T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
82.1 | | VAXUUM::DYER | | Thu Dec 06 1984 22:22 | 4 |
| His SSN is 987-65-4321. His home address is 1313 Mockingbird Lane.
His phone number is 867-5309.
(-: :-)
<_Jym_>
|
82.2 | | CASTOR::[7,44] | | Sat Dec 08 1984 20:43 | 5 |
| AH, THE GOOD OLD ALL PURPOSE PHONE NUMBER! I REMEMBER IT FROM A PREVIOUS
NOTE MANY MOONS AGO. IT DOES BRING UP THE POINT AS THE WHETHER THE
INFORMATION ACTUALLY POSTED IS CORRECT. DID THE REPORTER CONFIRM OR DENY
IT?
|
82.3 | | SPRITE::MCVAY | | Sun Dec 09 1984 19:53 | 7 |
| Unfortunately, these sort of tactics seem to prove the point: Hackers
really ARE dangerous and unlawful!! I feel like a Harley motorcycle
salesman trying to explain his job (and clients) at a church social
hour.
C'mon guys, clean up the act, huh? There's plenty of room to hack
without getting rough about it...
|
82.4 | | ACE::BREWER | | Tue Dec 11 1984 19:45 | 6 |
| ...Although I agree... (-.1) explain that to a 14 yr old!!!
-John
|
82.5 | | VAXUUM::DYER | | Wed Dec 12 1984 13:21 | 3 |
| Hey, it's a free country! I'll post those numbers and addresses if
I want to! So there!
<_Jym_>
|
82.6 | | NACHO::CONLIFFE | | Wed Dec 12 1984 13:30 | 3 |
| so Jym, you won't object when I post your SSN, home phone, salary info....
(possibly this should be moved to the SOAPBOX)
|
82.7 | | REX::MINOW | | Thu Dec 13 1984 10:07 | 18 |
| Showing how bad TRW's security is, and how sensitive the information
they have collected on you is, may be a good first step to getting
some data privacy laws enacted.
The Swedish data privacy laws, which are now 12 years old or thereabouts
were written -- in part -- as a reaction to the fact that TRW and
a few other multinationals (Reader's Digest, I think) were collecting
the civil registry change-of-address tapes every month. These
include such things as civil status, taxable income, and whether
or not you have a weapon license (all public information in Sweden).
The government felt that, while the information could not be made
non-accessable given Swedish law, it was important for the public
interest to limit its use.
The law seems to work well (and, yes, it doesn't require you to
have a permit for your Christmas card file).
Martin.
|
82.8 | | VAXUUM::DYER | | Fri Dec 14 1984 12:51 | 3 |
| Nigel, there's a big difference between you posting info about me and
me posting the info I did in .1.
<_Jym_>
|
82.9 | | ACE::BREWER | | Fri Dec 14 1984 19:17 | 5 |
| Ya got at least two, Jym!
"Jenny dont change that number ___-____"
:->
|
82.10 | | EDSVAX::CRESSEY | | Mon Dec 17 1984 11:08 | 6 |
| re .9 & .1:
Is it time to spill the beans?
Dave
|
82.11 | | AMBER::KAEPPLEIN | | Wed Dec 19 1984 15:07 | 15 |
| I read that blurb in USA Today on the flight to DECUS. It was the only
newspaper on the plane, I couldn't find a real newspaper. The front page
story was about Nancy buying Ron a pickup truck for Christmas, and about
how all American pick ups and apple pie are. Gag me.
Anyway, later in the week some network news program had a story about it.
It seems the cretins had an "electronic trial" and declared him "guilty"
of all sorts of mean nasty things (with 27 8x10 glossy photographs...).
There were only a couple rabid hackers. They put his VISA number on
BBoards and about $100 got charged. He changed his card number, they published
the new one. He wrote a new story in Newsweek explaining his harassment.
I didn't read it, but gather he was kinder to the cretins.
The cretins had a new "trial" and found him not guilty. The writer now
lives in peace.
|
82.12 | | EDSVAX::CRESSEY | | Thu Dec 20 1984 11:29 | 42 |
| I think that part of the emotional appeal that "hackers" have for many
people is that they somehow symbolize the individual who beats the
system. The sense of cosmic justice is further extended by the fact that
hackers are using the system against itself. Our emotional tie to the
rebel is that we all see ourselves as victimized by the system, and
secretly gloat when the system is beaten, even if most of our lives are
devoted to propping up the system.
Some people extend this feeling to airline hijackers. D.B.Cooper, who
hijacked an airliner for profit, and eluded capture by parachuting from
the rear staircase of a 727 in flight became a sort of cult hero. He
probably endangered the lives of over a hundred passengers. When the
first hijacking of a Cuban airliner to Florida occurred (years before the
first hijacking TO Cuba), the US Government gave the hijackers political
asylum, and conveyed to the world that people who beat the evil Communist
system that way were heroes and not criminals. I'm sure the government
would rather not be reminded of that today, given the recent hijack/murder
that occurred in the middle east, and our demands for extradition or
punishment of the criminals.
The arrogance of the hackers who held a "trial" should not be under-
estimated. In the first place, the trial is a mock trial not a real
one, in the sense that the hackers do not, to my knowledge, claim to
be a government. We can compare this mock trial to the ones held in
Sweden about a decade ago, in which the US and some of its officials
wre tried for "war crimes" in Vietnam. These trials were really a
political statement of precepts ranging from "All wars are wrong" to
"Some actions, by some participants, in some wars are wrong". The
comparable political statement in the current case is: "Freedom of
expression is expendable in the interest of power for self appointed
information technology wizards." That is a chilling statement.
I have been, and remain, in favor of hacking as a kind of infotech
theatre of the absurd, and occasionally smile at "pranks", provided
they are clearly identified as such. I think I even have some of the
sneaking vengeful feelings towards "the system" that I criticized
earlier. But I strongly urge all of us who share such feelings to
dissociate ourselves very clearly from the people who are willing
to use hackery as an offensive weapon against people who exercise
their own rights.
Dave Cressey (hiding in Argentina)
|
82.13 | | LATOUR::AMARTIN | | Fri Dec 28 1984 07:16 | 13 |
| At 6:40 this morning, I accidentally tuned into WCAU-AM to hear two vapid
drive-time DJ's discussing the case. (WCAU is in Philadelphia, and I am in
Hudson, Mass.) They asserted that the word "hacker" meant "someone who
breaks into computers". They engaged in a discussion as to whether
"war gaming" predated "hacking" or not (no context on whether they meant
playing hexagonal grid war simulation games, or breaking into NORAD computers
and starting WWIII). If it was a talk show, I would have called them up,
but it seemed to be merely interest filler which the station was using with
no concern about accuracy.
Could someone please find out the names of those DJ's so we can post their
credit card numbers?
/AHM/THX
|
82.14 | | NY1MM::KURZMAN | | Fri Jan 04 1985 17:18 | 20 |
| Re .-2: The successful hijacking was not actually done by jumping out the
rear door. Supposedly (according to someone in jail for something else
but knows more details about the hijacking than anyone who didn't do it
themselves): the money was thrown out the rear door, but Cooper actually
hid above the ceiling tiles in the lavaratory. He then stayed above there
while the plane was searched, fixed, flown to a new location, and FINALLY
took passengers. Then, when the passengers were in the air, he joined them
and lived happily ever after until he got busted for something else.
He used to run weapons, etc., and was a pilot, but I don't remember what
he's in jail for right now. Of the 3 bags (hefty I believe) he threw out
the door, the people in the boat down below only found 2 of them (each bag
had an electronic beeper). The third bag was not found. Several years later
(and after he told this story), there was a bunch of money found washed up
on the very body of water where he said he had tossed the bags.
If you are really interested in this, the interview with him was in an issue
of the Sunday Long Island Newsday Magazine Section. (within the last 5 months).
Believe at your own judgement.
|
82.15 | | FKPK::KONING | | Wed Jan 09 1985 18:11 | 3 |
| Re .7: somehow it seems strange to have privacy laws to keep public
data private...
Paul
|