Underground by Suelette Dreyfus (top rated books of all time txt) 📕
The critics have been good to `Underground', for which I am verygrateful. But the best praise came from two of the hackers detailed inthe book. Surprising praise, because while the text is free of thenarrative moralising that plague other works, the selection of materialis often very personal and evokes mixed sympathies. One of the hackers,Anthrax dropped by my office to say `Hi'. Out of the blue, he said witha note of amazement, `When I read those chapters, it was so real, as ifyou had been right there inside my head'. Not long after Par, half aworld away, and with a real tone of bewildered incredulity in his voicemade exactly the same observation. For a writer, it just doesn't get anybetter than that.
By releasing this book for free on the Net, I'm hoping more peoplewill not only enjoy the story of how the international computerunderground rose to power, but also make
Read free book «Underground by Suelette Dreyfus (top rated books of all time txt) 📕» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Suelette Dreyfus
- Performer: 1863305955
Read book online «Underground by Suelette Dreyfus (top rated books of all time txt) 📕». Author - Suelette Dreyfus
Yeah, this is Par. And to all those faggots from the Secret Service who keep calling and hanging up, well, lots of luck. ‘Cause, I mean, you’re so fucking stupid, it’s not even funny.
I mean, if you had to send my shit to Apple Computers [for analysis], you must be so stupid, it’s pitiful. You also thought I had blue-boxing equipment [for phreaking]. I’m just laughing trying to think what you thought was a blue box. You are so lame.
Oh well. And anyone else who needs to leave me a message, go ahead. And everyone take it easy and leave me some shit. Alright. Later.
Despite the bravado, paranoia took hold of Par as it never had before. If he saw a cop across the street, his breath would quicken and he would turn and walk in the opposite direction. If the cop was heading toward him, Par crossed the street and turned down the nearest alley. Police of any type made him very nervous.
By the autumn of 1989, Par had made his way to a small town in North Carolina. He found a place to stop and rest with a friend who used the handle The Nibbler and whose family owned a motel. A couple of weeks in one place, in one bed, was paradise. It was also free, which meant he didn’t have to borrow money from Theorem, who helped him out while he was on the run.
Par slept in whatever room happened to be available that night, but he spent most of his time in one of the motel chalets Nibbler used in the off-season as a computer room. They spent days hacking from Nibbler’s computer. The fugitive had been forced to sell off his inexpensive laptop before arriving in North Carolina.
After a few weeks at the motel, however, he couldn’t shake the feeling that he was being watched. There were too many strangers coming and going. He wondered if the hotel guests waiting in their cars were spying on him, and he soon began jumping at shadows. Perhaps, he thought, the Secret Service had found him after all.
Par thought about how he could investigate the matter in more depth.
One of The Atlanta Three hackers, The Prophet, called Nibbler occasionally to exchange hacking information, particularly security bugs in Unix systems. During one of their talks, Prophet told Par about a new security flaw he’d been experimenting with on a network that belonged to the phone company.
The Atlanta Three, a Georgia-based wing of The Legion of Doom, spent a good deal of time weaving their way through BellSouth, the phone company covering the south-eastern US. They knew about phone switching stations the way Par knew about Tymnet. The Secret Service had raided the hackers in July 1989 but had not arrested them yet, so in September The Prophet continued to maintain an interest in his favourite target.
Par thought the flaw in BellSouth’s network sounded very cool and began playing around in the company’s systems. Dial up the company’s computer network, poke around, look at things. The usual stuff.
It occurred to Par that he could check out the phone company’s records of the motel to see if there was anything unusual going on. He typed in the motel’s main phone number and the system fed back the motel’s address, name and some detailed technical information, such as the exact cable and pair attached to the phone number. Then he looked up the phone line of the computer chalet. Things looked odd on that line.
The line which he and Nibbler used for most of their hacking showed a special status: `maintenance unit on line’.
What maintenance unit? Nibbler hadn’t mentioned any problems with any of the motel’s lines, but Par checked with him. No problems with the telephones.
Par felt nervous. In addition to messing around with the phone company’s networks, he had been hacking into a Russian computer network from the computer chalet. The Soviet network was a shiny new toy. It had only been connected to the rest of the world’s global packet-switched network for about a month, which made it particularly attractive virgin territory.
Nibbler called in a friend to check the motel’s phones. The friend, a former telephone company technician turned freelancer, came over to look at the equipment. He told Nibbler and Par that something weird was happening in the motel’s phone system. The line voltages were way off.
Par realised instantly what was going on. The system was being monitored. Every line coming in and going out was probably being tapped, which meant only one thing. Someone—the phone company, the local police, the FBI or the Secret Service—was onto him.
Nibbler and Par quickly packed up all Nibbler’s computer gear, along with Par’s hacking notes, and moved to another motel across town. They had to shut down all their hacking activities and cover their tracks.
Par had left programs running which sniffed people’s passwords and login names on a continual basis as they logged in, then dumped all the information into a file on the hacked machine. He checked that file every day or so. If he didn’t shut the programs down, the log file would grow until it was so big the system administrator would become curious and have a look. When he discovered that his system had been hacked he would close the security holes. Par would have problems getting back into that system.
After they finished tidying up the hacked systems, they gathered up all Par’s notes and Nibbler’s computer equipment once again and stashed them in a rented storage space. Then they drove back to the motel.
Par couldn’t afford to move on just yet. Besides, maybe only the telephone company had taken an interest in the motel’s phone system. Par had done a lot of poking and prodding of the telecommunications companies’ computer systems from the motel phone, but he had done it anonymously. Perhaps BellSouth felt a little curious and just wanted to sniff about for more information. If that was the case, the law enforcement agencies probably didn’t know that Par, the fugitive, was hiding in the motel.
The atmosphere was becoming oppressive in the motel. Par became even more watchful of the people coming and going. He glanced out the front window a little more often, and he listened a little more carefully to the footsteps coming and going. How many of the guests were really just tourists? Par went through the guest list and found a man registered as being from New Jersey. He was from one of the AT&T corporations left after the break-up of Bell Systems. Why on earth would an AT&T guy be staying in a tiny hick town in North Carolina? Maybe a few Secret Service agents had snuck into the motel and were watching the chalet.
Par needed to bring the paranoia under control. He needed some fresh air, so he went out for a walk. The weather was bad and the wind blew hard, whipping up small tornadoes of autumn leaves. Soon it began raining and Par sought cover in the pay phone across the street.
Despite having been on the run for a few months, Par still called Theorem almost every day, mostly by phreaking calls through bulk telecommunications companies. He dialled her number and they talked for a bit. He told her about how the voltage was way off on the motel’s PABX and how the phone might be tapped. She asked how he was holding up. Then they spoke softly about when they might see each other again.
Outside the phone box, the storm worsened. The rain hammered the roof from one side and then another as the wind jammed it in at strange angles. The darkened street was deserted. Tree branches creaked under the strain of the wind. Rivulets rushed down the leeward side of the booth and formed a wall of water outside the glass. Then a trash bin toppled over and its contents flew onto the road.
Trying to ignore to the havoc around him, Par curled the phone handset into a small protected space, cupped between his hand, his chest and a corner of the phone booth. He reminded Theorem of their time together in California, of two and a half weeks, and they laughed gently over intimate secrets.
A tree branch groaned and then broke under the force of the wind. When it crashed on the pavement near the phone booth, Theorem asked Par what the noise was.
`There’s a hurricane coming,’ he told her. `Hurricane Hugo. It was supposed to hit tonight. I guess it’s arrived.’
Theorem sounded horrified and insisted Par go back to the safety of the motel immediately.
When Par opened the booth door, he was deluged by water. He dashed across the road, fighting the wind of the hurricane, staggered into his motel room and jumped into bed to warm up. He fell asleep listening to the storm, and he dreamed of Theorem.
Hurricane Hugo lasted more than three days, but they felt like the safest three days Par had spent in weeks. It was a good bet that the Secret Service wouldn’t be conducting any raids during a hurricane. South Carolina took the brunt of Hugo but North Carolina also suffered massive damage. It was one of the worst hurricanes to hit the area in decades. Winds near its centre reached more than 240 kilometres per hour, causing 60 deaths and $7 billion in damages as it made its way up the coast from the West Indies to the Carolinas.
When Par stepped outside his motel room one afternoon a few days after the storm, the air was fresh and clean. He walked to the railing outside his second-storey perch and found himself looking down on a hive of activity in the car park. There were cars. There was a van. There was a collection of spectators.
And there was the Secret Service.
At least eight agents wearing blue jackets with the Secret Service emblem on the back.
Par froze. He stopped breathing. Everything began to move in slow motion. A few of the agents formed a circle around one of the guys from the motel, a maintenance worker named John, who looked vaguely like Par. They seemed to be hauling John over the coals, searching his wallet for identification and quizzing him. Then they escorted him to the van, presumably to run his prints.
Par’s mind began moving again. He tried to think clearly. What was the best way out? He had to get back into his room. It would give him some cover while he figured out what to do next. The photos of Theorem flashed through his mind. No way was he going to let the Secret Service get hold of those. He needed to stash them and fast.
He could see the Secret Service agents searching the computer chalet. Thank God he and Nibbler had moved all the equipment. At least there was nothing incriminating in there and they wouldn’t be able to seize all their gear.
Par breathed deeply, deliberately, and forced himself to back away from the railing toward the door to his room. He resisted the urge to dash into his room, to recoil from the scene being played out below him. Abrupt movements would draw the agents’ attention.
Just as Par began to move, one of the agents turned around. He scanned the two-storey motel complex and his gaze quickly came to rest on Par. He looked Par dead in the eye.
This is it, Par thought. I’m screwed. No way out of here now. Months on the run only to get done in a hick town in North Carolina. These guys are gonna haul my ass away for good. I’ll never see the light of day again. Elimination is the only option.
While these thoughts raced through Par’s mind, he
Comments (0)