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- ==Phrack Inc.==
-
- Volume Three, Issue 28, File #11 of 12
-
- PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN
- PWN PWN
- PWN P h r a c k W o r l d N e w s PWN
- PWN ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ PWN
- PWN Issue XXVIII/Part 3 PWN
- PWN PWN
- PWN October 7, 1989 PWN
- PWN PWN
- PWN Created, Written, and Edited PWN
- PWN by Knight Lightning PWN
- PWN PWN
- PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN
-
-
- FCC Orders Radio Station To Stop Phone Pranks August 30, 1989
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The Federal Communications Commission has slapped Chicago radio station WLUP-AM
- (1000) and WLUP-FM (97.9) with a $5000 fine and threatened to pull their
- license for illegally broadcasting phone calls to "unsuspecting individuals."
-
- The FCC specifically cited "willful behavior and repeated violations of its
- policy that recipients of phone calls from radio stations must be informed in
- advance -- and on the air at the start of the call -- that they are being
- broadcast."
-
- In particular, the FCC noted that morning host Jonathon Brandmeier and mid-day
- host Kevin Matthews were in frequent violation of this rule.
-
- Scott G. Ginsberg, president and chief executive officer of Evergreen Media
- Corporation, parent company and license holder for WLUP confirmed that his
- company had paid the $5000 fine without protest for illegally broadcasting
- phone calls. He compared this punishment to receiving a traffic ticket.
-
- Both Brandmeier and Matthews enjoy harassing people on the phone, and
- broadcasting the reaction of their victims over the air. One of the calls
- placed by Matthews involved him posing as a police officer. He called a
- funeral home and spoke to the widow of a man who died the day before. He told
- her that her niece and nephew, who were scheduled to come to the funeral home
- later that day to help with burial arrangements had been arrested. The widow
- was not amused. She filed suit against WLUP and Matthews.
-
- Brandmeier likes to harass celebrities by managing to find their unlisted home
- phone numbers and call them at 6:30 or 7:00 AM when his show goes on the air.
- He also pulls phone scams including sending unwanted food orders; calling
- employers to provide excuses for employees who won't be at work that day, and
- similar. Always broadcasting the calls on the air, of course.
-
- But it was the call to the grieving widow at the funeral home which got the FCC
- livid. The Commission contacted the station that day, and an Enforcement
- Officer threatened to put the station off the air that day -- in a matter of
- minutes when he could get the order signed.
-
- After some discussion, WLUP was permitted to continue broadcasting, but a memo
- was circulated to all employees warning that effective immediately, any
- violation of the phone rules would lead to immediate termination.
-
- But despite this, less than three months later, Brandmeier pulled another of
- his obnoxious phone pranks. This time, the FCC gave him personally a $5000
- fine, and told WLUP "either keep those two under control on the air or you'll
- get your license yanked."
-
- Now WLUP faces more sanctions, and the probable non-renewal of its license
- when it expires December 1, 1989. Afternoon disk jockey Steve Dahl routinely
- broadcasts indecent material on his show. Daily topics of conversation include
- sadism and masochism, child molestation, sexual behavior of all sorts, and
- frequent slurs of the most vicious kind against gay people. He uses "street
- language" to express himself, of course, and has used the famous "seven words
- you never say on the radio" more times than anyone remembers.
-
- The victims of the phone pranks have consulted with their own attorney as a
- group, and he in turn is pressing the FCC to shut down WLUP completely.
-
- Ginsberg says he does not understand why the FCC is picking on them. He says
- it must be competing radio stations that would like to see them off the air,
- since they are rated number three in the Chicago area, which certainly says a
- lot about Chicagoan's taste in radio entertainment.
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
- Long time Phrack World News readers may have noticed a familiar name in this
- article: Steve Dahl.
-
- Depending on how long you have been with us, you may wish to refer to Phrack
- World News Issue Five/Part One (in Phrack Inc. Volume One, Issue Six). There
- is an article entitled "Mark Tabas and Karl Marx Busted" and it is dated May
- 2, 1986. Along with this article is a short note that explains how an
- informant (possibly the son of an agent of the Secret Service or Federal Bureau
- of Investigation) was believed to be using the handle of Jack or Will Bell and
- had helped the authorities get Tabas and Marx. It was widely known that he was
- from the 312 NPA -- Chicago, Illinois.
-
- In the following issue of Phrack Inc. we have PWN Issue VI/Part 1 and an
- article entitled, "Marx and Tabas: The Full Story." This article further
- explains how Steve Dahl was busted (for unknown crimes) in Miami, Florida by
- the U.S. Secret Service and then made a deal to help them get Karl Marx and
- Mark Tabas.
-
- So is the Steve Dahl of WLUP in Chicago the same Steve Dahl from Chicago that
- helped the U.S. Secret Service nail Mark Tabas and Karl Marx?
- _______________________________________________________________________________
-
- Reach Out And Tap Someone Revisited July 30, 1989
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- In Phrack World News Issue XXVI/Part 2 there was an article about two former
- employees of Cincinnati Bell (Leonard Gates and Robert Draise) who claimed they
- had had engaged in numerous illegal taps over a 12 year period at the request
- of their supervisors at Cincinnati Bell and the Cincinnati Police Department.
-
- Cincinnati Bell filed suit against the two men, Leonard Gates and Robert
- Draise, claiming both were liars out to get even with the company after they
- had been fired for other reasons.
-
- "'Taint necessarily so," said a judge who agreed the charges may have some
- merit, and permitted the class action suit against Cincinnati Bell to continue
- this past week.
-
- The class action suit claims that Cincinnati Bell routinely invaded the privacy
- of thousands of people in the area by secretly tapping their phones at the
- request of police or FBI officials over a twelve year period from 1972 - 1984.
- The taps were mainly applied against political dissidents during the Vietnam
- era, and in more recent years, against persons under investigation by the
- United States Attorney in southern Ohio, without the permission of a court.
-
- Now says the court, depending on the outcome of the class action suit, the
- criminal trials of everyone in the past decade in southern Ohio may have to be
- re-examined in light of illegal evidence gained by the United States Attorney,
- via the FBI, as a result of the complicity of Cincinnati Bell with that agency,
- courtesy of Robert Draise and Leonard Gates.
-
- The testimony this past week got *very messy* at times. Gates and Draise seem
- determined to tell every dirty thing they know about Cincinnati Bell's security
- department from the dozen years they worked there. More details as the trial
- continues.
- _______________________________________________________________________________
-
- The Grim Phreaker Cleared In Phone Scam June 30, 1989
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- by Suzanne Getman (Syracuse Herald Journal)
-
- "We disposed of this on the basis of his cooperation."
-
- A college student who talked his way into being arrested in April (by speaking
- with a chat operator) was cleared of charges against him this week. Kevin C.
- Ashford aka The Grim Phreaker, age 22, was arrested by sheriff's deputies on
- April 21 a mere five minutes after using a payphone to speak with an operator
- on the Onadaga Community College campus and charged with theft of services, a
- misdemeanor.
-
- Ashford admitted placing about 30 calls to a party lines known as bridges by
- using phony credit card numbers and extenders. "We disposed of this on the
- basis of his cooperation, our problem with proof, and his completion of 30
- hours of community service," Assistant District Attorney Timothy Keough said.
- Ashford had cooperated by assisting and providing information to the Sheriff's
- Department, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Secret Service for
- more than three weeks. There was no problem with proof however because Ashford
- admitted he was guilty of all of the crimes.
-
- Ashford was arrested in Onadaga Community College campus' Gordon Student Center
- on April 21, minutes after he placed a call to a nationwide party line called
- Systems 800 International (who offered to drop charges if they could receive
- copies of Phrack Inc. Newsletter from him and if he would work for them
- trapping others). Company officials said there is no way to establish the cost
- of the fraudulent calls. "Without a dollar amount, we didn't have proof.
- Without proof, we couldn't prosecute," Keough said.
-
- Article Submitted by DarkMage
- _______________________________________________________________________________
-
- Phony IRS Refunds By Computer August 17, 1989
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- By John King (Boston Globe)
-
- "Computer Filer Got $325,000 In Phony Refunds, IRS claims."
-
- Clever tax preparers are one thing, but a clever bookkeeper who allegedly pried
- 325,000 dollars from the Internal Revenue Service found himself on the wrong
- side of the law yesterday, August 16.
-
- In what may be the nation's first charge of electronic tax fraud, IRS special
- agents yesterday arrested Alan N. Scott of West Roxbury [a suburb of Boston],
- saying he claimed 45 fraudulent income tax refunds for amounts ranging from
- 3,000 dollars to 23,000 dollars.
-
- The IRS charges that Scott, age 37, used the service's new electronic filing
- system -- open only to tax preparers -- to submit phony claims with assumed
- names and Social Security numbers. In some cases, the names used were of
- people in prison, according to Chief Kenneth Claunch, IRS Criminal
- Investigation Division.
-
- "The computer age has spawned a new breed of criminal," Claunch said in a
- statement.
-
- New in tools, perhaps. As for the basic idea -- filing a false return in order
- to snare an unwarranted refund -- that's old hat, admitted IRS spokeswoman
- Marti Melecio.
-
- "I can't say that it's a new trick. We've had fraud cases with paper returns,"
- Melecio said. "The time frame is different, though. With electronic filings,
- the returns come back in two or three weeks."
-
- According to the IRS, Scott received electronic filing status on January 31.
- He did this by using a false Social Security number, and making false
- statements on his application. However, the IRS also says Scott electronically
- filed 10 returns where he used his own name as a preparer, and these returns
- appear to be legitimate.
-
- The scheme was uncovered by a "questionable refund detection team," at the IRS
- service center in Andover, Massachusetts. Also, the IRS credited a tip from an
- unnamed Boston bank "which reported a suspicious electronic transfer of funds
- to an individual," presumably Scott.
-
- If convicted, Scott faces a possible prison sentence and up to 250,000 dollars
- in fines on each of the counts of fraud.
- _______________________________________________________________________________
-
- Paris Computer Takes Law Into Its Own Hands September 6, 1989
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From The Guardian
-
- A crusading computer has taken the law into its own hands and caught 41,000
- Parisians on charges of murder, extortion, prostitution, drug trafficking and
- other serious crimes. But the big round-up ended in embarrassment after an
- admission by the City Hall yesterday that the electronic "Batman" could not
- tell the difference between a parking offense and gang warfare. "The accused
- persons will be receiving letters of apology," an official at the City Hall
- Treasury department said. "Instead of receiving summons on criminal charges,
- they should have been sent reminders of unpaid motoring fines in April.
- Somehow the standard codes we use for automatically issued reminders got mixed
- up."
-
- The first hint of the avenging computer's self-appointed mission to clean up
- the capital came at the weekend. Hundreds of Parisians received printed
- letters accusing them of big crimes, but demanding only petty fines for the
- major crimes of between $50 and $150 (pounds - UK equivalent). "About 41,000
- people are involved and some of the charges are quite weird," the official
- admitted. "One man has complained of being accused of dealing in illegal
- veterinary products. Unfortunately, other accusations went much further, like
- man-slaughter through the administration of dangerous drugs." "There were a
- lot of cases of living off immoral earnings, racketeering and murder." The
- official said an inquiry had been started to see if the caped computer had a
- human accomplice. So far, no one has asked the Joker if he was in Paris last
- week.
- _______________________________________________________________________________
-
- Chalisti Magazine by the Chaos Computer Club August 20, 1989
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- In the future, there will be an electronic magazine, published by, and
- concerning the Chaos Computer Club. It is called Chalisti and the name is
- derived from "Kalisti," the Goddess of Chaos and will, hopefully, stand for
- creative Chaos and not for chaotic, but, as always only time will tell.
-
- The idea is like this...
-
- Over the different data networks, masses of information flow. On the Usenet it
- is about 100 MB/Month, on the CREN (Bitnet + CSNet) the flow is about the same
- size. On top of these flows, there is the information from national networks
- like Zerberus, BTX and Geonet. Mostly, a person only gets information from one
- network and that is why interesting information on data protection, data
- security, alternative uses of computers, environment, university etc. are being
- broadcast over only one network.
-
- Information from the networks for the networks, but that is not all. There
- should emerge a list of editors, that is spread over a large area, and works
- over the nets. Information and and opinions should be exchanged, but also
- further contacts will emerge.
-
- The first edition of Chalisti will presumably be published mid-September.
- Because of this, the list of editors is relatively small, one will publish
- stuff from the newest "Datenschleuder", the MIK-magazine and the most
- interesting messages from the nets that appear in the following weeks. But as
- soon as the 2nd edition will appear, the content will be different from the
- "Datenschleuder."
-
- In Chalisti, copy and messages from the nets and other media (MIK, and others)
- will be published as well. Articles meant especially for the Chalisti magazine
- are requested and these articles will be published with the highest priority.
-
- The magazine will be no bigger than 100 KB/Month. In case of doubt, articles
- will be kept for the forthcoming edition or for the fall in copy in the Summer.
- But it is also possible, that too few articles are being sent in, in which
- case the content will be spiced with information from DS, the nets and the
- MIK-magazine. In this way, a regular emerging of editions is being secured.
-
- The first edition is due 15th of September. The second at the end of October.
- At that date, the holiday will be ended, and a editorial and informal
- infrastructure will be built. From then on, there should be an edition every
- month.
-
- The editorial part will presumably be done on EARN or CREN. That bears the
- advantage that quick reactions on recent messages will be possible, as well as
- the possibility to talk it over at Relay's or Galaxy Meetings, and in this way,
- an international medium is available. Writers of articles or editors from
- other nets can be contacted, and there shouldn't be no technical problems in
- getting the job done. Especially on UUCP and Zerberus, facilities will be
- created.
-
- As ways of contacting the Editors, the following Networks are available:
-
- EARN/CREN - Distribution will be done over CHAMAS (107633@DOLUNI1).
- There will be a board for Chalisti, as well as a CUG
- for the board of Editors. Contact there will be
- 151133@DOLUNI1. Presumably, from the beginning of
- October, the userid CHAMAINT@DOLUNI1 will be available.
-
- UUCP/Subnet - Contacting will be possible through chalist@olis,
- ccc@mcshh and through ..!tmpmbx!DOLUNI1.bitnet!151133.
-
- UUCP/Dnet - Contacting will be possible through simon@uniol.
- Distribution will proceed through this id in
- dnet.general.
-
- Zerberus - At this moment: terra@mafia and terra@chaos-hh. From
- mid-September on, presumably through chalist@subetha.
-
- BTXNet - Unknown yet.
-
- GeoNet - mbk1:chaos-team. Time will show, whether distribution
- of the magazine will be done on GeoNet.
-
- Contacting or distribution through FidoNet and MagicNet has been planned for,
- but has to be built first.
-
- Interested people are being asked to use these addresses. For the absolute
- uncontactable, there is a Snailmail address as well:
-
- Frank Simon
- 12 Kennedy Street
- 2900 Oldenburg, FRG (West Germany)
-
- 04411/592607 (Telephone)
-
- Greets
-
- Terra
- _______________________________________________________________________________
-
- Computer-Based Airline Ticket Scam August 14, 1989
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Taken from the Los Angeles Times
-
- Phoenix police arrested four people as they continued to unravel a bogus
- airline ticket ring that allegedly sold millions of dollars of stolen tickets
- by advertising discounted fares in national publications. Investigators said
- the individuals put together a major conspiracy by knowing how to access
- airline computers to put travel itineraries in the computer system.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- In the interests of equal access to information for all, I have decided to
- include some of the supposed deep secrets of how to access airline computers
- and inset travel itineraries.
-
- This can be done from virtually any telephone nationwide (including a rotary
- dial telephone). This can of course also be done from a public payphone if you
- should decide to make sure your identity is anonymous.
-
- It is necessary to determine the phone number for an airline's computer. All
- you have to do is call 1-800 directory assistance (1-800-555-1212). Ask for
- Ozark Airlines reservations (a no longer existent company that was purchased by
- Trans World Airways [TWA] used here only as an example). The operators on duty
- will read you a number, 800-PRE-SUFF.
-
- Call this number and you will be connected with the Ozark Airlines reservation
- office. Here they will have a database which stores all of Ozark's
- itineraries. Simply state the date, flight number, departure and destination
- cities, and passenger name. It's that easy! You can later dial the same
- access number and cancel or modify your itineraries. The system even includes
- search functions if you don't know the flight number, and an extensive help
- system (just say "How do I make a reservation?").
- _______________________________________________________________________________
-
- Fighting Back Against Junk Calls September 4, 1989
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- "We are not Pavlov's dogs and should not have to jump everytime a bell rings."
-
- And if we do hop to the phone on demand, we ought to be paid for it, says
- Bulmash, president of Private Citizen, Inc., a Warrenville, IL organization
- designed to prevent what Bulmash describes as "junk calls" from telemarketers.
-
- We deserve at least a C-note -- $100, he says.
-
- Twice a year, Bulmash, age 43, a paralegal by trade, mails a directory of
- people who don't wish to have telephone solicitors call them to 600
- telemarketing firms. Along with the directories, he sends a contract which
- states that the people listed will listen to the solicitors only in exchange
- for $100.
-
- If the solicitors call, the contract says, the telemarketing company owes the
- listener $100. It's for "use of private property -- the phone, your ear, your
- time," says Bulmash.
-
- Subscribers, now numbering about 1000, pay $15 per year to be listed in the
- Private Citizen directory.
-
- While Bulmash doesn't guarantee you won't be called, he does offer some
- success stories. He says subscribers have collected anywhere from $5 - $92
- from telemarketing companies. He offers a money-back deal for those
- subscribers not completely satisfied. He says only one person has taken him up
- on it.
-
- "You can tell those companies 500 times over the phone not to call and they
- won't listen," Bulmash says. "But when you threaten them with charging them
- for your time, that gets their attention."
-
- Bulmash, who began Private Citizen in May, 1988, says telemarketers have the
- attitude of "we're big business, so you just hang up the phone if you don't
- like us. I say we have a right to be left alone in the first place, at least
- in our homes." Typically, a telemarketing call to a home has less than a 3
- percent success rate, he said, with the other 97 percent of us -- and we know
- who we are -- being unnecessarily inconvenienced.
-
- Bulmash says he has testified before Illinois and California state legislative
- committees and has lobbied state and federal lawmakers for relief from
- telemarketers. He teaches the members of his organization how to bill for
- their time, and in many cases, make the charges stick and get payment for
- "the use of their time, ear and phone."
-
- For more information on Private Citizen, contact Bulmash at 312-393-1555.
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
- Banned in Boston -- Telemarketer Gets Sued! September 14, 1989
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Alan Schlesinger's stock in trade is suing people. But you might say his stock
- is too hot to handle at Merrill Lynch these days. A Boston lawyer who hates
- telephone solicitors, Schlesinger sued Merrill Lynch after the brokerage firm
- ignored "repeated requests" to quit calling him with investment proposals.
-
- To Merrill Lynch's surprise, he won an injunction. Indeed, he sued them twice
- and won both times. The second time was after an unwitting broker called him
- in violation of the court order prohibiting it.
-
- "This is something that bothers a lot of people, but they don't have the sense
- they can do something about it," said Schlesinger, whose best retort is a tort,
- it would seem. In the second suit, the court awarded him $300, for the costs
- of his prosecution of the matter and for his time spent on the phone with the
- brokerage house's phone room.
-
- "He is using an atom bomb to deal with a gnat," said William Fitzpatrick,
- chief lawyer for the Securities Industry Association, faulting Schlesinger
- for doing what comes naturally for an attorney: "Being a lawyer myself,
- I can only guess he doesn't have enough brains to just hang up the phone."
- _______________________________________________________________________________
-
- Downloaded From P-80 International Information Systems 304-744-2253 12yrs+
-