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- ==Phrack Magazine==
-
- Volume Five, Issue Forty-Six, File 23 of 28
-
- ****************************************************************************
-
- Cyber Christ Bites The Big Apple
- HOPE - Hackers On Planet Earth,
- New York City - August 13-14, 1994
- (C) 1994 Winn Schwartau
- by Winn Schwartau
-
- (This is Part II of the ongoing Cyber Christ series. Part I,
- "Cyber Christ Meets Lady Luck" DefCon II, Las Vegas, July 22-24,
- 1994 is available all over the 'Net.)
-
- Las Vegas is a miserable place, and with a nasty cold no less; it
- took me three weeks of inhaling salt water and sand at the beach
- to finally dry up the post nasal drip after my jaunt to DefCon
- II. My ears returned to normal so that I no longer had to answer
- every question with an old Jewish man's "Eh?" while fondling my
- lobes for better reception.
-
- New York had to be better.
-
- Emmanuel Goldstein -aka Eric Corely - or is it the other way
- around? is the host of HOPE, Hackers on Planet Earth, a celebra
- tion of his successfully publishing 2600 - The Hackers Quarterly
- for ten years without getting jailed, shot or worse. For as
- Congressman Ed Markey said to Eric/Emmanuel in a Congressional
- hearing last year, and I paraphrase, 2600 is no more than a
- handbook for hacking (comparable obviously to a terrorist hand
- book for blowing up the World Trade Center) for which Eric/Emman
- uel should be properly vilified, countenanced and then drawn and
- quartered on Letterman's Stupid Pet Tricks.
-
- Ed and Eric/Emmanuel obviously have little room for negotiation
- and I frankly enjoyed watching their Congressional movie where
- communication was at a virtual standstill: and neither side
- understood the viewpoints or positions of the other.
-
- But Ed is from Baaahhhsten, and Eric/Emmanuel is from New York,
- and HOPE will take place in the Hotel Filthadelphia, straight
- across the street from Pennsylvania Station in beautiful downtown
- fast-food-before-they-mug-you 34th street, right around the
- corner from clean-the-streets-its-Thanksgiving Herald Square.
- Geography notwithstanding, HOPE promised to be a more iconoclas
- tic gathering than that of DefCon II.
-
- First off, to set the record straight, I am a New Yorker. No
- matter that I escaped in 1981 for the sunny beaches of California
- for 7 years, and then moved to the Great State of the Legally
- Stupid for four more (Tennessee); no matter that I now live on
- the Gulf Coast of Florida where the water temperature never dips
- below a chilly 98 degrees; I am and always will be a New Yorker.
-
- It took me the better part of a decade of living away from New
- York to come to that undeniable and inescapable conclusion: Once
- a New Yorker, always a New Yorker. Not that that makes my wife
- any the happier.
-
- "You are so rude. You love to argue. Confrontation is your
- middle name." Yeah, so what's your point?
-
- You see, for a true New Yorker these aren't insults to be re-
- regurgitated at the mental moron who attempts to combat us in a
- battle of wits yet enters the ring unarmed; these are mere tru
- isms as seen by someone who views the world in black and white,
- not black, white and New York.
-
- Case in point.
-
- I used to commute into Manhattan from the Westchester County
- suburb of Ossining where I lived 47 feet from the walls of Sing
- Sing prison (no shit!). Overlooking the wide expanse of the
- Hudson River from my aerie several hundred feet above, the only
- disquieting aspect of that location were the enormously deafening
- thunderclaps which resounded a hundred and one times between the
- cliffs on either side of the river. Then there was the occasion
- al escapee-alarm from the prison. .
-
- So, it was my daily New York regimen to take the 8:15 into the
- city. If the train's on time I'll get to work by nine . . .
-
- Grand Central Station - the grand old landmark thankfully saved
- by the late Jackie O. - is the nexus for a few hundred million
- commuters who congregate in New York Shitty for no other reason
- that to collect a paycheck to afford blood pressure medicine.
-
- You have to understand that New York is different. Imagine,
- picture in your mind: nothing is so endearing as to watch thou
- sands of briefcase carrying suits scrambling like ants in a Gary
- Larson cartoon for the nearest taxi, all the while greeting their
- neighbors with the prototypical New York G'day!
-
- With both fists high in the air, middle fingers locked into erect
- prominence, a cacophonous chorus of "Good Fucking Morning"
- brightens the day of a true New Yorker. His bloodshot eyes
- instantly clear, the blood pressure sinks by 50% and already the
- first conflict of the day has been waged and won.
-
- Welcome to the Big Apple, and remember never, ever, to say, "Have
- a Nice Day." Oh, no. Never.
-
- So HOPE was bound to be radically different from Vegas's DefCon
- II, if only for the setting. But, I expected hard core. The
- European contingent will be there, as will Israel and South
- America and even the Far East. All told, I am told, 1000 or more
- are expected. And again, as at DefCon II, I am to speak, but
- Eric/Emmanuel never told me about what, when, or any of the other
- niceties that go along with this thing we call a schedule.
-
- * * * * *
-
- God, I hate rushing.
-
- Leaving Vienna at 3:15 for a 4PM Amtrak "put your life in their
- hands" three hour trip to New York is not for the faint of heart.
- My rented Hyundai four cylinder limousine wound up like a sewing
- machine to 9,600 RPM and hydroplaned the bone dry route 66 into
- the pot holed, traffic hell of Friday afternoon Washington, DC.
- Twelve minutes to spare.
-
- I made the 23 mile trip is something less than three minutes and
- bounded into the Budget rental return, decelerated to impulse
- power and let my brick and lead filled suitcase drop to the
- pavement with a dent and a thud. "Send me the bill," I hollered
- at the attendant. Never mind that Budget doesn't offer express
- service like real car rental companies. "Just send me the bill!"
- and I was off.
-
- Eight minute to spare. Schlepp, schlepp. Heavy, heavy.
-
- Holy shit! Look at the line for tickets and I had reservations.
-
- "Is this the line for the four o'clock to New York?" Pant,
- breathless.
-
- "Yeah." She never looked up.
-
- "Will they hold the train?"
-
- "No." A resoundingly rude no at that. Panic gene takes over.
-
- "What about the self-ticketing computer?" I said pointing at the
- self ticketing computer.
-
- "Do you have a reservation?"
-
- "Yup." Maybe there is a God.
-
- "Won't help you."
-
- "What?"
-
- Nothing.
-
- "What do you mean won't help?"
-
- "Computer's broken." Criminy! I have 4 minutes and here's this
- over-paid over-attituded Amtrak employee who thinks she's the
- echo of Whoopi Goldberg. "The line's over there."
-
- Have you ever begged? I mean really begged? Well I have.
-
- "Are you waiting for the four?" "Can I slip ahead?" "Are you in
- a death defying hurry?" "I'll give you a dime for your spot in
- line." "You are so pretty for 76, ma'am. Can I sneak ahead?"
-
- Tears work. Two excruciating minutes to go. I bounced ahead of
- everyone in a line the length of the Great Wall of China, got my
- tickets and tore ass through Union Station The closing gate
- missed me but caught the suitcase costing me yet more time as I
- attempted to disgorge my now-shattered valise from the fork-lift-
- like spikes which protect the trains from late-coming commuters.
- The rubber edged doors on the train itself were kinder and gen
- tler, but at this point, screw it. It was Evian and Fritos for
- the next three hours.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Promises tend to be lies. The check is in the mail; Dan Quayle
- will learn to spell; I won't raise taxes. I wonder about HOPE.
-
- "It's going to be Bust Central," said one prominent hacker who
- threatened me with electronic assassination if I used his name.
- "Emmanuel will kill me." Apparently the authorities-who-be are
- going to be there in force. "They want to see if Corrupt or any
- of the MoD crew stay after dark, then Zap! Back to jail. (gig
- gle, giggle.) I want to see that."
-
- Will Mitnick show up? I'd like to talk to that boy. A thousand
- hackers in one place and Eric/Emmanuel egging on the Feds to do
- something stupid. Agent Steal will be there, or registered at
- least, and half of the folks I know going are using aliases.
-
- "I'd like a room please."
-
- "Yessir. Name?"
-
- "Monkey Meat."
-
- "Is that your first or last name?"
-
- "First."
-
- "Last name?"
-
- "Dilithium Crystal."
-
- "Could you spell that?"
-
- Now: I know the Hotel Pennsylvania. It used to be the high
- class Statler Hilton until Mr. Hilton himself decided that the
- place was beyond hope. "Sell it or scuttle it." They sold and
- thus begat the hotel Filthadelphia. I stayed here once in 1989
- and it was a cesspool then. I wondered why the Farsi-fluent
- bellhop wouldn't tell me how bad the damage was from the fire
- bombed 12th floor. The carpets were the same dingy, once upon a
- time colorful, drab as I remembered. And, I always have a bit of
- trouble with a hotel who puts a security check by the elevator
- bank. Gives you the warm and fuzzies that make you want to come
- back right away.
-
- I saved $2 because none of the bell hops noticed I needed help,
- but then again, it wouldn't have mattered for there was no way he
- and I and my luggage were going to fit inside of what the hotel
- euphemistically refers to as a 'room'. Closet would be kind but
- still inaccurate. I think the word, ah, '$95 a night slum' might
- still be overly generous. Let's try . . . ah ha! the room that
- almost survived the fire bombing. Yeah, that's the ticket.
-
- The walls were pealing. Long strips of yellowed antique wall
- paper embellished the flatness of the walls as they curled to
- wards the floor and windows. The chunks of dried glue decorated
- the pastel gray with texture and the water stains from I know not
- where slithered their way to the soggy carpet in fractal pat
- terned rivulets. I stood in awe at early funk motif that the
- Hotel Filthadelphia chose in honor of my attendance at HOPE.
- But, no matter how bad my room was, at least it was bachelor
- clean. (Ask your significant other what that means. . .)
-
- In one hacker's room no bigger than mine I counted 13 sleeping
- bags lying amongst the growing mold at the intersection of the
- drenched wallboard and putrefying carpet shreds. (God, I love
- going to hacker conferences! It's not that I like Hyatt's and
- Hilton' all that much: I do prefer the smaller facilities, but, I
- am sad to admit, clean counts at my age.). My nose did not have
- to venture towards the floor to be aware that the Hotel Filtha
- delphia was engaging in top secret exobiological government
- experiments bent on determining their communicability and infec
- tion factor.
-
- The top floor of the Hotel Filthadelphia - the 18th - was the
- place for HOPE, except the elevator door wouldn't open. The
- inner door did, but even with the combined strength of my person
- al crowbar (a New York defensive measure only; I never use it at
- home) and three roughians with a bad case of Mexican Claustropho
- bia, we never got the door open.
-
- The guard in the lobby was a big help.
-
- "Try again."
-
- Damned if he didn't know his elevators and I emerged into the
- pre-HOPE chaos of preparing for a conference.
-
- About 100 hackers lounged around in varying forms of disarray -
- Hey Rop!
-
- Rop Gongrijjp editor of the Dutch Hacktic is a both a friend and
- an occasional source of stimulating argument. Smart as a whip, I
- don't always agree with him, though, the above-ground security
- types ought to talk to him for a clear, concise and coherent
- description of the whys and wherefores of hacking.
-
- Hey Emmanuel! Hey Strat! Hey Garbage Heap! Hey Erikb! Hey to
- lots of folks. Is that you Supernigger? And Julio? I was sur
- prised. I knew a lot more of these guys that I thought I did.
- Some indicted, some unindicted, some mere sympathizers and other
- techno-freaks who enjoy a weekend with other techno-freaks.
- Security dudes - get hip! Contact your local hacker and make
- friends. You'll be glad you did.
-
- >From behind - got me. My adrenaline went into super-saturated
- mode as I was grabbed. I turned and it was . . . Ben. Ben is a
- hugger. "I just wanted to hug you," he said sweetly but without
- the humorous sexually deviant connotation that occurred during
- Novocain's offer to let Phil Zimmerman sleep with him in Las
- Vegas.
-
- I smiled a crooked smile. "Yeah, right." Woodstock '94 was a
- mere 120 miles away . . .maybe there was a psychic connection.
- But Ben was being sincere. He was hugging everyone. Everyone.
- At 17, he really believes that hugging and hacking are next to
- Godliness. Boy does he have surprise coming the first time his
- mortgage is late. Keep hugging while you have the chance, Ben.
-
- Assorted cases of Zima (the disgusting Polish is-this-really-lime
- flavored beer of choice by those without taste buds) appeared,
- but anyone over the age of 21 drank Bud. What about the 12 year
- olds drinking? And the 18 year olds? And the 16 year olds?
-
- "Rop, I don't think you need to give the hotel an excuse to bust
- you guys outta here." Me, fatherly and responsible? Stranger
- things have happened. The beer was gone. I'm not a teetotaler,
- but I didn't want my weekend going up in flames because of some
- trashed 16 year old puking on an Irani ambassador in the lobby.
- No reason to test fate.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Nothing worked, but that's normal.
-
- Rop had set up HEU (Hacking at the End of the Universe) in
- Holland last year with a single length of 800m ethernet. (That's
- meter for the Americans: about 2625 ft.) HOPE, though was dif
- ferent. The Hotel Filthadelphia's switchboard and phone systems
- crashed every half hour or so which doesn't do a lot for the
- health of 28.8 slip lines.
-
- The object of the exercise was seemingly simple: plug together
- about 20 terminals into a terminal server connected to Hope.Com
- and let 'em go at it. Provide 'net access and, to the lucky
- winner of the crack-the-hopenet server (root) the keys to a 1994
- Corvette!
-
- You heard it right! For breaking into root of their allegedly
- secure server, the folks at 2600 are giving away keys to a 1994
- Corvette. They don't know where the car is, just the keys. But
- they will give you the car's last known location . . . or was it
- $50 in cash?
-
- Erikb - Chris Goggans - showed up late Friday night in disguise:
- a baseball cap over his nearly waist length dirty blond hair.
- "He's here!" one could hear being muttered. "He had the balls to
- show up!" "He's gonna get his ass kicked to a pulp." "So you
- did come . . . I was afraid they'd intimidated you to stay in
- Texas."
-
- No way! "Why tell the enemy what your plans are." Even the 50's-
- something ex-amphetamine-dealer turned reseller of public-records
- Bootleg didn't know Goggans was going to be there. But the
- multiple fans of Erikb, (a strong resemblance to Cyber Christ if
- he do say so himself) were a-mighty proud to see him.
-
- This stunning Asian girl with skin too soft to touch (maybe she
- was 14, maybe she was 25) looked at Erikb by the message board.
- "You're," she pointed in disbelief "Erikb?" Chris nods, getting
- arrogantly used to the respectful adulation. Yeah, that's me, to
- which the lady/girl/woman instantly replied, "You're such an
- asshole." Smile, wide smile, hug, kiss, big kiss. Erikb revels
- in the attention and hundreds of horny hackers jealously look on.
-
- Friday night was more of an experience - a Baba Ram Dass-like Be
- Here Now experience - with mellow being the operative word. The
- hotel had apparently sacrificed 20,000 square feet of its pent
- house to hackers, but it was obvious to see they really didn't
- give a damn if the whole floor got trashed. Ceiling panels
- dripped from their 12 foot lofts making a scorched Shuttle under
- belly look pristine. What a cesspool! I swear nothing had been
- done to the decorative environs since the day Kennedy was shot.
- But kudos to Emmanuel for finding a centrally located cesspool
- that undoubtedly gave him one hell of a deal. I think it would be
- a big mistake to hold a hacker conference at the Plaza or some
- such snooty overly-self-indulgent denizen of the rich.
-
- Filth sort of lends credibility to an event that otherwise seeks
- notoriety.
-
- I didn't want to take up too much of Emmanuel's and Rop's time -
- they were in setup panic - so it was off to the netherworld until
- noon. That's when a civilized Con begins.
-
- * * * * *
-
- I dared to go outside; it was about 11AM and I was in search of
- the perfect New York breakfast: a greasy spoon that serves coffee
- as tough as tree bark and a catatonia inducing egg and bacon
- sandwich. Munch, munch, munch on that coffee.
-
- I'd forgotten how many beggars hang out on the corner of 33rd and
- 7th, all armed with the same words, "how about a handout, Winn?"
- How the hell do they know my name? "Whatever you give will come
- back to you double and triple . . . please man, I gotta eat." It
- is sad, but John Paul Getty I ain't.
-
- As I munched on my coffee and sipped my runny egg-sandwich I
- noticed that right in front of the runny-egg-sandwich place sat a
- Ford Econoline van. Nice van. Nice phone company van. What are
- they doing here? Oh, yeah, the hackers need lines and the switch
- board is down. Of course, the phone company is here. But,
- what's that? Hello? A Hacker playing in the phone van? I recog
- nize you! You work with Emmanuel. How? He's robbing it. Not
- robbing, maybe borrowing.
-
- The ersatz telephone van could have fooled anyone - even me, a
- color blind quasi-techno-weanie to yell "Yo! Ma Bell!" But, upon
- not-too-closer inspection, the TPC (The Phone Company) van was in
- fact a 2600 van - straight from the minds of Emmanuel and
- friends. Impeccable! The telephone bell in a circle logo is, in
- this case, connected via cable to a hacker at a keyboard. The
- commercial plates add an additional air of respectability to the
- whole image. It works.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Up to HOPE - egg sandwich and all.
-
- The keynote speech was to be provided courtesy of the Man in
- Blue. Scheduled for noon, things were getting off to a late
- start. The media (who were there in droves, eat your heart out
- CSI) converged on the MIB to see who and why someone of his
- stature would (gasp!) appear/speak at a funky-downtown hotel
- filled with the scourges of Cyberspace. I didn't see if Ben
- hugged the MIB, but I would understand if he didn't. Few people
- knew him or suspected what size of Jim-Carey-MASK arsenal might
- suddenly appear if a passive hug were accidentally interpreted as
- being too aggressive. The MIB is imposing and Ben too shy.
-
- The media can ask some dumb questions and write some dumb arti
- cles because they spend 12 1/2 minutes trying to understand an
- entire culture. Can't do that fellows!
-
- The MIB, though, knows hackers and is learning about them more
- and more; and since he is respectable, the media asks him about
- hackers. What are hackers? Why are YOU here, Mr. MIB?
-
- "Because they have a lot to offer. They are the future," the Man
- In Blue said over and over. Interview after interview - how time
- flies when you're having fun - and the lights and cameras are
- rolling from NBC and PIX and CNN and assorted other channels and
- magazines. At 12:55 chaos had not settled down to regimented
- disorganization and the MIB was getting antsy. After all, he was
- a military man and 55 minutes off schedule: Egad! Take charge.
-
- The MIB stood on a chair and hollered to the 700+ hacker phreaks
- in the demonstration ballroom, "Hey! It's starting. Let's go the
- theater and get rocking! Follow me." He leaned over to me: "Do
- you know where the room is?"
-
- "Sure, follow me."
-
- "Everyone follow, c'mon," yelled the MIB. "I'm going to get
- started in exactly three minutes," and three minutes he meant.
- Despite the fact that I got lost in a hallway and had hundreds of
- followers following my missteps and the MIB yelling at me for
- getting lost in a room with only two doors, we did make the main
- hall, and within 90 seconds he took over the podium and began
- speaking.
-
- "I bet you've always wanted to ask a spy a few questions. Here's
- your chance. But let me say that the United States intelligence
- community needs help and you guys are part of the solution." The
- MIB was impeccably dressed in his pin stripe with only traces of
- a Hackers 80 T-shirt leaking through his starched white dress
- shirt. The MIB is no less than Robert Steele, ex-CIA type spy,
- senior civilian in Marine Corps Intelligence and now the Presi
- dent of Open Source Solutions, Inc.
-
- He got these guys (and gals) going. Robert doesn't mince words
- and that's why as he puts it, he's "been adopted by the hackers."
- At his OSS conferences he has successfully juxtaposed hackers and
- senior KGB officials who needed full time security during their
- specially arranged 48 hour visa to Washington, DC. He brought
- Emmanuel and Rop and clan to his show and since their agendas
- aren't all that different, a camaraderie was formed.
-
- Robert MIB Steele believes that the current intelligence machin
- ery is inadequate to meet the challenges of today's world. Over
- 80% of the classified information contained with the Byzantine
- bowels of the government is actually available from open sources.
- We need to realize that the future is more of an open book than
- ever before.
-
- We classify newspaper articles from Peru in the incredibly naive
- belief that only Pentagon spooks subscribe. We classify BBC
- video tapes from the UK with the inane belief that no one will
- watch it if it so stamped. We classify $4 Billion National
- Reconnaissance Office satellite generated street maps of Calle,
- Colombia when anyone with an IQ only slightly above a rock can
- get the same one from the tourist office. And that's where
- hackers come in.
-
- "You guys are a national resource. Too bad everyone's so scared
- of you." Applause from everywhere. The MIB knows how to massage
- a crowd. Hackers, according to Steele, and to a certain extent I
- agree, are the truth tellers "in a constellation of complex
- systems run amok and on the verge of catastrophic collapse."
-
- Hackers are the greatest sources of open source information in
- the world. They have the navigation skills, they have the time,
- and they have the motivation, Robert says. Hackers peruse the
- edges of technology and there is little that will stop them in
- their efforts. The intelligence community should take advantage
- of the skills and lessons that the hackers have to teach us, yet
- as we all know, political and social oppositions keep both sides
- (who are really more similar then dissimilar) from talking.
-
- "Hackers put a mirror up to the technical designers who have
- built the networks, and what they see, they don't like. Hackers
- have shown us all the chinks in the armor of a house without
- doors or windows. The information infrastructure is fragile and
- we had better do something about it now; before it's too late."
-
- Beat them at their own game, suggests Steele. Keep the doors of
- Cyberspace open, and sooner or later, the denizens of the black
- holes of information will have to sooner or late realize that the
- cat is out of the bag.
-
- Steele educated the Hacker crowd in a way new to them: he treat
- ed them with respect, and in turn he opened a channel of dialog
- that few above ground suit-types have ever envisioned. Steele
- works at the source.
-
- HOPE had begun and Robert had set the tone.
-
- * * * * *
-
- The day was long. Dogged by press, hackers rolled over so the
- reporters could tickle their stomachs on camera. Despite their
- public allegations that the media screws it up and never can get
- the story right, a camera is like a magnet. The New York Times
- printed an article about HOPE so off the wall I wondered if the
- reporter had actually been there. Nonetheless, the crowds fol
- lowed the cameras, the cameras followed the crowds, and the
- crowds parted like the Red Sea. But these were mighty colorful
- crowds.
-
- We all hear of that prototypical image of the acne faced, Jolt-
- drinking, pepperoni downing nerdish teenager who has himself
- locked in the un-air-conditioned attic of his parents' half
- million dollar house from the time school gets out till the sun
- rises. Wrongo security-breath. Yeah, there's that component, but
- I was reminded of the '80's, the early '80's by a large percent
- age of the crowd.
-
- Purple hair was present but scarce, and I swear on a stack of
- 2600's that Pat from Saturday Night Live was there putting every
- one's hormonal guess-machines to the test. But what cannot help
- but capture one's attention is a 40 pin integrated circuit in
- serted into the shaved side skull of an otherwise clean-cut
- Mohawk haircut.
-
- The story goes that Chip Head went to a doctor and had a pair of
- small incisions placed in his skull which would hold the leads
- from the chip. A little dab of glue and in a few days the skin
- would grow back to hold the 40 pins in the natural way; God's
- way.
-
- There was a time that I thought ponytails were 'out' and passe,
- but I thought wrong. Mine got chopped off in roughly 1976 down
- to shoulder length which remained for another six years, but half
- of the HOPE audience is the reason for wide spread poverty in the
- hair salon industry.
-
- Nothing wrong with long, styled, inventive, outrageous hair as
- long as it's clean; and with barely an exception, such was the
- case. In New York it's not too hard to be perceived as clean,
- especially when you consider the frame of reference. Nothing is
- too weird.
-
- The energy level of HOPE was much higher than the almost lethar
- gic (but good!) DefCon II. People move in a great hurry, perhaps
- to convey the sense of importance to others, or just out of
- frenetic hyperactivity. Hackers hunched over their keyboards -
- yet with a sense of urgency and purpose. Quiet yet highly animat
- ed conversations in all corners. HOPE staff endlessly pacing
- throughout the event with their walkie-talkies glued to their
- ears.
-
- Not many suit types. A handful at best, and what about the Feds?
- I was accosted a few times for being a Fed, but word spread: no
- Fed, no bust. Where were the Feds? In the lobby. The typical
- NYPD cop has the distinctive reputation of being overweight
- especially when he wearing two holsters - one for the gun and one
- for the Italian sausage. Perpetually portrayed as donut dunking
- dodo's, some New York cops' asses are referred to as the Fourth
- Precinct and a few actually moonlight as sofas.
-
- So rather than make a stink, (NY cops hate to make a scene) the
- lobby of the Hotel Filthadelphia was home to the Coffee Clutch
- for Cops. About a half dozen of them made their profound
- presence known by merely spending their day consuming mass quan
- tities of questionable ingestibles, but that was infinitely
- preferable to hanging out on the 18th floor. The hackers weren't
- causing any trouble, the cops knew that, so why push it. Hackers
- don't fight, they hack. Right?
-
- After hours of running hours behind schedule, the HOPE conference
- was in first place for disorganized, with DefCon II not far
- behind. Only with 1000 people to keep happy and in the right
- rooms, chaos reigns sooner. The free Unix sessions and Pager
- session and open microphone bitch session and the unadulterated
- true history of 2600 kept audiences of several hundred hankering
- for more - hour after hour.
-
- Over by the cellular hacking demonstrations, I ran into a hacker
- I had written about: Julio, from the almost defunct Masters of
- Destruction. Julio had gone state's evidence and was prepared to
- testify against MoD ring leader Mark Abene (aka Phiber Optik) but
- once Mark pled guilty to enough crimes to satisfy the Feds, Julio
- was off the hook with mere probation. Good guy, sworn off of
- hacking. Cell phones are so much more interesting.
-
- However, while standing around with Erikb and a gaggle of Cyber
- Christ wanna-bes, Julio and his friend (who was the size of Texas
- on two legs) began a pushing match with Goggans. "You fucking
- narc red-neck son of a bitch." Goggans helped build the case
- against the MoD and didn't make a lot of friends in the process.
-
- The shoving and shouldering reminded me of slam dancing from
- decades past, but these kids are too young to have taken part in
- the social niceties of deranged high speed propulsion and revul
- sion on the dance floor. So it was a straight out pushing match,
- which found Erikb doing his bloody best to avoid. Julio and pal
- kept a'coming and Erikb kept avoiding. It took a dozen of us to
- get in the middle and see that Julio was escorted to the eleva
- tors.
-
- Julio said Corrupt, also of the MoD, was coming down to HOPE,
- too. Corrupt has been accused of mugging drug dealers to finance
- his computer escapades, and was busted along with the rest of the
- MoD gang. The implied threat was taken seriously, but, for
- whatever reason, Corrupt never showed. It is said that the
- majority of the hacking community distances itself from him; he's
- not good for the collective reputation. So much for hacker
- fights. All is calm.
-
- The evening sessions continued and continued with estimates of as
- late as 4AM being bandied about. Somewhere around 1:00AM I ran
- into Bootleg in the downstairs bar. Where was everybody? Not
- upstairs. Not in the bar. I saw a Garbage Heap in the street
- outside (now that's a double entendre) and then Goggans popped up
- from the door of the Blarney Stone, a syndicated chain of low-
- class Irish bars that serve fabulously thick hot sandwiches.
-
- "We're about to get thrown out."
-
- "From the Blarney Stone? That's impossible. Drunks call the
- phone booths home!"
-
- Fifty or so hacker/phreaks had migrated to the least likely, most
- anachronistic location one could imagine. A handful of drunken
- sots leaning over their beers on a stain encrusted wooden breed
- ing ground for salmonella. A men's room that hasn't seen the
- fuzzy end of a brush for the best part of a century made Turkish
- toilets appear refreshingly clean. And they serve food here.
-
- I didn't look like a hacker so I asked the bartender, "Big crowd,
- eh?"
-
- The barrel chested beer bellied barman nonchalantly replied,
- "nah. Pretty usual." He cleaned a glass so thoroughly the water
- marks stood out plainly.
-
- "Really? This much action on a Saturday night on a dark side
- street so questionably safe that Manhattan's Mugger Society posts
- warnings?"
-
- "Yup."
-
- "So," I continued. "These hackers come here a lot?"
-
- "Sure do," he said emphatically.
-
- "Wow. I didn't know that. So this is sort of a hacker bar, you
- might say?"
-
- "Exactly. Every Saturday night they come in and raise a little
- hell."
-
- With a straight face I somehow managed to thank the confused
- barman for his help and for the next four hours learned that
- socially, hackers of today are no different than many if not most
- of us were in our late teens ad early twenties. We laughed and
- joked and so do they - but there is more computer talk. We
- decried the political status of our day as they do theirs, albeit
- they with less fervor and more resignation. The X-Generation
- factor: most of them give little more than a tiny shit about
- things they view as being totally outside their control, so why
- bother. Live for today.
-
- Know they enemy. Robert hung in with me intermingling and argu
- ing and debating and learning from them, and they from us.
- Hackers aren't the enemy - their knowledge is - and they are not
- the exclusive holders of that information. Information Warfare
- is about capabilities, and no matter who possesses that capabili
- ty, there ought to be a corresponding amount respect.
-
- Indeed, rather than adversaries, hackers could well become gov
- ernment allies and national security assets in an intense inter
- national cyber-conflict. In the LoD/MoD War of 1990-91, one
- group of hackers did help authorities. Today many hackers assist
- professional organizations, governments in the US and overseas -
- although very quietly. 'Can't be seen consorting with the
- enemy.' Is hacking from an Army or Navy or NATO base illegal?
- Damned if I know, but more than one Cyber Christ-like character
- makes a tidy sum providing hands-on hacking education to the
- brass in Europe.
-
- Where these guys went after 5AM I don't know, but I was one of
- the first to be back at the HOPE conference later that day; 12:30
- PM Sunday.
-
- * * * * *
-
- The Nazi Hunters were out in force.
-
- "The Neo-Nazi skinheads are trying to start another Holocaust." A
- piercing, almost annoying voice stabbed right through the crowds.
- "Their racist propaganda advocates killing Jews and blacks. They
- have to be stopped, now."
-
- Mortechai Levy (I'll call him Morty) commanded the attention of a
- couple dozen hackers. Morty was a good, emotional, riveting
- shouter. "These cowardly bastards have set up vicious hate call
- lines in over 50 cities. The messages advocate burning syna
- gogues, killing minorities and other violence. These phones have
- to be stopped!"
-
- The ever-present leaflet from Morty's Jewish Defense Organization
- asked for help from the 2600 population.
-
- "Phone freaks you must use your various assorted bag of
- tricks to shut these lines down. No cowardly sputterings
- about 'free speech' for these fascist scum."
-
- The headline invited the hacker/phreak community to:
-
- "Let's Shut Down 'Dial-A-Nazi'!!!"
-
- Morty was looking for political and technical support from a band
- of nowhere men and women who largely don't know where they're
- going much less care about an organized political response to
- someone elses cause. He wasn't making a lot of headway, and he
- must have know that he would walk right into the anarchist's
- bible: the 1st amendment.
-
- The battle lines had been set. Morty wanted to see the Nazis
- censored and hackers are absolute freedom of speechers by any
- measure. Even Ben sauntering over for a group hug did little to
- defuse the mounting tension.
-
- I couldn't help but play mediator. Morty was belligerently loud
- and being deafeningly intrusive which affected the on-going ses
- sions. To tone it down some, we nudged Morty and company off to
- the side and occupied a corner of thread bare carpet, leaning
- against a boorish beige wall that had lost its better epidermis.
-
- The heated freedom of speech versus the promotion of racial
- genocide rancor subdued little even though we were all buns side
- down. I tried to get a little control of the situation.
-
- "Morty. Answer me this so we know where you're coming from. You
- advocate the silencing of the Nazis, right?
-
- "They're planning a new race war; they have to be stopped."
-
- "So you want them silenced. You say their phones should be
- stopped and that the hackers should help."
-
- "Call that number and they'll tell you that Jews and blacks
- should be killed and then they . . ."
-
- "Morty. OK, you want to censor the Nazis. Yes or No."
-
- "Yes."
-
- "OK, I can understand that. The question really is, and I need
- your help here, what is the line of censorship that you advocate.
- Where is your line of legal versus censored?"
-
- A few more minutes of political diatribe and then he got to the
- point. "Any group with a history of violence should be censored
- and stopped." A little imagination and suddenly the whole planet
- is silenced. We need a better line, please. "Hate group, Nazis,
- people who advocate genocide . . . they should be
- silenced . . . ."
-
- "So," I analyzed. "You want to establish censorship criteria
- based upon subjective interpretation. Whose interpretation?"
- My approach brought nods of approval.
-
- One has to admire Morty and his sheer audacity and tenacity and
- how much he strenuously and single-mindedly drives his points
- home. He didn't have the ideal sympathetic audience, but he
- wouldn't give an inch. Not an inch. A little self righteousness
- goes a long way; boisterous extremism grows stale. It invites
- punitive retorts and teasing, or in counter-culture jargon,
- "fucking with their heads."
-
- Morty (perhaps for justifiable reasons) was totally inflexible
- and thus more prone to verbal barbing. "You're just a Jewish
- racist. Racism in reverse," accused one jocular but definitely
- lower middle class hacker with an accent thicker than all of
- Brooklyn.
-
- Incoming Scuds! Look out! Morty went nuts and as they say,
- freedom of speech ends when my fists impacts upon your nose.
- Morty came dangerously close to crossing that line. Whoah,
- Morty, whoah. He's just fucking with your head. The calm-down
- brigade did its level best to keep these two mortals at opposite
- ends of the room.
-
- "You support that Neo Nazi down there; you're as bad as the
- rest!" Morty said. "See what I have to tolerate. I know him,
- we've been keeping track of him and he hangs out with the son of
- the Grand Wizard of Nazi Oz." The paranoid train got on the
- tracks.
-
- "Do you really know the Big Poo-bah of Hate?" I asked the hacker
- under assault and now under protective custody.
-
- "Yeah," he said candidly. "He's some dick head who hates every
- one. Real jerk."
-
- "So what about you said to Morty over there?"
-
- "Just fucking with his head. He gets a little extreme." So we
- had in our midst the Al Sharpton of the Jewish faith. Ballsy.
- Since Morty takes Saturday's off by religious law, he missed the
- press cavalcade, but as a radical New York fixture, the media
- probably didn't mind too much.
-
- I was off to sessions, Morty found new audiences as they came off
- the elevators, and the band played on.
-
- * * * * *
-
- In my humble 40-something opinion, the best session of HOPE was
- the one on social engineering.
-
- The panel consisted of only Emmanuel, Supernigger (social engi
- neer par excellence) and Cheshire Catalyst. The first bits were
- pretty staid dry conventional conference (ConCon) oriented, but
- nonetheless, not the kind of info that you expect to find William
- H. Murray, Executive Consultant handing out.
-
- The best social engineers make friends of their victims. Remem
- ber: you're playing a role. Think Remington Steele.
-
- Schmooze! "Hey, Jack did you get a load of the blond on Stern
- last night?"
-
- Justifiable anger: "Your department has caused nothing but head
- aches. These damn new computers/phones/technology just don't
- work like the old ones. Now either you help me now or I'm going
- all the way to Shellhorn and we'll what he says about these kinds
- of screwups." A contrite response is the desired effect.
-
- Butt headed bosses: "Hey, my boss is all over my butt, can you
- help me out?"
-
- Management hatred: "I'm sitting here at 3PM working while man
- agement is on their yachts. Can you tell me . . .?"
-
- Giveaways: "Did you know that so and so is having an affair with
- so and so? It's true, I swear. By the way, can you tell me how
- to . . ."
-
- Empathy: "I'm new, haven't been to the training course and they
- expect me to figure this out all by myself. It's not fair."
-
- Thick Accent: "Hi. Dees computes haf big no wurk. Eet no makedah
- passurt. Cunu help? Ah, tanku." Good for a quick exchange and a
- quick good-bye. Carefully done, people want you off the phone
- quickly.
-
- Billsf, the almost 40 American phreak who now calls Amsterdam
- home was wiring up Supernigger's real live demonstration of
- social engineering against Sprint. A dial tone came over the PA
- system followed by the pulses to 411.
-
- "Directory Assistance," the operator's male voice was squeezed
- into a mere three kilohertz bandwidth.
-
- Suddenly, to the immense pleasure of the audience, an ear-split
- ting screech a thousand times louder than finger nails on a chalk
- board not only belched across the sound system but caused instant
- bleeding in the ears of the innocent but now deaf operator. .
- Billsf sheepishly grinned. "Just trying to wire up a mute
- button."
-
- Three hundred people in unison responded: "It doesn't work." No
- shit.
-
- While Billsf feverishly worked to regain his reputation, Super
- nigger explained what he was going to do. The phone companies
- have a service, ostensibly for internal use, called a C/NA. Sort
- of a reverse directory when you have the number but want to know
- who the number belongs to and from whence it comes. You can
- understand that this is not the sort of feature that the phone
- company wants to have in the hands of a generation of kids who
- are so apathetic that they don't even know they don't give a
- shit. Nonetheless, the access to this capability is through an
- 800 number and a PIN.
-
- Supernigger was going to show us how to acquire such privileged
- information. Live. "When you get some phone company person as
- dumb as a bolt on the other end, and you know a few buzz words.
- you convince them that it is in their best interest and that they
- are supposed to give you the information."
-
- "I've never done this in front of an audience before, so give me
- three tries," he explained to an anxiously foaming at the mouth
- crowd. No one took a cheap pot shot at him: tacit acceptance of
- his rules.
-
- Ring. Ring.
-
- "Operations. Mary."
-
- "Mary. Hi, this is Don Brewer in social engineering over at CIS,
- how's it going?" Defuse.
-
- "Oh, fine. I guess."
-
- "I know, I hate working Sundays. Been busy?"
-
- "Nah, no more. Pretty calm. How can I help you?"
-
- "I'm doing a verification and I got systems down. I just need
- the C/NA. You got it handy?" Long pause.
-
- "Sure, lemme look. Ah, it's 313.424.0900." 700 notebooks ap
- peared out of nowhere, accompanied by the sound of 700 pens
- writing down a now-public phone number.
-
- "Got it. Thanks." The audience is gasping at the stunningly
- stupid gullibility of Mary. But quiet was essential to the
- mission.
-
- "Here's the PIN number while we're at it." Double gasp. She's
- offering the supposedly super secret and secure PIN number? Was
- this event legal? Had Supernigger gone over the line?
-
- "No, CIS just came up. Thanks anyway."
-
- "Sure you don't need it?"
-
- "Yeah. Thanks. Bye." Click. No need to press the issue. PIN
- access might be worth a close look from the next computer DA
- wanna-be.
-
- An instant shock wave of cacophonous approval worked its way
- throughout the 750 seat ballroom in less than 2 microseconds.
- Supernigger had just successfully set himself as a publicly
- ordained Cyber Christ of Social Engineering. His white robes
- were on the way. Almost a standing ovation lasted for the better
- part of a minute by everyone but the narcs in the audience. I
- don't know if they were telco or Feds of whatever, but I do know
- that they were the stupidest narcs in the city of New York. This
- pair of dour thirty something Republicans had sphincters so tight
- you could mine diamonds out of their ass.
-
- Arms defiantly and defensively crossed, they were stupid enough
- to sit in the third row center aisle. They never cracked a smile
- at some of the most entertaining performances I have seen outside
- of the giant sucking sound that emanates from Ross Perot's ears.
-
- Agree or disagree with hacking and phreaking, this was funny and
- unrehearsed ad lib material. Fools. So, for fun, I crawled over
- the legs of the front row and sat in the aisle, a bare eight feet
- from the narcs. Camera in hand I extended the 3000mm tele-photo
- lens which can distinguish the color of a mosquitoes underwear
- from a kilometer and pointed it in their exact direction. Their
- childhood acne scars appeared the depth of the Marianna Trench.
- Click, and the flash went off into their eyes, which at such a
- short distance should have caused instant blindness. But noth
- ing. No reaction. Nada. Cold as ice. Rather disappointing, but
- now we know that almost human looking narc-bots have been per
- fected and are being beta tested at hacker cons.
-
- Emmanuel Goldstein is very funny. Maybe that's why Ed Markey and
- he get along so well. His low key voice rings of a gentler,
- kinder sarcasm but has a youthful charm despite that he is 30-
- something himself.
-
- "Sometimes you have to call back. Sometimes you have to call
- over and over to get what you want. You have to keep in mind
- that the people at the other end of the phone are generally not
- as intelligent as a powered down computer." He proceeded to
- prove the point.
-
- Ring ring,
-
- "Directory Assistance."
-
- "Hi."
-
- "Hi."
-
- "Hi."
-
- "Can I help you."
-
- "Yes."
-
- Pause.
-
- "Hello?"
-
- "Hi."
-
- "Hi."
-
- "Can I help you.:
-
- "OK."
-
- Shhhhh. Ssshhh. Quiet. Shhhh. Too damned funny for words.
-
- "Directory Assistance."
-
- "I need some information."
-
- "How can I help you."
-
- "Is this where I get numbers?"
-
- "What number would you like?"
-
- "Information."
-
- "This is information."
-
- "You said directory assistance."
-
- "This is."
-
- "But I need information."
-
- "What information do you need?"
-
- "For information."
-
- "This is information."
-
- "What's the number?"
-
- "For what?"
-
- "Information."
-
- "This is directory assistance."
-
- "I need the number for information."
-
- Pause. Pause.
-
- "What number do you want?"
-
- "For information."
-
- Pause. Guffaws, some stifled, some less so. Funny stuff.
-
- "Hold on please."
-
- Pause.
-
- "Supervisor. May I help you?"
-
- "Hi."
-
- "Hi."
-
- Pause.
-
- "Can I help you?"
-
- "I need the number for information."
-
- "This is directory assistance."
-
- "Hi."
-
- "Hi."
-
- "What's the number for information?"
-
- "This is information."
-
- "What about directory assistance?"
-
- "This is directory assistance."
-
- "But I need information."
-
- "This is information."
-
- "Oh, OK. What's the number for information?"
-
- Pause.
-
- "Ah 411."
-
- "That's it?"
-
- "No. 555.1212 works too."
-
- "So there's two numbers for information?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Which one is better?" How this audience kept its cool was
- beyond me. Me and my compatriots were beside ourselves.
-
- Pause.
-
- "Neither."
-
- "Then why are there two?"
-
- Pause.
-
- "I don't know."
-
- "OK. So I can use 411 or 555.1212."
-
- "That's right."
-
- "And which one should I use?"
-
- Pause.
-
- "411 is faster." Huge guffaws. Ssshhhh. Ssshhhh..
-
- "Oh. What about the ones?"
-
- "Ones?"
-
- "The ones."
-
- "Which ones?"
-
- "The ones at the front of the number."
-
- "Oh, those ones. You don't need ones. Just 411 or 555.1212.."
-
- "My friends say they get to use ones." Big laugh. Shhhhhh.
-
- "That's only for long distance."
-
- "To where?" How does he keep a straight face?
-
- Pause.
-
- "If you wanted 914 information you'd use a one."
-
- "If I wanted to go where?"
-
- "To 914?"
-
- "Where's that?"
-
- "Westchester."
-
- "Oh, Westchester. I have friends there."
-
- Pause.
-
- "Hello?"
-
- "Yes?"
-
- "So I use ones?"
-
- "Yes. A one for the 914 area."
-
- "How?"
-
- Pause.
-
- "Put a one before the number."
-
- "Like 1914. Right?"
-
- "1914.555.1212."
-
- "All of those numbers?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "That's three ones."
-
- "That's the area code."
-
- "I've heard about those. They confuse me." Rumbling chuckles
- and laughs throughout the hall.
-
- Pause.
-
- She slowly and carefully explained what an area code is to the
- howlingly irreverent amusement of the entire crowd except for the
- fool narcs.
-
- "Thanks. So I can call information and get a number?"
-
- "That's right."
-
- "And there's two numbers I can use?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "So I got two numbers on one call?"
-
- "Yeah . . ."
-
- "Wow. Thanks. Have a nice day."
-
- * * * * *
-
- Comments heard around HOPE.
-
- Rop Gongrijjp, Hacktic: "The local phone companies use their own
- social engineers when they can't get their own people to tell
- them what they need to know."
-
- Sprint is using what they consider to be the greatest access
- mechanism since the guillotine. For all of us road warriors out
- there who are forever needing long distance voice service from
- the Whattownisthis, USA airport, Sprint thinks they have a better
- mousetrap. No more messing finger entry. No more pass-codes or
- PIN's.
-
- I remember at the Washington National Airport last summer I was
- using my Cable and Wireless long distance access card and entered
- the PIN and to my surprise, an automated voice came on and said,
- "Sorry, you entered your PIN with the wrong finger. Please try
- again."
-
- Sprint says they've solved this thorny cumbersome problem with a
- service called "The Voice Fone Card". Instead of memorizing
- another 64 digit long PIN, you just speak into the phone: "Hi,
- it's me. Give me dial tone or give me death." The voice recog
- nition circuits masturbate for a while to determine if it's
- really you or not.
-
- Good idea. But according to Strat, not a good execution. Strat
- found that someone performing a poor imitation of his voice was
- enough to break through the front door with ease. Even a poor
- tape recording played back over a cheap cassette speaker was
- sufficient to get through Sprint's new whiz-banger ID system.
-
- Strat laughed that Sprint officials said in defense, "We didn't
- say it was secure: just convenient."
-
- Smart. Oh, so smart.
-
- * * * * *
-
- "If my generation of the late 60's and early 70's had had the
- same technology you guys have there never would have been an
- 80's." This was how I opened my portion of the author's panel.
-
- The authors panel was meant to give HOPE hackers insight into how
- they are perceived from the so-called outside. I think the
- session achieved that well, and I understand the videos will be
- available soon.
-
- The question of electronic transvestites on AOL came up to every
- one's enjoyment, and all of us on the panel retorted with a big,
- "So what?" If you have cyber-sex with someone on the 'Net and
- enjoy it, what the hell's the difference? Uncomfortable butt
- shifting on chairs echoed how the largely male audience likely
- feels about male-male sex regardless of distance.
-
- "Imagine," I kinda said, "that is a few years you have a body
- suit which not only can duplicate your moves exactly, but can
- touch you in surprisingly private ways when your suit is connect
- ed to another. In this VR world, you select the gorgeous woman
- of choice to virtually occupy the other suit, and then the two of
- you go for it. How do you react when you discover that like
- Lola, 'I know what I am, and what I am is a man and so's Lola.'"
- Muted acknowledgment that unisex may come to mean something
- entirely different in the not too distant future.
-
- "Ooh, ooh, please call on me." I don't mean to be insulting, but
- purely for identification purposes, the woman behind the voice
- bordered on five foot four and four hundred pounds. Her bathtub
- had stretch marks.
-
- I never called on her but that didn't stop her.
-
- "I want to know what you think of how the democratization of the
- internet is affected by the differences between the government
- and the people who think that freedom of the net is the most
- important thing and that government is fucked but for freedom to
- be free you have to have the democracy behind you which means
- that the people and the government need to, I mean, you know, and
- get along but the sub culture of the hackers doesn't help the
- government but hackers are doing their thing which means that the
- democracy will not work , now I know that people are laughing and
- giggling (which they were in waves) but I'm serious about this
- and I know that I have a bad case of hypomania but the medication
- is working so it's not a bad as it could be. What do you think?"
-
- I leaned forward into the microphone and gave the only possible
- answer. "I dunno. Next." The thunderous round of applause
- which followed my in-depth response certainly suggested that my
- answer was correct. Not politically, not technically, but anar
- chistically. Flexibility counts.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HOPE was attended by around one thousands folks, and the Hotel
- Filthadelphia still stands. (Aw shucks.)
-
- My single biggest complaint was not that the schedules slipped by
- an hour or two or three; sessions at conferences like this keep
- going if the audience is into them and they are found to be
- educational and productive. So an hour session can run into two
- if the material and presentations fit the mood. In theory a
- boring session could find itself kama kazi'd into early melt-down
- if you have the monotone bean counter from hell explaining the
- distributed statistical means of aggregate synthetic transverse
- digitization in composite analogous integral fruminations.
- (Yeah, this audience would buy off on that in a hot minute.) But
- there were not any bad sessions. The single track plenary style
- attracted hundred of hackers for every event. Emmanuel and
- friends picked their panels and speakers well. When dealing with
- sponge-like minds who want to soak up all they can learn, even in
- somewhat of a party atmosphere, the response is bound to be good.
-
- My single biggest complaint was the registration nightmare. I'd
- rather go the DMV and stand in line there than get tagged by the
- seemingly infinite lines at HOPE. At DefCon early registration
- was encouraged and the sign up verification kept simple.
-
- For some reason I cannot thoroughly (or even partially) fathom, a
- two step procedure was chosen. Upon entering, and before the
- door narcs would let anyone in, each attendee had to be assigned
- a piece of red cardboard with a number on it. For the first day
- you could enter the 'exhibits' and auditorium without challenge.
- But by Day 2 one was expected to wait in line for the better part
- of a week, have a digital picture taken on a computer tied to a
- CCD camera, and then receive a legitimate HOPE photo-ID card.
- What a mess. I don't have to beat them up on it too bad; they
- know the whole scheme was rotten to the core.
-
- I waited till near the end of Day 2 when the lines were gone and
- the show was over. That's when I got my Photo ID card. I used
- the MIB's photo ID card the rest of the time.
-
- HOPE was a lot of fun and I was sorry to see it end, but as all
- experiences, there is a certain amount of letdown. After a great
- vacation, or summer camp, or a cruise, or maybe even after Wood
- stock, a tear welts up. Now I didn't cry that HOPE was over, but
- an intense 48 hours with hackers is definitely not your average
- computer security convention that only rolls from 9AM to Happy
- Hour. At a hacker conference, you snooze, you lose. You never
- know what is going to happen next - so much is spontaneous and
- unplanned - and it generally is highly educational, informative
- and entertaining.
-
- Computer security folks: you missed an event worth attending.
- You missed some very funny entertainment. You missed some fine
- young people dressed in some fine garb. You missed the chance to
- meet with your perceived 'enemy'. You missed the opportunity to
- get inside the heads of the generation that knows more about
- keyboards than Huck Finning in suburbia. You really missed
- something, and you should join Robert MIB Steele and I at the
- next hacker conference.
-
- * * * * *
-
- If only I had known.
-
- If only I had known that tornadoes had been dancing up and down
- 5th avenue I would have stayed at the Hotel Filthadelphia for
- another night.
-
- La Guardia airport was closed. Flights were up to 6 hours de
- layed if not out and out canceled. Thousands of stranded travel
- ers hunkered down for the night. If only I had known.
-
- Wait, wait. Hours to wait. And then, finally, a plane ready and
- willing to take off and swerve and dive between thunderbolts and
- twisters and set me on my way home.
-
- My kids were bouncing out of the car windows when my wife picked
- me up at the airport somewhere in the vicinity of 1AM.
-
- "Not too late are you dear?" Sweet Southern Sarcasm from my
- Sweet Southern Wife.
-
- "Don't blame me," I said in all seriousness. "It was the hack
- ers. They caused the whole thing."
-
- * * * * *
-
- Notice: This article is free, and the author encourages responsi
- ble widespread electronic distribution of the document in full,
- not piecemeal. No fees may be charged for its use. For hard
- copy print rights, please contact the author and I'll make you an
- offer you can't refuse. The author retains full copyrights to
- the contents and the term Cyber-Christ.
-
- Winn is the author of "Terminal Compromise", a novel detailing
- a fictionalized account of a computer war waged on the United
- States. After selling well as a book-store-book, Terminal Com
- promise was placed on the Global Network as the world's first
- Novel-on-the-Net Shareware and has become an underground classic.
- (Gopher TERMCOMP.ZIP)
-
- His new non-fiction book, "Information Warfare: Chaos on the
- Electronic Superhighway" is a compelling, non-technical analy
- sis of personal privacy, economic and industrial espionage and
- national security. He calls for the creation of a National
- Information Policy, a Constitution in Cyberspace and an Elec
- tronic Bill of Rights.
-
- He may be reached at INTER.PACT, 11511 Pine St., Seminole,
- FL. 34642. 813-393-6600, fax 813-393-6361, E-Mail:
- P00506@psilink.com.
-
-