| ==Phrack Magazine== |
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| Volume Four, Issue Forty-Three, File 6 of 27 |
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| -:[ Phrack Prophile ]:- |
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| This issue our prophile features a hacker who has been around forever, |
| who's been there and done that, literally. His handle is Dr. Who. |
| When almost everyone was still mystified by Telenet, Dr. Who was busily |
| exploring Europe's PSN's like PSS and Datex-P. When the Internet was in |
| its infancy, Dr. Who was there with an account on BBN. When the world |
| was short of NUI's, Dr. Who discovered and perfected Pad-To-Pad. When |
| the world still thought COSMOS was the end-all-be-all, Dr. Who was |
| lurking on 1A's. One of the early LODers and one of the longest lasting. |
| And to top it all off, a close personal friend. How elite can you get? |
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| ______________________________________________________________________________ |
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| Personal Info: |
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| Handle: Doctor Who (aka Skinny Puppy and Saint Cloud) |
| Call him: Bob |
| Date of Birth: February 5, 1967 |
| Age: 26 |
| Height: 6'1" |
| Weight: 160 lbs |
| Computers owned: in chronological order: Apple ][ series, Sinclair ZX81, |
| Commodore TRS-80 models 4 and 16, Coco, Atari 512, |
| Toshiba 2000sx. I am probably leaving out some. |
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| How did you get your handle? |
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| From the TV show, of course - I had a hard time defending it from other |
| people, so would sometimes add (413), my home area code, to identify |
| which one I was. Skinny Puppy was from the band of course, |
| and Saint Cloud was from the location of a system I was playing with, |
| in France. |
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|
| How did you get started? |
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| As a kid, I was a radio & electronics junkie. In 6th grade I wanted |
| one of those $99 "computer kits" you would see in the back of "Popular |
| Electronics" magazine, which had a hex keypad, and seven-segment LED |
| display, had 1K of ram, etc...But lusted after the TRS-80 model-I |
| when I used it at Radio Shack. I finally got a computer in 1981 |
| when I was in 9th grade. I asked my parents for a Commodore, |
| but they went all out and got an Apple ][+. I took to programming |
| instantly, and within a few months had a reputation as the best |
| programmer in my school. |
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|
| In a 1982 "Popular Communications" magazine article, I discovered |
| the world of loops and test tones and started playing with those. |
| I later tried to make free phone calls by using a tape recorder |
| as a red box but failed, looking back probably due to inadequate |
| volume. The seeds had been planted. |
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|
| I wanted all sorts of software, but I had no money, and my parents |
| wouldn't buy very much. One computer-club meeting, someone brought |
| in about 15 disks of pirated software, and I had a chance to copy |
| about 4 disks. They guy told me about pirate BBSs, and people trading |
| software. In a few of the games I copied, there were numbers to |
| different BBSes, and when I was at a friends house on Cape Cod in the |
| summer of 1983, we used his 300 baud acoustic modem to call them. |
| I remember calling Pirate's Harbor in Boston, and I think we called |
| Pirate-80. |
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| I wanted a modem badly, but they were too expensive. I convinced a |
| friend to split the cost with me, and on January 2, 1984 my |
| networker modem arrived. That month, in the process of getting warez |
| I ran up over $150 in phone bills as there were no local boards. |
| I was becoming obsessed with being on the modem, and on the computer |
| in general. I was never a good student, and my parents and teachers |
| found a way, they thought, to entice me to do my homework - hold |
| computer usage over my head. But this just succeeded in making me |
| sneak access when no one was looking - during lunch at school, or |
| when my parents went shopping at home. Soon they locked the computer |
| room (the den, really) when they left, but I used a ladder to get |
| in to the second story window until I had a copy of the key. To this |
| day I think if they let me indulge myself in my interest, I would have |
| become a much more normal computer geek, and done better in school. |
| Anyhow, I started learning about codez to appease the huge phone bills, |
| and started to learn more about phones & how they worked. The pirating |
| fell by the wayside as I became more involved with phreak/hack boards. |
| I was fascinated by communications (I always had been) and |
| phreaking/hacking opened up new frontiers. My inhibitions in breaking |
| the law melted away because it interfered with my enjoyment of |
| knowledge - had there been opportunities to pursue this avocation |
| without breaking the law, I probably would have done so. |
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| A hacker was born. |
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| What are your interests? |
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| Women: Tall, thin, brainy, blue eyes. It seems as though I |
| attract all the psychos. Right now, I am FREE of |
| any relationships and haven't decided whether I am |
| enjoying it or not. |
| Cars: Cars are the greatest things. I love them. Art, |
| Machine & House - The only possession I have that |
| encloses me. I got my license later than most people, |
| and have learned to enjoy the freedom wheels bring, |
| especially for someone who lives in a rural area. |
| Right now, I own two cars, one running (barely) and |
| entirely generic, the other one very unique, beautiful, |
| and broken. The story of my life! |
| Food: I hate fish & chicken, love hot food. Not a vegetarian |
| in the least. But don't eat much, I am too busy. |
| I survive on Coffee. |
| Music: I have been 'alternative' for a while now, kind of |
| Gothic, sometimes I dress that way, sometimes I don't. |
| Favorite bands: Joy Division, Skinny Puppy, old Cure, |
| but I have been starting to like Techno more and |
| also Classical. Go figure. |
| Favorite authors: Ayn Rand, Ann Rice, Robert Anton Wilson, George Orwell, |
| Douglas Adams, J.G. Ballard |
| Favorite Book: Atlas Shrugged |
| Favorite Movies: Brazil, 1984, The Holy Grail, Heathers, Blade Runner, |
| Max Headroom, Slacker, Subway, Drowning by Numbers, Dune |
| Favorite TV: Doctor Who (of course), The Avengers, Miami Vice, |
| Hawaii Five-O |
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| What am I? |
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| A slacker, a hacker, a writer, a romantic, a twenty-nothing, a lost |
| poet, a New Englander, an American in the truest sense of the word, |
| a girl-chaser, a connoisseur of cheap champagne & expensive beer, |
| a dilettante, a smoker of cloves, caffeine addict, an atheist, |
| a discordian, a libertarian of sorts, a cynic, a procrastinator, |
| a conversationalist, a fast driver, an oldest child, a criminal, |
| a watcher of fire & water, a lover of love, a believer in the unpure, |
| a trekkie, a whovian, an anglophile, still an undergraduate, jealous, |
| mischievous, a perfectionist, a believer in the essential |
| good in mankind, and probably a mortal. |
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| What are some of your most memorable experiences? |
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| The worst day of my life - 3/11/86 - getting busted, and not knowing |
| what for. My parents called up my high-school and left a message for |
| me to call home immediately. When I did, they informed me that the |
| Secret Service and TRW (Hi Mr. Braum) had been in our house and removed |
| everything. A nosy neighbor saw the whole incident, and within days our |
| entire town knew about the raid. |
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| Some three and a half years later they pressed charges. So much for |
| due process and right to a speedy trial. |
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| Good days: |
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| 5-91 - Being all fucked up in NYC with my girlfriend and Bill from RNOC; |
| 10/9/84 - My first TAP meeting. Expecting to meet Mark Tabas but |
| meeting his father instead. Tabas had run away from home, and his |
| parents found some notes indicating that he might turn up in New York |
| at Eddie's for the TAP meeting. Tabas' dad hopped on a plane to NYC, |
| rented a car and staked out the meeting. Everyone inside, already |
| convinced that they were under surveillance, became very aware that |
| they were being watched by some guy in a suit and a rental car. |
| Eventually, he came inside and asked if anyone knew where Tabas was. |
| We said "Who wants to know?" To which he gave out his business card |
| letting us know he was Tabas' dad and just worried. Tabas was not |
| even in New York. |
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| The whole summer of 1985 - staying at home, hacking and loving being |
| a computer geek. Four days straight on an Alliance Teleconference once, |
| being woken up each morning by blasts of touch-tone! |
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| Philadelphia Cons, back in 86. |
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| West 57th St. - a few seconds towards my 15 minutes of fame. |
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| KP+914-042-1050+ST |
| Discovering Pad-to-Pad. |
| McD: Becoming an XRAY Technician. (Dr. Bubbnet) |
| MSK ../tdas |
| NET-LINE-20245614140000. |
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| Wallpapering my room with Sprint Foncard printouts |
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| Most of the rest of my most memorable experiences are in my love life, |
| which is none of your business! |
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| Some People (and/or BBSes) To Mention: |
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| My favorite BBS of all time was Farmers of Doom. Also memorable were |
| The Legion of Doom, Osuny, WOPR, Black Ice, and lots more. |
| My favorite boards were the ones where there was a lot of activity, and |
| a lot of trust between the users. While a board that doesn't crash |
| all the time is important, an expensive computer does not a good |
| board create. |
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| There are a lot of people who I would like to mention that have helped |
| me greatly and who I have known for a very long time: |
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| Lex Luthor - Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean people |
| AREN'T out get you. |
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| Mark Tabas - He really does look like Tom Petty. |
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| Bill from RNOC - Should sell used cars. |
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| RC Modeler - I hold you wholly responsible for the Clashmaster incident :) |
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| Tuc - Well, he's just Tuc. What else can you say? |
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| X-Man - Is he an FBI agent yet? |
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| Karl Marx - Only person I know with his own dictionary entry. |
| Next: the social register. |
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| Mr. Bigchip - Who is that? (I'm sure you are all asking) |
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| The Videosmith - (see entry for Luthor, L.) |
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| Parmaster - Should have followed Lex's advice. |
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| Kerrang Kahn - His accent is finally gone. |
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| Terminal Man - So long and thanks for all the codes. (This man |
| knew The Condor?) |
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| The Marauder - Has taken up permanent residence on IRC. |
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| Shatter, Pad, Gandalf - PSS Junkies. What those guys wouldn't |
| do for an NUI. |
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| New York - Don't Mess With Texas |
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| Everyone Else - Sorry I couldn't think of anything clever to say. |
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| One I would like single out is Erik Bloodaxe, who I have known over the |
| phone for 9 years now, but will meet for the first time at this year's |
| Summercon, if I get there. [Ed: He didn't make it] |
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| Also: for you hackers that have disappeared from my life, you who had |
| my number, my parents' number has never changed, you can contact me |
| through them if you like, I would love to hear from you. |
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| How do you see the future of the Underground? |
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| It's not going to go away. There will always be new challenges. There |
| are always new toys for curious minds. There may be a split into |
| several different, only partially interlocking 'undergrounds' involving |
| different types of technological playing. In spite of Caller-ID and |
| advanced security functions of the new digital switches, there will |
| still be many ways to phreak around the phone system: taking advantage |
| of the old Crossbars in remote areas, and by finding some of the |
| 'pheatures' in new switches. |
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| Hacking on the Internet will always be around despite who controls the |
| net, though I am sure there would be a lot more destructive hacking if |
| the mega-corporations take it over. Security of systems is more a social |
| problem than a technological one, there is always a segment of the |
| population that is gullible, stupid, or corrupt. There will always be |
| some smartass out there making trouble for the Organization. Constantly |
| evolving systems and brand new systems will present security holes forever, |
| though they may be harder to understand as the systems grow more complex. |
| With more computers networked there will be a lot more to play with. |
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| Socially, I am worried about the huge wars that have developed, |
| LOD v. MOD, etc. While hackers have always been contentious, as well |
| they should be, the ferocity of attacks has me somewhat stunned. I will |
| leave out blames and suggestions here, but I will just make the |
| observation that as any community grows large in size, the intimacy |
| that it enjoys will be diminished. |
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| When the underground was small, isolated, and revered as black magicians |
| by outsiders, it was as though we were all part of some guild. Now that |
| there are many more people who have knowledge of, and access to, the |
| hacker community, there is little cohesiveness. I see this getting |
| worse. The solution may be tighter knit groups. But an outbreak of |
| wars between mega-gangs could be a real catastrophe. |
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| The cyberpunk aesthetic seems to have captivated the underground. |
| Some people have to be aware that the community was here before William |
| Gibson was patron saint, and that most of us still can't successfully |
| "rustle credit" - which means this is a hobby, not a profession. |
| Will this change? Slowly, I imagine. The trendies will get tired and |
| find something else to pretend to be, (maybe dinosaurs, given |
| the current popularity of Jurassic Park), and only the hard-core hackers |
| will be left. Some of us may, in time, turn into computer criminals, |
| to which I am indifferent, as it won't be me. The current cyber-hysteria |
| has attracted a whole bunch of trendy fakes, and is distracting us from |
| what originally brought us, most of us anyway, to hacking/phreaking in |
| the first place - the insatiable curiosity, the dance of the mind |
| unbounded. |
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| Will the hype die? Time will tell. Sometimes I get so sick of the crap |
| I see on IRC that I wish someone would give me back an apple IIe and |
| an applecat 212, and set me back down in 1984. Just call me |
| over the hill. |
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| Any end comments? |
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| Hacking is the art of esoteric quests, of priceless and worthless |
| secrets. Odd bits of raw data from smashed machinery of intelligence |
| and slavery reassembled in a mosaic both hilarious in its absurdity |
| and frightening in its power. |
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| -----------=?> Doctor Who <?=----------- |