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- ==Phrack Magazine==
-
- Volume Five, Issue Forty-Six, File 24 of 28
-
- ****************************************************************************
-
-
- The ABCs of better H O T E L Staying ...
-
- ... by SevenUp (sec@escape.com)
-
- This ARTICLE will give you some information on how to experience
- a cheaper, safer, and more comfortable stay at your next hotel visit.
- Always keep in mind that the staff is taught to make your stay
- as pleasant as possible and fulfil most of your wishes. So it is often
- a matter of social engineering to reach your goal.
-
- BUSINESS CENTRES
- Many good hotels offer business centres. Some business centres just offer
- "typing service" at high rates, others provide a PC you can use for free.
- Usually it is a 286 or older, but it should give you the opportunity
- to copy warez, write your latest article for Phrack or even connect your
- pocket modem and login to the -> Internet.
-
- CREDIT CARDS
- If you have your own card and don't mind paying for the room - great!
- Just use it when you check in - most places require you to have a credit
- card or won't let you use the phone or won't even let you in.
- You want to use someone else's card? Be careful! Don't use a stolen
- card when you check in, or you won't have a safe sleep, fearing that they
- could come and get you. You would be safer if you tell them upon check in
- that you misplaces your card and don't need to make long distance calls,
- and just want to pay with it in the end. This doesn't work always, but
- sometimes. You also need a faked ID upon check in with the same name as
- the cardholder.
-
- But overall, using a faked Credit Card in a hotel is one of the easiest ways
- to get busted.
-
- DIALUPS
- Many hotels have dialins for their reservation system. Novells are quite
- popular. Some hotels also use PC based UNIXes (old System V's mostly)
- that are often unprotected - no passwords on the root account or even
- giving you a shell prompt when you call the dialup. Most of them are 7e1
- at slow speeds. I won't say more about reservation systems here.
-
- EATING & DANCING
- Many hotels have good and relatively expensive restaurants and discos.
- They just require you to sign the check with a room number and full name.
- If you know of a guest that is checked in and has secured his account with
- a credit card who just checked in, just use his name and room number -
- this is probably the biggest lack of security in a hotel.
-
- Also if you don't stay at the hotel but want to go to their disco at night,
- pretend to be a guest to get in free and save cover charges. They usually
- believe you.
-
- FUCKING
- You've read right, hotels are favorite places to make love. No matter
- if you bring your IRC date here, pick up a hooker or stay alone and
- watch the in-house porn movies. Since many hotels pride themselves in
- having as much staff as guests, the question is how to get the cute
- waitresses and maids into your bed. If anyone has experience making
- them willing without much financial and physical effort, drop me a
- mail and I will include it in the next list.
-
- GET ALL
- Some people love to take all movable parts from the room before checking
- out. The question is what to take and what not.
-
- The easiest things to take are soaps, shampoo, lotions and Kleenex from
- the bathroom, since they will be replaced every morning without problems.
- If you want a bathrobe (usually most expensive item), hide it in your
- suitcase immediately after check in and then complain that there was just
- one robe in your room. They will bring you a new one immediately. If you
- take one when you leave the hotel, they will notice and most likely
- charge you $100 in your credit card. If you want a bath towel, also don't
- wait until the end of your stay, but hide it some days earlier. If anyone
- should ask about it, just tell him that you left it at the pool.
- Taking magazines from your room is usually no problem, but stay away
- from removing the TV or blankets!
-
- HYATT GOLD PASSPORT
- If you want to check in at a Hyatt, get yourself their Gold Pass before.
- It is free of charge and will get you free Orange Juice, Coffee and a
- newspaper in the morning, and also a bigger room.
-
- INTERNET
- So you are at a hotel in a new city and want to get on the Internet?
- There are usually 2 ways: Using a computer and a modem from your hotel room
- and calling a dialup, or walking to a local university and logging in from
- there.
-
- If you bring your laptop with built-in modem, find the dialup in the
- Internet Dialup list in this issue of Phrack, get an account on the host
- and can make free local calls from your room, the first choice is probably
- the best one.
-
- But if you don't have your own account at a local school and want to
- stay legit, it is often useful to walk to a computer lab in that school
- and check out their computers. Many school around the world have PC's
- in their labs which let you do a telnet throughout the world without
- needing any account or password, or ID to enter the school. You can find
- them in Hong Kong, New York, Munich and many other major cities; but usually
- they are unknown to the public or are likely to be closed down (similar to the
- vending machines, see -> SEVENUP).
-
- JACKING OFF
- See -> Fucking.
-
- KEY
- There are plenty of different types of room keys. Some hotels still use
- old-fashioned standard keys, but most use programmable keys (plastic cards
- with "holes" or magnetic stripes, or even the pretty modern metal keys
- in key-shape, which allow programming of their magnetic fields. These
- programmable keys will always be reprogrammed if a guest checks out.
- On the other hand, if you go to the reception and claim that you lost
- your key, they will always program a spare key for you. Sometimes they
- ask you for your birthday, sometimes for your ID (just tell them you
- left it in your room). This way you could easily get into someone else's
- room.
-
- LIGHT
- Some hotels have quite fancy light systems. If the light won't shine,
- there is often a box in the entrance where you have to enter your key
- (or some paper) to activate the main power. This should help saving
- energy while you are gone, but sometimes even the air condition will
- turn off, so you have to fool the box with a paper or spare key.
- Some systems will turn on certain lights just when you insert the key
- into the door and open it. This is quite unfortunate if your roommate
- sleeps while you go cruising and clubbing at night. When you return,
- the light will shine bright and wake him up. The only thing that helps
- is unscrewing the light bulbs.
-
- MOVIES & TV
- I bet many of you will first turn on the TV after entering the room.
- Some people just stay at hotels that offer HBO in their rooms.
- Before playing with the remote, read the papers above the TV carefully,
- because some channels might show in-house movies that are being charged
- automatically without any warning. Typical rates are US $6-9 per movie.
- Of course you don't want to pay that much, nor do I.
-
- Here are the 3 big S' of movie watching:
- Spectravision, Sex movies and Social Engineering.
-
- Spectravision is one of the most popular systems. It usually allows you
- to watch 5 minutes (sometimes 2) of each movie per day free, enough for
- some people to come. There are usually a bunch of BNC cables from the
- wall to your Spectravision box and to your TV. One of the cables delivers
- the program, the other assures billing. Use your fantasy and try replacing
- the "billing cable" in the wall! Generally it can also be useful to use
- a standard cable decoder (cablebox) to decode the pay channels. Just bring
- one along and if you are lucky, you can watch the movies easily.
-
- If all your technical expertise fails, there is still one way of watching
- movies for free: Social Engineering. Just watch the movies of your choice
- and then complain to the reception that you had trouble with the TV,
- that the Spectravision box or remote control broke, or that you caught
- the maid watching movies in your room. If you cry a lot, they will usually
- be nice and remove the movies from your bill.
-
- PHONE CALLS
- Be careful before making any phone calls from your room. Many hotels
- charge you up to $3 for 800 numbers and log all your touch tones (and
- calling codez!). You can't be sure who will view the logs and abuse your
- calling card. Also there are often high surcharges for long distance calls,
- up to 40% on top of AT&T's operator connected charges. There are also hotels
- that charge a minimum charge per call (up to $5), even if you just talked
- for 10 seconds long distance. On the other side, some hotels offer free local
- and 800 calls. Just make sure and read all papers in the room and contact
- the reception. I also had operators telling me lower rates than the ones that
- showed up on my bill, so be careful.
-
- RACK RATE
- This is the highest possible rate for a room, and the rate that is officially
- displayed at the reception. You should never pay that rate. If you say you
- are with a company they will give you a discount of at least 10% (corporate
- rate). Some hotels even give qualified people and companies discounts of
- 25% - 50% on the rack rate. When you wonder if you pay too much for your
- room or think you got a great rate, send me a mail, because I try to keep
- a database about cheapest prices for selected hotels.
-
- SEVENUP, Coke, Pepsi & Rootbeer:
- You are staying at a five-star hotel. You are thirsty. Your room has
- a minibar, but the cheapest soda is $4.95. The next supermarket or gas
- station is 20 miles away. But you need a Coke. What to do now?
-
- TRY finding the gangways where the employers work, live and eat!
- About every bigger hotel has a kitchen for employees. They also have
- a vending machine hidden somewhere, with sodas for just 60 cents.
-
- When strolling through the restricted area, just walk straight, slowly
- and self confident. If someone asks you what you are doing, tell them:
- a) you are an undercover agent for the IRS and they should get lost.
- b) you are looking for the vending machine. (telling the truth openly
- with a broad smile can be more successful than you think!)
- c) you are a new employee and ask her to show you around
-
- Also notice the signs and posters in most restricted areas, telling
- the personnel to be "enthusiastic, punctual, generous to the guest..."
- Quote these phrases when an employer behaves nasty towards you.
-
- UPGRADES
- After first going into your room and checking it out, go back to
- the reception and complain that the bed is too small, the street noise
- is too loud, the view is too poor, etc. Quite often they will give you
- a nicer and bigger room on their executive floor! See also -> Hyatt
- Gold Passport.
-
- VOICE MAIL
- Many good hotels offer voice mail to their guests. The most popular
- system is Meridian Mail. Some hotels have an own dialup for the voicemail,
- but mostly the hotel just lets you access it through the main PBX operator.
- If you are unlucky you have to wait 5 rings at a number before the
- Voice Mail answers.
-
- Most guests don't use Voice Mail. The few that do also keep the default
- password, which is often the room number or the birthday of the guest.
- One way to get the birthday is call up front desk, tell them you are
- with "Mommy's Birthday Cakes Delivery" and have a cake for John Smith.
- Ask them to check birthday's of all John Smith's etc. Of course there
- are more ways, just use your social engineering fantasy!
-
- WHERE TO GO?
- It is pretty hard to recommend chains in general. But I had quite
- good experience with Hilton, Hyatt (try getting a room on the Regency
- floor), Holiday Inn (sometimes really cheap prices and good standard),
- Shangri-La (best hotels in Asia) and Marriott (usually nice service).
- I had less good experience with Sheraton (less discounts), Peninsula,
- Regent & Four Seasons (all a bit overpriced and not so modern). But
- there are always exceptions, so tell me about your experience!
-
-
- I hope some of these tips might be useful for you. Stay tuned and wait
- for a new issue of travel tips, next time about Airlines!
-
-
- (c)opyright 1994 by the author. Publication outside of Phrack forbidden.
-