ball, or
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whatever. If I was picked, I was always last or second to last. You can
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imagine what a pleasure the following was to read:
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<Asriel> WE PICK GLYPH
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<DaveNull> WE ALREADY HAVE GLYPH ASRIEL
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<Asriel> oh
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<Asriel> fuck
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<Asriel> well
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<Asriel> at least we have knuth
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Other quotes have been lost to the vestiges of time.
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----------------[ The future of the computer underground
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I see a future without me.
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----------------[ The forgotten pro-phile question
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...And now for the [once] regularly taken poll from all interviewees.
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Of the general population of phreaks and hackers you have met, would
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you consider most, if any, to be computer geeks?
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No. Most phreaks and hackers that I have met are not geeks. They are
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more likely to be utter freaks, however, but not nerds or geeks. Geeks
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lack social skills. Phreaks and hackers have a definite social world that
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extends beyond phone switches and computer networks.
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Thanks for your time, Yesmar. "No problem."
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----[ EOF
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