|   | NIA #35 - Operation: Sun DevilNOTICE: TO ALL CONCERNED Certain text files and messages contained on this site deal with activities and devices which would be in violation of various Federal, State, and local laws if actually carried out or constructed. The webmasters of this site do not advocate the breaking of any law. Our text files and message bases are for informational purposes only. We recommend that you contact your local law enforcement officials before undertaking any project based upon any information obtained from this or any other web site. We do not guarantee that any of the information contained on this system is correct, workable, or factual. We are not responsible for, nor do we assume any liability for, damages resulting from the use of any information on this site.
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 ?   Founded By:    ? ?  Network Information Access   ? ?   Founded By:    ?
 ? Guardian Of Time ???            02JUN90            ???   Judge Dredd    ?
 ???????????????????? ?          Judge Dredd          ? ????????????????????
 ?           ?            File 35            ?           ?
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 ?????????????????? Operation: SunDevil ??????????????????
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 The Washington Post, Business Section, May 31, 1990
 By Willie Schatz
 
 Mitchell Kapor, inventor of Lotus 1-2-3, the world's most popular
 financial software package, is considering backing a national effort to
 defend computer hackers against prosecutions resulting form Operation Sun
 Devil, a two-year Secret Service investigation of potential computer fraud.
 Operation Sun Devil was disclosed early this month by the Secret
 Service, which conducted 27 searches of suspected hackers' homes and
 offices, confiscating 23,000 computer disks and 40 computer systems.  There
 have been three arrests thus far.  The Secret Service said the hackers who
 were the target of the probe are individuals who had gained unauthorized
 access to company computer systems--including one at American Telephone &
 Telegraph Co.--or had stolen and distributed software programs that
 belonged to major corporations.
 In an interview from the Cambridge, Mass., headquarters of his new
 company, ON Technology, Inc., Kapor said he thinks the government probe is
 misdirected.  He said it is damaging technological innovation and
 dissemination of information through the ubiquitous electronic message
 networks called bulletin boards that are the hackers' prime method of
 communication.  Kapor intends to announce tomorrow whether he will pay for
 all or part of the hackers' legal defense.
 "It's plausible that there's a witch hunt going on," Kapor said.  "I'm
 concerned that hackers' civil liberties are being violated [by the Secret
 Service].  I'm concerned these kids--which is mostly what hackers
 are--aren't getting a fair shake in the legal system.  They don't have
 access to legal counsel that would let them adequately defend their
 rights."
 Sources said Kapor is reviewing a proposal he received yesterday from
 two law firms that asks him to help finance a $200,000 hackers' legal
 defense fund.  Lawyers involved in the matter plan to provide much of their
 legal work free.  The proposal before Kapor also includes a program to
 lobby Congress to change the computer fraud law and a public education
 campaign about hackers.
 "Sun Devil gives me a funny feeling in the pit of my stomach," Kapor
 said.  "There's an incongruence between the language of the Secret Service
 and the acts and attitudes of hackers.  I understand and know that
 [hackers'] kind of mentality.  You don't want to use an A-bomb to kill a
 fly.  There has to be an appropriate response and understanding of what's
 at issue.  I'm lacking confidence that that's there."
 Earlier this month, Garry J. Jenkins, assistant director of the Secret
 Service, said Operation Sun Devil revealed that an "alarming number of
 young people" exploit computers through credit card fraud, unlawful
 placement of free long-distance phone calls and other criminal activities.
 In an interview, Dale Boll, an assistant special agent in charge of the
 Secret Service's fraud division, defended the government probe.
 "We have not declared war," Boll said.  "Computer crime is a serious
 offense, but we don't overreact.  There's no tendency for overkill.  We
 were given these laws to enforce and we're doing the best we can.  We
 prefer to work more hardened criminals.  The government didn't prosecute
 hackers when they were juveniles.  But now they're growing up and doing
 more serious things."
 The damage form the government's aggressive law enforcement efforts,
 according to Kapor, is a "chilling effect" on the flow in information among
 computer designers and programmers.  Kapor contends that if the people
 responsible for operating computer bulletin boards are held responsible for
 information posted on their boards, hackers will stop using the boards.
 John Barlow, a dedicated hacker and a lyricist for The Greatful Dead
 band, said he already is committed to financing the hackers' cause.  "I'm
 going to chip in to secure them legal council and so is Mitch," Barlow said
 from his home in Pinedale, Wyo.  "I'm sure the [Secret Service's] assault
 is having an effect.  It's turning mischievous kids into high-tech
 criminals.  These hackers are explorers, not criminals or vandals.  They're
 exploring a new information frontier.  It's a reincarnation of what
 happened with the settling of the Old West, only in the computer sphere."
 Government officials have a different view.  "Many computer hacker
 suspects are no longer misguided teenagers mischievously playing games with
 their computers in the bedroom," the Secret Service's Jenkins said.  "...We
 will continue to investigate aggressively those crimes which threaten to
 disrupt our nation's business and government services."
 -JUDGE DREDD/NIA
 
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