| ==Phrack Classic== |
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| Volume Three, Issue 32, File #2 of 12 |
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|
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| ==Phrack Classic Spotlight== |
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| Knight Lightning |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Personal |
| ~~~~~~~ |
| Handle: Knight Lightning |
| Call him: Craig Neidorf |
| Past handles: None |
| Handle origin: Cross between character "Lightning Lad" from DC Comics' |
| Legion of Superheros and Michael Knight from the NBC |
| television series "Knight Rider". |
| Date of Birth: I doubt you're sending me a birthday card so skip it. |
| Age at current date: 21 years old |
| Height: 5'10" or so (give or take an inch) |
| Weight: 135-140 lbs. |
| Eye color: Brown |
| Hair Color: Dark Brown |
| Computers: Apple IIc (Do you believe this?) |
| Co-Sysop of: Metal Shop Private, The Brewery, Quick Shop/Metal Shop |
| AE, Whackoland, The Dark Tower, Digital ITS (yay!), |
| Stronghold East and probably a few more I've forgotten |
| about. |
| Net address: C483307@UMCVMB.MISSOURI.EDU (Yes, they actually gave |
| C483307@UMCVMB.BITNET me my account back!) |
| knight@well.sf.ca.us |
|
|
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| For several years I had been a die hard fan of video games, both arcade |
| and home versions. It was really the Atari 2600 video game Adventure that led |
| me into the world of computers and hacking. As many people might know there |
| was a secret locked within this game concerning a "magic" dot. It was not |
| mentioned in any instruction manuals for the game, but if you could find it and |
| bring it to the right place in the game, you could enter a room that didn't |
| officially exist. In this room was a message flashing in gold and black. It |
| said "Created by Warren Robinet". From that point on I experimented with every |
| Atari cartridge I had. I tried screwing around with the connections, the |
| components on the system itself, and I attempted bizarre tactics within the |
| games, just to see what might happen. During that period of time I found |
| several more secretly implanted messages and developed new ways of playing the |
| games. Atari played on this idea quite a bit when they created a four game |
| saga called Swordquest, but by then the fun was taken out of it because you |
| knew already that something was waiting to be found. Eventually I upgraded to |
| ColecoVision, but before too long this bored me as well. It is sort of |
| interesting to see the new surge of home videogames of Nintendo, NEC, and Sega. |
| It makes me wonder if this cycle is permanent. |
| I was first introduced to the world of computers by a friend who had a |
| Commodore 64. He showed me what bulletin boards were and then took me on a |
| tour of the ARPAnet. Later that year, my long-time and best friend, known to |
| most of you as Taran King obtained the use of his father's IBM PC. Together we |
| explored various bulletin boards in the St. Louis area, always looking for new |
| places to visit. |
| In August of 1983 I received an Apple IIc as a birthday gift from my |
| parents. It was real basic -- no monitor (I had a black and white television |
| for that), no extra disk drive, no printer, no joystick, and no modem. Those |
| items I would have to earn. So instead of playing with faraway computer |
| systems, I was introduced to programming and a community of people who |
| considered themselves to be software pirates. These people seemed to be able |
| to get software before the companies even began to sell it. However, I was |
| content to play games like Ultima III and Wizardry and hack the game itself by |
| altering character values. This enabled me to move my characters through |
| different places, some of which I never might have realized existed. Later, I |
| was able to redesign the game itself to create an endless world of new |
| possibilities for intellectual stimulation. |
| Finally in March of 1984, my parents purchased me a modem. It was a sad |
| little piece of plastic made by Volksmodem, 300 baud and battery operated, but |
| it worked and now Knight Lightning was ready to take to the wires. By this |
| time I already knew a lot about the bulletin board community through Taran |
| King. Even so, it was relatively odd how fast I became co-sysop of the |
| ancestor to Metal Shop known as The Dark Tower. TDT was operated by a "hacker" |
| with the truly unoriginal name of David Lightman. Before I knew it, I was in |
| remote command of his system with full power over user validation and BBS |
| maintenance. Although the system went down after about six months, it did |
| attract a few out of state users and it was here that my notoriety began. It |
| was almost funny, but even as early as then Taran King, Forest Ranger, and I |
| became known as the top hacker/phreakers in the St. Louis area. To this day I |
| still don't understand why. |
| By July of 1985 most of the hacker bulletin boards in St. Louis had |
| disappeared, but The Dark Tower program lived again when Taran King created |
| Metal Shop: The Dark Tower Phase II. He took the name from a popular |
| afternoon rock'n roll program (KSHE FM radio) that centered on heavy metal. |
| Both of us had visited systems around the country and we were able to |
| effectively advertise MS. At one point we had over 500 registered users so we |
| switched to a general password system for security reasons and eventually in |
| January of 1986 the board became Metal Shop Private and we cut 4/5ths of the |
| users. |
| During the late Spring and early Summer of 1985 Taran King and I created |
| the 2600 Club. It was just a group name to stick behind our handles since |
| everybody was doing it, but it only took use a few months to realize just |
| how ignorant hacker groups really are. However, the 2600 Club had one |
| great legacy -- it gave birth to Phrack. If you go back and look, you'll |
| notice that the first issue of Phrack was a product of the 2600 Club. The idea |
| for doing Phrack came from Forest Ranger. Taran King provided the arena and |
| would be the editor and I came up with the name. |
| When I used to call bulletin boards like the Twilight Zone (sysoped by The |
| Marauder) I would data capture the message bases and save them in text files. |
| The messages from the hacking subboard would be saved in a file called HACKMESS |
| (which stood for hack messages), the messages from the phone phreak subboard |
| were saved as PHREAKMESS, but when there was a subboard where both these types |
| of messages appeared together, I simply merged the two names and came up with |
| PHRACKMESS. Since the newsletter would contain information on both topics and |
| more, I felt the name Phrack was applicable. So where did the "Inc." come |
| from? Actually it came from another DC Comics series called Infinity Inc. |
| Kind of silly now since we never intended to actually incorporate. The first |
| issue of Phrack was distributed on November 17, 1985. |
| In Phrack issue 2 I began the ongoing series of Phrack World News. I |
| followed every story I could and it was fun. The first issue was sort of lame, |
| but eventually I learned that PWN was the most popular segment of Phrack. The |
| greatest thing about PWN was that it was an original concept for a hacker |
| newsletter -- lots of people had tried to write "how-to files, but no one had |
| ever tried news before. Who was getting busted? What did they do? How can I |
| make sure it doesn't happen to me? Lots of the stories were exaggerated or in |
| the case of Oryan QUEST, fabricated (by QUEST himself). |
| Outside of Phrack World News I wrote files about Videoconferencing, |
| Private Branch eXchanges, and a few others here and there. Prior to Phrack |
| I had released a huge glossary of telecommunications terms and files about the |
| divestiture of AT&T and its aftermath. Taran King and I also wrote a joke file |
| about "Real Phreaks" that was echoed by a continuation of that file in the |
| Phrack parody issue number 13 that was released on April 1, 1987. |
| Throughout my years I have met many people who call themselves hackers |
| and/or phone phreaks: |
|
|
| Android Pope - I wonder how married life is treating him. |
| Aristotle - Sporty! He is the former editor of the New TAP. |
| Bad Subscript - Right hand man to Control C and an expert at disco dancing |
| in high speed Camaros. |
| Bill from RNOC - How have your phone bills been? High? Have they been!? |
| He is also known as "the most dangerous man in New York." |
| Beer Wolf - Former sysop of the (Metal Shop) Brewery. |
| Blue Buccaneer - Lost track of him over the years. |
| Cat Man - How about a nice Hawaiian Punch? |
| Cheap Shades - Now a Computer Science graduate of University of |
| Missouri-Rolla. Former sysop of Metal Shop AE and |
| QuickShop. |
| Control C - A man with serious problems right now. Hope you get those |
| videotapes and best of luck! |
| Crimson Death - The one in 618 NPA. Very un-original name, but definitely |
| one of a kind. |
| Cryptic Fist - Kinda warm for that leather jacket, isn't it? (90 degrees) |
| Cutthroat - So what McDonalds do *you* work at? |
| Dan The Operator - An informant for John Maxfield (SummerCon '87). |
| Data Line - Now a government agent, but hardly a hacker tracker. |
| David Lightman - The sysop of The Dark Tower in 314 NPA. |
| The Dictator - Not-so secret agent of Gail Thackeray, the assistant |
| Arizona state attorney behind Operation Sun-Devil. |
| In a past life, Dale was the creator of Candid Camera. |
| What a surprise that was this summer. |
| Disk Jockey - I thought he was a great guy until he started to backstab |
| me on Lunitic Labs while I was under indictment. |
| Doc Holiday (901) - The original! |
| Dr. Cypher - Knowledgeable person who remains local. |
| Dr. Forbin - Last seen at SummerCon '89. |
| Dr. Ripco - Well haven't met him yet, but in a couple of weeks. |
| Doom Prophet - A friend who seems to have disappeared. |
| Epsilon - Must have lost my number I guess. |
| Emmanuel Goldstein - Also known as Eric Corley, the editor of 2600 Magazine. |
| Erik Bloodaxe - He is a wildcard... totally unpredictable... hacks by the |
| seat of his pants. Still active, but he'd better not have |
| a squirt gun next to his bed or he may be sorry.{SS} |
| Forest Ranger - The man who introduced me to the hacker elite way back |
| when. Former editor of TeleComputist Newsletter. |
| Gary Seven - Don't remember much about him. Met him with Lex in Fla. |
| Hatchet Molly - You know him as Computer Underground Digest's Gordon |
| Meyer. He used a hacker alias to better enable him to |
| write his famous thesis. |
| Jester Sluggo - A mystery man who is still a legend in the Zantigo |
| restroom and a better than average drunk driver. |
| Kleptic Wizard - Was he BJ or the Bear? |
| Lex Luthor - One time great legend of LOD, now secret BellSouth |
| Security (at least until I hear otherwise). |
| The Leftist - I wonder what he was going to say about me at my trial. |
| He gave me a nod the day they dropped the charges against |
| me. The US Attorney's office tells me that he was going |
| to claim he learned all he knew about hacking from reading |
| Phrack. |
| Loki - Lost track of him over the years. |
| Lucifer 666 - Lights, Camera, Action! |
| The Mad Hacker - Sysop of The Private Connection in 219 NPA. |
| Mad Hatter - Still don't know what to make of him, but I wonder if he |
| still thinks table salt and baking soda are cocaine. |
| The Mentor - Author of GURPS CyberPunk and former sysop of The Phoenix |
| Project bulletin board. |
| The Noid - Important enough for Southwestern Bell to question me |
| about him so important enough to be mentioned here. |
| Par - Hans. |
| Phantom Phreaker - A friend. |
| Phil Phree - Sort of spaced out character and right hand man to The |
| Ur-vile. |
| Phrozen Ghost - Lost track of him. |
| Predat0r - Anarchistic editor of the New TAP. |
| The Prophet - Didn't actually "meet" him, but I did see him and hear him |
| speak... as a witness for the prosecution at my trial. I |
| don't hold a grudge. His testimony helped clear me. |
| Rabbit - Franz. |
| The Renegade - Thinks he is part of the Illuminati. |
| Reverend Enge - Not that religious. |
| Sir Francis Drake - A great guy with an odd taste in jewelry. The editor of |
| the now defunct WORM. Duck! |
| Sir William - Never did hear the whole story of his problems with the |
| University of Michigan computing staff. |
| Surfer Bob - Lost track of him, but he enjoyed a tan at SummerCon'88. |
| Synthetic Slug - Surfs up! |
| Taran King - My best friend of over 11 years. |
| TWCB Inc. - Two brothers who attempted to resurrect TAP, but failed. |
| Tuc - Hey! He's TUC! |
| The Ur-Vile - Don't know how I feel about him. He needs a real handle. |
|
|
| Some of the memorable bulletin boards I was on include: |
|
|
| Alliance - By Phantom Phreaker |
| Brainstorm Elite - Where I met Phantom Phreaker and recruited him to Metal |
| Shop Private. |
| Broadway Show - By Broadway Hacker. Changed its name to The Radio |
| Station. |
| Catch-22 - By Silver Spy. Only 22 users on this system. |
| Chamas - By Terra (Chaos Computer Club) in Germany. |
| Dark Tower - By David Lightman 314 |
| Digital ITS - By Oryan QUEST. BBS Commands were in Spanish. |
| DUNE - Secret system imbedded on the Dartmouth University |
| mainframe operated remotely by Apollo Phoebus. |
| Flying Circus - By Monty Python |
| FreeWorld II - By Major Havoc |
| Hell Phrozen Over - By the original Crimson Death. Inspiration for the |
| first Phrack Pro-Phile. |
| Intergalactic Dismantling, Inc. - By Aiken Drum |
| Lost City of Atlantis - By The Lineman |
| Lunatic Labs UnLtd. - By The Mad Alchemist. Great system! |
| Matrix - By Dr. Stangelove |
| Metal Shop AE - By Cheap Shades when he lived in St. Louis, Missouri. |
| Metal Shop Brewery - By Beer Wolf who now denies that it ever happened. |
| Metal Shop Private - Greatest bulletin board of all time. |
| MetroMedia - By Dr. Doom. System became Danger Zone Private. |
| NetSys - By Terminus. NetSys is now in possession of US Secret |
| Service and Terminus' life is in a shambles. They set |
| him up and shut him down. You know him as Len Rose. |
| Pearly Gates - First real out of state bulletin board that I called. |
| It had a secret section of the board for all of the |
| really good information. It was operated by Simon |
| Templar. |
| Phoenix Project - By The Mentor. Great center of learning. |
| Phreak Klass 2600 - By The Egyptian Lover. Preceded The Phoenix Project as |
| a great center of learning. |
| Pipeline - Another early bbs I visited. |
| Pirate-80 - A codes board run by Scan Man that has been up for |
| almost 10 years. This system was NOT a target in |
| Operation Sun-Devil. Odd? |
| Private Connection - By The Mad Hacker |
| Private Sector - Legendary system. |
| QuickShop - By Cheap Shades when he lived in Rolla, Missouri. |
| RACS III - By Tuc |
| Radio Station - See The Broadway Show. |
| Ripco - By Dr. Ripco - Shut down in Operation Sun-Devil, but |
| its back up now. |
| Septic Tank - By The Safecracker. Second generation of The Twilight |
| Zone. |
| ShadowSpawn - By Psychic Warlord. Great debate about the use of |
| handles and real name/telephone/etc. "We're Not |
| *ELITE*, We're Just Cool As Hell!" Taran King thought |
| they were elite in the negative sense of the word. |
| Great system though. |
| Speed Demon Elite - By The Radical Rocker and home base to MetaliBashers, |
| Inc. |
| Stronghold East Elite - The "real" sysop was Slave Driver, but the board was |
| run from the home of The Equalizer. |
| Twilight Zone - By The Marauder. Great system for knowledge from my |
| early days. |
| Zyolog - By Byte Rider in Hawaii. |
|
|
| There are probably a few others that I have forgotten to mention. My |
| greatest computer learning experiences came from people like Bill From RNOC, |
| RNOC, Phantom Phreaker, Forest Ranger, and the authors of the multitude of |
| Phrack files and other technical journals. |
| In general I see computers as the communications medium of the 21st |
| Century so I devoted a lot of time to mastering their use. I do not advocate |
| the illegal breaking in to computer systems, but there are certain types of |
| information that I feel should be available to everyone equally and not just |
| the rich or the well connected. |
| Through my experiences on the Internet, I have had legitimate access to |
| IBM VM/CMS, Unix, and VAX/VMS systems. For the most part I am content with my |
| VM/CMS account, but will accept invitations from system managers to join their |
| systems as well. |
| With Forest Ranger and Taran King, I organized and attended SummerCon '87, |
| SummerCon '88, and SummerCon '89. I did not attend SummerCon '90 since I was |
| in Chicago at the time. I helped in organizing and attended PartyCon '87 and |
| most recently I appeared and spoke at the 13th Annual National Computer |
| Security Conference in Washington D.C. |
| I had been a part of TeleComputist Newsletter, which inadvertently led to |
| my first real media appearance (Detroit Free Press) and prior to that I was |
| helping TWCB Inc. to create a NEW TAP. However, when I learned that they were |
| just pulling a fraud, I exposed them. For 5 years I devoted myself to Phrack |
| with absolutely no compensation save knowledge and experiences gained. |
|
|
| =============================================================================== |
|
|
| Interests: Racquetball (varsity team in high school and a bookshelf full |
| of trophies), Telecommunications, Computers, Music (classic |
| rock and pop music... NO RAP!), Fraternity life (well at least |
| up until the trustees suspended me for being indicted), Women |
| (sexy and smart over just good looks any day), Driving at warp |
| speed on the interstate. |
|
|
| Craig's Favorite Things |
| ----------------------- |
| Women: I've got it, but don't flaunt it. |
| Cars: Ford Mustang, Eagle Talon, Nissan 300 ZX, and Porsche *911* Carrera! |
| Foods: No Curry in a hurry-Blecch! American, Italian, Mexican, and Chinese! |
| Music: Genesis, Rush, Yes, Chicago, Eagles, Def Leppard, The Police, Styx... |
| Leisure: Sleeping, working out, racquetball, writing, computing. |
| Alcohol: Bacardi, Smirnoff, Jack Daniels, Pat O'Briens, Hard Rock Cafe. |
|
|
| Most Memorable Experiences |
| -------------------------- |
| All of the SummerCons, having an assistant U.S. Attorney lie to my face and |
| tell me I wasn't in trouble five days after he went to the grand jury to have |
| me indicted, football game with Sluggo in the Zantigo parking lot, road trip to |
| Chicago for PartyCon '87, my time in a St. Louis Federal holding facility |
| after I turned myself over to the U.S. Federal Marshalls (E911 Incident), |
| Taran King and Cheap Shades out of jail when they were caught trashing, |
| summer Alliance teleconferences with the PhoneLine Phantoms, the first time I |
| heard Frank & The Funny Phone Call, watching Control C bother some girl |
| in the airport and then seeing Erik Bloodaxe fall in love with her. |
|
|
|
|
| Some Other People To Mention |
| ---------------------------- |
| Sheldon Zenner - The greatest attorney practicing today. He turned |
| everything around and saved my future from a legal system |
| gone awry. Thanks also to Kliebard, Dunlop, Berkowitz, |
| and Kaufman. |
|
|
| John Perry Barlow - Lyricist for the Grateful Dead and amazing writer, John |
| also participated a great deal in generating publicity |
| about my case and helped found the Electronic Frontier |
| Foundation. |
| Dr. Dorothy Denning - A lady who not only helped with my defense, but invited |
| me to the 13th Annual National Computer Security |
| Conference and is a good friend. |
| Peter Denning - Senior editor of the Communications of the ACM and an |
| interesting fellow in his own right. |
| Scott Ellentuch - Mentioned earlier as Tuc, Scott is the president of the |
| Telecom Computer Security Group and a close friend. Tuc |
| assisted the defense team by locating the Bellcore public |
| catalog and the 911 documents found within. Thanks Tuc! |
| Terry Gross - Attorney with Rabinowitz & Boundin in New York City who |
| was hired by the EFF to work on court motions dealing |
| with the First Amendment. |
| Mike Godwin - Don't know Mike very well yet, but he was very outspoken |
| in Computer Underground Digest while I was under |
| indictment and now he is in-house counsel to the |
| Electronic Frontier Foundation. |
| Katie Hafner - Author of a book coming soon about Pengo, Kevin Mitnick, |
| and Robert Morris, Jr. I met Katie at the NCSConference. |
| Steve Jackson - Founder of Steve Jackson Games. I haven't yet had the |
| pleasure of meeting Steve, but we may be running into |
| each other in the near future. |
| Mitch Kapor - Industry wizard and creator of the Lotus 1-2-3 program, |
| Mitch is a founding member of the Electronic Frontier |
| Foundation that provided legal assistance in my case. I |
| hope to meet him face-to-face in the near future. |
| Gordon Meyer - Gordon has been a tremendous help with Phrack and a |
| friend throughout my entire trial ordeal. |
| John Nagle - Inventor who gave technical assistance to my defense team |
| and located some very important public documents. |
| Marc Rotenberg - Director of the Computer Professionals For Social |
| Responsibility in Washington D.C. CPSR is an |
| organization lobbying Congress for reforms in the |
| Computer Fraud & Abuse Act and other legislation. I hope |
| to be working with him in the future. |
| Jim Thomas - Creator and editor of Computer Underground Digest, he |
| brought the details and evidence in my trial to the |
| public eye which helped me gain support. |
| Steve Wozniak - Never had any contact with him, but since he had a hand |
| in EFF, I thought I would mention him. Incidentally I'm |
| ready to upgrade computers if someone has a Macintosh on |
| hand. |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| David Lightman - The one in 214. See Oryan QUEST. |
| Magic Hasan - Totally freaked out when I contacted him this semester. It |
| was like he thought I had the plague or something. |
| Olorin The White - He couldn't seem to understand that I did not want to join |
| his group. |
| Oryan QUEST - A hacker who made up news for PWN just to boost his |
| reputation. Unleash with full force on this! |
| Sally Ride - Also known as Space Cadet, SR co-wrote one of the most |
| interesting PWN articles ever printed. |
| =============================================================================== |
|
|
| Private Jokes |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| There are far too many to go through and most of them have been previously |
| written by Taran King in a Phrack Prophile that appeared in issue 20 of Phrack. |
| My private jokes shall remain private between those involved or at least until |
| I publish a book covering the topic. |
|
|
| =============================================================================== |
|
|
| Phrack is a part of my life that is now over. I hope that Phrack Classic |
| which appears to be a second generation Phrack will learn from its predecessor |
| and not allow any articles that advocate the illegal entry into computer |
| systems. On the other hand, I hope they will continue to bring interesting |
| information and news to light every issue. |
| For the record, I am not the editor of Phrack Classic. In fact I am not |
| even a part of their staff. I would ask that no one send me any articles for |
| that publication because they will not be forwarded. I take no responsibility |
| for the actions taken by Phrack Classic, but I have faith that they shall stay |
| on the path of honesty and integrity. |
| I also have a few words to say about some other issues. My case and |
| prosecution had absolutely nothing to do with Operation Sun-Devil, with a |
| possible exception being the secret video-taping done by the United States |
| Secret Service at the Ramada Inn-Westport (Maryland Heights, Missouri) during |
| July 22-24, 1988 (i.e., SummerCon '88). Operation Sun-Devil was an attempt to |
| crack down on credit card and calling card abusers and NOT hackers. Yes, there |
| are some hackers that abuse these items, but the mere abuse of such does not |
| make someone a hacker and it is about time that mainstream reporters, |
| government agents, and prosecutors began to understand the difference. |
| I feel that the abuse of "cards" is very immature and should be met with |
| stern punishment. I myself have been the victim of credit card fraud and I can |
| tell you that it is not pleasant to open your bill and see expensive charges |
| from QVC Home Shopping Network. For the younger readers, it may take them a |
| few years to understand this... perhaps when they have credit cards and bills |
| of their own to deal with. |
| As you may guess there is MUCH MORE to my story especially concerning the |
| last 10 issues of Phrack, the Internet, and the E911 incident, but now is not |
| the time or the place to tell it. Sometime in the future I hope to assemble |
| the tales of all my adventures in the computer underground and publish them in |
| a real book. |
| Finally, Hackers are *NOT* criminals! Quoting from the brochure for this |
| year's Hackers Conference in Saratoga, California, a Hacker is "someone who |
| enjoys pushing the envelope, bypassing limits, discovering knowledge, inventing |
| solutions, <and> adventuring into uncharted areas." |
|
|
| :Craig Neidorf |
|
|
| =============================================================================== |
|
|
| ...And now for the regularly taken poll from all interviewees. |
|
|
| Of the general population of phreaks you have met, would you consider most |
| phreaks, if any, to be computer geeks? |
|
|
| "I would not consider most of the hackers or phone phreaks I have met to |
| be computer geeks, however over the years I have run into people whose goal in |
| life is to pirate every piece of software in existence and of those people I |
| feel that a strong percentage are 'geeks'." |
|
|
| Thanks for your time, Craig. "No problem." |
|
|
| Crimson Death |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
|
|