mirror of
https://github.com/fdiskyou/Zines.git
synced 2025-03-09 00:00:00 +01:00
760 lines
39 KiB
Text
760 lines
39 KiB
Text
==Phrack Inc.==
|
|
|
|
Volume 0x0c, Issue 0x41, Phile #0x0f of 0x0f
|
|
|
|
|
|
|=-----------------------------------------------------------------------=|
|
|
|=----------------------=[ International scenes ]=-----------------------=|
|
|
|=-----------------------------------------------------------------------=|
|
|
|=-----------------------------------------------------------------------=|
|
|
|=------------------------=[ By Various ]=------------------------=|
|
|
|=------------------------=[ <various@nsa.gov> ]=------------------------=|
|
|
|=-----------------------------------------------------------------------=|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For this release, 3 new international scenes are presented. The phrack
|
|
staff would like to thank people who took the time to share information
|
|
about their scene. A special thanks to gmac for having written something
|
|
about a country that probably none of us know.
|
|
|
|
Once more, we would like to emphasize that we would like to see
|
|
different scenes than the usual presented. We particulary think
|
|
of China, Russia or South American countries.
|
|
|
|
For this release, we have:
|
|
|
|
1. Italia
|
|
2. Portugal
|
|
3. Uganda
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
An overview of the italian underground (1994-2007)
|
|
|
|
|
|
You did read about the Italian scene last time on Phrack #47 [0], just
|
|
a few months after the Italian Crackdown in 1994. This short article is
|
|
an attempt to sum up the evolution of the Italian underground since
|
|
those days.
|
|
|
|
1994 was the year of the so called Italian Crackdown (aka FidoBust): a
|
|
wide (and wild) Finance Guard operation nominally aimed at busting
|
|
warez BBS. A stunning total of nearly 200 BBS systems on the FidoNet
|
|
network were seized with irresponsible methods including, but not
|
|
limited to, the requisition of all electronic equipment from the sysops
|
|
(included modems, cables, keyboards, monitors, ...) as well as the
|
|
police sealing whole rooms.
|
|
|
|
In its first phase the purpose of the operation was to fight the illegal
|
|
market of copied software and to satisfy the BSA lobby this way. However
|
|
subsequent seizures and raids proved the crackdown also had a political
|
|
objective. The bust included BBS that belonged to CyberNet (a network
|
|
supporting the motto "INFORMATION WANTS TO BE FREE", populated by
|
|
hackers and cyberpunks alike, close to social centres), ECN [1]
|
|
(european network dedicated to broadening political debate and providing
|
|
counter-information about social themes and workplace politics) and
|
|
PeaceLink [2] (peace/ecologist association and network).
|
|
|
|
Though just a few BBS were really involved in sale of warez, a lot of
|
|
completely legal BBS closed to never open again as a result of the bust.
|
|
|
|
As new people were being busted, the national press gave its best at
|
|
building castles in the air about hackers and describing them as
|
|
software pirates or members of organized crime. The underground reacted
|
|
striking to the reliability of media with a round of actions signed by
|
|
the multiple name Luther Blisset [3]. The campaign adopted hoaxes and
|
|
communication guerrilla to show the unsuitability of journalists, and
|
|
even managed to have Mondadori, the second most important publishing
|
|
company in Italy, print the whole *fake* book "Netgeneration" (1996).
|
|
|
|
As a consequence of the crackdown the Italian underground started
|
|
feeling the need of an organization similar to the american EFF, able to
|
|
support hackers against abuses. In 1995 ALCEI Electronic Frontiers
|
|
Italy [4] was founded to "affirm and protect constitutional rights for
|
|
electronic citizens as new communications technologies emerge".
|
|
|
|
Nearly at the same time, Metro Olografix [5] was born, an association
|
|
made by people with a mixed range of skills and histories, from
|
|
cyberpunks and hackers to social volunteers, that nowadays counts about
|
|
80 members. The main mission of Metro Olografix is to spread the
|
|
telematics culture through the country supporting the old BBS spirit of
|
|
sharing, free communication and cooperation. Metro Olografix has an
|
|
office in Pescara for real life meetings and acts as a crossroads for
|
|
other groups and individuals to meet. Thanks to the esteem and trust
|
|
gained from the most part of the Italian underground, the association
|
|
was able to organize events like "L'hacker e il magistrato" ("The
|
|
hacker and the magistrate", from 1995 to 1999), a face to face
|
|
conference involving hackers, magistrates and press reporters, aimed at
|
|
communicating and making understand the difference between hackers that
|
|
follow hacker ethic and real criminals.
|
|
|
|
While BBS were still experiencing hard times, 1995 registered the
|
|
boom of Internet access in Italy - mainly thanks to the VOL ISP that
|
|
offered free promotional accounts, opened POPs in many cities reachable
|
|
with a cheap urban rate call and at the beginning even provided a
|
|
toll-free number. Internet access was no more limited to universities
|
|
and the opportunity to have a relatively fast, cheap and long lasting
|
|
Internet SLIP (later on PPP) connection from home marked the growth of a
|
|
new generation of young hackers. Those guys started to study and play
|
|
with TCP/IP protocols and they elected the Linux open-source operating
|
|
system and the C programming language as their favourite study matters.
|
|
Those wannabes were going to inject into the Italian underground new
|
|
ideas within a few years and to create some valuable projects and
|
|
groups.
|
|
|
|
Like the new generation, old-school BBS hackers too got very
|
|
interested in the communication opportunities offered by the Internet.
|
|
Thanks to "Isole nella Rete" [6] (the Italian for "Islands in the Net"),
|
|
the Internet connection of ECN, BBSs of the CyberNet circuit begun to
|
|
put their contents online. Message areas turned into mailing lists and
|
|
IRC channels like #cybernet were born on EFNet.
|
|
|
|
=46rom 1987 to 1998 *the* fanzine of the Italian underground was Decoder
|
|
(published by ShaKe Edizioni Underground, a cyberpunk cooperative based
|
|
in Milan): covered subjects included hacking, hacktivism, networks,
|
|
cyberpunk culture, counter-information, leading figures and events from
|
|
the international scene, virtual reality and new technologies. As
|
|
Decoder was the only printed underground zine during those years, a few
|
|
hacking/phreaking e-zines were released: The DTE222 Technical Journal
|
|
(1987) and The Black Page (1994): altough those experiences did not
|
|
last as long as Decoder and did not focus on international scene, their
|
|
technical level was considerable.
|
|
|
|
In 1996 the first number of System Down was published, an e-zine
|
|
written by some users of IRCNet channels #cybernet and #hackers.it.
|
|
Quality and technical level of articles marked a drop compared to
|
|
previous zines, because authors were largely young guys that had started
|
|
hacking just after the Internet boom, they were not very conscious about
|
|
hacker culture and the past works of the Italian underground.
|
|
|
|
Year 1997 saw a flourishing of new groups that lived hacking mostly as
|
|
study and research about programming, networks, operating systems,
|
|
instead of catching its political value and focusing on its
|
|
consequences for the society. In the beginning members of those
|
|
organizations were for the most part low skilled, but many of them were
|
|
higly motivated, tenacious, capable of learning quickly and they
|
|
reached a very good technical level in a very few years.
|
|
|
|
Orda delle Badlands was a crew especially dedicated to owning systems on
|
|
Internet and to ircwar (deprecable activity, but widely exercised over
|
|
those times). The experience exhausted in few years because the engine
|
|
of the group was in fact the cooperation within actions engaged by its
|
|
charismatic leader (that was nearly worshipped); in the long run that
|
|
proved to be an insufficient incentive, the crew closed and some of its
|
|
members joined other groups.
|
|
|
|
Antifork [7] (formerly known as disLESSici) more than a crew is a
|
|
'hackers research virtual lab', a place where hackers can share their
|
|
techniques and codes following open source and full disclosure
|
|
philosophies. Between Antifork members there are also creators of well
|
|
known tools like ettercap. Antifork software is available through their
|
|
website and public access CVS.
|
|
|
|
The S0ftpj [8] group reunited people with different skills and
|
|
backgrounds: cyberpunks, sysops, coders, virus writers, security and
|
|
privacy researchers, hardware and network experts. Since the beginning
|
|
the group stood out out by its will to collaborate and confront
|
|
with other realities of the Italian underground (this explains the
|
|
notable amount of its releases distributed via its website). S0ftpj team
|
|
skills cover a wide range of fields - it has been contributing
|
|
to many events in the country holding workshops mainly focused on
|
|
its research in kernel hacking and new privacy enhancement technologies.
|
|
|
|
In the meanwhile, as these new groups were appearing, the fusion between
|
|
ECN/CyberNet hackers and the squat scene brought in 1998 to the first
|
|
Hackmeeting [9], a yearly 3-days hacker con "without *organisers,
|
|
teachers, public and customers* but with *sharers*", held in a T.A.Z
|
|
[10] and then totally self-organized. Altough the level of its speeches
|
|
is not always very high, Hackmeeting has become a unique opportunity to
|
|
have fun and discuss with people from different realities and feel the
|
|
informal atmosphere of old times - free of commercial influences. In
|
|
1999 the second Hackmeeting promoted the idea of "hacklabs",
|
|
laboratories mainly hosted by social centres where hackers could meet
|
|
in real to share and develop their do-it-yourself attitute and their
|
|
knowledge about programming, technologies, media activism, privacy and
|
|
cyber-rights. After Freaknet Medialab [11], the first Italian hacklab
|
|
and home of radio#cybernet, opened in Catania in 1995, other hacklabs
|
|
popped out in biggest cities of the country (Florence, Milan, Bologna,
|
|
Turin, Rome).
|
|
|
|
In spring 1998, when System Down stopped publication, S0ftpj and Orda
|
|
delle Badlands started a new e-zine called Butchered From Inside (BFi)
|
|
[12] that dealt with various topics (h/p, virus, reversing, reports from
|
|
cons, underground culture, ethics) following a semi-disclosure policy
|
|
(no complete and ready to use exploits and tools, but techniques). At
|
|
first the technical level of articles was low, but it quickly improved
|
|
and from its second year of life it already distinguished itself by its
|
|
originality and quality of its articles. BFi documented the growth of
|
|
new characters in the Italian scene, in the course of time it adopted an
|
|
acceptance policy for articles similar to the one used by Phrack and
|
|
today is also read by non-Italian people thanks to its English, French
|
|
and Spanish translations. BFi is written by hackers that belong to many
|
|
organizations, indipendent researchers and, obviously, by S0ftpj
|
|
members who have been editing and contributing during these years.
|
|
|
|
BFi has provided an example of the good spirit and built a virtuous
|
|
circle where new ideas and techniques, at first explained in the
|
|
articles, inspired other hackers to develop them further and publish
|
|
them in later articles. The feeling of a steady continuity between
|
|
works made by different contributors was great, so BFi launched
|
|
successful collaborations between hackers. In autumn 2001, BFi hosted
|
|
an important debate about a subject that had been in the background for
|
|
long time, but that had not been discussed publicly yet: feasibility of
|
|
hacking without political connotations. That topic of course was not
|
|
exhausted in that circumstance and was going to resurface periodically:
|
|
that discussion anyway helped all parties to think about it and
|
|
confront with each other: "politicals" understood that a big effort in
|
|
experimenting new techniques was becoming foundamental to fight their
|
|
battles efficiently, while "technicals" acquired a stronger
|
|
consciousness of their actions.
|
|
|
|
Sikurezza.org [13] has been another good project aimed to develop
|
|
discussions about computer security. It was established in 1999 with a
|
|
few open mailing lists, where advanced topics could be talked over by
|
|
hackers in a vendor-free, no-profit and full-disclosure atmosphere.
|
|
Unluckily, in parallel with the dramatic increase in subscribers and
|
|
posters, the technical level of posts progressively and necessarily has
|
|
decreased through the years, altough the list still represents an
|
|
important community credited also by the underground. Moreover,
|
|
researchers presenting themselves under Sikurezza.org umbrella dictated
|
|
a new style and quality standard in security speeches for events held
|
|
in Italy.
|
|
|
|
Other active hacking groups in those years were Spippolatori, Packet
|
|
Knights Crew and S.P.I.N.E.: some of them released interesting stuff
|
|
but they all eventually closed by 2005. There were also many attempts
|
|
to start new e-zines. Apart from OndaQuadra that contained also a few
|
|
nice articles, quality was low and every new e-zine started talking
|
|
about hacking from a very basic level instead of learning and catching
|
|
inputs sent from other previous editorial experiences.
|
|
|
|
New school Italian phreakers mostly have been interested in studying
|
|
PSTN/ISDN, phone kiosks and magnetic cards, cellular cloning and VoIP.
|
|
BFi published various articles on Fastweb, the biggest national fiber
|
|
optic ISP. Fastweb Milan metropolitan network has been the favourite
|
|
playground for pioneering VoIP and IPTV hacking. Since 1998 the
|
|
Spaghetti Phreakers [14] website and mailing list have been an archive
|
|
and meeting point to experiment and learn and contributed in keeping
|
|
alive interest about phreaking among new generations.
|
|
|
|
The Italian underground counts talented reverse engineers and software
|
|
crackers; some of them have been members of renowned international
|
|
cracking groups or the cracking university +HCU. Web sites like
|
|
Universita' Italiana Cracking[15] (resembling the teaching style of
|
|
+HCU) and 3564020356 [16] have been running for many years and provide
|
|
nice communities and huge archives of tutorials and technical documents.
|
|
RingZ3r0 and RACL were other two groups that published good textfiles
|
|
about reversing but they are no more active.
|
|
|
|
Italy is a country with a long and prolific artistic tradition and the
|
|
underground has got its own artists too. There have been many good demo
|
|
groups (for a comprehensive list, check the site Scene-IT [17]) and
|
|
some demo parties: "The Italian Gathering" organized by Metro
|
|
Olografix from 1996 to 1998 in Pescara, a demoscene area within
|
|
Codex Alpe Adria [18] (a wider event also featuring retrocomputing,
|
|
emulation and alternative systems) from 2004 to 2006 in Udine and since
|
|
2007 the HORDE [19] demoparty. Prof. Bad Trip [20] has been a peculiar
|
|
experimental artist capable of interpreting cyberpunk offering a visual
|
|
perspective on themes like cyborgs, mutants, polluted metropolis from
|
|
a disturbed future and so on. It is worth mentioning, in the end, the
|
|
graphic novel "Uccidere un Hacker" [21] (the Italian for "Killing an
|
|
Hacker") by Andrea Ferraresso inspired by the story of the German
|
|
hacker Karl Koch.
|
|
|
|
In the field of privacy, a milestone was erected in 1998 with the book
|
|
Kriptonite [22] written by hackers from ECN/CyberNet. Kriptonite
|
|
extensively covered theory and practice of topics like cryptography,
|
|
anonymous remailers, nym servers, steganography, voice encryption and
|
|
packet radio.
|
|
|
|
Somehow influenced by Kriptonite, Progetto Winston Smith (PWS) [23] has
|
|
been working since 1999 to sensibilize netcitizens about the risks of
|
|
technocontrol and network surveillance. PWS mantains a website
|
|
providing information about privacy enhancement technologies, for both
|
|
administrators and end users. Moreover PWS organizes every spring in
|
|
Florence a free convention called E-Privacy [24]. The con develops in
|
|
two tracks where privacy related topics are discussed at a legal and
|
|
technical level; it also hosts the local cerimony of Big Brother Awards
|
|
for the yearly best privacy violators in Italy. Besides E-Privacy there
|
|
were other events about privacy and freedom organized by Metro Olografix
|
|
like the Metro Olografix Crypto Meeting and Cyber Freedom.
|
|
|
|
Autistici/Inventati (A/I) [25] was born in 2001 as a collective of
|
|
people from hacklabs and media activist and its main effort has been to
|
|
build a server that offers free services like web/blog/mail hosting,
|
|
anonymizer, anonymous remailer and mailing list management for activits
|
|
and people desirous of privacy. The A/I server, due its policy voted to
|
|
free speech, had to be defended in tribunal many times. In summer 2005,
|
|
A/I discovered that its server had been phisically compromised, and
|
|
that the Italian police had had access to its SSL keys (which allowed
|
|
them to monitor all the traffic for a whole year). The collective
|
|
reorganized and deployed the so called "R* Plan": a fresh decentralized
|
|
redundant network infrastructure with servers located in different
|
|
countries and jurisdictions. As well as for any provided service, A/I
|
|
made technical documentation for Plan R* [26] avaible on its site.
|
|
Thanks to the work by PWS, A/I and individuals, Italy boasts various
|
|
TOR and Freenet nodes as well as anonymous remailers and nym servers.
|
|
|
|
Analyzing this short story so far you, the reader, could argue that the
|
|
underground in Italy is very healthy, but unfortunately the expression
|
|
"zombie-scene" used by Duvel in last Phrack issue [27] fits well its
|
|
real current status.
|
|
|
|
An alarming matter of fact is the big number of people once in the
|
|
underground that now collaborate with computer crime units or work for
|
|
companies providing malware and services to law enforcement agencies.
|
|
These people have been largely contributing to the death of the the
|
|
underground in Italy: even when they did not consciously fight other
|
|
hackers, the lack of trust and paranoia acted as disgregating forces
|
|
against groups and cooperations. The underground has shown not only it
|
|
is not strong enough to refuse working for law enforcements, but it is
|
|
not even able to isolate people that publicly claim to partecipate and
|
|
belong to the underground while at the same time working for the police.
|
|
|
|
Wounds are made to the underground not only by the ones who explicitly
|
|
want to strike it, but also from entities willing to exploit it. The
|
|
Hacker Profiling Project (HPP) applies criminal profiling methodology to
|
|
enable analysts to identify the kind of attacker and to anticipate his
|
|
next moves. It tries to accomplish its goal by collecting
|
|
questionnaires from hackers and deploying honeynets. Altough HPP
|
|
creators, that are italians, promote their work between hackers
|
|
stating they want to break stereotypes about the hacker figure, this
|
|
sounds a bit bizarre... their real goals are quite evident to
|
|
everybody. Zone-H [28] is another attempt to suck from the underground
|
|
giving back shit to it. The archive of defaced websites lacks the good
|
|
spirit of the old Attrition.org and the primary purpose of the
|
|
portal activities is to keep high the perception of an evil hacker
|
|
menace to sell more ethical hacking courses and services. The
|
|
organization has been able to attract a few young guys and exploit them
|
|
in borderline actions (the founder has been arrested in connection to
|
|
the Telecom Italia spying scandal [29]). It seems that in italy the
|
|
more people use the word "ethical" the less they prove to really have
|
|
an ethic.
|
|
|
|
Like everywhere, nowadays many Italian hackers are in the security
|
|
business and have stopped releasing their advances and works through
|
|
underground channels. The problem is not the fact that they speak at
|
|
commercial cons, but the limited amount (and sometimes lack of free
|
|
access) of knowledge they usually provide in such events. Those people
|
|
largely made their bones inside the underground communities and they
|
|
learnt a lot from underground publications and releases. It is then
|
|
auspicable that hackers working in security field would keep showing
|
|
their slides at cons but also give back to the underground what it
|
|
deserves, that is a detailed view of their researches to let other
|
|
hackers study, learn from and improve (or thwart, this is part of the
|
|
game, sorry) them.
|
|
|
|
In this discouraging scenario the hackmeeting community has been always
|
|
managing to wake up a few mounths before the yearly meeting and make it
|
|
a nice event, but it has experienced difficulties in bulding a
|
|
continuity of activities during the rest of the year between
|
|
consecutive meetings. Number of hacklabs in the country also decreased
|
|
in last years. In 2004 Metro Olografix organized MOCA, a hacker summer
|
|
camp run in Pescara that resembled the CCC camp and was a great
|
|
success. The experience it is likely to be repeated in summer 2008. In
|
|
recent times Net&System Security has stood out among technical cons
|
|
because of medium-high quality of its speeches; the con is held every
|
|
year in Pisa. Old groups appear dormient and only a few public releases
|
|
are published. Also BFi magazine has progressively decreased its number
|
|
of articles per year until 2006, but last year marked an inversion of
|
|
this trend that made room for a hope in a renewal of activity in a near
|
|
future. A few new groups have released good stuff but their names are
|
|
not cited here because they are not underground-only oriented - they
|
|
also offer business solutions.
|
|
|
|
Italian underground is still active, but most of old hackers keep a
|
|
low profile and rarely make their works publicly available. Most groups
|
|
and e-zine sites has been put offline by their staff depriving new
|
|
generations from accessing a part of the underground history and
|
|
culture. The underground should exploit new web technogies to regain
|
|
its past visibility and influence (do "media saturation" and "cDc"
|
|
remind you of anything?) on young talents to offer an alternative
|
|
perspective than the one proposed by the world of commercial security.
|
|
|
|
Hackers now employed in the ICT industry should understand the risks of
|
|
underground death and make an effort to spread knowledge coming from
|
|
their research through underground vectors and methods and taking back
|
|
advantages offered by a review and comparison with the community.
|
|
|
|
Limits imposed by new laws and extended technocontrol would hopefully
|
|
act as a strong incentive for the underground to get more united and
|
|
reactive.
|
|
|
|
Hackers role is to make the future more *free*, not (only) more (IT)
|
|
secure. Join the underground, keep working for and with the underground
|
|
if you care about your freedom, in Italy and everywhere.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[0] International Scenes
|
|
Phrack Magazine Volume Six, Issue Forty-Seven, File 21 of 22
|
|
http://www.phrack.org/issues.html?issue=3D47&id=3D21
|
|
[1] E.C.N. European Counter Network
|
|
http://www.xs4all.nl/~tank/ecn/
|
|
[2] PeaceLink
|
|
http://www.peacelink.it/
|
|
[3] Luther Blisset
|
|
http://www.lutherblissett.net/
|
|
[4] ALCEI Electronic Frontiers Italy
|
|
http://www.alcei.it/
|
|
[5] Metro Olografix
|
|
http://www.olografix.org/
|
|
[6] Isole nella Rete
|
|
http://www.ecn.org/
|
|
[7] Antifork
|
|
http://www.antifork.org/
|
|
[8] S0ftpj
|
|
http://www.s0ftpj.org/
|
|
[9] Hackmeeting
|
|
http://www.hackmeeting.org/
|
|
[10] Temporary Autonomous Zone
|
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporary_Autonomous_Zone
|
|
[11] Freaknet Medialab
|
|
http://www.freaknet.org/
|
|
[12] Butchered From Inside
|
|
http://bfi.s0ftpj.org/
|
|
[13] Sikurezza.org
|
|
http://www.sikurezza.org/
|
|
[14] Spaghetti Phreakers
|
|
http://www.spaghettiphreakers.tk/
|
|
[15] Universita' Italiana Cracking (UIC)
|
|
http://www.quequero.org/
|
|
[16] 3564020356
|
|
http://3564020356.org/
|
|
[17] Scene-IT [!]
|
|
http://scene-it.untergrund.net/
|
|
[18] Codex Alpe Adria
|
|
http://www.0xaa.org/
|
|
[19] HORDE
|
|
http://horde.untergrund.net/
|
|
[20] Prof. Bad Trip
|
|
http://www.profbadtrip.org/
|
|
[21] Uccidere un Hacker
|
|
http://digilander.libero.it/code6502/
|
|
[22] Kriptonite
|
|
http://isole.ecn.org/kriptonite/
|
|
[23] Progetto Winston Smith
|
|
http://www.winstonsmith.info/
|
|
[24] E-Privacy
|
|
http://e-privacy.winstonsmith.info/
|
|
[25] Autistici/Inventati
|
|
http://www.autistici.org/
|
|
[26] Plan R* Orange Book
|
|
http://dev.autistici.org/orangebook/
|
|
[27] A brief History of the Underground scene
|
|
Phrack Magazine Volume 0x0c, Issue 0x40, Phile #0x04 of 0x11
|
|
http://www.phrack.org/issues.html?issue=3D64&id=3D4
|
|
[28] Zone-H
|
|
http://www.encyclopediadramatica.com/Zone-H
|
|
[29] Telecom-SISMI Scandal
|
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SISMI-Telecom_scandal
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Portuguese Scene
|
|
----------------------
|
|
|
|
(By Eurinomo and Quickzero)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- The evolution of the Internet
|
|
|
|
When Internet showed up, it was very expensive, even around 96/97 we
|
|
had to pay something like 1.50Euros per hour to the ISP, plus, around
|
|
1 Euro per hour to the Phone company for a Dial-up connection.
|
|
|
|
Some years later, internet got cheaper, in fact, free! ISPs started racing
|
|
on giving away free dial-up accounts without any limitation of time, they
|
|
even gave CDs with already created accounts. Still, we had to pay
|
|
the phone company.
|
|
|
|
Around 2000/2001, ADSL and cable connections started showing up, it was
|
|
kind of cheap, around 35Euros per month for a 512k connection, plus the
|
|
15Euros per month for the phone line or cable. There were no time
|
|
limitations, only traffic limitation around 3GiB. A lot of people started
|
|
showing online, for most of them Internet was a new world. Some people
|
|
started creating domestic servers, sharing information, code, and
|
|
software.
|
|
|
|
Years later, 24mbps connections were made public using ADSL2+, and it just
|
|
cost around 35Euros per month on total, with 60GiB traffic limit, so
|
|
people started to take this advantage to trade games and movies.
|
|
|
|
On the present date, OC connections are available to the public on the
|
|
capital (Lisbon), an OC connection, up to 60Mbps, costs something around
|
|
50Euros per month.
|
|
|
|
On resume, we had a slow start on internet service, but now he have a kind
|
|
of quick evolution.
|
|
|
|
|
|
- The evolution of technology
|
|
|
|
Technology always has been expensive, even now, electronic parts are very
|
|
expensive, but computers, are getting cheaper and cheaper.
|
|
|
|
I remember when I bought my first x86, it was a used Pentium-90, 16MiB of
|
|
ram, 1GiB of HD, this all inside a heavy Big-Tower, it cost something
|
|
around 700Euros, remembering that it was a used computer, and the cheapest
|
|
price I could find, the best computer around that time was a Pentium-133.
|
|
A new computer (Pentium-133) cost something around 2000Euros.
|
|
|
|
Around 2000/2001, computers started to get cheaper, more people started to
|
|
buy computers (at that time, not many people had one).
|
|
|
|
On the present date, anyone can buy a good complete computer (or laptop)
|
|
with less than 400Euros.
|
|
|
|
Only recently with this cheap technology, government and other high
|
|
entities documentation and information meet the digital world, most of it
|
|
is/was stored in hand made paper work.
|
|
|
|
|
|
- The evolution of society
|
|
|
|
Portuguese people may have an extreme reputation on sailing and
|
|
discovering
|
|
'new worlds', but it seemed that all this ended up a few centuries ago.
|
|
|
|
Nowadays, society is a lot stupid and ignorant, they started to loss the
|
|
pride of being Portuguese, the pride of the world not being enough for
|
|
everyone and still having half of it on they're hands, the courage to make
|
|
discoveries, and ending up on people that are happy if they have food on
|
|
the table, and a good reality show or soap opera on TV.
|
|
|
|
Society gives more value to someone that does something using the tools of
|
|
other person, that the person that made those tools. Per example, they
|
|
consider an expert, someone that unlocks mobile phones without knowing
|
|
what he is actually doing, without knowing what is behind it. They give
|
|
more importance to someone wearing a tie, than someone dressed normal,
|
|
they also give more importance to someone that doesn't know what he is
|
|
talking about but has a PhD or something, that someone that knows a lot
|
|
about what he is talking about, but doesn't have any diploma.
|
|
|
|
The term 'hacker', is not very popular in society, the last time it
|
|
appeared on TV was two years ago, in the format of a interview with
|
|
someone calling himself 'buzzybee', he was only a script kiddie that did
|
|
some defacing and carding, was self proclaiming himself a 'hacker' and
|
|
showed up on the news, saying that he was able to do get free stuff using
|
|
carding, and had access to any site of the internet and so on, everyone
|
|
that was in the scene knew this kid real name, phone, address and age,
|
|
even thought he hadn't many problems with the police.
|
|
|
|
|
|
- The evolution of the scene
|
|
|
|
Finally the part of most interest, the Portuguese scene is kind of
|
|
obscure, almost no one outside the scene knows what in fact is going on.
|
|
No one knows when the scene really started since it started before
|
|
the boost of telecommunications, a guess goes around 70s and 80s.
|
|
|
|
In the 90s, some groups started to show up, groups like Kaotik, Pulhas,
|
|
Ironik and a few others, even an e-zine came up, called 'PT Zine',
|
|
but died on the third release. Some of the groups still exist to this
|
|
day, but not much information comes out of it. Also, some individual
|
|
people started to show up in the form of Hackers, Crackers and
|
|
Phreakers.
|
|
|
|
The most notorious groups were:
|
|
|
|
Pulhas: Founded in 1994 by Kennobi. This was the oldest Portuguese group.
|
|
Actually is 'dead', but they had their golden age in the 90's by the
|
|
inumerous papers that they wrote and the exploit/code database to the
|
|
Portuguese mainstream.
|
|
|
|
Toxyn: Founded in 1996 by m0xx. This group is notorious known by their
|
|
campaign against Indonesia, when East Timor was occupied by Indonesia
|
|
millitary. The attack against the IT indonesian infrastracture was
|
|
motivated by the currently abuses of Indonesian military officers against
|
|
east timor people. Toxyn start their campaign with this statment: "We hope
|
|
to call attention to the necessity of self-determination and independence
|
|
of the people of Timor, oppressed and violated for decades by the
|
|
government of indonesia. We hope you give your full attention to this
|
|
historical step towards freedom, we ask that you help us fight the tyranny
|
|
of Indonesia occupating Timor." The campaign was started at 10/2/1997.
|
|
The fall of the Toxyn, has began when m0xx, has accepted and gave
|
|
inumerous interviews about the campaign and about the portuguese hacker
|
|
scene, exposing plans and actions of the scene. Toxyn group was helped
|
|
by Savage, an known spanish hacker, who developed the exploit, that
|
|
Toxyn Group used to break in in the .ID servers.
|
|
|
|
KaotiK: Founded in 1997(??). They've been a very active group in the
|
|
East Timor campaign, hacked and defaced inumerous .id websites. They've
|
|
created the first ezine about hacking & security to Portuguese people.
|
|
The e-zine was extinct after 3 editions. KaotiK has reach their fame in
|
|
the Portuguese Scene after a member disclosure of some flaws in various
|
|
Microsoft products.
|
|
|
|
F0rpaxe: F0rpaxe was maybe, the most mediatic group/'hacker'/troll, for
|
|
the worst reason. This character was the responsable for the first major
|
|
attack against US .mil targets in 1999. The attacks were allegedly being
|
|
carried out in retaliation for Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) raids
|
|
on suspected "crackers" in several U.S. cities. The attacks hits various
|
|
governemental and military webservers including FBI, NSA and the Navy.
|
|
|
|
East Timor Campaign: Was one of the firsts major hackivism campaign
|
|
worldwide. Timor was in Portuguese administration until 1975, after
|
|
Portuguese government abandoned that country, Timor was invaded by
|
|
Indonesia military army, who oppressed, violated, raped and murdured for
|
|
most 20 years. Various Portuguese hackers and groups decided to begin a
|
|
campaign to show to the world the truth about the Indonesian occupation
|
|
in East Timor. The East Timor campaign started in 1997 and was finished
|
|
in 1999. Various military, governement and corporativ indonisian websites
|
|
had been defaced. The defaces was to aware all people in the world about
|
|
the illegal occupation of East Timor, the mission was accompliced, the
|
|
attacks were transmited to the media all over the world. The campaign
|
|
was finished when m0xx, the lider of the group Toxyn, gave inumerous
|
|
interviews to the midia, exposing then the entire portuguese scene to the
|
|
public.
|
|
|
|
[5~Between 2002 and 2004, two Portuguese hackers also did some 'infamous'
|
|
work, these two hackers gained access to FCCN ('Fundacao para a
|
|
Computacao Cientifica Nacional' / Foundation for National Scientific
|
|
Computation), witch was backdoored with a reverse ICMP backdoor developed
|
|
by them, witch rumours say it is still active. They also gained access
|
|
to numerous universities and were backdoored the same way, this includes
|
|
the 100 machines cluster 'Centopeia' from 'Faculdade de Coimbra'. A lot
|
|
more work was made, including the database server of 'A.M. Gonçalves' and
|
|
'Salvador Caetano', Portuguese Toyota distributor. Then they just
|
|
disapeared from the scene.
|
|
|
|
Some of the people inside the scene are found on the x86 '0xD9D0', those
|
|
whom know, know what I'm talking about.
|
|
|
|
On the start of the new millennium, an explosion of 'lame' groups started,
|
|
most of them were kids playing up with Trojans, others, were script kids
|
|
playing up with public exploits, most of this groups are found on a
|
|
Portuguese IRC network, called PTNet. Some of these kids turned up to be
|
|
carders, using databases found by 'Google hacking', or simply by asking
|
|
people on some IRC networks. Some of these kids ended up having problems
|
|
with the police, but nothing serious.
|
|
|
|
Also in the start of the new millennium, satellite and cable Phreakers
|
|
starter to show up, breaking encrypted signals, an unnamed box came out,
|
|
that was plugged in the TV SCART connection and an external 9v power
|
|
supply, and unlocked (in fact, it broke the Nagravision encryption) every
|
|
single channel there was on cable TV, this box for a long time was though
|
|
to be made outside of Portugal, until I had the pleasure to meet the
|
|
original creator of it, and guess what, he was Portuguese, and lived next
|
|
to me, he explained me how it really worked, and how was the original
|
|
version, since the version that everyone had, that was commercialized
|
|
by lame groups searching for profit, had way too much components that it
|
|
didn't need at all, it even got some traps, only to make itself more
|
|
expensive, and difficult to make, in order to avoid people
|
|
commercializing it. Also, satellite FTA boxes started to get themselves
|
|
modified nationally, in order to break satellite TV encryptions,
|
|
like Nagravision (used by or cable TV provider, 'TVCabo'). So did the
|
|
original TVCabo cable boxes, some national hackers were able to hack
|
|
the firmware, in order to get its unique ID (Boxkey), and created cards
|
|
that once plugged, were able to break the signal. After this, this
|
|
knowledge started to get public, but on a 'pratical' way, and lots of
|
|
people started to make profit out of it, without knowing what they were
|
|
really doing. In other words, they knew if they bought this and that, and
|
|
used this and that software, were able to have free satellite/cable TV,
|
|
and they could seal later to other people. An example was the first
|
|
unnamed box that was created, it cost 4Euros to build, but people were
|
|
sealing it up to 100Euros. So do the FTA boxes, cost something around
|
|
70Euros unmodified, and were sold for 250Euros modified at no cost.
|
|
|
|
Nowadays, the scene is still obscure, and people are still ignorant,
|
|
sometimes, there is an exception, like when I went to an interview to
|
|
a part of the Bosch Group, where the guy interviewing me, by reading my
|
|
curriculum started to laugh silently, and said to himself 'A hacker..' and
|
|
'hackers do not harm anyone... only if pushed too', without me making any
|
|
mention to illegal activities (duh) or being member of this or that group.
|
|
When I was guessing myself unemployed, I got myself well employed, and
|
|
working on more areas than I was asked to, I even got myself involved
|
|
with robotics, automation, and electronics, when I was attending the
|
|
interview as web developer for an Intranet. Later, we found out that I
|
|
already knew him from the scene, and so did he knew me.
|
|
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Ugandan Scene(surprise!!!!!)
|
|
============================
|
|
by gmac
|
|
|
|
Introduction
|
|
------------
|
|
|
|
For those who don't know what Uganda is n are too lazy to use google, well
|
|
in short its located on the African continent more specifically in Eastern
|
|
africa. Still lost then this will clear it all up for you, have you ever
|
|
heard of a movie called Last King of Scotland if yes then you know Uganda
|
|
and if No then use google.
|
|
|
|
Sometime back.....
|
|
------------------
|
|
|
|
Cutting edge computer technology is as you correct in assuming fairly new
|
|
in the Ugandan context, it cannot be more than 13 years old so generally
|
|
hacking on our scene had maintained a fairly urban legend status, not much
|
|
is avaliable on any hacking groups back in the day to be honest to my
|
|
knowledge they were almost none existent.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Present....
|
|
-----------
|
|
|
|
Currently as technology advances the scene has surfaced with formation of
|
|
groups like gsquad by yours truly which is i believe the first of its kind
|
|
here, although hacking has still maintained its urban legend status the
|
|
scene is dominated by a few knowledgeable individuals. Bu..t the winds of
|
|
change are upon us because i have seen the advent of a new generation with
|
|
a desire which ofcourse has been fueled by hacker related movies like most
|
|
recently Die Hard 4.0. The gsquad remains the only active group providing
|
|
help to individuals on request and ofcourse releasing zines(which was but
|
|
made a print debut recently) which has won many fans but ofcourse inspired
|
|
by Phrack. This new generation needs content and i think Phrack is our one
|
|
stop Hacking Content Provider (HCP,oh i made that up).
|
|
|
|
We are late comers onto the scene but we will catch up because we have the
|
|
spirit, and oh it was BloodAxe's first appeal that drove me to starting
|
|
the gsquad so i hope the circle of lost hackers' appeal will inspire
|
|
another individual somewhere on this planet.
|
|
|
|
We maybe in different lands but we are part of the same underground, so we
|
|
will survive the media caused division which started all these different
|
|
kind of hats i hear white hats....erm...black...grey we may soon hear pink
|
|
hats(ie blondes running security sites)
|
|
|
|
The spirit still lives on but its in a critical state......
|
|
|
|
|
|
Busts....
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
This is almost a trivial joke because without any real laws noone can get
|
|
busted, but there is a motion to release laws due to rising fraud cases.
|
|
But of course there have been cases of major censorship, call monitoring
|
|
and all that by ISPs and of course the govt.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Appeal....(am sorry to put this part but i had to)
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
I read the Underground Spirit article and i really think the onus is
|
|
on all of us to stage what i would call "a last stand" [like in X3] to
|
|
stop the decline of the underground. Lets not stop at reminiscing the
|
|
days of Mentor, BloodAxe, KL, the drama involving Agent steal and the
|
|
like and start living them and all this starts with each individual
|
|
making this "stand" a personal thing not just a battle for the circle
|
|
of lost hackers or a few individuals. I really think what has hampered
|
|
the growth of the underground has been lack of.....lets call it
|
|
selfishness by the knowledgeable(read 3l33t) who undermine those new
|
|
to the scene hence making them only become script kiddies atmost.
|
|
This unwillingness to share knowledge has seriously hampered the
|
|
underground's growth making the curious hunt for this knowledge from
|
|
"security" sites.
|
|
|
|
Underground...Underground..... UNDERGROUND we have a platform of
|
|
change and that platform is PHRACK...
|
|
|
|
Hey sorry it sounds like a battle cry...but it is!
|
|
|
|
Long live Phrack
|
|
|
|
|