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Stay Off the Grid, Win $10,000

DariusD writes "Last summer, Wired writer Evan Ratliff wrote a story about how people erase their identities and start over. After it ran, he tried to disappear — spending 25 days on the lam until a few enterprising Wired readers tracked him down through some brilliant hacking and sleuthing. Now we're going to try the experiment again. Evan, Wired, Loneshark Games and I are working with Universal Pictures to do another, similar contest connected to the new film Repo Men, and this time we want you to go on the run. We need four applicants willing to disappear from their lives from late February to late March. If they can stay hidden for that time period, they'll end up with $10,000 each."

15 of 228 comments (clear)

  1. If only I were still Unemployed... by RemusX2 · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is a great opportunity for those unemployed to ,well, still be unemployed!

  2. Easy by sakdoctor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Easy with one caveat. It would only be easy for people who wouldn't want to take part in the first place.

    For the twittering, facebooking, wannabe internet-celebrity, attention whores, who would take part; they'd blow it.

    1. Re:Easy by Angst+Badger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Easy with one caveat. It would only be easy for people who wouldn't want to take part in the first place.

      Indeed. All you'd have to do is get a friend to give you a lift to a national park and spend the month camping, and when you need something, walk out to the nearest town and pay in cash. This time of year, you'd probably want to choose a park in the southern parts of the country -- the accompanying Deliverance joke is left as an exercise to the reader -- but that's about it. Even if you're the governor of South Carolina -- the Appalachian Trail is the last place they'd look for you.

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    2. Re:Easy by smclean · · Score: 4, Informative

      In the Wired article, Evan regularly logged in to the internet and even conversed with people involved in the hunt.

      Clearly this is not the way to disappear from society, so I wouldn't be surprised if the contest includes rules mandating you to do certain things that make you catchable.

      If someone with outdoor experience just walked off in to the wilderness, they would not be found. The Appalachian Trail might as well be an interstate freeway compared to the isolation that's possible if you just wander off cross-country.

      I'd love 10 grand to go on a month long backpacking trip, and you better believe a lot of other people would too!

      --

      "'Yrch!' said Legolas, falling into his own tongue."

  3. Dear Boss, by boneglorious · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'll be out of the office for a month. Please ignore the anonymous person checking stuff into the svn repo, I swear it isn't me...

    --
    Can I mod something +1 Scary if it's true but I wish it weren't?
  4. Uh, but you can't drop off the grid... by Rich0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The summary seems misleading. From what I understand, you aren't allowed to actually drop off the grid - they want you to actually perform certain activities, check in, provide clues, etc.

    Otherwise I'd just take a month off of work and buy a ton of food and go wilderness camping somewhere (Canada would be nice, but not in Feb). There is almost no way anybody would be able to track you down.

    On the other hand, I'd never take a month of vacation time just to live like a hermit and maybe win $10k - they really need to up the ante if they want people to do this for real.

    It sounds like the contest is just about lying low, but posting hints. That obviously makes you far more detectable than if you were allowed to participate without any constraints.

    1. Re:Uh, but you can't drop off the grid... by noidentity · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah, I too was disappointed on reading the rules. I was thinking, "yes, living in the basement and rarely going out will finally pay off!"

  5. Re:Dear Employee, by DeadDecoy · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's fine, I'll also ignore sending pay-checks to this anonymous fellow as well, as he clearly isn't you.

  6. Don't do it! by lupinstel · · Score: 5, Funny

    I have seen this setup many times before. Once you sign up you are soon hunted for sport by wealthy businessmen and heads of state. You will disappear forever and "win" the $10,000, but your stuffed and mounted corpse won't be able to spend it from the underground chamber it is displayed in. I have seen this happen; beware.

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Cthulhu.
  7. Obligatory by PPH · · Score: 4, Funny
    1. Create a phony identity.
    2. Apply for the Wired "Off The Grid" contest.
    3. Stop using that identity for the duration of the contest.
    4. ?????
    5. Profit!
    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  8. Re:Bin Laden comes to mind... by tibman · · Score: 4, Funny

    Congratulations on winning 10k$ !! Please come down to our office and collect it anytime.. day or night.. we'll wait.

    --
    http://soylentnews.org/~tibman
  9. web server by commodoresloat · · Score: 4, Funny

    "If you are the owner or webmaster for this web site please contact your web site hosting company's support department."

    It looks like the webserver for this story entered the contest.

  10. Re:There must be something in the rules... by maxume · · Score: 4, Informative

    The application asks you to list 5 restrictions or activities that you will commit to doing. They will pick people who list interesting things. They will not people who list sleeping, eating and drinking.

    --
    Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  11. Re:I'm in ! by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is stupid. Anyone able to camp for a month could just go live in the bush. Or draw as much cash as you'd need and go hire a camper van for a month if you're a sissy for the outdoors. Double points if you find a way to park your camper van 100 yards from the offices of the guys holding this competition. Triple points if you wear a disguise and use their lobby toilets every day.

    --
    I hate printers.
  12. Re:I'm in ! by JWSmythe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hiding out in the bush is boring. Well, nice to experience nature, but not the best place to hide, especially if law enforcement is after you. If you're in a county, state, or federal park, you'll likely encounter a fish & wildlife officer or park ranger. If you're on private property, you'll likely get a visit from the local Sheriff's department, when the landowner or a neighbor calls. No matter how isolated you think you are, someone will notice you, and complain.

    The best place to hide anything, including yourself, is in plain sight. In a rural area, you may be the only person for miles. In Manhattan, your face is mingled with hundreds of thousands of others, who wouldn't remember seeing you walking down the street. You're no different than anyone else they see.

    But, the best way to hide is to not be obvious. Book a hotel room under another name, preferably with all the required credentials. You can be out of sight, and out of mind, without being out of the area.

    The 100 yards from the organizers facility isn't a bad idea, but it has to be done right. Sleeping in your car or a camper in their parking lot will raise suspicions. A nearby hotel with a view of the front door of their building is much more advantageous. It's also more entertaining to provide pictures of the staffers entering and exiting, *AFTER* the contest is done. You'll get the urge to brag, and when you send the first picture, it's a matter of elimination to figure out where it was shot from.

    As always, know your environment. In the hotel, there may be a main elevator to the lobby, and that would be watched. What about stairways? I spent some time in a hotel for work. The elevators opened in the lobby, in plain sight. From the 2nd floor, you could take the stairs closest to the room to the 3rd floor. From there, you could cross the floor and take the other stairwell to an outside exit, without tripping a fire alarm. I wasn't scouting it because I was worried I was being followed. I was bored and exploring. It turned out that if I took the stairs to the 3rd floor, walked the length of the floor, and took the other stairwell down, it was quicker to get to always empty parking. That was faster than going the lobby route.

    Pay attention to available spaces. Can you go in the laundry room, and lock the door from the inside? How about a janitorial closet that's usually unlocked.

    At some point, you'll need food. In a high density environment, you won't be noticed.

    Sometimes it's easy to leave all traces of yourself in one state, while being in another. Give someone your credit card and cell phone. Have them use the cards, and phone on a regular basis, to give the illusion that you are still there. Loan him your car for the duration. Folks believe I am in one state, and I'm actually in a distant state. My friend with the phone knows my new disposable cell phone number. I wander around, turn the phone on, check my voicemails that the friend leaves, and then return to my "home base".

    Where am I today? I could be at a friends house. I could be in a hotel. I may be sleeping in my car in between locations. My IP? VPN'd to the state where I want to appear to be, on a private VPN. If I even begin to believe my location is burnt, I move on. Don't settle in one place too long. Have your bags ready to move within 5 minutes.

    Traveling on cash for gas, and sleeping in the car leaves little evidence of my travels. I be anywhere in the US within a few days, and I still look like I'm home. Use your car like the burn phones. Buy one on Craigslist, slap the old plate on, and keep moving. If you're caught driving with the wrong plate, you can produce the bill of sale showing that you just bought it, and say you are going to properly register once you get back to your home state. With the title in hand, it's easy to swap ca

    --
    Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.