| ==Phrack Magazine== |
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| Volume Six, Issue Forty-Seven, File 10 of 22 |
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| HoHoCon '94 |
| December 29, 1994 - January 2, 1995 |
| Ramada Inn South, Austin, TX |
| A Review, released to the Net on 1/25/95 |
| By Netta "grayarea" Gilboa |
|
|
|
|
| I flew to Austin, TX after spending Christmas with some hacker friends. |
| I arrived a day early, unsure if the Con was gonna come off and how many |
| people would show if it did. HoHoCon had almost been cancelled this year |
| after someone called the original hotel and said a bunch of mean, evil |
| hackers were gonna descend on the hotel and that several federal agencies |
| would be sending feds there to monitor it. If you ask me, some kid's mom |
| said he couldn't go so he decided to try to make sure none of us could |
| either. Lame. It also taught me that everyone in this community has |
| enemies. Maybe someone just doesn't like Drunkfux. Supposedly, right after |
| this phone call the hotel got another, this time from Dateline NBC who |
| wanted permission to film the Con. Rumor had it the hotel panicked and |
| cancelled. The truth is that a regular client of theirs offered to pay |
| higher room rates and the hotel stood to make over $20,000 extra by |
| getting rid of us and having them there instead. So they used the phone |
| calls as an excuse. I can only imagine the hassles Drunkfux went |
| through to find another hotel that was empty on New Year's Eve weekend. |
|
|
| But Drunkfux came through with flying colors and when I got to the |
| hotel they told me other people had started to arrive. They gave me a |
| list of these people to look at, complete with their real names and room |
| numbers. It's possible they would even have xeroxed the list if I had |
| asked them to. Uncool. Even more uncool, almost shocking, was that the |
| hotel had a clipboard on the counter with people's real names, assigned |
| room number and credit card number complete with expiration date. It was |
| listed in alphabetical order and I was on the top page in the third spot. |
| I freaked. I told the woman behind the counter that she must move the |
| clipboard as some of the people coming specialized in attacking people's |
| credit and that I would surely be a target given my position on the list |
| and my all too well-known real name. She said okay but when I returned my |
| luggage cart, some twenty minutes later, it was still on the counter. I |
| told her again, nastier this time, to move it. An hour later she still had |
| not. I then asked to use a phone and was told there was one in my room and |
| another down the hall. I explained that I wanted to call right from the |
| counter to cancel my credit card and to call the national offices of Ramada |
| Inns to have her fired. In a nasty tone she told me she'd move the clipboard. |
| She did. However, the next day they threw the pages in the trash and, of |
| course, had the clipboard on the counter again with a new list of the people |
| due to check in that day. I argued with them again and they moved it. A few |
| hours later (surprise!) their trash was invaded and they went out and bought |
| two paper shredders. This was a good investment on their part although it's |
| a shame it took us to teach them that. If you intend to stay at a Ramada Inn |
| anywhere in the U.S., I would strongly advise you not to prepay with a credit |
| card. They can't be trusted with your data. We invite readers who may have |
| experienced credit card fraud after staying at Ramada Inns (or other hotels) |
| to contact us. It was a sobering lesson in how vulnerable the average person |
| is in society. |
|
|
| I had plans to hook up with Stormbringer and Holy Spirit, two virus |
| writers I love talking to. Stormbringer had recently retired from virus |
| writing after hearing from someone in Singapore who got infected with |
| one of his non-malicious viruses. I had read his retirement text file and |
| was anxious to talk to him about it. He assured me on the phone all was well |
| and they agreed to meet me at Mr. Wasabi for sushi and I ate more sushi |
| than I ever had before in one sitting. Then we walked to a coffee house |
| and they drove me back to my hotel around 1 a.m. |
|
|
| I was invited to Novocain and Particle's room so I headed up there and |
| ran into Veggie, Onkel Ditmeyer, Count Zero, Buckaroo, etc. Onkel showed |
| me his way cool laptop and I finally got to see what an IBM demo looks |
| like. These are programs which demonstrate the sound and graphics |
| capabilities of a computer. He copied a few of them on a disk for me along |
| with some electronic magazines I had never seen. Onkel is the author of a |
| well known phreaking program called Bluebeep. We spoke a lot over the |
| weekend and I found him brilliant, honest, charming and not afraid of |
| girls who know way less than him. He was one of the coolest people at |
| HoHoCon this year. |
|
|
| At 6 a.m. a few of us went downstairs for free breakfast and the |
| conversation turned to the various women who hang out on #hack. There |
| was some dissing of one girl who has slept her way around the scene and |
| in the past had given a number of hackers herpes without telling them |
| first. Eeks. I tried to get out of the guys I was eating with what she |
| had that I didn't (besides herpes). I message most of her old lovers on |
| IRC but none has ever made a pass at me. We talked about the other girls |
| on IRC, who has slept with whom, and how they got treated afterwards. We |
| talked about why people might have slept with those particular girls at |
| the time they did and I suddenly felt both very lucky and better about |
| myself that the one hacker I had slept with was a decent choice. Quality |
| might beat quantity. To know for sure, I guess I'd have to ask the girls |
| <wink>. |
|
|
| We picked up a bunch of food that was apparently not included in our |
| free breakfast coupon. The waitress didn't know how to handle it and |
| neither did we. I offered to put the food back and she finally agreed to |
| let us eat it. I suggested they put up a sign to warn others and, of |
| course, they didn't. Later I heard they let us all eat the bacon and other |
| food for the rest of the Con. I never made it back down there again even |
| though for American food it was pretty good. I was pretty tired and so |
| headed off to sleep when we were done chowing down. |
|
|
| I woke up Friday afternoon when Particle and Novocain knocked on the |
| door. They had a car and took me to a Chinese restaurant nearby with a |
| killer buffet. When we got back there were many people in the lobby |
| listening to a tape of prank phone calls made by Phone Losers of America. |
| I wanted the tape bad as it seemed highly appropriate for us to review. |
| I was promised a copy which materialized in under an hour. W0rd! For all |
| the shit I take for it, there are advantages to being press. |
|
|
| I felt pretty comfortable with all of the people I was talking to and |
| since my room was very close to the lobby I invited everyone there and |
| even left the door open for others to enter my room (which almost |
| everyone who passed by did). It was kind of odd where they had situated |
| me. You could watch my door from the counter where people checked in. I |
| had asked for a smoking room but got dealt non-smoking instead. I |
| inquired about changing it and was told some crap about all the rooms |
| being accounted for already. It crossed my mind at the time that maybe |
| some feds had purposely put me there but I discounted my gut feeling and |
| remembered most hackers thought I was too paranoid about things. I told |
| people to go ahead and smoke in my room with no ashtray. They did. All |
| told about 15 people were in there and one of them pulled out a toy |
| to show me. It was a box that hooked up to your telephone which allowed |
| you to change your voice into that of a male, female or child. I had seen |
| these boxes before in catalogs. They sure work great! I made two calls |
| with it, one to a friend and one to my ex-husband. I snickered at how |
| surprised they'd be when they heard my message and later regretted not |
| telling either or them to save it so I could hear it back. Honestly, |
| playing with this legal box was every bit as cool as great drugs or sex. |
| I vowed to buy one. Watch out! |
|
|
| Talk turned to dinner and people started to leave my room. Particle was |
| the last one out and he showed me something about how the hotel room locks |
| worked. Hackers spend hours trying to figure out how things work and |
| although I had little interest in the subject it was clear Particle was |
| struck by the technology and not the idea of breaking into someone's |
| room. I started to organize people who were willing to eat sushi. Just as |
| we were about to leave Particle and Novocain were gathering everyone into |
| a room to tell people to chill their behavior. It later turned out that |
| Particle had played with another lock after I made him stop touching |
| mine. He had the misfortune to be seen by a member of the Austin Police |
| Department who wisely agreed not to arrest him in exchange for Particle's |
| agreeing to talk to people in an attempt to curtail the usual HoHoCon |
| hotel destruction. I should have attended this talk although I had no |
| idea at the time why it was being organized. But I was starving and |
| the people I took to eat sushi were not those who would consider trashing |
| a hotel. Laughing Gas, Thumper27, Slyme, El_Jefe and I checked out Kyoto |
| sushi which was good but expensive for what you got. I spent part of dinner |
| wiping the free space on the hard drive on my laptop. I had never used |
| this feature before, but had been told about it at the con and it sounded |
| like something I should start doing regularly to protect other people's |
| privacy so that erased E-mail and articles were truly erased. It was a |
| good thing I had sushi to eat to keep me busy as it took a good twenty |
| minutes to do on a Pentium laptop with a 500+ meg hard drive. |
|
|
| When we got back to the hotel I ran into Drunkfux who had cut his |
| hair and dyed it bright red. I hardly recognized him but it looked great. |
| It was clear by the police presence in the lobby that the Con had |
| officially started. We were told that signs hung on room doors (I had |
| put up a copy of one of the magazine covers with a small piece of scotch |
| tape) would be taken down. This made it much harder for us to find each |
| other (I'd estimate we had 90% of the hotel's rooms) but so it goes. |
| Some people were told specifically that they could not use their modems |
| and for hours on Friday night the phone lines were so busy with modem |
| usage that there was no way to make an outgoing call or to receive an |
| expected incoming one. All sorts of security guards appeared. The ones |
| I spoke with were police officers too. I'd guess there were 1-3 dozen |
| around at all times and apparently hotel personnel were told they were |
| all on duty until we left and none of them were able to go home for the |
| rest of the weekend. I wish I could say this was utterly unwarranted. |
| But some lamer broke the lock on the door to the hotel's phone system. |
| And remember that another person had trashed the hotel's garbage and |
| must have made a mess or been spotted. |
|
|
| The hot party that night was in Erik Bloodaxe's room. Loki, Ice-9 |
| and Ophie were staying with him and Loki was in charge of the door. |
| He made sure to keep me out just as he does when he acts like a bully |
| on IRC. I knew in my heart it was Loki's doing not ErikB's, but that |
| didn't stop me from getting majorly upset about it anyway. I went |
| downstairs to be alone and Particle knocked on the door a few minutes |
| later. I gave him a piece of my mind and then some about how shitty |
| some of those in the computer underground are. I went on for at least |
| an hour and drew great comfort from the fact Particle thought I was not |
| crazy and that things are as awful as they seem sometimes. Finally |
| he told me that since I kept claiming to love hackers despite all of the |
| grief, there were dozens of nice ones out there who would be thrilled to |
| talk to me if I'd only leave my room and go try to have a good time. W0rd. |
| I took his advice and had a good time in the lobby with the other rejects |
| from Bloodaxe's party. The conversation was so good it was hard to tear |
| away to go to sleep. I went to my room at 4:30 a.m., got under the covers, |
| thought about sleep for 10 seconds. Then I pulled out my laptop and wrote |
| a speech to deliver to the crowd the next day. |
|
|
| The two people I had counted on to wake me up didn't show and it was a |
| stroke of luck that made me jump up at 9:45. The speeches were supposed to |
| start at 10 a.m. and even though they surely wouldn't start till later I |
| was selling magazines and was due there pronto to claim my table. It took a |
| luggage cart to get all those magazines downstairs. I shudder to think what |
| my life will be like when I have 30 issues to lug around instead of six. |
| The folks from Fringeware were selling books and T-shirts and someone else |
| had old Atari game units and cartridges. People came by to say hi and to |
| buy magazines. I plugged my speech and told people not to dare miss it. |
|
|
| It was impressive that Drunkfux had gotten so many original speakers |
| on such short notice. They mostly said what the crowd wanted to hear and |
| shared thoughts on digital cash, the regulation of the Internet, recent |
| laws, etc. Damien Thorn showed a video clip to the tune of the current |
| rock hit "21st Century Digital Boy" which had cellular phones, scanners, |
| etc. in it. It's part of an upcoming video that looked awesome. Veggie |
| talked about dealing with the media after an old text file of his was |
| used to harass a BBS sysop who got more than twice Phiber's jail sentence |
| just for having a file around. |
|
|
| Someone sent Erik Bloodaxe to talk to me as part of my speech referred |
| to him. It was an uncomfortable talk and I was probably correct in feeling |
| that half the room was watching us and not whoever was speaking. I told |
| him he could pay me back in print or elsewhere but that I was going to |
| go ahead with what I planned to say and he surprised me by saying that |
| what I had written was fine and he even added to it. He also told me |
| that Loki had gotten too drunk and had been a pain in the ass to room |
| with the night before. He assured me that although way too many people |
| had been in his room, and way too many had tried to get in after it was |
| full, it had not been his intention to keep me out. I felt bad that I |
| even cared, and that he knew I cared, and that he and I even had to |
| discuss it. I was unhappy that he had no intention of staying to hear my |
| speech or the fight with Loki that he knew was coming but didn't |
| mention to me. We left things with the fact that we'd go out for dinner |
| or something the next night with Ophie (who also had an early flight) |
| after the bulk of the Con was over. It occurred to me then it would never |
| happen because plans are hard to keep at Cons but I mentioned it in my |
| speech anyway. |
|
|
| My speech went over very well. It was about what's been going on at |
| Gray Areas since I spoke at HoHoCon last year. It was also about the |
| behavior of certain elements of the community and how that behavior has |
| affected me. And it was a stern warning about some busts that are coming |
| down. I know a few people got the message. I could tell from the gasps |
| and laughter at key points. But perhaps the highlight of the speech was |
| the confrontation between Loki and I when he chose to bully me before |
| anyone else could ask a question. I answered his accusations and managed |
| to do a decent job even with no warning. Whatever he hoped to accomplish |
| clearly wasn't working and from somewhere deep inside of me I found the |
| courage to ask the entire room to vote on whether or not they really |
| never wanted to see me on #hack again. The only vote opposed in a room of |
| about 250-300 people was Loki's. Hours later I regretted not thinking to |
| ask how many people never wanted to see Loki there again. Four people had |
| come up to me and told me they would have voted him out. Loki left the |
| room with his tail between his legs and ran to IRC. By the time I got on |
| hours later word had spread a story that I picked a fight with him and |
| he had won. The proof is in the videotape which will be available soon |
| from Drunkfux. It's highly recommended for both friends and foes of mine. |
| Drunkfux said demand for this portion of his footage was very high. I |
| promised to give him better footage and an even better speech next year. |
|
|
| Later Count Zero wrote this about my speech in Cult of the Dead Cow: |
| "Grayarea gets up and begins to read off a pre-prepared speech on her |
| laptop. Her speech is too quick for my alcohol-byproduct-sodden synapses |
| to register accurately. I keep staring at her dress...bright tie-dye... |
| mesmerizing...it's actually quite cool. Suddenly, Loki gets up in the |
| audience and the accusations fly back and forth between them. You kicked |
| me off IRC. You called my office at work. You are doing this, you are |
| doing that. Both are getting into this verbal slugfest in a major way. |
| I feel the bad karma in the room hanging heavy like blue-green cigar |
| smoke. "Can't we all just get along??" I yell, but no one seems to hear |
| me. I don't know who is right or wrong (it's probably somewhere in |
| between...the truth's always gray, right?), so I don't hypothesize. All I |
| do know is that I'd never want to piss off Grayarea...she's damn strong |
| on her convictions and won't take shit from anyone. I think she'd look |
| better up there wearing a big ol' leather jacket with studs...terminator |
| style. "One tends to assume that people wearing tie-dye gear are quiet, |
| meek, very soft spoken, non-confrontational types....it is a camouflage |
| that suits her well," I think. Bahaha! I liked your comments, Count Zero. |
| And I did hear you yell that. |
|
|
| After the speeches I sold more magazines thanks to Loki who |
| inadvertently made way more people interested in me. Bahahaha! Some of |
| them said they liked or loved my dress, some of them hugged me and some |
| of them signed up for subscriptions and gave me their data. I then |
| headed off for dinner at yet another sushi restaurant. Laughing Gas |
| and Slyme came again along with Mr. Spock who agreed to lose his sushi |
| virginity to me and jokingly said that way he'd get mentioned in my |
| review. I thought he was one of the three kewlest people I hung out with |
| at the Con. I hope I get to spend more time with him at a Con in the |
| future and I'd even be willing to go try his favorite type of food! The |
| sushi place we picked was awesome. I was sorry I hadn't found it |
| sooner. It's almost too bad HoHoCon will be in another city next year. |
| I also wanna mention the elite, Jak_Flack, who drove us to the restaurant |
| when cabs were scarce on New Year's Eve. He didn't want any sushi or |
| any money. He even got lucky and gave a ride to people who probably |
| would have done the same thing for him under the same circumstances. |
| Thanks. |
|
|
| After dinner I did what Drunkfux begged us not to do. I spent New |
| Year's Eve on IRC. I messaged Mr. Spock, in fact, who was typing from |
| the other side of the room. I also messaged some hackers I talk to all |
| the time. Some were lonely and glad to see me. I thought a lot about |
| loneliness. Some of us prefer to be with computers than people. Some of |
| us can open up more easily to people on a computer. And some of us need |
| computers around even when we're with other people. I was typing from an |
| account at hohocon.org and there were several people in the room having |
| fun with their "site" as X and Y tried repeatedly (and succeeded) to get |
| root there. I had never seen root before from the position of the person |
| protecting it. I should have paid way more attention but I got too caught |
| up in having conversations. I should also have paid more attention to the |
| people in the room with me. Loq and Fool were there and they seemed really |
| kewl but I got too lost in IRC. Oh well, at least I wasn't hopelessly |
| drunk. And I wasn't kicked or banned once. People were delicate with each |
| other on IRC. They were often drunk, vulnerable and more likely to reveal |
| things when conversing. Those who were on were more than willing to talk |
| to anyone who showed up. People apparently intend to make public the |
| hohocon.org logs. If they include IRC chats it would be very shallow. I |
| will never again take the chance and IRC from a Con again. Although I have |
| mostly come to terms with the fact that I am a semi-public figure and |
| people will always want to see whatever I type on the Net, but it's not |
| fair to expose the words of the people I messaged. |
|
|
| I dragged myself off IRC about 4:30 a.m. and went downstairs to clean |
| off one of the beds. Novocain and Particle had checked out of their room |
| and were gonna stay in my room for one night. I was thrilled at the idea |
| of having company. But when the bed was empty it looked tempting and I |
| lay down for the 90 minutes till I was due to meet them at the breakfast |
| buffet. Next thing I knew it was Sunday afternoon. Oops! I wondered where |
| they had slept. Apparently they hadn't wanted to wake me so they slept |
| in another room. I felt bad but at least their stuff had been safe which |
| is all you really care about at a Con. SORRY! Next time, guys, wake me. |
|
|
| I stumbled into the lobby and joined the conversations that were going |
| on. A hotel employee asked if we'd mind moving to the conference room and |
| we agreed. We figured the room was bugged just as the hotel phone lines |
| had been. But we weren't talking about anything secret and a few of the |
| hackers answered all of the questions asked by the cop/security guard who |
| hung out for about half of the time we were in there. It was a very fun |
| time there on the floor chatting with Voyager, Ophie, Onkel Ditmeyer, lgas, |
| Deadkat, Drunkfux, etc. There were way more people but I'm drawing a blank |
| on specifically who. I went upstairs to get more magazines and ran into |
| Bruce Sterling. He was growing facial hair and looked great. He said he |
| felt lousy which shows what I know. I hugged him before he said he felt |
| lousy. We talked about the book he is working on. Then Ophie and I went |
| off to be interviewed about female hackers and the treatment of women by |
| hackers. It could have used Cori and Noelle but it made some good points. |
| We came downstairs and I saw Drunkfux at work videotaping an interview |
| with the guys from TNO in Colorado. This was priceless footage of them |
| discussing how a group decides policies and handles politics and how they |
| have applied political thought to hacking. I was sorry I had missed half |
| of it and sorry I had spent so much time socializing with them that it |
| had never occurred to me I didn't know much about their group and I should |
| have interviewed them too. I hope Drunkfux includes every word of their |
| interview in the video. |
|
|
| Ophie brought up the idea of photos and so I grabbed my camera. |
| Everyone there got into it and I got a whole roll of film of people |
| hugging and kissing me, looking at porn mags with Ophie and generally |
| playing around somehow. They came out great. If you want yours passed |
| around or published, let me know. Until then, they're private. |
|
|
| Slyme and I headed back to Mr. Wasabi for dinner but to our surprise |
| it was closed! New Year's day turned out to be a bad day to try to find |
| places open to serve food. We should have stayed at the hotel. We finally |
| ended up in a bar which served food, ordered hot chocolate and consoled |
| ourselves on the lack of sushi. Back at the hotel a bunch of us went |
| room hopping and tried to determine who was left. My flight was at 7 a.m. |
| and I had no intention of going to sleep and taking a chance I would miss |
| it. Several people had flights at 8 and 10 a.m. Others were staying on |
| for 3 more days to get better airfare rates. I heard ErikB had left with |
| Ophie and he told me later they had asked the hotel and had been told I |
| checked out. One room we ended up in had a console copier running. I had |
| heard about them but never seen one and was told it was okay if I |
| photographed it. I went downstairs for my camera. |
|
|
| I hadn't been alone once since arriving in Austin. While this wasn't |
| always planned, the thought did occur to me that my room might be watched |
| and that law enforcement might be interested in any of the many people |
| I was seen talking to. I had mentioned a controversial interview we had |
| coming up with ILF and although I thought I was being overly paranoid, I |
| was still nervous I would be questioned about it. But it was 12:30 a.m. |
| or so and I felt too silly asking for someone to run downstairs with me. |
| So I went alone. But as I was closing the door and checking it was locked |
| I saw someone head down the hall towards me and I knew instantly something |
| was about to be up. Hackers are right when they say you can't fully |
| understand this until you have lived it. He asked if I was Netta and I |
| said yes and then he reached towards his pocket. I knew he was going for |
| either a gun or a badge and there was nothing I could do about either. |
| It turned out to be a badge and as he got close enough so that I could |
| see it read "Austin Police Department" I thought to myself "Kewl, it's |
| not the Secret Service." He asked me to accompany him to a room and, |
| holding my camera, I did. He told the two "security guards" that we'd be |
| leaving the door open. I had asked whether he was the guy who had |
| called me last March and he said no that he was his partner. I wondered |
| whether I was under investigation or whether they had no one else to ask |
| for information or whether they just wanted to meet me after talking to |
| me voice. It didn't occur to me to ask. I thought several times about the |
| fact I was supposed to be out with Bloodaxe and Ophie and that if I had |
| made it a point to leave with them this wouldn't be happening. I wondered |
| who else APD had questioned who had not told anyone. I wondered if they had |
| even questioned someone about me. I also feared people would come looking |
| for me and see me in that room and think I was talking to the police |
| voluntarily. That I had sought them out. God forbid they should think I |
| was telling the police about the console copier. |
|
|
| The whole thing only took about 8 minutes and the officer asked me |
| nothing I had a problem answering. He treated me with respect and didn't |
| press me to say anything I wasn't comfortable saying. I offered to give |
| him some of my magazines at the end of the conversation and he walked me |
| to my room and was clearly planning to wait outside. I invited him in and |
| he watched me pull issues from three suitcases. It was apparent nothing |
| illegal had gone on in my room. I'd lay odds it was the cleanest room |
| there too. The day before, for example, my trash in the bathroom had |
| been dumped at least three times. None were by me or when I was in the |
| room. The only thing I couldn't answer, and it was simply from nerves, |
| was what I had done on New Year's Eve. The answer came out that I didn't |
| remember and since I stammered it, it must have looked like I had seen or |
| done something I shouldn't have. But all I did was IRC and eat sushi and |
| I do that so often I didn't even remember when asked. New Year's Eve had |
| been almost like any other night. |
|
|
| Anyway, I got the console copier photo (hint: I could use a detailed |
| article on how they work to run with it). We then moved on to other rooms |
| and I ran into Drunkfux and Damien Thorn. I did a long video interview |
| with Drunkfux, who would have made an excellent journalist. He resisted |
| the idea of asking me petty questions about who I like and don't like in |
| the scene and who I'd sleep with if I could. I would have answered |
| anything he asked in the spirit of the HoHoCon video tradition, but |
| instead we got into more serious issues and people who think Drunkfux is |
| shallow or a less-than-serious dude due to his IRC reputation will be most |
| surprised. |
|
|
| Then Damien did an equally long interview and Drunkfux got eleet footage |
| of me closing my eyes when the talk got too technical. I did almost pass |
| out as it was 3 a.m. or so and I felt really comfortable being with them |
| but I snapped to attention just in the nick of time as Drunkfux had the |
| camera aimed on me and Damien was making a joke. Damien took it in stride |
| but I think it was the first time anyone had ever had the chance to listen |
| to his most eleet technical tips and was bored. I hope he knows I love him, |
| like most hackers, for the person he is and not for the skills or trophies |
| he has. I was transfixed as he told Drunkfux his beginnings in the computer |
| underground and his views on laws, ethics, writing, etc. I just don't lust |
| to know what model of phones he respects most or what gadget he's tested |
| last. Luckily for you, Drunkfux did the interview, not me, and he did ask |
| lots on that sort of stuff. After they were done Damien and I went out to |
| some fast food burger joint. It was dirt cheap and tasted like cardboard. |
| We had a great chat, as usual, and then went to the airport with Slyme who |
| had slept the night away and missed everything. My flight was first and |
| they walked me to the gate and made a fuss over me and it was the perfect |
| ending. |
|
|
| I can't believe I now have to wait till June (and go to Georgia, of |
| all places) to see some of you again. Oh well. In the meantime, happy |
| Valentine's Day to you and whoever you netsex and/or fantasize about. |
| Happy April Fool's Day in advance too. Just prank someone else this year, |
| okay? <grin>. |
|
|
| (Sample issues of Gray Areas are $7.00 each (U.S.) and $10.00 each |
| (foreign) from: Gray Areas, Inc. P.O. Box 808, Broomall, PA 19008. |
| E-mail addresses are: grayarea@well.sf.ca.us or grayarea@netaxs.com or |
| grayarea@mindvox.phantom.com. PGP key is below. Use it.) |
|
|
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| Version: 2.3 |
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| vZb61BnF9s4oyyZitGJ8F/IKnqGX5+jE3/6WvcJ0HxDJPL5jEA2uwNFX4WuNAAUR |
| tBZncmF5YXJlYUB3ZWxsLnNmLmNhLnVz |
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|
|