| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume Three, Issue 28, File #10 of 12 |
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| 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 2 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 |
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| Grand Jury Indicts Student For Crippling Nationwide Computer Network 7/26/89 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| by John Markoff (New York Times) |
|
|
| After more than eight months of delay, the Justice Department said Wednesday |
| that a federal grand jury in Syracuse, N.Y., had indicted the 24-year-old |
| Cornell University graduate student who has been blamed for crippling a |
| nationwide computer network with a rogue software program. |
|
|
| The student, Robert Tappan Morris, was charged with a single felony count under |
| a 1986 computer crimes law, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Justice |
| Department officials said the indictment was the first under a provision of the |
| law that makes it illegal to gain unauthorized access to federal computers. |
|
|
| A spokesman for the Justice Department said Wednesday that the indictment had |
| been delayed simply because of the time taken to develop evidence. |
|
|
| But legal experts familiar with the case said the department had been stalled |
| in efforts to prosecute Morris because of an internal debate over whether it |
| might be impossible to prove the charges. Under the 1986 law, prosecutors must |
| show that Morris intended to cripple the computer network. |
|
|
| As a result of this concern, the U.S. attorney in Syracuse, Frederick J. |
| Scullin Jr., had considered a plea bargain in which Morris would have pleaded |
| guilty to a misdemeanor charge. This approach was apparently resisted, |
| however, by Scullin's superiors in Washington, who wanted to send a clear |
| signal about the seriousness of computer crime. |
|
|
| Three bills now pending before Congress would make it easier than with the 1986 |
| law to prosecute malicious invasion of computer systems. |
|
|
| The indictment charges that Morris was the author of a computer program that |
| swept through a national network composed of more than 60,000 computers |
| November 2, 1988 jamming as many as 6,000 machines at universities, research |
| centers and military installations. |
|
|
| The software, which computer hackers call a "virus," was supposed to hide |
| silently in the computer network, two of Morris' college friends said, but |
| because of a programming error it multiplied wildly out of control. The |
| friends said Morris' idea had been to simply to prove that he could bypass the |
| security protection of the network. |
|
|
| According to Wednesday's indictment, Morris gained unauthorized access to |
| computers at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Ames Research |
| Center in Moffett Field, California; the U.S. Air Force Logistics Command at |
| Wright Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio; the University of California |
| at Berkeley, and Purdue University. |
|
|
| The indictment charges that the program shut down numerous computers and |
| prevented their use. It charges Morris with causing "substantial damage" at |
| many computer centers resulting from the loss of service and the expense |
| incurred diagnosing the program. |
|
|
| The felony count carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a fine |
| of $250,000, in addition to which the convicted person can be ordered to pay |
| restitution to those affected by his program. |
|
|
| Morris' lawyer, Thomas A. Guidoboni, said his client intended to plead not |
| guilty. Morris, who now lives in the Boston area, was scheduled to be |
| arraigned on Wednesday, August 2, before Gustave J. DiBianco, a U.S. magistrate |
| in Syracuse. |
|
|
| Morris' father, Robert, the chief scientist for the National Security Agency, |
| said the family planned to stand behind their son. "We're distressed to hear |
| of the indictment," he said. |
|
|
| After realizing that his program had run amok, Morris went to his family home |
| in Arnold, Maryland, and later met with Justice Department officials. |
|
|
| The 1986 law was the first broad federal attempt to address the problem of |
| computer crime. Morris is charged with gaining unauthorized access to |
| computers, preventing authorized access by others and causing more than $1,000 |
| in damage. |
|
|
| The incident raised fundamental questions about the security of the nation's |
| computers and renewed debate over the who should be responsible for protecting |
| the nation's non-military computer systems. |
|
|
| Last year Congress settled a debate between the National Security Agency and |
| the National Institute of Standards and Technology by giving authority over |
| non-military systems to the civilian agency. |
|
|
| Last week, however, a General Accounting Office report based on an |
| investigation of the incident recommended that the Office of Science and |
| Technology Policy coordinate the establishment of an interagency group to |
| address computer network security. |
|
|
| The incident has also bitterly divided computer scientists and computer |
| security experts around the country. Some have said they believe that "an |
| example" should be made of Morris to discourage future tampering with computer |
| networks. |
|
|
| Others, however, have argued that Morris performed a valuable service by |
| alerting the nation to the laxity of computer security controls. |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Other articles about Robert Tappan Morris, Jr. and the Internet Worm are; |
|
|
| "Computer Network Disrupted By 'Virus'" (11/03/88) PWN XXII -Part 2 |
| "Virus Attack" (11/06/88) PWN XXII -Part 2 |
| "The Computer Jam: How It Came About" (11/08/88) PWN XXII -Part 2 |
| "US Is Moving To Restrict {...} Virus" (11/11/88) PWN XXII -Part 2 * |
| "FBI Studies Possible Charges In Virus" (11/12/88) PWN XXII -Part 2 |
| "Big Guns Take Aim At Virus" (11/21/88) PWN XXII -Part 3 |
| "Congressman Plan Hearings On Virus" (11/27/88) PWN XXII -Part 3 |
| "Pentagon Severs Military {...} Virus" (11/30/88) PWN XXII -Part 3 * |
| "Networks Of Computers At Risk From Invaders" (12/03/88) PWN XXII -Part 4 * |
| "Computer Virus Eradication Act of 1988" (12/05/88) PWN XXII -Part 4 * |
| "Breaking Into Computers {...}, Pure and Simple" (12/04/88) PWN XXIV -Part 1 * |
| "Cornell Panel Concludes Morris {...} Virus" (04/06/89) PWN XXVI -Part 1 |
| "Robert T. Morris Suspended From Cornell" (05/25/89) PWN XXVII -Part 2 |
| "Justice Department Wary In Computer Case" (05/28/89) PWN XXVII -Part 2 |
|
|
| * - Indicates that the article was not directly related to Robert Morris, but |
| did discuss him as well as the Internet Worm incident. |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
|
|
| The Free World Incident July 5, 1989 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Special Thanks to Brew Associates of Phortune 500 |
|
|
| [Some articles edited for this presentation --KL] |
|
|
| Numb: 84 of 98 7/2/89 at 8:56 pm |
| Subj: ... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: Major Havoc |
|
|
| Here is the story... |
|
|
| Evidently, someone got into Chesapeake & Potomac's (C&P) computer systems, and |
| added call forwarding to the telephone line that the Free World is being run |
| on. It was not done through social engineering, because there was not an order |
| pending on my line. Therefore, I had "free" call waiting on my line. |
|
|
| What the individual who did this does not realize is that service cannot be |
| changed on my line unless it is typical service, because because my father is a |
| retired VP from C&P. |
|
|
| The phone lines at this location are paid for by C&P, so the only way that the |
| service on these lines could have been changed is directly via the C&P computer |
| systems. I had a long talk with C&P security, and they know who the individual |
| was that made the changes in the system. My parents (since I do not even |
| really live here anymore) are supposed to be signing papers that will have this |
| individual prosecuted sometime next week, because he was foolish enough to |
| leave something for them to track down. |
|
|
| My guess is that it was someone who was denied access to the system that has |
| some type of grudge to hold or something. I will have the pleasure of seeing |
| this individual serve time, if they are not a minor. |
|
|
| C&P Security questioned me in person and asked me if I had any information on |
| different incidents concerning central office burglaries or theft of C&P |
| property. Some of you may be getting a BIG surprise REAL soon. |
|
|
| The bottom line is that I am not going to put up with this hassle much longer. |
| The mere fact that I am under possible investigation for something that I am |
| not involved with is really starting to get me upset. I am 20 years old, and I |
| have a nice 32K salary job, and I am not going to tolerate these situations any |
| longer. I have been doing this for so long, that it is about time that I got |
| some kind of recognition, and not more grief from a bunch of worthless |
| Christmas modemers. |
|
|
| Shape up or pay the consequences. |
|
|
| -Major Havoc |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Numb: 86 of 98 7/2/89 at 11:54 pm |
| Subj: Hmm.. |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: Weatherman |
|
|
| I would do the same thing. If some guy thinks he is being really slick and |
| does something like that just to cause trouble, they deserve a rude awakening |
| to real life. Keep us posted on the situation. I can see your point as to |
| your job and age and everything since I am in the same boat. I am not going to |
| sacrifice my future life for any reason. Unfortunately, I don't make 32k yet. |
|
|
| \%\%eatherman |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Numb: 87 of 98 7/3/89 at 12:07 pm |
| Subj: Umm... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: Lost Carrier |
|
|
| Major Havoc -- The only part of your message I am concerned about is "I had a |
| long talk with C&P security and a lot of you will be in for a big surpirse," or |
| something to that effect. I hate surprises. Which of us? heh. |
|
|
| LC, 2af |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Numb: 89 of 98 7/3/89 at 4:03 pm |
| Subj: .... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: Raving Lunatic |
|
|
| I am shocked. Major Havoc turning people in? About time, I guess it takes |
| income and responsibilities for most geeks to grow up and I am glad Havoc is not |
| going to tolerate it. Would be interesting to at least hear the alias(es) of |
| the people/person that did the forwarding. |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Numb: 90 of 98 7/3/89 at 5:03 pm |
| Subj: I find this interesting... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: The Mechanic |
|
|
| I have seen Major Havoc post several messages recently (both here [The Free |
| World bulletin board] and elsewhere) on the topic of telephone security. While |
| it was not explicitly mentioned, it was implied that some activities discussed |
| might not be entirely legal. In fact, there is a logon message encouraging |
| users to post as much as possible, as well as upload and download software, |
| including software that may be copyrighted. Now we see a message from MHavoc |
| that some of us may be looking forward to "BIG Surprises." I do not know about |
| you, but I'm going to think twice before I post *anything* to this system, at |
| least until I am assured that material on this board is not being monitored by |
| C&P personnel. |
|
|
| I think that if MHavoc wants this system to go anywhere, he is going to have to |
| *prove* to us that he is not going to be narcing on people as a result of what |
| they post. |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Numb: 91 of 98 7/3/89 at 5:23 pm |
| Subj: ... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: Major Havoc |
|
|
| The information was not supplied by myself. It was information that was read |
| to me by C&P security people. I stood there plainly denying that I even knew |
| what a modem was. |
|
|
| The bottom line is that you do not have to worry about me. You need to worry |
| about the information that they already have. They merely asked me if I knew |
| anything about it. Of course I did not...seriously, I don't even know. |
|
|
| -Major Havoc |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Numb: 93 of 98 7/3/89 at 8:29 pm |
| Subj: ... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: Juan Valdez |
|
|
| I am sure Major Havoc cannot reveal the name of the person who did it, since he |
| is under investigation, it would make matters more difficult to make his name |
| public. I am sure we'd all like to know maybe after everything is all done |
| with. This thing about C&P cracking down scares me. I know that I have not |
| done anything like what you mentioned and I am not connected to anything |
| directly as far as I know. Now you are getting me paranoid. |
|
|
| Mike |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
|
|
| Numb: 94 of 98 7/3/89 at 9:31 pm |
| Subj: Hmm... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: Mr. Mystery |
|
|
| When it becomes possible, please post his name, and, more |
| importantly, the date of his court appearance. Might be worth |
| watching. |
|
|
| - MR. MYSTERY |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Numb: 95 of 98 7/3/89 at 11:10 pm |
| Subj: That |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: The Killer |
|
|
| Is he a local or just an upset user. What sort of stuff was the |
| phone company upset about? Phreakers or people tampering with |
| their equipment? That is pretty messed up. |
|
|
| So long as my ass is clean, I really hope you get the idiot. I |
| am curious --Is he a phone company employee? How did he get into |
| the system? |
|
|
| [Killer/USAlliance] - FW:301/486-4515 |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Numb: 96 of 98 7/4/89 at 2:26 am |
| Subj: Things......... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: Hellraiser |
|
|
| Would I be correct to assume that this board is completely |
| "private." At any rate, I would be interested in knowing who |
| this person causing the disturbance is/was (drop a hint). |
|
|
|
|
| Numb: 97 of 98 7/4/89 at 6:33 pm |
| Subj: Jesus... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: The Disk Jockey |
|
|
| Geez... Someone learns a few LMOS commands and they seem obsessed |
| with doing stupid things. |
|
|
| I have absolutely no idea why people would act wary towards |
| Havoc, I am sure that I and anyone else who ran a board would, |
| given the chance, burn the person disrupting the system. What |
| the hell did you think? Havoc should just let it slide? I think |
| not. People like that (doers of such cute call forwarding |
| things) should be screwed. They are the people that give you a |
| bad reputation. |
|
|
| -The Disk Jockey |
|
|
| I hope he gets nailed, I just find it hard to believe that he |
| left any information that could lead back to him, as someone who |
| was at least smart enough to get into an LMOS or equivalent could |
| have at least some common sense, but I suppose his acts dictate |
| otherwise. |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Numb: 98 of 98 7/4/89 at 7:21 pm |
| Subj: Well... |
| Sect: General Messages |
| From: Microchip |
|
|
| When it was on interchat, it said Major Havoc was fed up and it |
| was going to do this until we all calmed down |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
| For those who never found out, the perpetrator of the call |
| forwarding was none other than SuperNigger (who is also |
| responsible for crashing Black Ice). There never was any solid |
| proof that could be used and any comments about him leaving a |
| trail to follow back to him were bluffs. -KL |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
|
|
| Conman Loses Prison Phone Privileges September 23, 1989 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| About a year ago there was a plot to steal $69 million from the |
| First National Bank of Chicago through a fraudulent wire-transfer |
| scheme masterminded by a man named Armand Moore. Using the |
| telephone and a computer -- the tools of his trade, Mr. Moore |
| planned to transfer money from the accounts of corporate |
| customers at First National to his account in Switzerland. |
|
|
| He needed some inside help to bring it off, and he found two |
| young guys in the wire transfer room at the bank who were willing |
| to help. Both of the clerks were fellows in their early |
| twenties, who had worked for the bank a couple years each. Both |
| had come from families living in a ghetto neighborhood on the |
| south side of Chicago; but their families had raised them to be |
| honest. Both had been average high school students; neither had |
| any previous criminal record of any sort; both had been given a |
| break by an employer who treated them fairly and allowed them to |
| rise to positions of trust: handling huge sums of money --about |
| a hundred million dollars a day -- in the wire-transfer unit at |
| the bank. Both showed great promise; then Armand Moore came |
| along. |
|
|
| Moore wined and dined these two kids; showed them the best of |
| times and what it was like to have a fancy apartment in a wealthy |
| neighborhood instead of living with your parents in an inner-city |
| ghetto. Its not that they weren't guilty --after all, they did |
| provide the secret passwords and phrases which bank employees say |
| to one another on the telephone, and they did press the buttons |
| which sent $69 million dollars on its way to Europe -- but they |
| would not have done it if Armand Moore had not been there. |
|
|
| So instead of a career at the bank, the guys exchanged it for an |
| indictment for bank fraud; loss of their jobs; humiliation for |
| themselves and their families; and the right to say "convicted of |
| bank fraud" on future job applications. Naturally, they are |
| blacklisted in the banking and computer industries for the rest |
| of their lives. One of the guys said Armand had promised to give |
| him money to buy his mother a new coat. |
|
|
| The job at First National was bungled as we all know, two young |
| guys had their lives ruined, and the court took all this into |
| consideration when Armand Moore was sentenced to ten years in |
| prison last June. But as Paul Harvey would say, "...then there |
| is the rest of the story...." |
|
|
| It seems Armand Moore was no stranger to bank fraud. He had |
| previously pulled a couple of smaller jobs, using a telephone and |
| a computer to net about a million dollars from two banks in the |
| Detroit area. The FBI had not previously connected him with |
| those jobs. He had this money stashed away, waiting for him when |
| he got released from prison, which in this latest scheme, would |
| be a lot sooner than the government expected. |
|
|
| Mr. Moore is the sort of fellow who could sell the proverbial |
| ice-box to an Eskimo... or a newspaper subscription to a blind |
| man... he can get anybody to do anything it seems... by flirting |
| with them, showering them with attention, and if necessary, just |
| bribing them. Now two more lives have been ruined by Armand |
| Moore, and his only regret is he got caught. |
|
|
| Since his trial in June, Armand Moore has been a guest of the |
| government at the federal penitentiary in downtown Chicago. As a |
| long term resident, he's gotten to know a lot of the folks, |
| including the employees of the prison. In particular, he got to |
| be very good friends with Randy W. Glass, age 28, an employee of |
| the prison in the computer facility there. Glass' duties include |
| entering data into the prison computer about the inmates, their |
| sentences and other data. Oh... is the story becoming clearer |
| now? |
|
|
| Glass and his wife live in Harvey, IL, a middle class suburb on |
| the south side of Chicago. It seems like so many other people |
| who meet Armand Moore, Glass enjoyed the company of this older, |
| very sophisticated and friendly chap. After several meetings in |
| the past three months, Glass was finally seduced by Moore's |
| money, like everyone else who meets him. That, plus his pleasant |
| manners, his smooth conversation and his assurance that nothing |
| could go wrong led to Glass finally agreeing to accept a $70,000 |
| bribe in exchange for punching a few buttons on the computer to |
| show Armand Moore's sentence was complete; him and a couple other |
| inmates who were sharing the same room at the prison. Just |
| change a few details, punch a few buttons -- and to be on the |
| safe side, do it from home with your modem and terminal, using |
| the Warden's password which I just happen to have and will give |
| to you in exchange for your cooperation. |
|
|
| $70,000 was hard to resist. But Glass was a prudent man, and he |
| asked what guarantee would he have of payment once Armand Moore |
| was released. After all, hadn't he promised those fellows at the |
| bank all sorts of things and then tried to skip town immediately |
| when he thought the transfer had gone through? He would even |
| cheat his fellow crooks, wouldn't he? |
|
|
| Moore offered a $20,000 "down payment" to show his intentions. A |
| confederate outside the prison would meet Glass' wife and give |
| her the money. Then the job would be done, and following Moore's |
| untimely release from the joint, the rest would be paid. The |
| deal was made, alleges the government, and Armand Moore used a |
| pay phone at the prison that day to call his stepsister and have |
| her arrange to meet Mrs. Glass. The money would be exchanged; |
| Glass was off two days later and would make the necessary |
| "adjustments" from his home computer; the prison roll would |
| reflect this on the next morning's roster of prisoners with the |
| notation "Time Served/Release Today." They would meet that |
| evening and exchange the rest of the money. |
|
|
| All telephones at the prison, including the public pay phones, |
| are subject to monitoring. A sign on each pay phone advises that |
| "your call may be monitored by an employee authorized to do so." |
| The FBI alleges that recordings were made of Moore on the phone |
| telling his stepsister that she should "...work with Randy, a |
| person affiliated with the law..." and that she would meet Mrs. |
| Glass the next day. With a court ordered tap obtained a few |
| minutes later, the FBI heard Stephanie Glass agree to meet |
| Moore's stepsister at 5:45 AM the next morning in a parking lot |
| in Richton Park, IL. |
|
|
| At the appointed time the next morning, the two cars met in the |
| parking lot, and the FBI alleges the one woman handed the other a |
| package containing $20,000 in cash. The FBI videotaped the |
| meeting and waited until Mrs. Glass had driven away. They |
| followed her home, and arrested her at that time. Randy Glass |
| was arrested at the prison when he arrived for work about an hour |
| later. Armand Moore was arrested in his cell at the prison once |
| Glass had been taken into custody. To do it the other way around |
| might have caused Glass to get tipped off and run away. |
|
|
| On Thursday, September 21, 1989 Mr. & Mrs. Glass and Armand Moore |
| appeared before United States Magistrate Joan Lefkow for |
| arraignment and finding of probable cause. Finding probable |
| cause, she ordered all three held without bail at the prison |
| until their trial. Randy Glass is now, so to speak, on the wrong |
| side of the bars at the place where he used to work. He was |
| suspended without pay at the time of his arrest. |
|
|
| At the hearing, Magistrate Lefkow directed some particularly acid |
| comments to Mr. Moore, noting that he was forbidden to ever use |
| the telephone again for any reason for the duration of his |
| confinement, and was forbidden to ever be in the vicinity of the |
| computer room for any reason, also for the duration. |
|
|
| She noted, "...it seems to me you continue to seek the |
| conspiracy's objectives by using the telephone, and convincing |
| others to manipulate the computer..." you stand here today and |
| show no remorse whatsoever except that you were caught once |
| again. Your prison record notes that on two occasions, prison |
| staff have observed you using the telephone and "...pressing the |
| touchtone buttons in a peculiar way during the call..." and that |
| you were counseled to stop doing it. I will tell you now sir |
| that you are not to use the telephone for any reason for the |
| remainder of your current sentence. I find probable cause to |
| hold you over for trial on the charge of bribery of a government |
| employee. Stay away from the phones and computers at the prison |
| Mr. Moore!" |
|
|
| Like Gabriel Taylor at the First National Bank, neither Randy |
| Glass or his wife had any prior arrest record or conviction. In |
| a foolish moment of greed, spurred on by a friendly fellow who |
| Randy really enjoyed talking to "...because he was so smart and |
| well-educated..." they now get to face prison and the loss of |
| everything in their lives. When all three were leaving the |
| courtroom Thursday, Armand Moore snickered and smiled at the |
| audience. He'll find other suckers soon enough. |
| ______________________________________________________________________ |
|
|