| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume Three, Issue 29, File #2 of 12 |
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| ==Phrack Pro-Phile XXIX== |
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| Created and Presented by Taran King |
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| Done on November 12, 1989 |
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| Welcome to Phrack Pro-Phile XXIX. Phrack Pro-Phile was created to |
| bring information to you, the community, about retired or highly important/ |
| controversial people. This edition of the Phrack Pro-Phile starts a different |
| format as I'm sure you will notice. The skeleton of the Pro-Phile is a form |
| in which the people fill in the blanks. Starting now, using their words (and a |
| little editing), the Pro-Phile will be presented in first person format. This |
| month, we present to you the editor of one of the most prominent printed |
| phreak/hack newsletters of all times... |
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| Emmanuel Goldstein |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| Handle: Emmanuel Goldstein |
| Call Him: Call me anything. Just look me in the eye. |
| Past Handles: Howard Tripod, Sidney Schreiber, Bob Hardy, Gary Wilson, |
| Clint Eastwood, 110. There are others that I keep quiet |
| about. |
| Handle Origin: I prefer using regular names rather than descriptive |
| boastful titles (i.e., "The Hacker King," who, |
| incidentally, I don't wish to offend if he/she even exists; |
| this is just an example). The names I use are either |
| people I've "become" or names that bestow a certain image. |
| Emmanuel Goldstein, for instance, led the resistance in |
| "1984." But then, there was talk that he never really |
| existed and was just created by the government in order to |
| capture the real subversives. I don't think that's the |
| case with me. |
| Computers: I use PC compatibles for the most part. I also play around |
| with Macs but they're not REAL computers to me. My |
| favorite machine of all time is the Zenith Z-100, a |
| dual-processor computer that can emulate an old fashioned |
| H8 or an IBM PC. It runs lots of operating systems and has |
| a great keyboard. Too bad it was discontinued four years |
| ago.... |
| Sysop/Co-Sysop Of: The old Plovernet on Long Island (1984), Private Sector in |
| New Jersey (1985, 1986), and the present and future 2600 |
| boards. |
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| Origins in Phreak/Hack World |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| I've been playing with phones all of my life and I started playing with |
| computers the first time I saw one. I always seemed to get in trouble for |
| doing things I wasn't supposed to... crashing the PDP-10 in high school... |
| flashing the switchhook on my phone 95 times and getting an angry switchman who |
| wouldn't release the line, claiming I broke it (I was 10). As computers and |
| phones started to become integrated, I realized what hacking really was -- just |
| asking a lot of questions and being really persistent. A lot of people don't |
| like that, whether it's computers or real life, but how else are you going to |
| learn what's REALLY happening and not just what others WANT you to know? |
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| Origins in Phreak/Hack BBSes |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| I don't really have a BBS reputation to speak of. They tend to disappear |
| rather quickly and that tends to dampen my enthusiasm towards them quite a bit, |
| but I do want to see more and more of them come up and begin to reach out and |
| be creative. They also have to challenge the system some more. 2600 has a |
| very strong opinion on BBS privacy, namely that the same rights afforded to any |
| publication should be extended to a bulletin board, but every BBS owner should |
| know the importance of this and should be willing to fight for it. If you |
| didn't believe in preserving the First Amendment, you probably wouldn't go out |
| and buy a newspaper, would you? A BBS is the same thing and anyone who runs a |
| system should see this connection. Hackers tend to bring this issue to the |
| forefront a bit more, but this is something that applies to all bulletin |
| boards. |
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| Encounters With Phreakers and Hackers |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Meeting Captain Crunch in Amsterdam this past summer was a real trip. Finding |
| out who Cable Pair really was certainly resulted in some highlights. I've met |
| a lot of "famous" phreaks and hackers and now I know a lot of foreign ones, but |
| I'm always amazed at the number of people I meet (mostly in New York) who say |
| they've been hacking since the sixties. There's an awful lot of people out |
| there who are into this kind of stuff, which is something I never knew before I |
| started being open about these particular interests. |
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| Experience Gained In The Following Ways |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Social engineering, of course. I like hacking computers when I'm not feeling |
| social because you don't have to adjust your attitude to get a reply, but |
| people hacking is so much more satisfying. No matter how many security codes |
| and precautions are taken, as long as one person without knowledge is able to |
| talk to another with knowledge, it will always be possible to get things out of |
| them. Most of the really important bits of information I've been able to get |
| are through people, not computers. |
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| Knowledge Attributed To... |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Ignorance. I built up my knowledge by wandering around in places others |
| thought unimportant. Hacking can be like trashing. It looks like garbage or a |
| waste of time to most, but if you keep your mind open, you can learn a lot. If |
| more people felt this way, hackers would stand out less because everyone would |
| be a bit more adventurous, but ignorance prevails and we learn what nobody else |
| cares about...that is until it affects them. |
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| Work/Schooling |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| I got an English degree at Stony Brook (it's currently gathering dust in a |
| closet). I should note that I've never taken a computer course, nor do I |
| intend to. I've worked as a limo driver, a Good Humor man, and a typesetter, |
| and more recently, as a freelance writer, a reporter for Pacifica Radio, and a |
| radio engineer/producer and talk show host. |
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| Busted For... |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| I used to make free phone calls all the time. Now, obviously, I can't do that, |
| since I'm in the public eye, but that's not a drawback to me because I can |
| still experiment all I want. Nothing can change that. For the most part I was |
| careful while I was doing these things, but there was one time when my luck ran |
| out. I had been using Telemail to communicate with some other people and they, |
| unknown to us, had been looking for hackers on their system. They found us, |
| the members of PHALSE (Phreakers, Hackers, and Laundromat Service Employees |
| [I'm told the feds spent a lot of time investigating the laundry connection, |
| even though we only used it to spell out the word PHALSE!]). I believe four |
| people got indicted in that adventure. I was one of them. Bill Landreth was |
| another. They thought I was the ringleader so they gave me a 10 count |
| indictment, more than twice what anyone else got. Without hiring an expensive |
| lawyer, I talked to a roomful of feds about the system and what was wrong with |
| it. I made it clear that I wasn't turning anybody in -- even if I wanted to I |
| still didn't know who or where they were. I think I was dealt with fairly. I |
| told them what I did and paid for the time I used. Nothing more. That was in |
| 1984 when 2600 was just getting off the ground. A couple of years ago, one of |
| the feds who had questioned me tried to get me to work for them. Not to entrap |
| hackers, but Soviet spies. And so it goes. |
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| Interests |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| I guess I'm an explorer because everything I like doing involves exploration of |
| some sort. Obviously, hacking contains a good amount of that. I like |
| traveling quite a bit, particularly when I'm free to do whatever the hell I |
| want. Traveling with people is fun but it can also be a drag because something |
| you want to do puts them off and then you either wind up not doing it or doing |
| it and pissing them off. I like to ride subways to weird places and walk |
| through bad neighborhoods. It's all a part of exploring and seeing the world |
| through different eyes. A couple of years ago I went to Baffin Island and hung |
| out for a week with Eskimos. Everyone thought I was crazy but I had a great |
| time. I'm also into astronomy, but not the classroom kind. I took a course |
| in astronomy once and it was the biggest mistake of my life. All we did was |
| talk about equations. I like to look at the sky and read about what's being |
| discovered up there. When the space telescope goes up next year, interest in |
| space will rise again. Then there's free-lance writing, which I have to devote |
| more time to. I'm working on a couple of plays, some short stories, a |
| screenplay for a movie, and a screenplay for TV. I'll probably focus on the |
| plays only because there's so much bullshit involved in TV and movies. And |
| finally, there's radio. I've been in radio for just over 10 years, doing |
| whatever comes to mind on WUSB-FM in Stony Brook, NY, a small, noncommercial |
| radio station at the State University. Now I also work at WBAI-FM, a much |
| larger station in New York City with the same kind of free-form attitude. |
| There's so much you can do with radio, but so few stations want to take a |
| chance any more. That's why they all sound the same. Unfortunately, when you |
| sell commercials, you also sell your freedom. I've seen it enough times to |
| know it's true and that's the reason I've stayed out of commercial radio. |
| Right now I do a weekly talk show on WUSB called "Brain Damage" where I take |
| calls, play with the phones, and air tapes from Radio Moscow. On WBAI I'm |
| doing two shows: "News of the World" which is a compilation of foreign news |
| reports and "Off The Hook," a program about, you guessed it, phone phreaks. |
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| Favorite Things |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| I like hanging out with fun people who are open-minded, non-judgmental, and |
| preferably insane to a degree. I enjoy talking on the phone with friends and |
| strangers alike. Strangers are different because you can be whoever you want |
| to be with them. They tend to believe almost anything you say. Music is |
| really important. Right now I like rappers and toasters the most, with soca |
| and hardcore close behind. Ska's real good too, but there's not much coming |
| out. The record I put on when I wake up sets my mood for the day. I like |
| music with lyrics that mean something. There's a time and a place for mindless |
| droning but there's too much of it around. Music should have meaning. In |
| Jamaica, people don't buy newspapers. They buy records and that's how they |
| learn what's going on and what the latest catch phrases are. Some of my |
| favorite rock bands include The Clash, Big Audio Dynamite, Dead Kennedys, |
| Donner Party, Public Enemy, Camper Van Beethoven, Pink Floyd, Fun Boy Three, De |
| La Soul, and Anti-Nowhere League. Some of my favorite solo artists are Tracy |
| Chapman, John Lennon, Elvis Costello, and Patsy Cline. I realize I'm very |
| lucky because I work in an environment (noncommercial radio station) that gets |
| over 100 new albums a week. I don't know how I would have ever found some of |
| the stuff I like if I didn't have that kind of access. |
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| Inside Jokes |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| "OK, if we can't have a tour, can we at least have a look around?" |
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| "I'm not allowed to talk to you any more." |
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| "This is the Sprint operator. I have a collect call from AT&T." |
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| "There aren't any more supervisors, sir. You've spoken to all of them." |
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| "Iran, will you hang up! Sir, do you speak what he speaks?" |
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| "I said, DON'T hit return!" |
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| "But we didn't know it was the foreign minister!" |
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| "Repair serv-- damn! There it goes again. What the hell's wrong with |
| these phones?" |
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| "Just tell me how much money you lost and I'll arrange for a trial date." |
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| Serious Section |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Being a part of the hack/phreak community, you get to experience unique little |
| adventures that the "average" person has no conception of. We talk to people |
| over the phone and have no idea what they look like, often no idea what they |
| even sound like (BBSes). We play with technology and are thought of as |
| geniuses merely because the rest of the world doesn't understand what we're |
| doing. I think that goes to our heads sometimes, which is bad for everyone. |
| We should apply our knowledge and skills not only to help ourselves by getting |
| a high-paying job somewhere but to help others as well. Look what happened in |
| China. Using FAX machines, modems, and redial functions, people forced |
| information into the country and tied up the government's snitch lines which |
| probably saved a few lives. The "average" person would never think of applying |
| technology in this way, but we do and we know how to do it efficiently, |
| quickly, and without spending money. It's because of that last one that we've |
| got freedom. Most people don't do things because of the cost. Without having |
| to worry about that, you can be a lot more imaginative. Of course, that also |
| makes it illegal, which is enough to stifle some of us. What we do and how we |
| do it is a decision we each have to make, but we should stop wasting time |
| boasting and get on with the exploring and the learning and the new |
| applications. Another thing that really gets me is the person who says, |
| "hacking and phreaking isn't what it used to be." First off, if nothing |
| changes, life gets pretty dull. Second, that statement is usually a precursor |
| to something like, "what kids do today isn't real hacking. What I did 5, 10, |
| 20 years ago was REAL hacking." Generalizations like that are worthless. It's |
| just like yuppies going on about the Beatles, calling that real music, and |
| saying the sounds of today are crap (by the way, I like the Beatles a lot). At |
| the same time, too many hackers are just starting out and thinking they know it |
| all, dismissing everything that happened before they were around. The spirit |
| of today's hacker is often the same as that of a phone phreak of the sixties. |
| And there were people like us around 100 years ago but we're even more far |
| removed from what they could have possibly been doing. The point is that |
| there's a bond that ties a lot of us together -- it cuts through time and |
| backgrounds. Like anything else, there's too much hypocrisy and judging going |
| on in the hack/phreak world. I think it's a real waste of time. |
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| Are Phreaks/Hackers You've Met Generally Computer Geeks? |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Not in the least. Those people that I've come to know have turned out to be |
| just about everything you can imagine. White/Black, Jew/Gentile, straight/gay, |
| male/female, opened/closed, you name it. Everyone's got different sides to |
| them, stuff they don't always want others to know. Sometimes we try to squash |
| those other sides of us, but they still exist. I've met hackers who have |
| geekish qualities but once you get to know them, you realize there's more to |
| them. Of course, there are lots of hackers I would never want to know in a |
| million years; that's just the way I am with a lot of people. I think it was |
| Linus Van Pelt who said, "I love mankind. It's people I can't stand." |
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| >--------=====END=====--------< |
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