| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume Three, Issue Thirty-Three, File 2 of 13 |
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| -*[ P H R A C K XXXIII P R O P H I L E ]*- |
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| -=>[ by Crimson Death ]<=- |
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| This issue Phrack Profile features a hacker familiar to most of you. |
| His informative files in Phrack and the Legion of Doom Technical Journals |
| created a stampede of wanna-be Unix hackers. Your friend and mine... |
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|
| Shooting Shark |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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|
| Personal |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
| Handle: Shooting Shark |
| Call him: 'Shark' |
| Past handles: None |
| Handle origin: It's the title of the 3rd song on "Revolution By Night," |
| which many consider to be Blue Oyster Cult's last good |
| album. |
| Date of Birth: 11/25/66 |
| Age at current date: 24 |
| Approximate Location: San Francisco Bay Area. |
| Height: 5'10" |
| Weight: 150 lbs. |
| Eye color: Hazel |
| Hair Color: Dark Brown |
| Computers: First: Apple //e. Presently: ALR Business V EISA |
| 386/33. |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
|
| The Story of my Hacking Career |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| In 1984 I was lucky enough to be a Senior at a high school that had one of |
| the pilot "Advanced Placement Computer Science" classes. I didn't know much |
| about computers at the time, but I had a strong interest, so I signed up. |
| "Advanced Placement Computer Science" meant programming in Pascal using the |
| UCSD P-System on the newly-released Apple //e. I wasn't too crazy about |
| programming in Pascal -- does ANYBODY really like Pascal? -- but I did enjoy |
| the software piracy sessions that the class had after school and, much of the |
| time, during class when the Instructor was lecturing about DO WHILE loops or |
| something equally fascinating. Some of our favorite games at the time were |
| ZORK II and what I still consider to be the best Apple II game ever, RESCUE |
| RAIDERS. A few months into the school year, I somehow convinced my mother to |
| buy me my very own Apple //e, with an entire 64K of RAM, a monochrome monitor, |
| and a floppy drive. The first low-cost hard drive for the Apple II, the Sider, |
| was $700 for 10Mb at the time, so it was out of the question. |
|
|
| Now at about this time, Coleco was touting their Adam add-on to the |
| ColecoVision game unit, and they had these great guilt-inducing advertisements |
| that had copy something like this: |
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|
| TEACHER: "I want to talk to you about Billy. He's not doing very |
| well in school. He just doesn't seem to understand new |
| concepts as well as the other kids. All he does is sit |
| there and pick his nose." |
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| CONCERNED "Well, golly, I just don't know what to do. It's probably |
| FATHER: probably because his mother drank so much when she was |
| pregnant." |
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| TEACHER: "Have you considered getting Billy a computer?" |
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|
| And of course the next scene showed little Billy inserting a tape |
| cartridge into his new Adam and pecking his way to higher grades. |
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| Such was not the case with me when I got MY computer. All I did was go |
| home after school and play "Wizardry." I stopped doing homework and |
| I failed 3 out of 6 classes my last semester of my Senior year of high school. |
| Luckily enough, I had already been accepted to the local state University, so |
| it didn't really matter. Shortly before graduating, I took the AP Computer |
| Science test and got the minimum passing score. (I didn't feel so bad when Sir |
| Francis Drake later told me that he failed it. Then again, he completed all |
| the questions in BASIC.) |
|
|
| Worse yet, "Wargames" came out around this time. I'll admit it, my |
| interest in hacking was largely influenced by that film. |
|
|
| Shortly after I (barely) graduated from high school, I saved up my money |
| and bought a (get this) Hayes MicroModem //e. It was only something like $250 |
| and I was in 300 baud heaven. I started calling the local "use your real name" |
| BBSs and shortly graduated to the various small-time hacker BBSs. Note that |
| 90% of the BBSs at this time were running on Apples using Networks, GBBS or |
| some other variant. Few were faster than 300 baud. It was on one of these |
| Apple Networks BBSs that I noticed some users talking about these mysterious |
| numbers called "800 extenders." I innocently inquired as to what these were, |
| and got a reply from Elric of Imrryr. He explained that all I needed to do was |
| dial an 800 number, enter a six-digit code, and then I could call anywhere I |
| wanted for FREE! It was the most amazing thing. So, I picked a handle, and |
| began calling systems like Sherwood Forest II and Sherwood Forest III, OSUNY, |
| and PloverNet. At their height, you could call any of these systems and read |
| dozens of new messages containing lots of new Sprint and extender codes EVERY |
| DAY. It was great! I kept pestering my mentor, Elric, and despite his |
| undoubted annoyance with my stupid questions, we remained friends. By this |
| time, I realized that my Hayes MicroModem //e was just not where it was at, and |
| saved up the $400 to buy a Novation Apple Cat 300, the most awesomest modem of |
| its day. This baby had a sound generation chip which could be used to generate |
| speech, and more importantly, DTMF and 2600Hz tones. Stupidly enough, I began |
| blue boxing. Ironically, at this time I was living in the very town that Steve |
| Wozniak and Steve Jobs had gotten busted in for boxing ten years previously. |
|
|
| And THEN I started college. I probably would have remained a two-bit |
| Apple hacker (instead of what I am today, a two-bit IBM hacker) to this day if |
| a friend hadn't told me that it was easy to hack into the school's new Pyramid |
| 90x, a "super mini" that ran a BSD 4.2 variant. "The professor for the C class |
| has created a bunch of accounts, sequentially numbered, all with the same |
| default password," he told me. "Just keep trying them until you get an account |
| that hasn't been used by a student yet!" I snagged an account which I still |
| use to this day, seven years later. |
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|
| At about this time, I called The Matrix, run by Dr. Strangelove. This was |
| my first experience with Ken's FORUM-PC BBS software. Dr. Strangelove was a |
| great guy, even though he looks somewhat like a wood mouse (and I mean that in |
| the nicest possible way). DSL helped me build my first XT clone for a total |
| cost of about $400. He even GAVE me a lot of the components I needed, like a |
| CGA card and a keyboard. |
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| Shortly after that, The Matrix went down and was quickly replaced by IDI, |
| run by Aiken Drum. It is here that I met Sir Francis Drake. Shortly after |
| THAT, IDI went down and was quickly replaced by Lunatic Labs Unltd, run by my |
| old friend The Mad Alchemist. TMA lived within walking distance of my house, |
| so I called LunaLabs quite a bit. LunaLabs later became the home base of |
| Phrack for a few issues when Knight Lightning and Taran King gave it upon |
| entering their freshman year of college. |
|
|
| So during this time I just got really into Unix and started writing files |
| for Phrack. I wrote about six articles for Phrack and then one for the 2nd LOD |
| Technical Journal, which featured a brute-force password hacker. I know, that |
| sounds archaic, but this was back in 1984, and I was actually one of the few |
| people in the hacker community that knew quite a bit about Unix. I've been |
| told by several people that it was my LOD TJ article that got *them* into Unix |
| hacking (shucks). I also wrote the original Unix Nasties article for Phrack, |
| and on two occasions, when I was later heavily into massive Internet node |
| hopping, I would get into a virgin system at some backwoods college like MIT |
| and find *my file* in somebody's directory. |
|
|
| During 1987, I got a letter from the local FBI office. It was addressed |
| to my real name and asked for any information I might wish to provide on a |
| break-in in San Diego. Of course I declined, but they kept sending me more |
| letters. Now that I was 18 years old I decided to stop doing illegal things. |
| I know..."what a weenie." So Lunatic Labs, now being run by The Mad Alchemist, |
| became my exclusive haunt because it was a local board. When Elric and Sir |
| Francis Drake took over the editorship of Phrack for a few issues, I wrote all |
| their intro files. |
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| When my computer broke I let those days just fade away behind me. |
| Occasionally, old associates would manage to find me and call me voice, much to |
| my surprise. Somebody called me once and told me an account had been created |
| for me on a BBS called "Catch 22," a system that must have been too good to |
| last. I think I called it twice before it went down. Most recently, Crimson |
| Death called me, asked me to write a Profile, and here we are. |
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|
| What I'm Doing Now |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| After two years in the Computer Science program in college, I switched my |
| major to Theater Arts for three reasons: |
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| 1) Theater Arts people were generally nicer people; |
| 2) Most CS students were just too geeky for me (note I said "most"); and, |
| 3) I just couldn't manage to pass Calculus III! |
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| I graduated last year with a BA in Theater Arts, and like all newly graduated |
| Theater majors, started practicing my lines, such as "Do you want fries with |
| that?" and "Can I tell you about today's special?" However, I managed to have |
| the amazing luck of getting a job in upper management at one of the west |
| coast's most famous IBM video graphics card manufacturers. My position lets me |
| play with a lot of different toys like AutoDesk 3D Studio and 24-bit frame |
| buffers. A 24-bit image I created was featured on the cover of the November |
| 1990 issue of Presentation Products magazine. For a while I was the system |
| administrator of the company's Unix system, with an IP address and netnews and |
| the whole works. Now I'm running the company's two-line BBS -- if you can |
| figure out what company I work for, give it a call and leave me some mail |
| sometime. I'm also into MIDI, and I've set my mother up with a nice little |
| studio including a Tascam Porta One and a Roland MT-32. I was an extra in the |
| films "Patty Hearst" (with The $muggler) and "The Doors" (for which I put in a |
| 22-hour day at the Warfield Theater in San Francisco for a concert scene that |
| WAS CUT FROM THE #*%& FILM) and I look forward to working on more films in a |
| capacity that does not require me to wear bell-bottoms. I've also acted in |
| local college theater and I'll be directing a full-length production at a local |
| community theater next year. I like to consider myself a well-rounded person. |
|
|
| Oh yeah. I also got married last October. |
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|
| People I Have Known |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Elric of Imrryr -- My true mentor. He got me into the business. Too bad he |
| moved to Los Angeles. |
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|
| Shadow 2600 -- Known to some as David Flory, may he rest in peace. Early |
| in my career he mentioned me and listed me as a collaborator for |
| a 2600 article. That was the first time I saw my name in print. |
|
|
| Oryan QUEST -- After I had my first Phrack article published, he started |
| calling me (he lived about 20 miles away at the time). He would |
| just call me and give me c0deZ like he was trying to impress me |
| or something. I don't know why he needed me for his own |
| personal validation. I was one of the first people to see |
| through him and I realized early on that he was a pathological |
| liar. Later on he lied about me on a BBS and got me kicked off, |
| because the Sysop though he was this great guy. Sheesh. |
|
|
| Sir Francis Drake -- Certainly one of the more unique people I've met. He |
| printed a really crappy two-part fiction story I wrote in |
| his WORM magazine. Shortly after that the magazine |
| folded; I think there's a connection. |
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| David Lightman -- Never met him, but he used to share my Unix account at |
| school. |
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| The Disk Jockey -- He pulled a TRW report on the woman that I later ended |
| up marrying. Incidentally, he can be seen playing |
| basketball in the background in one scene of the film |
| "Hoosiers." |
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| Lex Luthor -- I have to respect somebody who would first publish my article in |
| LOD TJ and then call me up for no reason a year later and give me |
| his private Tymnet outdial code. |
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|
| Dr. Strangelove -- He runs a really cool BBS called JUST SAY YES. Call it at |
| (415) 922-2008. DSL is probably singularly responsible for |
| getting me into IBM clones, which in turn got me my job (how |
| many Apple // programmers are they hiring nowadays?). |
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|
| BBSs |
| ~~~ |
| Sherwood Forest II and III, OSUNY -- I just thought they were the greatest |
| systems ever. |
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| Pirate's Bay -- Run by Mr. KRACK-MAN, who considered himself the greatest Apple |
| pirate that ever lived. It's still up, for all I know. |
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| The 2600 Magazine BBS -- Run on a piece of Apple BBS software called |
| TBBS. It is there that I met David Flory. |
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| The Police Station -- Remember THAT one? |
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| The Matrix, IDI, Lunatic Labs -- Three great Bay Area Forum-PC boards. |
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| Catch-22 -- 25 Users, No Waiting! |
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| And, of course, net.telecom (the original), comp.risks, rec.arts.startrek... |
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| Memories |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
| Remember Alliance Teleconferencing? Nothing like putting the receiver |
| down to go get something to eat, forgetting about it, coming back in 24 hours, |
| and finding the conference still going on. |
|
|
| Playing Wizardry and Rescue Raiders on my Apple //e until I lost the |
| feeling in my fingers... |
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| Carding 13 child-sized Garfield sleeping bags to people I didn't |
| particularly care for in high school... |
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| Calling Canadian DA Ops and playing a 2600Hz tone for them was always fun. |
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| Trashing all the local COs with The Mad Alchemist... |
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|
| My brush with greatness: I was riding BART home from school one night a |
| few years ago when Steve Wozniak got onto my car with two of his kids. He was |
| taking them to a Warriors game. I was the only person in the car that |
| recognized him. He signed a copy of BYTE that I happened to have on me and we |
| talked about his new venture, CL-9, the universal remote controller. (Do you |
| know anybody who ever BOUGHT one of those?) |
|
|
| ....And now, for the question |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| "Of the general population of phreaks you have met, would you consider |
| most phreaks, if any, to be computer geeks?" |
|
|
| Back in my Apple pirating days, I met quite a few young men who were |
| definitely members of the Order of the Geek. However, I can count the number |
| of true phreaks/hackers I have met personally on one hand. None of them are |
| people I'd consider geeks, nerds, spazzes, dorks, etc. They're all people who |
| live on the fringe and do things a bit differently -- how many LEGAL people do |
| you know that have a nose ring? -- but they're all people I've respected. |
| Well, let me take back what I just said. Dr. Strangelove looks kinda geeky in |
| my opinion (my mother thinks he's cute, but then again she said that Sir |
| Francis Drake is "cute" and when I told him that it bothered him to no end), |
| but I consider him a good friend and a generally k-kool d00d. (I'm sure I'll |
| be getting a voice call from him on that one...) The only phreak that I've |
| ever taken a genuine disliking to was Oryan QUEST, but that was only because he |
| was a pathological liar and a pest. Who knows, he might be a nice person now, |
| so no offense intended, especially if he knows my home address. |
|
|
| So, Anyway... |
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| -> Thanks for your time Shooting Shark. |
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|
| Crimson Death |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
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