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- ============================================================================
-
- THE SYNDICATE REPORT
- Information Transmittal No. 14
-
-
- Released August 21, 1987
- Featuring:
- BOC Restriction Decision Still Pending (i.wld 7\20)
- Hugo World News 1 (p80 5\20)
- Vendors Underline Commitment to ISDN, Predict Tariff Battles (i.wld 7\29)
- Proposed FCC Access Fee Draws More Criticism (i.wld 8\1)
- Silent Assault (612 Phreak) Busted (sa 8\12)
- by The Sensei
- ============================================================================
- Exposition:
- Once again, TSReport now excepts outside sources. Anyone can write/provide
- information to the Syndicate Report. The Syndicate Report is also altering
- format. Rather than concentrating mainly on BELL orientated information,
- the Syndicate Report now has a more broad interest. Thus, TSR now handles
- all types of news gatherings.
-
- All articles have been presented by me unless shown at the end of the
- article as the information provider(s).
-
- ============================================================================
-
- Author's Note:
-
- Hello, welcome to TSR 14. I hope you enjoyed the 13th issue of the
- report. TSR #13 has a Part 2 to it, so if you have not gotten it...look
- around for it. It features my day with the Interstate Cops.
-
- Anyways, I've set up a TSR Xfer Line. The number is 612-829-8509. It's a
- pre-recorded transfer of the Syndicate Report. To use it, dial the number,
- wait for the carrier. The baud rate is only at 300 baud, sorry. When you
- connect, you should see the report. Have your buffer on...because it's
- transfered via ASCII Mode. This is not a BBS.
-
- Syndicate Report Newsline is at 612-829-8503. Dial in an enjoy.
-
- ============================================================================
-
- BOC RES
- TRICTION DECISION STILL PENDING:
-
- Most Regional BOCs -- Limited entry of the regional Bell Operating
- Companies (BOCs) into information services may be coming, but US District Judge H.
- Greene probably won't decide until after Labor Day. In early July, Greene heard oral
- arguments from attorneys for the BOCs as well as from consumer groups, on-line industry
- officials, and the Department of Justice (DOJ), which has advocated fewer restriction
- fro the BOCs in several areas.
- "The BOCs will get some rights, but as far as what level or what role they
- will play, or even which services they will provide, no one knows which prices
- Greene may parcel out," said communications consultant G. Arlen.
- Greene is skeptical about the DOJ's proposals, which hinge on FCC
- monitoring of potential abuses by the BOCs, which would continue to control
- local phone exchanges, Arlen said.
-
- So uncertain is the outcome that all
- sides seems to be positioning
- themselves to lose, Arlen said. "Everyone seems to be looking to Congress as
- the next arena." But congressional action will be slow, he said.
-
- Some foes of broader BOC freedom are becoming more conciliatory, said
- D. Simons, president of Digital Video Corp. Recently, the American Newspaper
- Publishers Assoc. (ANPA) adopted a position permitting BOCs to provide a point
- of entry for information services. But the ANPA opposes letting the BOCs provide electronic yellow pages
- or databaselike services, he said.
-
- ============================================================================
-
- HUGO WORLD NEWS 1:
-
- This is from some small town newspaper and I thought it was interesting. I'll
- only type up the interesting articles since it is rather long.
- "HOW TO BEAT PHONE ASSAULT"
- - June 25, 1987 [The first few paragraphs are about this girl who was
- terrorized by some pervert on the phone] New technology- Thanks to improved
- technology, phone call tracing, known to police as putting a "trap" on the line [CLID?],
- is now a feasibile solution. Forget about old movies that depict police
- urging the perspiring victim to "Keep him talking-stay on the line!" while
- the diligent telephone engineers hurry through racks of wires to pinpoint the
- origin of the call.It's all computerized now, and the trap is quick and
- decisive, with a success rate, says Abel, "near 100 percent With our
- computerized switching center
- [ESS is what he is talking about], it's almost instantaneous." To obtain
- a telephone trap, a customer with persistent harassing calls must notify police.
- The police then contact Illinois Bell [The newspaper is from Illinois] and the
- trap is installed. A trap costs $20 for a week, $7 each additional week. In
- life-threatening situtations, there is no charge. Although Illinois Bell
- quickly locates every call made during the trap, legalities often cause a
- time lag in providing the information to police. Police eventually release the
- caller's identity to the victim and the caller is arrested. Maximum penalty
- is a six-month sentence and a $500 fine. However, as of June 1, the new state
- legislation requires a police subpoena to obtain phone trap information from
- Bell, a process lasting as long as one month.
-
- ----------------------------------------
-
- The Dade County Jail in Miami, Florida was slapped with a phone bill of $153,000.
- IT seems that the inmates were blue boxing, using AT&T Calling Cards,
- billing to third parties, conning operators, and that sort of stuph. One call
- on Thanksgiving was to Columbia and lasted about 3 hours. Another call to a
- dial-a-porn number lasted for about 4 hours and cost $220. The police are now
- investigating and the county's taxpayers are going to have to pay the bill. The
- payphones at the prison are supposed to be used for local calls only... yeah
- right! That's it for now..
-
- ----------------------------------------
-
- This first article is the most recent and I think it is very interesting (and
- funny). It comes from the Ann Landers advice column (like I read it every da
- y).
- "Check this: Ma Bell is a generous soul"
-
- Dear Ann Landers: I think I can top the person who wrote complaining the idiocy
- of the phone company. Talk about garbage in, garbage out! When AT&T split
- with Bell we had three phones in our house. The equipment belonged to Ma Bell
- and the service belonged to AT&T. After we returned all the phone equipment
- to Ma Bell, we received a bill for $0.00. My husband and I took turns calling
- people to get this straightened out. Shortly after that we were informed that
- our bill for $0.00 was overdue. My husband, just to be cute, sent a check to Ma
- Bell for $0.00. A few weeks later, we recieved a check for $5 and a note
- thanking us. We didn't cash the check the check, thinking this had to be a
- mistake. Several months later, we received another computerized bill for $0.00.
- We called again, got nowhere, so we sent another check for $0.00. A few weeks
- later we recieved another $5 refund with the same thank you. This went on every
- three months for two years. Now we are down to once a year and have given up
- trying to straighten this out. We just cash the $5 and forget about it. They
- say that computers don't make mistakes, but people sure do. Someone out there
- likes us very much, or they are very stupid.
-
- -Linda K.R. in California
-
- ----------------------------------------
-
- --- The Chicago Tribune ---
-
- Tuesday, July something (about two weeks ago) "Sign in and then sign on" James
- Dao says he has a foolproff way to foil computer hackers who ferret out secret
- passwords [FERRET??? ANYONE HERE FERRET?] and spy mechanically. Punt the
- passwords, Dao says. [punt=get rid of]. Using software developed by Dao's
- company, Communications Intelligence Corp. (CIC) of Menlo Park, Calif.,
- computer users must sign in in order to sign on. CIC's Handwriter program
- allows you to sign your name with an electronic pen on a flat plastic plate
- underlaid with a grid of wires. The computer then analyzes your signature
- against several that you have previously submitted to make sure that
- it's not a forgery before giving you access to informations. The handwriting
- analysis is more sophisticated than a simple comparison of letters. According
- to Dao, the company takes into account how quickly you write and how you
- accelerate from beginning to end. It also examines the points at which you
- apply most pressure with the pen. All of these factors are unique to your
- signature. Signature analysis is only one part of the Handwriter program.
- Other features include the ability to write longhand memos and leters that
- the computer translates into printed material. Right now, the technology
- is availiable only for mainframe and personal computers, Dao says.
- But one day, he predicts, businessmen will sit on planes scribling
- with electronic pens on plastic plates attached to laptop computers.
- "We're opening up computers to a segment of the population
- that's afraid of typing," he explains.
- -CHICAGO TRIBUNE.. TUESDAY.. SOMETIME ABOUT A WEEK OR SO AGO.
-
-
-
- :::::::::::::::::::Information Provided by Hugo World News::::::::::::::::::
-
- ============================================================================
- VENDORS UNDERLINE COMMITMENT TO ISDN, PREDICT TARIFF BATTLES:
-
- NAPA, CA -- Several major computer vendors, including IBM, DEC, AT&T,
- and Hayes, stressed their commitment to ISDN at a recent communications seminar.
- "We will market ISDN products and ISDN interfa
- ces," said Lark Allen,
- manager of Telecommunications Market Progs. at IBM, speaking at Dataquest's
- Telecom. Industry Conference. "Through our Rolm CBX, we will support ISDN as
- well as synchronous and asynchronous data communications."
-
- But ketnote speaker Ellen Hancock, president of IBM's Communications
- Products Division, said that while IBM was embracing ISDN, there was some
- concern about line costs.
- An executive from Hayes Microcomputer also expressed concern that tariffs will
- be complicated. "If tariffs for ISDN are set incorrectly, the ramp-up for
- widespread acceptance of ISDN services will be long and painful,"
- said Gary Betty, senior vice president of Hayes Microcomputer Products Inc.
-
- Betty also predicted that there will be a tariff battle in every state
- with the arrival of ISDN, Consequently, the industry may be slow in adopting
- an ISDN standard, he said.
- At AT&T representative, however, hinted that line costs would be
- competative, although he would not give details. R.Snow
- den, director of AT&T's Concept Development Center, said AT&T would be filing
- tariffs for ISDN service before the end of the year.
-
- F.Balfour, DEC product marketing manager, said that DEC also supports
- ISDN, but does not yet support it to the desktop.
- In short term, ISDN7s effect may be to lengthen the life of Centrex,
- centralized telephone functions offered by Bell Op. Companies, predicted Vic
- Krueger, Dataquest's VP for Telecom Industry Service. This is because ISDN will
- send several functions which are now being performed by PBX systems back to
- the main phone company office, according to Krueger.
-
- :::::::::Laurie Flynn and Sharon Fisher Contributed to this story:::::::::::
-
- ============================================================================
-
- PROPOSED FCC ACCESS FEE DRAWS MORE CRITICISM:
-
- Washington -- With the July 17 official FCC publication of its plan for
- enhanced service access charges, which could add up to 5$ per hour to user
- on-line connect fees, providers of information services stepped up their criticism.
-
- As of last week, the FCC had received more than 100 letters, all of
- them against the proposal. "Out ultimate objective is to establish a set of
- rules that provide for recovery of the costs of exchange access used in
- interstate service in a fair, reasonable, and efficient manner from all
- users of access services," read part of the proposal, CC Docket 87-215.
- "To the extempt from access charges, the other users of exchange access pay a
- disproportionate share of the costs of the local exchange that access charges
- are disigned to cover."
-
- "There is no basis for singling out one class of users and subjecting
- them to common carrier-type access charges simply because they are engaged in
- the provision of computer services," said G. T. DeBakey, executive director of
- Adapso, the computer software and services industry association, based in
- Arlignton, Virginia.
-
- DeBakey said the new fees would put prices of consumer-oriented
- information services beyond the reach of most users.
- The FCC proposal would "cause a drastic curtailment in the development
- and availability of commercial network-based information services of all kinds,"
- said Anthony L. Craig, president of GE Info. Services division, based in
- Rockville, Maryland.
-
- *******The deadline for public comment is August 24; the deadline for replies
- to the comments is September 24. Send them in users!
- ============================================================================
-
-
- SILENT ASSAULT (612 PHREAK) BUSTED: (Revised Sept 16, 1987)
-
- Minneapolis, Minnesota. TSR -- Silent Assault, a local 612 phreak, was
- apprehended for various illegal items (stated later) on January 2nd. He was
- awoken by one of his parents approximately Midnight. He asked what was wrong
- and he was told that the Secret Service was here to talk to him. He then went
- to them and they showed SA all their IDs. There was 3 SS Men. Three guys and
- One lady, and they asked him if he was Silent Assault. SA tried to act dumb
- and said he didn't know what they were talking about. SA said no, and on of the
- SS Men asked him if this was his voice. He continued to play back previous
- recordings that they had monitored on SA's Info VMS Line. About the Info Line:
- SA had a local VMS set up that he carded. He used it to report illegal
- information such as CCards, Acc Codes, Hacked Computer Systems and other misc.
- PWs. They were monitoring his line probably right away because he had carded
- the VMS instead of just hacking the PW. Anyways, after the SS Men played his
- voice, he said he didn't think it was his voice. Then they went down and
- looked at SA's system, since he had to choice, his parents already gave them
- permission. SA had everything (printouts, disks, etc.) sitting out downstairs
- since he didn't know they were coming for a visit. One of the SS Men said they
- knew what was going on, they had evidence and they were going to seize
- everything. They then told him to admit he's SA and it would go easier on
- him and they'd help him. He then said, yes I am Silent Assault. SA couldn't
- do anything about it since they had his voice on tape, and they had way of
- comparing voices.
-
- SA did get his computer system back, and is now active until he has to
- serve his 6 month max. sentence. He did lost about 10 ft. on printouts, over
- half his disks of hacking programs and general hack/phreak files. SA stated to
- me it was a crock of shit and all of this went on for about 3 months.
-
- ============================================================================
-
- If you have any question to the information in this file, contact the
- author. Now can be found on the following systems: Brewery Systems
- 314-394-8259, Osuny BBS 914-725-4060, PGrounds CF 612-645-7132
-
- ============================================================================
-
- This concludes this transmittal No. 14 provided by:
-
- The Sensei of The Syndicate Report
-
- Released August 21, 1987
-
- ================================================================
-
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