| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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|
| Volume Two, Issue 22, File 3 of 12 |
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| <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> |
| <> <> |
| <> The Judas Contract <> |
| <> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ <> |
| <> Part Two Of The Vicious Circle Trilogy <> |
| <> <> |
| <> An Exploration of The Quisling Syndrome <> |
| <> and <> |
| <> A Look At The Insurrection Of Security Into The Community <> |
| <> <> |
| <> Presented by Knight Lightning <> |
| <> August 7, 1988 <> |
| <> <> |
| <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> |
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| The Quisling Syndrome |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Definition: Quisling - (Kwiz/lin) (1) n. Vidkun Quisling (1887 - 1945), |
| Norwegian politician who betrayed |
| his country to the Nazis and became |
| its puppet ruler. |
|
|
| (2) n. A traitor. |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| The "Quisling" Syndrome is rapidly becoming a common occurrence in the less |
| than legal realms of the modem community. In general it starts out with a |
| phreaker or hacker that is either very foolish or inexperienced. He somehow |
| manages to get caught or busted for something and is scared beyond belief about |
| the consequences of his actions. At this point, the law enforcement agency(s) |
| realize that this one bust alone is worthless, especially since the person |
| busted is probably someone who does not know much to begin with and would be a |
| much better asset if he could assist them in grabbing other more experienced |
| and dangerous hackers and phreaks. In exchange for these services the Judas |
| will have his charges dropped or reduced and considering the more than likely |
| parential pressure these Judases will receive, the contract will be fulfilled. |
|
|
| Example; Taken from Phrack World News Issue XV; |
|
|
| [This exceprt has been edited for this presentation. -KL] |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Mad Hatter; Informant? July 31, 1987 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| We at Phrack Inc. have uncovered a significant amount of information that has |
| led us to the belief that Mad Hatter is an informant for some law enforcement |
| organization. |
|
|
| MH had also brought down several disks for the purpose of copying Phantasie |
| Realm. Please note; PR was an IBM program and MH has an apple. |
|
|
| Control C told us that when he went to pick MH up at the bus terminal, he |
| watched the bus pull in and saw everyone who disembarked. Suddenly Mad Hatter |
| was there, but not from the bus he was supposed to have come in on. In |
| addition to this, he had baking soda wraped in a five dollar bill that he tried |
| to pass off as cocaine. Perhaps to make us think he was cool or something. |
|
|
| MH constantly tried to get left behind at ^C's apartment for unknown reasons. |
| He also was seen at a neighbor's apartment making unauthorized calls into the |
| city of Chicago. When asked who he called, his reply was "Don't worry about |
| it." MH had absolutely no money with him during PartyCon (and incidentally ate |
| everything in ^C's refrigerator) and yet he insisted that although he had taken |
| the bus down and had return trip tickets for the bus, that he would fly back |
| home. How was this going to be achieved? He had no money and even if he could |
| get a refund for the bus tickets, he would still be over $200 short. When |
| asked how he was going to do this, his reply was "Don't worry about it." |
|
|
| On Saturday night while on the way to the Hard Rock Cafe, Mad Hatter asked |
| Control C for the location of his computer system and other items 4 times. |
| This is information that Hatter did not need to know, but perhaps a SS agent or |
| someone could use very nicely. |
|
|
| When Phrack Inc. discovered that Dan The Operator was an FBI informant and made |
| the news public, several people were criticizing him on Free World II Private. |
| Mad Hatter on the other hand, stood up for Noah and said that he was still his |
| friend despite what had happened. Then later when he realized that people were |
| questioning his legitimacy, his original posts were deleted and he started |
| saying how much he wanted to kill Dan The Operator and that he hated him. |
|
|
| Mad Hatter already has admitted to knowing that Dan The Operator was an FBI |
| informant prior to SummerCon '87. He says the reason he didn't tell anyone is |
| because he assumed we already knew. |
|
|
| A few things to add; |
|
|
| ^*^ Some time ago, Mad Hatter was contacted by AT&T because of an illegal |
| Alliance Teleconference that he was responsible for. There was no bust. |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Could this AT&T investigation have been the starting point for Mad Hatter's |
| treason against the phreak/hack community? Is there more to it than that? |
| We may never know the full truth behind this, however we do know that Mad |
| Hatter was not the only one to know Dan The Operator's secret prior to |
| SummerCon '87. The Executioner (who had close ties to TMC Security employees |
| in Omaha, Nebraska) was fully aware of Dan The Operator's motives and |
| intentions in the modem world. |
|
|
| There does not always have to be a bust involved for a phreak/hacker to turn |
| Judas, sometimes fear and panic can be a more powerful motivator to become a |
| Quisling. |
|
|
| Example; Taken From Phrack World News Issue XV; |
|
|
| [This exceprt has been edited for this presentation. -KL] |
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|
|
| Crisis On Infinite Hackers July 27, 1987 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| It all started on Tuesday, July 21, 1987. Among 30-40 others, Bill From RNOC, |
| Eric NYC, Solid State, Oryan QUEST, Mark Gerardo, The Rebel, and Delta-Master |
| have been busted by the United States Secret Service. There are rumored to be |
| several more members of the more "elite" community busted as well, but since we |
| can neither disprove or prove the validity of these rumors, I have chosen not |
| to name them at this time. |
|
|
| One of the offshoots of this investigation is the end of The Lost City of |
| Atlantis and The Lineman's treason against the community he once helped to |
| bring about. In Pennsylvainia, 9 people were busted for credit card fraud. |
| When asked where they learned how to perform the art in which they had been |
| caught, they all responded with the reply of text files from The Lost City Of |
| Atlantis. |
|
|
| So, the Secret Service decided to give The Lineman a visit. Lineman, age 16 (a |
| minor) had no charges against him, but he panicked anyway and turned over the |
| bulletin board, all g-philes, and the complete userlog to the Secret Service. |
| This included information from the "Club Board." The final outcome of this |
| action is still on its way. In the meantime, many hackers are preparing for |
| the worst. |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
| The results and consequences from The Lineman's actions were far more severe |
| than they originally appeared. It is highly speculated that The Lineman was in |
| possesion on a very large directory of phreaks/hackers/pirates that he had |
| recently acquired. That list is now in the hands of the government and the |
| Communications Fraud Control Association (as well as in the files of all of the |
| individual security departments of CFCA members). I've seen it and more. |
|
|
| The Lineman was able to acquire this list because one phreak stole it from |
| another and then began to trade it to his friends and to others for information |
| and passwords, etc. and what happened from there is such an over exposure and |
| lack of CONTROL that it fell into the wrong and dangerous hands. Acts such as |
| this will with out a doubt eventually lead all of us towards entropy. |
|
|
| Captain Caveman, also known as Shawn of Phreakers Quest, began work to help TMC |
| after he was set up by Scan Man during the summer of 1986. |
|
|
| However, being busted or feeling panic are still not the only motivations for |
| becoming a Judas. John Maxfield, one of today's best known security |
| consultants, was once a hacker under the handle(s) of Cable Pair and Uncle Tom. |
| He was a member of the Detroit based Corrupt Computing and the original Inner |
| Circle until he was contacted by the FBI and decided that it would be more fun |
| to bust hackers than be one. |
|
|
| The following is an excerpt from Phrack World News Issue V; |
|
|
| [This article has been edited for this presentation. -KL] |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Computer Kids, Or Criminals? |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| John Maxfield is a computer security consultant who lives in a downriver |
| suburb. Maxfield spends most of his working hours scanning BBSs, and is known |
| by computer crime experts as a hacker tracker. His investigative work scanning |
| boards has resulted in more prosecutions of computer hackers than anyone else |
| in the field, say sources familiar with his work. Maxfield, who accepts death |
| threats and other scare tactics as part of the job, says the trick is knowing |
| the enemy. Next to his monstrous, homemade computer system, Maxfield boasts |
| the only file on computer hackers that exists. [Not true any longer -KL] It |
| contains several thousand aliases used by hackers, many followed by their real |
| names and home phone numbers. All of it is the result of four years of steady |
| hacker-tracking, says Maxfield. "I've achieved what most hackers would dearly |
| love to achieve," said Maxfield. "Hacking the hacker is the ultimate hack." |
|
|
| Maxfield estimates there are currently 50,000 hackers operating in the computer |
| underground and close to 1,000 underground bulletin boards. Of these, he |
| estimates about 200 bulletin boards are "nasty," posting credit card numbers, |
| phone numbers of Fortune 500 corporations, regional phone companies, banks, and |
| even authored tutorials on how to make bombs and explosives. One growing camp |
| of serious hackers is college students, who typically started hacking at 14 and |
| are now into drug trafficking, mainly LSD and cocaine, said Maxfield. |
|
|
| Maxfield's operation is called BoardScan. He is paid by major corporations and |
| institutions to gather and provide them with pertinent intelligence about the |
| computer underground. Maxfield also relies on reformed hackers. Letters of |
| thanks from VISA and McDonald's decorate a wall in his office along with an |
| autographed photo of Scottie, the engineer on Star Trek's Starship Enterprise. |
|
|
| Often he contacts potential clients about business. "More often I call them |
| and say, I've detected a hacker in your system," said Maxfield. "At that |
| point, they're firmly entrenched. Once the hackers get into your computer, |
| you're in trouble. It's analogous to having roaches or mice in the walls of |
| your house. They don't make their presence known at first. But one day you |
| open the refrigerator door and a handful of roaches drop out." |
|
|
| Prior to tracking hackers, Maxfield worked for 20-odd years in the hardware end |
| of the business, installing and repairing computers and phone systems. When |
| the FBI recruited him a few years back to work undercover as a hacker and phone |
| phreak, Maxfield concluded fighting hacker crime must be his mission in life. |
|
|
| "So I became the hacker I was always afraid I would become," he said. Maxfield |
| believes the hacker problem is growing more serious. He estimates there were |
| just 400 to 500 hackers in 1982. Every two years, he says, the numbers |
| increase by a factor of 10. Another worrisome trend to emerge recently is the |
| presence of adult computer hackers. Some adults in the computer underground |
| pose as Fagans, a character from a Charles Dickens novel who ran a crime ring |
| of young boys, luring young hackers to their underground crime rings. |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| John Freeman Maxfield's BoardScan is also known as the Semco Computer Club and |
| Universial Export, the latter coming from the company name used by the British |
| government in Ian Flemming's James Bond novels and subsequent motion pictures. |
|
|
| Another Judas hacker who went on to become a security consultant is the |
| infamous Ian Arthur Murphy of I.A.M. Security. Perhaps he is better known as |
| Captain Zap. |
|
|
| The following excerpt is from The Wall Street Journal; |
|
|
| [This article has been edited for this presentation. -KL] |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| It Takes A Hacker To Catch A Hacker As Well As A Thief November 3, 1987 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| by Dennis Kneale (Staff Reporter Of The Wall Street Journal) |
|
|
| "Computer Hacker Ian [Arthur] Murphy Prowls A Night |
| Beat Tracking Down Other Hackers Who Pirate Data" |
|
|
| Capt. Zap actually Ian A. Murphy, is well-known as one of the first |
| convicted computer-hacker thieves. He has since reformed -- he swears it -- |
| and has been resurrected as a consultant, working the other side of the law. |
|
|
| CRIME CREDENTIALS |
| Other consultants, many of them graying military vets, try to flush out |
| illicit hackers. But few boast the distinction of being a real hacker -- and |
| one with a felony among his credentials. Capt. Zap is more comfortable at the |
| screen than in a conversation. Asked to name his closest friend, he shakes his |
| head and throws up his hands. He has none. "I don't like people," he says. |
| "They're dreadful." |
| "He's legendary in the hacking world and has access to what's going on. |
| That's a very valuable commodity to us," says Robert P. Campbell of Advanced |
| Information Management in Woodbridge, Va., Mr. Murphy's mentor, who has hired |
| him for consulting jobs. The 30-year-old Mr. Murphy is well-connected into his |
| nocturnal netherworld. Every night till 4 a.m., he walks a beat through some |
| of the hundreds of electronic bulletin boards where hackers swap tales and |
| techniques of computer break-ins. |
| It is very busy these nights. On the Stonehenge bulletin board, "The |
| Marauder" has put up a phone number for Citibank's checking and credit-card |
| records, advising, "Give it a call." On another board, Mr. Murphy finds a |
| primer for rookie "hacklings," written by "The Knights Of Shadow." On yet |
| another he sifts out network codes for the Defense Department's research |
| agency. |
| He watches the boards for clients and warns when a system is under attack. |
| For a fee of $800 a day and up, his firm, IAM/Secure Data Systems Inc., will |
| test the security of a data base by trying to break in, investigate how the |
| security was breached, eavesdrop on anyone you want, and do anything else that |
| strikes his fancy as nerd vs. spy. He says his clients have included Monsanto |
| Co., United Airlines, General Foods Corp., and Peat Marwick. Some probably |
| don't know he worked for them. His felony rap -- not to mention his caustic |
| style -- forces him to work often under a more established consultant. "Ian |
| hasn't grown up yet, but he's technically a brilliant kid," says Lindsey L. |
| Baird, an Army veteran whose firm, Info-Systems Safeguards in Morristown, New |
| Jersey has hired Capt. Zap. |
| Mr. Murphy's electronic voyeurism started early, At age 14, he would |
| sneak into the backyard to tap into the phone switch box and listen to |
| neighbor's calls. (He still eavesdrops now and then.) He quit highschool at |
| age 17. By 19 he was impersonating a student and sneaking into the computer |
| center Temple University to play computer games. |
|
|
| EASY TRANSITION |
| From there it was an easy transition to Capt. Zap's role of breaking in |
| and peeking at academic records, credit ratings, a Pentagon list of the sites |
| of missiles aimed at the U.S., and other verboten verbiage. He even left his |
| resume inside Bell of Pennsylvania's computer, asking for a job. |
| The electronic tinkering got him into trouble in 1981. Federal agents |
| swarmed around his parent's home in the wealthy suburb of Gladwyne, Pa. They |
| seized a computer and left an arrest warrant. Capt. Zap was in a ring of eight |
| hackers who ran up $212,000 in long-distance calls by using a "blue box" that |
| mimics phone-company gear. They also ordered $200,000 in hardware by charging |
| it to stolen credit-card numbers and using false mail drops and bogus purchase |
| orders. Mr. Murphy was the leader because "I had the most contempt" for |
| authority, he says. |
| In 1982, he pleaded guilty to receiving stolen goods and was sentenced to |
| 1,000 hours of community service and 2 1/2 years of probation. "It wasn't |
| illegal. It was electronically unethical," he says, unrepentant. "Do you know |
| who likes the phone company?" Who would have a problem with ripping them off?" |
| Mr. Murphy, who had installed commercial air conditioning in an earlier |
| job, was unable to find work after his arrest and conviction. So the hacker |
| became a hack. One day in his cab he picked up a Dun & Bradstreet Corp. |
| manager while he was carrying a printout of hacker instructions for tapping |
| Dun's systems. Thus, he solicited his first consulting assignment: "I think |
| you need to talk to me." He got the job. |
| As a consultant, Mr. Murphy gets to do, legally, the shenanigans that got |
| him into trouble in the first place. "When I was a kid, hacking was fun. Now |
| I can make money at it and still have a lot of fun." |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
| Now because of all the publicity surrounding our well known friends like Ian |
| Murphy or John Maxfield, some so-called hackers have decided to cash in on news |
| coverage themselves. |
|
|
| Perhaps the most well known personality that "sold out" is Bill Landreth aka |
| The Cracker, who is the author of "Out Of The Inner Circle," published by |
| Microsoft Press. The book was definitely more fiction than fact as it tried to |
| make everyone believe that not only did The Cracker form the Inner Circle, but |
| that it was the first group ever created. However, for starters, The Cracker |
| was a second-rate member of Inner Circle II. The publicity from the book may |
| have served to bring him some dollars, but it ultimately focused more negative |
| attention on the community adding to an already intense situation. The |
| Cracker's final story had a little sadder ending... |
|
|
| Taken from Phrack World News Issue X; |
|
|
| [This article has been edited for this presentation. -KL] |
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|
|
| The Cracker Cracks Up? December 21, 1986 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| "Computer 'Cracker' Is Missing -- Is He Dead Or Is He Alive" |
|
|
| ESCONDIDO, Calif. -- Early one morning in late September, computer hacker Bill |
| Landreth pushed himself away from his IBM-PC computer -- its screen glowing |
| with an uncompleted sentence -- and walked out the front door of a friend's |
| home here. |
|
|
| He has not been seen or heard from since. |
|
|
| The authorities want him because he is the "Cracker", convicted in 1984 of |
| breaking into some of the most secure computer systems in the United States, |
| including GTE Telemail's electronic mail network, where he peeped at NASA |
| Department of Defense computer correspondence. |
|
|
| His literary agent wants him because he is Bill Landreth the author, who |
| already has cashed in on the successful publication of one book on computer |
| hacking and who is overdue with the manuscript of a second computer book. |
|
|
| The Institute of Internal Auditors wants him because he is Bill Landreth the |
| public speaker who was going to tell the group in a few months how to make |
| their computer systems safer from people like him. |
|
|
| The letter, typed into his computer, then printed out and left in his room for |
| someone to discover, touched on the evolution of mankind, prospects for man's |
| immortality and the defeat of the aging process, nuclear war, communism versus |
| capitalism, society's greed, the purpose of life, computers becoming more |
| creative than man and finally -- suicide. |
|
|
| The last page reads: |
|
|
| "As I am writing this as of the moment, I am obviously not dead. I do, |
| however, plan on being dead before any other humans read this. The idea is |
| that I will commit suicide sometime around my 22nd birthday..." |
|
|
| The note explained: |
|
|
| "I was bored in school, bored traveling around the country, bored getting |
| raided by the FBI, bored in prison, bored writing books, bored being bored. I |
| will probably be bored dead, but this is my risk to take." |
|
|
| But then the note said: |
|
|
| "Since writing the above, my plans have changed slightly.... But the point is, |
| that I am going to take the money I have left in the bank (my liquid assets) |
| and make a final attempt at making life worthy. It will be a short attempt, |
| and I do suspect that if it works out that none of my current friends will know |
| me then. If it doesn't work out, the news of my death will probably get |
| around. (I won't try to hide it.)" |
|
|
| Landreth's birthday is December 26 and his best friend is not counting on |
| seeing him again. |
|
|
| "We used to joke about what you could learn about life, especially since if you |
| don't believe in a God, then there's not much point to life," said Tom |
| Anderson, 16, a senior at San Pasqual High School in Escondido, about 30 miles |
| north of San Diego. Anderson also has been convicted of computer hacking and |
| placed on probation. |
|
|
| Anderson was the last person to see Landreth. It was around September 25 -- he |
| does not remember exactly. Landreth had spent a week living in Anderson's home |
| so the two could share Landreth's computer. Anderson's IBM-PC had been |
| confiscated by authorities, and he wanted to complete his own book. |
|
|
| Anderson said he and Landreth were also working on a proposal for a movie about |
| their exploits. |
|
|
| Apparently Landreth took only his house key, a passport, and the clothes on his |
| back. |
|
|
| But concern grew by October 1, when Landreth failed to keep a speaking |
| engagement with a group of auditors in Ohio, for which he would have received |
| $1,000 plus expenses. Landreth may have kept a messy room and poor financial |
| records, but he was reliable enough to keep a speaking engagement, said his |
| friends and literary agent, Bill Gladstone, noting that Landreth's second |
| manuscript was due in August and had not yet been delivered. |
|
|
| But, the manuscript never came and Landreth has not reappeared. |
|
|
| Steve Burnap, another close friend, said that during the summer Landreth had |
| grown lackadaisical toward life. "He just didn't seem to care much about |
| anything anymore." |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
| Landreth eventually turned up in Seattle, Washington around the third week of |
| July 1987. Because of his breaking probation, he is back in jail finishing his |
| sentence. |
|
|
| Another individual who wanted to publicize himself is Oryan QUEST. Ever since |
| the "Crisis On Infinite Hackers" that occurred on July 21, 1987, QUEST has been |
| "pumping" information to John Markoff -- a reporter for the San Francisco |
| Examiner who now has moved up to the New York Times. Almost t everything Oryan |
| QUEST has told John Markoff are utter and complete lies and false boasts about |
| the powerful things OQ liked to think he could do with a computer. This in |
| itself is harmless, but when it gets printed in newspapers like the New York |
| Times, the general public get a misleading look at the hacker community which |
| can only do us harm. John Markoff has gone on to receive great fame as a news |
| reporter and is now considered a hacker expert -- utterly ridiculous. |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
|
|
| Infiltration |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| One way in which the hacking community is constantly being infiltrated happens |
| on some of today's best known bulletin boards. Boards like Pirate-80 sysoped |
| by Scan Man (who was also working for Telemarketing Company; a |
| telecommunications reseller in Charleston, West Virginia) can be a major |
| problem. On P-80 anyone can get an account if you pay a nominal fee and from |
| there a security consultant just has to start posted supplied information to |
| begin to draw attention and fame as being a super hacker. Eventually he will |
| be asked to join ill-formed groups and start to appear on boards with higher |
| levels of information and blend into the community. After a while he will be |
| beyond suspicion and as such he has successfully entered the phreak/hack world. |
| Dan The Operator was one such agent who acted in this way and would have gone |
| on being undiscovered if not for the events of SummerCon '87 whereafter he was |
| exposed by Knight Lightning and Phrack Inc. |
|
|
|
|
| :Knight Lightning |
|
|
| "The Future Is Forever" |
|
|
| =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= |
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|