| ==Phrack Magazine== |
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| Volume Four, Issue Forty-Four, File 7 of 27 |
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| Conference News |
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| Part II |
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| **************************************************************************** |
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| xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxx xx x xx DEF CON I, Las Vegas 1993 |
| xxxxxxxXXXXxxxxxxxxxxxxx xx x x I'll attempt to give you guys |
| xxxxxxXXXXXXxxxxx x x x the real deal on what happened. Since you |
| xxxxxXXXXXXXXxxxxx xx x x most likely don't care about the whole |
| xxxxXXXXXXXXXXxxx x xxxxxxxx x planning side of it I'll just talk about |
| xxxXXXXXXXXXXXXxxxxxxxxxx x what happened of interest. |
| xxXXXXXXXXXXXXXXxxxxxx xx x |
| xxxXXXXXXXXXXXXxxxxxxxx I showed up at the Sands Hotel later than |
| xxxxXXXXXXXXXXxxxxxxxx x x xx I thought, thanks to a delay at the |
| xxxxxXXXXXXXXxxxxxxx xxx xx x airport and a ride on the slowest hotel |
| xxxxxxXXXXXXxxxxxxx x x x shuttle known to mankind. It had to stop |
| xxxxxxxXXXXxxxxxxxxxxx xx x x at every other hotel before it made it to |
| xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx x mine. Oh well. |
|
|
| So I check in and go to check out the conference room, which happens to be |
| right next to the conference planning room for the hotel. "Hmm, they will be |
| gone for the weekend though, so we should be safe," I think as I wander into |
| "The Burgundy Room" Sounds like a room in "Clue." Anyway there are like maybe |
| six other people there. Dead Addict has been holding down the fort, and wanted |
| to go get drinks so I set him free to frolic as I set up shop. I handed out |
| tags to the people who had shown up and settled in for the duration. |
|
|
| Someone had brought a cd player, so I put on a tape and got the music |
| going. Red Five was there sporting scanners and radio gear, this guy had wires |
| sticking out all over the place. "Good thing they turned to phones off," I say |
| looking around the room happy that I wouldn't be stuck with a $31,312 phone |
| call to Eastern Europe. "Yeah, we already checked that one," said one of the |
| "hammies" gesturing to the phone jack I had seen. I notice a large cable |
| running from the jack to a larger junction box at about the same time their |
| eyes light up with glee. "Get the handset!," one says as another advances on |
| the box with a tool kit that appeared out of thin air. "I'll need the ohm |
| meter and some clips." the box is dismantled, and three people swarm it in |
| a line testing frenzy. "No good on one.. two.. three.. got tone on four!" |
| Great, I think, I'm fucked! "hhmm.. seems to be just the hotel, can't get an |
| outside line.." |
|
|
| This goes on for some time until I persuade them to stop fucking with the |
| box and to do something else. They give up bored, and start exploring the |
| rooms next to us finding a hallway that leads to a security camera monitoring |
| the casino tables below. Some decide it's not cool to be recorded and return |
| from there in a hurry, while others locate a travel agent's office and start |
| grabbing a few things of no consequence. We grabbed two large easels holding |
| large pads of paper for people to draw/write on. |
|
|
| About this time the lady in charge of convention planning calls me to her |
| office. "We got a call from the communications room. They said things were |
| lighting up on their board that aren't supposed to be lighting up from your |
| conference room. They say if it doesn't stop that you'll be thrown out of the |
| hotel." Zowie. "OK, I got them to stop. They were just trying out their |
| computer on the phone line to see if they could place a call," (Yeah, right) |
| "but I'm sure it won't happen again." The assistant in the office spoke up |
| and said something like, "Well, if you can clear my credit card I'm sure we |
| wouldn't mind!" To which the main lady, Moreen, said "Yeah, my name is Moreen |
| Robinson, and my Social Security number is..." What did they think? "Yeah, |
| I'll get my credit erasers on it right away!"?? |
|
|
| Back at the room things started to pick up. People came in throughout the |
| day, and the bar downstairs was having a $1 margarita special. Someone bought |
| twenty drinks for everyone (All right!) and then we got a picture more of them. |
| Metal Head went and got me a drink while he was out. Things were looking good |
| through this buzz of mine. Judi Clark of the Bay Area CPSR showed up (one of |
| the speakers) and was real cool. She was jonesing for an internet connection, |
| but we couldn't line one up with a slip connection for her. She had brought |
| some literature to distribute, too. |
|
|
| Around six or seven or so we had a pretty good crowd going, with more and |
| more speakers showing up. Ray Kaplan (Kaplan and Associates) drove like a |
| maniac out of Arizona, and Dr. Ludwig (Author of Little Black Book of |
| Computer Viruses) drove up with Merc from Arizona also. It was about ten or |
| so Friday night and people were getting to know each other. Some more radio |
| guys showed up, including the Jackal, and they were in another corner speaking |
| in some other language.. stuff I won't even try to reproduce here. It revolved |
| around the best ways to pick up restricted channels and how not to be |
| triangulated. Cool. |
|
|
| Speculation was rising about what Gail Thackery would be like, and when |
| Gillian from New Media Magazine showed up to cover the event people figured |
| that she must be Gail. Nope. Gail showed up about a half hour later. |
| Conversation in the room stopped, and all eyes were on Gail. She didn't seem |
| to notice, and came up and said hello. I gave her a speakers id pass, and |
| she went off to find a drink. When she returned people started to talk to her, |
| and by about midnight she was mobbed with people. She had a captive audience |
| at the back of the room and was fielding all types of questions. Some guy was |
| saying "Say, hypothetically, that you have 9 gigs all encrypted on your, re, |
| a bbs and you get raided, wow will they get the evidence?" Gail's response |
| was basically if they have enough evidence to boot in your door they should |
| have enough evidence to prosecute a case. Want to be a test case for |
| encryption? Neither did he. |
|
|
| Kurt Karnow, the VR speaker from San Francisco showed up and was talking |
| with the New Media Reporter. Some local radio d.j. who does a late night |
| cutting edge style showed up to grab some audio clips from me and bailed out. |
| A "suit" showed up, and everyone immediately, in an attempt to win the free |
| "I spotted the fed" shirt pointed him out to me. This "suit" had cop eyes, |
| cop walk and cop speak. He was all businesslike, and wanted to talk to me |
| in private. I took him into the "cone-o-silence" room (the hallway connected |
| to the travel agent's place) and asked what's up. Turns out he is a writer |
| for Loompanics and was there checking to see if there was anything or anyone |
| worth writing about or having write for him. Everyone was sure I was a super |
| narc after coming out of the cone, but he started loosening up and was talking |
| with everyone by the next day. If he was a fed, they have great feds out there |
| that are almost undetectable. He said his cop speak is a great way to get |
| people to tell him stuff they wouldn't normally say. |
|
|
| Dan Farmer showed up with a female harem in tow. He seemed to have this |
| ability to magically attract females, but we won't get into that here. He |
| would make an appearance and then leave every once in a while. His women |
| looked bored (there were three of them) so I assume he was keeping them |
| entertained by gambling or something... |
|
|
| Dark Druid showed up with Richard Finch, an author who is writing a book |
| entitled "The underground road map through cyberspace" Oh, yeah. This guy |
| still owes me a copy of the video tapes from the convention. Basically a |
| snake. Said he would send me a copy of them, and then moved and changed his |
| number. We located him and he said he would send them again. Not. L00zer. |
| Dark Druid was cool, though, and was franticly looking for alcohol to comfort |
| him after the long drive. |
|
|
| One person I met worked for Logicon, SOF Weapon Systems, doing "Nuclear |
| event testing." Basically his job is to see if he can break in and cause a |
| simulated "event" (missile launch, detonation, etc.) to happen. I'll invite this |
| guy to speak at DEF CON ][ for sure. Not that people are going to hack silos, |
| but it was very interesting to say the least. |
|
|
| It was decided it was time for a "Death Star" raid (we had spotted the |
| local AT&T office with a billion repeaters and microwave shit on the roof) |
| and rounded up a crew to go attack it. Of course Red Five was standing by |
| (Ow!) and Gillian offered to rent a limo to go trashing in. It turned out |
| that it would take 1/2 hour to get the limo, so we went in two cars instead. |
| After getting lost in the Las Vegas Hell we found the target. Fences |
| everywhere, a guard patrolling, and an unprotected dumpster just by the |
| fences. Red Five radioed to his friend, we coordinated an attack plan. I |
| laid down flat in the back of the truck, another car was "blocker" on the |
| street. We turned in, screeched up to the treasure chest, I bailed out and |
| hurled the bags into the truck and pounced on top of them to the papers |
| wouldn't fly out as we hauled ass outta there. Those Vegas telco employees |
| eat more dino-sized McMeals and burgers than I can count. My body was almost |
| covered in apple pie containers and happy meals, yuck. We hauled the find up |
| to the room, and the people who were still up dived on it. Jamin the Shamin |
| went bonkers rooting through crap, and I think White Ninja was sportin' wood. |
| People got some interesting items (catalogues, some x.25 phone numbers, etc..) |
| while I got to clean up the mess, er, wreckage in the room. Everyone pitched |
| in and by two thirty a.m. it was time to snooze. Everyone took off to wherever |
| they were going, and a few people stuck around to crash in the conference room. |
|
|
| It seems over the night that the late shift of security personnel were not |
| informed that I had the conference room 24 hours. They showed up at around |
| four a.m. and saw Code Ripper, The Prophet and Merc crashed out and they went |
| nuts. At first they asked them to leave to room. The Prophet explained that |
| the room was rented 24 hours, and they didn't care. He then asked to talk to |
| the assistant manager. They didn't like this and called in the goons. Like |
| five or more guards showed up. In Las Vegas the goons carry guns. These guys |
| asked to have 'em leave and Code Ripper and Merc were like "Sure, no prob. |
| Later!" The Prophet continued to bitch and got a personal interview with head |
| guard man and then a personal boot off the hotel's property. |
|
|
| Saturday morning I get a fax that Allen Grogan (Editor of the Computer |
| Lawyer) won't be able to make it because of a family emergency. That's one less |
| speaker. Already Count Zero's dad went ballistic when he found out his son |
| might speak at the con. He threatened to sue me if he showed up. Dude, chill, |
| it's your son, not mine. It turns out he called the Sands Hotel ranting and |
| raving at anyone he could. Moreen said, "he was spouting off things about law |
| suits and some such, so I transferred him to legal." What a kook. Midnight |
| Sorrow (used to run CCi) backed out too after his phone bills reached like |
| half of the national debt. ErikB spent too much money at SCon and he bailed |
| out also. They were dropping like flies! Scott Simpson wasn't about to show |
| up after his door was kicked in with the help of various federal agencies, |
| either. Oh well, we still had a full speaking list. |
|
|
| Robert X. Cringly from Info World was there, a photographer from Mac World, |
| John Littman, Unix World (<- an evil review.. don't believe it.. it was all |
| wrong and jumbled. Rik Farrow messed it up) another photographer who took the |
| picture that ended up in New Media was there. The photographer (Who turned |
| out to be Karnow's sister) gathered some "cyberpunk" looking people together |
| for it.. needless to say I wasn't in it. She bought a bunch of alcohol for |
| everyone, so that wasn't so bad. |
|
|
| I did a little blurb welcoming everyone and talking about my run in at the |
| Seattle 2600 meeting a few weeks before, and then let Ray K. start off the |
| convention. About halfway through the talks before lunch, the X. Cringe factor |
| got a cellular phone call, and got up to leave the room so as not to disturb |
| the audience. He was about halfway towards the door when you could hear |
| scanners turning on all over the room (well, OK, three of them) and a |
| coordinated effort was put forth to find his call. Some start at the low |
| frequencies and worked up, and some at the high frequencies and worked down. |
| It turns out it was only Pammy, and no super secret industry gossip. Bummer. |
|
|
| I'm not going to cover exactly what the speakers had to say because I wouldn't |
| know what to include and what not too. Get the tapes, or ftp the huge |
| digitized speeches off the ftp site (cyberspace.com /pub/defcon) and listen |
| to 'em. We tried to make typed transcripts, but they were a nightmare, so we |
| gave up on it. This is basically what was covered: |
|
|
| Ray Kaplan did a verbal sample of the attendees, and then went on to talk |
| about morality and the hacking ethic. He came across pro-responsible-hacker, |
| but managed to get into a debate with Torquamada who though he was preaching |
| too much. A good exchange, and his talk reminded me of some of the stuff you |
| hear on IRC late at night when #hack becomes #hack-politics, only better. |
|
|
| Gail Thackery spoke about where the law is coming from in all this, and |
| was very straight forward with a no shit attitude. She said she loved |
| capturing and collecting all the log in screens of bbs systems that have lame |
| disclaimers like "If you are a fed you can't log on here. If you press 'y' |
| you can never narc on me." She swaps 'em with her other law enforcement |
| friends. As a side note we were selling hack pads and bbs pads that attempted |
| to organize all the notes people make in the course of things. It seems every |
| one who gets nabbed gets nabbed with their "bust-me book" You know, that |
| note pad with all the incriminating evidence on it that everyone keeps. Well |
| we figured we'd at least make things easier so we had these pads. Gail looked |
| them over and made a comment like, "Oh, those look just like ours except we |
| have a space for the case number in the upper right hand corner." |
|
|
| Judy Clark from the CPSR spoke about the role of the CPSR (Computer |
| Professionals for Social Responsibility) as opposed to that of the EFF which |
| is almost entirely, well, er, it is, sponsored by large corporations including |
| computer and telephone interests. She spoke about privacy issues and what to |
| do if you are interested in getting involved. |
|
|
| There was a panel discussion with Gail and Ray K fielding questions from |
| the audience. Ray talked about how security is useless unless the employers |
| and employees are willing to change their way of working. It's not as simple |
| as installing the latest and greatest security packages. |
|
|
| Kurt Karnow works as an attorney for a San Fransisco law firm that |
| represents large companies such as AT&T and Sega. He spoke about "ZUI" or |
| Zero User Interface as envisioned in the future with VR equipment. He talked |
| about how impossible it is to debug any large program 100%, and that mistakes |
| and problems will occur. He talked of a recent case he worked on, where the |
| makers of "Sim City" made "Sim Oil Refinery" for a large oil company. The |
| company was concerned that if their software was programmed incorrectly, and |
| they find that out by having a refinery explode when the employees did |
| something they were trained to do, that they could loose all. Kurt was also |
| great is shamelessly hoping some for a few good accidents so he could finance |
| his kids through college. A very well informed and easy to talk to person. |
|
|
| Dr. Mark Ludwig Spoke about the philosophy behind his virii programming |
| analysis. It was almost a political talk about the invasive government |
| policies and the desire of the Federal System to be the know all and be all |
| in the future. He spoke about their attempts to restrict encryption |
| technologies. He announced that he has come up with a virus that acts as a |
| software delivery service for the IDEA encryption algorithm. When you |
| insert this disk, or get the "infection" it asks if you want to encrypt your |
| fixed disk, and then asks for your password. Any floppy that is inserted on |
| your system gets encrypted and infected with the password of your choice. |
| You can toggle the encryption on and off, un-install your hard drive, etc. He |
| posed the question to the crowd, "What if everyone woke up one day and all |
| their data was safely encrypted? If encryption became the standard, people |
| would have less to fear from Big Brother." I've got the virus, called the |
| KOH virus, currently being updated, and will bring it to Pump Con ][, Ho Ho, |
| Etc. for anyone interested. |
|
|
| Dead Addict spoke on the past and the future as he sees it of the Computer |
| Underground's various factions. The increase of people on the net and the use |
| of more and more networks will yield rich lands to be explored. It turned |
| into a question and answer with people discussing their view on where things |
| are going. |
|
|
| Dan Farmer spoke on Unix security. He was very good and sounded very well |
| informed. He has learned his tricks monitoring the 30,000 or so workstations |
| used by Sun Microsystem and else where over the years. He talked about how |
| people get caught and what to do about it. How sysadmins usually monitor and |
| maintain their systems. Basically he was bored with password crackers and lame |
| passwords. He focused on the creative ways to get root. "If you can gain |
| access enough to execute one command on the victim computer, you should be able |
| to get root." He avoided bugs and problems that will be fixed, and focused on |
| flaws in the way systems and networks are set up. |
|
|
| Dark Druid talked about his bust and how it sucks not to be charged and |
| still not have his equipment back after it was seized. |
|
|
| Right as the group was breaking up someone did a quick impromptu |
| demonstration to a few people of a laptop plugged into the diagnostic port of a |
| cell phone that allowed all types of crazy activity. People broke into groups |
| and went out for dinner. I ended up with Gail Thackery, Gillian the reporter, |
| Kurt Karnow, the sysadmin of cyberspace and a few others. General B.S. about |
| government plots and assassinations ensued with real discussions branching off. |
| Because there are no clocks anywhere in Las Vegas we kinda lost track of time, |
| and wandered back to the hotel in an hour or so. People changed and the broke |
| off to do their thing. |
|
|
| I ran into a guy from SGI security at the bar, and then Dan Farmer, and |
| then Aleph One, and then fuck, it seemed like a mini con at the bar. |
| People were drinking like fiends, and Gail showed up with Gillian and the crowd |
| from L.A. and the San Francisco 2600 group was there drinking too. Gail was |
| chain smoking and pounding Johnny Walker straight, drinking most of us under the |
| table. I think that shocked more people more than anything else! We finally |
| got a thinly clad waitress to take a group picture, where everyone is all |
| smiles and laughing, and Gail has this evil frown looking like this is the last |
| place on earth she wants to be. Right as the pic is taken someone goes to fake |
| pour a drink on her head, making for a great picture WHICH I STILL DON'T HAVE! |
| (Aleph One, send me that digitized picture so I can stick it on the ftp site) |
|
|
| Sunday people just hung out to bull-shit about whatever, with groups |
| forming on and off till everyone took off for home. Someone approached me |
| and let me know that they had the password for the Sands Hotel Vax |
| system and the barrier code for their PBX. "If the hotel gave you too much |
| trouble, just let me know." You would think that after years of mob and |
| crime action the casino would have a functional security set up. Not. That |
| was area code 702 for anyone interested in scanning it. |
|
|
| A few of use were sitting around waiting for time to pass when I found a |
| bunch of wires wrapped together from the death star raid Friday night. It sort |
| of looked like a mini whip, and was immediately termed the "Def Con Cyber-Whip" |
| Needless to say, we had to present the Cyber-Whip to Dan Farmer for his |
| excellent contribution mention of a.s.b. during his speech that seemed to |
| cause the most gossip. Hacking a network? No problem. Talking about a.s.b.? |
| OuTrAgEoUs! People are so funny. Anyway, Dan is now the keeper of the |
| Cyber-Whip. We'll try to come up with a more formal presentation next year. |
| That should drive the media nuts. Hey, with a little help from ErikB for video |
| entertainment maybe create a Def Con dungeon. Ha! Ok, it's late. Hackers are |
| such sick people. |
|
|
| A lot of people made great contacts and I'm still hearing of people who |
| are working with their new contacts doing "things" I managed to weasel a |
| job out of the deal, writing a small monthly column in New Media Magazine |
| (as my editor puts it) on "Interesting things that could only happen on the |
| net." This gets translated to reading a bunch of newsgroups in a futile |
| attempt to find something that would be amusing to the readership. If you |
| guys have any good rumors you want mentioned, just feed 'em to me in e-mail. |
|
|
| Overall a good time. We planned for about 100 people max, and we got just |
| around 110 or so. Our blurb in 2600 came out late, Mondo 2000 missed an issue |
| and Wired messed up hard core twice. I had mailed LR inviting someone to |
| attend and asking if we could get a mention in the upcoming events section. He |
| said sure, just e-mail me. I did that and nothing happened. I talked to him, |
| and he said I should send it to someone else at Wired, which I did. It wasn't |
| in the next issue either! Right before the con I got e-mail form someone at |
| Wired asking me if the convention was still on and what its status was. They |
| are nice people there, just a little bit confused or busy. This was happening |
| right after wired.com got hacked so they might have been preoccupied. This |
| year we won't miss any deadlines and make sure that the word gets spread well |
| in advance so we can get a greater turn out, but for a first attempt it went |
| over well. No fights, fire alarms pulled or people vomiting on the gamblers. |
| The things that could be improved like more technical speeches, etc., will all |
| be fixed in DEF CON ][. We'll have midnight tech talks, terminals hooked up |
| to the net for people to IRC on or whatever, and additional speeches on Sunday |
| so people have an excuse to stick around that day. |
|
|
| [Generic closing statement omitted] |
|
|
| The Dark Tangent |
| dtangent@defcon.org |
|
|
| ******************************************************************************* |
|
|
| Top 23(!) things learned at DEF CON 1 |
| By The White Ninja |
|
|
| "Jesus Hacks! Why don't YOU?" |
|
|
| This text file idea blatantly leeched from: |
| SummerCon! |
|
|
| 1. Casino offices can be full of fun!! |
|
|
| 2. Casinos generally don't appreciate it when you explore their offices.... |
|
|
| 3. Yes, some people ARE capable of gambling away $167 in an hour! |
|
|
| 4. You can get reasonable conference discounts on prostitution in Nevada. |
|
|
| 5. One can survive for 3 days in Vegas on $12 and a gift certificate. |
|
|
| 6. Viruses are our friends. |
|
|
| 7. Give a Casino security guard a walkie-talkie and he'll swear he's the |
| center of the universe. |
|
|
| 8. Don't commit a felony in front of Gail Thackery. |
|
|
| 9. The people who work at the Death Star throw the darndest things in the |
| trash! |
|
|
| 10. Pirates and Theives ONLY! |
|
|
| 11. If you harass a hotel telephone operator long enough she WILL send |
| security. |
|
|
| 12. When using ITT ask for BOB... |
|
|
| 13. Metal plates screwed to your hotel room ceiling generally constitute a |
| bad sign. |
|
|
| 14. Don't forget to Hack the BED! |
|
|
| 15. You know your in deep shit when THEY aim an IR-Mic at your window. |
|
|
| 16. Setting 11 fires in selected parts of the city is probably a bad idea. |
|
|
| 17. The guy who looks most like a fed probably writes for LOOMPANICS. |
|
|
| 18. The guy who looks least like a fed probably does security for SUN. |
|
|
| 19. As a general rule, don't hack the hotel PBX unless you're giving them a |
| better credit rating. |
|
|
| 20. If your wondering where all those C-64 warez kidz went, try talking to |
| some of the beggars in Vegas. |
|
|
| 21. Those COCOTS were gold plated for a REASON! |
|
|
| 22. If you plan to stay the night in a hotel, make sure you get a room there. |
|
|
| 23. "0K, dit rating. |
|
|
| 20. If your wondering where all those C-64 warez kidz went, try talking to |
| some of the beggars in Vegas. |
|
|
| 21. Those COCOTS were gold plated for a REASON! |
|
|
| 22. If you plan to stay the night in a hotel, make sure you get a room there. |
|
|
| 23. "0K, this is my new PGP key for use in sensitive matters. Heck, use |
| it for unsensitive matters.. people sniff packets 'ya know." |
|
|
| ******************************************************************************* |
|
|
| What Was Your Best Hack September, 1993 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| (New Media) (Page 14) |
|
|
| [Asked at Def Con 1, the first formal gathering of the hacker community |
| to discuss security, viruses and the law.] |
|
|
| Mike Winters, 19, Seattle |
| Claims to have hacked into GMAC and then held a conference call with |
| GM's VP of Finance to help him "secure the system." |
|
|
| HB, San Mateo, California |
| Broke into a system to counterfeit checks to "show his employers |
| how easy it was." Got arrested with two years probation and |
| 24 days of community service. |
|
|
| Gail Thackeray, 44, Deputy County Attorney, Phoenix |
| A Hacker had broken into a voice mail system and was using it |
| as a code line. The company could not take down the system |
| until the prosecutors were ready to make a case. When they did, |
| the company blocked all access and changed the greeting to |
| a song parody of "Hey Jude" called "Hey Dood," which really |
| infuriated the hacker. |
|
|
| ******************************************************************************* |
|
|
| Dead Addict At Def Con September, 1993 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| by Gillian Newson (New Media) (Page 119) |
|
|
| ["The oldest cyberchick" hangs with the Def Con Posse and discovers |
| the joys of trashing.] |
|
|
| ******************************************************************************* |
|
|
| READ & DISTRIBUTE & READ & DISTRIBUTE & READ & DISTRIBUTE & READ & DISTRIBUTE |
|
|
| ]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]] ]]] ]] ] ]] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]]]]]^^^^]]]]]]]]]]]]] ]] ] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]]]]^^^^^^]]]]] ] ] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]]]^^^^^^^^]]]]] ]] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]]^^^^^^^^^^]]] ] ]]]]]]]] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]^^^^^^^^^^^^]]]]]]]]]] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]^^^^^^^^^^^^^^]]]]]] ]] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]^^^^^^^^^^^^]]]]]]]] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]]^^^^^^^^^^]]]]]]]] ] ]] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]]]^^^^^^^^]]]]]]] ]]] ]] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]]]]^^^^^^]]]]]]] ] ] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]]]]]^^^^]]]]]]]]]]] ]] ] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
| ]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]] ] DEF CON ][ Initial Announcement |
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| READ & DISTRIBUTE & READ & DISTRIBUTE & READ & DISTRIBUTE & READ & DISTRIBUTE |
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| WTF is this? This is the initial announcement and invitation to DEF CON ][, |
| a convention for the "underground" elements of the computer culture. We try |
| to target the (Fill in your favorite word here): Hackers, Phreaks, Hammies, |
| Virii coders, programmers, crackers, Cyberpunk Wannabees, Civil Liberties |
| Groups, CypherPunks, Futurists, etc.. |
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| WHO: You know who you are, you shady characters. |
| WHAT: A convention for you to meet, party, and listen to some speeches that |
| you would normally never hear. |
| WHEN: July 22, 23, 24 - 1994 |
| WHERE: Las Vegas, Nevada @ The Sahara Hotel |
|
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| So you heard about DEF CON I, and want to hit part ][? You heard about the |
| parties, the info discussed, the bizarre atmosphere of Las Vegas and want to |
| check it out in person? Load up your laptop muffy, we're heading to Vegas! |
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| Here is what Three out of Three people said about last years convention: |
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| "DEF CON I, last week in Las Vegas, was both the strangest and the best |
| computer event I have attended in years." -- Robert X. Cringely, Info World |
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| "Toto, I don't think we're at COMDEX anymore." -- Coderipper, Gray Areas |
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| "Soon we were at the hotel going through the spoils: fax sheets, catalogs, |
| bits of torn paper, a few McDonald's Dino-Meals and lots of coffee grounds. |
| The documents disappeared in seconds." -- Gillian Newson, New Media Magazine |
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| DESCRIPTION: |
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| Last year we held DEF CON I, which went over great, and this year we are |
| planning on being bigger and better. We have expanded the number of speakers |
| to included midnight tech talks and additional speaking on Sunday. We attempt |
| to bring the underground into contact with "legitimate" speakers. Sure it's |
| great to meet and party with fellow hackers, but besides that we try to |
| provide information and speakers in a forum that can't be found at other |
| conferences. |
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| WHAT'S NEW THIS YEAR: |
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| This year will be much larger and more organized than last year. We have a |
| much larger meeting area, and have better name recognition. Because of this |
| we will have more speakers on broader topics, we plan on having a slip |
| connection with multiple terminals and an IRC connection provided by |
| cyberspace.com. We are trying to arrange a VR demo of some sort. Dr. Ludwig |
| will present this years virus creation award. There will be door prizes, and |
| as usual a bigger and better "Spot The Fed" contest. If you are elite enough |
| to handle it, there should be the returning of the Cyber-Whip and the |
| beginning of a new one. We'll try to get an interesting video or two for |
| people to watch. If you have any cool footage you want shown, email me with |
| more information. |
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| WHO IS SPEAKING: |
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| We are still lining up speakers, but we have several people who have expressed |
| interest in speaking, including Dr. Mark Ludwig (Little Black Book Of Computer |
| Viruses), Phillip Zimmerman (PGP), The Mentor (Steve Jackson Games), |
| Ken Phillips (Meta Information), and Jackal (Radio) to name a few, plus there |
| should be a mystery speaker via video conference. We are still contacting |
| various groups and individuals, and don't want to say anything until we are as |
| sure as we can be. If you think you are interested in speaking on a self |
| selected topic, please contact me. As the speaking list is completed there |
| will be another announcement letting people know who is expected to talk, and |
| on what topic. |
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| WHERE THIS THING IS: |
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| It's in Las Vegas, the town that never sleeps. Really. There are no clocks |
| anywhere in an attempt to lull you into believing the day never ends. Talk |
| about virtual reality, this place fits the bill with no clunky hardware. If |
| you have a buzz you may never know the difference. It will be at the Sahara |
| Hotel. Intel as follows: |
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| The Sahara Hotel 1.800.634.6078 |
| Room Rates: Single/Double $55, Suite $120 (Usually $200) + 8% tax |
| Transportation: Shuttles from the airport for cheap |
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| NOTES: Please make it clear you are registering for the DEF CON ][ |
| convention to get the room rates. Our convention space price is |
| based on how many people register. Register under a false name if |
| it makes you feel better, 'cuz the more that register the better for |
| my pocket book. No one under 21 can rent a room by themselves, so |
| get your buddy who is 21 to rent for you and crash out. Don't let |
| the hotel people get their hands on your baggage, or there is a |
| mandatory $3 group baggage fee. Vegas has killer unions. |
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| COST: |
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| Cost is whatever you pay for a hotel room split however many ways, plus |
| $15 if you preregister, or $30 at the door. This gets you a nifty 24 bit |
| color name tag (We're gonna make it niftier this year) and your foot in the |
| door. There are fast food places all over, and there is alcohol all over |
| the place, the trick is to get it during a happy hour for maximum cheapness. |
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| FOR MORE INFORMATION: |
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| For InterNet users, there is a DEF CON anonymous ftp site at cyberspace.com in |
| /pub/defcon. There are digitized pictures, digitized speeches and text files |
| with the latest up to date info available. |
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| For email users, you can email dtangent@defcon.org for more information. |
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| For Snail Mail send to DEF CON, 2702 E. Madison Street, Seattle, WA, 99207 |
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| For Voice Mail and maybe a human, 0-700-TANGENT on an AT&T phone. |
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| A DEF CON Mailing list is maintained, and the latest announcements are mailed |
| automatically to you. If you wish to be added to the list just send |
| email to dtangent@defcon.org. We also maintain a chat mailing list where |
| people can talk to one another and plan rides, talk, whatever. If you request |
| to be on this list your email address will be shown to everyone, just so you |
| are aware. |
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| STUFF TO SPEND YOUR MONEY ON: |
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| > Tapes of last years speakers (four 90 minute tapes) are available for $20 |
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| > DEF CON I tee-shirts (white, large only) with large color logo on the front, |
| and on the back the Fourth Amendment, past and present. This is shirt v 1.1 |
| with no type-o's. These are $20, and sweatshirts are $25. |
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| > Pre-Register for next year in advance for $15 and save half. |
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| > Make all checks/money orders/etc. out to DEF CON, and mail to the address |
| above. |
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| If you have any confidential info to send, use this PGP key to encrypt: |
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| Version: 2.3 |
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