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- /* All comments by Digital Derelict. */
-
-
- Hackers of the World, Unite!
- ============================
-
- From Newsweek, July 2, 1990
-
- By John Schwartz
-
- Typed by Mortimer
-
- A production of Hanford BBS.
-
- /* Comments by Digital Derelict */
-
- It is not your average keynote speech. It's more like a call to
- arms. A couple of hundred software developers sit entralled by Mitch
- Kapor, who dropped by their recent Ann Arbor in his private jet - one of
- the nifty things you can buy for yourself if you happen to be the guy who
- wrote Lotus 1-2-3. The once portly computer star has shed 25 pounds
- lately through a determined combination of exercise and diet. He's
- doffed his jacket and slipped on a convention T shirt over his shirt and
- tie. While this fashion statement might be confused, his message is not:
- There's a threat out there. Not computer viruses. Not nasty hackers.
- It's the Feds.
-
- /* This is something that publications like PHRACK INC. (rest in peace),
- LOD/H (also shut down), and any BBSers that have bothered to pull their
- head(s) out have been saying for a decade. Amazing how fast news travels,
- huh? */
-
- Kapor first asks which members of the audience use electronic
- "bulletin boards" and conference systems. Almost all the hands go up.
- Kapor then puts the scare into them with tales from the "hacker dragnet".
- Law-enforcement agencies have stepped up efforts against computer crime
- [fun timeline at the end]. Kapor believes that they have gone too far.
- He cites police raids on teenagers' homes, with guns drawn and family
- members forcibly restrained. He tells of widespread equipment seizures,
- and the raid that nearly shut down Steve Jackson Games, a small Austin,
- Texas, producer of fantasy role-playing games - even though it was not a
- target of the investigation.
-
- /* Actually, what happened was that an employee of SJ Games was formerly
- affiliated with The Phoenix Project, a perfectly legal BBS that was shut
- down by the Pigs -* er, the Feds the instant that the sysop (it is not
- clear which, but The Mentor was one) announced that they were going to start
- using an E-Mail encryption routine. The Mentor had invited a few Feds to
- come and join them in discussions on the board to prove that it wasn't
- anything to be afraid of, thus the immediate response. As far as this
- author knows, the equipment was never returned, no charges were pressed, and
- it had nothing to do with an investigation. It was allegedly affiliated
- with LoD (publishers of LoD/H Technical Journal), which is the current
- target of this new McCarthyism. LoD was allegedly connected with the E911
- case, where The Prophet leaked the contents of the E911 document to Knight
- Lightning, publisher of PHRACK. If this is a valid excuse for nearly
- shutting down the publishers of the 'GURPS' RPG series, the Feds as
- far gone as I suspected. The year '1984' comes to mind. */
-
- And he talks about a student indicted on charges stemming from
- publishing a private telephone-company statement in his electronic
- newsletter; Kapor says that the prosecution may violate freedom of press.
- "The first thing that happens is the government goes around busting a
- bunch of teenagers," Kapor complains," and calls them criminals." The
- threat, he warns, extends to virtually anyone who links his computer
- to others.
-
- Law-enforcement officials accuse Kapor of romanticizing crooks who
- are violating the rights of their victims, and most people still think
- that hackers are a bigger threat than the cops.
-
- /* The same 'law-enforcement' (read: police-brutality) officials also hold
- that a student fired first at the Kent State Massacre. */
-
- But the crackdown has spurred Kapor and such industry legends as
- Apple Computer cofounder Steve Wozniak to band together behind the new
- generation. Their goal: to protect the flow of information and innovation
- that helped bring about the personal-computer revolution.
-
- /* Unfortunately, Apple Computers' current top executives are working in the
- opposite direction. More to come on this. */
-
- Within the next few weeks they will officially announce a new
- foundation, yet unnamed, intended to combat computer phobia and provide
- legal aid for some of those snared in the dragnet. The computer-rights
- movement has gained support on Capitol Hill, where Sen. Patrick Leahy,
- Democrat of Vermont, has planned upcoming hearings on how far law
- enforcement should go. While advocating some punishment for lawbreakers,
- Leahy adds, "We cannot unduly inhibit the inquisitive 13-year-old who, if
- left to experiment today, may tomorrow develop the telecommunications or
- computer technology to lead the United States into the 21st century.
- He represents our future and our best hope to remain a technologically
- competitive nation."
-
- /* Interestingly enough, Dr. Timothy Leary (correct me on the spelling) of
- 'turn on, tune in, drop out' fame holds the same position. */
-
- It's not that Kapor thinks he's defending choirboys. Although
- some hackers insist they should be able to traipse digitally wherever
- they please, Kapor says that trespassers should be prosecuted - "I don't
- want people breaking in where they don't belong." But he says the
- zealousness of the investigations is out for proportion to the threat.
-
- /* Somebody should tell this reporter what 'McCarthyism' and 'witch-hunts'
- are. There always must be an enemy. Now that the commies aren't the
- 'evil empire,' the government is being forced to invent new threats. */
-
- To Kapor, there is more at stake than keeping a bunch of teenagers
- out of jail. He cites the case of Craig Neidorf, the University of Missuori
- student indicted after his electronic newsletter, Phrack, featured the
- private telephone-company document. If the government is right in
- Neidorf's case, says Kapor attorney Terry Gross, The New York Times could
- have had its printing presses confiscated for publishing the Pentagon
- Papers.
-
- /* Read that sentence again. Carefully. */
-
- "Its very, very clear First Amendment implications should threaten
- all traditional media," says Gross - whose firm, Rabinowitz, Boudin,
- Standard, Krinsky and Lieberman, represented Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel
- Ellsberg.
-
- Not everyone is singing along with Mitch. Software companies, long
- angry over "piracy" (passing around bootleg copies of programs), are glad
- to see the authorities cracking down. Ken Wasch, executive director of
- the Software Publishers Association, calls Kapor a friend, but says, "For
- Mitch to believe that there is a government-sponsored witch hunt going on
- is completely without foundation."
-
- /* I had to have three people pin me while one beat me senseless in order to
- stop laughing after reading this! This is the same person who (with help
- from [Cr]Apple Computers) is advocating laws in Europe (and soon the USA)
- to OUTLAW all hardware, software, and publications that could in ANY WAY
- aid or instruct a person in breaking copy protection (which is a ridiculous
- concept in the first place) or altering commercial software. This means no
- Central Points Option Boards. This means that a PC-Magazine article telling
- you how to twiddle a bit would land you in jail. This means that a copy of
- 'Gamemaster,' Copy-II [insert computer type here, e.g. Copy-II-PC], Option
- Board control software, or character editors would be outlawed. */
-
- Gail Thackeray, an Arizona assistant attorney general who deals with
- high-tech crime, insists the authorities are being mindful of civil rights.
- She predicts that when the facts come out at the various trials, the cops
- will be vindicated: "Some of these people who are loudest on the bandwagon
- may just slink back into the background."
-
- /* After Men In Black show up with pistols pulled and threaten them. It's
- happened. */
-
- Thackeray dismisses claims that prosecution will shut down legitamite
- computer networks;...
-
- /* It already has. Large, public, dial-up UNIX boxes have been seized as
- 'evidence' and never returned without being used in trials because 6K of
- their 15-megs-a-night of Internet mail happened to be that rewritten E911
- leak. Interestingly enough, the document, supposedly valued at ~$79K,
- contains mostly public information and certainly NOTHING that would enable
- a so-called 'hacker' to gain access to the system. */
-
- ...she speaks approvingly of one former hacker who told agents that he had
- quit as word spread of the raids. "That's not, to me, a constitutionally
- suspect chilling effect," she says. "That's what we in law enforcement
- call a 'deterrent'."
-
- /* I suppose Kent State was a 'deterrent' against free thought. I suppose
- McCarthyism was a 'deterrent' against proposing reform in our corrupt
- government. How stupid does she take us to be? */
-
- If Kapor's stance seems surprising, he's used to surprising
- people. His 1-2-3 bundle of business tools was an overnight hit, making
- him a multimillionaire. Once his Lotus Development Corp. became a giant,
- he shocked the industry again by walking away; Lotus, he says, had
- outgrown its innovative beginnings. "Most of what you do in business is
- business," he explains. "I'm interested in business as a medium for
- creating products." He is now creating products again at his new firm,
- Cambridge Mass.-based On Technology.
-
- Kapor developed the idea for the computer foundation with John
- Perry Barlow, a writer and self-described "professional techno-crank."
- Barlow says hackers typically try to sound more dangerous than they
- really are, a kind of digital vogueing. He says most live by a "hacker
- ethic" described by a Phrack essay. The piece tells prospective hackers
- to do no harm, because "The thrill of the hack is not in breaking the
- law, it is in the pursuit of knowledge." Barlow says if this weren't the
- case, there would be even more damage to computers.
-
- /* This is very true. If the people out there would use their knowledge for
- 'bad,' the Internet would go to pot. Corporate systems would crash daily
- and NOT because of a root spilling his coffee on a circuitboard. */
-
- With the outlines of the organization sketched out, Kapor began
- calling on friends in the industry. While some have been reluctant,
- there was one instant convert: Apple cofounder Wozniak. Like Kapor,
- Wozniak walked away from his company when it grew too far past its funky
- beginnings. He has since put on rock concerts, gone back for his college
- degree and taken stabs at high-tech ventures. Wozniak says a little
- mischief is important to the quest for knowledge. He credits his college
- experience building "blue boxes" (devices for making free phone calls)
- with honing his hardware-design skills. He compares electronic trespass
- to driving a few miles over the speed limit. There are people who never
- break any such rules, he says, but adds "do you think I'd want my son to
- turn out like that, or marry one? I'd still support him... but I kinda
- hope he has a a more fun life." "Woz" pledged to match Kapor's
- contribution, which helped put the initial funding over $150,000.
-
- Kapor, captain of his high school math team, has thrown in his lot
- with the nerds. He and his allies are attempting nothing less than to
- keep the ideals of the computer revolution alive. They hope to turn
- around a public increasingly resentful of computers and the people who
- are adept at using them. "You've got a lot of people who don't understand
- the present," Barlow says, "and in the absence of understanding, /* and in
- the face of intense government propaganda */ default to fear...The real
- disease here is future shock." Somebody has to stick up for the pencil-
- necked and the pimply. Luckily for them, the men who have chosen to do so
- are filthy rich.
-
-
- Great Moments in Mischief
- =========================
- [The fun timeline, as promised!]
-
- The word "hacker" once meant any dedicated programmer; lately it's
- taken on a criminal tone. Some events that got us from there to here:
-
- September 1970: John Draper makes free calls with a cereal-box whistle
- that matches AT&T's tones. Hence his nom de hack: Captain
- Crunch. [Wasn't it Cap'n Crunch?]
-
- 1986: The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act passes, toughening police powers
- against hackers.
-
- February 1990: Four indictments in an alleged scheme authorities say
- endangered 911 service. They cite a group calling itself "Legion
- of Doom." /* The Feds are trying to slap a ~$130000 fine and several
- years in jail on each of them */
- /*
- February 1990: Federal investigators confiscate Knight Lightning's (pub-
- lisher of PHRACK) laser printer as evidence in the E911 trial.
- Somehow I have a feeling that it's sitting on the desk of the local
- sherriff, churning out smut textfiles. Another item that was seized as
- 'evidence' was a story-in-progress that was due in less than a month.
- They marked a Cyberpunk novel for confiscation as well, but overlooked
- it.
- */
- May 1990: Robert T. Morris Jr. is found guilty of setting loose a "worm"
- program that stilled thousands of linked computers in November
- 1988. His sentence includes no jail time.
- /* ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ */
- May 1990: Operation Sundevil, one of several antihacker investigations,
- seizes 42 computers and 23,000 floppy disks in 14 cities with four
- arrests.
- /*
- June 1990: Government investigators have still refused to give back the systems
- that they seized as [totally irrelevant] 'evidence' in cases that
- never have and never will go to trial. The few systems that _are_
- returned are very seldom in working order.
-
- June 1990: Steve Jackson Games is on the verge of going out of business. When
- the 'public slavedrivers-*, er, SERVANTS' seized their systems they
- also seized work-in-progress (GURPS Cyberpunk RPG modules) and the
- food from the fridge. Definitely solid evidence there.
- */
-
- THIS HAS BEEN A PRODUCTION OF HANFORD BBS
- CONSTANTLY STRIVING FOR PUBLIC AWARENESS AND ABOLITION OF
- AMERICAN APATHY
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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