==Phrack Inc.== Volume Two, Issue Ten, Phile #9 of 9 PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN <-=*} Phrack World News {*=-> PWN PWN PWN PWN Issue IX/Part Two PWN PWN PWN PWN Compiled, Written, and Edited by PWN PWN PWN PWN Knight Lightning PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN On The Home Front December 25, 1986 ----------------- Happy Holidays to all from everyone at Phrack Inc. and Metal Shop Private! Well, here we are at that time of year again and before too long we will have a new wave of self appointed hackers who got their modems for Christmas. Some important dates to point out: November 17, 1986............1st Anniversary of Phrack Inc. January 2, 1987..............1st Anniversary of Metal Shop being a PRIVATE BBS. January 10, 1987.............1st Anniversary of Metal Shop AE, now Quick Shop January 25, 1987.............1st Anniversary of Phrack World News The Phrack Inc./Metal Shop Private Voice Mailbox is now back in operation. If you have a question for Taran King, Cheap Shades, or myself and cannot reach us through regular means, please leave us a message on our VMS. Thanks to the efforts of Oryan Quest, an upcoming Phrack Pro-Phile will focus on Steve Wozniak. Plans are already underway for Summer Con '87. It is to be held in St. Louis, Missouri during the last week of June. It is being sponsored by TeleComputist Newsletter, Phrack Inc., and Metal Shop Private. Forest Ranger is in charge of planning and is putting out a lot of front money for the necessary conference rooms and such. There will be a mandatory $10 admittance at the door to Summer Con '87. If you will be attending this conference, please as an act of good faith and to save 50% send $5 in early to: J. Thomas TeleComputist Newsletter P.O. Box 2003 Florissant, Missouri 63032-2003 Also, Letters to the Editor and anything else dealing with TeleComputist can be sent to the same address. TeleComputist can also be reached through Easylink at 62195770, MCI Telex at 650-240-6356, CIS at 72767,3207 and PLINK at OLS 631. Try MCI and Easylink first. Not much else to say... so keep learning and try not to get into any trouble. :Knight Lightning _______________________________________________________________________________ Computer Hackers Beware! - Senate Passes Computer Fraud And Abuse Act ------------------------ ------------------------------------------ On October 2, 1986, the US Senate unanimously passed the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986. The bill, S. 2281, imposes fines of up to $500,000 and/or prison terms of up to 20 years for breaking into government or financial institutions' computers. The Federal Government alone operates more than 18,000 medium-scale and large-scale computers at some 4,500 different sites. The Office of Technology Assessment estimates the government's investment in computers over the past four years at roughly $60 million. The General Services Administration estimates that there will be 250,000 to 500,000 computers in use by the Federal Government by 1990. In 1984, legislators' attention to and concern about computer fraud was heightened by a report by the American Bar Association task force on computer crime. According to the report, based on a survey of 1,000 private organizations and public agencies, forty-five percent of the 283 respondents had been victimized by some form of computer crime, and more than 25 percent had sustained financial losses totaling between an estimated $145 million and $730 million during one twelve month period. To address this problem, the Senate and House enacted, in 1984, the first computer statute (18 U.S.C. 1030). Early this year both the House and Senate introduced legislation to expand and amend this statute. In the current bill, which is expected to be signed by President Reagan next week, penalties will be imposed on anyone who knowingly or intentionally accesses a computer without authorization, or exceeds authorized access and: (1) Obtains from government computers information relating to national defense and foreign relations. (2) Obtains information contained in financial records of financial institutions. (3) Affects the use of the government's operation of a computer in any department or agency of the government that is exclusively for the use of the U.S. Government. (4) Obtains anything of value, unless the object of the fraud and the thing obtained consists only of the use of the computer. (5) Alters, damages, or destroys information in any federal interest computer, or prevents authorized use of any such computer or information. Under the bill, a person would be guilty of computer fraud if he or she causes a loss of $1,000 or more during any one year period. Depending on the offense, penalties include fines up to $100,000 for a misdemeanor, $250,000 for a felony, $500,000 if the crime is committed by an organization, and prison terms of up to 20 years. The bill also prohibits traffic in passwords and other information from computers used for interstate or foreign commerce. This part of the bill makes it possible for Federal Prosecutors to crack down on pirate bulletin boards and similar operations because the bill covers business computers, online networks, and online news and information services, all of which are considered interstate commerce. Information provided by P - 8 0 S y s t e m s _______________________________________________________________________________ GTE News December 20, 1986 -------- "GTE Develops High-Speed GaAs Multiplexer Combining Four Data Channels" In an effort to achieve data communication rates of several gigabits per second, GTE Labs (Waltham, MA) is combining the high-capacity of fiber optics with the high speed of gallium arsenide circuits. The research arm of GTE has designed a GaAs multiplexer that can combine four data channels, each with a communication rate of 1 gigabit per second, into one channel. GTE has also recently developed a technique called MOVPE (metal-organic vapor-phase epitaxy) for efficiently growing thin-film GaAs crystals. The new devices should play an important role in future communication systems, which will involve high-capacity fiber-optic cables connecting houses and offices through telephone switching centres. Data rates on these cables could be as high as 20 gigabits per second. In addition to standard computer data, numerous video channels could be supported, each with a data rate of almost 100 megabits per second. The GaAs multiplexers will probably be the only devices fast enough to interface houses and offices through this fiber-optic grid. In future supercomputers [misuse of the word -eds.] these multiplexers will also be used for high-speed fiber-optic transmissions between various boards in the computer, replacing copper wires. Because of the high-speed nature of the fiber-optic link, such techniques may even be used for chip-to- chip communication. GTE said it has completed a prototype of the GaAs multiplexer and a final version should be ready in less than a year. Comments: And meanwhile, while GTE's been building gigabit/second multiplexers, AT&T Bell Labs is still experimenting with the neuron webs from slug brains... Information from Byte Magazine, December 1986, Page 9 Typed & Commented on by Mark Tabas _______________________________________________________________________________ The LOD/H Technical Journal --------------------------- The Legion Of Doom/Hackers Technical Journal is a soft-copy free newsletter whose primary purpose is to further the knowledge of those who are interested in topics such as: Telecommunications, Datacommunications, Computer & Physical Security/Insecurity and the various technical aspects of the phone system. The articles are totally original unless otherwise stated. All sources of information for a specific article are listed in the introduction or conclusion of the article. They will not accept any articles that are unoriginal, plagiarized, or contain invalid or false information. Articles will be accepted from anyone who meets those criteria. They are not dependant upon readers for articles, since members of LOD/H and a select group of others will be the primary contributors, but anyone can submit articles. There is no set date for releasing issues, as they have no monetary or legal obligation to the readers, but they predict that issues will be released every 2 or 3 months. Thus, expect 4 to 6 issues a year assuming that they continue to produce them, which they intend to do. The bulletin boards sponsoring the LOD/H TJs include: Atlantis Digital Logic Data Service Hell Phrozen Over (HPO) Metal Shop Private Private Sector The Shack // - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The first issue will include these articles; - Introduction to the LOD/H Technical Journal and Table Of Contents - Editorial: "Is the law a deterrent to computer crime?" by Lex Luthor - Local Area Signalling Services (LASS) by The Videosmith - Identifying and Defeating Physical Security and Intrusion Detection Systems Part I: The Perimeter by Lex Luthor - Traffic Service Position System (TSPS) by The Marauder - Hacking DEC's TOPS-20: Intro by Blue Archer - Building your own Blue Box (Includes Schematic) by Jester Sluggo - Intelligence and Interrogation Processes by Master Of Impact - The Outside Loop Distribution Plant: Part I by Phucked Agent 04 - The Outside Loop Distribution Plant: Part II by Phucked Agent 04 - LOH Telenet Directory: Update #4 (12-9-86) Part I by LOH - LOH Telenet Directory: Update #4 (12-9-86) Part II by LOH - Network News & Notes by "Staff" That's a total of 13 files... That ends the preview, the newsletter is due to be released by January 1, 1987 so watch for it! Information Provided by Lex Luthor & The Legion Of Doom/Hackers Technical Journal Staff _______________________________________________________________________________ Texas Rumors Run Rampant December 24, 1986 ------------------------ Remember all that controversy about Sir Gamelord being Videosmith? Well here's the story... It all started on a conference bridge, where a number of people including Evil Jay, Line Breaker [who, indirectly started all of this], and Blade Runner among others were having a discussion. Line Breaker was telling a story of how Videosmith was a fed, how Videosmith had busted everyone at a phreak con (or something like that), and how he [Line Breaker] and some other people called Videosmith up, pretending to be feds, and got him to admit that he did these things. Blade Runner was terribly pissed at Sir Gamelord (who had recently attempted to take over P.H.I.R.M., which is Blade Runner's group). As a retaliatory strike and after hearing this slander upon Videosmith's name, Blade Runner started telling people that Sir Gamelord was Videosmith. The stories have been getting more and more exaggerated since then but that is all that really happened. [They say everything is bigger in Texas...I guess that includes bullshit too!] Information Provided by Evil Jay _______________________________________________________________________________ The Cracker Disappears December 27, 1986 ---------------------- The rumors and stories are flying around about the disappearance of one Bill Landreth aka The Cracker. Bill Landreth is the author of "Out Of The Inner Circle," a book on hackers that was published a few years back. According to newspaper articles in the San Francisco area, Bill was at a friend's home working on some computer program. His friend stepped out for a while and when he returned, there was a lot of garbage on screen and a suicide message. On Ripco BBS, message was posted about Bill Landreth, stating that he had disappeared, and was once again wanted by the FBI. The message asked that anyone in contact with Bill would tell him to contact his "friends." Most of what is going on right now is bogus rumors. There may be a follow up story in the next PWN. Information Provided By The Prophet/Sir Frances Drake/Elric Of Imrryr _______________________________________________________________________________ U.S. Sprint Screws Up December 24, 1986 --------------------- Taken From the Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinal "He got a 1,400 page bill!" In Montrose, Colorado, Brad Switzer said he thought the box from the U.S. Sprint Long Distance Company was an early Christmas present until he opened it and found that it contained a 1,400 page phone bill. The $34,000 bill was delivered to Switzer's doorstep Monday. He called U.S. Sprint's Denver office, where company officials assured him he was "Off the Hook." A spokesman for U.S. Sprint said that Switzer had mistakenly received U.S. Sprint's own phone bill for long distance calls. Typed For PWN by The Leftist _______________________________________________________________________________