Hacker Crackdown by Bruce Sterling (i have read the book TXT) đ
You can put the book on disks and give the disks away, aslong as you don't take any money for it.
But this book is not public domain. You can't copyrightit in your own name. I own the copyright. Attempts to piratethis book and make money from selling it may involve you in aserious litigative snarl. Believe me, for the pittance you mightwring out of such an action, it's really not worth it. This bookdon't "belong" to you. In an odd but very genuine way, I feel itdoesn't "belong" to me, either. It's a book about the people ofcyberspace, and distributing it in this way is the best way Iknow to actually make this information available, freely andeasily, to all the people of cyberspace--including people faroutside the borders of the United States, who otherwise may neverhave a chance to see any edition of the book, and who may perhapslearn something useful from this strange story of distant,obscure, but por
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So the Secret Serviceâs authority over âunauthorized accessâ to computers covers a lot of territory, but by no means the whole ball of cyberspatial wax. If you are, for instance, a LOCAL computer retailer, or the owner of a LOCAL bulletin board system, then a malicious LOCAL intruder can break in, crash your system, trash your files and scatter viruses, and the U.S. Secret Service cannot do a single thing about it.
At least, it canât do anything DIRECTLY. But the Secret Service will do plenty to help the local people who can.
The FBI may have dealt itself an ace off the bottom of the deck when it comes to Section 1030; but thatâs not the whole story; thatâs not the street. Whatâs Congress thinks is one thing, and Congress has been known to change its mind. The REAL turf-struggle is out there in the streets where itâs happening. If youâre a local street-cop with a computer problem, the Secret Service wants you to know where you can find the real expertise. While the Bureau crowd are off having their favorite shoes polishedâ(wing-tips)âand making derisive fun of the Serviceâs favorite shoesâ(âpansy-ass tasselsâ)âthe tassel-toting Secret Service has a crew of ready-and-able hacker-trackers installed in the capital of every state in the Union. Need advice? Theyâll give you advice, or at least point you in the right direction. Need training? They can see to that, too.
If youâre a local cop and you call in the FBI, the FBI (as is widely and slanderously rumored) will order you around like a coolie, take all the credit for your busts, and mop up every possible scrap of reflected glory. The Secret Service, on the other hand, doesnât brag a lot. Theyâre the quiet types. VERY quiet. Very cool. Efficient. High-tech. Mirrorshades, icy stares, radio ear-plugs, an Uzi machine-pistol tucked somewhere in that well-cut jacket. American samurai, sworn to give their lives to protect our President. âThe granite agents.â Trained in martial arts, absolutely fearless. Every single one of âem has a top-secret security clearance. Something goes a little wrong, youâre not gonna hear any whining and moaning and political buck-passing out of these guys.
The facade of the granite agent is not, of course, the reality. Secret Service agents are human beings. And the real glory in Service work is not in battling computer crimeânot yet, anywayâbut in protecting the President. The real glamour of Secret Service work is in the White House Detail. If youâre at the Presidentâs side, then the kids and the wife see you on television; you rub shoulders with the most powerful people in the world. Thatâs the real heart of Service work, the number one priority. More than one computer investigation has stopped dead in the water when Service agents vanished at the Presidentâs need.
Thereâs romance in the work of the Service. The intimate access to circles of great power; the esprit-de-corps of a highly trained and disciplined elite; the high responsibility of defending the Chief Executive; the fulfillment of a patriotic duty. And as police work goes, the payâs not bad. But thereâs squalor in Service work, too. You may get spat upon by protesters howling abuseâand if they get violent, if they get too close, sometimes you have to knock one of them downâ discreetly.
The real squalor in Service work is drudgery such as âthe quarterlies,â traipsing out four times a year, year in, year out, to interview the various pathetic wretches, many of them in prisons and asylums, who have seen fit to threaten the Presidentâs life. And then thereâs the grinding stress of searching all those faces in the endless bustling crowds, looking for hatred, looking for psychosis, looking for the tight, nervous face of an Arthur Bremer, a Squeaky Fromme, a Lee Harvey Oswald. Itâs watching all those grasping, waving hands for sudden movements, while your ears strain at your radio headphone for the long-rehearsed cry of âGun!â
Itâs poring, in grinding detail, over the biographies of every rotten loser who ever shot at a President. Itâs the unsung work of the Protective Research Section, who study scrawled, anonymous death threats with all the meticulous tools of anti-forgery techniques.
And itâs maintaining the hefty computerized files on anyone who ever threatened the Presidentâs life. Civil libertarians have become increasingly concerned at the Governmentâs use of computer files to track American citizensâ but the Secret Service file of potential Presidential assassins, which has upward of twenty thousand names, rarely causes a peep of protest. If you EVER state that you intend to kill the President, the Secret Service will want to know and record who you are, where you are, what you are, and what youâre up to. If youâre a serious threatâif youâre officially considered âof protective interestââthen the Secret Service may well keep tabs on you for the rest of your natural life.
Protecting the President has first call on all the Serviceâs resources. But thereâs a lot more to the Serviceâs traditions and history than standing guard outside the Oval Office.
The Secret Service is the nationâs oldest general federal law-enforcement agency. Compared to the Secret Service, the FBI are new-hires and the CIA are temps. The Secret Service was founded âway back in 1865, at the suggestion of Hugh McCulloch, Abraham Lincolnâs Secretary of the Treasury. McCulloch wanted a specialized Treasury police to combat counterfeiting. Abraham Lincoln agreed that this seemed a good idea, and, with a terrible irony, Abraham Lincoln was shot that very night by John Wilkes Booth.
The Secret Service originally had nothing to do with protecting Presidents. They didnât take this on as a regular assignment until after the Garfield assassination in 1881. And they didnât get any Congressional money for it until President McKinley was shot in 1901. The Service was originally designed for one purpose: destroying counterfeiters.
There are interesting parallels between the Serviceâs nineteenth-century entry into counterfeiting, and Americaâs twentieth-century entry into computer-crime.
In 1865, Americaâs paper currency was a terrible muddle. Security was drastically bad. Currency was printed on the spot by local banks in literally hundreds of different designs. No one really knew what the heck a dollar bill was supposed to look like. Bogus bills passed easily. If some joker told you that a one-dollar bill from the Railroad Bank of Lowell, Massachusetts had a woman leaning on a shield, with a locomotive, a cornucopia, a compass, various agricultural implements, a railroad bridge, and some factories, then you pretty much had to take his word for it. (And in fact he was telling the truth!)
SIXTEEN HUNDRED local American banks designed and printed their own paper currency, and there were no general standards for security. Like a badly guarded node in a computer network, badly designed bills were easy to fake, and posed a security hazard for the entire monetary system.
No one knew the exact extent of the threat to the currency. There were panicked estimates that as much as a third of the entire national currency was faked. Counterfeitersâknown as âboodlersâ in the underground slang of the timeâwere mostly technically skilled printers who had gone to the bad. Many had once worked printing legitimate currency. Boodlers operated in rings and gangs. Technical experts engraved the bogus platesâ commonly in basements in New York City. Smooth confidence men passed large wads of high-quality, high-denomination fakes, including the really sophisticated stuffâgovernment bonds, stock certificates, and railway shares. Cheaper, botched fakes were sold or sharewared to low-level gangs of boodler wannabes. (The really cheesy lowlife boodlers merely upgraded real bills by altering face values, changing ones to fives, tens to hundreds, and so on.)
The techniques of boodling were little-known and regarded with a certain awe by the mid-nineteenth-century public. The ability to manipulate the system for rip-off seemed diabolically clever. As the skill and daring of the boodlers increased, the situation became intolerable. The federal government stepped in, and began offering its own federal currency, which was printed in fancy green ink, but only on the backâthe original âgreenbacks.â And at first, the improved security of the well-designed, well-printed federal greenbacks seemed to solve the problem; but then the counterfeiters caught on. Within a few years things were worse than ever: a CENTRALIZED system where ALL security was bad!
The local police were helpless. The Government tried offering blood money to potential informants, but this met with little success. Banks, plagued by boodling, gave up hope of police help and hired private security men instead. Merchants and bankers queued up by the thousands to buy privately-printed manuals on currency security, slim little books like Laban Heathâs INFALLIBLE GOVERNMENT COUNTERFEIT DETECTOR. The back of the book offered Laban Heathâs patent microscope for five bucks.
Then the Secret Service entered the picture. The first agents were a rough and ready crew. Their chief was one William P. Wood, a former guerilla in the Mexican War whoâd won a reputation busting contractor fraudsters for the War Department during the Civil War. Wood, who was also Keeper of the Capital Prison, had a sideline as a counterfeiting expert, bagging boodlers for the federal bounty money.
Wood was named Chief of the new Secret Service in July 1865. There were only ten Secret Service agents in all: Wood himself, a handful whoâd worked for him in the War Department, and a few former private investigatorsâcounterfeiting expertsâ whom Wood had won over to public service. (The Secret Service of 1865 was much the size of the Chicago Computer Fraud Task Force or the Arizona Racketeering Unit of 1990.) These ten âOperativesâ had an additional twenty or so âAssistant Operativesâ and âInformants.â Besides salary and per diem, each Secret Service employee received a whopping twenty-five dollars for each boodler he captured.
Wood himself publicly estimated that at least HALF of Americaâs currency was counterfeit, a perhaps pardonable perception. Within a year the Secret Service had arrested over 200 counterfeiters. They busted about two hundred boodlers a year for four years straight.
Wood attributed his success to travelling fast and light, hitting the bad-guys hard, and avoiding bureaucratic baggage. âBecause my raids were made without military escort and I did not ask the assistance of state officers, I surprised the professional counterfeiter.â
Woodâs social message to the once-impudent boodlers bore an eerie ring of Sundevil: âIt was also my purpose to convince such characters that it would no longer be healthy for them to ply their vocation without being handled roughly, a fact they soon discovered.â
William P. Wood, the Secret Serviceâs guerilla pioneer, did not end well. He succumbed to the lure of aiming for the really big score. The notorious Brockway Gang of New York City, headed by William E. Brockway, the âKing of the Counterfeiters,â had forged a number of government bonds. Theyâd passed these brilliant fakes on the prestigious Wall Street investment firm of Jay Cooke and Company. The Cooke firm were frantic and offered a huge reward for the forgersâ plates.
Laboring diligently, Wood confiscated the plates (though not Mr. Brockway) and claimed the reward. But the Cooke company treacherously reneged. Wood got involved in a down-and-dirty lawsuit with the Cooke capitalists. Woodâs boss, Secretary of the Treasury McCulloch, felt that Woodâs demands for money and glory were unseemly, and even when the reward money finally came through, McCulloch refused to pay Wood anything. Wood found himself mired in a seemingly endless round of federal suits and Congressional lobbying.
Wood never got his money. And he lost his job to boot. He resigned in 1869.
Woodâs agents suffered, too. On May 12, 1869, the second Chief of the Secret Service took over, and almost immediately fired most of Woodâs pioneer Secret Service agents: Operatives, Assistants and Informants alike. The practice of receiving $25
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