Current issue : #
65 |
Release date :
11/04/2008 |
Editor :
TCLH
Title : The Underground Myth
==Phrack Inc.==
Volume 0x0c, Issue 0x41, Phile #0x0d of 0x0f
|=-----------------------------------------------------------------------=|
|=-----------------------=[ The Underground Myth ]=----------------------=|
|=-----------------------------------------------------------------------=|
|=---------------------------=[ By Anonymous ]=--------------------------=|
|=-----------------------------------------------------------------------=|
1 - Hacker's Myth
2 - The Security Industry
3 - Black Hat, Two Faces
4 - Technology
5 - Criminals
6 - Forgotten Youth
7 - The Forward Link
-------------
Hacker's Myth
-------------
This is a statement on the fate of the modern underground. There will
be none of the nostalgia, melodrama, black hat rhetoric or white hat
over-analysis that normally accompanies such writing.
Since the early sixties there has been just one continuous hacking
scene. From phreaking to hacking, people came and went, explosions of
activity, various geographical shifts of influence. But although the scene
seemed to constantly redefine itself in the ebb and flow of technology,
it always had a direct lineage to the past, with similar traditions,
culture and spirit.
In the past few years this connection has been completely severed.
And so there's very little point in writing about what the underground
used to be; leave that to the historians. Very little point writing
about what should be done to make everything good again; leave that to
the dreamers and idealists. Instead I'm going to lay down some cold hard
facts about the way things are now, and more importantly, how they came
to be this way.
This is the story of how the underground died.
---------------------
The Security Industry
---------------------
Then in the U.S. music scene there was big changes made
Due to circumstances beyond our control... such as payola
The rock n roll scene died after two years of solid rock
- The Animals, circa 1964
There is little doubt that the explosion of the security industry has
directly coincided with the decline of the hacking scene. The hackers
of the eighties and nineties became the security professionals of the
new millennium, and the community suffered for it.
The fact is that hackers, mostly on an individual basis, decided to
use their passion as a source of income. Whether this is good, bad,
or just pragmatic is completely irrelevant. Nearly all the hackers that
could get jobs did. For the individuals that decision has been made (for
better or worse), and in general there's nothing that will change this.
This was a hacker exodus. What really mattered was not the loss of any
individuals, but the cumulative effect this had on the underground. The
more hackers that left the underground for a corporate life, the fewer
that came in. And those who stayed became entrenched, increasingly
disconnected.
Collaboration in this new age of career hackers has all but ceased to
exist. Individuals are now obsessed with credit. For their career, for
their standing in the community, it must be absolutely clear who this
research, this vulnerability, or even this opinion belongs to.
There is no trust in this corporate community; an underground issue
greatly amplified by corporate motivations. A single person can go months
or even years without telling anyone exactly what he is working on, and
whats more, will be genuinely worried about someone "publishing" their
results before him. There is no respect for the information he holds,
no belief that information should be free, no belief that research should
be open. All that matters is credit; all that matters is fame and money,
their career.
This is purely the fault of the security industry, who has exploited
and cultivated this culture, designed it for their needs. The truly sad
thing is that the corporate security world hasn't realized that they are
sitting on a gold mine, and as a result the mine is likely to collapse;
and likely to take their industry down with it.
The security industry uses information as its sole commodity, information
about insecurity. Who has the information, and who doesn't is what
makes this economy work. Whats more, the economy has been founded on
the continued output of a finite group of hackers. For the most part,
founded on those hackers that came out of the underground scene at their
technical prime.
But these hackers are not going to continue their production
indefinitely. They will lose their technical edge, move on to other
industries, perhaps climb the ladder up to management, and then
retire. The question is, then what? Then it will be up to the new wave
of young security professionals, whose motivation is as much financial
as it is passion for the technology and the thrill of the hacking game.
To imagine that these new wave office workers, university trained and
disinterested, can match the creative output of a genuine hacker is
laughable. The industry will stagnate under these conditions. The rapid
technical advancement we have seen will end, no more breakthroughs:
no more new security products or services. Just the same old techniques
being rehashed again and again until the rock has been bled dry.
I am trying to show you the symbiotic nature of the security industry
and the hacking scene. Industry needs insecurity to survive, there is
no doubt about this. A secure and stable Internet is not profitable for
long. Hackers provided instability, change, chaos. So the industry became
a parasite on the hacking scene, devouring the talent pool without giving
anything back, not thinking of what will happen when there are no more
hackers to consume.
For this reason, the security industry, much like the hacker underground,
is doomed, perhaps even destined for failure. But for now, all that
matters is that we have a thriving industry and...
A hacker underground proclaimed to be dead.
--------------------
Black Hat, Two Faces
--------------------
It would be easy to lay the blame squarely on the shoulders of the
security industry. A lot of people have. Unfortunately, its not that
simple. Perhaps the underground could have survived without the lure of
a six figure job, but one thing should be made clear. The self-proclaimed
black hat movement does nothing to help.
Various black hat groups have claimed to be the voice of the underground,
but the black hat scene was only ever a pale imitation of the actual
underground. The underground wasn't at all interested in public
self-aggrandizement, but this is all the black hats ever did. All that
their various rants and escapades accomplished was to show how desperate
they actually were for fame and recognition.
But whats worse, while they often talk a big game, they very rarely have
the pedigree to back it up. This is mostly because these self-proclaimed
black hats are really just as self-serving as the white hats they pretend
to detest. With few exceptions, those black hats that aren't already
working in the security industry are those that don't have the skills
to cut it.
The entire anti-security theme was simply embarrassing. This was just the
black hat movement admitting that they couldn't step up and represent
in an increasingly technical world. Where once hacking skill commanded
respect, now the black hats were promoting misinformation in order to
make what few hacks they managed to pull off easier. They couldn't step
up to a challenge, they couldn't outsmart the white hats they so detest.
This ineptitude and misguided fervor of the black hat scene had a
massive negative impact on the hacking underground. The true voice of
the underground was lost behind the noise and drama, until the voice
became a whisper.
And then eventually fell silent.
----------
Technology
----------
The very nature of technology, a dynamic and intractable force, had a lot
to say in the demise of the hacking world. In many cases, if a black hat
had been active 5 or 10 years earlier they would have been technically
competent and may well have contributed significantly. This is because
with the utmost respect, and despite all the nostalgia, hackers of the
past had it easy.
In the early years, the problems hackers faced were largely related to the
availability of information. Isolated groups of people had their tricks
and techniques, and sharing this information was problematic. This is
in direct contrast with the situation today, where there is an excess
of information but a void of quality.
As a result of many differing factors, the world is becoming aware of the
threats posed by lax security. When there is money at risk, steps will
be taken to protect those assets. We see now an increasing move towards
technical security mechanisms being employed as part of a defense in
depth strategy, and as a result, to be a hacker today requires immense
technical ability in a broad range of disciplines. It takes years of
individual study to reach this level.
But unfortunately, fewer and fewer people are willing, or indeed capable
of following this path, of pursuing that ever-unattainable goal of
technical perfection. Instead, the current trend is to pursue the lowest
common denominator, to do the least amount of work to gain the most fame,
respect or money.
There has also been an increasingly narrow range in what is published. In
part this is because of the lack of accessibility of certain systems
(through obscurity or price), but this is also increasingly dictated by
fashion. In a desire to fit in with the community, to be accepted in
to conferences, to be seen doing the right things in the right places
with the right people, researchers are all too happy to slot in to this
pattern of predictable and narrow progress.
And even then, the standards of what makes acceptable research, or for
what makes a vulnerability interesting, drops with every year. The gap
between offensive research and defensive implementations continues to
grow, to the point where public vulnerability research has become a
parody of what it once was, a type of inside joke.
There is no creativity, no sense of arcana anymore.
---------
Criminals
---------
From Operation Sundevil to cyber terrorism. The criminalization of
computer hacking and, by association, computer hackers had a devastating
impact on the underground. Hacking was criminalized in two ways, both
of near equal importance: by legislation of computer crimes, and by the
new trend of genuine criminals using hacking as a method for fraud.
There should be a clear separation between these two things. The fact
that the underground collectively became criminals under the law for
what they had been doing for, in some cases, decades. And the fact that
in public perception, even among professionals that should know better,
there was very little distinction between a genuine hacker and those
criminals using hacking purely as a method for profit.
Indeed, little of what organized crime and terrorist/activist groups
are doing could justifiably be labeled hacking. It is simply convenient
to make this simplification, in media and in industry. The security
industry knows the difference, but they have no economic interest in
there being any clarity on this point. Any sort of hacking, anything
they can sensationalize enough to scare their profit margin up suits
them perfectly.
For the underground, these issues largely affected individuals, not the
broader structure of things. Each person had to make a personal decision
on whether it was worth 1) being seen as a criminal under the law and
2) being seen as a criminal in public perception. Why should the hacker
face this when such an easy, safe, respectable alternative is available
in the security industry?
Even the term black hat has been twisted into something more closely
aligned to organized crime. For all their faults, black hats were not
(in theory) motivated by this type of money.
It comes down to an aging hacking population deciding, on an individual
basis, to settle down with their families, their material possessions,
their careers. No one can argue that there is anything wrong with this. It
is just a fact that these hackers left the scene behind.
Leaving a void too large to be filled.
---------------
Forgotten Youth
---------------
The forgotten aspect of this whole story is, without doubt, the importance
of new talent entering the world of hacking. Historically, hacking has
belonged to the young. With every passing year, the average age of hackers
collectively increases. Some would claim this is a sign of a maturing
discipline. For surely, what could youth possibly contribute in this
technological landscape? They call them kids, dismiss them as irrelevant.
Despite all of the issues facing the underground, if hackers had managed
to get this one aspect right, if they had recognized the importance
of those who would come after them, if they had given them something
to aspire to be, if they had directly or indirectly taught them the
accumulated wisdom that so often separates a hacker from the crowd;
then perhaps there still would be a hacker underground.
Nearly all of the situations surrounding the disestablishment of the
underground were circumstantial, there was nobody to blame, and nothing
that could be done. But one point for which this was not true was the
underground's obligations to young hackers. An entire generation of
talented hackers have lost the opportunity to become a part of something
bigger than themselves by participating in a functioning hacking
community, simply because hackers were too self-absorbed to notice.
The decline of the underground scene happened relatively quickly, and
also relatively quietly. The hacker who left the underground behind
for his new life was unlikely to justify or explain his choices. In
fact it was more likely he would deny being changed at all. It's likely
he'd even continue to have contact with his fellow ex-hackers, in some
imitation of the underground scene. This only helped to obscure what
was actually happening.
Today's youth, for the most part, have no true understanding of hackers
or hacking. They have no knowledge of the history, no knowledge that
a history even exists. Their hacker is the media's hacker, the cyber
terrorist, the Russian mafia. This is unfortunate, but the real trouble
begins for those few that somehow become interested enough to look a
bit deeper.
The average person requires some form of role model, something to aspire
to, to imitate and to an extent, to idolize. At this time, the only
visible efforts were the white hat researchers, the black hat horde or
various other technically inept self-proclaimed 'experts'. There is so
little inspiring research, and even less inspiring hacking, that anyone
new to the world of hacking is almost invariably left with a skewed
impression of things.
Indeed, for a lot of the young people that managed to acquire the
necessary technical base, hacking was seen as simply an interesting career
path. There is no passion in these people, no motivation to extend and
create. A competent professional, valued employee.
But no longer a hacker.
----------------
The Forward Link
----------------
The hacker underground has been systematically dismantled, a victim of
circumstance. There was no reason for this, no conspiracy, no winner. A
conquered people, but with no conqueror, no enemy to fight. No chance
of rebellion. Conquered by circumstance, if not fate.
At first this would seem to be a bleak message. What is the point of
even trying anymore? Why practice a dead art? But the truth is that the
art is not dead, just the circle that brought the artists together. The
hacker underground is broken, but the hackers are not.
Casualties have been high; but there still exists a scattered,
marginalized, and misrepresented people who are the hackers. Hackers,
not black hat nor white, not professionals, not amateurs (surely none
of this matters), are still out there in this world today, still with
all the potential to be something great.
The question is not then how to artificially group these people into a
new underground movement. The question is not how to mourn the passing of
the golden days, how to keep the memories alive. There are no questions
of this sort, no problems that can be solved or corrected by individual
action.
All that remains is to relax, to do what you enjoy doing; to hack purely
for the enjoyment of doing so. The rest will come naturally, a new
scene, with its own traditions, culture and history. A new underground,
organically formed over time, just like the first, out of the hacker's
natural inclination to share and explore.
It will take time, and there will be difficulties. Some will not be able
to let go of the past, and some will fail for not remembering it. But
in the end, after everything has been said and done, the equilibrium
will be restored.
A new world, at the frontier of cyberspace, belonging to the hackers
by right.
Nice article, I'm glad others seen this way too. I also think that their isn't too many hacker/computer fanatic in
the new generations either because they pussies to learn + got brainwashed by the stupid media + dumBSC education = no interest.
About the Criminals ( carders, fraudsters ), well most of the ppl simply don't understand how and why these carding
groups operate. I agree they shouldn't be categorized for hackers at all. All of them using tools what underground
programmers provide ( worms, bots, keyloggers, scam pages, mailers ). Most of the ppl who are writing these tools
and selling them online from 2nd, 3rd world shithole countries and they can't get a normal job from various reasons.
Considering that whole Europe is a shithole -for those who dont live there- and the crazy fucked industrialized
education system throwing out the brains every fucking day it's not suprising.
So I telling for those who against the carders, malware writers, blackhats who try to make some money to think about
a bit how would that feel when u can't get a fucking job in 1 year on this fucked up continent then u get a job and
simply got fired cos u don't respect your coworkers etc. reasons, lol?
For everyone who works in the Security industry: eat my shit u fucking cunts, keep continue destroying the hacking
community, hope all of you gonna end up on the streets then got beat to death
youngwannabehacker, if you should read this, feel free to add me on MSN (xerohawk@hotmail.de). I dont know a lot of people my age doing something with computers other than gaming... pretty much what you meant.
If you dont have MSN, just send me a mail to that address and I can give you my ICQ or Xfire.
Xero|Hawk
Sad, but true.
Although I don't think that having or not an Underground scene is the issue - especially in the traditional context and meaning.
Different times - different tools.
The number one reason for the downfall is that, 15 years ago, when I wrote my first BASIC program, money wasn't what it is today.
Also, back in the days there wasn't much to do with a PC except for gaming and coding (games).
Another reason is purely social. Kids now become adults or face adult problems way sooner than us back then. Thus, no proper virtues, no time, no education, no future.
I believe that if one has the spark, is curious enough and over society's bullshits, he or she can grow up to be a good hacker (in the very large meaning of the word).
It's been 1984 for quite some time now, and things will get worse, but this is exactly the right soil for the souls of those who seek true knowledge and true freedom.
Nice article...
I dunno whether the "underground" is alive or dead but all i know is that for this art to survive, people have to stop "claiming" to be the underground or creating a hype about "the scene". Do it for the fun of it without bothering much about other things.Everything else will take care of itself.
"All that remains is to relax, to do what you enjoy doing; to hack purely
for the enjoyment of doing so."<----- this is your only solution!!!
Comment on "Forgotten Youth":
The so called overaging has two reasons:
1) As said in the article the youth isn't interested in digging into the material and the communities. This is because the youth itself automatically identifies computer - interested individuals as nerds or geeks and isolates them. These then try to become part of the group again by giving up hacking. (I have seen this several times at my school)
2)I myself am very interested in hacking, but I try not to show it in public due to 1). In my free time I've been through several communities you could call "the underground". In some of these I've really been harassed because of my age (15 years). This shows that some communities are not only self-absorbed but almost hostile to newcomers.
I think both hackers and youth have to rethink their opinions towards each other.
PS: This is the situation in Germany. With the term "youth" I refer to peolple from the age of 13 - 21.
The underground isn't dead, it has just become too paranoid to let you find it. It is all about people being trustworthy. You know.. loose lips sink ships and all that bullshit. IRC posers leak codes, talk loud, kill bugs, narc on people, etc etc. They haven't spent weeks stewing on one bug, desperate to find a reliable path of execution, so they don't understand the rage felt when someones golden egg hits the mailing lists. Who cares? It wasn't their time spent.. someone will find another bug soon, right? Wrong. Codes get watermarked, moles found out and eventually you have an air-tight vessel. There are still communication mediums loaded with oh-day coding, researching, owning and learning but the only way an outsider is likely to find even the existence of the real underground, is to meet another player inside a high-profile system who may recognize your skill and lend you a friendly hint on where to find like minded individuals, but there are many layers of the onion.. and if you are too inept or pussy to join the party, fuck you, you're not welcome anyway.
Ok, for improve my skills in this days, i have to read like 230230 books, papers, and find some good info about spirit and do the good way of hacking... yeah its true, and the next generation, would have to do the same but with +10301401 books and papers, but they surely will have a cisco Certification CCNA.. so it would be more cool, cuz they can use the firefox for search..
Be a blackhat or whitehat, sysadmin or a bastard, why we should care?, you're too intrested on being a hacker, but you dont want to have fun, you want to see a website with HackEd bY Me!!1 on the index... and maybe share it with your msn friends, at least china ppl skilled, are doing this... they call it revolution or cyberwar, but have no speechs or information about that on their "index", and im talking about this, cuz is the scene of today, defacing .. 2000-2008 is the undergound scene and where people share everything, and of course all is based on websites attack, cuz hijacking tcp sessions with good firewalls sounds dificult, decryption on 128 bits stuff too, and net without firewalls or security appliances... are just stupid targets.. and its more faster have a php shelL doesnt it?... now people even now how the fetching cycle works and they are reading about learning python in 21 days... and if you like computers and get to the university, of course you would learn .NET and Framework and all those fancy stuff... that would makes you a product..
Take things to the next level, being like 102103013 levels, is dificult, just use green letters and black wallpaper on your tty... i dont know skate with your laptop on the backpack and enjoy life, maybe it shouldn't be about hacking mainly for fun, beacuse for get hacking on something, you have to read 2193193291239 papers, so start now?
I have been working in the Security industry for the last 10 years - I have been researching security for 8 years before my professional career started.
And I can relate to this article in a big way. I have worked for some of the so called in Know companies in the UK following industry practices like CESG CHECK or the new Crest certification and all I have to say is, its a cash cow dreamed up by creative individuals who read second hand - old tried and tested security papers. I know personally a number of Check team leaders as well as black hat community experts who can barely explain what a buffer over flow is let alone exploit it - gone are the days when reverse code engineering and assembly programming was a skill needed these days people program in M$ dot net frame work and use automated tools. Look at companies that sell penetration testing as a service all of those companies state they don
i am also 19, and have been trying to learn to "hack" since i was around 10. when i got into high school my motivation moved from computers -> to girls and partying, and i lost my edge for those years. but not only that, it was hard as a 13year old to grasp the concepts. i learned to program very well, wrote utilities, but i was not mature enough to really take it to the next level like some people on this magazine have.
and by next level, i mean coming up with something analogous to what halfdead wrote in his article about mystifiying the debugger. sure, i wrote exploits and all that. but that age is over. i am lucky enough to have experienced the scene right before its demise (circa 1999-2000) for at least a little bit.
but one thing is, this article has made me realize now that i am older, more mature, in college, and have more mental capacity, i can bring it to the next level.
this is also the reason why the scene is dead. early on, you had basic buffer overflows, heap overflows, and format string exploits. now that all of those are eradicated (for the most part, there are still many integer overflows in many major apps), and now that there are so many restrictions (PaX, Grsecurity), its harder for new people to get started. Us people that have experienced what its like to exploit something with relative ease, can relate and see now what Grsecurity and other things have done to make it harder for us.
LONG LIVE THE UNDERGROUND. HACKERS HACK SYSTEMS. HACKERS WRITE 0DAY.
I'm talking to you from another kind of scene, the game-hacking scene. Although I'm therefore not a real hacker, I'm yet a quite young member (< 16) of "my" scene.
Roughly the same problem as in the real scene can be observed here. Money, profit and careers are getting more important than the game-hacking itself and pay-cheat-websites outnumber game-hacking-boards by far. Sadly (?) I'm a part of this whole "money-movement". I'm coding for a pay-website as well, and therefore I MUSTN'T share all the things I found out with others. I know that this doesn't contribute to the scene at all, in fact I'm taking much more than I'm giving, but... there is not really a solution to this situation. Either I'm doing the coding as work (and keep my information private) or I share them. If I did both, the information I gave out would hurt my work, which would be nothing but ineffective.
Ok, I'm quite young and a little pocket money isn't bad, but... maybe I'll have another excuse when I'm older.
Still, as long as the last few educational sites continue to exist, there is hope for "my" scene, because they ensure that there will be new generations of cheaters...
I hope it at least.
Xero|Hawk
I'm another voice of the youth (19 aswell).
I agree to badspyro and your article, because of the source of information and the learning curve.
I disagree to the censorship thing, people did a great job in giving other people ways to circumvent filters.
I'm not the programmer or a prospective hacker , therefore I will never join your force, because the underground is for those people only and very restricted in its contact to other scenes.
Hacking only is not the cure against 1984 or Fahrenheit 451, the infos have to get out to the people and the people are led by technology and media.
I would like to join as a media-activist, uniting the power.
Hacker are so open-minded and creative on the one hand, but very restricted in their actions on the other hand.
Not the best comment, because my thoughts are quite fresh, but may be you get what I was thinking.
Thank you for the spirit.
I'll further add, there is no symbiotic nature between the security industry and the hacker scene. The security industry needs hackers, not the other way around. Once hacking will be dead, it will turn to any other weak link of trust people have one toward the others, until there is no trust left to be, only security measures and access control.
Don't know what to answer to that. Ditto on one side. Yet, some of those critisms are conflicting - and confusing. Antisecurity was not a pathetic attempt at disinforming the public, it was an attempt at raising the awareness of the community on the points that you are actually underlining. Yet, for some reason, you seem to propose that your points are better than theirs were.
What was embarassing is that instead of it resulting in people conscious of the state of things to join forces and denounciate this exodus, as you accurately refer to it, it created conflict, in regard to what was happening, how to fix it, and most laughably, who should take the credit for it. What was embarassing is that everybody's ego had more weight than their concern for what was happening. People started pointing fingers, naming names, pretending they were more righteous than others. Pretty much like you are doing right now. Yet, what did you do to convince people to stop jumping the fence? Threaten them of publishing their emails on the internet? Threats don't work in the long run, only rationality does.
Yet, for all you just said, this piece will probably make history. I hope people will still get to read that in 20 years, so that they remember. Hope this phrack revival will also revive people's minds.
As one of the younger generation (19 at the time of typeing), and having an interest in hacking from an erly age, certany, as far as I can see, there is little or no way that the hacker movement can continue together in any meaningful movement any more, never mind give the information needed to the young people who have the potential to become hackers.
The other major problem thease days is the steep learning curve involved. Most children don't know what programing is, never mind a compiler, or what Hex code can mean. And they can't get to the information either.
With web filters 'guarding' the connections of children all arround the world, there is little if anything that a child can do on the online world without their sys admins, parents or otherwise, knowing and discourageing it.
The meat we get is far past pre-chewed and tasteless. The desert is dryer than ever.
The internet was supposed to be a method of community, a world wide repository of all knowlage, where people, hackers and geeks alike could learn, develop and explore, but with the governments in control, this has all but died. It is not just the hackers underground that has died, it is the entire spirit of the intrernet that has crumbled under the feet of corperations and countries alike.
Something needs to bedone before it is too late, before it reaches Farenheit 451