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 ?   Founded By:    ? ?  Network Information Access   ? ? Txt and Only Txt ?
 ? Guardian Of Time ???            23Aug90            ???Text File Archives?
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 ?     In The Arcane Culture Of Computer Hackers, Few Doors Stay Closed     ?
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 ?Frank Darden Easily Broke Into BellSouth's Network, Trading Tips W/ Others?
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 ?                       Entering The Legion Of Doom                        ?
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 Article Direct From The Wall Street Journal Volume LXXXVI NO. 37 Southwest
 Edition WEDNESDAY AUGUST 22, 1990.
 
 Article Written By: John R. Wilke
 Staff Report Of The Wall Street Journal
 
 ATLANTA - Frank Darden got his first computer at the age of 16, a Christmas
 present from his parents.  Sitting on a desk in his bedroom, it opened a
 window on a world he found so consuming that he quit high school and spend
 most days/nights at the keyboard.
 
 His parents often wondered what their son found so compelling in the endless
 hours he spent alone in his room.  then one afternoon last summer, a doezen
 Secret SErvice agents burst into the family's suburbn home.  Agents held
 Edward and Lou Darden at gunpoint as they swarmed into their son's room,
 seizing scores of disks, armloads of files and three computers.
 
 When Frank got home an hour later, the terrified young man confessed that he
 had used his home computer to break into BellSouth Corp's telephone network.
 In February, Mr. Darden and two others were indicted on felony charges of
 conspiracy and wire fraud.
 
 "I guess now my parents know what I was doing in my room," says a remoresful
 Mr. Darden, a bright, impatient 24-year old with shoulder-length hair and a
 tie-dyed shirt.
 
 JUST PASSING THROUGH
 
 Mr. Darden thus became another of the growing number of "hackers" nabbed by
 federal agents.  for a long time, these high tech trespasswers operated in
 relative obscurity, using their computers and phone lines to go where few
 people were meant to go.  But lately, in a string of highly publicized
 cases, hacking has moved toward the forefront of white-collar crime.
 Increasingly, banks, businesses, credit bureaus and telephone companies are
 discovering that someone, often in the dead of night, has wandered into
 their computer systems -- and left his mark.
 
 As Mr. Darden's experience reveals, hacking has developed its own
 subculture, rich with literature and legend and peopled by electronic
 vandels, yoyeurs, and explorers known by fanciful code names.  "any business
 that has a computer hooked to a phone is vulnerable," warns Mr. Darden, who
 called himself the "The Leftist."  Before the bust, he was one of the best.
 
 STARTING EARLY
 
 Mr. Darden's case is part of a broad federal crackdown on computer hackers
 that has led to more than 30 raids in cities across the country.  In the
 most recent sweep, 13 people were arrested in New York last week, including
 a 14 year old suspected of breaking into a computer used by the Secretary of
 the Air Force.
 
 An early target in the crackdown was the Legion Of Doom, an elite clique of
 hackers that included Mr. Darden and was targeted by the SEcret Service
 because of its member's notable skills.  "The Legion Of Doom had the power
 to jeopardize the entire phone network," Says Kent B. Alexander, an
 assistant U.S. attorney prosecuting Mr. Darden's case in Atlanta.
 
 In a SEcret Service affidavit filed in U.S. District Court in Atlanta,
 BellSouth investigators call the Legion Of Doom "a severe threat to U.S.
 financial and telecommunications industries."  Federal agents suspect the
 Legion was responsible for software "Time-Bombs" -- Destructive progrmas
 designed to shut down major switching hubs -- planted in telephone company
 computers in Denver, Atlanta And New Jersey last year.  The programs were
 defused before causing damage, investigators say, but the intrusions, which
 were not disclosed by the phone companies, could have knocked out service to
 hundreds of thoughsands of customore phone lines.
 
 The government sweep so far has bagged a motley band, mostly loners and
 young rebels in their teens or early twenties.  In past cases, many of the
 hackers who have admitted breaking into computers have insisted that they
 didn't damage the systems they penetrated.  they did it for sport.
 
 "There is no thrill quite the same as getting into your first system," says
 Phrack, an electronic magazine run out of a University of Missouri dorm and
 accessed by computer.  Before it was shut down in the latest sweep, Phrack
 (for Phone-freak-hacking (GOT: Notice the spelling of Phreak??), published
 tips on cracking computer security.  One issue offers a "hacker's code of
 ethics," which advises, "Do NOT intentionally damage ANY system" or alter
 any files "other than ones you need to ensure your escape."  Another rule:
 "Don't be afraid to be paranoid.  Remember, you are breaking the law."  Mr.
 Darden says he strictly adhered to the code.
 
 But the hackers' creed means nothing in court.  There, hacking is treated
 much like any other form of criminal trespass under a law Congress passed in
 1988.  The law persuaded many hackers to end their illicit forays.  But it
 turned other hobbyists into criminals.
 
 During his hacker days, Mr. Darden's world was an oddly solitary one.  For
 hours on end he sat in front of the computer screen, finding his only human
 contact in the words and arcane code that arrived via computer from other
 hackers.  "Once he got into a subject, there was no stopping," recalls his
 mother.  "He was always studing up on somthing.  He read encyclopedias as a
 pastime."
 
 Geography was meaningless; friends around the world were just a few
 keystrokes away, thanks to modems that connect computers through phone
 lines.  Mr. Darden says he has struck up many lasting friendships on-line w/
 many people he has never met in person.
 
 In this silent, cerebral world, age is also irrelevant.  Only computer
 skills count.  Once on-line, a hacker can be anyone he/she wants to be.  "No
 one knows if you are fat, pimply, or scared to talk to girls," says Sheldon
 Zenner, a chicago attorney who recently defended an editor of Phrack on
 felony wire-fraud charges.  "Suddenly you are no longer just the shy
 adolescent but KNIGHT LIGHTNING or THE PROPHET."
 
 "It is a complusion for some of these people," adds Mr. Alexander, the
 Atlanta Prosecutor, "I am convinced that if Lotus 1-2-3 was behind door
 number one and Cheryl Tiegs was standing behind Door Number two, a hacker
 would go for the software."
 
 Mr. Darden recounts his hacking days w/ disapproval -- and just a touch of
 pride.  He broke into his first system at the age of 17, dialing his way
 into a big computer at Hayes Microcomputer Products Inc., in Norcross, Ga.,
 and nosing around the system.  "I didn't take anything, I was just trying to
 see if it could be done," he says now.  Hayes uncovered the breach and
 quickly tightened security, he says.
 
 Hacking sessions often stretched into the early morning hours.  He owuld
 start by checking lists of comptuer phone numbers collected by his computer
 the night before through an automatic process called "war dialing."  Thats
 the brute force approach to hacking, when the computer runs through the
 night, methodically dialing every number in a telephone exchange.  It
 records the number whenever it hits a "carrier tone" signaling a computer is
 on the other end.
 
 In a typical night of war dialing, in which the computer might check
 thousands of numbers, perhaps 100 computer carrier tones would be unerathed,
 "each one a potential treasure chest, " Mr. Darden says.  He would then
 begin calling down the "hit list" w/ his computer, each time trying to
 determine what kind of system was on the other end.  FAX machines were a
 problem, because they emit a tone that sounds like a computer to he wrote
 software that ignored them.
 
 HELLO, ARE YOU THERE??
 
 Each kind of computer had a distinctive response to his call, so he would
 tailor his approach to the type of system he encountered.  Computers that
 used the UNIX software operating system were especially easy to break into,
 while Digital Equipment Corp.'s VAX computers, which have multiple levels of
 security, presented a bigger challenge.  But he says he was fond of the VAX
 because of its widely used software. "For a hacker, the VAX is like putting
 on an old Jimi Hendrix record in a bar -- it's a real classic."  Using
 purloined telephone credit-card numbers, which his computer generated
 through trial and error, he got into computers all over the world, including
 an encounter with a VAX that spoke Finnish.
 
 He devised password-caracking programs that automated the hacking process.
 He also devised a program that let him capture legitimate users' passwords
 as they logged onto the system.  When he found a password the target
 computer recognized, his screen would typically respond with a prompt, such
 as a sign.  "once you get that, you have an open door," he says.  Often he
 would play "cat/mouse games" w/ a company's computer operators.  "I'd send a
 little greeting to their printer to let them know I was there.  It drove
 them crazy."
 
 Credit bureaus were a favorite target.  And, despite the warnings of other
 hackers that it might give him away, his first move was to look up his own
 credit report.  "Naturally, i didn't have one," he says.  He found his
 parents' report, and looked up others for friends.
 
 To make the process more efficient, and show off, Mr. Darden and other
 hackers traded phone numbers and system-cracking tips on pirate "Bulletin
 Boards" -- computer systems that store and forward text and electronic mail
 over phone lines.  "Black Ice" was one such board.  Access was tightly
 limited to an elite circle.
 
 NO BUSY SIGNAL HERE
 
 Mr. Darden's biggest thrill as a hacker, and ultimately his downfall, came
 when he broke into a big BellSouth computer in Atlanta used by technicians
 to maintain and control the phone system.  He learned how to navigate w/in
 the system by asking questions of BellSouth's own online "help" program.
 Once inside, he found he had the ability to reroute telephone calls or bring
 down switching centers, neither of which he says he did.  Mr. Darden did,
 however, listen in on a few phone lines, but only those of other hackers, he
 insists and only to prove his prowness.
 
 "If we'd wanted to, we could have knocked out service across the
 Southeastern United States" he says.  "The fact that I could get into the
 system amazed me.  But we were careful not to damage anything."
 
 Not surprisingly, when BellSouth discovered hackers rummaging through its
 computer, it reacted swiftly.  It put 42 investigators on the task of
 tracking the intruders down, and spent 1.5$ million on the effort.  Once it
 found the source of the intrusions, it called in the Secret Service, which
 enforces computer-crime laws.
 
 In the indictment, Mr. Darden and two co-defendants, Robert J. Riggs, 21,
 aka The Prophet, and Adam E. Garant, 22, aka The Urvile, were charged with
 taking copies of proprietary software from BellSouth, and w/ unauthorized
 intrusion, possessing illegal phone credit-card numbers w/ intent to
 defrand, and conspiracy.  Messrs, Darden and Riggs pleaded guilty to
 conspiracy and face a maximum of five years in prison and a 250,00$ fine.
 Mr. Grant pleaded guilty to possessing BellSouth computer access codes w/
 intent to defraud and faces a maximum of 10 years in prison and a 250,00$
 fine.  Sentencing is scheduled for September 14.
 
 The only good thing to come out of the whole experience, Mr. Darden muses,
 is that after he was indicted, his high-school sweetheart, whom he often
 spurned in favor of his computer, saw his picture on the front page of the
 local paper and got back in touch.
 
 Mr. Darden, who now works installing systems for a local computer company,
 views himself as a purist, hacking for the thrill of exploring the
 forbidden.  He looks down on those who use their skills simply to steal
 phone/credit-card numbers.  But in this game, information is everything and
 not even Mr. Darden can control its spread.  During their sweep, federal
 agents have found some hackers using code-cracking information dug up by the
 Legion of Doom to perpetrate their own practical jokes and fraud.
 
 For a few days last year, for example, phone calls to the Delray Beach,
 Fla., probation office were mysteriously rerouted to a dial a porn line in
 New York.  Secret Service agents say its the kind of thing the Legion of
 Doom MIGHT have done.
 
 And in Elwood, Ind., a 15 year old calling himself Fry Guy allegedly used
 information he got from the Legion to carry out an elaborate fraud.  Secret
 Service agents say he used his computer to break into a Credit Rating
 service in Maryland to pilfer VISA/MASTERCARD credit information.  He then
 entered BellSouth's control network and altered a pay phone on a street
 corner in nearby Paducah, Ky., to residential status.  Next, he called
 Western Union and had cash wired out of credit-card accounts to the Paducah
 Western Union office.  When Western Union called the credit-card holders to
 verify the transactions, the calls were forwarded to the pay phone and then
 to the youth's home phone, where he posed as the credit-card holders and
 gave approval.  The cash was then picked up at the loacl Western Union
 window, investigators say.
 
 AND A RAISE FOR EVERYONE
 
 In all, Fry Guy siphoned more than 10,000$ in cash and purchases from
 credit-card accunts, alleges William M. Gleason, the Secret Service
 investigator.  He also found evidence that Fry Guy, whose name has not been
 released, hacked his way into a payroll computer for a local McDonald's
 Corporation outlet, giving pay raises to his friends working at the
 restaurant.
 
 Fry Guy's case is being handled by state and federal juvenile authorities
 and, because of his age, it is unclear what punishment he might get.  At the
 very least, his parents are likely to watch the family phone bill more
 closely.  In a recent meeting w/ federal prosecutors, Fry Guy's exasperated
 father wore a baseball cap bearing the legen "Kids: They'll drive you
 crazy."
 
 Federal agents admit that, when they detect an intruder inside a computer,
 there isn't any way of telling if its a precocious teen-ager or a crook out
 to commit fraud.  So they simply execute the law.
 
 "when a hacker gets into a system. It's no different from a burglar breaking
 into your home/office," Says Secret Service agent James Cool.  If the door
 is open, the law treats a trespasser differently , he adds.  But if a hacker
 cracks a password to get into a system, "it's the same as kicking in a
 locked door, and we're going to come after them."
 
 Ed Darden wishes he had known all of this before he gave his son that
 Apple II for Christmas eight years ago.  "I'd have thought twice about it,"
 he says.  "Maybe we should have given him a bicycle."
 
 NIA UPDATE:
 
 Mother Earth is down, disregard any phone numbers.  The board will be going
 up in December and under a different name.  No name/Number has been
 established as of yet.  When the time comes, we'll publish it in our latest
 Issue Of NIA.
 
 Guardian Of Time // Judge Dredd
 
 [OTHER WORLD BBS]
 
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