home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Hackers Allege Harassment at Mall; Pentagon City Guards Stop
- Meeting, Tell Computer Group to Leave
-
- By Robert O'Harrow Jr.
- =Washington Post Staff Writer= There were about 20 of them,
- computer hackers mostly in their late teens and early twenties.
- They met in the Food Court at the Pentagon City shopping mall,
- where they pushed a few tables together, munched on junk food and
- began to discuss their hobby: infiltrating private computer net-
- works.
-
- Suddenly, in a scene that resembled something from a spy novel,
- they were surrounded by a few mall security guards and at least
- one agent from the Secret Service. The guards demanded identifi-
- cation and wrote down the computer hackers' names, authorities
- said later.
-
- Several bags containing computer books and printouts were confis-
- cated, and the group was booted out of the mall. Arlington pol-
- ice, who described the incident as a Secret Service matter, were
- on the scene but arrested no one.
-
- The incident Friday offered a glimpse into a cat-and-mouse game
- being played out in malls and train stations and on computer net-
- works across the nation by hackers and federal agents who track
- them as part of an effort to crack down on computer and telephone
- fraud.
-
- It's a game in which computer hackers, many of whom take pride in
- their ability to snoop through private records, now are complain-
- ing that their privacy rights are being violated by law enforce-
- ment officers who track them.
-
- The Secret Service, which Congress has directed to go after com-
- puter hackers who use phone lines to break into computer systems
- for free long-distance phone service or other information, ack-
- nowledges that its agents often track groups of young hackers who
- gather to discuss their passion.
-
- Special Agent David Adams, an agency spokesman, would neither
- confirm nor deny agency involvement in the Pentagon City in-
- cident, which involved a group called the 2600 Meeting, named
- after a New York-based magazine for hackers.
-
- "We don't make any comments on ongoing investigations," said
- Adams, who said the agency believes that hackers across the coun-
- try are responsible for computer and telephone fraud costing more
- than $1 billion annually.
-
- "We're not targeting any group," said Adams, who said that in ad-
- dition to following suspected hackers, the agency searches for
- them by working computer networks.
-
- In general, he said, "We're targeting people who have committed
- violations under the (federal) statute."
-
- The current issue of 2600 magazine contains articles on such to-
- pics as creating computer viruses, using long-distance phone
- lines without paying for them and other high-technology tricks.
-
- The term "hackers" is used to describe a variety of computer
- users, from whizzes who test their skills by scanning private
- networks, to those who illegally use computer networks and phone
- lines for profit.
-
- Most fall somewhere in between. They use sophisticated software
- to search telephone systems for on-line computers, collect data
- as proof of their exploits and consider hacking a game.
-
- Hackers can be costly to governments and businesses, running up
- phone bills and altering confidential information. During the
- Persian Gulf War, a group of Dutch teenagers broke into the
- Pentagon's computers and modified or copied information about
- U.S. war operations.
-
- Like members of similarly named groups in New York, San Francisco
- and several other cities, the Washington group meets on the first
- Friday of each month. Each group's meetings take place in public,
- and at least some members apparently are accustomed to scrutiny
- by federal agents. A recent advertisement in 2600 promoting a
- meeting in New York encouraged members to "come by, drop off ar-
- ticles, ask questions, find the undercover agents." Michael Min-
- nich, a 17-year-old Arlington resident who organized the local
- group, said its members "explore things in technological society
- that have not been explored very well."
-
- News about Friday's incident quickly spread on electronic bul-
- letin boards across the country, and computer users from New York
- to California's Silicon Valley have flooded on-line forums with
- complaints that the hackers were harassed without being charged
- with any crime.
-
- Even computer professionals who normally look down on hackers'
- illicit techniques have weighed in, raising questions about con-
- stitutional rights.
-
- "Their concern is, the government is singling out a group and
- trampling on their civil liberties," said John McMullen, a
- university computer teacher and New York correspondent for News-
- bytes, a computer news service. According to several members of
- the hackers' group, Friday's incident began about 6 p.m., shortly
- after group members had pushed tables together in the mall's Food
- Court.
-
- With some members of the group still arriving, mall guards sur-
- rounded the group and began asking for identification. Group
- member Craig Neidorf, 23, said the guards demanded to know why
- one member had a computer keyboard. Neidorf said the guards
- seemed to know they were holding a meeting.
-
- "They knew what they were doing," he said. "I think it was
- harassment."
-
- Nathan Newton, 24, another member, said the guards searched
- through some of the group's belongings and took several bags con-
- taining computer books, magazines and printouts.
-
- A third group member, who asked not to be identified, said that
- an Arlington police officer asked for his student ID, even though
- the group member objected.
-
- The officer "said they were working with the Secret Service, and
- therefore they had the right to do what they were doing," said
- the student, who lives in Arlington.
-
- Al Johnson, chief of the mall's security force, said the guards
- did not detain anyone and confiscated only some bags that were
- left on the tables. Johnson said they moved in on the group be-
- cause one group member was carrying handcuffs and because meet-
- ings are not allowed in the privately owned mall.
-
- "We're not here to make arrests. We're here to keep people mov-
- ing," Johnson said.
-
- "As far as I'm concerned this whole thing is over."
-