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357 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
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X/\/ \/\X
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X\/X - Digital Underground - X\/X
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X/\X Story by Mark Bennett. Published in i-D Technology Issue X/\X
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X\/X X\/X
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X/\X Transcribed by Phantasm. 12th September 1992 X/\X
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X/\X Unauthorised Access UK. Online 10.00pm-7.00am. +44-636-708063 X/\X
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They've got a file on you. It's on computer. And that computer is connected
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to a global network. Who's going to stand up for our civil liberties in the
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digital era? Can the anarchic activities of hackers and cyberpunks make them
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freedom fighters for the information age?
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CYBERPUNK
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TECHNOLOGY
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Cyberspace, the Net, Non-Space, or the Electronic Frontier call it what you
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will, but it's out there now, spread across the world like an opulent
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immaterial spider's web, growing as each new computer, telephone or fax
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machine is plugged in, as satellites close continental divides, hooking
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independent phone systems together. It's almost a living entity - the
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backbone is the various telephone exchanges, the limbs the copper and fibre-
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optic links. Increasingly the world is shifting to this unseen plane. Your
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earnings, your purchasing patterns and your poll tax records are processed
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there. You may not realise it exists, but it's part of everyday life. As
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John Barlow, writer and electronic activist puts it, "Cyberspace is the place
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you are when you're on the telephone."
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As life moves to this electronic frontier, politicians and corporations are
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starting to exert increasing control over the new digital realm, policing
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information highways with growing strictness. Before we even realise we're
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there, we may find ourselves boxed into a digital ghetto, denied simple
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rights of access, while corporations and governments agencies make out their
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territory and roam free. So who will oppose the big guys? Who's going to
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stand up for our digital civil liberties? Who has the techno-literacy
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necessary to ask a few pertinent questions about what's going down in
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cyberspace? Perhaps the people who have been living there the longest might
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have a few answers.
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You could argue that hackers have been the most misrepresented of all sub-
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cultures. In the mainstream press they've been cast as full-blown electronic
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folk devils, either dangerous adolescents and electronic vandals or malevolent
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masterminds in the pay of organised crime or evil foreign powers. Others have
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tried to put forward a rather romantic view of hackers as freedom fighters
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for the information age. And the cyberpunk media industry that grew from
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William Gibson and Bruce Sterling's science fiction has mytholised them as
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digital rebels, computer cowboys.
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The truthis more complex. As more and more people explore cyberspace, it's
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becoming harder than ever to make generalisations about a hacker ethic, to
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even figure out what hackers are doing and why. All you can say is that
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between them they have created a genuine digital underground, an electronic
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bohemia where diverse subcultures can take root, where new ideas, dodgy
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tech and weird science can flourish.
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In Europe, the centres for hacking activity are Germany, Holland and
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Italy. UK hacking remains relatively stagnant and disorganised. In part it's
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down to the relatively high cost of computers and telephone calls. In part
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it's down to a difference in attitude. It seems typical that the most famous
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hack in Britain came when two hackers broke into Prince Philip's electronic
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mailbox. As Andrew Ross points out in an essay on the subject in Strange
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Weather, hacking in the UK has a quaint, 'Little England' air about it. Hugo
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Cornwall, author of The Hacker's Handbook, has compared hacking to electronic
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rambling and has suggested developing a kind of Country Code for computer
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ramblers. It's all very benign, a matter of closing gates behind you,
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respecting the lands you cross and never ignoring the 'No Trespassing' signs
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you might encounter. As Ross says, this amounts to a kind of electronic
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feudalism, with digital peasants respecting the inherited land rights of
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information barons and never asking bigger questions about property, state
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surveillance and the activity of corporations and governments.
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The Europeans tend to take a more politicised, sceptical stance. The focus
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for most hacking activity on the continent is the Hamburg-based Chaos
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Computer Club, which organises meetings, lectures, publishes magazines and
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books on the politics of information and holds an annual conference which
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usually draws hackers from around Europe. The club, who's motto is "access
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public data freely while protecting private data firmly", was formed by
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Wau Holland after the publication of the A5 hacking magazine Datenschleuder
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in 1982. An article in the mainstream press stimulated interest and
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subscribers decided to set up the club.
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With home computing a minority hobby in Germany during the mid-'80s, the
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club couldn't really limit itself to one type of computer as a similar club
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in the States might do. Instead it cut across product loyalties and hobbyist
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pettines and brought together all computer users. Similarly, the club aimed
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to be as open-minded about their activites. They weren't just interested in
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swapping access codes and passwords. Instead Datenschleuder published
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informed speculation about the way information technology might develop.
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Realising that the majority of the public were unaccustomed to, and in some
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cases frightened of, the new technology, they attempted to open up and
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demystify thre computerised landscape. Alongside the regular magazine, they
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have published four books on computers and hacking, including the essential
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Die Hacker Bible One which reprints back copies of Datenschleuder and the
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first 50 issues of TAP (aka Technological Assistance Program), a magazine
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put together back in the '70s by phone phreakers (early tech-pranksters who
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gained free phonecalls with gadgets like Blue Boxes and touch pads).
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Like most hackers, the Chaos Club takes a critical stance towards the phone
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companies of the world. As in the UK, the Germans have to live with high
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prices for their phone services, something which has prevented the growth of
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a network of computerised bulletin boards as in the US. In general,
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communications regulations are very restrictive in Germany. Something as
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simple as acquiring an extension telephone requires applications for
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permission, excessive paperwork and extra charges. In this area the club acts
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rather like a technoliterate consumer group, fighting to loosen the phone
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company's monopoly and open up the system's potential to ordinary punters.
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In many ways, the Chaos Club is determinedly respectable, at times more like
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a special interest pressure group than a hacking club. These days they're
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particularly concerned to distance themselves from what they see as
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irresponsible elements within the digital underground, perhaps because some
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of their members have performed some of the most notorious hacks in the
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past. Hackers from the Chaos Club bust into NASA's system in the mid-'80s. In
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addition, three years ago, it became apparent that some of the club's
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members had hacked into Western military computers and tried to sell what
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they found to the KGB. This somewhat sullied the carefully cultivated image
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of openness and responsibility and the club has been through something of a
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crisis. More recently, confidence has picked up and the last two annual
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conferences have attracted around 500 hackers and other interested parties.
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These annual get-togethers have become much more than just illicit swap meets
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for Europe's computer intruders. They're part digital be-in, part electronic
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think tank, part R&D lab, part informal high-tech trade fair. The centrepiece
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is still usually the hacking rooms. Hooked into the phone system by means of
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bundles of illegal extension cords, these feature rows of terminals on which
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visitors could access networks around the world, call up the club's various
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databases or tele-conference with members who couldn't make the event.
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The 1991 event featured a room housing various rudimentary explorations into
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the world of 'brain hacking'. Here people were swapping ideas about the
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possibilities of making a real life version of the electrodes which feature
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in William Gibson's cyberpunk novels and which allow users to jack into a
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network and move from computer to computer purely by thought. The technology
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that was actually up and running was little more than a biofeedback system
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(basically an EEG machine which displays a user's brain waves in order to
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help them to achieve particular frequencies and corresponding mental
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states). Some present were talking about actually developing a brain-
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controlled system, in which information could be moved around the screen
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via something like ESP or telekinesis.
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More functional future tech was demonstrated at the same conference by John
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Draper, aka Captain Crunch, one of the first phone phreakers and a legend in
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hacking circles, who had been flown in by the Virtual Travel Project, an
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organisation designed to bring East and West together via technology. He
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brought along an old Panasonic videophone which comes complete with a two
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inch square display lens and a small camera. When hooked up to standard
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telephone lines, the videophone can transmit still images taken by the built
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in camera and transmit them to a similar telephone or computer equipped with
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the right software. Draper was able to visually connect with the US in a
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conference call that hooked up Hamburg, New York, the Electronic Cafe in
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Santa Cruz in California and San Francisco.
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Although the Chaos Club is the best-known European hacking group, others are
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beginning to achieve a higher profile, particularly the self-styled Italian
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Cyberpunks, who are based in Milan and produce the magazine Decoder, which
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reads like a politically tougher version of Mondo 2000 and mixes hacker info
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and socio-political opinion pieces on information technology with interviews
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with the likes of William Gibson, underground comics and scratchy DIY
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graphics. With its roots in Italian anarchist traditions and connections to
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the free radio movement of the '70's, the Cyberpunks have tried to theorise
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hacker activity and present it as a coherent form of political
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protest. They're taken relatively seriously by Italian society at large and
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their recently published Cyberpunk Anthology managed to make it onto the
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bestseller list for several weeks. They are currently working on an English
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translation which they hope to publish here (in the UK) by the Summer.
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Like the Chaos Club, the Cyberpunks are less hung up on getting hold of the
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latest technology and more interested in educating the public and spreading
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information. Invited to participate in the Santarcangelo Arts Festival, held
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in Rimini last Summer, they organised lectures on virtual reality and multi-
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media, flying in speakers from Germany and Britain and running an
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'information wall'. This comprised of a wall of old TVs playing feeds which
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were processed by an Amiga video editing system and mixed raw footage of the
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festival events, computer graphics and the Cyberpunks' own videos. There
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were also plans to set up a pirate TV station and broadcast in a narrow 2km
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band towards Rimini. Unfortunately, after technical problems and concern
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voiced by members of the Mutoid Waste Company (also present at the festival)
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that the material transmitted might be X rated, this had to be called off.
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Whilst groups in Europe seem to be gradually evolving into artful campaigners
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and consciousness-raising pranksters, the majority of US hackers have
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remained simple tech freaks. However, things may be changing. US hacker
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culture has been going through a crisis in the last two years. In a full-
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blown moral panic, they have been systematically hunted down by the Secret
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Service and have become the focus for hysteria reminiscent of the red scares
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of the '50s. (A time magazine cover from 1988 talked about "The Invasion Of
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The Data Snatchers".)
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Things began to happen in January 1990 as the Secret Service began to arrest
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members of The Legion Of Doom, one of the most celebrated US hacker groups,
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on suspicion of having entered the computer systems of the Bell South
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company. Although in many cases no charges were filed, electronic equipment
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and discs were confiscated. things came to a head with Operation Sun Devil
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in May 1990, which involved 28 raids in 14 days; 42 computers and 23,000
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discs were confiscated, many of which have never been returned. Government
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agents carried out dawn raids on teenage bedrooms across the US, confiscating
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calculators and answerphones. All quite comical. Except things began to get
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more serious. Raids became like precision strikes on terrorists and teenagers
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found themselves threatened with jail sentences for accessing computer
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systems with no password, copying files or just being vaguely
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mischievous. Their offence might have been no more than the electronic
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equivalent of walking on the grass or breaking and entering, but the
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punishment they faced was ten times more severe.
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In addition, the authorities began to target and close down electronic
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bulletin boards. In the States, there are now boards for every obsession
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going, every hobby, belief, vice or fad. So many that regulation of the kind
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of information being circulated is increasingly difficult. For that reason,
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it has been argued that the powers that be don't like the idea of boards
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per se. Although a lot of the information that is circulated on some of the
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more underground boards (how to build bombs, for example) is available
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elsewhere, they feel spooked by the thougth that it can be accessed by
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anyone with a computer.
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They feel particularly spooked by the idea of hacker bulletin boards, and
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have begun to charge people merely for allowing 'dangerous information' to
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pass through their systems.
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Hacker reaction to all this has been varied. After receiving prison sentences
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for their activities, the majority of the Legion Of Doom have decided to go
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legit and have set up as Comsec Data Security Corporation, a computer
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protection consultancy. Others have taken a campaigning stance reminiscent
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of the Europeans. The East Coast hacker quarterly 2600, which published
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hardcore hacking info on phreaking and accessing computer networks, has tried
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to highlight the hypocrisy of the hacker busts. "An individual cannot take
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a big credit checking corporation like TRW to court because they collect
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personal data on them without his or her permission," 2600 editor Emmanuel
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Goldstein comments. "But TRW could claim its privacy was violated if a hacker
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figures out how to access their system." Whats wrong with this picture...
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Other organisations have been set up to raise concern about civil liberties
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and freedom of speech, the most high profile being the Electronic Frontier
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Foundation, which was set up by Mitch Kapor, a millionaire software pioneer,
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along with other big cheeses from the computer industry (including Steve
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Wozniak of Apple, an ex-phone phreaker), as a direct response to anti-hacking
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hysteria. A self-confessed hacker/software pirate in the '70s, Kapor is
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worried that the current panic may lead to the formation of restrictive
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regulations which may hamper the development of cyberspace in the
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future. However he isn't in favour of legalising hacking. He thinks hackers
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should still be punished.
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Although the EFF has had some success in its moves to end Secret Service
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excesses, not all hackers are happy with the way it draws a line between the
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old '60s hackers and modern computer intruders. "There are a lot of
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similarities between these 15-year-olds who are playing around in corporate
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computers and the 40-year-olds who played around with phones and are now
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writing software somewhere," comments Emmanuel Goldstein. "They may be legit
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now, but they weren't always legitimate". Goldstein is also sceptical of the
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'cyberpunk' tag which hackers appropriated from the fiction of William Gibson
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and Bruce Sterling, dismissing it as a fashion thing. Whilst it may have
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helped to give hackers a sense of identity, the image of leather-clad
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anti-social rebels backfired when the authorities started to take it
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seriosly.
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Something which places original cyberpunk writers like Bruce Sterling in a
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tricky position. "I've had law enforcement people tell me that if they see a
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copy of (William Gibson's) Neuromancer in a kid's bedroom when they're doing
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a raid, they know he's bad, he's gone," he observes. "There are people who
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use the word 'cyberpunk' as a synonym for computer criminal now. There's
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little that we can do about it really." Except write a book, something
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Sterling decided to do when anti-hacker hysteria reached his home town of
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Austin, Texas. The Chicago Computer Fraud and Abuse Task Force seized
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hardware and software from a texas SF publisher and made statements to the
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local press that cyberpunks were dangerous. "Being quite well-known as a
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cyberpunk myself, I thought I'd better find out what was going on". The
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results of his investigations will be published as The Hacker Crackdown in
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October in the US.
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As an outsider, Sterling offers a refreshingly sceptical perspective on the
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scene. Of the 5,000 or so hackers currently practicing in the States, he says
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the majority are just mischievous teens, electronic joyriders who are more
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curious than malicious. Most of them don't hack beyond the age of 22. They
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get bored and get a life outside of cyberspace. He laughs off the idea that
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hackers might be seen as radicals. "The idea that these are like fresh-faced
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idealistic genius kids who are linked arm-in-arm to deal a telling blow to
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the establishment is just bullshit. They all hate each other's guts. They
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turn each other in at the drop of a hat."
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Far from being proto-political rebels, he argues that young US hackers are
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actually political footballs, part of a larger game which is about the future
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and management of cyberspace. Thats why the rich software entrepreneurs of
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the Electronic Frontier Foundation have become involved. "The EFF and their
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civil liberties fellow travellers are an interest group like any other. They
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shouldn't be shrouded in this air of 'Oh they're old '60s people, look how
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idealistic and non-materialistic they are. These guys are pretty sharp
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operators who've made a lot of money in the computer industry, and would now
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like to get their mouse gripping mitts on some lever of political power that
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is consonant with the amount of money they have and the influence they wield
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in the business world".
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A cynic might argue that the EFF aren't just concerned with the freedom of
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speech. They really want to make sure that in the heat of hacker hysteria, a
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set of excessive laws don't get passed which might restrict their business
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operations in the future. This kind of thing is only to be expected, since
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as Sterling says, the electronic community is expanding daily. In the rush to
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go digital, hackers may even find themselves sidelined. "Every aspect of
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society is moving into electronic networking and that includes hippies,
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criminals, lawyers, politicians, bikers, knitting societies, even cops. Cops
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have their own bulletin boards now. There are hacker cops. All these
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subcultures and sub-groups are moving in, and in a while what was once called
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hacker culture may get swamped by other kinds of electronic bohemia."
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US hackers may have acted as the pioneers of the new electronic
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landscape. But like the real pioneers who first explored the American West,
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they may find it difficult to find a foothold in the new communities they
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helped to create. The simple thing is to go in to business for the people
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they formerly thought of as the enemy. Alternatively they could band together
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in informal vaguely politicised pressure groups like the Europeans. But they
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need to update their act. Otherwise they could even wind up a dying
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breed. "In the end the thing about American hackers that'll kill them off is
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that they're dilettantes," Sterling concludes. "They're not getting any
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money for this. They're doing it for free, because it's like a cool
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subculture do. They're doing it for power and knowledge. But anything these
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jerk-offs can do for power and knowledge, a real operator can do for a lot
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of money."
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The pioneer age is over. The Net is here to grow. And as the digital
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community expands and corporate control of computerised data increases,
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hackers will have to raise their political consciousness if they intend to
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fulfil their mythical role as electronic watchmen.
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CONTACTS
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Italian Cyberpunk magazine and book: Dutch hacking magazine:
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Decoder Hack-Tic
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Shake Edizioni PO Box 22953
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Via Cesare Balbo 10 1100 DL Amsterdam
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20136 Milan, Italy The Netherlands
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2600 Magazine - subscriptions, back issues and uncut NTSC video:
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2600 Subscription Dept
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PO Box 752
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Middle Island
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New York 11953-0752
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USA
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Tel: 0101 516 751 2600
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Back issues of TAP can be found in the classified section of 2600.
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Die Hacker Bible 1 is available in bookshops in Germany.
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Transcribed by Phantasm. 12th September 1992
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Downloaded From P-80 Systems 304-744-2253
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