| ==Phrack Magazine== |
|
|
| Volume Six, Issue Forty-Seven, File 12 of 22 |
|
|
| HoHoCon Miscellany |
|
|
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
| "HERTz vs Y" |
| By Loq |
|
|
| (for the uninformed, HERTz is the Hohocon Emergency |
| Response Team, born to deal with pussy (err posse)-like |
| hackers on the net) |
|
|
|
|
| OK, here it is...The complete story about hohocon.org, or at least as much as |
| I can piece together...I will try to restrict myself to hohocon.org |
| information, as I sure plenty of people have their own comments on what |
| happened at h0h0. |
|
|
| I arrived at hohocon Friday evening, and there was nobody around. After |
| phoning fool's VMB, I headed up to room 518, the computer room, to see |
| what was up. f0t0n, MiCRO^[[, fool and other people were scattered throughout |
| the room were supposedly working on getting the system up, but they were |
| having some "routing" problem...Hmm... Nevertheless, they finally got it up |
| a short time later, working reasonably well. |
|
|
| hohocon.org consisted of a mass of computer equipment all kludged together, |
| which nevertheless worked remarkably well. There was the main user machine, |
| hohocon.org, which handled all the user logins, the (supposedly dual) 28.8k PPP |
| gateway machine, photon.hohocon.org, the terminal server, oki900.hohocon.org, |
| and then micro^[['s box, lie.hohocon.org (lie didn't allow logins to most |
| people). Additionally, a last minute machine was added onto the network as |
| sadie.hohocon.org. That machine was graciously provided by mwe, a dfw.net |
| type who fool had hit up for terminal and had shown up with a mysterious |
| overclocked '66 with a shitload of neat stuff including multimedia |
| capabilities. He also brought us several "classic" (some call them ancient =) |
| terminals that people were able to use to login. |
|
|
| At some point, dfx showed up and made use of America's capitalistic system by |
| offering various warez for sale, consisting mostly of those nifty red-type |
| armbands to let people in to the main event...he pointed his camera at |
| the systems..and then left. he's tooo uber for us... |
|
|
| Friday night, everything was calm...Micro^[[, myself, and several other |
| people started working on bouncing between sites on the net...Several |
| people donated accounts to use for this task, and we ended up with a nice |
| list, until we hit utexas.edu, when the whole thing came to a screeching |
| halt...Must say something about University of Texas at Austin networking, eh? |
| Not wanting to escape through tons of telnets just to kill the final one |
| that went through utexas, we just killed the whole thing and decided that |
| we would do it the next day (although we never did get around to it again... |
| oh well)... For those interested, here is a list of some of the sites we were |
| able to bounce through: |
|
|
| usis.com (Houston, Texas) |
| bell.cac.psu.edu (State College, Pennsylvania) |
| pip.shsu.edu (Huntsville, Texas) |
| dfw.net (Dallas, Texas) |
| deepthought.armory.com (San Jose, California) |
| falcon.cc.ukans.edu (Lawrence, Kansas) |
| dunx1.ocs.drexel.edu (Philidelphia, Pennsylvania) |
| solix.fiu.edu (Miami, Florida) |
| thetics.europa.com (Portland, Oregon) |
| yogi.utsa.edu (San Antonio, Texas) |
| thepoint.com (Sellersburg, Indiana) |
| aladdin.dataflux.bc.ca (British Columbia, Canada) |
| itesocci.gdl.iteso.mx (Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico) |
| tamvm1.tamu.edu (College Station, Texas) |
| Joyce-Perkins.tenet.edu (Austin, Texas) |
| earth.cs.utexas.edu (Austin, Texas) |
|
|
| I left Friday night around 2 am because I had to work at 8 :(...I will |
| never do THAT again...Nothing very eventful happened in the computer room, |
| several people wandered by, ophie refused to say hi to me (j/k ophie) |
| and plenty of jokes and stories were passed around... |
|
|
| Saturday nite was when all the fun happened on the net. fool decided it |
| would be a great idea to let everyone have accounts, and we finally got up to |
| about a 60 line password file...Much of this traffic was over a 28.8k |
| slip, which worked its way down to about 10bps by the time everyone started |
| (ab)using it, not to mention the wonderful speed-decreasing/error-overcoming |
| resolution tendencies of the v.fc protocol, which left us a bit...uhh... |
| llllaaaaaaaaaggggggggggggeeeeeeeeddddddd. This was eventually switched down |
| to 14.4k after photon realized the problems the v.fc was causing. |
|
|
| The next problem was probably very predictable, apparently to everyone except |
| for one "fool" who broke down and decided to give y an account. Everyone |
| familiar with y (Y-WiNDoZE), knows his general habits around systems, |
| and hohocon.org was no exception(ok,ok, so it wasn't completely fool's fault... |
| Still...:) |
|
|
| Apparently y next let x login under his account to look around. The details |
| are a little sketchy, but the first thing X did was look around, |
| check out the password file, check out the remote hosts, went on irc for |
| a bit, and then he began his real attack. He ran pico and suddenly there |
| was a copy of 8lgm's lprcp in his directory (presumably he ascii uploaded |
| it into the editor) with the name 'posse'...hmmm... How ingenious (bah)...He |
| then proceeded to copy the password file to his own directory, add a WWW |
| account, password bin, and use lprcp to put it back in /etc/passwd. (copies of |
| his .bash_history should be available on fool's ftp site by the time you read |
| this...see below) |
|
|
| DjRen and I, in the meantime, were out of the room having a small party for |
| ourselves, so I didn't get a chance to see all this happening. Apparently |
| nobody discovered it until y started wall'ing message about his eliteness |
| and also started bragging to everyone on irc about it. When Dj and I returned, |
| we discovered that X had managed to an account for himself on the system. |
| X installed his own backdoors into the system and started playing |
| around. At this point, I wasn't really fully aware of what was going on |
| because of the buzz I had from that New-Years-Day bottle of champagne |
| graciously delivered to us by an interesting Australian writer at the |
| conference. |
|
|
| Finally, Dj and I returned to the computer room, where I sat down at a terminal |
| to IRC a little, and I heard a big commotion about how y had hacked root :) |
| About the same time, y was on irc attempting to play netgod because he hacked |
| hohocon.org :) |
|
|
| Apparently even Mike got access to the system at one point, but it is not |
| clear if he did anything once he was there. The people sitting at the |
| hohocon.org consoles then began a massive scramble to kick them out of the |
| system. Several times they were killed, but Y and X kept coming back. |
| fool managed to find some of the accounts they had created, and I managed to |
| hear the root password from among the commotion and I logged in to kill inetd |
| keep them from being able to connect in. I then proceeded to do a find for |
| all the suid programs, where I found a couple of x and y's backdoors (the |
| oh-so-elite /usr/bin/time sure had me ph00led, y :) |
|
|
| After I removed the backdoors I could find, I looked at /etc/motd, and noticed |
| y's message: |
| ================================================ |
| Spock rules more than anyone |
|
|
| WE SWEAR |
|
|
|
|
| WELCOME SOUTH EASTERN POSSE TO HOHOCON!@#$ |
| ================================================ |
| I don't think I really have to make any comment about this message, it is |
| clearly self-explanatory :) |
|
|
| Thinking I could be elite too, I replaced his message with |
| ================================================ |
|
|
|
|
| Loq has defeated X and Y :) |
|
|
|
|
| ================================================ |
|
|
| Photon came in the room, and started working on getting the systems back |
| together... That was the conversation where we coined the phrase the |
| "Hohocon Emergency Response Team (HERTz)". |
|
|
| About half-an-hour later, Eclipse ambled into the room telling me to |
| login again...I do and somehow Proff had managed to get root access and |
| add a line into the motd: |
|
|
| ================================================ |
|
|
|
|
| Loq has defeated X and Y :) |
| And proff has defeated Loq. |
|
|
|
|
| ================================================ |
|
|
| I started to look around a little and suddenly it looked like all the files |
| were missing... When I did an ls / I realized that Proff has replaced ls |
| with his own copy that wouldn't show any files :) So for awhile, I had |
| to do echo *'s just to get lists of files in the directories. At that point, |
| I really didn't want to play the games anymore, as it was about 2am and I had |
| to work at 8am that morning, but I congratulate Proff in being |
| able to defeat all of us that one last time :) |
|
|
| The rest of the con, with respect to the network, was pretty quiet... |
| For those interested, most of the hohocon logs and information will be on |
| fool's ftp site: ftp://dfw.net/pub/stuff/FTP/Stuff/HoHoCon |
|
|
| The list of users that were finally on Hoho was pretty large, here is a copy |
| of all the accounts that existed on hohocon.org at the time it went down: |
|
|
| root bin daemon adm lp sync shutdown halt mail news uucp operator games |
| man postmaster ftp fool yle djren mthreat shaytan loq mindV klepto btomlin |
| nnightmare train patriot fonenerd joe630 plexor pmetheus vampyre phlux |
| windjammer nocturnus phreon spock phred room202 novonarq thorn davesob |
| f-christ gweeds cyboboy elrond onkeld octfest tdc mwe angeli Kream ljsilver |
| marauder landon proff hos fool cykoma dr_x el_jefe mwesucks iceman eric |
| z0rphix |
|
|
|
|
| Other miscellaneous notes.... |
|
|
| Thanks to fool for organizing as much as he did in such limited time. |
| It sucks that the first hotel had to cancel and that caused |
| us to lose our ISDN link...Hopefully next year I will be able |
| to provide the link for you. |
|
|
| Thanks to photon for getting the PPP link up and running...it disconnected |
| many times and became really slow when the load finally came down |
| on it, but overall it worked extremely well with few problems. |
|
|
| Thanks to micro^[[ for the idea of trying to bounce the telnets around the |
| world in the normal hacker tradition... |
|
|
| Thanks to eclipse for the interesting conversations and for giving me a |
| better understanding of Proff... :) |
| A small note that Eclipse discovered: |
| "To Root: (slang) To have sex..." |
|
|
| ahh...no wonder all those people sit on the net on friday nites :) |
|
|
| Thanks to Proff for the extra entertainment at the end of the nite... I |
| look forward to battling you in the future :) |
|
|
| Also thanks to X and Y for the entertainment as well :) |
|
|
| Finally, thanks to both fool and eclipse for helping me review this text and |
| get it somewhat accurate at least :) |
|
|
| I am intentionally leaving everyone else's names off of here because I |
| know I would forget someone that I met at hohocon, and I wouldn't want to |
| cause hurt feelings or anything :) |
|
|
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
| Bits and Bytes Column by J. Barr |
| (From Austin Tech-Connected) |
|
|
|
|
| WaReZ <nOun> 1. Stolen software available to 'elite' callers on |
| 'elite' bulletin boards. 2. Pirated or cracked commercial |
| software. |
|
|
| HoHoCon is Austin's annual celebration of the computer |
| underground. Phreaks, phracks and geeks rub shoulders with |
| corporate security-types, law enforcement officials, and various |
| and assorted cyber-authors. It's an in thing, a cult thing, an elite |
| thing. In many ways it reminds me of the drug-culture of the 60's |
| and 70's. It has the same mentality: paranoia and an abiding |
| disdain for the keepers of law and order. But after all, HoHoCon |
| honors the Robin Hoods of the computer era: stealing from the |
| rich, powerful, and evil prince (Microsoft, IBM, Lotus, et al) and |
| distributing to poor dweebs under the very nose of the sherrif. |
| A nose, by the way, that just begs to be tweaked. That's the |
| romantic notion, at least. To others there is no nobility in |
| computer crime. Whether it's a case of wholesome anarchy run |
| amok or youthful pranksterism subverted to common criminal |
| mischief: warez is warez, theft is theft. |
|
|
| A month or two ago I had an email conversation with a young |
| man and we discovered we both ran BBS's. He asked what my |
| board was about and I explained that The Red Wheelbarrow) |
| was for 'rascals, poets, and dweebs', and that it carried echos |
| from FidoNet, USENET, and elsewhere. He replied that his was |
| a private board, one that dealt mainly in "WaRez and 'bOts" and |
| closed his note with an "eVil gRin." Not being sure what he was |
| talking about, I asked him to spell it out for me. I never heard |
| from him again. |
|
|
| I mention this because at HoHoCon you either knew these |
| things or you didn't; you were part of the elite or you were not. |
| Like my questions to my friend the pirate board operator, my |
| questions at HoHoCon went unanswered. |
|
|
| The hype in various Austin newsgroups for this year's event |
| talked quite a bit about the party last year. Cyberspace |
| luminaries shared top billing with the mention of teenage girls |
| stripping for dollars in a hotel room. I decided then and there it |
| was the sort of function I should cover for Tech-Connected. |
|
|
| I asked at the door for a press pass and was directed towards a |
| rather small redheaded kid across the room. The guard at the |
| door said he (the kid) was running the show. I expected to see |
| lots of people I knew there, but I only saw one. John Foster is |
| the man who keeps the whole world (including Tech- |
| Connected) up-to-date as to what boards are up and what boards |
| are down in Central Texas. John is about my age. He looked |
| normal. Everyone else was strange. I saw more jewelry in |
| pierced noses and ears walking across that room than I normally |
| see in a week. Lots of leather and metal, too. HoHoCon '94 |
| looked like where the tire met the (info) road: a cross between |
| neo-punk-Harley-rennaisance and cyber-boutique. Most of the |
| crowd was young. Old gray-beards like John and I really stuck |
| out in the crowd. |
|
|
| I found the redheaded kid. He was selling t-shirts at the table. |
| Next to him an "old hand" (who must have been nearly 30) was |
| reciting the genesis of personal computers to a younger dweeb. |
| They quibbled for a second about which came first, the Altos or |
| the Altair, then looked up to see if anyone was listening and |
| smiled when they saw that I was. I waited respectfully for the |
| redheaded kid to finish hawking one of his shirts, then repeated |
| my request for a press pass. He just looked at me kind of funny |
| and said he had given some out, but only to people he knew. I |
| didn't know a secret handshake or any codewords I could blurt |
| out to prove I was cool, so I just stood there for a moment and |
| thought about what to do next. |
|
|
| Perhaps a change in costume would make me cool. Maybe then |
| these kids could see that I was OK. I picked up a black one, it |
| read NARC across the front and on the back had a list of the top- |
| ten NARC boards of 1994. Not wanting to appear ignorant, I |
| didn't ask what NARC stood for. I figured it would be easy |
| enough to find out later, so I bought the shirt and left. |
|
|
| I returned Sunday morning, wearing my new NARC t-shirt, |
| certain it would give me the sort of instant-approval I hadn't had |
| the day before. It didn't. As I was poking around the empty |
| meeting room, a long-haired dude in lots of leather came |
| clunking up in heavy-heeled motorcycle boots and asked what I |
| was doing. I explained I was there to do a story. That shut him |
| up for a second so I decided to pursue my advantage. "Anything |
| exciting happen last night?" I asked. "Nothing I can tell YOU |
| about, SIR" he replied, then pivoted on one of those big heels |
| and clunked away. |
|
|
| Browsing the tables in the meeting room I found pamphlets left |
| over from the previous day's activities. There was an old |
| 'treasure map' of high-tech 'trash' locations in Denver. Northern |
| Telecom, AT&T and U.S.West locations seemed to be the focus. |
| There were flyers from Internet access providers (it seemed a |
| little like carrying coals to Newcastle, but then what do I know), a |
| catalog from an underground press with titles like "The Paper |
| Trail" (just in case you need to create a new identity for |
| yourself), "Fugitive: How to Run, Hide, and Survive" and |
| "Secrets of Methamphetamine Manufacture." Good family |
| reading, fer shure. |
|
|
| For the purists there were reprints of issues 1 to 91 of |
| "YIPL/TAP", the first phreak newsletter. For the wannabe's like |
| me, there were more kewl t-shirts to be ordered. I decided I |
| should have opted for the one with "Hacking for Jesus" across |
| the back. I appreciate the art of anthropology a little more after |
| trying to read the spoor left behind at HoHoCon. It is definitely |
| a mixed bag. |
|
|
| To this day, I'm not certain what NARC stands for. Someone |
| suggested it was any state or federal officer interested in busting |
| people, just like in the bad old days (or today, for that matter). |
| Maybe it's shorthand for aNARChist. The definition I like best |
| was given to me on an internet newsgroup, alt.binary.warez.pc. |
| (Really, it exists right there in front of the Secret Service and |
| everyone.) One reply actually had an answer. After a paragraph |
| or two of the requisite 'my gawd what a stupid question from a |
| know-nothing nerd', the suggestion was made that it stood for |
| "Never At Rest Couriers." |
|
|
| I like that one because it suggests a purpose for those 'bots my |
| friend with the WaReZ board and the eViL gRiN mentioned in |
| our conversation. Sitting in private channels on IRC servers, |
| 'bots could be used to store and forward pirated goods across the |
| internet in almost untraceable ways. Who knows for sure? Not |
| I. One thing I'm certain of, I'm real careful what part of town I |
| wear my NARC t-shirt in. I would really hate getting shot by a |
| confused crack-cocaine dealer who thought my shirt was the |
| signal his deal had gone bad. |
|
|
| Because I had been excluded from the inner circle, because I |
| had tried and failed to become part of the elite during HoHoCon, |
| it was easy for me to work myself into a morally superior position |
| from which to write this column. All I had really seen were a |
| bunch of kids: wannabe's, cyber-groupies and counterculture |
| alternatives to life-as-we-know-it, celebrating the triumph of |
| crooks and petty thieves over legitimate big business and big |
| government. But something bothered me about that safe, smug |
| position, and the more I thought about it the more it irked. |
|
|
| For one thing, something was missing. If they were criminals, |
| where was the loot? Where were the Benz and BMW's that |
| should have been in the parking lot? Where were all the fancy |
| wimminz that follow fast money? Software prices are high these |
| days, so even if they were only getting a dime on the dollar for |
| their WaReZ, there should have been some real high-rollers |
| strutting their stuff. |
|
|
| A reformed phreaker gave me some input on this. He said it was |
| about collecting a complete set, like trading baseball cards, not |
| about making money. The software itself wasn't important. |
| Having it in your collection was the important thing. Tagging in |
| cyberspace. Making a mark by having one of everything. But |
| still, it's illegal. Against the law, whether for profit or not. |
|
|
| The news background as I write this story is about Microsoft, |
| king of the PC software hill. The judge reviewing the Consent |
| Decree negotiated between the Department of Justice and |
| Microsoft is angry with the lawyers from Redmond. He tells them |
| that he can't believe them any longer. They testified in |
| September that Microsoft did not engage in marketing |
| vaporware, which is an old IBM tactic of hurting the sales of a |
| competitor's product by promising they would have one just like |
| it, and better, real soon now. |
|
|
| The judge has before him internal Microsoft documents which |
| indicate that the employee who came up with the idea of using |
| vaporware to combat new products from Borland was given the |
| highest possible ranking in his evaluation. The tactic apparently |
| worked to perfection. The suits have now told the judge it wasn't |
| vaporware, because Microsoft was actually working on such a |
| product. The judge is not amused. Are these crimes, this |
| dishonesty, somehow more acceptable because they are done |
| for profit by an industry giant? Because they're done by |
| business men in suits instead of punk kids in jeans? |
|
|
| How about Ross Perot's old company, EDS. Have the once |
| proud men and women of the red (tie), white (shirt), and blue |
| (suit) drifted astray since the days when 'the little guy' insisted |
| that not even a hint of impropriety was acceptable? The state |
| employee that negotiated and signed the contract with EDS that |
| brought me to Austin in 1990 to install the statewide USAS |
| accounting system for the State Comptrollers Office was hired by |
| EDS as a 'special consultant' in 1992. Hint of impropriety? This |
| was shouted from the roof-tops. EDS bought a full-page ad in the |
| Austin American-Statesman to make sure that all the other |
| bureaucrats in state government got the message. |
|
|
| What about the cops? The federal storm-troopers who |
| conducted the raids around town at the time of the Steve Jackson |
| affair. The judge at that trial had dressed down the agent in |
| charge like he was talking to a teenage bully who had been |
| busted for taking candy from the other kids. No wonder the EFF |
| (Electronic Frontier Foundation) is so popular. It's the ACLU of |
| the 90's and the uncharted terrain of cyber-space. |
|
|
| Finally, how about me. I have the illegal software on my PC. It's |
| a copy of Personal Editor II that I've had forever. When I |
| worked at EDS I once had to code 250,000 lines of COBOL |
| using EDLIN. In those days, management didn't think PC's were |
| anything but toys and they would be damned before they spent |
| any money buying editors to write software for them. Out of that |
| ordeal came an abiding disdain for EDLIN and my own copy of |
| PE II. I'm not sure where I got it. It was a legal copy at one |
| time, though I'm not sure whose it was. When I transferred to |
| Washington, D.C. in 1987, I took it with me. I moved it from my |
| XT, to my AT, to my 386SX. Now it's own my 486DX2/50. I had |
| a copy of it on every computer I used at work. I used it for |
| everything I coded, for all the notes I wrote. |
|
|
| These days I don't go into DOS unless I want to hear the guns |
| fire in Doom II. OS/2 comes with TEDIT, which looks enough |
| like an updated version of PE II to make me feel guilty every |
| time I see it. But I haven't taken the time to learn how to use this |
| legal editor. My taboo copy of PE II is much too comfortable. |
|
|
| So who are the good guys and who are the bad? The suits who |
| steal and bribe and leverage from within the system? The |
| arrogant thugs with badges? The punks with body-piercings? |
| Or an old phart like me, with illegal software on my own PC? |
| Heady questions for sure. I thought I knew the answer when I |
| started this column, now I'm not so sure. I can't condone the theft |
| of goods or services no matter how altruistic or noble the cause, |
| or how badly some noses need to be tweaked, or how ignoble |
| some agents of law enforcement. |
|
|
| I think it would be my style to point a finger first at the suits, |
| then at the kids. But as long as I'm using stolen software, or |
| 'evaluating' shareware long after the trial period is over, I don't |
| have to go very far should I get the urge to set something right. |
|
|
|
|
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
| Ho Ho Con '94 Review |
|
|
| by Onkel Dittmeyer (onkeld@netcom.com) |
|
|
|
|
| " If I would arrest you, you would really be under arrest, |
| as I am a real officer that can actually arrest people who |
| are under arrest when I arrest them. " |
| - Austin Cop, HoHoCon '94 |
|
|
|
|
| For those who missed it, dissed it or were afraid to go, here |
| comes my very personal impression on HoHoCon 1994...flames: /dev/null. |
|
|
| Drunkfux did it again. K0de-kiddiez, WaReZ-whiners, UNIX-users, |
| DOS destroyers, linux lunatics - all of them found their way to the |
| Ramada South Inn in Austin, Texas to indulge in a weekend of excessive |
| abuse of information equipment and controlled substances under |
| supervision of the usual array of ph3dz, narqz, local authorities, |
| mall cops and this time - oh yes! - scantily clad Mexican nationals |
| without green cards in charge of hotel security. Tracy Lords, however, |
| did NOT show up. |
|
|
| (I want my money back.) |
|
|
| Well. |
|
|
| When I walked into the hotel, I noticed a large handwritten |
| poster that Novocaine put up in the lobby, marking his room as a |
| "hospitality suite" for those who already made it to Austin Thursday |
| night. I ditched my bags into my room and went up to the fifth floor to |
| see what was going on, and who was already there. Grayareas, Novocaine, |
| Eclipse, Dead Vegetable and a bunch of unidentified people were |
| lingering around a table that was cluttered with all kinds of |
| underground mags (from 2600 to Hack-Tic), some reading, some making up |
| new conspiracy theories. Everybody took a good whiff of Austin air and |
| prepared themselves for the action to come. Later that night, I took |
| Commander Crash for a walk around the hotel to see how well they did |
| their homework. The rumor was that the hotel had been notified, as well |
| as all local computer-oriented businesses, that the haqrz were in |
| the neighborhood.. and it looked like it was telling the truth. We |
| found not a single door unlocked, not one phone interface un-secured. |
| Somebody closed all the security h0lez in advance, therefore hacking |
| the hotel looked pointless and lame. Everybody crashed out, |
| eventually. For most, it was the last sleep they would get for the new |
| year's weekend. |
|
|
| Noon the next day, I awoke to find the lobby crawling with |
| people, and ran into some familiar faces. Like last year, most of the |
| lobby-ists were playing with hand-held scanners. The National Weather |
| service was soon declared The Official HoHoConFrequency, and was - in |
| old fashion - blaring through all hallways and lounges of the site. At |
| least, nobody could claim they didn't know it was going to rain... |
|
|
| Commander Crash approached me in the early afternoon. "Dude, " |
| he said, "I think I've got a bug on my scanner..". We went hunting |
| around the hotel with a signal-strength-indicator-equipped eleet |
| scanner to see if we could locate the little bastard. We couldn't. |
| Disappointed, we asked some cDc guys to help us look, and soon we |
| walked up and down the hallways in a mob of approximately fifteen to |
| twenty people. An "undercover" hotel security guard, clad in a "beefy |
| look" muscle-shirt that revealed some badly-sketched tattoos walked up |
| and advised us to "get our asses back to our rooms". "If there is a |
| bug in this hotel, it is there for a reason. Therefore, don't mess |
| with it." I asked him if we were grounded or something. He was kindly |
| ignored for the rest of the night. As the mob settled into the |
| check-in lounge, I noticed about half a dozen new security guards who |
| were hired to enforce Law & Order and just received an extra briefing |
| from the hotel manager in a back room. An Austin cop proceeded giving |
| each one of them an extra pair of handcuffs. Somebody exclaimed "My |
| Lord, it's gonna be bondage-con!", which caused me to spray my soda |
| over an unsuspecting warez d00d. He called me a "LaMeR" and chased me |
| back to my room where I peacefully lost consciousness. |
|
|
| The next morning, I awoke late while the actual con was already |
| in full swing. I pumped myself back into reality with a handful of |
| Maximum Strength Vivarine(TM) (thank god for small favors) and moved |
| my not-too-pleasant-smelling likeness into the con room, where |
| Douglas Barnes was in the middle of a rant on basic encryption. Very |
| basic, so to speak. Maybe because, like he said, he did not know "how |
| to address such a diverse audience consisting of hackers, security |
| professionals and federal agents". Hmpf! You fill in the blanks. Next |
| up was Jeremy Porter, going into the details of available digital cash |
| systems, and repeatedly pointing out how easy you can scam over |
| NetCash by faxing them a check and then cancelling it out after you |
| got your digicash string in the (e-) mail. Up next, Jim McCoy gave a |
| talk on underground networking, a concept that enables you to run a |
| totally transparent and invisible network over an existing one like |
| the Internet. Very much like the firewall at whitehouse.gov.. |
|
|
| Damien Thorn was next, starting with some video footage he taped |
| off a news station where he is interviewed on cellular fraud through |
| cloning. He also showed off a nice video clip that showed him playing |
| around with ESN grabbers an other quite k-rad equipment. Ironically, he |
| chose "21st Century Digital Boy" from Bad Religion as the underlying |
| soundtrack. That reeks of pure K-RaDiCaLnEsS, doesn't it? When dFx came |
| back to the mike, about 400 ranting and raving haqrz demanded for the |
| raffle to finally start, and the k-g0d (who wore a pair of weird, |
| green, pointed artfag boots) gave in. In the next thirty minutes or |
| so, a lot of eleet things found new owners like hard drives, |
| keyboards, twelve hour well-edited hotel porno videos, HoHoCon videos, |
| back issues of 2600 and TAP, a whole lot of HOPE t-shirts, a |
| Southwestern Bell payphone booth, CO manuals and other dumpster-diving |
| loot, AT&T Gift Certificates, an eleet 600 bps modem, and lots of |
| other more or less useful gadgets. Dead Vegetable repeatedly insisted |
| that he was not giving up the 35-pound "Mr. T." head he brought, which |
| was made of solid concrete and hand-painted. "No, it's a Mr-T-Phone, |
| you can pick up the mohawk and talk!" |
|
|
| Back out in the lobby, I ran into erikb and chatted briefly |
| about some other Europeans we both knew (Hi 7up..).. On the way |
| up to my room, I stopped at the 2nd floor lobby to mock somebody |
| for cigarettes. Well, see, I don't have anything against a huge |
| flock of ph3dz taking up the whole lobby, but if not a single one |
| of them smokes, let alone has a ciggy to spare, it pisses the fuck |
| out of me. Back down, I crammed some fliers into my bag (Buy HoHoCon |
| videos/TAP issues/2600 subscriptions and other sellout), chatted with |
| Ophie and a couple of other IRC babes (a lot of females at the con |
| this year, if this trends keeps up, it will look like a Ricky Lake |
| show at next year's HoHoCon) and retreated back to my room to secure |
| all the nifty things I won at the raffle (a book of TAP issues, |
| a 2600 issue, two t- shirts, an acoustic coupler.. dFx looked |
| quite pissed). |
|
|
| Back down, everybody that had something to sell had opened up |
| shop. dFx was selling last years "I LOVE FEDS/WAREZ" tee-shirts plus |
| a new stack of the elusive "I LOVE COPS" baseball caps, who came |
| in four different spanking colors this year. The embroidered logo is |
| the clincher. I can just recommend everyone who did not get one yet |
| to get their hands on one of these (no, I am not receiving any ca$h |
| for this). Netta Gilboa was auctioning off some back issues of |
| Gray Areas, and cDc sold everything from sizzling "Cult of the Dead C0w" |
| shirts and hats to "Please do not eat kids" stickers, cable TV descramblers |
| and DTMF decoders while happily zonking away on an old Atari 7800 |
| video game. While browsing through the merchandise, I ran into a guy |
| with a shirt that said "I quit hacking, phreaking, k0dez and |
| warez.....it was the worst 15 minutes of my life." Now THAT |
| would have been something to bring home! I blew my excess money on |
| some less original shirts and visited Room 518, where a bunch of |
| dedicated people had set up a Net connection and public-access |
| terminals. Some of the TTYs definitely looked like something you would |
| find if you decided to take a walk around the desolate offices of your |
| local CO at night.. |
|
|
| Midnight drew closer. When the new year came around, I was quite |
| shocked. "Hey d00dZ! Happy New Year!" - "Shut Up! I am about to get |
| op on #warez2!" What a festive mood. After midnight, everybody pretty |
| much retreated into a room with a fair quantity of their favorite |
| narcotic substance (the 4th floor was filled with an ubiquitous pot |
| smell, despite of the alarming presence of suits who were talking into |
| their jackets) and called it a day. |
|
|