Underground by Suelette Dreyfus (top rated books of all time txt) đź“•
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
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Hijacked? Day’s comment took Mendax by surprise. What surprised him was not that Day suspected him of hijacking the line, but rather that he didn’t know whether the line had been manipulated.
`Well, don’t you know?’ he taunted Day.
For the next half hour, Day and the other officers picked apart Mendax’s telephone, trying to work out what sort of shenanigans the hacker had been up to. They made a series of calls to see if the long-haired youth had somehow rewired his telephone line, perhaps to make his calls untraceable.
In fact, the dial tone on Mendax’s telephone was the very normal sound of a tone-dial telephone on an ARE-11 telephone exchange. The tone was simply different from the ones generated by other exchange types, such as AXE and step-by-step exchanges.
Finally Mendax was allowed to call a lawyer at Alphaline. The lawyer warned the hacker not to say anything. He said the police could offer a sworn statement to the court about anything the hacker said, and then added that the police might even be wired.
Next, Day tried the chummy approach at getting information from the hacker. `Just between you and me, are you Mendax?’ he asked.
Silence.
Day tried another tactic. Hackers have a well-developed sense of ego—a flaw Day no doubt believed he could tap into.
`There have been a lot of people over the years running around impersonating you—using your handle,’ he said.
Mendax could see Day was trying to manipulate him but by this stage he didn’t care. He figured that the police already had plenty of evidence that linked him to his handle, so he admitted to it.
Day had some other surprising questions up his sleeve.
`So, Mendax, what do you know about that white powder in the bedroom?’
Mendax couldn’t recall any white powder in the bedroom. He didn’t do drugs, so why would there be any white powder anywhere? He watched two police officers bringing two large red toolboxes in the house—they looked like drug testing kits. Jesus, Mendax thought. I’m being set up.
The cops led the hacker into the bedroom and pointed to two neat lines of white powder laid out on a bench.
Mendax smiled, relieved. `It’s not what you think,’ he said. The white powder was glow-in-the-dark glue he had used to paint stars on the ceiling of his child’s bedroom.
Two of the cops started smiling at each other. Mendax could see exactly what was going through their minds: It’s not every cocaine or speed user that can come up with a story like that.
One grinned at the other and exclaimed gleefully, `TASTE TEST!’
`That’s not a good idea,’ Mendax said, but his protests only made things worse. The cops shooed him into another room and returned to inspect the powder by themselves.
What Mendax really wanted was to get word through to Prime Suspect. The cops had probably busted all three IS hackers at the same time, but maybe not. While the police investigated the glue on their own, Mendax managed to sneak a telephone call to his estranged wife and asked her to call Prime Suspect and warn him. He and his wife might have had their differences, but he figured she would make the call anyway.
When Mendax’s wife reached Prime Suspect later that night, he replied, `Yeah, there’s a party going on over here too.’
Mendax went back in to the kitchen where an officer was tagging the growing number of possessions seized by the police. One of the female officers was struggling to move his printer to the pile. She smiled sweetly at Mendax and asked if he would move it for her. He obliged.
The police finally left Mendax’s house at about 3 a.m. They had spent three and half hours and seized 63 bundles of his personal belongings, but they had not charged him with a single crime.
When the last of the unmarked police cars had driven away, Mendax stepped out into the silent suburban street. He looked around. After making sure that no-one was watching him, he walked to a nearby phone booth and rang Trax.
`The AFP raided my house tonight.’ he warned his friend. `They just left.’
Trax sounded odd, awkward. `Oh. Ah. I see.’
`Is there something wrong? You sound strange,’ Mendax said.
`Ah. No … no, nothing’s wrong. Just um … tired. So, um … so the feds could … ah, be here any minute …’ Trax’s voice trailed off.
But something was very wrong. The AFP were already at Trax’s house, and they had been there for 10 hours.
The IS hackers waited almost three years to be charged. The threat of criminal charges hung over their heads like personalised Swords of Damocles. They couldn’t apply for a job, make a friend at TAFE or plan for the future without worrying about what would happen as a result of the AFP raids of 29 October 1991.
Finally, in July 1994, each hacker received formal charges—in the mail. During the intervening years, all three hackers went through monumental changes in their lives.
Devastated by the break-down of his marriage and unhinged by the AFP raid, Mendax sank into a deep depression and consuming anger. By the middle of November 1991, he was admitted to hospital.
He hated hospital, its institutional regimens and game-playing shrinks. Eventually, he told the doctors he wanted out. He might be crazy, but hospital was definitely making him crazier. He left there and stayed at his mother’s house. The next year was the worst of his life.
Once a young person leaves home—particularly the home of a strong-willed parent—it becomes very difficult for him or her to return. Short visits might work, but permanent residency often fails. Mendax lived for a few days at home, then went walkabout. He slept in the open air, on the banks of rivers and creeks, in grassy meadows—all on the country fringes of Melbourne’s furthest suburbs. Sometimes he travelled closer to the city, overnighting in places like the Merri Creek reserve.
Mostly, he haunted Sherbrooke Forest in the Dandenong Ranges National Park. Because of the park’s higher elevation, the temperature dropped well below the rest of Melbourne in winter. In summer, the mosquitoes were unbearable and Mendax sometimes woke to find his face swollen and bloated from their bites.
For six months after the AFP raid, Mendax didn’t touch a computer. Slowly, he started rebuilding his life from the ground up. By the time the AFP’s blue slips—carrying 29 charges—arrived in July 1994, he was settled in a new house with his child. Throughout his period of transition, he talked to Prime Suspect and Trax on the phone regularly—as friends and fellow rebels, not fellow hackers. Prime Suspect had been going through his own set of problems.
While he hacked, Prime Suspect didn’t do many drugs. A little weed, not much else. There was no time for drugs, girls, sports or anything else. After the raid, he gave up hacking and began smoking more dope. In April 1992, he tried ecstasy for the first time—and spent the next nine months trying to find the same high. He didn’t consider himself addicted to drugs, but the drugs had certainly replaced his addiction to hacking and his life fell into a rhythm.
Snort some speed or pop an ecstasy tablet on Saturday night. Go to a rave. Dance all night, sometimes for six hours straight. Get home mid-morning and spend Sunday coming down from the drugs. Get high on dope a few times during the week, to dull the edges of desire for the more expensive drugs. When Saturday rolled around, do it all over again. Week in, week out. Month after month.
Dancing to techno-music released him. Dancing to it on drugs cleared his mind completely, made him feel possessed by the music. Techno was musical nihilism; no message, and not much medium either. Fast, repetitive, computer-synthesised beats, completely stripped of vocals or any other evidence of humanity. He liked to go to techno-night at The Lounge, a city club, where people danced by themselves, or in small, loose groups of four or five. Everyone watched the video screen which provided an endless stream of ever-changing, colourful computer-generated geometric shapes pulsing to the beat.
Prime Suspect never told his mother he was going to a rave. He just said he was going to a friend’s for the night. In between the drugs, he attended his computer science courses at TAFE and worked at the local supermarket so he could afford his weekly $60 ecstasy tablet, $20 rave entry fee and regular baggy of marijuana.
Over time, the drugs became less and less fun. Then, one Sunday, he came down off some speed hard. A big crash. The worst he had ever experienced. Depression set in, and then paranoia. He knew the police were still watching him. They had followed him before.
At his police interviews, he learned that an AFP officer had followed him to an AC/DC concert less than two weeks before he had been busted. The officer told him the AFP wanted to know what sort of friends Prime Suspect associated with—and the officer had been treated to the spectre of seven other arm-waving, head-thumping, screaming teenagers just like Prime Suspect himself.
Now Prime Suspect believed that the AFP had started following him again. They were going to raid him again, even though he had given up hacking completely. It didn’t make sense. He knew the premonition was illogical, but he couldn’t shake it.
Something bad—very, very bad—was going to happen any day. Overcome with a great sense of impending doom, he lapsed into a sort of hysterical depression. Feeling unable to prevent the advent of the dark, terrible event which would tear apart his life yet again, he reached out to a friend who had experienced his own personal problems. The friend guided him to a psychologist at the Austin Hospital. Prime Suspect decided that there had to be a better way to deal with his problems than wasting himself every weekend. He began counselling.
The counselling made him deal with all sorts of unresolved business. His father’s death. His relationship with his mother. How he had evolved into an introvert, and why he was never comfortable talking to people. Why he hacked. How he became addicted to hacking. Why he took up drugs.
At the end, the 21-year-old Prime Suspect emerged drug-free and, though still shaky, on the road to recovery. The worst he had to wait for were the charges from the AFP.
Trax’s recovery from his psychological instabilities wasn’t as definitive. From 1985, Trax had suffered from panic attacks, but he didn’t want to seek professional help—he just ran away from the problem. The situation only became worse after he was involved in a serious car accident. He became afraid to leave the house at night. He couldn’t drive. Whenever he was in a car, he had to fight an overwhelming desire to fling the door open and throw himself out on to the road. In 1989, his local GP referred Trax to a psychiatrist, who tried to treat the phreaker’s growing anxiety attacks with hypnosis and relaxation techniques.
Trax’s illness degenerated into full-fledged agoraphobia, a fear of open spaces. When he rang the police in late October 1991—just days before the AFP raid—his condition had deteriorated to the point where he could not comfortably leave his own house.
Initially he rang the state police to report a death threat made against him by another phreaker. Somewhere in the conversation, he began to talk about his own phreaking and hacking. He hadn’t intended to turn himself in but, well, the more he talked, the more he
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