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- " U.S. computer investigation targets Austinites "
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- [ The above caption high-lighted the Saturday March 17, 1990 edition
- of the Austin American-Statesman [ Austin, Texas ]. The article has
- been copied in its entirety, and the main point for typing this up
- was because of the involvement of the LOD/H throughout the article. ]
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- The U.S. Secret Service has seized computer equipment from two
- Austin homes and a local business in the past month as part of a federal
- investigation into electronic tampering with the nation's 911 emergency
- network.
- Armed Secret Service agents, accompanied by officers from the Austin
- Police Department, took the equipment in three March 1 raids that sources
- say are linked to a nationwide federal inquiry coordinated by the Secret
- Service and the U.S. attorney's office in Chicago.
- While federal officials have declined to comment on the investigation
- - which focuses on a bizarre mix of science fiction and allegations of
- high-tech thievery - the Austin American-Statesman has learned that the
- raids targeted Steve Jackson Games, a South Austin publisher of role-
- playing games, and the home of Loyd Blankenship, managing editor at the
- company.
- A second Austin home, whose resident was acquainted with Jackson
- officials, also was raided.
- Jackson said there is no reason for the company to be investigated
- . Steve Jackson Games is a book and game publisher of fiction, he said,
- and it is not involved in any computer-related thefts.
- The agents, executing search warrants now sealed by a judge from
- public view, took computer equipment, including modems, printers, and
- monitors, as well as manuals, instruction books and other documents. The
- equipment has been forwarded to federal officials in Chicago.
- The Secret Service, best-known for protecting the president, has
- jurisdiction in the case, government officials say, because damage to
- the nation's telephone system could harm the public's welfare. In
- addition, the system is run by American Telephone & Telegraph Co., a
- company involved in the nation's defense.
- The 911 investigation already has resulted in the indictment of
- two computer "hackers" in Illinois and sources say federal authorities
- now are focusing on Austin's ties to a shadowy underground computer
- user's group known as the Legion of Doom.
- The hackers, who live in Georgia and Missouri, where indicted in
- Chicago. they are believed to be members of the Legion of Doom and
- are charged with seven counts, including interstate transportation of
- stolen property, wire fraud, and violations of the Computer Fraud and
- Abuse Act of 1986.
- The government alleges that the defendants stole a computerized
- copy of Bell South's system that controls 911 emergency calls in nine
- states. The information was then transferred to a computer bulletin
- board and published in a hacker publication known as Phrack!
- A trial in the case is scheduled to begin in June.
- U.S. agents also have seized the final drafts of a science
- fiction game written by the Austin-based game company. Sources say
- the agents are trying to determine whether the game - a dark, futur-
- istic account of a world where technology has gone awry - is being
- used as a handbook for computer crime. Steve Jackson, the owner of
- the local company and a well-known figure in the role-playing game
- industry, said neither he nor his company has been involved in
- tampering with the 911 system.
- No one in Austin has been indicted or arrested as a result of
- the investigation. "It is an on-going investigation. That is all
- I can say," said Steve Beauchamp, special agent-in-charge of the
- Secret Service Austin field office. "Until we can put it all
- together, we just do not comment," he said.
- Bob Rogers, Jackson's Dallas attorney, said federal officials
- have assured him that neither Jackson nor Jackson Games is the tar-
- get of the probe. The authorities would not tell Rogers whether the
- inquiry focused on other company employees. As for the science fiction
- game, called Cyberpunk, Jackson said federal authorities have mistaken
- a fictional work for a technical manual [E.N. Why does this sound all
- too familiar?] .
- "It's not a manual for computer crime any more than a Reader's
- Digest story on how to burglar-proof your house is a manual for
- burglars," said Jackson, 36. "It's kind of like the hints you get
- on safe-cracking from a James Bond movie."
- Blankenship, the author of the book, said his attorney has advised
- him not to comment on the book or the Secret Service investigation.
- Jackson said he guesses his company was linked to the 911 probe
- by its use of a computer bulletin board system, called Usenet. The
- board, one of hundreds throughout the country, is a sort of electronic
- Town Square, where personal computer users from throughout the world
- can tap into the system via phone lines and a modem.
- The network, free and relatively unregulated, is an information
- exchange where users can post information, exchange electronic messages
- and debate with keyboards everything from poetry and politics to nuclear
- war.
- One of the world's largest networks - boasting more than 600,000
- users - Usenet was tapped by Chinese students in North America to
- organize support for students during the pro-democracy demonstrations
- last year. The network also was infected in 1988 by a now-famous
- computer "virus" unleashed by college student Robert Morris.
- Jackson said his company has maintained a bulletin board on
- the Usenet network on which it posts advanced copies of its role-
- playing games. The firm posts the games and requests that the users
- of the network comment on the text and propose improvements.
- The Jackson bulletin board, called Illuminati, greets users with
- the company's logo and a message that states: "Welcome to the World's
- Oldest and Largest Secret Conspiracy."
- Over the past several months, the company has been posting drafts
- of Cyberpunk for review.
- The resident of the second Austin home raided by the Secret Service
- was acquainted with Jackson and had made comments about the game on
- Usenet. He asked to remain anonymous.
- Typical of Cyberpunk literature, the game is set in a bleak future,
- much like the world portrayed in Max Headroom, formerly a network
- television program. Computers and technology control people's thoughts
- and actions and are viewed both as a means of oppression and as a method
- of escape. Portions of Jackson's Cyberpunk viewed by the Austin American
- Statesman include a detailed discussion on penetrating government computer
- networks and a list of fictitious programs used to break into closed
- networks. Bruce Sterling, an Austin science fiction writer and one of
- the world's best-known Cyberpunk writers, said Jackson's game and its
- computer-related discussions are hardly unusual for the genre.
- "Cyberpunk is thriller fiction." Sterling said. "It deals to a
- great extent with the romance of crime in the same way that mysteries
- or techno-thrillers do." He said the detailed technical discussions
- in the Jackson games are what draws people to them. "That's the
- charm of simulating something that's supposed to be accurate. If
- it's cooked up out of thin air, the people who play these games are
- going to lose interest."
- Jackson, though, said he has been told by Secret Service agents
- that they view the game as a user's guide to computer mischief. He
- said they made the comments where he went to the agency's Austin
- office in an unsuccessful attempt to reclaim some of his seized
- equipment. "As they were reading over it, they kept making outraged
- comments," Jackson said. "When they read it, they became very, very
- upset. "I said, 'This is science fiction.' They said, 'No. This
- is real.'"
- The text of the Cyberpunk games, as well as other computer
- equipment taken from Jackson's office, still has not been returned.
- The company now is working to rewrite portions of the book and is
- hoping to have it printed next month. In addition to reviewing
- Cyberpunk, sources say federal authorities currently are investigating
- any links between local computer hackers and the Legion of Doom. The
- sources say some of the 911 information that is the subject of Chicago
- indictments has been traced to Austin computers.
- Jackson's attorney said federal officials have told him that
- the 911 information pilfered from Bell South has surfaced on a computer
- bulletin board used at Steve Jackson games. But the information
- apparently has not been traced to a user. Jackson said that neither
- he nor any of his employees is a member of the Legion of Doom.
- Blankenship, however, did consult with the group in the
- course of researching the writing the Cyberpunk game, Jackson said.
- Further, the group is listed in the game's acknowledgments for its
- aid in providing technical information used in Cyberpunk. For these
- reasons he believes Blankenship is a local target of the federal probe,
- though none of the investigators has yet confirmed his suspicion.
- "My opinion is that he is (being investigated)," Jackson said,
- "If that's the case, that's gross.
- "he had been doing research for what he hoped would be a mass-
- market book on the computer underground," Jackson said.
- The other Austin resident raided by the authorities, who asked
- to remain anonymous, acknowledged that he is the founding member of
- the Legion of Doom and that copies of the 911 system had surfaced on
- the group's local bulletin board. The 20-year-old college student
- said the information hardly posed any threat to the 911 system.
- "It was nothing," he said. "It was garbage, and it was boring."
- In the Chicago indictment accuses the group of a litany of
- electronic abuses, including: disrupting telephone service by
- changing the routing of telephone calls; stealing and modifying
- individual credit histories; stealing money and property from
- companies by altering computer information; and disseminating
- information about attacking computers to other computer hackers.
- The Austin Legion of Doom member said his group's worst
- crime is snooping through other people's computers. "For the
- most part, that's all we do," he said. "No one's out ripping
- off people's credit cards. No one's out to make any money.
- "We're just out to have fun."
- The group member said the fact that the legion is shrouded
- in mystery adds to its mystique - and to the interest law
- enforcement agents have in cracking the ring. "It's an entirely
- different world," the student said. "It's a very strange little
- counter-culture. "Everybody who exists in that world is familiar
- with the Legion of Doom," he said. "Most people are in awe or are
- intimidated by it."
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- (C)opied by Pizzia Man
- 03/18/90Downloaded from Just Say Yes. 2 lines, More than 1500 filine!
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