| ==Phrack Magazine== |
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|
| Volume Four, Issue Forty-Three, File 8 of 27 |
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| CONFERENCE NEWS |
| PART II |
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| **************************************************************************** |
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|
| Fear & Loathing in San Francisco |
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|
| By Some Guy |
|
|
| (The names have been changed to protect the guilty.) |
|
|
| 1. The Arrival |
|
|
| I had been up for about 48 hours by the time America West dropped |
| me off at San Francisco's airport. The only thing I could think about |
| was sleep. Everything took on strange dreamlike properties as I staggered |
| through the airport looking for the baggage claim area. Somehow, I |
| found myself on an airport shuttle headed towards the Burlingame |
| Marriott. Suddenly I was standing in front of an Iranian in a red |
| suit asking me for a major credit card. After a quick shuffle of forms |
| at the checkin counter I finally had the cardkey to my room and was |
| staggering toward a nice warm bed. |
|
|
| Once in the room I fell down on the bed, exhausted. Within the space of a |
| few minutes I was well on my way to Dreamland. Within the space of a few |
| more minutes I was slammed back into reality as someone came barreling into |
| the room. Mr. Blast had arrived from Chitown with a bag full of corporate |
| goodies. I accepted a shirt and told him to get lost. No sooner had he left |
| than Fitzgerald burst in with enough manuals to stock a small college's |
| technical library. After griping for nearly 30 minutes at the fact that |
| I had neglected to likewise bring 500 pounds of 5ess manuals for him, |
| Fitzgerald took off. |
|
|
| Sleep. |
|
|
| 2. Mindvodxka |
|
|
| After several needed hours rest, I took off downstairs to scope out the |
| spread. I ran into Bruce Sterling who relayed some of the mornings |
| events, the highlight of which was Don Delaney's "Finger Hackers" the |
| inner city folks who sequentially dial, by hand, every possible combination |
| of pbx code to then sell on street corners. |
|
|
| Out of the corner of my eye I spotted two young turks dressed like |
| mafioso: RBOC & Voxman. I wandered over and complimented them on their |
| wardrobe and told them to buy me drinks. Beer. Beer. More beer. |
| Screwdrivers. Screwdrivers. Last call. Last screwdriver. |
|
|
| RBOC and I decided that it was our calling to get more drinks. We took |
| off to find a bar. Upon exiting the hotel we realized that we were in |
| the middle of fucking nowhere. We walked up and down the street, rapidly |
| getting nowhere. In our quest for booze, we managed to terrorize a |
| small oriental woman at a neighboring hotel who, after 10 minutes of our |
| screaming and pounding, finally opened up the door to her office wide |
| enough to tell us there were no bars within a 15 mile radius. |
| We went back to the hotel very distraught. |
|
|
| We went back to RBOC's room where Voxman was sampling a non-tobacco smoke. |
| We bitched about the lack of watering holes in the vicinity, but he was |
| rather unsympathetic. After he finished his smoke and left the room, we |
| decided to order a bottle of vodka through room service and charge it |
| to Voxman since it was roughly 50 dollars. |
|
|
| RBOC called up room service and started to barter with the clerk about the |
| bottle. "Look, tell you what," he said, "I've got twenty bucks. You meet |
| me out back with two bottles. I give you the twenty and you keep one of |
| the bottles for yourself." |
|
|
| "Look man, I know you have about a thousand cases of liquor down there, |
| right? Who's going to miss two bottles? Don't you want to make a few |
| extra bucks? I mean, twenty dollars, that's got to be about what you make |
| in a day, right? I mean, you aren't exactly going to own this hotel any |
| time soon, am I right? So, I'll be down in a few minutes to meet you |
| with the vodka. What do you mean? Look man, I'm just trying to help out |
| another human being. I know how it is, I'm not made out of money either, |
| you know? Listen, I'm from NYC...if someone offers me twenty dollars |
| for nothing, I take it, you know? So, do we have a deal?" |
|
|
| This went on for nearly an hour. Finally RBOC told the guy to just bring up |
| the damn bottle. When it arrived, the food services manager, acting as |
| courier, demanded proof of age, and then refused to credit it to the room. |
| This sparked a new battle, as we then had to track down Voxman to sign |
| for our booze. After that was settled, a new crisis arose: We had no |
| mixer. |
|
|
| The soda machine proved our saviour. Orange Slice for only a dollar a |
| can. We decided to mix drinks half and half. Gathering our fluids, |
| we adjourned to the lobby to join Voxman and a few conventioneers. |
| The vodka went over well with the crew, and many a glass was quaffed |
| over inane conversation about something or other. |
|
|
| Soon the vodka informed me it was bed time. |
|
|
| 3. It Begins. |
|
|
| I woke late, feeling like a used condom. I noticed more bags in the room |
| and deduced that X-con had made it to the hotel. After dressing, I staggered |
| down to the convention area for a panel. |
|
|
| "Censorship and Free Speech on the Networks" was the first one I got to |
| see. The main focus of the panel seemed to be complaints of alt.sex |
| newsgroups and dirty gifs. As these two are among my favorite things |
| about the net, I took a quick disliking of the forum. Nothing was resolved |
| and nothing was stated. |
|
|
| There was a small break during which I found X-con. We saw a few feds. |
| It was neat. The head of the FBI's computer crime division called me by name. |
| That was not terribly neat. |
|
|
| The next session was called "Portrait of the Artist on the Net." X-con |
| and I didn't get it. We felt like it was "portrait of the artist on |
| drugs on the net." Weird videos, odd projects, and stream of |
| consciousness rants. Wasn't this a privacy conference? We were confused. |
|
|
| The session gave way to a reception. This would have been uneventful had |
| it not been for two things: 1) an open bar 2) the arrival of the Unknown |
| Hacker. U.H. was probably the most mysterious and heralded hacker on |
| the net. The fact that he showed up in public was monumental. |
|
|
| The reception gave way to dinner, which was uneventful. |
|
|
| 4. Let the Beatings Begin |
|
|
| A few days before the con, Mr. Blast had scoured the net looking for |
| dens of inequity at my behest. In alt.sex.bondage he had run across |
| a message referring to "Bondage A Go-Go." This was a weekly event at |
| a club in the industrial district called "The Bridge." The description |
| on the net described it as a dance club where people liked to dress up |
| in leather and spikes, and women handcuffed to the bar from |
| 9-11 drank free! This was my kind of place. |
|
|
| On that Wednesday night, I could think of nothing but going out and |
| getting to Bondage A Go-Go. I pestered X-con, Mr. Blast and U.H. into |
| going. We tried to get Fender to go too, but he totally lamed out. |
| (This would be remembered as the biggest mistake of his life.) |
|
|
| We eventually found ourselves driving around a very seedy part of |
| San Francisco. On one exceedingly dark avenue we noticed a row |
| of Harleys and their burly owners hanging outside a major dive. We |
| had found our destination. |
|
|
| Cover was five bucks. Once inside we were assaulted by pounding |
| industrial and women in leather. RAD! Beer was a buck fifty. |
| Grabbing a Coors and sparking a Camel, I wandered out to the main dance |
| floor where some kind of event was taking place. |
|
|
| Upon a raised stage several girlies were undulating in their |
| dominatrix get-ups, slowly removing them piece by piece. A smile |
| began to form. X-con and U.H. found me and likewise denoted their |
| approval. The strip revue continued for a few songs, with the |
| girlies removing everything but their attitudes. |
|
|
| The lights went up, and a new girl came out. She was followed by a |
| friend carrying several items. The first girl began to read rather |
| obscure poetry as the second undressed her. Once girl1 was free |
| of restrictive undergarments girl2 donned surgical gloves and |
| began pouring generous amounts of lubricant over her hands. As the |
| poetry reached a frantic peak, girl2 slowly inserted her entire hand |
| into girl1. |
|
|
| A woman in the crowd screamed. |
|
|
| My smile was so wide, it hurt. |
|
|
| The fisting continued for an eternity, with girl1 moving around the stage |
| complaining in her poetic rant about how no man could ever satisfy her. |
| (This was of no surprise to me since she had an entire forearm up her twat.) |
| Girl2 scampered around underneath, happily pumping away for what seemed like |
| an hour. |
|
|
| When the performance ended, a very tall woman in hard dominatrix gear |
| sauntered out on the stage. From her Nazi SS cap to her stiletto heels |
| to her riding crop, she was the top of my dreams. Two accomplices tied |
| a seemingly unwilling bottom to the stage and she began striking |
| her repeatedly with the crop, to the beat of something that sounded like |
| KMFDM. The screams filled the club, and drool filled the corners of my |
| mouth. |
|
|
| As the song ended, the girls all came back out on stage and took a bow |
| to deafening applause. Then the disco ball lit up, and Ministry began |
| thundering, and people began to dance like nothing had ever |
| happened. We were a bit stunned. |
|
|
| We all wandered up to the second level where we were greeted by a guy and |
| two girls going at it full on. I staggered dazed to the second story on the |
| opposite side. There was a skinhead getting a huge tattoo and a girl |
| getting a smaller one. I was not brave enough to risk the needle in |
| San Francisco, so I wandered back downstairs. That's where I fell in love. |
|
|
| She was about 5'2", clad in a leather teddy, bobbed blood red hair, carrying |
| a cat o'nine tails. Huge, uh, eyes. Alas, 'twas not to be. She was |
| leading around a couple of boy toys on studded leashes. Although the |
| guys seemed to be more interested in each other than her, I kept away, |
| knowing I would get the hell beaten out of me if I intervened. |
|
|
| As it approached 3:00 am, we decided it was time to go. We bid a fond |
| farewell to the Bridge and took leave. |
|
|
| We all wanted to see Golden Gate, so U.H. directed us towards downtown |
| to the bridge. Passing down Market, we noticed a man lying in a pool of |
| blood before a shattered plate glass window, surrounded by cops. |
|
|
| We eventually reached the Golden Gate Bridge. We drove across to the |
| scenic overlook. Even in the darkness it was rather cool. We took off |
| through the hills and nearly smashed into a few deer with the car. |
| It was almost time for the conference by then, so we decided to get back. |
|
|
| 5. Thursday |
|
|
| I made it downstairs for the "Medical Information and Privacy" that |
| morning. As I was walking towards the room, I got a sudden flash of |
| an airlines advertisement. The Pilot had arrived. I was shocked. |
| Here was this guy who used to be one of the evil legionnaires, and he |
| looked like an actor from a delta commercial...blue suit, aviator |
| sunglasses, nappy hat with the little wings. Appalling. |
|
|
| I drug him into the meeting hall where we sat and made MST3K-like |
| commentary during the panel. I began to get mad that no one had |
| even mentioned the lack of legislation regarding medical records privacy, |
| nor the human genome project. I was formulating my rude commentary |
| for the question period when the last speaker thankfully brought |
| up all these points, and chastised everyone else for not having done |
| so previously. Good job. |
|
|
| I snaked The Pilot a lunch pass, and we grabbed a bite. It was pretty |
| good. I noticed that it was paid for by Equifax or Mead Data Central |
| or some other data-gathering puppet agency of The Man. No doubt a |
| pathetic ploy to sway our feelings. I ate it anyway. |
|
|
| After lunch, John Perry Barlow got up to bs a bit. The thing that stuck me |
| about Barlow was his rant about the legalization of drugs. Yet another |
| stray from computers & privacy. It must be nice to be rich enough to |
| stand in front of the FBI and say that you like to take acid and think |
| it ought to be legal. I debated whether or not to ask him if he |
| knew where to score any in San Francisco, but decided on silence, since |
| I'm not rich. |
|
|
| I lost all concept of time and space after Barlow's talk, and have no idea |
| what happened between that time and that evening. |
|
|
| 6. Birds of a Feather BOF together |
|
|
| That night we went to the Hacker BOF, sponsored by John McMullen. |
| Lots of oldies siting around being superior since it wasn't illegal |
| when they swiped cpu access, and lots of newbies sitting around feeling |
| superior since they had access to far better things than the oldies |
| ever dreamed of. |
|
|
| A certain New York State Policeman had been given the remainder of the |
| bottle of vodka from the previous night. It was gone in record time. |
| Later he was heard remarking about how hackers should get the death |
| penalty. When Emmanuel Goldstein demonstrated his Demon Dialer from |
| the Netherlands, he sat in the corner slamming his fist into his hand |
| muttering, "wait till we get home, you'll get yours." |
|
|
| I went outside and hid. Also hiding outside was Phiber. We exchanged a |
| few glares. He and I had been exchanging glares since our respective |
| arrivals. But neither of us said anything directly to the other. |
| I had heard from several people that Phiber had remarked, "on the third |
| day, I'm gonna get that guy. Just you wait." I was waiting. |
|
|
| I decided that Thursday should be the night we would all go to a |
| strip club. After telling everyone within a 15 mile radius about |
| Bondage A Go-Go, it was rather easy to work up an interest in this |
| adventure. Me, X-con, Mr. Blast, U.H. and Fender would be the |
| valiant warriors. |
|
|
| Before making preparations to leave, X-con and Fitzgerald decided to |
| check out the hotel's PBX. Setting up Tone-Loc, X-con's notebook |
| set out banging away at the available block of internals. We |
| decided that the hotel had a 75, and yes, it would be ours, oh yes, |
| it would be ours. |
|
|
| It was a Herculean task to gather the crew. Despite their desire to go, |
| everyone farted around and rounding them up was akin to a cattle |
| drive. Fender cried about having to attend this BOF and that BOF and |
| Mr. Blast cried about being tired, Fitzgerald cried about not being |
| old enough to go, and I just cried. Eventually we gathered our |
| crew and launched. |
|
|
| 8. Market Street Madness |
|
|
| We initially went out to locate the Mitchell Brothers club. I had heard that |
| it was quite rad. Totally nude. Lap dancing. Total degradation and |
| objectification. Wowzers. |
|
|
| U.H. said he knew where it was. He was mistaken. The address in the |
| phone book was wrong. It was nowhere to be found. We ended back up |
| on Market surrounded by junkies and would-be muggers. Thankfully, |
| there were no fresh corpses. I saw a marquee with the banner Traci Topps. |
|
|
| Forcing Mr. Blast to pull over, we made a beeline to the entrance. |
| Cover was ten dollars, and we had missed Traci's last performance. |
| We paid it anyway, since we had bothered to pull over. Big mistake. |
|
|
| Now, when I think of strip clubs, I think of places like Houston's |
| Men's Club, or Atlanta's Gold Club, or Dallas' Fantasy Ranch. Very |
| nice. Hot women. Good music. Booze. Tables. |
|
|
| We entered a room that used to be a theater. Sloping aisles along |
| theater seats side by side. Up on the stage, was a tired, unattractive, |
| heavy set brunette slumping along to some cheesy pop number. |
| I was instantly disgusted. I felt compelled to tell X-con that strip |
| clubs were not like this normally, since he had never been to one, and |
| it was my bright idea to be here. |
|
|
| We noticed some old perv at the far end of our row in a trench. It was |
| like out of a bad movie. He was not at all shy about his self-satisfaction |
| and in fact seemed quite proud of it. He kept trying to get the girls to |
| bend down so he could fondle them. Gross beyond belief. We debated |
| whether or not to point and laugh at him, but decided he might have |
| something more deadly concealed under the trench and tried to ignore it. |
|
|
| Some more furniture passed across the stage. One sauntered over to me |
| and asked if I'd like any company. I asked her what the hell this place |
| was all about. She said that this was the way most places were downtown. |
| I told her that I expected tables, beer, and a happy upbeat tempo. She |
| shrugged and said she didn't know of anything really like that. |
|
|
| On the stage a really cute girl popped up. A shroom on this turd of a club. |
| Fender and I both decided she was ours. Fender said there was no way that |
| I would get the only good looking girl in the place. I said he needed to |
| get real, that it would be no contest. |
|
|
| As soon as she left the stage, Fender disappeared. Later he returned |
| smirking. Moments afterward, the girl appeared and plopped down in his lap. |
| (We found out later he paid her.) He continued his dialogue for about |
| 20 minutes discussing philosophy or something equally stupid to talk |
| to a nude dancer about, and then we got up to leave. She gave him her |
| phone number. (It was the number to the Special Olympics.) We left, |
| and I apologized to everyone. |
|
|
| We took off to Lombard street and fantasized about letting the rental |
| car loose to plummet down the hill, destroying everything in its |
| path. Next time we decided we would. |
|
|
| Then it was decided that it would be a good idea to look for some food. |
| We ended up somewhere where there was some kind of dance club. |
| Everything was closed and there was no food to be seen. Walking down |
| a few side streets looking for food, U.H. decided to tell Fender that |
| he had broken into his machine. Fender turned about 20 shades of green. |
|
|
| We then went back to the Golden Gate Bridge since it never closed and |
| stared out at the bay. Fender began to talk incoherently so it |
| became urgent that we get back to the hotel and put him to bed to dream |
| happy dreams of his stripper Edie. |
|
|
| Back at the hotel X-con and I could not sleep. The notebook had found |
| a number of carriers. One was for a System V unix. We decided that |
| this was the hotel's registration computer. We knew most used some kind of |
| package like encore, so we...well. :) We also found several odd systems, |
| probably some kind of elevator/ac/power controllers or whatnot. |
|
|
| At 5am or so, X-con and I took off to explore the hotel. Down in the lobby we |
| found RBOC busily typing away to a TTD operator on the AT&T payphone 2000. |
| He was engrossed in conversation, so we left him to his typing. |
| X-con started to look around the Hertz counter for anything exciting and |
| set off the alarm. Within seconds security arrived to find me |
| perched on the shoeshine stand and X-con rapping on the payphone to |
| another hotel. We told him we hadn't seen anyone go behind the counter. |
| He didn't believe us but left anyway. |
|
|
| As we burst into fits of laughter, Mitch Kapor, in shorts and t-shirt came |
| cruising by and exited through a glass door. We weren't quite sure if he |
| were real so we snuck through the door after him. The door led to the |
| gym. Mitch was busily pedaling away on an exercycle. |
|
|
| X-con and I decided to explore the hotel since we never even knew there |
| was a gym, and who could tell what other wild and wacky places remained |
| unseen. We took off to find the roof, since that was the most obvious |
| place to go that we should not be. Finding the stairwell with roof access, |
| we charged up to the top landing. The roof was unlocked, but right before |
| opening the hatch, we noticed that there was a small magnetic contact |
| connected to a lead. Not feeling up to disabling alarm systems so |
| late in the evening (or early in the morning), we took off. |
| On another level, we found the offices. Simplex locks. Amazing. |
| Evil grins began to form, but we wimped out, besides it was damn near |
| convention time. |
|
|
| 9. Coffee, Coffee and More Coffee |
|
|
| Outside the convention room the caterers had set up the coffee urns. |
| X-con and I dove into the java like Mexican cliff jumpers. It got |
| to be really really stupid. We were slamming coffee like there was no |
| tomorrow. Fuck tomorrow, we slammed it like there was no today. |
| I put about eight packets of sugar in each of my cups. Ahh, nothing like |
| a steamin' cup o' joe. By the time we were done we had each drank |
| nearly 20 cups. The world was alive with an electric hum. We were ready |
| to take on the entire convention. Yep. After another cup. |
|
|
| The first panel of the day was "Gender Issues in Computing and |
| Telecommunications." As the talk began, the pig in me grew restless. |
| "What's all this crap?" it said. "Bunch of feminazis bitching about |
| gifs. They should all go to the bridge next Wednesday, that will give them |
| a new perspective. Where's Shit Kickin' Jim when you need him?" |
| Then I got more idealistic in my thinking. "Ok, fine, if women |
| demand equal treatment on the net, then what about equal treatment for |
| homosexuals? What about equal treatment for hermaphrodites? What about |
| equal treatment for one-legged retired American Indian Proctologists on |
| the net? And let us not forget the plight of the Hairless. Geez. What |
| a load of hooey. I wanted to jump up and yell, "THE NET IS NOT REAL! |
| WORRY ABOUT THE REAL WORLD AND THE NET WILL CHANGE! YOU CANNOT CHANGE |
| REALITY BY CHANGING THE NET!" If only I'd had another cup of coffee, I might |
| have done it. |
|
|
| The women got nothing done. After the panel X-con and I took off to the |
| room, after getting a few cups of coffee for the elevator ride. We sat |
| in the hotel room and made rude noises until Mr. Blast and Fitzgerald |
| got up. We all fought for the shower and by noon we were ready to |
| venture outward for lunch. |
|
|
| 10. Cliffie! |
|
|
| The lunch that day had a few pleasant surprises. The first came in the |
| form of a waitress with HUGE, uh, eyes. Having something of an |
| fetish for big, ahem, eyes, I practiced my patented Manson-like gaze |
| for her benefit. The second surprise came when a the CFP staffers |
| cornered a couple of people at our table. |
|
|
| KCrow and Xaen had photocopied lunch tickets and forged badges to hang |
| out at the conference. Finally, on the last day, the staffers suddenly |
| decided that these two might not be paying attendees. Whether it was |
| the names on their badges that did not check out, or the fact that |
| Xaen had been walking around in a red and white dress-like robe the entire |
| day. They let them stay, but told them next time to either make better |
| forgeries or send in their scholarship applications like everyone else. |
|
|
| As lunch drew to a close, the crowd grew restless. A cry rang out, |
| "CLIFFIE!" The crowd took up the cry, and executives began throwing |
| conference papers in the air, stomping their feet and holding up |
| their lit cigarette lighters. "We want Cliffie, we want Cliffie!" |
| The house lights dimmed and a silhouette of frazzled hair appeared at the |
| head of the room. |
|
|
| Well, maybe it wasn't quite like that. Cliff Stoll took the stand and |
| began a stream of consciousness rant that would make someone with a bipolar |
| disorder look lucid. Contorting himself and leaping on tables, Cliff |
| definitely got my attention. It was kind of like watching Emo Philips |
| on crank while tripping. I dug it. If you have the opportunity |
| to catch Cliff on his next tour, make sure to do so. Lorne Michaels could |
| do worse than make some kind of sitcom around this guy. It was |
| probably the most amazing thing I had seen at the official conference. |
|
|
| 11. A Little Bit O' History |
|
|
| Fitzgerald heard that there was a Pac Bell museum downtown. This news |
| evoked a Pavlovian response almost as pronounced as me at The Bridge. |
| Me and The Pilot wanted to check it out too so we decided to go. |
| It was like the Warner Bros. cartoon of the big dog and the little dog |
| "huh Spike, we gonna get us a cat, aren't we Spike, yep, we are gonna get |
| that cat, boy, aren't we Spike, yep, yep, boy I can't wait, boy is that |
| darn cat gonna be sorry, isn't he Spike, huh, Spike, huh?" Fitzgerald |
| was psyched. |
|
|
| Driving through downtown San Francisco was kind of like some kind of |
| deranged Nientendo game. The streets were obviously layed out by farm |
| animals. Traffic was disgusting. Of course, 3:30 on Friday afternoon |
| is official road construction time in downtown San Francisco. That was |
| not in my "Welcome To SF" guide, so I penciled it in. |
|
|
| About 4:00 we found an open lot, amazingly enough across from the |
| Pac Bell building. We paid roughly 37 thousand dollars for the spot and |
| took off to the museum. Fitzgerald was in heaven. He had called the |
| museum from the hotel before we left and told them we were on our way. |
|
|
| Upon walking in the building we were stopped by a guard. He asked us what |
| we wanted. Fitzgerald said, "We're here for to see the museum!" The |
| guard gave us the once over and said, "Museum's closed." Fitzgerald |
| almost fainted. Sure enough, the museum guy had bailed early. Probably |
| immediately after receiving our phone call. Typical telco nazi antics. |
|
|
| We took to the streets. (The streets of San Francisco...haha) Wandering |
| up and down the hills checking people out proved quite fun. We checked out |
| Chinatown where we all decided that the little Oriental schoolgirls in their |
| uniforms were quite amazing. We tried to spot the opium dens, and pointed |
| out suspect organized crime figures. Suddenly, we realized we were lost, |
| and if we didn't get back to the lot we would lose our car. (Thirty-seven |
| thousand dollars only buys you a spot for a few hours.) We managed to |
| find our car minutes before the tow trucks rolled in and spent |
| a few more hours looking for buildings with good dumpsters for that night's |
| planned trashing spree. We found a few spots and took off towards the |
| hotel and dinner. |
|
|
| 12. Zen & The Art of Trashing |
|
|
| That night everyone decided to move into our room. Somehow Fitzgerald stole |
| a bed and wheeled it into our room to allow for more sleep space. So, it was |
| X-con, Fitzgerald, me, Fender and Mr. Blast all smashed into the little |
| room. As we were sitting in the room discussing what to do that |
| evening, the door burst open and a large man in basketball sweats walked |
| in. After he saw us in the room he turned around and quickly exited. |
|
|
| Fitzgerald ran out in the hall after him and discovered that the whole hall |
| was full of basketball players. We called down to the front desk to complain |
| that our room had been given out. The desk apologized and told us that the |
| mistake had been noticed and they would correct the problem with the |
| basketball team. This did not exactly sit well with me, as I envisioned |
| shitloads of jocks rooting through our stuff, taking my camera and |
| various and sundry electronics gear. |
|
|
| Temporarily forgetting about the impending robberies, we took off to do |
| a little recon of our own. The five of us and The Pilot piled into |
| two cars and took off towards downtown looking for garbage. |
|
|
| We found several Pac Bell offices but the only one with any type of |
| dumpster had nothing to offer save old yellow pages and pizza boxes. |
| We were totally bummed. We decided to wander around aimlessly |
| to see what we could stumble across. |
|
|
| After making about a dozen turns and walking a mile or two we came across |
| a huge black beast of a building. It looked like the Borg Cube. It was |
| vast and foreboding. It was an AT&T building. Fitzgerald took off |
| towards the door to ask for a tour. It was only 11:00 in the evening, |
| so we were certain that we would be given a hearty welcoming and |
| guided journey through the bowels of the cube. Yeah, right. |
|
|
| Alas, we were not to be assimilated. The guard told us to get lost. |
| We decided to see the Borg used dumpsters. Around the back end of the |
| building by the loading docks we saw several stair landings starting about |
| three floors up. We debated scaling the building, but noticed about |
| 500 security cameras. This place was possibly the most secure telco |
| installation we had ever seen. |
|
|
| We decided that this place must be the point of presence for the West Coast |
| since it was just so damn impenetrable. As we turned to leave I noticed a |
| small piece of white cord on the ground. As I picked it up, we noticed it |
| led from a small construction shack behind the POP. It ran all the way |
| from the shack to a heavy steel door in the side of the cube where it |
| snaked its way under the door into the building and probably into the |
| frame. We all had a great laugh at the exposed line, and wished we |
| would have had a test-set to make a few choice overseas calls. |
|
|
| We wandered back to the cars and ended up driving around downtown some |
| more for a few hours before ending up back at the hotel. |
|
|
| 13. Mr. Blast Can't Drive. |
|
|
| We all regrouped the next morning to go shopping downtown. Fender was kind |
| enough to dish out vast quantities of chocolate-covered espresso beans |
| and we all got completely wired. X-con and I decided that we should have had |
| a bag of these the previous morning. |
|
|
| We drove straight down to Chinatown and began looking for a place to park. |
| Mr. Blast, Fender, X-con were in one car, me, Fitzgerald and The Pilot |
| in another. Mr. Blast, for being from a huge city, had absolutely no |
| concept of driving in traffic in a downtown setting. He missed lots, |
| made weird turns, ran lights and generally seemed like he was trying |
| to lose us. He achieved his desired goal. |
|
|
| We cursed his name for fifteen minutes and then gave up our search. |
| Fitzgerald had swiped Fender's scanner and was busily entertaining |
| himself listening to cellular phone calls. He had the window rolled down |
| in the back seat and took great joy in holding up the scanner so people |
| walking down the street could join in on the voyeuristic fun. Suddenly |
| Fitzgerald shouted, "HOLY SHIT! I can't believe it!" |
|
|
| The Pilot and I nearly had matching strokes, "WHAT?" I said. "It's |
| ENCRYPTED! I can't believe it man, encrypted speech on the phone!" |
| I began to laugh, and The Pilot soon joined in. It was Mandarin. |
| "Where the hell are we, Fitz?" I asked him. "San Francisco, " he replied. |
| "No," I said, "Specifically, where in San Francisco?" Fitzgerald |
| thought for a minute and said, "Uh, Chinatown?" Suddenly, his eyes |
| lit up, "OHHHHHHH. Hehe.. it's not encrypted is it?" We laughed at him |
| for about ten minutes. |
|
|
| We came to a stop light where a very confused Chinese lady was looking |
| at us. Fitzgerald held up the scanner and I yelled, "Herro!" We |
| went hysterical as we drove off, leaving the woman even more bewildered. |
|
|
| We found a place to park and decided to explore on our own. The plethora |
| of little Chinese hotties blew my mind. We staggered around Chinatown |
| trying to get bargains on electronics gear. It struck us all as odd |
| that every electronics store in the downtown area was owned and |
| operated by Iranians. Needless to say, no bargains were found. |
|
|
| We had lunch at a restaurant called Red Dragon. The majority of the |
| lunch was spent talking telco. Watching Fitz and The Pilot get totally |
| wrapped up in the talk, both trying to tell the best story about the |
| neatest hack proved incredibly interesting. |
|
|
| We took off into the crowds to try to find cheap watches, since The Pilot's |
| watch was ready to retire. He soon made a totally sweet deal on a watch |
| from an oriental merchant and we took off for the car. On the way we noticed |
| a small shop in a back alley with throwing stars in the window. |
|
|
| Inside was ninja heaven. They had daggers, cloaks, stars, nunchaca, |
| swords, masks and tons and tons of violence inducing paraphanalia. I saw |
| a telescoping steel whip behind a case. I knew I must possess this item, |
| and when I found out that it was only $22.00 the money was already in |
| my hands. Fitz also got a whip and five stars. We were now armed...Phiber |
| beware. |
|
|
| We took off down to the port to look out at the bay. While we were there |
| we watched a bunch of skaters doing totally insane street style in a small |
| cement fountain area. One kid waxed the street with his face and we all |
| had a serious laugh, much to the chagrin of the injured and his posse. |
| As soon as they scraped up the hapless skatepunk off the ground, |
| they resumed their thrashing, avoiding the wet spot. We decided |
| that these kids were totally insane. |
|
|
| We took off back to the hotel to meet up with the idiots. Once we arrived |
| we found that we were locked out of our room. In fact, not only had they |
| cut off our keys, but they had checked us out. We got a security guard |
| to let us in the room. Shortly thereafter X-con et.al. returned loaded |
| with gear they had picked up on their trip. They exclaimed that they |
| rushed back to the hotel at top speed, since when they tried to call the |
| room, the hotel had said that our room was not in use. |
|
|
| I got furious and went downstairs to yell. Eventually, we got our phone |
| service back and the manager went upstairs to give us a live body to |
| verbally abuse, which we took full advantage of. He shucked and jived |
| his way through an apology but we did not get a free night as we had |
| hoped for. |
|
|
| 14. Castro-Bound |
|
|
| X-Con wanted shoes. We all sorted out the card key mess and piled back in |
| The Pilot's car and headed out to find NaNa's. As we drove towards |
| the store we noticed something change about the city. The fog lifted. |
| The colors got more pastel. The men walking down the street seemed to |
| have more spring in their step. We had entered the Castro. |
|
|
| I really wanted to hit a record store in the Castro because homos always |
| seem to have cool dance music. I convinced everyone that we should pull |
| over and risk a quick walk down the main drag. |
|
|
| The stroll was a complete farce. Our crew seemed to be extremely |
| apprehensive. To make them more edgy I took great glee in talking |
| real nelly and batting my eyes at anything that moved. No one was amused. |
| In fact, Fitzgerald and the Pilot looked like they wanted to cry and run |
| back to the car and hide. |
|
|
| None of the record stores had anything good. There were lots of old |
| Judy Garland and Ethyl Merman but nothing more modern than the |
| Village People. (And I was expecting techno. But noooooo...) |
|
|
| On our way back to the car we passed by a leather goods store. Not |
| exactly Tandycraft, if you get my drift. X-con was the only one |
| brave enough to go in. He came out looking drained of all color holding |
| a catalog. |
|
|
| "There were these three guys in there," he stammered. "One of them was |
| being fitted for a cock sheath. The two other guys kept showing him |
| different ones, but he said they were too big." |
|
|
| We all shuddered and hastened our return to the car. |
|
|
| We drove a few miles more down the street and ended up at the NaNa's shop. |
| The store was your typical alternative grunge-wear shop. Stompin' |
| boots, nifty caps, shirts by Blunt. X-con got his shoes. We all got |
| nifty caps. Leaving for the hotel, I grabbed a handful of flyers from |
| the front window. Most were rave flyers for the next weekend. One however |
| was announcing a bondage party for 'women only' two days later. I felt a |
| tear begin to form as I reminisced about the Bridge. |
|
|
| 15. Hating It In The Height. |
|
|
| We regrouped back at the hotel and took off again for the Height to go |
| check out Rough Trade records and see what could be seen. And X-con |
| and I needed a few tabs. (YEEE!) We needed these rather badly since |
| Mr. Blast had found out about a rave that evening from the SF-RAVES |
| mailing list. There was no way X-con and I could sit through a rave |
| sober, and dancing was WAY out of the question. |
|
|
| Rough Trade was closed. |
|
|
| We decided to grab a quick bite to eat while waiting for information |
| on the rave. We decided to try something really odd, since we weren't in |
| for the typical corporate burger scene. A bit down the street from |
| Rough Trade we happened upon a Ethopian restaurant. Since this was about |
| as obscure as any of us had ever dreamed, we decided to check it out. |
| I personally didn't think Ethopians ever had any food, and made a few jokes |
| about wanting something light, so this would definitely be the place. |
|
|
| Ethopian food was odd. Looking over the menu, Mr. Blast decided that |
| he didn't want much of anything they had to offer. We decided that we |
| should buy a lot of everything and just pick and choose. I made the |
| comment that I would only eat chicken, and Mr. Blast didn't like the |
| idea of eating much of anything everyone wanted to try. We ordered |
| separately. |
|
|
| The food came out in a rather odd fashion. Everything was piled on top |
| of everything else. It was all splattered on top of a weird pancake-like |
| sponge bread. There were all manner of sauces to smother, dip, or otherwise |
| destroy the entrees with, so we all took great bravado in our sampling of |
| each. It was quite a fantastic spread, and I wholeheartedly urge everyone |
| to check out this particular cuisine. |
|
|
| After the meal we took off to find a phone to call the raveline. On our |
| way to the phone X-con and I stumbled across a few transients who offered |
| us acid at a remarkable price. This was almost too good to be true. |
| We slunk down a side street and bs'ed with the homeless couple as we |
| decided how many to buy. We settled on 20 hits for 45 dollars. X-con |
| and I were psyched. The rave would indeed be tolerable. |
|
|
| We hooked up with the crew, smiling like Cheshire cats. Mr. Blast had |
| the directions to the rave so we took off ready to overindulge. |
| By the time we reached the rave, we were one of what seemed like |
| a hundred or two hanging outside of a warehouse. This might be |
| pretty damn cool. X-con and I began our dosing. |
|
|
| Now, usually I love the first contact of the blotter with my tongue. |
| It evokes a certain tangy taste, akin to touching a battery to the tip |
| of your tongue. It always gets the adrenaline flowing, and brings |
| back memories of what will soon be repeated. |
|
|
| Nothing. |
|
|
| I looked at X-con. "Dude," he said, "I can't taste shit. I better |
| take more." He dropped about 3 more. Still no taste. I ate a few more |
| myself in a futile hope that some lysergine substance may have once resided |
| in the fibers of the blotter. Nope. |
|
|
| This was the beginning. |
|
|
| As we waited to be let in to the warehouse, cursing the transients, the sirens |
| begin to wail. Fucking great. Five police cars swept into the cul-de-sac |
| that led to the warehouse. The rave would not be in this location. Everyone |
| bailed like rats from a sinking ship, yelling that the rave would be |
| moved to a soon to be announced location. |
|
|
| Now X-con and I were really pissed. I whipped out my steel whip and said, |
| "Let's go pay a quick visit to the Height and visit our friends." |
| We piled back into the cars and set out to do some serious damage. |
|
|
| Arriving in the Height we noticed that cops were everywhere. This was not |
| going to be easy. X-con and I set out like men possessed. The transients |
| were gone. We wandered up and down the street for about 30 minutes looking |
| for our prey. Finally we saw them. They saw us. One ran like a marathon |
| sprinter. The other stayed, but was soon flanked by a gang of eight |
| other transients. X-con walked right up and said "You fucking ripped us |
| off!" |
|
|
| As we tried to get either our money back or working drugs, more and more |
| transients gathered. It was time to write it off as a loss. We cursed |
| and backed away from the crowd. |
|
|
| Our group had congregated at a grocery store at the end of the street. |
| Mr. Blast was speed dialing the raveline in a desperate attempt to |
| find a venue to spin wildly in and blow his day-glo rave whistle. |
|
|
| Across the street, a homeless black man screamed painfully at each and |
| every passing car, "HELP! You gotta take me and my girlfriend to |
| the hospital now! She's gonna DIE!" He staggered over to us |
| and begged for a ride, we respectfully declined. |
|
|
| As this was going on, the grocery store erupted with violence as |
| a drunken frat type was ejected forcibly. He started swinging |
| wildly at the rent-a-cop, and was greeted with the business end |
| of a police baton. |
|
|
| The Pilot decided this was a good time to make his exit. He waved |
| goodbye and was gone. |
|
|
| RBOC, Voxman and a nameless waif arrived in the parking lot. We |
| told them the status of the rave and they decided to wait to see if |
| there may be any type of decadence forthcoming. About that time |
| Mr. Blast came screaming across the lot with the directions. |
|
|
| We no longer had room for everyone, so Voxman & the nameless waif were |
| offered a ride from a flaming pedophile who overheard their plight. |
| The took him up on his offer before we could stop them. We said a quick |
| prayer for them and piled into the car. |
|
|
| 16. Stark Raving Mad Late Into The Night |
|
|
| The new location was out at a marina in Berkeley on the beach. It took damn |
| near an enternity to get there and when we arrived it was raining. |
| X-con and I made it our mission to find acid at this location. The music |
| could be heard for several hundred yards from the street, so we took off |
| in a sprint towards the source. |
|
|
| There were roughly 40 or so people. Thirty-nine guys, one ugly girl. |
|
|
| X-con immediately disappeared in the crowd looking for someone with |
| a beeper...anyone. Fender disappeared. Fitz disappeared. RBOC and I |
| sat and made rude comments. X-con arrived back with a big smile. |
|
|
| Our saviour was in the form of a teenage Hispanic dude. He had red blotter |
| with elephant, and yellow blotter with some other kind of design. The |
| yellow was "three-way." We bought several of each, and there was much |
| rejoicing. X-con had already eaten one three-way and one regular, before |
| I could split one in half for RBOC. The taste was overwhelming. |
| Freshly squeezed. |
|
|
| The three of us perched up on a hill staring out over the undulating mass |
| waiting for the effect. It came quickly. |
|
|
| As it hit, Fitz wandered up and said, "Let's hack the raveline!" |
| This idea went over VERY WELL, so we all set out towards the car, leaving |
| little sparky streamers behind us as we moved. |
|
|
| From a nearby hotel lobby, Fitz and X-con busily hacked at the VMB |
| while RBOC and I sat in the car totally wigging. About 30 minutes |
| later they ran out screaming. It had been done and the code was |
| now 902100. |
|
|
| We drove back to the rave and noticed the red and blues flashing and the |
| ravers bailing en masse. We picked up Mr. Blast and Fender and took off |
| back to our hotel. Fender had done a bit of networking at the rave and |
| exchanged a few business cards. We were totally appalled. |
|
|
| Once back at the hotel X-con took even more. He said he wanted to see |
| static. Within an hour he achieved his goal. He spent a large portion of |
| the night walking in and out of the room muttering, "Man...you guys are |
| totally fucking with me." |
|
|
| We then decided to spice up the raveline. RBOC changed the outgoing |
| message a few times and then finally decided on, "HAR HAR HAR, Y'all been |
| boarded by the pirate! No more techno! No more homosexuals |
| grinding away at 120 beats per minute! No more Rave! HAR HAR HAR!" |
| We laughed like schoolgirls. |
|
|
| Everyone passed out. Everyone but us tripsters of course. We stayed up |
| the majority of the night telling really odd pharmaceutical war stories. |
|
|
| At about 6 am RBOC decided that he was hungry and called for room service. |
| He ordered linguini. The room service clerk told him that the kitchen |
| was not ready for dinner, and would only be serving breakfast. RBOC |
| replied, "Look, do you have noodles? Yes? Do you have water? Well, |
| what's the fucking problem. What exactly do you need to boil water? |
| Turn on the stove, and I'll be down in a few minutes to make it myself." |
| With this logic, the room service clerk replied his linguini would |
| be up in about half an hour. |
|
|
| We then decided to get escorts, or at least order up a few, and listen |
| to them on their cell phones calling their pimps. (Fender had listened |
| to about five different such conversations a few nights prior.) |
| RBOC ordered up a couple of buxom blondes to go and we waited for their |
| return phone call to barter on the price. |
|
|
| The call never came in. The hotel had turned off our phone for incoming |
| calls. This sparked even more fun, as RBOC called up the front desk |
| to complain, "Look ma'am, my hookers can't fucking call into my room! |
| Turn my phone back on NOW! I've had a rough night up for 24 hours on |
| drugs, and I need a woman." The operator was not amused. |
|
|
| The sun rose. We all remarked about the typical morning after layer of |
| filth that seems to congeal after a good fry. The static was no longer |
| visible to X-con and he became almost lucid again, interjecting bits |
| of wisdom like "Uh" and "Yeah" into the conversation. His flight was in |
| two hours. |
|
|
| The linguini arrived and everyone had a small taste as the smell of |
| the white sauce permeated the room. As we smacked away, the inexperienced |
| of the crowd arose to greet a new morning. RBOC suddenly realized that |
| NYC was probably snowed under, so he took off to find a phone to check |
| on the status of his flight home. |
|
|
| X-con gathered his bags and mumbled "Later," and disappeared. I fell on the |
| bed and disappeared into darkness. |
|
|
| 17. Laterz |
|
|
| The alarm clock blared out a sickening beep, to which it was rewarded with |
| a small flight across the hotel room. I gathered up my gear and made a |
| beeline towards the elevator. |
|
|
| Still confused, I wandered down to the lobby where I was greeted by |
| Fitzgerald and Fender. I bid them both a fond farewell and boarded |
| the airport shuttle. This was one hell of a good time. I wonder if |
| CFP4 in Chicago will be as good? One can only hope. See you there. |
|
|
|
|
| *************************************************************************** |
|
|
| D E F C O N I C O N V E N T I O N |
| D E F C O N I C O N V E N T I O N |
| DEF CON I CONVENTION |
| D E F C O N I C O N V E N T I O N |
|
|
| >> READ AND DISTRIBUTE AND READ AND DISTRIBUTE AND READ AND DISTRIBUTE << |
|
|
|
|
| Finalized Announcement: 5/08/1993 |
|
|
| We are proud to announce the 1st annual Def Con. |
|
|
| If you are at all familiar with any of the previous Con's, then you |
| will have a good idea of what DEF CON I will be like. If you don't have any |
| experience with Con's, they are an event on the order of a pilgrimage to |
| Mecca for the underground. They are a mind-blowing orgy of information |
| exchange, viewpoints, speeches, education, enlightenment... And most of all |
| sheer, unchecked PARTYING. It is an event that you must experience at least |
| once in your lifetime. |
|
|
| The partying aside, it is a wonderful opportunity to met some of the |
| celebrities of the underground computer scene. And those that shape its |
| destiny - the lawyers, libertarians, and most of all the other There will |
| be plenty of open-ended discussion on security, telephones and other |
| topics. As well as what TIME magazine calls the "Cyberpunk Movement". |
|
|
| Las Vegas, is as you might have guessed a great choice for the Con. |
| Gambling, loads of hotels and facilities, cheap air fare and room rates. |
| It's also in the West Coast making it more available to a different crowd |
| than the former Cons have been. |
|
|
| Your foray into the scene and your life will be forever incomplete |
| if by some chance you miss out on DEF CON I. Plan to be there! |
|
|
|
|
| WHO: You know who you are. |
| WHAT: Super Blowout Party Fest, with Speakers and Activities. |
| WHERE: Las Vegas, Nevada |
| WHEN: July 9th, 10th and 11th (Fri, Sat, Sun) 1993 |
| WHY: To meet all the other people out there you've been talking to for |
| months and months, and get some solid information instead of rumors. |
|
|
|
|
| DESCRIPTION: |
|
|
| So your bored, and have never gone to a convention? You want to meet |
| all the other members of the so called 'computer underground'? You've been |
| calling BBS systems for a long time now, and you definitely have been |
| interacting on the national networks. You've bullshitted with the best, |
| and now it's time to meet them in Vegas! For me I've been networking for |
| years, and now I'll get a chance to meet everyone in the flesh. Get |
| together with a group of your friends and make the journey. |
|
|
| We cordially invite all hackers/phreaks, techno-rats, programmers, |
| writers, activists, lawyers, philosophers, politicians, security officials, |
| cyberpunks and all network sysops and users to attend. |
|
|
| DEF CON I will be over the weekend in the middle of down town Las |
| Vegas at the Sands Hotel. Why Las Vegas? Well the West Coast hasn't had |
| a good Convention that I can remember, and Las Vegas is the place to do it. |
| Cheap food, alcohol, lots of entertainment and, like us, it never sleeps. |
| We will have a convention room open 24 hours so everyone can meet and plan |
| and scheme till they pass out. Events and speakers will be there to provide |
| distraction and some actual information and experiences from this loosely |
| knit community. |
|
|
| This is an initial announcement. It is meant only to alert you to |
| the time, dates and location of the convention. Future announcements will |
| inform you about specific speakers and events. |
|
|
| An information pack is FTPable off of the internet at nwnexus.wa.com, |
| in the cd/pub/dtangent directory. The IP# is 192.135.191.1 Information |
| updates will be posted there in the future as well as scanned map images and |
| updated speaker lists. |
|
|
| FINAL NOTES: |
|
|
| COST: How you get there is up to you, but United Airlines will be |
| the official carrier (meaning if you fly you get a 5% to 10% price reduction |
| off the cheapest available fare at the time of ticket purchase) When buying |
| airline tickets, call 1-800-521-4041 and reference meeting ID# 540ii. Hotel |
| Rooms will cost $62 per night for a double occupancy room. Get your friends |
| together and split the cost to $31. Food is inexpensive. The entertainment |
| is free inside the hotel. Reference the DEF CON I convention when |
| registering, as we have a block of rooms locked out, but once they go it will |
| be first come, fist serve. Call 1-800-634-6901 for the reservations desk. |
|
|
| The convention itself will cost $30 at the door, or $15 in advance. |
| It pays to register in advance! Also it helps us plan and cover expenses! |
| Mail checks/money orders/cashiers checks to: DEF CON I, 2709 East Madison |
| Street, #102, Seattle, WA, 98112. Make them payable to: "DEF CON" we're not |
| trying to make money, we will be trying to cover costs of the conference room |
| and hotel plus air fair for the speakers who require it. Don't bother mailing |
| it a week in advance, that just won't happen. Advanced registration gets you |
| a groovy 24 bit color pre-generated name tag. Include with your payment the |
| name you want listed, your association/group affiliation/bbs/whatever, email |
| address, and/or bbs number for syops. Last day for the registrations to reach |
| me will be July 1st. |
|
|
| SPEAKERS: We have solicited speakers from all aspects of the |
| computer underground and associated culture (Law, Media, Software Companies, |
| Cracking Groups, Hacking Groups, Magazine Editors, Etc.) If you know of |
| someone interested in speaking on a self selected topic, please contact The |
| Dark Tangent to discuss it. |
|
|
| FOR MORE INFORMATION: |
|
|
| For initial comments, requests for more information, information |
| about speaking at the event, or maps to the section where prostitution is |
| legal outside Las Vegas (Just Kidding) Contact The Dark Tangent by leaving |
| me mail at: dtangent@dtangent.wa.com on the InterNet. |
|
|
| Or call: 0-700-TANGENT for conference information/updates and to leave |
| questions or comments. |
| Or Snail Mail (U.S. Postal Service) it to DEF CON, 2709 East Madison Street, |
| #102, Seattle, WA, 98112. |
|
|
| Future information updates will pertain to the speaking agenda. |
|
|
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| Updates since the last announcement: |
|
|
| >> The Secret Service is too busy to attend. |
| >> New Media Magazine, Unix World and Robert X. Cringly have stated they will |
| attend. |
| >> We got a voice mail system working (I think) for comments and questions. |
| >> We don't have enough $$$ to fly out the EFF or Phillip Zimmerman (Author |
| of PGP) or Loyd Blankenship. |
| >> Judy Clark will be representing the CPSR and a few other organizations |
|
|
| Don't forget to bring a poster / banner representing any of the groups you |
| belong to. I want to cover the conference room walls with a display of all |
| the various groups / people attending. (Break out the crayons and markers) |
|
|
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| DEF CON I CONVENTION [PROPOSED SPEAKING SCHEDULE UPDATED 5.31.1993] |
|
|
| Saturday the 10th of July 10am, Sands Hotel, Las Vegas |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| INTRODUCTION Welcome to the convention |
| *The Dark Tangent (CON Organizer) |
|
|
| Keynote speaker Cyberspace, Society, crime and the future. |
|
|
| To hack or not to hack, that is not the question |
| *Ray Kaplan |
|
|
| Civil Libertarians |
| -CPSR Computer Privacy/1st Amendment/Encryption |
| Gender Rolls and Discrimination |
| *Judi Clark |
|
|
| -USC Comp. Law Legalities of BBS Operation, message content |
| laws and network concerns. |
| *Allen Grogan, Editor of Computer Lawyer |
|
|
| 'The Underworld' |
| -Networking Concerns of National Networking |
| of CCi (Cyber Crime International) Network. |
| *Midnight Sorrow. |
|
|
| Corporations |
| -Packet Switching |
| SPRINT Concerns/security and the future |
| MCI of packet switching. |
| (*Jim Black, MCI Systems Integrity) |
|
|
|
|
| Misc Common misbeliefs and rumors of the underground |
| *Scott Simpson |
|
|
| -Virtual Reality The law, and it's intersection with VR |
| *Karnow |
|
|
| -Unix Security Future developments in unix security software, |
| General Q&A on unix security |
| *Dan Farmer |
|
|
| -System Administrator Security Concerns of an Administrator |
| *Terminus |
|
|
| The 'Underworld' |
| -Internet The security problems with Internet/Networks |
| Overview of hacking |
| *Dark Druid |
|
|
| -Getting Busted The process of getting "busted" |
| *Count Zero |
|
|
| -How to be a nobody Hiding your identity in the high-tech future, or |
| The payphone is your friend. |
| *TBA-nonymous |
|
|
| -The Prosecutors Their concerns/problems and |
| Hacker Hunters suggestions for the 'underworld'/Q&A |
|
|
| CONCLUSION General Q&A |
|
|
|
|
| This itinerary is proposed, and topics and speakers will be marked as |
| permanent once a confirmation is received. This is by no means the exact |
| format of DEF CON I. Any Questions / Comments Contact: |
|
|
| dtangent@dtangent.wa.com |
| Voice Mail 0-700-TANGENT |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| [> DEF CON I and United Airlines Travel Arrangements <] |
|
|
|
|
| United Airlines has been chosen as the official carrier for DEF CON I |
| and is pleased to offer a 10% discount off the unrestricted BUA coach fare or |
| a 5% discount off the lowest applicable fares, including first class. This |
| special offer is available only to attendees of this meeting, and applies to |
| travel on domestic segments of all United Airlines and United Express flights. |
| A 5% discount off any fare is also available for attendees traveling to or from |
| Canada in conjunction with your meeting. These fares are available through |
| United's Meeting Desk with all fare rules and restrictions applying. |
|
|
| Help support the DEF CON I Conference by securing your reservations |
| with United Airlines. To obtain the best fares or schedule information, |
| please call United's Specialized Meeting Reservations Center at 1-800-521-4041. |
| Dedicated reservationists are on duty 7 days a week from 7:00 a.m. to 1:00 a.m. |
| ET. Please be sure to reference ID number 540II. You or your travel agent |
| should call today as seats may be limited. |
|
|
| As a United Meeting attendee you qualify for special discount rates |
| on Hertz rental cars. Mileage Plus members receive full credit for all miles |
| flown to this meeting. |
|
|
| Tickets will be mailed by United or you can pick them up at your |
| local travel agency or United Airlines ticket office. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Generic update #1--- |
|
|
| My system exploded, so it's been hard to keep in touch with everyone, |
| but my mail response should be better now. Yep the conference is |
| still on. A blown hard drive won't kill me. You can reach me for |
| information or questions at 0-700-TANGENT (the DEF CON I hot line) |
|
|
| ----- |
|
|
|
|
| -- |
| Sorry for the huge signature, but I like privacy on sensitive matters. |
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