Crackers Take Down FBI Web Servers
Xanadu Inc wrote
in to send us a story over at ZD Net about
Crackers
taking down the FBIs Web Site. The article refers
to them as Hackers (Bad ZD! No Cookie!) and says that it
was the result of search warrants being filed against Global
Hell (gH) that apparently got some PCs confiscated.
The FBI agents that visited me last year about this time were actually pretty nice. Unfortunatly some boob from my university snagged my IP and smurfed the University of North Carolina.. (for 5 days straight.. and my U didn't bother to keep any logs or anything.)
:)
The best was when they knocked on the door (my room a mess...)
F: Hello, we're from the FBI (badges shown).. Could we come in and ask you a few questions?
M: Sure, but I wasn't expecting guests...
F: Got any computer in your dorm room?
M: Ya.. one behind the couch, two on the desk, one in the closet and a laptop on the bed.
.... anyway the dude with a clue told me what happened (6 months earlier) and they left and never came back..
So now I have my very own file in the FBI archives.. (Does that raise my purety test score?)
I've been a hacker (not cracker) for quite a few years. I've written a lot of networked applications, been sysadmin on many types of systems and networks, decoded protocol stacks and the like... in short, I could probably be a killer cracker if I really wanted to. But I have no desire for that. Cracker accomplishments seem too fleeting for me. A crack might make the news for a day or two, but eventually it fades away. If I instead develop an open source tool that becomes popular, I will have a much more noticable (and positive) impact that will last for a long time. I get the satisfaction of actually having built something instead of having torn something down.
But I can understand the lure of cracking. It appeals to that puzzle solving side of me. If only the two communities were not so often confused in the media... (sigh)
Thad
The Bolachek Journals
I suggest everyone go read anti-online's coverage of this.
If some of those items, specifically the article
about the FBI directives sent to ISPs, are true,
it is a VERY disturbing situation...
here are some excerpts....
AntiOnline Receives Directives
Thursday, May 27, 1999 at 11:59:27
by John Vranesevich - Founder of AntiOnline
AntiOnline has recieved directives given to
several ISPs listing the groups of hackers and
hackgroups that they're currently targeting.
Sources faxed AntiOnline the 6 page directive
which begins:
-snip-
The request then goes on for 6 pages listing
hacker, groups, and media currently under
investigation by the FBI. The list contains
not only the hacker's handles, but in most
cases, their real names. For the privacy of
those involved, AntiOnline is only publishing
their aliases. Here is a partial list of the
individuals on that list:
-snip-
Notice an important section from the above
paragraph: "...and media currently under
investigation by the FBI."
Now I REALLY have to wonder...what MEDIA is under
investigation by the FBI...and more importantly,
in what way are media services related to crackers
and their activity?
I am wondering if the FBI is attempting to "get
some dirt" on those media outlets that they
detest...(this may be completely off base but it
deserves some attention...).
Another interesting(and disturbing) part is listed
later on:
The directive goes on to request information to:
Directories, files, logs, records, information or
any data concearning IRC Channels visited by
Hackers or individuals listed in paragraph 1,
specifically:
It goes on to list the following IRC Channels:
#creep
#j00nix
#tk
#pascal
#ex0dus
#faggotsex
#gayfagsex
#gaysex
#hackunix
#hax0r
#lezbiandsex
#linux
#sex_gay
#sex_pl
#shellx.log
-snip-
It concerns me that some of those channels have
*NOTHING* to do crackers at all...
#PASCAL?!?!
Again, maybe this is not important...
but I am certain many people have visited #linux
for non-cracking reasons(I know I have on
EFNET).
Just some thoughts...
dCf
--"They go around loooking younger for a few days,
then they need more...."
Seems like anyone can run a few scripts and get famous. I got busted for cracking 4 years ago, 'cept I wasn't using someone elses tools. It isn't as glamorous as one would think. I'm having much more fun maintaining and building the world I live in rather than trying to take it down...
*Condense fact from the vapor of nuance*