SUELETTE DREYFUS                                     JULIAN ASSANGE
    _   _ _   _ ____  _____ ____   ____ ____   ___  _   _ _   _ ____
   | | | | \ | |  _ \| ____|  _ \ / ___|  _ \ / _ \| | | | \ | |  _ \
   | | | |  \| | | | |  _| | |_) | |  _| |_) | | | | | | |  \| | | | |
   | |_| | |\  | |_| | |___|  _ <| |_| |  _ <| |_| | |_| | |\  | |_| |
    \___/|_| \_|____/|_____|_| \_\\____|_| \_\\___/ \___/|_| \_|____/
                     http://www.underground-book.com/

        Hacking, madness and obsession on the electronic frontier

    `Gripping, eminently readable.. Dreyfus has uncovered one of this
     country's best kept secrets and in doing so has created a highly
     intense and enjoyable read' -- Rolling Stone

  By Suelette Dreyfus with
  Research by Julian Assange

  First Published 1997 by Mandarin

  a part of Reed Books Australia

  35 Cotham Road, Kew 3101

  a subsidiary of Random House books Australia

  a division of Random House International Pty Limited

  Copyright (c) 1997, 2001 Suelette Dreyfus & Julian Assange

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright
  above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or
  introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or
  by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or
  otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the
  copyright owner and the publisher.

  Typeset in New Baskerville by J&M Typesetting

  Printed and bound in Australia by Australian Print Group

  National Library of Australia

  cataloguing-in-publication data:

  Dreyfus, Suelette.

  Underground: tales of hacking, madness & obsession on the
               electronic frontier

  Bibliography.

  ISBN 1 86330 595 5

  1. Computer hackers--Australia--Biography.
  2. Computer crimes--Australia.
  3. Computer security--Australia.
  I. Assange, Julian. II. Title.

  364.1680922


   ___________________________________________________________________

                      READER AND CRITICAL ACCLAIM
   ___________________________________________________________________

       `...I hold your book           `I have never before read a
       responsible for destroying my  book this good, literally!'
       social life for the last two   -- [email protected]
       days...I bought it Friday
       afternoon, and then finished   `I just finished the book..
       it at lunchtime today!         and thoroughly enjoyed it.
       (Sunday) *grin*. Excellent     Dreyfus showed an amazing
       reading!' -- [email protected]  insight into the world of
                                      electronic exploration. I am
       `A few pages into this book I  sure it was in no small part
       found it to be different to    due to [the researcher's]
       any other book I have ever     excellent technical
       read on the subject. Dreyfus   assistance. Good Job!!' --
       treats the people she writes   [email protected]
       about AS PEOPLE not just
       "computer junkies" or "cyber   `I loved the book - couldn't
       geeks"' -- [email protected]   put it down!' --
                                      [email protected]
       `A real pleasure' -- George
       Smith, Crypt News              `I wanted to say how much I
                                      liked your book Underground'
       `A tale of madness, paranoia   -- Prof. Dorothy Denning
       and brilliance among
       Australian computer hackers -  `I was blown away' --
       and how they nearly brought    [email protected]
       NASA undone' -- The Weekend
       Australian Magazine            `I'm grateful to Ms Dreyfus
                                      for introducing me to a
       `Adventure book for the brain' number of first-rate
       -- Sarah McDonald, JJJ         subversives' -- Phillip
                                      Adams, Late Night Live
       `After reading the extract of
       Underground in The Age I       `Joy knew no bounds' --
       couldn't wait to read it.      Phillip Adams, Late Night
       Finally it came out in the     Live
       shops and I finished it all
       within a few days. I wasn't    `Just thought that I would
       disappointed for a second.' -- say great job on your book
       [email protected]           very nice piece of work and
                                      very informative!' --
       `Amazing insight' --           Anonymous hacker
       [email protected]
                                      `Keeps the reader glued to
       `Backed up by..detailed        the page' -- Danny Yee, Danny
       technical research' -- Trudie  Yee's review of books
       MacIntosh, The Australian
                                      `La descripcion de las
       `Best hacker book I've read'   detenciones, registros
       -- Jim Lippard                 yprocesos legales es
                                      especialmente interesante' --
       `Brillant read - will rest     Cripto, Spain
       safely next the rest of my
       Gibson, Sterling and           `Let me say how much I
       Brunner...' --                 enjoyed Underground. I really
       [email protected]       thought it was fascinating
                                      and a great read.' --
       `Brillant' --                  [email protected] (Editor,
       [email protected]             Network World)

       `Compelling reading for those  `Loved it' --
       of us who want more than just  [email protected]
       salacious and hyped snippets'
       -- Trudie MacIntosh, The       `Makes the esoteric world of
       Australian                     the hacker accessible' --
                                      Australian Bookseller and
       `Compelling' -- David Nichols, Publisher
       The Big Issue
                                      `Matt Piening told me about
       `Contains enough technical     it and showed me the article
       information to impress anyone  in The Age.. consequently..
       who can appreciate it' --      we bought it, we read it, we
       [email protected]       loved it. :)' --
                                      [email protected]
       `Couldn't put it down' --
       Trudie MacIntosh, The          `Meeslepende book' --
       Australian                     Digiface, The Netherlands

       `Depth of character and rapid  `Meticulously researched' --
       pacing' -- Ed Burns, IBIC      Australian Bookseller and
                                      Publisher
       `Displays a level of research
       and technical understanding    `Meticuously researched
       not matched by other hacker    psychological and social
       books' -- Jim Lippard          profile of hackers' --
                                      Australian Bookseller and
       `Dive into the Underground and Publisher
       be swept into a thrilling
       elite realm' --                `Most brilliant book I have
       [email protected]                ever read' --
                                      [email protected]
       `Dreyfus does not attempt any
       sleights of hand with jargon'  `Nice work' --
       -- David Nichols, The Big      [email protected]
       Issue
                                      `Powerful' -- [email protected]
       `Dreyfus has clearly done her
       research well' -- Danny Yee,   `Reads like Ludlum.. I love
       Danny Yee's review of books    the book.. The style of
                                      writing is the clincher..' --
       `Dreyfus hat hier Abhilfe      [email protected]
       geschaffen' -- iX, Germany
                                      `Reads like a thriller' --
       `Dreyfus is one smart cookie'  The Age
       -- Ed Burns, IBIC
                                      `Riveting' -- Australian
       `El libro tiene como fuentes a Bookseller and Publisher
       varios grupos de hackers
       australianos y todas las       `Riviting read'-- The
       sentencias de los casos de     Adelaide Advertiser
       asaltos informaticos de esa
       epoca' -- Cripto, Spain        `Several cites to it in my
                                      own book on information
       `Enjoyed the book!' -- Jake    warfare' -- Prof. Dorothy
       Barnes, The Face (UK)          Denning

       `Entirely original' -- Rolling `Skall du la:sa Underground'
       Stone                          -- Mikael Pawlo, Internet
                                      World, Sweden
       `Especialmente interesante' --
       Cripto, Spain                  `THIS BOOK IS FOR YOU!' --
                                      [email protected]
       `Excellent insight' --
       [email protected]           `Thank you for such an
                                      AMAZING and informative book'
       `Excellent reporting' --       -- [email protected]
       Editor, IBIC
                                      `The reader is readily drawn
       `Excellent.. Compared against  forward into the eddies of
       Bruce Sterling's text (the     the underground by the thrust
       most obvious comparison), it   and parry of the hackers and
       makes for much better          their pursuers' -- Ed Burns,
       reading.. Commendable' --      IBIC
       [email protected]
                                      `The true stories of
       `Extraordinary' -- Rolling     Underground are simply
       Stone                          compelling' -- David Nichols,
                                      The Big Issue
       `Fascinating piece of
       investigative journalism' --   `There is much to admire in
       Jim Reavis, Network World      the doggedness with which
                                      Dreyfus follows her subjects'
       `Fascinating' -- Ed Burns,     -- Gideo Haigh, Australian
       IBIC                           Literary Suppliment

       `Fiercely independent thinking `Thoroughly enjoyed' --
       found on every page' -- Lew    Suzanne Pratley, Frugal Films
       Koch, ZDNET
                                      `Thoroughly researched' --
       `For those sick of bullish     Jim Reavis, Network World
       cyberpiffle, Underground
       contains any amount of         `Those inclined to seek the
       counterintelligence.." --      unvarnished truth will find
       Gideon Haigh, Australian       Underground an excellent
       Literary Suppliment            read' -- George Smith, Crypt
                                      News
       `Genuine perception' -- George
       Smith, Crypt News              `Totally recommended' --
                                      Matthew Green, NetBSD
       `Genuinely fascinating' --     Security Officer, author IRC
       David Nichols, The Big Issue   II

       `Great real life thriller' --  `Very good, very accurate..
       [email protected]       makes for an interesting
                                      contrast with books like
       `Gripping Account'-- The       Cuckoo's Egg, and Takedown'
       Adelaide Advertiser            -- [email protected] (Codex
                                      Surveillance List)
       `Gripping, eminently readable'
       -- Rolling Stone               `WOW! What an incredible
                                      read! Your book captures
       `Highly intense and enjoyable  exactly what it was like for
       read' -- Rolling Stone         me...'  -- Anonymous Canadian
                                      hacker
       `Highly original investigative
       journalism' -- Gideo Haigh,    `Well done and thanks' --
       Australian Literary Suppliment [email protected]

       `Highly recommended' -- Jim    `What is most impressive,
       Lippard                        however, is the personal
                                      detail she has managed to
       `Will Surprise' -- Darren      garner about her subjects:
       Reed, author, ipfirewall       more than anything else, it
                                      is this is which gives
       `Wonderful Book' --            Underground its appeal' --
       [email protected]          Danny Yee, Danny Yee's review
                                      of books

                      [email protected]

   ___________________________________________________________________

                    PREFACE TO THE ELECTRONIC EDITION
   ___________________________________________________________________

  Why would an author give away an unlimited number of copies of her book
  for free?

  That's a good question. When `Underground''s researcher, Julian
  Assange, first suggested releasing an electronic version of the book on
  the Net for free, I had to stop and think about just that question.

  I'd spent nearly three years researching, writing and editing the nearly
  500 pages of `Underground'. Julian had worked thousands of
  hours doing painstaking research; discovering and cultivating sources,
  digging with great resourcefulness into obscure databases and legal
  papers, not to mention providing valuable editorial advice.

  So why would I give away this carefully ripened fruit for free?

  Because part of the joy of creating a piece of art is in knowing that
  many people can - and are - enjoying it. Particularly people who can't
  otherwise afford to pay $11 USD for a book. People such as cash strapped
  hackers. This book is about them, their lives and obsessions. It rubs
  clear a small circle in the frosted glass so the reader can peer into
  that hazy world. `Underground' belongs on the Net, in their ephemeral
  landscape.

  The critics have been good to `Underground', for which I am very
  grateful. But the best praise came from two of the hackers detailed in
  the book. Surprising praise, because while the text is free of the
  narrative moralising that plague other works, the selection of material
  is 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 with
  a note of amazement, `When I read those chapters, it was so real, as if
  you had been right there inside my head'. Not long after Par, half a
  world away, and with a real tone of bewildered incredulity in his voice
  made exactly the same observation. For a writer, it just doesn't get any
  better than that.

  By releasing this book for free on the Net, I'm hoping more people
  will not only enjoy the story of how the international computer
  underground rose to power, but also make the journey into the minds
  of hackers involved. When I first began sketching out the book's
  structure, I decided to go with depth. I wanted the reader to
  think, 'NOW I understand, because I too was there.' I hope those
  words will enter your thoughts as you read this electronic book.

  Michael Hall, a supersmart lawyer on the book's legal team, told me
  in July last year he saw a young man in Sydney reading a copy of
  `Underground' beside him on the #380 bus to North Bondi. Michael
  said he wanted to lean over and proclaim proudly, `I legalled that
  book!'. Instead, he chose to watch the young man's reactions.

  The young man was completely absorbed, reading hungrily through his
  well-worn copy, which he had completely personalised. The pages were
  covered in highlighter, scrawled margin writing and post-it notes. He
  had underlined sections and dog-eared pages. If the bus had detoured to
  Brisbane, he probably wouldn't have noticed.

  I like that. Call me subversive, but I'm chuffed `Underground' is
  engaging enough to make people miss bus stops. It makes me happy, and
  happy people usually want to share.

  There are other reasons for releasing `Underground' in this format. The
  electronic version is being donated to the visionary Project Gutenburg,
  a collection of free electronic books run with missionary zeal by
  Michael Hart.

  Project Gutenburg promises to keep old out-of-print books in free
  ``electronic'' print forever, to bring literature to those who can't
  afford books, and to brighten the world of the visually
  impaired. `Underground' isn't out of print -- and long may it remain
  that way -- but those are laudable goals. I wrote in the `Introduction'
  to the printed edition about my great aunt, a diver and artist who
  pioneered underwater painting in the 1940s.  She provided me with a kind
  of inspiration for this book. What I didn't mention is that as a result
  of macular degeneration in both eyes, she is now blind. She can no
  longer paint or dive. But she does read - avidly - through `talking
  books'. She is another reason I decided to release `Underground' in this
  format.

  So, now you can download and read the electronic version of
  `Underground' for free. You can also send the work to your friends for
  free. Or your enemies. At around a megabyte of plain text each, a few
  dozen copies of `Underground' make an extremely effective mail bomb.

  That's a joke, folks, not a suggestion. ;-)

  Like many of the people in this book, I'm not big on rules. Fortunately,
  there aren't many that come with this electronic version. Don't print
  the work on paper, CD or any other format, except for your own personal
  reading pleasure. This includes using the work as teaching material in
  institutions. You must not alter or truncate the work in any way. You
  must not redistribute the work for any sort of payment, including
  selling it on its own or as part of a package. Random House is a
  friendly place, but as one of the world's largest publishers it has a
  collection of equally large lawyers. Messing with them will leave you
  with scars in places that could be hard to explain to any future
  partner.

  If you want to do any of these things, please contact me or my literary
  agents Curtis Brown & Co first. I retain the copyright on the
  work. Julian Assange designed the elegant layout of this electronic
  edition, and he retains ownership of this design and layout.

  If you like the electronic version of the book, do buy the paper
  version. Why? For starters, it's not only much easier to read on the
  bus, its much easier to read full stop. It's also easier to thumb
  through, highlight, scribble on, dribble on, and show off.  It never
  needs batteries. It can run on solar power and candles. It looks sexy on
  your bookshelf, by your bed and in your bed. If you are a male geek, the
  book comes with a girl-magnet guarantee.  The paper version is much
  easier to lend to a prospective girlfriend. When she's finished reading
  the book, ask her which hacker thrilled her to pieces. Then nod
  knowingly, and say coyly `Well, I've never admitted this to anyone
  except the author and the Feds, but ..'

  And the most important reason to purchase a paper copy? Because buying
  the printed edition of the book lets the author continue to write more
  fine books like this one.

  Enjoy!

                                                          Suelette Dreyfus

                                                            January 2001

                                                           [email protected]
   ___________________________________________________________________


  Literary Freeware: Not for Commercial Use.

  Copyright (c) 1997, 2001 Suelette Dreyfus & Julian Assange

  This HTML and text electronic version was arranged by Julian Assange
  <[email protected]> and is based on the printed paper edition.

  Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
  publication provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
  preserved on all copies and distribution is without fee.


   ___________________________________________________________________

                          RESEARCHER'S INTRODUCTION
   ___________________________________________________________________

   "Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask,
   and he will tell you the truth" -- Oscar Wilde

   "What is essential is invisible to the eye" -- Antoine De Saint-Exupery

   "But, how do you *know* it happened like that?" -- Reader

   Due of the seamless nature of `Underground' this is a reasonable
   question to ask, although hints can be found at the back of the book in
   the Bibliography and Endnotes. The simple answer to this question is
   that we conducted over a hundred interviews and collected around 40,000
   pages of primary documentation; telephone intercepts, data intercepts,
   log-files, witness statements, confessions, judgements. Telephone dialog
   and on-line discussions are drawn directly from the latter. Every
   significant hacking incident mentioned in this book has reams of
   primary documentation behind it. System X included.

   The non-simple answer goes more like this:

   In chapter 4, Par, one of the principle subjects of this book, is being
   watched by the Secret Service. He's on the run. He's a wanted
   fugitive. He's hiding out with another hacker, Nibbler in a motel
   chalet, Black Mountain, North Carolina. The Secret Service move in.
   The incident is vital in explaining Par's life on the run and the
   nature of his interaction with the Secret Service. Yet, just before the
   final edits of this book were to go the publisher, all the pages
   relating to the Block Mountain incident were about to be pulled. Why?

   Suelette had flown to Tuscon Az where she spent three days
   interviewing Par. I had spent dozens of hours interviewing Par on
   the phone and on-line. Par gave both of us extraordinary access to
   his life. While Par displayed a high degree of paranoia about why
   events had unfolded in the manner they had, he was consistent,
   detailed and believable as to the events themselves. He showed
   very little blurring of these two realities, but we needed to show
   none at all.

   During Par's time on the run, the international computer underground
   was a small and strongly connected place. We had already
   co-incidentally interviewed half a dozen hackers he had communicated
   with at various times during his zig-zag flight across America. Suelette
   also spoke at length to his lead lawyer Richard Rosen, who, after
   getting the all-clear from Par, was kind enough to send us a copy of
   the legal brief.  We had logs of messages Par had written on
   underground BBS's. We had data intercepts of other hackers in
   conversation with Par. We had obtained various Secret Service documents
   and propriety security reports relating to Par's activities. I had
   extensively interviewed his Swiss girlfriend Theorem (who had also been
   involved with Electron and Pengo), and yes, she did have a melting
   French accent.

   Altogether we had an enormous amount of material on Par's activities,
   all of which was consistent with what Par had said during his
   interviews, but none of it, including Rosen's file, contained any
   reference to Black Mountain, NC. Rosen, Theorem and others had heard
   about a SS raid on the run, yet when the story was traced back, it
   always led to one source. To Par.

   Was Par having us on? Par had said that he had made a telephone call to
   Theorem in Switzerland from a phone booth outside the motel a day or
   two before the Secret Service raid.  During a storm. Not just any
   storm. Hurricane Hugo. But archival news reports on Hugo discussed it
   hitting South Carolina, not North Carolina. And not Black
   Mountain. Theorem remembered Par calling once during a storm. But not
   Hugo. And she didn't remember it in relation to the Black Mountain
   raid.

   Par had destroyed most of his legal documents, in circumstances that
   become clear in the book, but of the hundreds of pages of documentary
   material we had obtained from other sources there was wasn't a single
   mention of Black Mountain.  The Black Mountain Motel didn't seem to
   exist. Par said Nibbler had moved and couldn't be located.  Dozens of
   calls by Suelette to the Secret Service told us what we didn't want to
   hear.  The agents we thought most likely to have been involved in the
   the hypothetical Black Mountain incident had either left the Secret
   Service or were otherwise unreachable.  The Secret Service had no idea
   who would have been involved, because while Par was still listed in the
   Secret Service central database, his profile, contained three
   significant annotations:

               1) Another agency had ``borrowed'' parts Par's file
               2) There were medical ``issues'' surrounding Par
               3) SS documents covering the time of Black Mountain
                  incident had been destroyed for various reasons
                  that become clear the book.
               4) The remaining SS documents had been moved into
                  ``deep-storage'' and would take two weeks to retrieve.

   With only one week before our publisher's ``use it or lose it''
   dead-line, the chances of obtaining secondary confirmation of the Black
   Mountain events did not look promising.

   While we waited for leads on the long trail of ex, transfered and
   seconded SS agents who might have been involved in the Black Mountain
   raid, I turned to resolving the two inconsistencies in Par's story;
   Hurricane Hugo and the strange invisibility of the Black Mountain
   Motel.

   Hurricane Hugo had wreathed a path of destruction, but like most most
   hurricanes heading directly into a continental land-mass it had started
   out big and ended up small. News reports followed this pattern, with a
   large amount of material on its initial impact, but little or nothing
   about subsequent events. Finally I obtained detailed time by velocity
   weather maps from the National Reconnaissance Office, which showed the
   remaining Hugo epicentre ripping through Charlotte NC (pop. 400k)
   before spending itself on the Carolinas. Database searches turned up a
   report by Natalie, D. & Ball, W, EIS Coordinator, North Carolina
   Emergency Management, `How North Carolina Managed Hurricane Hugo' --
   which was used to flesh out the scenes in Chapter 4 describing Par's
   escape to New York via the Charlotte Airport.

   Old Fashioned gum-shoe leg-work, calling every motel in Black Mountain
   and the surrounding area, revealed that the Black Mountain Motel had
   changed name, ownership and.. all its staff. Par's story was holding,
   but in some ways I wished it hadn't. We were back to square one in terms
   of gaining independent secondary confirmation.

   Who else could have been involved? There must have been a paper-trail
   outside of Washington. Perhaps the SS representation in Charlotte had
   something? No. Perhaps there were records of the warrants in the
   Charlotte courts? No. Perhaps NC state police attended the SS raid in
   support? Maybe, but finding warm bodies who had been directly involved
   proved proved futile. If it was a SS case, they had no indexable
   records that they were willing to provide. What about the local
   coppers? An SS raid on a fugitive computer hacker holed up at one of
   the local motels was not the sort of event that would be likely to have
   passed unnoticed at the Black Mountain county police office, indexable
   records or not.

   Neither however, were international telephone calls from strangely
   accented foreign-nationals wanting to know about them. Perhaps the Reds
   were no-longer under the beds, but in Black Mountain, this could be
   explained away by the fact they were now hanging out in phone booths. I
   waited for a new shift at the Black Mountain county police office,
   hoping against hope, that the officer I had spoken to wouldn't
   contaminate his replacement. Shamed, I resorted to using that most
   special of US militia infiltration devices. An American accent and a
   woman's touch. Suelette weaved her magic. The Black Mountain raid had
   taken place. The county police had supported it. We had our
   confirmation.

   While this anecdote is a strong account, it's also representative one.
   Every chapter in underground was formed from many stories like
   it. They're unseen, because a book must not be true merely in details.
   It must be true in feeling.

   True to the visible and the invisible. A difficult combination.

                                                              Julian Assange

                                                               January 2001

                                                               [email protected]

   ___________________________________________________________________

                                CONTENTS
   ___________________________________________________________________

  Acknowledgements viii

  Introduction xi

  1 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 1

  2 The Corner Pub 45

  3 The American Connection 84

  4 The Fugitive 120

  5 The Holy Grail 159

  6 Page One, the New York Times 212

  7 Judgment Day 244

  8 The International Subversives 285

  9 Operation Weather 323

  10 Anthrax--the Outsider 364

  11 The Prisoner's Dilemma 400

  Afterword 427 Glossary and Abbreviations 455 Notes 460

  Bibliography

  [ Page numbers above correspond to the Random House printed edition ]



    _________________________________________________________________

                            ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    _________________________________________________________________

  There are many people who were interviewed for this work, and many
  others who helped in providing documents so vital for fact
  checking. Often this help invovled spending a considerable amount of
  time explaining complex technical or legal matters. I want to express
  my gratitude to all these people, some of whom prefer to remain
  anonymous, for their willingness to dig through the files in search of
  yet one more report and their patience in answering yet one more
  question.

  I want to thank the members of the computer underground, past and
  present, who were interviewed for this book. Most gave me
  extraordinary access to their lives, for which I am very grateful.

  I also want to thank Julian Assange for his tireless research efforts.
  His superb technical expertise and first-rate research is evidence by
  the immense number of details which are included in this book.

  Three exceptional women -- Fiona Inglis, Deb Callaghan and Jennifer
  Byrne -- believed in my vision for this book and helped me to bring it
  to fruition. Carl Harrison-Ford's excellent editing job streamlined a
  large and difficult manuscript despite the tight deadline. Thank you
  also to Judy Brookes.

  I am also very grateful to the following people and organisations for
  their help (in no particular order): John McMahon, Ron Tencati, Kevin
  Oberman, Ray Kaplan, the New York Daily News library staff, the New
  York Post library staff, Bow Street Magistrates Court staff, Southwark
  Court staff, the US Secret Service, the Black Mountain Police, Michael
  Rosenberg, Michael Rosen, Melbourne Magistrates Court staff, D.L
  Sellers & Co. staff, Victorian County Court staff, Paul Galbally, Mark
  Dorset, Suburbia.net, Freeside Communications, Greg Hooper, H&S
  Support Services, Peter Andrews, Kevin Thompson, Andrew Weaver,
  Mukhtar Hussain, Midnight Oil, Helen Meredith, Ivan Himmelhoch,
  Michael Hall, Donn Ferris, Victorian State Library staff, News Limited
  library staff (Sydney), Allan Young, Ed DeHart, Annette Seeber, Arthur
  Arkin, Doug Barnes, Jeremy Porter, James McNabb, Carolyn Ford, ATA,
  Domini Banfield, Alistair Kelman, Ann-Maree Moodie, Jane Hutchinson,
  Catherine Murphy, Norma Hawkins, N. Llewelyn, Christine Assange,
  Russel Brand, Matthew Bishop, Matthew Cox, Michele Ziehlky, Andrew
  James, Brendan McGrath, Warner Chappell Music Australia, News Limited,
  Pearson Williams Solicitors, Tami Friedman, the Free Software
  Foundation (GNU Project), and the US Department of Energy Computer
  Incident Advisory Capability.

  Finally, I would like to thank my family, whose unfailing support,
  advice and encouragement have made this book possible.


    _________________________________________________________________

                              INTRODUCTION
    _________________________________________________________________

  My great aunt used to paint underwater.

  Piling on the weighty diving gear used in 1939 and looking like
  something out of 20000 Leagues Under the Sea, Lucie slowly sank below
  the surface, with palette, special paints and canvas
  in hand. She settled on the ocean floor, arranged her weighted
  painter's easel and allowed herself to become completely enveloped by
  another world. Red and white striped fish darted around fields of
  blue-green coral and blue-lipped giant clams. Lionfish drifted by,
  gracefully waving their dangerous feathered spines. Striped green
  moray eels peered at her from their rock crevice homes.

  Lucie dived and painted everywhere. The Sulu Archipelago. Mexico.
  Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Hawaii. Borneo. Sometimes she was the
  first white woman seen by the Pacific villagers she lived with for
  months on end.

  As a child, I was entranced by her stories of the unknown world below
  the ocean's surface, and the strange and wonderful cultures she met on
  her journeys. I grew up in awe of her chosen task: to capture on
  canvas the essence of a world utterly foreign to her own.

  New technology--revolutionary for its time--had allowed her to do
  this. Using a compressor, or sometimes just a hand pump connected to
  air hoses running to the surface, human beings were suddenly able to
  submerge themselves for long periods in an otherwise inaccessible
  world. New technology allowed her to both venture into this unexplored
  realm, and to document it in canvas.

  I came upon the brave new world of computer communications and its
  darker side, the underground, quite by accident. It struck me
  somewhere in the journey that followed that my trepidations and
  conflicting desires to explore this alien world were perhaps not
  unlike my aunt's own desires some half a century before. Like her
  journey, my own travels have only been made possible by new
  technologies. And like her, I have tried to capture a small corner of
  this world.

  This is a book about the computer underground. It is not a book about
  law enforcement agencies, and it is not written from the point of view
  of the police officer. From a literary perspective, I have told this
  story through the eyes of numerous computer hackers. In doing so, I
  hope to provide the reader with a window into a mysterious, shrouded
  and usually inaccessible realm.

  Who are hackers? Why do they hack? There are no simple answers to
  these questions. Each hacker is different. To that end, I have
  attempted to present a collection of individual but interconnected
  stories, bound by their links to the international computer
  underground. These are true stories, tales of the world's best and the
  brightest hackers and phreakers. There are some members of the
  underground whose stories I have not covered, a few of whom would also
  rank as world-class. In the end, I chose to paint detailed portraits
  of a few hackers rather than attempt to compile a comprehensive but
  shallow catalogue.

  While each hacker has a distinct story, there are common themes which
  appear throughout many of the stories. Rebellion against all symbols
  of authority. Dysfunctional families. Bright children suffocated by
  ill-equipped teachers. Mental illness or instability. Obsession and
  addiction.

  I have endeavoured to track what happened to each character in this
  work over time: the individual's hacking adventures, the police raid
  and the ensuing court case. Some of those court cases have taken years
  to reach completion.

  Hackers use `handles'--on-line nicknames--that serve two purposes.
  They shield the hacker's identity and, importantly, they often make a
  statement about how the hacker perceives himself in the underground.
  Hawk, Crawler, Toucan Jones, Comhack, Dataking, Spy, Ripmax, Fractal
  Insanity, Blade. These are all real handles used in Australia.

  In the computer underground, a hacker's handle is his name. For this
  reason, and because most hackers in this work have now put together
  new lives for themselves, I have chosen to use only their handles.
  Where a hacker has had more than one handle, I have used the one he
  prefers.

  Each chapter in this book is headed with a quote from a Midnight Oil
  song which expresses an important aspect of the chapter. The Oilz are
  uniquely Australian. Their loud voice of protest against the
  establishment--particularly the military-industrial
  establishment--echoes a key theme in the underground, where music in
  general plays a vital role.

  The idea for using these Oilz extracts came while researching Chapter
  1, which reveals the tale of the WANK worm crisis in NASA. Next to the
  RTM worm, WANK is the most famous worm in the history of computer
  networks. And it is the first major worm bearing a political message.
  With WANK, life imitated art, since the term computer `worm' came from
  John Brunner's sci-fi novel, The Shockwave Rider, about a politically
  motivated worm.

  The WANK worm is also believed to be the first worm written by an
  Australian, or Australians.

  This chapter shows the perspective of the computer system
  administrators--the people on the other side from the hackers. Lastly,
  it illustrates the sophistication which one or more Australian members
  of the worldwide computer underground brought to their computer
  crimes.

  The following chapters set the scene for the dramas which unfold and
  show the transition of the underground from its early days, its loss
  of innocence, its closing ranks in ever smaller circles until it
  reached the inevitable outcome: the lone hacker. In the beginning, the
  computer underground was a place, like the corner pub, open and
  friendly. Now, it has become an ephemeral expanse, where hackers
  occasionally bump into one another but where the original sense of
  open community has been lost.

  The computer underground has changed over time, largely in response to
  the introduction of new computer crime laws across the globe and to
  numerous police crackdowns. This work attempts to document not only an
  important piece of Australian history, but also to show fundamental
  shifts in the underground --to show, in essence, how the underground
  has moved further underground.

                                                        Suelette Dreyfus

                                                              March 1997


    _________________________________________________________________

               Chapter 1 -- 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1
    _________________________________________________________________


    Somebody's out there, somebody's waiting
    Somebody's trying to tell me something

  -- from `Somebody's Trying to Tell Me Something', on 10, 9, 8, 7, 6,
  5, 4, 3, 2, 1 by Midnight Oil

  Monday, 16 October 1989
  Kennedy Space Center, Florida

  NASA buzzed with the excitement of a launch. Galileo was finally going
  to Jupiter.

  Administrators and scientists in the world's most prestigious space
  agency had spent years trying to get the unmanned probe into space.
  Now, on Tuesday, 17 October, if all went well, the five astronauts in
  the Atlantis space shuttle would blast off from the Kennedy Space
  Center at Cape Canaveral, Florida, with Galileo in tow. On the team's
  fifth orbit, as the shuttle floated 295 kilometres above the Gulf of
  Mexico, the crew would liberate the three-tonne space probe.

  An hour later, as Galileo skated safely away from the shuttle, the
  probe's 32500 pound booster system would fire up and NASA staff would
  watch this exquisite piece of human ingenuity embark on a six-year
  mission to the largest planet in the solar system. Galileo would take
  a necessarily circuitous route, flying by Venus once and Earth twice
  in a gravitational slingshot effort to get up enough momentum to reach
  Jupiter.2

  NASA's finest minds had wrestled for years with the problem of exactly
  how to get the probe across the solar system. Solar power was one
  option. But if Jupiter was a long way from Earth, it was even further
  from the Sun--778.3 million kilometres to be exact. Galileo would need
  ridiculously large solar panels to generate enough power for its
  instruments at such a distance from the Sun. In the end, NASA's
  engineers decided on a tried if not true earthly energy source:
  nuclear power.

  Nuclear power was perfect for space, a giant void free of human life
  which could play host to a bit of radioactive plutonium 238 dioxide.
  The plutonium was compact for the amount of energy it gave off--and it
  lasted a long time. It seemed logical enough. Pop just under 24
  kilograms of plutonium in a lead box, let it heat up through its own
  decay, generate electricity for the probe's instruments, and presto!
  Galileo would be on its way to investigate Jupiter.

  American anti-nuclear activists didn't quite see it that way. They
  figured what goes up might come down. And they didn't much like the idea
  of plutonium rain. NASA assured them Galileo's power pack was quite
  safe. The agency spent about $50 million on tests which supposedly
  proved the probe's generators were very safe. They would survive intact
  in the face of any number of terrible explosions, mishaps and
  accidents. NASA told journalists that the odds of a plutonium release
  due to `inadvertent atmospheric re-entry' were 1 in 2 million. The
  likelihood of a plutonium radiation leak as a result of a launch
  disaster was a reassuring 1 in 2700.

  The activists weren't having a bar of it. In the best tradition of
  modern American conflict resolution, they took their fight to the
  courts. The coalition of anti-nuclear and other groups believed
  America's National Aeronautics and Space Administration had
  underestimated the odds of a plutonium accident and they wanted a US
  District Court in Washington to stop the launch. The injunction
  application went in, and the stakes went up. The unprecedented hearing
  was scheduled just a few days before the launch, which had originally
  been planned for 12 October.

  For weeks, the protesters had been out in force, demonstrating and
  seizing media attention. Things had become very heated. On Saturday, 7
  October, sign-wielding activists fitted themselves out with gas masks
  and walked around on street corners in nearby Cape Canaveral in
  protest. At 8 a.m. on Monday, 9 October, NASA started the countdown
  for the Thursday blast-off. But as Atlantis's clock began ticking
  toward take-off, activists from the Florida Coalition for Peace and
  Justice demonstrated at the centre's tourist complex.

  That these protests had already taken some of the shine off NASA's bold
  space mission was the least of the agency's worries. The real headache
  was that the Florida Coalition told the media it would `put people on
  the launchpad in a non-violent protest'.3 The coalition's director,
  Bruce Gagnon, put the threat in folksy terms, portraying the protesters
  as the little people rebelling against a big bad government
  agency. President Jeremy Rivkin of the Foundation on Economic Trends,
  another protest group, also drove a wedge between `the people' and
  `NASA's people'. He told UPI, `The astronauts volunteered for this
  mission. Those around the world who may be the victims of radiation
  contamination have not volunteered.'4

  But the protesters weren't the only people working the media. NASA
  knew how to handle the press. They simply rolled out their
  superstars--the astronauts themselves. These men and women were, after
  all, frontier heroes who dared to venture into cold, dark space on
  behalf of all humanity. Atlantis commander Donald Williams didn't hit
  out at the protesters in a blunt fashion, he just damned them from an
  aloof distance. `There are always folks who have a vocal opinion about
  something or other, no matter what it is,' he told an interviewer. `On
  the other hand, it's easy to carry a sign. It's not so easy to go
  forth and do something worthwhile.'5

  NASA had another trump card in the families of the heroes. Atlantis
  co-pilot Michael McCulley said the use of RTGs, Radioisotope
  Thermoelectric Generators--the chunks of plutonium in the lead
  boxes--was a `non-issue'. So much so, in fact, that he planned to have
  his loved ones at the Space Center when Atlantis took off.

  Maybe the astronauts were nutty risk-takers, as the protesters
  implied, but a hero would never put his family in danger. Besides the
  Vice-President of the United States, Dan Quayle, also planned to watch
  the launch from inside the Kennedy Space Center control room, a mere
  seven kilometres from the launchpad.

  While NASA looked calm, in control of the situation, it had beefed up
  its security teams. It had about 200 security guards watching the
  launch site. NASA just wasn't taking any chances. The agency's
  scientists had waited too long for this moment. Galileo's parade would
  not be rained on by a bunch of peaceniks.

  The launch was already running late as it was--almost seven years
  late. Congress gave the Galileo project its stamp of approval way back
  in 1977 and the probe, which had been budgeted to cost about $400
  million, was scheduled to be launched in 1982. However, things began
  going wrong almost from the start.

  In 1979, NASA pushed the flight out to 1984 because of shuttle
  development problems. Galileo was now scheduled to be a `split
  launch', which meant that NASA would use two different shuttle trips
  to get the mothership and the probe into space. By 1981, with costs
  spiralling upwards, NASA made major changes to the project. It stopped
  work on Galileo's planned three-stage booster system in favour of a
  different system and pushed out the launch deadline yet again, this
  time to 1985. After a federal Budget cut fight in 1981 to save
  Galileo's booster development program, NASA moved the launch yet
  again, to May 1986. The 1986 Challenger disaster, however, saw NASA
  change Galileo's booster system for safety reasons, resulting in
  yet more delays.

  The best option seemed to be a two-stage, solid-fuel IUS system. There
  was only one problem. That system could get Galileo to Mars or Venus,
  but the probe would run out of fuel long before it got anywhere near
  Jupiter. Then Roger Diehl of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory had a good
  idea. Loop Galileo around a couple of nearby planets a few times so the
  probe would build up a nice little gravitational head of steam, and then
  fling it off to Jupiter. Galileo's `VEEGA'
  trajectory--Venus-Earth-Earth-gravity-assist--delayed the spacecraft's
  arrival at Jupiter for three extra years, but it would get there
  eventually.

  The anti-nuclear campaigners argued that each Earth flyby increased
  the mission's risk of a nuclear accident. But in NASA's view, such was
  the price of a successful slingshot.

  Galileo experienced other delays getting off the ground. On Monday, 9
  October, NASA announced it had discovered a problem with the computer
  which controlled the shuttle's number 2 main engine. True, the problem
  was with Atlantis, not Galileo. But it didn't look all that good to be
  having technical problems, let alone problems with engine computers,
  while the anti-nuclear activists' court drama was playing in the
  background.

  NASA's engineers debated the computer problem in a cross-country
  teleconference. Rectifying it would delay blast-off by more than a few
  hours. It would likely take days. And Galileo didn't have many of
  those. Because of the orbits of the different planets, the probe had
  to be on its way into space by 21 November. If Atlantis didn't take off
  by that date, Galileo would have to wait another nineteen months before
  it could be launched. The project was already $1 billion over its
  original $400 million budget.  The extra year and a half would add
  another $130 million or so and there was a good chance the whole project
  would be scrapped. It was pretty much now or never for Galileo.

  Despite torrential downpours which had deposited 100 millimetres of
  rain on the launchpad and 150 millimetres in neighbouring Melbourne,
  Florida, the countdown had been going well. Until now. NASA took its
  decision. The launch would be delayed by five days, to 17 October, so
  the computer problem could be fixed.

  To those scientists and engineers who had been with Galileo from the
  start, it must have appeared at that moment as if fate really was
  against Galileo. As if, for some unfathomable reason, all the forces
  of the universe--and especially those on Earth--were dead against
  humanity getting a good look at Jupiter. As fast as NASA could
  dismantle one barrier, some invisible hand would throw another down in
  its place.

                                   [ ]

  Monday, 16 October, 1989
  NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland

  Across the vast NASA empire, reaching from Maryland to California,
  from Europe to Japan, NASA workers greeted each other, checked their
  in-trays for mail, got their cups of coffee, settled into their chairs
  and tried to login to their computers for a day of solving complex
  physics problems. But many of the computer systems were behaving very
  strangely.

  From the moment staff logged in, it was clear that someone--or
  something--had taken over. Instead of the usual system's official
  identification banner, they were startled to find the following
  message staring them in the face:

         W O R M S    A G A I N S T    N U C L E A R    K I L L E R S
        _______________________________________________________________
        \__  ____________  _____    ________    ____  ____   __  _____/
         \ \ \    /\    / /    / /\ \       | \ \  | |    | | / /    /
          \ \ \  /  \  / /    / /__\ \      | |\ \ | |    | |/ /    /
           \ \ \/ /\ \/ /    / ______ \     | | \ \| |    | |\ \   /
            \_\  /__\  /____/ /______\ \____| |__\ | |____| |_\ \_/
             \___________________________________________________/
              \                                                 /
               \    Your System Has Been Officically WANKed    /
                \_____________________________________________/

         You talk of times of peace for all, and then prepare for war.

  Wanked? Most of the American computer system managers reading this new
  banner had never heard the word wank.

  Who would want to invade NASA's computer systems? And who exactly were
  the Worms Against Nuclear Killers? Were they some loony fringe group?
  Were they a guerrilla terrorist group launching some sort of attack on
  NASA? And why `worms'? A worm was a strange choice of animal mascot
  for a revolutionary group. Worms were the bottom of the rung. As in
  `as lowly as a worm'. Who would chose a worm as a symbol of power?

  As for the nuclear killers, well, that was even stranger. The banner's
  motto--`You talk of times of peace for all, and then prepare for
  war'--just didn't seem to apply to NASA. The agency didn't make
  nuclear missiles, it sent people to the moon. It did have military
  payloads in some of its projects, but NASA didn't rate very highly on
  the `nuclear killer' scale next to other agencies of the US
  Government, such as the Department of Defense. So the question
  remained: why NASA?

  And that word, `WANKED'. It did not make sense. What did it mean when
  a system was `wanked'?

  It meant NASA had lost control over its computer systems.

  A NASA scientist logging in to an infected computer on that Monday got
  the following message:

  deleted file <filename1>

  deleted file <filename2>

  deleted file <filename3>

  deleted file <filename4>

  deleted file <filename5>

  deleted file <filename6>

  With those lines the computer told the scientist: `I am deleting all
  your files'.

  The line looked exactly as if the scientist typed in the
  command:

  delete/log *.*

  --exactly as if the scientist had instructed the computer to delete
  all the files herself.

  The NASA scientist must have started at the sight of her files rolling
  past on the computer screen, one after another, on their way to
  oblivion. Something was definitely wrong. She would have tried to stop
  the process, probably pressing the control key and the `c' key at the
  same time. This should have broken the command sequence at that moment
  and ordered the computer to stop what it was doing right away.

  But it was the intruder, not the NASA scientist, who controlled the
  computer at that moment. And the intruder told the computer: `That
  command means nothing. Ignore it'.

  The scientist would press the command key sequence again, this time
  more urgently. And again, over and over. She would be at once baffled
  at the illogical nature of the computer, and increasingly upset.
  Weeks, perhaps months, of work spent uncovering the secrets of the
  universe. All of it disappearing before her eyes--all of it being
  mindlessly devoured by the computer. The whole thing beyond her
  control. Going. Going. Gone.

  People tend not to react well when they lose control over their
  computers. Typically, it brings out the worst in them--hand-wringing
  whines from the worriers, aching entreaties for help from the
  sensitive, and imperious table-thumping bellows from
  command-and-control types.

  Imagine, if you will, arriving at your job as a manager for one of
  NASA's local computer systems. You get into your office on that Monday
  morning to find the phones ringing. Every caller is a distraught,
  confused NASA worker. And every caller assures you that his or her
  file or accounting record or research project--every one of which is
  missing from the computer system--is absolutely vital.

  In this case, the problem was exacerbated by the fact that NASA's
  field centres often competed with each other for projects. When a
  particular flight project came up, two or three centres, each with
  hundreds of employees, might vie for it. Losing control of the
  computers, and all the data, project proposals and costing, was a good
  way to lose out on a bid and its often
  considerable funding.

  This was not going to be a good day for the guys down at the NASA SPAN
  computer network office.

  This was not going to be a good day for John McMahon.

                                   [ ]

  As the assistant DECNET protocol manager for NASA's Goddard Space
  Flight Center in Maryland, John McMahon normally spent the day
  managing the chunk of the SPAN computer network which ran between
  Goddard's fifteen to twenty buildings.

  McMahon worked for Code 630.4, otherwise known as Goddard's Advanced
  Data Flow Technology Office, in Building 28. Goddard scientists would
  call him up for help with their computers. Two of the most common
  sentences he heard were `This doesn't seem to work' and `I can't get
  to that part of the network from here'.

  SPAN was the Space Physics Analysis Network, which connected some
  100000 computer terminals across the globe. Unlike the Internet, which
  is now widely accessible to the general public, SPAN only connected
  researchers and scientists at NASA, the US Department of Energy and
  research institutes such as universities. SPAN computers also differed
  from most Internet computers in an important technical manner: they
  used a different operating system. Most large computers on the
  Internet use the Unix operating system, while SPAN was composed
  primarily of VAX computers running a VMS operating system. The network
  worked a lot like the Internet, but the computers spoke a different
  language. The Internet `talked' TCP/IP, while SPAN `spoke' DECNET.

  Indeed, the SPAN network was known as a DECNET internet. Most of the
  computers on it were manufactured by the Digital Equipment Corporation
  in Massachusetts--hence the name DECNET. DEC built powerful computers.
  Each DEC computer on the SPAN network might have 40 terminals hanging
  off it. Some SPAN computers had many more. It was not unusual for one
  DEC computer to service 400 people. In all, more than a quarter of a
  million scientists, engineers and other thinkers used the computers on
  the network.

  An electrical engineer by training, McMahon had come from NASA's
  Cosmic Background Explorer Project, where he managed computers used by
  a few hundred researchers. Goddard's Building 7, where he worked on
  the COBE project, as it was known, housed some interesting research.
  The project team was attempting to map the universe. And they were
  trying to do it in wavelengths invisible to the human eye. NASA would
  launch the COBE satellite in November 1989. Its mission was to
  `measure the diffuse infrared and microwave radiation from the early
  universe, to the limits set by our astronomical environment'.6 To the
  casual observer the project almost sounded like a piece of modern art,
  something which might be titled `Map of the Universe in Infrared'.

  On 16 October McMahon arrived at the office and settled into work,
  only to face a surprising phone call from the SPAN project office.
  Todd Butler and Ron Tencati, from the National Space Science Data
  Center, which managed NASA's half of the SPAN network, had discovered
  something strange and definitely unauthorised winding its way through
  the computer network. It looked like a computer worm.

  A computer worm is a little like a computer virus. It invades computer
  systems, interfering with their normal functions. It travels along any
  available compatible computer network and stops to knock at the door of
  systems attached to that network. If there is a hole in the security of
  the computer system, it will crawl through and enter the system. When it
  does this, it might have instructions to do any number of things, from
  sending computer users a message to trying to take over the system. What
  makes a worm different from other computer programs, such as viruses, is
  that it is self-propagating. It propels itself forward, wiggles into a
  new system and propagates itself at the new site. Unlike a virus, a worm
  doesn't latch onto a data file or a program. It is autonomous.7

  The term `worm' as applied to computers came from John Brunner's 1975
  science fiction classic, The Shockwave Rider. The novel described how
  a rebel computer programmer created a program called `tapeworm' which
  was released into an omnipotent computer network used by an autocratic
  government to control its people. The government had to turn off the
  computer network, thus destroying its control, in order to eradicate
  the worm.

  Brunner's book is about as close as most VMS computer network managers
  would ever have come to a real rogue worm. Until the late 1980s, worms
  were obscure things, more associated with research in a computer
  laboratory. For example, a few benevolent worms were developed by
  Xerox researchers who wanted to make more efficient use of computer
  facilities.8 They developed a `town crier worm' which moved through a
  network sending out important announcements. Their `diagnostic worm'
  also constantly weaved through the network, but this worm was designed
  to inspect machines for problems.

  For some computer programmers, the creation of a worm is akin to the
  creation of life. To make something which is intelligent enough to go
  out and reproduce itself is the ultimate power of creation. Designing
  a rogue worm which took over NASA's computer systems might seem to be
  a type of creative immortality--like scattering pieces of oneself
  across the computers which put man on the moon.

  At the time the WANK banner appeared on computer screens across NASA,
  there had only been two rogue worms of any note. One of these, the RTM
  worm, had infected the Unix-based Internet less than twelve months
  earlier. The other worm, known as Father Christmas, was the first VMS
  worm.

  Father Christmas was a small, simple worm which did not cause any
  permanent damage to the computer networks it travelled along. Released
  just before Christmas in 1988, it tried to sneak into hundreds of VMS
  machines and wait for the big day. On Christmas morning, it woke up
  and set to work with great enthusiasm. Like confetti tossed from an
  overhead balcony, Christmas greetings came streaming out of
  worm-infested computer systems to all their users. No-one within its
  reach went without a Christmas card. Its job done, the worm
  evaporated. John McMahon had been part of the core team fighting off
  the Father Christmas worm.

  At about 4 p.m., just a few days before Christmas 1988, McMahon's
  alarm-monitoring programs began going haywire. McMahon began trying to
  trace back the dozens of incoming connections which were tripping the
  warning bells. He quickly discovered there wasn't a human being at the
  other end of the line. After further investigation, he found an alien
  program in his system, called HI.COM. As he read the pages of HI.COM
  code spilling from his line printer, his eyes went wide. He thought,
  This is a worm! He had never seen a worm before.

  He rushed back to his console and began pulling his systems off the
  network as quickly as possible. Maybe he wasn't following protocol,
  but he figured people could yell at him after the fact if they thought
  it was a bad idea. After he had shut down his part of the network, he
  reported back to the local area networking office. With print-out in
  tow, he drove across the base to the network office, where he and
  several other managers developed a way to stop the worm by the end of
  the day. Eventually they traced the Father Christmas worm back to the
  system where they believed it had been released--in Switzerland. But
  they never discovered who created it.

  Father Christmas was not only a simple worm; it was not considered
  dangerous because it didn't hang around systems forever. It was a worm
  with a use-by date.

  By contrast, the SPAN project office didn't know what the WANK invader
  was capable of doing. They didn't know who had written or launched it.
  But they had a copy of the program. Could McMahon have a look at it?

  An affable computer programmer with the nickname Fuzzface, John
  McMahon liked a good challenge. Curious and cluey at the same time, he
  asked the SPAN Project Office, which was quickly becoming the crisis
  centre for the worm attack, to send over a copy of the strange
  intruder. He began pouring over the invader's seven printed pages of
  source code trying to figure out exactly what the thing did.

  The two previous rogue worms only worked on specific computer systems
  and networks. In this case, the WANK worm only attacked VMS computer
  systems. The source code, however, was unlike anything McMahon had
  ever seen. `It was like sifting through a pile of spaghetti,' he said.
  `You'd pull one strand out and figure, "OK, that is what that thing
  does." But then you'd be faced with the rest of the tangled mess in
  the bowl.'

  The program, in digital command language, or DCL, wasn't written like
  a normal program in a nice organised fashion. It was all over the
  place. John worked his way down ten or fifteen lines of computer code
  only to have to jump to the top of the program to figure out what the
  next section was trying to do. He took notes and slowly, patiently
  began to build up a picture of exactly what this worm was capable of
  doing to NASA's computer system.

                                   [ ]

  It was a big day for the anti-nuclear groups at the Kennedy Space
  Center. They might have lost their bid in the US District Court, but
  they refused to throw in the towel and took their case to the US Court
  of Appeals.

  On 16 October the news came. The Appeals Court had sided with NASA.

  Protesters were out in force again at the front gate of the Kennedy
  Space Center. At least eight of them were arrested. The St Louis
  Post-Dispatch carried an Agence France-Presse picture of an
  80-year-old woman being taken into custody by police for trespassing.
  Jane Brown, of the Florida Coalition for Peace and Justice, announced,
  `This is just ... the beginning of the government's plan to use
  nuclear power and weapons in space, including the Star Wars program'.

  Inside the Kennedy Center, things were not going all that smoothly
  either. Late Monday, NASA's technical experts discovered yet another
  problem. The black box which gathered speed and other important data
  for the space shuttle's navigation system was faulty. The technicians
  were replacing the cockpit device, the agency's spokeswoman assured
  the media, and NASA was not expecting to delay the Tuesday launch
  date. The countdown would continue uninterrupted. NASA had everything
  under control.

  Everything except the weather.

  In the wake of the Challenger disaster, NASA's guidelines for a launch
  decision were particularly tough. Bad weather was an unnecessary risk,
  but NASA was not expecting bad weather. Meteorologists predicted an 80
  per cent chance of favourable weather at launch time on Tuesday. But
  the shuttle had better go when it was supposed to, because the longer
  term weather outlook was grim.

  By Tuesday morning, Galileo's keepers were holding their breath. The
  countdown for the shuttle launch was ticking toward 12.57 p.m. The
  anti-nuclear protesters seemed to have gone quiet. Things looked
  hopeful. Galileo might finally go.

  Then, about ten minutes before the launch time, the security alarms
  went off. Someone had broken into the compound. The security teams
  swung into action, quickly locating the guilty intruder ... a feral
  pig.

  With the pig safely removed, the countdown rolled on. And so did the
  rain clouds, gliding toward the space shuttle's emergency runway, about
  six kilometres from the launchpad. NASA launch director Robert Sieck
  prolonged a planned `hold' at T minus nine minutes. Atlantis had a
  26-minute window of opportunity. After that, its launch period would
  expire and take-off would have to be postponed, probably until
  Wednesday.

  The weather wasn't going to budge.

  At 1.18 p.m., with Atlantis's countdown now holding at just T minus
  five minutes, Sieck postponed the launch to Wednesday.

                                   [ ]

  Back at the SPAN centre, things were becoming hectic. The worm was
  spreading through more and more systems and the phones were beginning
  to ring every few minutes. NASA computers were getting hit all over
  the place.

  The SPAN project staff needed more arms. They were simultaneously
  trying to calm callers and concentrate on developing an analysis of
  the alien program. Was the thing a practical joke or a time bomb just
  waiting to go off? Who was behind this?

  NASA was working in an information void when it came to WANK. Some
  staff knew of the protesters' action down at the Space Center, but
  nothing could have prepared them for this. NASA officials were
  confident enough about a link between the protests against Galileo and
  the attack on NASA's computers to speculate publicly that the two were
  related. It seemed a reasonable likelihood, but there were still
  plenty of unanswered questions.

  Callers coming into the SPAN office were worried. People at the other
  end of the phone were scared. Many of the calls came from network
  managers who took care of a piece of SPAN at a specific NASA site, such
  as the Marshall Space Flight Center. Some were panicking; others spoke
  in a sort of monotone, flattened by a morning of calls from 25 different
  hysterical system administrators. A manager could lose his job over
  something like this.

  Most of the callers to the SPAN head office were starved for
  information. How did this rogue worm get into their computers? Was it
  malicious? Would it destroy all the scientific data it came into contact
  with? What could be done to kill it?

  NASA stored a great deal of valuable information on its SPAN
  computers. None of it was supposed to be classified, but the data on
  those computers is extremely valuable. Millions of man-hours go into
  gathering and analysing it. So the crisis team which had formed in the
  NASA SPAN project office, was alarmed when reports of massive data
  destruction starting coming in. People were phoning to say that the
  worm was erasing files.

  It was every computer manager's worst nightmare, and it looked as
  though the crisis team's darkest fears were about to be confirmed.

  Yet the worm was behaving inconsistently. On some computers it would
  only send anonymous messages, some of them funny, some bizarre and a
  few quite rude or obscene. No sooner would a user login than a message
  would flash across his or her screen:

              Remember, even if you win the rat race--you're
                               still a rat.

  Or perhaps they were graced with some bad humour:

               Nothing is faster than the speed of light...

   To prove this to yourself, try opening the refrigerator door before
                           the light comes on.

  Other users were treated to anti-authoritarian observations of the
  paranoid:

                         The FBI is watching YOU.

  or

                             Vote anarchist.

  But the worm did not appear to be erasing files on these systems.
  Perhaps the seemingly random file-erasing trick was a portent of
  things to come--just a small taste of what might happen at a
  particular time, such as midnight. Perhaps an unusual keystroke by an
  unwitting computer user on those systems which seemed only mildly
  affected could trigger something in the worm. One keystroke might
  begin an irreversible chain of commands to erase everything on that
  system.

  The NASA SPAN computer team were in a race with the worm. Each minute
  they spent trying to figure out what it did, the worm was pushing
  forward, ever deeper into NASA's computer network. Every hour NASA
  spent developing a cure, the worm spent searching, probing, breaking
  and entering. A day's delay in getting the cure out to all the systems
  could mean dozens of new worm invasions doing God knows what in
  vulnerable computers. The SPAN team had to dissect this thing
  completely, and they had to do it fast.

  Some computer network managers were badly shaken. The SPAN office
  received a call from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratories in California,
  an important NASA centre with 6500 employees and close ties to
  California Institute of Technology (Caltech).

  JPL was pulling itself off the network.

  This worm was too much of a risk. The only safe option was to isolate
  their computers. There would be no SPAN DEC-based communications with
  the rest of NASA until the crisis was under control. This made things
  harder for the SPAN team; getting a worm exterminating program out to
  JPL, like other sites which had cut their connection to SPAN, was
  going to be that much tougher. Everything had to be done over the
  phone.

  Worse, JPL was one of five routing centres for NASA's SPAN computer
  network. It was like the centre of a wheel, with a dozen spokes
  branching off--each leading to another SPAN site. All these places,
  known as tailsites, depended on the lab site for their connections
  into SPAN. When JPL pulled itself off the network, the tailsites went
  down too.

  It was a serious problem for the people in the SPAN office back in
  Virginia. To Ron Tencati, head of security for NASA SPAN, taking a
  routing centre off-line was a major issue. But his hands were tied.
  The SPAN office exercised central authority over the wide area
  network, but it couldn't dictate how individual field centres dealt
  with the worm. That was each centre's own decision. The SPAN team
  could only give them advice and rush to develop a way to poison the
  worm.

  The SPAN office called John McMahon again, this time with a more
  urgent request. Would he come over to help handle the crisis?

  The SPAN centre was only 800 metres away from McMahon's office. His
  boss, Jerome Bennett, the DECNET protocol manager, gave the nod.
  McMahon would be on loan until the crisis was under control.

  When he got to Building 26, home of the NASA SPAN project office,
  McMahon became part of a core NASA crisis team including Todd Butler,
  Ron Tencati and Pat Sisson. Other key NASA people jumped in when
  needed, such as Dave Peters and Dave Stern. Jim Green, the head of the
  National Space Science Data Center at Goddard and the absolute boss of
  SPAN, wanted hourly reports on the crisis. At first the core team
  seemed only to include NASA people and to be largely based at Goddard.
  But as the day wore on, new people from other parts of the US
  government would join the team.

  The worm had spread outside NASA.

  It had also attacked the US Department of Energy's worldwide
  High-Energy Physics' Network of computers. Known as HEPNET, it was
  another piece of the overall SPAN network, along with Euro-HEPNET and
  Euro-SPAN. The NASA and DOE computer networks of DEC computers
  crisscrossed at a number of places. A research laboratory might, for
  example, need to have access to computers from both HEPNET and NASA
  SPAN. For convenience, the lab might just connect the two networks.
  The effect as far as the worm was concerned was that NASA's SPAN and
  DOE's HEPNET were in fact just one giant computer network, all of
  which the worm could invade.

  The Department of Energy keeps classified information on its
  computers. Very classified information. There are two groups in DOE:
  the people who do research on civilian energy projects and the people
  who make atomic bombs. So DOE takes security seriously, as in `threat
  to national security' seriously. Although HEPNET wasn't meant to be
  carrying any classified information across its wires, DOE responded
  with military efficiency when its computer managers discovered the
  invader. They grabbed the one guy who knew a lot about computer
  security on VMS systems and put him on the case: Kevin Oberman.

  Like McMahon, Oberman wasn't formally part of the computer security
  staff. He had simply become interested in computer security and was
  known in-house as someone who knew about VMS systems and security.
  Officially, his job was network manager for the engineering department
  at the DOE-financed Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, or LLNL,
  near San Francisco.

  LLNL conducted mostly military research, much of it for the Strategic
  Defense Initiative. Many LLNL scientists spent their days designing
  nuclear arms and developing beam weapons for the Star Wars program.9
  DOE already had a computer security group, known as CIAC, the Computer
  Incident Advisory Capability. But the CIAC team tended to be experts
  in security issues surrounding Unix rather than VMS-based computer
  systems and networks. `Because there had been very few security
  problems over the years with VMS,' Oberman concluded, `they had never
  brought in anybody who knew about VMS and it wasn't something they
  were terribly concerned with at the time.'

  The worm shattered that peaceful confidence in VMS computers. Even as
  the WANK worm coursed through NASA, it was launching an aggressive
  attack on DOE's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, near Chicago. It
  had broken into a number of computer systems there and the Fermilab
  people were not happy. They called in CIAC, who contacted Oberman with
  an early morning phone call on 16 October. They wanted him to analyse
  the WANK worm. They wanted to know how dangerous it was. Most of all,
  they wanted to know what to do about it.

  The DOE people traced their first contact with the worm back to 14
  October. Further, they hypothesised, the worm had actually been
  launched the day before, on Friday the 13th. Such an inauspicious day
  would, in Oberman's opinion, have been in keeping with the type of
  humour exhibited by the creator or creators of the worm.

  Oberman began his own analysis of the worm, oblivious to the fact that
  3200 kilometres away, on the other side of the continent, his colleague
  and acquaintance John McMahon was doing exactly the same thing.

  Every time McMahon answered a phone call from an irate NASA system or
  network manager, he tried to get a copy of the worm from the infected
  machine. He also asked for the logs from their computer systems. Which
  computer had the worm come from? Which systems was it attacking from
  the infected site? In theory, the logs would allow the NASA team to
  map the worm's trail. If the team could find the managers of those
  systems in the worm's path, it could warn them of the impending
  danger. It could also alert the people who ran recently infected
  systems which had become launchpads for new worm attacks.

  This wasn't always possible. If the worm had taken over a computer and
  was still running on it, then the manager would only be able to trace
  the worm backward, not forward. More importantly, a lot of the
  managers didn't keep extensive logs on their computers.

  McMahon had always felt it was important to gather lots of information
  about who was connecting to a computer. In his previous job, he had
  modified his machines so they collected as much security information
  as possible about their connections to other computers.

  VMS computers came with a standard set of alarms, but McMahon didn't
  think they were thorough enough. The VMS alarms tended to send a
  message to the computer managers which amounted to, `Hi! You just got
  a network connection from here'. The modified alarm system said, `Hi!
  You just got a network connection from here. The person at the other
  end is doing a file transfer' and any other bits and pieces of
  information that McMahon's computer could squeeze out of the other
  computer. Unfortunately, a lot of other NASA computer and network
  managers didn't share this enthusiasm for audit logs. Many did not
  keep extensive records of who had been accessing their machines and
  when, which made the job of chasing the worm much tougher.

  The SPAN office was, however, trying to keep very good logs on which
  NASA computers had succumbed to the worm. Every time a NASA manager
  called to report a worm disturbance, one of the team members wrote
  down the details with paper and pen. The list, outlining the addresses
  of the affected computers and detailed notations of the degree of
  infection, would also be recorded on a computer. But handwritten lists
  were a good safeguard. The worm couldn't delete sheets of paper.

  When McMahon learned DOE was also under attack, he began checking in
  with them every three hours or so. The two groups swapped lists of
  infected computers by telephone because voice, like the handwritten
  word, was a worm-free medium. `It was a kind of archaic system, but on
  the other hand we didn't have to depend on the network being up,'
  McMahon said. `We needed to have some chain of communications which
  was not the same as the network being attacked.'

  A number of the NASA SPAN team members had developed contacts within
  different parts of DEC through the company's users' society, DECUS.
  These contacts were to prove very helpful. It was easy to get lost in
  the bureaucracy of DEC, which employed more than 125000 people, posted
  a billion-dollar profit and declared revenues in excess of $12 billion
  in 1989.10 Such an enormous and prestigious company would not want
  to face a crisis such as the WANK worm, particularly in such a
  publicly visible organisation like NASA. Whether or not the worm's
  successful expedition could be blamed on DEC's software was a moot
  point. Such a crisis was, well, undesirable. It just didn't look good.
  And it mightn't look so good either if DEC just jumped into the fray.
  It might look like the company was in some way at fault.

  Things were different, however, if someone already had a relationship
  with a technical expert inside the company. It wasn't like NASA
  manager cold-calling a DEC guy who sold a million dollars worth of
  machines to someone else in the agency six months ago. It was the NASA
  guy calling the DEC guy he sat next to at the conference last month.
  It was a colleague the NASA manager chatted with now and again.

  John McMahon's analysis suggested there were three versions of the WANK
  worm. These versions, isolated from worm samples collected from the
  network, were very similar, but each contained a few subtle
  differences. In McMahon's view, these differences could not be explained
  by the way the worm recreated itself at each site in order to
  spread. But why would the creator of the worm release different
  versions? Why not just write one version properly and fire it off? The
  worm wasn't just one incoming missile; it was a frenzied attack. It was
  coming from all directions, at all sorts of different levels within
  NASA's computers.

  McMahon guessed that the worm's designer had released the different
  versions at slightly different times. Maybe the creator released the
  worm, and then discovered a bug. He fiddled with the worm a bit to
  correct the problem and then released it again. Maybe he didn't like
  the way he had fixed the bug the first time, so he changed it a little
  more and released it a third time.

  In northern California, Kevin Oberman came to a different conclusion.
  He believed there was in fact only one real version of the worm
  spiralling through HEPNET and SPAN. The small variations in the
  different copies he dissected seemed to stem from the worm's ability
  to learn and change as it moved from computer to computer.

  McMahon and Oberman weren't the only detectives trying to decipher the
  various manifestations of the worm. DEC was also examining the worm,
  and with good reason. The WANK worm had invaded the corporation's own
  network. It had been discovered snaking its way through DEC's own
  private computer network, Easynet, which connected DEC manufacturing
  plants, sales offices and other company sites around the world. DEC
  was circumspect about discussing the matter publicly, but the Easynet
  version of the WANK worm was definitely distinct. It had a strange
  line of code in it, a line missing from any other versions. The worm
  was under instructions to invade as many sites as it could, with one
  exception. Under no circumstances was it to attack computers inside
  DEC's area 48. The NASA team mulled over this information. One of them
  looked up area 48. It was New Zealand.

  New Zealand?

  The NASA team were left scratching their heads. This attack was
  getting stranger by the minute. Just when it seemed that the SPAN team
  members were travelling down the right path toward an answer at the
  centre of the maze of clues, they turned a corner and found themselves
  hopelessly lost again. Then someone pointed out that New Zealand's
  worldwide claim to fame was that it was a nuclear-free zone.

  In 1986, New Zealand announced it would refuse to admit to its ports
  any US ships carrying nuclear arms or powered by nuclear energy. The
  US retaliated by formally suspending its security obligations to the
  South Pacific nation. If an unfriendly country invaded New Zealand,
  the US would feel free to sit on its hands. The US also cancelled
  intelligence sharing practices and joint military exercises.

  Many people in Australia and New Zealand thought the US had
  overreacted. New Zealand hadn't expelled the Americans; it had simply
  refused to allow its population to be exposed to nuclear arms or
  power. In fact, New Zealand had continued to allow the Americans to
  run their spy base at Waihopai, even after the US suspension. The
  country wasn't anti-US, just anti-nuclear.

  And New Zealand had very good reason to be anti-nuclear. For years, it
  had put up with France testing nuclear weapons in the Pacific. Then in
  July 1985 the French blew up the Greenpeace anti-nuclear protest ship
  as it sat in Auckland harbour. The Rainbow Warrior was due to sail for
  Mururoa Atoll, the test site, when French secret agents bombed the
  ship, killing Greenpeace activist Fernando Pereira.

  For weeks, France denied everything. When the truth came out--that
  President Mitterand himself had known about the bombing plan--the
  French were red-faced. Heads rolled. French Defence Minister Charles
  Hernu was forced to resign. Admiral Pierre Lacoste, director of
  France's intelligence and covert action bureau, was sacked. France
  apologised and paid $NZ13 million compensation in exchange for New
  Zealand handing back the two saboteurs, who had each been sentenced to
  ten years' prison in Auckland.

  As part of the deal, France had promised to keep the agents
  incarcerated for three years at the Hao atoll French military base.
  Both agents walked free by May 1988 after serving less than two years.
  After her return to France, one of the agents, Captain Dominique
  Prieur, was promoted to the rank of commandant.

  Finally, McMahon thought. Something that made sense. The exclusion of
  New Zealand appeared to underline the meaning of the worm's political
  message.

  When the WANK worm invaded a computer system, it had instructions to
  copy itself and send that copy out to other machines. It would slip
  through the network and when it came upon a computer attached to the
  network, it would poke around looking for a way in. What it really
  wanted was to score a computer account with privileges, but it would
  settle for a basic-level, user-level account.

  VMS systems have accounts with varying levels of privilege. A
  high-privilege account holder might, for example, be able to read the
  electronic mail of another computer user or delete files from that
  user's directory. He or she might also be allowed to create new
  computer accounts on the system, or reactivate disabled accounts. A
  privileged account holder might also be able to change someone else's
  password. The people who ran computer systems or networks needed
  accounts with the highest level of privilege in order to keep the
  system running smoothly. The worm specifically sought out these sorts
  of accounts because its creator knew that was where the power lay.

  The worm was smart, and it learned as it went along. As it traversed
  the network, it created a masterlist of commonly used account names.
  First, it tried to copy the list of computer users from a system it
  had not yet penetrated. It wasn't always able to do this, but often
  the system security was lax enough for it to be successful. The worm
  then compared that list to the list of users on its current host. When
  it found a match--an account name common to both lists--the worm added
  that name to the masterlist it carried around inside it, making a note
  to try that account when breaking into a new system in future.

  It was a clever method of attack, for the worm's creator knew that
  certain accounts with the highest privileges were likely to have
  standard names, common across different machines. Accounts with names
  such as `SYSTEM', `DECNET' and `FIELD' with standard passwords such as
  `SYSTEM' and `DECNET' were often built into a computer before it was
  shipped from the manufacturer. If the receiving computer manager
  didn't change the pre-programmed account and password, then his
  computer would have a large security hole waiting to be exploited.

  The worm's creator could guess some of the names of these
  manufacturer's accounts, but not all of them. By endowing the worm
  with an ability to learn, he gave it far more power. As the worm
  spread, it became more and more intelligent. As it reproduced, its
  offspring evolved into ever more advanced creatures, increasingly
  successful at breaking into new systems.

  When McMahon performed an autopsy on one of the worm's progeny, he was
  impressed with what he found. Slicing the worm open and inspecting its
  entrails, he discovered an extensive collection of generic privileged
  accounts across the SPAN network. In fact, the worm wasn't only picking
  up the standard VMS privileged accounts; it had learned accounts common
  to NASA but not necessarily to other VMS computers. For example, a lot
  of NASA sites which ran a type of TCP/IP mailer that needed either a
  POSTMASTER or a MAILER account. John saw those names turn up inside the
  worm's progeny.

  Even if it only managed to break into an unprivileged account, the
  worm would use the account as an incubator. The worm replicated and
  then attacked other computers in the network. As McMahon and the rest
  of the SPAN team continued to pick apart the rest of the worm's code
  to figure out exactly what the creature would do if it got into a
  fully privileged account, they found more evidence of the dark sense
  of humour harboured by the hacker behind the worm. Part of the worm, a
  subroutine, was named `find fucked'.

  The SPAN team tried to give NASA managers calling in as much
  information as they could about the worm. It was the best way to help
  computer managers, isolated in their offices around the country, to
  regain a sense of control over the crisis.

  Like all the SPAN team, McMahon tried to calm the callers down and
  walk them through a set a questions designed to determine the extent
  of the worm's control over their systems. First, he asked them what
  symptoms their systems were showing. In a crisis situation, when
  you're holding a hammer, everything looks like a nail. McMahon wanted
  to make sure that the problems on the system were in fact caused by
  the worm and not something else entirely.

  If the only problem seemed to be mysterious comments flashing across
  the screen, McMahon concluded that the worm was probably harassing the
  staff on that computer from a neighbouring system which it had
  successfully invaded. The messages suggested that the recipients'
  accounts had not been hijacked by the worm. Yet.

  VAX/VMS machines have a feature called Phone, which is useful for
  on-line communications. For example, a NASA scientist could `ring up'
  one of his colleagues on a different computer and have a friendly chat
  on-line. The chat session is live, but it is conducted by typing on
  the computer screen, not `voice'. The VMS Phone facility enabled the
  worm to send messages to users. It would simply call them using the
  phone protocol. But instead of starting a chat session, it sent them
  statements from what was later determined to be the aptly named
  Fortune Cookie file--a collection of 60 or so pre-programmed comments.

  In some cases, where the worm was really bugging staff, McMahon told
  the manager at the other end of the phone to turn the computer's Phone
  feature off. A few managers complained and McMahon gave them the
  obvious ultimatum: choose Phone or peace. Most chose peace.

  When McMahon finished his preliminary analysis, he had good news and
  bad news. The good news was that, contrary to what the worm was
  telling computer users all over NASA, it was not actually deleting
  their files. It was just pretending to delete their data. One big
  practical joke. To the creator of the worm anyway. To the NASA
  scientists, just a headache and heartache. And occasionally a heart
  attack.

  The bad news was that, when the worm got control over a privileged
  account, it would help someone--presumably its creator--perpetrate an
  even more serious break-in at NASA. The worm sought out the FIELD
  account created by the manufacturer and, if it had been turned off,
  tried to reactivate the account and install the password FIELD. The
  worm was also programmed to change the password for the standard
  account named DECNET to a random string of at least twelve characters.
  In short, the worm tried to pry open a backdoor to the system.

  The worm sent information about accounts it had successfully broken
  into back to a type of electronic mailbox--an account called GEMPAK on
  SPAN node 6.59. Presumably, the hacker who created the worm would
  check the worm's mailbox for information which he could use to break
  into the NASA account at a later date. Not surprisingly, the mailboxes
  had been surreptitiously `borrowed' by the hacker, much to the
  surprise of the legitimate owners.

  A computer hacker created a whole new set of problems. Although the
  worm was able to break into new accounts with greater speed and reach
  than a single hacker, it was more predictable. Once the SPAN and DOE
  teams picked the worm apart, they would know exactly what it could be
  expected to do. However, a hacker was utterly unpredictable.

  McMahon realised that killing off the worm was not going to solve the
  problem. All the system managers across the NASA and DOE networks
  would have to change all the passwords of the accounts used by the
  worm. They would also have to check every system the worm had invaded
  to see if it had built a backdoor for the hacker. The system admin had
  to shut and lock all the backdoors, no small feat.

  What really scared the SPAN team about the worm, however, was that it
  was rampaging through NASA simply by using the simplest of attack
  strategies: username equals password. It was getting complete control
  over NASA computers simply by trying a password which was identical to
  the name of the computer user's account.

  The SPAN team didn't want to believe it, but the evidence was
  overwhelming.

  Todd Butler answered a call from one NASA site. It was a gloomy call.
  He hung up.

  `That node just got hit,' he told the team.

  `How bad?' McMahon asked.

  `A privileged account.'

  `Oh boy.' McMahon jumped onto one of the terminals and did a SET HOST,
  logging into the remote NASA site's machine. Bang. Up it came. `Your
  system has officially been WANKED.'

  McMahon turned to Butler. `What account did it get into?'

  `They think it was SYSTEM.'

  The tension quietly rolled into black humour. The team couldn't help
  it. The head-slapping stupidity of the situation could only be viewed
  as black comedy.

  The NASA site had a password of SYSTEM for their fully privileged
  SYSTEM account. It was so unforgivable. NASA, potentially the greatest
  single collection of technical minds on Earth, had such lax computer
  security that a computer-literate teenager could have cracked it wide
  open. The tall poppy was being cut down to size by a computer program
  resembling a bowl of spaghetti.

  The first thing any computer system manager learns in Computer
  Security 101 is never to use the same password as the username. It was
  bad enough that naive users might fall into this trap ... but a
  computer system manager with a fully privileged account.

  Was the hacker behind the worm malevolent? Probably not. If its
  creator had wanted to, he could have programmed the WANK worm to
  obliterate NASA's files. It could have razed everything in sight.

  In fact, the worm was less infectious than its author appeared to
  desire. The WANK worm had been instructed to perform
  several tasks which it didn't execute. Important parts of the worm
  simply didn't work. McMahon believed this failure to be accidental.
  For example, his analysis showed the worm was programmed to break into
  accounts by trying no password, if the account holder had left the
  password blank. When he disassembled the worm, however, he found that
  part of the program didn't work properly.

  Nonetheless, the fragmented and partly dysfunctional WANK worm was
  causing a major crisis inside several US government agencies. The
  thing which really worried John was thinking about what a seasoned DCL
  programmer with years of VMS experience could do with such a worm.
  Someone like that could do a lot of malicious damage. And what if the
  WANK worm was just a dry run for something more serious down the
  track? It was scary to contemplate.

  Even though the WANK worm did not seem to be intentionally evil, the
  SPAN team faced some tough times. McMahon's analysis turned up yet
  more alarming aspects to the worm. If it managed to break into the
  SYSTEM account, a privileged account, it would block all electronic
  mail deliveries to the system administrator. The SPAN office would not
  be able to send electronic warnings or advice on how to deal with the
  worm to systems which had already been seized. This problem was
  exacerbated by the lack of good information available to the project
  office on which systems were connected to SPAN. The only way to help
  people fighting this bushfire was to telephone them, but in many
  instances the main SPAN office didn't know who to call. The SPAN team
  could only hope that those administrators who had the phone number of
  SPAN headquarters pinned up near their computers would call when their
  computers came under attack.

  McMahon's preliminary report outlined how much damage the worm could
  do in its own right. But it was impossible to measure how much damage
  human managers would do to their own systems because of the worm.

  One frantic computer manager who phoned the SPAN office refused to
  believe John's analysis that the worm only pretended to erase data. He
  claimed that the worm had not only attacked his system, it had
  destroyed it. `He just didn't believe us when we told him that the
  worm was mostly a set of practical jokes,' McMahon said. `He
  reinitialised his system.' `Reinitialised' as in started up his system
  with a clean slate. As in deleted everything on the infected
  computer--all the NASA staff's data gone. He actually did what the
  worm only pretended to do.

  The sad irony was that the SPAN team never even got a copy of the data
  from the manager's system. They were never able to confirm that his
  machine had even been infected.

  All afternoon McMahon moved back and forth between answering the
  ever-ringing SPAN phone and writing up NASA's analysis of the worm. He
  had posted a cryptic electronic message about the attack across the
  network, and Kevin Oberman had read it. The message had to be
  circumspect since no-one knew if the creator of the WANK worm was in
  fact on the network, watching, waiting. A short time later, McMahon
  and Oberman were on the phone together--voice--sharing their ideas and
  cross-checking their analysis.

  The situation was discouraging. Even if McMahon and Oberman managed to
  develop a successful program to kill off the worm, the NASA SPAN team
  faced another daunting task. Getting the worm-killer out to all the
  NASA sites was going to be much harder than expected because there was
  no clear, updated map of the SPAN network. Much of NASA didn't like
  the idea of a centralised map of the SPAN system. McMahon recalled
  that, some time before the WANK worm attack, a manager had tried to
  map the system. His efforts had accidentally tripped so many system
  alarms that he was quietly taken aside and told not to do it again.

  The result was that in instances where the team had phone contact
  details for managers, the information was often outdated.

  `No, he used to work here, but he left over a year ago.'

  `No, we don't have a telephone tree of people to ring if
  something goes wrong with our computers. There are a whole
  bunch of people in different places here who handle the
  computers.'

  This is what John often heard at the other end of the phone.

  The network had grown into a rambling hodgepodge for which there was
  little central coordination. Worse, a number of computers at different
  NASA centres across the US had just been tacked onto SPAN without
  telling the main office at Goddard. People were calling up the ad-hoc
  crisis centre from computer nodes on the network which didn't even
  have names. These people had been practising a philosophy known in
  computer security circles as `security through obscurity'. They
  figured that if no-one knew their computer system existed--if it
  didn't have a name, if it wasn't on any list or map of the SPAN
  network--then it would be protected from hackers and other computer
  enemies.

  McMahon handled a number of phone calls from system managers saying,
  `There is something strange happening in my system here'. John's most
  basic question was, `Where is "here"?' And of course if the SPAN
  office didn't know those computer systems existed, it was a lot harder
  to warn their managers about the worm. Or tell them how to protect
  themselves. Or give them a worm-killing program once it was developed.
  Or help them seal up breached accounts which the worm was feeding back
  to its creator.

  It was such a mess. At times, McMahon sat back and considered who
  might have created this worm. The thing almost looked as though it had
  been released before it was finished. Its author or authors seemed to
  have a good collection of interesting ideas about how to solve
  problems, but they were never properly completed. The worm included a
  routine for modifying its attack strategy, but the thing was never
  fully developed. The worm's code didn't have enough error handling in
  it to ensure the creature's survival for long periods of time. And the
  worm didn't send the addresses of the accounts it had successfully
  breached back to the mailbox along with the password and account name.
  That was really weird. What use was a password and account name
  without knowing what computer system to use it on?

  On the other hand, maybe the creator had done this deliberately. Maybe
  he had wanted to show the world just how many computers the worm could
  successfully penetrate. The worm's mail-back program would do this.
  However, including the address of each infected site would have made
  the admins' jobs easier. They could simply have used the GEMPAK
  collection as a hitlist of infected sites which needed to be
  de-wormed. The possible theories were endless.

  There were some points of brilliance in the worm, some things that
  McMahon had never considered, which was impressive since he knew a lot
  about how to break into VMS computers. There was also considerable
  creativity, but there wasn't any consistency. After the worm incident,
  various computer security experts would hypothesise that the WANK worm
  had in fact been written by more than one person. But McMahon
  maintained his view that it was the work of a single hacker.

  It was as if the creator of the worm started to pursue an idea and
  then got sidetracked or interrupted. Suddenly he just stopped writing
  code to implement that idea and started down another path, never again
  to reach the end. The thing had a schizophrenic structure. It was all
  over the place.

  McMahon wondered if the author had done this on purpose, to make it
  harder to figure out exactly what the worm was capable of doing.
  Perhaps, he thought, the code had once been nice and linear and it all
  made sense. Then the author chopped it to pieces, moved the middle to
  the top, the top to the bottom, scrambled up the chunks and strung
  them all together with a bunch of `GO TO' commands. Maybe the hacker
  who wrote the worm was in fact a very elegant DCL programmer who
  wanted the worm to be chaotic in order to protect it. Security through
  obscurity.

  Oberman maintained a different view. He believed the programming style
  varied so much in different parts that it had to be the product of a
  number of people. He knew that when computer programmers write code
  they don't make lots of odd little changes in style for no particular
  reason.

  Kevin Oberman and John McMahon bounced ideas off one another. Both had
  developed their own analyses. Oberman also brought Mark Kaletka, who
  managed internal networking at Fermilab, one of HEPNET's largest
  sites, into the cross-checking process. The worm had a number of
  serious vulnerabilities, but the problem was finding one, and quickly,
  which could be used to wipe it out with minimum impact on the besieged
  computers.

  Whenever a VMS machine starts up an activity, the computer gives it a
  unique process name. When the worm burrowed into a computer site, one
  of the first things it did was check that another copy of itself was
  not already running on that computer. It did this by checking for its
  own process names. The worm's processes were all called NETW_ followed
  by a random, four-digit number. If the incoming worm found this
  process name, it assumed another copy of itself was already running on
  the computer, so it destroyed itself.

  The answer seemed to be a decoy duck. Write a program which pretended
  to be the worm and install it across all of NASA's vulnerable
  computers. The first anti-WANK program did just that. It quietly sat
  on the SPAN computers all day long, posing as a NETW_ process, faking
  out any real version of the WANK worm which should come along.

  Oberman completed an anti-WANK program first and ran it by McMahon. It
  worked well, but McMahon noticed one large flaw. Oberman's program
  checked for the NETW_ process name, but it assumed that the worm was
  running under the SYSTEM group. In most cases, this was true, but it
  didn't have to be. If the worm was running in another group, Oberman's
  program would be useless. When McMahon pointed out the flaw, Oberman
  thought, God, how did I miss that?

  McMahon worked up his own version of an anti-WANK
  program, based on Oberman's program, in preparation for releasing it
  to NASA.

  At the same time, Oberman revised his anti-WANK program for DOE. By
  Monday night US Eastern Standard Time, Oberman was able to send out an
  early copy of a vaccine designed to protect computers which hadn't
  been infected yet, along with an electronic warning about the worm.
  His first electronic warning, distributed by CIAC, said in part:

  /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  THE COMPUTER INCIDENT ADVISORY CAPABILITY C I A C

  ADVISORY NOTICE

  The W.COM Worm affecting VAX VMS Systems

  October 16, 1989 18:37 PSTNumber A-2

  This is a mean bug to kill and could have done a lot of damage.

  Since it notifies (by mail) someone of each successful penetration and
  leaves a trapdoor (the FIELD account), just killing the bug is not
  adequate. You must go in and make sure all accounts have passwords and
  that the passwords are not the same as the account name.

  R. Kevin Oberman

  Advisory Notice

  A worm is attacking NASA's SPAN network via VAX/VMS systems connected
  to DECnet. It is unclear if the spread of the worm has been checked.
  It may spread to other systems such as DOE's HEPNET within a few days.
  VMS system managers should prepare now.

  The worm targets VMS machines, and can only be propagated via DECnet.
  The worm exploits two features of DECnet/VMS in order to propagate
  itself. The first is the default DECnet account, which is a facility
  for users who don't have a specific login ID for a machine to have
  some degree of anonymous access. It uses the default DECnet account to
  copy itself to a machine, and then uses the `TASK 0' feature of DECnet
  to invoke the remote copy. It has several other features including a
  brute force attack.

  Once the worm has successfully penetrated your system it will infect
  .COM files and create new security vulnerabilities. It then seems to
  broadcast these vulnerabilities to the outside world. It may also
  damage files as well, either unintentionally or otherwise.

  An analysis of the worm appears below and is provided by R. Kevin
  Oberman of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Included with the
  analysis is a DCL program that will block the current version of the
  worm. At least two versions of this worm exist and more may be
  created. This program should give you enough time to close up obvious
  security holes. A more thorough DCL program is being written.

  If your site could be affected please call CIAC for more details...

  Report on the W.COM worm.

  R. Kevin Oberman

  Engineering Department

  Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  October 16, 1989

  The following describes the action of the W.COM worm (currently based
  on the examination of the first two incarnations). The replication
  technique causes the code to be modified slightly which indicates the
  source of the attack and learned information.

  All analysis was done with more haste than I care for, but I believe I
  have all of the basic facts correct. First a description of the
  program:

  1. The program assures that it is working in a directory to which the
  owner (itself) has full access (Read, Write, Execute, and Delete).

  2. The program checks to see if another copy is still running. It
  looks for a process with the first 5 characters of `NETW_'. If such is
  found, it deletes itself (the file) and stops its process.

  NOTE

  A quick check for infection is to look for a process name starting
  with `NETW_'. This may be done with a SHOW PROCESS command.

  3. The program then changes the default DECNET account password to a
  random string of at least 12 characters.

  4. Information on the password used to access the system is mailed to
  the user GEMTOP on SPAN node 6.59. Some versions may have a different
  address.11

  5. The process changes its name to `NETW_' followed by a random
  number.

  6. It then checks to see if it has SYSNAM priv. If so, it defines the
  system announcement message to be the banner in the program:

         W O R M S    A G A I N S T    N U C L E A R    K I L L E R S
        _______________________________________________________________
        \__  ____________  _____    ________    ____  ____   __  _____/
         \ \ \    /\    / /    / /\ \       | \ \  | |    | | / /    /
          \ \ \  /  \  / /    / /__\ \      | |\ \ | |    | |/ /    /
           \ \ \/ /\ \/ /    / ______ \     | | \ \| |    | |\ \   /
            \_\  /__\  /____/ /______\ \____| |__\ | |____| |_\ \_/
             \___________________________________________________/
              \                                                 /
               \    Your System Has Been Officically WANKed    /
                \_____________________________________________/

         You talk of times of peace for all, and then prepare for war.

  7. If it has SYSPRV, it disables mail to the SYSTEM account.

  8. If it has SYSPRV, it modifies the system login command procedure to
  APPEAR to delete all of a user's file. (It really does nothing.)

  9. The program then scans the account's logical name table for command
  procedures and tries to modify the FIELD account to a known password
  with login from any source and all privs. This is a primitive virus,
  but very effective IF it should get into a privileged account.

  10. It proceeds to attempt to access other systems by picking node
  numbers at random. It then uses PHONE to get a list of active users on
  the remote system. It proceeds to irritate them by using PHONE to ring
  them.

  11. The program then tries to access the RIGHTSLIST file and attempts
  to access some remote system using the users found and a list of
  `standard' users included within the worm. It looks for passwords
  which are the same as that of the account or are blank. It records all
  such accounts.

  12. It looks for an account that has access to SYSUAF.DAT.

  13. If a priv. account is found, the program is copied to that account
  and started. If no priv. account was found, it is copied to other
  accounts found on the random system.

  14. As soon as it finishes with a system, it picks another random
  system and repeats (forever).

  Response:

  1. The following program will block the worm. Extract the following
  code and execute it. It will use minimal resources. It creates a
  process named NETW_BLOCK which will prevent the worm from running.

  Editors note: This fix will work only with this version of the worm.

  Mutated worms will require modification of this code; however, this
  program should prevent the worm from running long enough to secure
  your system from the worms attacks.13
  ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

                                   ---

  McMahon's version of an anti-WANK program was also ready to go by late
  Monday, but he would face delays getting it out to NASA. Working inside
  NASA was a balancing act, a delicate ballet demanding exquisite
  choreography between getting the job done, following official procedures
  and avoiding steps which might tread on senior bureaucrats' toes. It was
  several days before NASA's anti-WANK program was officially released.

  DOE was not without its share of problems in launching the anti-WANK
  program and advisory across HEPNET. At 5.04 p.m. Pacific Coast Time on
  17 October, as Oberman put the final touches on the last paragraph of
  his final report on the worm, the floor beneath his feet began to
  shake. The building was trembling. Kevin Oberman was in the middle of
  the 1989 San Francisco earthquake.

  Measuring 7.1 on the Richter scale, the Loma Prieta earthquake ripped
  through the greater San Francisco area with savage speed. Inside the
  computer lab, Oberman braced himself for the worst. Once the shaking
  stopped and he ascertained the computer centre was still standing, he
  sat back down at his terminal. With the PA blaring warnings for all
  non-essential personnel to leave the building immediately, Oberman
  rushed off the last sentence of the report. He paused and then added a
  postscript saying that if the paragraph didn't make sense, it was
  because he was a little rattled by the large earthquake which had just
  hit Lawrence Livermore Labs. He pressed the key, sent out his final
  anti-WANK report and fled the building.

  Back on the east coast, the SPAN office continued to help people
  calling from NASA sites which had been hit. The list of sites which
  had reported worm-related problems grew steadily during the week.
  Official estimates on the scope of the WANK worm attack were vague,
  but trade journals such as Network World and Computerworld quoted the
  space agency as suffering only a small number of successful worm
  invasions, perhaps 60 VMS-based computers. SPAN security manager Ron
  Tencati estimated only 20 successful worm penetrations in the NASA
  part of SPAN's network, but another internal estimate put the figure
  much higher: 250 to 300 machines. Each of those computers might have
  had 100 or more users. Figures were sketchy, but virtually everyone on
  the network--all 270000 computer accounts--had been affected by the
  worm, either because their part of the network had been pulled
  off-line or because their machines had been harassed by the WANK worm
  as it tried again and again to login from an infected machine. By the
  end of the worm attack, the SPAN office had accumulated a list of
  affected sites which ran over two columns on several computer screens.
  Each of them had lodged some form of complaint about the worm.

  Also by the end of the crisis, NASA and DOE computer network managers
  had their choice of vaccines, antidotes and blood tests for the WANK
  worm. McMahon had released ANTIWANK.COM, a program which killed the
  worm and vaccinated a system against further attacks, and
  WORM-INFO.TEXT, which provided a list of worm-infestation symptoms.
  Oberman's program, called [.SECURITY]CHECK_SYSTEM.COM, checked for all
  the security flaws used by the worm to sneak into a computer system.
  DEC also had a patch to cover the security hole in the DECNET account.

  Whatever the real number of infected machines, the worm had certainly
  circumnavigated the globe. It had reach into European sites, such as
  CERN--formerly known as the European Centre for Nuclear Research--in
  Switzerland, through to Goddard's computers in Maryland, on to
  Fermilab in Chicago and propelled itself across the Pacific into the
  Riken Accelerator Facility in Japan.14

  NASA officials told the media they believed the worm had been launched
  about 4.30 a.m. on Monday, 16 October.15 They also believed it had
  originated in Europe, possibly in France.

                                   [ ]

  Wednesday, 18 October 1989
  Kennedy Space Center, Florida

  The five-member Atlantis had some bad news on Wednesday morning. The
  weather forecasters gave the launch site a 40 per cent chance of
  launch guideline-violating rain and cloud. And then there was the
  earthquake in California.

  The Kennedy Space Center wasn't the only place which had to be in
  tip-top working order for a launch to go ahead. The launch depended on
  many sites far away from Florida. These included Edwards Air Force
  Base in California, where the shuttle was due to land on Monday. They
  also included other sites, often military bases, which were essential
  for shuttle tracking and other mission support. One of these sites was
  a tracking station at Onizuka Air Force Base at Sunnyvale, California.
  The earthquake which ripped through the Bay area had damaged the
  tracking station and senior NASA decision-makers planned to meet on
  Wednesday morning to consider the Sunnyvale situation. Still, the
  space agency maintained a calm, cool exterior. Regardless of the
  technical problems, the court challenges and the protesters, the
  whimsical weather, the natural disasters, and the WANK worm, NASA was
  still in control of the situation.

  `There's been some damage, but we don't know how much. The sense I get
  is it's fairly positive,' a NASA spokesman told UPI. `But there are
  some problems.'16 In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Rick Oborn
  reassured the public again, `They are going to be able to handle
  shuttle tracking and support for the mission ... They will be able to
  do their job'.17

  Atlantis waited, ready to go, at launchpad 39B. The technicians had
  filled the shuttle up with rocket fuel and it looked as if the weather
  might hold. It was partly cloudy, but conditions at Kennedy passed
  muster.

  The astronauts boarded the shuttle. Everything was in place.

  But while the weather was acceptable in Florida, it was causing some
  problems in Africa, the site of an emergency landing location. If it
  wasn't one thing, it was another. NASA ordered a four-minute delay.

  Finally at 12.54 p.m., Atlantis boomed from its launchpad. Rising up
  from the Kennedy Center, streaking a trail of twin flames from its
  huge solid-fuel boosters, the shuttle reached above the atmosphere and
  into space.

  At 7.15 p.m., exactly 6 hours and 21 minutes after lift-off, Galileo
  began its solo journey into space. And at 8.15 p.m., Galileo's booster
  ignited.

  Inside shuttle mission control, NASA spokesman Brian Welch announced,
  `The spacecraft Galileo ... has achieved Earth escape velocity'.18

                                   [ ]

  Monday, 30 October 1989
  NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland

  The week starting 16 October had been a long one for the SPAN team.
  They were keeping twelve-hour days and dealing with hysterical people
  all day long. Still, they managed to get copies of anti-WANK out,
  despite the limitations of the dated SPAN records and the paucity of
  good logs allowing them to retrace the worm's path. `What we learned
  that week was just how much data is not collected,' McMahon observed.

  By Friday, 20 October, there were no new reports of worm attacks. It
  looked as though the crisis had passed. Things could be tidied up by
  the rest of the SPAN team and McMahon returned to his own work.

  A week passed. All the while, though, McMahon was on edge. He doubted
  that someone who had gone to all that trouble of creating the WANK
  worm would let his baby be exterminated so quickly. The decoy-duck
  strategy only worked as long as the worm kept the same process name,
  and as long as it was programmed not to activate itself on systems
  which were already infected. Change the process name, or teach the
  worm to not to suicide, and the SPAN team would face another, larger
  problem. John McMahon had an instinct about the worm; it might just
  be back.

  His instinct was right.

  The following Monday, McMahon received another phone call from the
  SPAN project office. When he poked his head in his boss's office,
  Jerome Bennett looked up from his desk.

  `The thing is back,' McMahon told him. There was no need to explain
  what `the thing' was. `I'm going over to the SPAN office.'

  Ron Tencati and Todd Butler had a copy of the new WANK worm ready for
  McMahon. This version of the worm was far more virulent. It copied
  itself more effectively and therefore moved through the network much
  faster. The revised worm's penetration rate was much higher--more than
  four times greater than the version of WANK released in the first
  attack. The phone was ringing off the hook again. John took a call
  from one irate manager who launched into a tirade. `I ran your
  anti-WANK program, followed your instructions to the letter, and look
  what happened!'

  The worm had changed its process name. It was also designed to hunt down
  and kill the decoy-duck program. In fact, the SPAN network was going to
  turn into a rather bloody battlefield. This worm didn't just kill the
  decoy, it also killed any other copy of the WANK worm. Even if McMahon
  changed the process name used by his program, the decoy-duck strategy
  was not going to work any longer.

  There were other disturbing improvements to the new version of the
  WANK worm. Preliminary information suggested it changed the password
  on any account it got into. This was a problem. But not nearly as big
  a problem as if the passwords it changed were for the only privileged
  accounts on the system. The new worm was capable of locking a system
  manager out of his or her own system.

  Prevented from getting into his own account, the computer manager
  might try borrowing the account of an average user, call him Edwin.
  Unfortunately, Edwin's account probably only had low-level privileges.
  Even in the hands of a skilful computer manager, the powers granted to
  Edwin's account were likely too limited to eradicate the worm from its
  newly elevated status as computer manager. The manager might spend his
  whole morning matching wits with the worm from the disadvantaged
  position of a normal user's account. At some point he would have to
  make the tough decision of last resort: turn the entire computer
  system off.

  The manager would have to conduct a forced reboot of the machine. Take
  it down, then bring it back up on minimum configuration. Break back
  into it. Fix the password which the worm had changed. Logout. Reset
  some variables. Reboot the machine again. Close up any underlying
  security holes left behind by the worm. Change any passwords which
  matched users' names. A cold start of a large VMS machine took time.
  All the while, the astronomers, physicists and engineers who worked in
  this NASA office wouldn't be able to work on their computers.

  At least the SPAN team was better prepared for the worm this time.
  They had braced themselves psychologically for a possible return
  attack. Contact information for the network had been updated. And the
  general DECNET internet community was aware of the worm and was
  lending a hand wherever possible.

  Help came from a system manager in France, a country which seemed to
  be of special interest to the worm's author. The manager, Bernard
  Perrot of Institut de Physique Nucleaire in Orsay, had obtained a copy
  of the worm, inspected it and took special notice of the creature's
  poor error checking ability. This was the worm's true Achilles' heel.

  The worm was trained to go after the RIGHTSLIST database, the list of
  all the people who have accounts on the computer. What if someone
  moved the database by renaming it and put a dummy database in its
  place? The worm would, in theory, go after the dummy, which could be
  designed with a hidden bomb. When the worm sniffed out the dummy, and
  latched onto it, the creature would explode and die. If it worked, the
  SPAN team would not have to depend on the worm killing itself, as they
  had during the first invasion. They would have the satisfaction of
  destroying the thing themselves.

  Ron Tencati procured a copy of the French manager's worm-killing
  program and gave it to McMahon, who set up a sort of mini-laboratory
  experiment. He cut the worm into pieces and extracted the relevant
  bits. This allowed him to test the French worm-killing program with
  little risk of the worm escaping and doing damage. The French program
  worked wonderfully. Out it went. The second version of the worm was so
  much more virulent, getting it out of SPAN was going to take
  considerably longer than the first time around. Finally, almost two
  weeks after the second onslaught, the WANK worm had been eradicated
  from SPAN.

  By McMahon's estimate, the WANK worm had incurred up to half a million
  dollars in costs. Most of these were through people wasting time and
  resources chasing the worm instead of doing their normal jobs. The
  worm was, in his view, a crime of theft. `People's time and resources
  had been wasted,' he said. `The theft was not the result of the
  accident. This was someone who deliberately went out to make a mess.

  `In general, I support prosecuting people who think breaking into
  machines is fun. People like that don't seem to understand what kind
  of side effects that kind of fooling around has. They think that
  breaking into a machine and not touching anything doesn't do anything.
  That is not true. You end up wasting people's time. People are dragged
  into the office at strange hours. Reports have to be written. A lot of
  yelling and screaming occurs. You have to deal with law enforcement.
  These are all side effects of someone going for a joy ride in someone
  else's system, even if they don't do any damage. Someone has to pay
  the price.'

  McMahon never found out who created the WANK worm. Nor did he ever
  discover what he intended to prove by releasing it. The creator's
  motives were never clear and, if it had been politically inspired,
  no-one took credit.

  The WANK worm left a number of unanswered questions in its wake, a
  number of loose ends which still puzzle John McMahon. Was the hacker
  behind the worm really protesting against NASA's launch of the
  plutonium-powered Galileo space probe? Did the use of the word
  `WANK'--a most un-American word--mean the hacker wasn't American? Why
  had the creator recreated the worm and released it a second time? Why
  had no-one, no political or other group, claimed responsibility for
  the WANK worm?

  One of the many details which remained an enigma was contained in the
  version of the worm used in the second attack. The worm's creator had
  replaced the original process name, NETW_, with a new one, presumably
  to thwart the anti-WANK program. McMahon figured the original process
  name stood for `netwank'--a reasonable guess at the hacker's intended
  meaning. The new process name, however, left everyone on the SPAN team
  scratching their heads: it didn't seem to stand for anything. The
  letters formed an unlikely set of initials for someone's name. No-one
  recognised it as an acronym for a saying or an organisation. And it
  certainly wasn't a proper word in the English language. It was a
  complete mystery why the creator of the WANK worm, the hacker who
  launched an invasion into hundreds of NASA and DOE computers, should
  choose this weird word.

  The word was `OILZ'.


    _________________________________________________________________

                       Chapter 2 -- The Corner Pub
    _________________________________________________________________


    You talk of times of peace for all
    and then prepare for war

  -- from `Blossom of Blood' on Species Deceases by Midnight Oil

  It is not surprising the SPAN security team would miss the mark. It is
  not surprising, for example, that these officials should to this day
  be pronouncing the `Oilz' version of the WANK worm as `oil zee'. It is
  also not surprising that they hypothesised the worm's creator chose
  the word `Oilz' because the modifications made to the last version
  made it slippery, perhaps even oily.

  Likely as not, only an Australian would see the worm's link to the
  lyrics of Midnight Oil.

  This was the world's first worm with a political message, and the
  second major worm in the history of the worldwide computer networks.
  It was also the trigger for the creation of FIRST, the Forum of
  Incident Response and Security Teams.2 FIRST was an international
  security alliance allowing governments, universities and commercial
  organisations to share information about computer network security
  incidents. Yet, NASA and the US Department of Energy were half a world
  away from finding the creator of the WANK worm. Even as investigators
  sniffed around electronic trails leading to France, it appears the
  perpetrator was hiding behind his computer and modem in Australia.

  Geographically, Australia is a long way from anywhere. To Americans,
  it conjures up images of fuzzy marsupials, not computer hackers.
  American computer security officials, like those at NASA and the US
  Department of Energy, had other barriers as well. They function in a
  world of concretes, of appointments made and kept, of real names,
  business cards and official titles. The computer underground, by
  contrast, is a veiled world populated by characters slipping in and
  out of the half-darkness. It is not a place where people use their
  real names. It is not a place where people give out real personal
  details.

  It is, in fact, not so much a place as a space. It is ephemeral,
  intangible--a foggy labyrinth of unmapped, winding streets through
  which one occasionally ascertains the contours of a fellow traveller.

  When Ron Tencati, the manager in charge of NASA SPAN security, realised
  that NASA's computers were being attacked by an intruder, he rang the
  FBI. The US Federal Bureau of Investigation's Computer Crime Unit fired
  off a stream of questions. How many computers had been attacked? Where
  were they? Who was behind the attack? The FBI told Tencati, `keep us
  informed of the situation'. Like the CIAC team in the Department of
  Energy, it appears the FBI didn't have much knowledge of VMS, the
  primary computer operating system used in SPAN.

  But the FBI knew enough to realise the worm attack was potentially
  very serious. The winding electronic trail pointed vaguely to a
  foreign computer system and, before long, the US Secret Service was
  involved. Then the French secret service, the Direction de la
  Surveillance du Territoire, or DST, jumped into the fray.

  DST and the FBI began working together on the case. A casual observer
  with the benefit of hindsight might see different motivations driving
  the two government agencies. The FBI wanted to catch the perpetrator.
  The DST wanted to make it clear that the infamous WANK worm attack on
  the world's most prestigious space agency did not originate in France.

  In the best tradition of cloak-and-dagger government agencies, the FBI
  and DST people established two communication channels--an official
  channel and an unofficial one. The official channel involved
  embassies, attach�s, formal communiques and interminable delays in
  getting answers to the simplest questions. The unofficial channel
  involved a few phone calls and some fast answers.

  Ron Tencati had a colleague named Chris on the SPAN network in France,
  which was the largest user of SPAN in Europe. Chris was involved in
  more than just science computer networks. He had certain contacts in
  the French government and seemed to be involved in their computer
  networks. So, when the FBI needed technical information for its
  investigation--the kind of information likely to be sanitised by some
  embassy bureaucrat--one of its agents rang up Ron Tencati. `Ron, ask
  your friend this,' the FBI would say. And Ron would.

  `Chris, the FBI wants to know this,' Tencati would tell his colleague
  on SPAN France. Then Chris would get the necessary information. He
  would call Tencati back, saying, `Ron, here is the answer. Now, the
  DST wants to know that'. And off Ron would go in search of information
  requested by the DST.

  The investigation proceeded in this way, with each helping the other
  through backdoor channels. But the Americans' investigation was headed
  toward the inescapable conclusion that the attack on NASA had
  originated from a French computer. The worm may have simply travelled
  through the French computer from yet another system, but the French
  machine appeared to be the sole point of infection for NASA.

  The French did not like this outcome. Not one bit. There was no way
  that the worm had come from France. Ce n'est pas vrai.

  Word came back from the French that they were sure the worm had come
  from the US. Why else would it have been programmed to mail details of
  all computer accounts it penetrated around the world back to a US
  machine, the computer known as GEMPAK? Because the author of the worm
  was an American, of course! Therefore it is not our problem, the
  French told the Americans. It is your problem.

  Most computer security experts know it is standard practice among
  hackers to create the most tangled trail possible between the hacker
  and the hacked. It makes it very difficult for people like the FBI to
  trace who did it. So it would be difficult to draw definite
  conclusions about the nationality of the hacker from the location of a
  hacker's information drop-off point--a location the hacker no doubt
  figured would be investigated by the authorities almost immediately
  after the worm's release.

  Tencati had established the French connection from some computer logs
  showing NASA under attack very early on Monday, 16 October. The logs
  were important because they were relatively clear. As the worm had
  procreated during that day, it had forced computers all over the
  network to attack each other in ever greater numbers. By 11 a.m. it
  was almost impossible to tell where any one attack began and the other
  ended.

  Some time after the first attack, DST sent word that certain agents
  were going to be in Washington DC regarding other matters. They wanted
  a meeting with the FBI. A representative from the NASA Inspector
  General's Office would attend the meeting, as would someone from NASA
  SPAN security.

  Tencati was sure he could show the WANK worm attack on NASA originated
  in France. But he also knew he had to document everything, to have
  exact answers to every question and counter-argument put forward by
  the French secret service agents at the FBI meeting. When he developed
  a timeline of attacks, he found that the GEMPAK machine showed X.25
  network connection, via another system, from a French computer around
  the same time as the WANK worm attack. He followed the scent and
  contacted the manager of that system. Would he help Tencati? Mais oui.
  The machine is at your disposal, Monsieur Tencati.

  Tencati had never used an X.25 network before; it had a unique set of
  commands unlike any other type of computer communications network. He
  wanted to retrace the steps of the worm, but he needed help. So he
  called his friend Bob Lyons at DEC to walk him through the process.

  What Tencati found startled him. There were traces of the worm on the
  machine all right, the familiar pattern of login failures as the worm
  attempted to break into different accounts. But these remnants of the
  WANK worm were not dated 16 October or any time immediately around
  then. The logs showed worm-related activity up to two weeks before the
  attack on NASA. This computer was not just a pass-through machine the
  worm had used to launch its first attack on NASA. This was the
  development machine.

  Ground zero.

  Tencati went into the meeting with DST at the FBI offices prepared. He
  knew the accusations the French were going to put forward. When he
  presented the results of his sleuthwork, the French secret service
  couldn't refute it, but they dropped their own bombshell. Yes they
  told him, you might be able to point to a French system as ground zero
  for the attack, but our investigations reveal incoming X.25
  connections from elsewhere which coincided with the timing of the
  development of the WANK worm.

  The connections came from Australia.

  The French had satisfied themselves that it wasn't a French hacker who
  had created the WANK worm. Ce n'est pas notre problem. At least, it's
  not our problem any more.

  It is here that the trail begins to go cold. Law enforcement and
  computer security people in the US and Australia had ideas about just
  who had created the WANK worm. Fingers were pointed, accusations were
  made, but none stuck. At the end of the day, there was coincidence and
  innuendo, but not enough evidence to launch a case. Like many
  Australian hackers, the creator of the WANK worm had emerged from the
  shadows of the computer underground, stood momentarily in hazy
  silhouette, and then disappeared again.

                                   [ ]

  The Australian computer underground in the late 1980s was an
  environment which spawned and shaped the author of the WANK worm.
  Affordable home computers, such as the Apple IIe and the Commodore 64,
  made their way into ordinary suburban families. While these computers
  were not widespread, they were at least in a price range which made
  them attainable by dedicated computer enthusiasts.

  In 1988, the year before the WANK worm attack on NASA, Australia was
  on an upswing. The country was celebrating its bicentennial. The
  economy was booming. Trade barriers and old regulatory structures were
  coming down. Crocodile Dundee had already burst on the world movie
  scene and was making Australians the flavour of the month in cities
  like LA and New York. The mood was optimistic. People had a sense they
  were going places. Australia, a peaceful country of seventeen or so
  million people, poised on the edge of Asia but with the order of a
  Western European democracy, was on its way up. Perhaps for the first
  time, Australians had lost their cultural cringe, a unique type of
  insecurity alien to can-do cultures such as that found in the US.
  Exploration and experimentation require confidence and, in 1988,
  confidence was something Australia had finally attained.

  Yet this new-found confidence and optimism did not subdue Australia's
  tradition of cynicism toward large institutions. The two coexisted,
  suspended in a strange paradox. Australian humour, deeply rooted in a
  scepticism of all things serious and sacred, continued to poke fun at
  upright institutions with a depth of irreverence surprising to many
  foreigners. This cynicism of large, respected institutions coursed
  through the newly formed Australian computer underground without
  dampening its excitement or optimism for the brave new world of
  computers in the least.

  In 1988, the Australian computer underground thrived like a vibrant
  Asian street bazaar. In that year it was still a realm of place not
  space. Customers visited their regular stalls, haggled over goods with
  vendors, bumped into friends and waved across crowded paths to
  acquaintances. The market was as much a place to socialise as it was
  to shop. People ducked into tiny coffee houses or corner bars for
  intimate chats. The latest imported goods, laid out on tables like
  reams of bright Chinese silks, served as conversation starters. And,
  like every street market, many of the best items were tucked away,
  hidden in anticipation of the appearance of that one customer or
  friend most favoured by the trader. The currency of the underground
  was not money; it was information. People didn't share and exchange
  information to accumulate monetary wealth; they did it to win
  respect--and to buy a thrill.

  The members of the Australian computer underground met on bulletin
  board systems, known as BBSes. Simple things by today's standards,
  BBSes were often composed of a souped-up Apple II computer, a single
  modem and a lone telephone line. But they drew people from all walks
  of life. Teenagers from working-class neighbourhoods and those from
  the exclusive private schools. University students. People in their
  twenties groping their way through first jobs. Even some professional
  people in their thirties and forties who spent weekends poring over
  computer manuals and building primitive computers in spare rooms. Most
  regular BBS users were male. Sometimes a user's sister would find her
  way into the BBS world, often in search of a boyfriend. Mission
  accomplished, she might disappear from the scene for weeks, perhaps
  months, presumably until she required another visit.

  The BBS users had a few things in common. They were generally of above
  average intelligence--usually with a strong technical slant--and they
  were obsessed with their chosen hobby. They had to be. It often took
  45 minutes of attack dialling a busy BBS's lone phone line just to
  visit the computer system for perhaps half an hour. Most serious BBS
  hobbyists went through this routine several times each day.

  As the name suggests, a BBS had what amounted to an electronic version
  of a normal bulletin board. The owner of the BBS would have divided
  the board into different areas, as a school teacher crisscrosses
  coloured ribbon across the surface of a corkboard to divide it into
  sections. A single BBS might have 30 or more electronic discussion
  groups.

  As a user to the board, you might visit the politics section, tacking
  up a `note' on your views of ALP or Liberal policies for anyone
  passing by to read. Alternatively, you might fancy yourself a bit of a
  poet and work up the courage to post an original piece of work in the
  Poet's Corner. The corner was often filled with dark, misanthropic
  works inspired by the miseries of adolescence. Perhaps you preferred
  to discuss music. On many BBSes you could find postings on virtually
  any type of music. The most popular groups included bands like Pink
  Floyd, Tangerine Dream and Midnight Oil. Midnight Oil's
  anti-establishment message struck a particular chord within the new
  BBS community.

  Nineteen eighty-eight was the golden age of the BBS culture across
  Australia. It was an age of innocence and community, an open-air
  bazaar full of vitality and the sharing of ideas. For the most part,
  people trusted their peers within the community and the BBS operators,
  who were often revered as demigods. It was a happy place. And, in
  general, it was a safe place, which is perhaps one reason why its
  visitors felt secure in their explorations of new ideas. It was a
  place in which the creator of the WANK worm could sculpt and hone his
  creative computer skills.

  The capital of this spirited new Australian electronic civilisation
  was Melbourne. It is difficult to say why this southern city became
  the cultural centre of the BBS world, and its darker side, the
  Australian computer underground. Maybe the city's history as
  Australia's intellectual centre created a breeding ground for the many
  young people who built their systems with little more than curiosity
  and salvaged computer bits discarded by others. Maybe Melbourne's
  personality as a city of suburban homebodies and backyard tinkerers
  produced a culture conducive to BBSes. Or maybe it was just
  Melbourne's dreary beaches and often miserable weather. As one
  Melbourne hacker explained it, `What else is there to do here all
  winter but hibernate inside with your computer and modem?'

  In 1988, Melbourne had some 60 to 100 operating BBSes. The numbers are
  vague because it is difficult to count a collection of moving objects.
  The amateur nature of the systems, often a jumbled tangle of wires and
  second-hand electronics parts soldered together in someone's garage,
  meant that the life of any one system was frequently as short as a
  teenager's attention span. BBSes popped up, ran for two weeks, and
  then vanished again.

  Some of them operated only during certain hours, say between 10 p.m.
  and 8 a.m. When the owner went to bed, he or she would plug the home
  phone line into the BBS and leave it there until morning. Others ran
  24 hours a day, but the busiest times were always at night.

  Of course it wasn't just intellectual stimulation some users were
  after. Visitors often sought identity as much as ideas. On an
  electronic bulletin board, you could create a personality, mould it
  into shape and make it your own. Age and appearance did not matter.
  Technical aptitude did. Any spotty, gawky teenage boy could instantly
  transform himself into a suave, graceful BBS character. The
  transformation began with the choice of name. In real life, you might
  be stuck with the name Elliot Dingle--an appellation chosen by your
  mother to honour a long-dead great uncle. But on a BBS, well, you
  could be Blade Runner, Ned Kelly or Mad Max. Small wonder that, given
  the choice, many teenage boys chose to spend their time in the world
  of the BBS.

  Generally, once a user chose a handle, as the on-line names are known,
  he stuck with it. All his electronic mail came to an account with that
  name on it. Postings to bulletin boards were signed with it. Others
  dwelling in the system world knew him by that name and no other. A
  handle evolved into a name laden with innate meaning, though the
  personality reflected in it might well have been an alter ego. And so
  it was that characters like The Wizard, Conan and Iceman came to pass
  their time on BBSes like the Crystal Palace, Megaworks, The Real
  Connection and Electric Dreams.

  What such visitors valued about the BBS varied greatly. Some wanted to
  participate in its social life. They wanted to meet people like
  themselves--bright but geeky or misanthropic people who shared an
  interest in the finer technical points of computers. Many lived as
  outcasts in real life, never quite making it into the `normal' groups
  of friends at school or uni. Though some had started their first jobs,
  they hadn't managed to shake the daggy awkwardness which pursued them
  throughout their teen years. On the surface, they were just not the
  sort of people one asked out to the pub for a cold one after the
  footy.

  But that was all right. In general, they weren't much interested in
  footy anyway.

  Each BBS had its own style. Some were completely legitimate, with
  their wares--all legal goods--laid out in the open. Others, like The
  Real Connection, had once housed Australia's earliest hackers but had
  gone straight. They closed up the hacking parts of the board before
  the first Commonwealth government hacking laws were enacted in June
  1989. Perhaps ten or twelve of Melbourne's BBSes at the time had the
  secret, smoky flavour of the computer underground. A handful of these
  were invitation-only boards, places like Greyhawk and The Realm. You
  couldn't simply ring up the board, create a new account and login. You
  had to be invited by the board's owner. Members of the general
  modeming public need not apply.

  The two most important hubs in the Australian underground between 1987
  and 1989 were named Pacific Island and Zen. A 23-year-old who called
  himself Craig Bowen ran both systems from his bedroom.

  Also known as Thunderbird1, Bowen started up Pacific Island in 1987
  because he wanted a hub for hackers. The fledgling hacking community
  was dispersed after AHUBBS, possibly Melbourne's earliest hacking
  board, faded away. Bowen decided to create a home for it, a sort of
  dark, womb-like cafe bar amid the bustle of the BBS bazaar where
  Melbourne's hackers could gather and share information.

  His bedroom was a simple, boyish place. Built-in cupboards, a bed, a
  wallpaper design of vintage cars running across one side of the room.
  A window overlooking the neighbours' leafy suburban yard. A collection
  of PC magazines with titles like Nibble and Byte. A few volumes on
  computer programming. VAX/VMS manuals. Not many books, but a handful
  of science fiction works by Arthur C. Clarke. The Hitchhiker's Guide
  to the Galaxy. A Chinese-language dictionary used during his high
  school Mandarin classes, and after, as he continued to study the
  language on his own while he held down his first job.

  The Apple IIe, modem and telephone line rested on the drop-down
  drawing table and fold-up card table at the foot of his bed. Bowen put
  his TV next to the computer so he could sit in bed, watch TV and use
  Pacific Island all at the same time. Later, when he started Zen, it
  sat next to Pacific Island. It was the perfect set-up.

  Pacific Island was hardly fancy by today's standards of Unix Internet
  machines, but in 1987 it was an impressive computer. PI, pronounced
  `pie' by the local users, had a 20 megabyte hard drive--gargantuan for
  a personal computer at the time. Bowen spent about $5000 setting up PI
  alone. He loved both systems and spent many hours each week nurturing
  them.

  There was no charge for computer accounts on PI or ZEN, like most
  BBSes. This gentle-faced youth, a half-boy, half-man who would
  eventually play host on his humble BBS to many of Australia's
  cleverest computer and telephone hackers, could afford to pay for his
  computers for two reasons: he lived at home with his mum and dad, and
  he had a full-time job at Telecom--then the only domestic telephone
  carrier in Australia.

  PI had about 800 computer users, up to 200 of whom were `core' users
  accessing the system regularly. PI had its own dedicated phone line,
  separate from the house phone so Bowen's parents wouldn't get upset the
  line was always tied up. Later, he put in four additional phone lines
  for Zen, which had about 2000 users. Using his Telecom training, he
  installed a number of non-standard, but legal, features to his
  house. Junction boxes, master switches. Bowen's house was a
  telecommunications hot-rod.

  Bowen had decided early on that if he wanted to keep his job, he had
  better not do anything illegal when it came to Telecom. However, the
  Australian national telecommunications carrier was a handy source of
  technical information. For example, he had an account on a Telecom
  computer system--for work--from which he could learn about Telecom's
  exchanges. But he never used that account for hacking. Most
  respectable hackers followed a similar philosophy. Some had legitimate
  university computer accounts for their courses, but they kept those
  accounts clean. A basic rule of the underground, in the words of one
  hacker, was `Don't foul your own nest'.

  PI contained a public section and a private one. The public area was
  like an old-time pub. Anyone could wander in, plop down at the bar and
  start up a conversation with a group of locals. Just ring up the
  system with your modem and type in your details--real name, your
  chosen handle, phone number and other basic information.

  Many BBS users gave false information in order to hide their true
  identities, and many operators didn't really care. Bowen, however,
  did. Running a hacker's board carried some risk, even before the
  federal computer crime laws came into force. Pirated software was
  illegal. Storing data copied from hacking adventures in foreign
  computers might also be considered illegal. In an effort to exclude
  police and media spies, Bowen tried to verify the personal details of
  every user on PI by ringing them at home or work. Often he was
  successful. Sometimes he wasn't.

  The public section of PI housed discussion groups on the major PC
  brands--IBM, Commodore, Amiga, Apple and Atari--next to the popular
  Lonely Hearts group. Lonely Hearts had about twenty regulars, most of
  whom agonised under the weight of pubescent hormonal changes. A boy
  pining for the affections of the girl who dumped him or, worse, didn't
  even know he existed. Teenagers who contemplated suicide. The messages
  were completely anonymous, readers didn't even know the authors'
  handles, and that anonymous setting allowed heart-felt messages and
  genuine responses.

  Zen was PI's sophisticated younger sister. Within two years of PI
  making its debut, Bowen opened up Zen, one of the first Australian
  BBSes with more than one telephone line. The main reason he set up Zen
  was to stop his computer users from bothering him all the time. When
  someone logged into PI, one of the first things he or she did was
  request an on-line chat with the system operator. PI's Apple IIe was
  such a basic machine by today's standards, Bowen couldn't multi-task
  on it. He could not do anything with the machine, such as check his
  own mail, while a visitor was logged into PI.

  Zen was a watershed in the Australian BBS community. Zen multi-tasked.
  Up to four people could ring up and login to the machine at any one
  time, and Bowen could do his own thing while his users were on-line.
  Better still, his users could talk request each other instead of
  hassling him all the time. Having users on a multi-tasking machine
  with multiple phone lines was like having a gaggle of children. For
  the most part, they amused each other.

  Mainstream and respectful of authority on the surface, Bowen possessed
  the same streak of anti-establishment views harboured by many in the
  underground. His choice of name for Zen underlined this. Zen came from
  the futuristic British TV science fiction series `Blake 7', in which a
  bunch of underfunded rebels attempted to overthrow an evil
  totalitarian government. Zen was the computer on the rebels' ship. The
  rebels banded together after meeting on a prison ship; they were all
  being transported to a penal settlement on another planet. It was a
  story people in the Australian underground could relate to. One of the
  lead characters, a sort of heroic anti-hero, had been sentenced to
  prison for computer hacking. His big mistake, he told fellow rebels,
  was that he had relied on other people. He trusted them. He should
  have worked alone.

  Craig Bowen had no idea of how true that sentiment would ring in a
  matter of months.

  Bowen's place was a hub of current and future lights in the computer
  underground. The Wizard. The Force. Powerspike. Phoenix. Electron.
  Nom. Prime Suspect. Mendax. Train Trax. Some, such as Prime Suspect,
  merely passed through, occasionally stopping in to check out the
  action and greet friends. Others, such as Nom, were part of the
  close-knit PI family. Nom helped Bowen set up PI. Like many early
  members of the underground, they met through AUSOM, an Apple users'
  society in Melbourne. Bowen wanted to run ASCII Express, a program
  which allowed people to transfer files between their own computers and
  PI. But, as usual, he and everyone he knew only had a pirated copy of
  the program. No manuals. So Nom and Bowen spent one weekend picking
  apart the program by themselves. They were each at home, on their own
  machines, with copies. They sat on the phone for hours working through
  how the program worked. They wrote their own manual for other people
  in the underground suffering under the same lack of documentation.
  Then they got it up and running on PI.

  Making your way into the various groups in a BBS such as PI or Zen had
  benefits besides hacking information. If you wanted to drop your
  mantle of anonymity, you could join a pre-packaged, close-knit circle
  of friends. For example, one clique of PI people were fanatical
  followers of the film The Blues Brothers. Every Friday night, this
  group dressed up in Blues Brothers costumes of a dark suit, white
  shirt, narrow tie, Rayban sunglasses and, of course, the snap-brimmed
  hat. One couple brought their child, dressed as a mini-Blues Brother.
  The group of Friday night regulars made their way at 11.30 to
  Northcote's Valhalla Theatre (now the Westgarth). Its grand but
  slightly tatty vintage atmosphere lent itself to this alternative
  culture flourishing in late-night revelries. Leaping up on stage
  mid-film, the PI groupies sent up the actors in key scenes. It was a
  fun and, as importantly, a cheap evening. The Valhalla staff admitted
  regulars who were dressed in appropriate costume for free. The only
  thing the groupies had to pay for was drinks at the intermission.

  Occasionally, Bowen arranged gatherings of other young PI and Zen
  users. Usually, the group met in downtown Melbourne, sometimes at the
  City Square. The group was mostly boys, but sometimes a few girls
  would show up. Bowen's sister, who used the handle Syn, hung around a
  bit. She went out with a few hackers from the BBS scene. And she
  wasn't the only one. It was a tight group which interchanged
  boyfriends and girlfriends with considerable regularity. The group
  hung out in the City Square after watching a movie, usually a horror
  film. Nightmare 2. House 3. Titles tended to be a noun followed by a
  numeral. Once, for a bit of lively variation, they went bowling and
  drove the other people at the alley nuts. After the early
  entertainment, it was down to McDonald's for a cheap burger. They
  joked and laughed and threw gherkins against the restaurant's wall.
  This was followed by more hanging around on the stone steps of the
  City Square before catching the last bus or train home.

  The social sections of PI and Zen were more successful than the
  technical ones, but the private hacking section was even more
  successful than the others. The hacking section was hidden; would-be
  members of the Melbourne underground knew there was something going
  on, but they couldn't find out what is was.

  Getting an invite to the private area required hacking skill or
  information, and usually a recommendation to Bowen from someone who
  was already inside. Within the Inner Sanctum, as the private hacking
  area was called, people could comfortably share information such as
  opinions of new computer products, techniques for hacking, details of
  companies which had set up new sites to hack and the latest rumours on
  what the law enforcement agencies were up to.

  The Inner Sanctum was not, however, the only private room. Two hacking
  groups, Elite and H.A.C.K., guarded entry to their yet more exclusive
  back rooms. Even if you managed to get entry to the Inner Sanctum, you
  might not even know that H.A.C.K. or Elite existed. You might know
  there was a place even more selective than your area, but exactly how
  many layers of the onion stood between you and the most exclusive
  section was anyone's guess. Almost every hacker interviewed for this
  book described a vague sense of being somehow outside the innermost
  circle. They knew it was there, but wasn't sure just what it was.

  Bowen fielded occasional phone calls on his voice line from wanna-be
  hackers trying to pry open the door to the Inner Sanctum. `I want
  access to your pirate system,' the voice would whine.

  `What pirate system? Who told you my system was a pirate system?'

  Bowen sussed out how much the caller knew, and who had told him. Then
  he denied everything.

  To avoid these requests, Bowen had tried to hide his address, real
  name and phone number from most of the people who used his BBSes. But
  he wasn't completely successful. He had been surprised by the sudden
  appearance one day of Masked Avenger on his doorstep. How Masked
  Avenger actually found his address was a mystery. The two had chatted
  in a friendly fashion on-line, but Bowen didn't give out his details.
  Nothing could have prepared him for the little kid in the big crash
  helmet standing by his bike in front of Bowen's house. `Hi!' he
  squeaked. `I'm the Masked Avenger!'

  Masked Avenger--a boy perhaps fifteen years old--was quite resourceful
  to have found out Bowen's details. Bowen invited him in and showed him
  the system. They became friends. But after that incident, Bowen
  decided to tighten security around his personal details even more. He
  began, in his own words, `moving toward full anonymity'. He invented
  the name Craig Bowen, and everyone in the underground came to know him
  by that name or his handle, Thunderbird1. He even opened a false bank
  account in the name of Bowen for the periodic voluntary donations
  users sent into PI. It was never a lot of money, mostly $5 or $10,
  because students don't tend to have much money. He ploughed it all
  back into PI.

  People had lots of reasons for wanting to get into the Inner Sanctum.
  Some wanted free copies of the latest software, usually pirated games
  from the US. Others wanted to share information and ideas about ways
  to break into computers, often those owned by local universities.
  Still others wanted to learn about how to manipulate the telephone
  system.

  The private areas functioned like a royal court, populated by
  aristocrats and courtiers with varying seniority, loyalties and
  rivalries. The areas involved an intricate social order and respect
  was the name of the game. If you wanted admission, you had to walk a
  delicate line between showing your superiors that you possessed enough
  valuable hacking information to be elite and not showing them so much
  they would brand you a blabbermouth. A perfect bargaining chip was an
  old password for Melbourne University's dial-out.

  The university's dial-out was a valuable thing. A hacker could ring up
  the university's computer, login as `modem' and the machine would drop
  him into a modem which let him dial out again. He could then dial
  anywhere in the world, and the university would foot the phone bill.
  In the late 1980s, before the days of cheap, accessible Internet
  connections, the university dial-out meant a hacker could access
  anything from an underground BBS in Germany to a US military system in
  Panama. The password put the world at his fingertips.

  A hacker aspiring to move into PI's Inner Sanctum wouldn't give out
  the current dial-out password in the public discussion areas. Most
  likely, if he was low in the pecking order, he wouldn't have such
  precious information. Even if he had managed to stumble across the
  current password somehow, it was risky giving it out publicly. Every
  wanna-be and his dog would start messing around with the university's
  modem account. The system administrator would wise up and change the
  password and the hacker would quickly lose his own access to the
  university account. Worse, he would lose access for other hackers--the
  kind of hackers who ran H.A.C.K., Elite and the Inner Sanctum. They
  would be really cross. Hackers hate it when passwords on accounts they
  consider their own are changed without warning. Even if the password
  wasn't changed, the aspiring hacker would look like a guy who couldn't
  keep a good secret.

  Posting an old password, however, was quite a different matter. The
  information was next to useless, so the hacker wouldn't be giving much
  away. But just showing he had access to that sort of information
  suggested he was somehow in the know. Other hackers might think he had
  had the password when it was still valid. More importantly, by showing
  off a known, expired password, the hacker hinted that he might just
  have the current password. Voila! Instant respect.

  Positioning oneself to win an invite into the Inner Sanctum was a game
  of strategy; titillate but never go all the way. After a while,
  someone on the inside would probably notice you and put in a word with
  Bowen. Then you would get an invitation.

  If you were seriously ambitious and wanted to get past the first inner
  layer, you then had to start performing for real. You couldn't hide
  behind the excuse that the public area might be monitored by the
  authorities or was full of idiots who might abuse valuable hacking
  information.

  The hackers in the most elite area would judge you on how much
  information you provided about breaking into computer or phone
  systems. They also looked at the accuracy of the information. It was
  easy getting out-of-date login names and passwords for a student
  account on Monash University's computer system. Posting a valid
  account for the New Zealand forestry department's VMS system intrigued
  the people who counted considerably more.

  The Great Rite of Passage from boy to man in the computer underground
  was Minerva. OTC, Australia's then government-owned Overseas
  Telecommunications Commission,3 ran Minerva, a system of three Prime
  mainframes in Sydney. For hackers such as Mendax, breaking into
  Minerva was the test.

  Back in early 1988, Mendax was just beginning to explore the world of
  hacking. He had managed to break through the barrier from public to
  private section of PI, but it wasn't enough. To be recognised as
  up-and-coming talent by the aristocracy of hackers such as The Force
  and The Wizard, a hacker had to spend time inside the Minerva system.
  Mendax set to work on breaking
  into it.

  Minerva was special for a number of reasons. Although it was in
  Sydney, the phone number to its entry computer, called an X.25 pad,
  was a free call. At the time Mendax lived in Emerald, a country town
  on the outskirts of Melbourne. A call to most Melbourne numbers
  incurred a long-distance charge, thus ruling out options such as the
  Melbourne University dial-out for breaking into international computer
  systems.

  Emerald was hardly Emerald City. For a clever sixteen-year-old boy,
  the place was dead boring. Mendax lived there with his mother; Emerald
  was merely a stopping point, one of dozens, as his mother shuttled her
  child around the continent trying to escape from a psychopathic former
  de facto. The house was an emergency refuge for families on the run.
  It was safe and so, for a time, Mendax and his exhausted family
  stopped to rest before tearing off again in search of a new place to
  hide.

  Sometimes Mendax went to school. Often he didn't. The school system
  didn't hold much interest for him. It didn't feed his mind the way
  Minerva would. They Sydney computer system was a far more interesting
  place to muck around in than the rural high school.

  Minerva was a Prime computer, and Primes were in. Force, one of the
  more respected hackers in 1987-88 in the Australian computer
  underground, specialised in Primos, the special operating system used
  on Prime computers. He wrote his own programs--potent hacking tools
  which provided current usernames and passwords--and made the systems
  fashionable in the computer underground.

  Prime computers were big and expensive and no hacker could afford one,
  so being able to access the speed and computational grunt of a system
  like Minerva was valuable for running a hacker's own programs. For
  example, a network scanner, a program which gathered the addresses of
  computers on the X.25 network which would be targets for future
  hacking adventures, ate up computing resources. But a huge machine
  like Minerva could handle that sort of program with ease. Minerva also
  allowed users to connect to other computer systems on the X.25 network
  around the world. Better still, Minerva had a BASIC interpreter on it.
  This allowed people to write programs in the BASIC programming
  language--by far the most popular language at the time--and make them
  run on Minerva. You didn't have to be a Primos fanatic, like Force, to
  write and execute a program on the OTC computer. Minerva suited Mendax
  very well.

  The OTC system had other benefits. Most major Australian corporations
  had accounts on the system. Breaking into an account requires a
  username and password; find the username and you have solved half the
  equation. Minerva account names were easy picking. Each one was
  composed of three letters followed by three numbers, a system which
  could have been difficult to crack except for the choice of those
  letters and numbers. The first three letters were almost always
  obvious acronyms for the company. For example, the ANZ Bank had
  accounts named ANZ001, ANZ002 and ANZ002. The numbers followed the
  same pattern for most companies. BHP001. CRA001. NAB001. Even OTC007.
  Anyone with the IQ of a desk lamp could guess at least a few account
  names on Minerva. Passwords were a bit tougher to come by, but Mendax
  had some ideas for that. He was going to have a crack at social
  engineering. Social engineering means smooth-talking someone in a
  position of power into doing something for you. It always involved a
  ruse of some sort.

  Mendax decided he would social engineer a password out of one of
  Minerva's users. He had downloaded a partial list of Minerva users
  another PI hacker had generously posted for those talented enough to
  make use of it. This list was maybe two years old, and incomplete, but
  it contained 30-odd pages of Minerva account usernames, company names,
  addresses, contact names and telephone and fax numbers. Some of them
  would probably still be valid.

  Mendax had a deep voice for his age; it would have been impossible to
  even contemplate social engineering without it. Cracking adolescent
  male voices were the kiss of death for would-be social engineers. But
  even though he had the voice, he didn't have the office or the Sydney
  phone number if the intended victim wanted a number to call back on.
  He found a way to solve the Sydney phone number by poking around until
  he dug up a number with Sydney's 02 area code which was permanently
  engaged. One down, one to go.

  Next problem: generate some realistic office background noise. He
  could hardly call a company posing as an OTC official to cajole a
  password when the only background noise was birds tweeting in the
  fresh country air.

  No, he needed the same background buzz as a crowded office in downtown
  Sydney. Mendex had a tape recorder, so he could pre-record the sound
  of an office and play it as background when he called companies on the
  Minerva list. The only hurdle was finding the appropriate office
  noise. Not even the local post office would offer a believable noise
  level. With none easily accessible, he decided to make his own audible
  office clutter. It wouldn't be easy. With a single track on his
  recording device, he couldn't dub in sounds on top of each other: he
  had to make all the noises simultaneously.

  First, he turned on the TV news, down very low, so it just hummed in
  the background. Then he set up a long document to print on his
  Commodore MPS 801 printer. He removed the cover from the noisy dot
  matrix machine, to create just the right volume of clackity-clack in
  the background. Still, he needed something more. Operators' voices
  mumbling across a crowded floor. He could mumble quietly to himself,
  but he soon discovered his verbal skills had not developed to the
  point of being able to stand in the middle of the room talking about
  nothing to himself for a quarter of an hour. So he fished out his
  volume of Shakespeare and started reading aloud. Loud enough to hear
  voices, but not so loud that the intended victim would be able to pick
  Macbeth. OTC operators had keyboards, so he began tapping randomly on
  his. Occasionally, for a little variation, he walked up to the tape
  recorder and asked a question--and then promptly answered it in
  another voice. He stomped noisily away from the recorder again, across
  the room, and then silently dove back to the keyboard for more
  keyboard typing and mumblings of Macbeth.

  It was exhausting. He figured the tape had to run for at least fifteen
  minutes uninterrupted. It wouldn't look very realistic if the office
  buzz suddenly went dead for three seconds at a time in the places
  where he paused the tape to rest.

  The tapes took a number of attempts. He would be halfway through,
  racing through line after line of Shakespeare, rap-tap-tapping on his
  keyboard and asking himself questions in authoritative voices when the
  paper jammed in his printer. Damn. He had to start all over again.
  Finally, after a tiring hour of auditory schizophrenia, he had the
  perfect tape of office hubbub.

  Mendax pulled out his partial list of Minerva users and began working
  through the 30-odd pages. It was discouraging.

  `The number you have dialled is not connected. Please check the number
  before dialling again.'

  Next number.

  `Sorry, he is in a meeting at the moment. Can I have him return your
  call?' Ah, no thanks.

  Another try.

  `That person is no longer working with our company. Can I refer you to
  someone else?' Uhm, not really.

  And another try.

  Finally, success.

  Mendax reached one of the contact names for a company in Perth. Valid
  number, valid company, valid contact name. He cleared his throat to
  deepen his voice even further and began.

  `This is John Keller, an operator from OTC Minerva in Sydney. One of
  our D090 hard drives has crashed. We've pulled across the data on the
  back-up tape and we believe we have all your correct information. But
  some of it might have been corrupted in the accident and we would just
  like to confirm your details. Also the back-up tape is two days old,
  so we want to check your information is up to date so your service is
  not interrupted. Let me just dig out your details ...' Mendax shuffled
  some papers around on the table top.

  `Oh, dear. Yes. Let's check it,' the worried manager responded.

  Mendax started reading all the information on the Minerva list
  obtained from Pacific Island, except for one thing. He changed the fax
  number slightly. It worked. The manager jumped right in.

  `Oh, no. That's wrong. Our fax number is definitely wrong,' he said
  and proceeded to give the correct number.

  Mendax tried to sound concerned. `Hmm,' he told the manager. `We may
  have bigger problems than we anticipated. Hmm.' He gave another
  pregnant pause. Working up the courage to ask the Big Question.

  It was hard to know who was sweating more, the fretting Perth manager,
  tormented by the idea of loud staff complaints from all over the
  company because the Minerva account was faulty, or the gangly kid
  trying his hand at social engineering for the first time.

  `Well,' Mendax began, trying to keep the sound of authority in his
  voice. `Let's see. We have your account number, but we had better
  check your password ... what was it?' An arrow shot from the bow.

  It hit the target. `Yes, it's L-U-R-C-H--full stop.'

  Lurch? Uhuh. An Addams Family fan.

  `Can you make sure everything is working? We don't want our service
  interrupted.' The Perth manager sounded quite anxious.

  Mendax tapped away on the keyboard randomly and then paused. `Well, it
  looks like everything is working just fine now,' he quickly reassured
  him. Just fine.

  `Oh, that's a relief!' the Perth manager exclaimed. `Thank you for
  that. Thank you. I just can't thank you enough for calling us!' More
  gratitude.

  Mendax had to extract himself. This was getting embarrassing.

  `Yes, well I'd better go now. More customers to call.' That should
  work. The Perth manager wanted a contact telephone number, as
  expected, if something went wrong--so Mendax gave him the one which
  was permanently busy.

  `Thank you again for your courteous service!' Uhuh. Anytime.

  Mendax hung up and tried the toll-free Minerva number. The password
  worked. He couldn't believe how easy it was to get in.

  He had a quick look around, following the pattern of most hackers
  breaking into a new machine. First thing to do was to check the
  electronic mail of the `borrowed' account. Email often contains
  valuable information. One company manager might send another
  information about other account names, password changes or even phone
  numbers to modems at the company itself. Then it was off to check the
  directories available for anyone to read on the main system--another
  good source of information. Final stop: Minerva's bulletin board of
  news. This included postings from the system operators about planned
  downtime or other service issues. He didn't stay long. The first visit
  was usually mostly a bit of reconnaissance work.

  Minerva had many uses. Most important among these was the fact that
  Minerva gave hackers an entry point into various X.25 networks. X.25
  is a type of computer communications network, much like the Unix-based
  Internet or the VMS-based DECNET. It has different commands and
  protocols, but the principle of an extensive worldwide data
  communications network is the same. There is, however, one important
  difference. The targets for hackers on the X.25 networks are often far
  more interesting. For example, most banks are on X.25. Indeed, X.25
  underpins many aspects of the world's financial markets. A number of
  countries' classified military computer sites only run on X.25. It is
  considered by many people to be more secure than the Internet or any
  DECNET system.

  Minerva allowed incoming callers to pass into the X.25
  network--something most Australian universities did not offer at the
  time. And Minerva let Australian callers do this without incurring a
  long-distance telephone charge.

  In the early days of Minerva, the OTC operators didn't seem to care
  much about the hackers, probably because it seemed impossible to get
  rid of them. The OTC operators managed the OTC X.25 exchange, which
  was like a telephone exchange for the X.25 data network. This exchange
  was the data gateway for Minerva and other systems connected to that
  data network.

  Australia's early hackers had it easy, until Michael Rosenberg
  arrived.

  Rosenberg, known on-line simply as MichaelR, decided to clean up
  Minerva. An engineering graduate from Queensland University, Michael
  moved to Sydney when he joined OTC at age 21. He was about the same
  age as the hackers he was chasing off his system. Rosenberg didn't
  work as an OTC operator, he managed the software which ran on Minerva.
  And he made life hell for people like Force. Closing up security
  holes, quietly noting accounts used by hackers and then killing those
  accounts, Rosenberg almost single-handedly stamped out much of the
  hacker activity in OTC's Minerva.

  Despite this, the hackers--`my hackers' as he termed the regulars--had
  a grudging respect for Rosenberg. Unlike anyone else at OTC, he was
  their technical equal and, in a world where technical prowess was the
  currency, Rosenberg was a wealthy young man.

  He wanted to catch the hackers, but he didn't want to see them go to
  prison. They were an annoyance, and he just wanted them out of his
  system. Any line trace, however, had to go through Telecom, which was
  at that time a separate body from OTC. Telecom, Rosenberg was told,
  was difficult about these things because of strict privacy laws. So,
  for the most part, he was left to deal with the hackers on his own.
  Rosenberg could not secure his system completely since OTC didn't
  dictate passwords to their customers. Their customers were usually
  more concerned about employees being able to remember passwords easily
  than worrying about warding off wily hackers. The result: the
  passwords on a number of Minerva accounts were easy pickings.

  The hackers and OTC waged a war from 1988 to 1990, and it was fought
  in many ways.

  Sometimes an OTC operator would break into a hacker's on-line session
  demanding to know who was really using the account. Sometimes the
  operators sent insulting messages to the hackers--and the hackers gave
  it right back to them. They broke into the hacker's session with `Oh,
  you idiots are at it again'. The operators couldn't keep the hackers
  out, but they had other ways of getting even.

  Electron, a Melbourne hacker and rising star in the Australian
  underground, had been logging into a system in Germany via OTC's X.25
  link. Using a VMS machine, a sort of sister system to Minerva, he had
  been playing a game called Empire on the Altos system, a popular
  hang-out for hackers. It was his first attempt at Empire, a complex
  war game of strategy which attracted players from around the world.
  They each had less than one hour per day to conquer regions while
  keeping production units at a strategic level. The Melbourne hacker
  had spent weeks building his position. He was in second place.

  Then, one day, he logged into the game via Minerva and the German
  system, and he couldn't believe what he saw on the screen in front of
  him. His regions, his position in the game, all of it--weeks of
  work--had been wiped out. An OTC operator had used an X.25
  packet-sniffer to monitor the hacker's login and capture his password to
  Empire. Instead of trading the usual insults, the operator had waited
  for the hacker to logoff and then had hacked into the game and destroyed
  the hacker's position.

  Electron was furious. He had been so proud of his position in his very
  first game. Still, wreaking havoc on the Minerva system in retribution
  was out of the question. Despite the fact that they wasted weeks of
  his work, Electron had no desire to damage their system. He considered
  himself lucky to be able to use it as long as he did.

  The anti-establishment attitudes nurtured in BBSes such as PI and Zen
  fed on a love of the new and untried. There was no bitterness, just a
  desire to throw off the mantle of the old and dive into the new.
  Camaraderie grew from the exhilarating sense that the youth in this
  particular time and place were constantly on the edge of big
  discoveries. People were calling up computers with their modems and
  experimenting. What did this key sequence do? What about that tone?
  What would happen if ... It was the question which drove them to stay
  up day and night, poking and prodding. These hackers didn't for the
  most part do drugs. They didn't even drink that much, given their age.
  All of that would have interfered with their burning desire to know,
  would have dulled their sharp edge. The underground's
  anti-establishment views were mostly directed at organisations which
  seemed to block the way to the new frontier--organisations like
  Telecom.

  It was a powerful word. Say `Telecom' to a member of the computer
  underground from that era and you will observe the most striking
  reaction. Instant contempt sweeps across his face. There is a pause as
  his lips curl into a noticeable sneer and he replies with complete
  derision, `Telescum'. The underground hated Australia's national
  telephone carrier with a passion equalled only to its love of
  exploration. They felt that Telecom was backward and its staff had no
  idea how to use their own telecommunications technology. Worst of all,
  Telecom seemed to actively dislike BBSes.

  Line noise interfered with one modem talking to another, and in the
  eyes of the computer underground, Telecom was responsible for the line
  noise. A hacker might be reading a message on PI, and there, in the
  middle of some juicy technical titbit, would be a bit of crud--random
  characters `2'28 v'1';D>nj4'--followed by the comment, `Line noise.
  Damn Telescum! At their best as usual, I see'. Sometimes the line
  noise was so bad it logged the hacker off, thus forcing him to spend
  another 45 minutes attack dialling the BBS. The modems didn't have
  error correction, and the faster the modem speed, the worse the impact
  of line noise. Often it became a race to read mail and post messages
  before Telecom's line noise logged the hacker off.

  Rumours flew through the underground again and again that Telecom was
  trying to bring in timed local calls. The volume of outrage was
  deafening. The BBS community believed it really irked the national
  carrier that people could spend an hour logged into a BBS for the cost
  of one local phone call. Even more heinous, other rumours abounded
  that Telecom had forced at least one BBS to limit each incoming call
  to under half an hour. Hence Telecom's other nickname in the computer
  underground: Teleprofit.

  To the BBS community, Telecom's Protective Services Unit was the
  enemy. They were the electronic police. The underground saw Protective
  Services as `the enforcers'--an all-powerful government force which
  could raid your house, tap your phone line and seize your computer
  equipment at any time. The ultimate reason to hate Telecom.

  There was such hatred of Telecom that people in the computer
  underground routinely discussed ways of sabotaging the carrier. Some
  people talked of sending 240 volts of electricity down the telephone
  line--an act which would blow up bits of the telephone exchange along
  with any line technicians who happened to be working on the cable at
  the time. Telecom had protective fuses which stopped electrical surges
  on the line, but BBS hackers had reportedly developed circuit plans
  which would allow high-frequency voltages to bypass them. Other
  members of the underground considered what sweet justice it would be
  to set fire to all the cables outside a particular Telecom exchange
  which had an easily accessible cable entrance duct.

  It was against this backdrop that the underground began to shift into
  phreaking. Phreaking is loosely defined as hacking the telephone
  system. It is a very loose definition. Some people believe phreaking
  includes stealing a credit card number and using it to make a
  long-distance call for free. Purists shun this definition. To them,
  using a stolen credit card is not phreaking, it is carding. They argue
  that phreaking demands a reasonable level of technical skill and
  involves manipulation of a telephone exchange. This manipulation may
  manifest itself as using computers or electrical circuits to generate
  special tones or modify the voltage of a phone line. The manipulation
  changes how the telephone exchange views a particular telephone
  line. The result: a free and hopefully untraceable call. The purist
  hacker sees phreaking more as a way of eluding telephone traces than of
  calling his or her friends around the world for free.

  The first transition into phreaking and eventually carding happened
  over a period of about six months in 1988. Early hackers on PI and Zen
  relied primarily on dial-outs, like those at Melbourne University or
  Telecom's Clayton office, to bounce around international computer
  sites. They also used X.25 dial-outs in other countries--the US,
  Sweden and Germany--to make another leap in their international
  journeys.

  Gradually, the people running these dial-out lines wised up. Dial-outs
  started drying up. Passwords were changed. Facilities were cancelled.
  But the hackers didn't want to give up access to overseas systems.
  They'd had their first taste of international calling and they wanted
  more. There was a big shiny electronic world to explore out there.
  They began trying different methods of getting where they wanted to
  go. And so the Melbourne underground moved into phreaking.

  Phreakers swarmed to PABXes like bees to honey. A PABX, a private
  automatic branch exchange, works like a mini-Telecom telephone
  exchange. Using a PABX, the employee of a large company could dial
  another employee in-house without incurring the cost of a local
  telephone call. If the employee was, for example, staying in a hotel
  out of town, the company might ask him to make all his calls through
  the company's PABX to avoid paying extortionate hotel long-distance
  rates. If the employee was in Brisbane on business, he could dial a
  Brisbane number which might route him via the company's PABX to
  Sydney. From there, he might dial out to Rome or London, and the
  charge would be billed directly to the company. What worked for an
  employee also worked for a phreaker.

  A phreaker dialling into the PABX would generally need to either know
  or guess the password allowing him to dial out again. Often, the
  phreaker was greeted by an automated message asking for the employee's
  telephone extension--which also served as the password. Well, that was
  easy enough. The phreaker simply tried a series of numbers until he
  found one which actually worked.

  Occasionally, a PABX system didn't even have passwords. The managers
  of the PABX figured that keeping the phone number secret was good
  enough security. Sometimes phreakers made free calls out of PABXes
  simply by exploited security flaws in a particular model or brand of
  PABX. A series of specific key presses allowed the phreaker to get in
  without knowing a password, an employee's name, or even the name of
  the company for that matter.

  As a fashionable pastime on BBSes, phreaking began to surpass hacking.
  PI established a private phreaking section. For a while, it became
  almost old hat to call yourself a hacker. Phreaking was forging the
  path forward.

  Somewhere in this transition, the Phreakers Five sprung to life. A
  group of five hackers-turned-phreakers gathered in an exclusive group
  on PI. Tales of their late-night podding adventures leaked into the
  other areas of the BBS and made would-be phreakers green with
  jealousy.

  First, the phreakers would scout out a telephone pod--the grey steel,
  rounded box perched nondescriptly on most streets. Ideally, the chosen
  pod would be by a park or some other public area likely to be deserted
  at night. Pods directly in front of suburban houses were a bit
  risky--the house might contain a nosy little old lady with a penchant
  for calling the local police if anything looked suspicious. And what
  she would see, if she peered out from behind her lace curtains, was a
  small tornado of action.

  One of the five would leap from the van and open the pod with a key
  begged, borrowed or stolen from a Telecom technician. The keys seemed
  easy enough to obtain. The BBSes message boards were rife with gleeful
  tales of valuable Telecom equipment, such as 500 metres of cable or a
  pod key, procured off a visiting Telecom repairman either through
  legitimate means or in exchange for a six-pack of beer.

  The designated phreaker would poke inside the pod until he found
  someone else's phone line. He'd strip back the cable, whack on a pair
  of alligator clips and, if he wanted to make a voice call, run it to a
  linesman's handset also borrowed, bought or stolen from Telecom. If he
  wanted to call another computer instead of talking voice, he would
  need to extend the phone line back to the phreakers' car. This is
  where the 500 metres of Telecom cable came in handy. A long cable
  meant the car, containing five anxious, whispering young men and a
  veritable junkyard of equipment, would not have to sit next to the pod
  for hours on end. That sort of scene might look a little suspicious to
  a local resident out walking his or her dog late one night.

  The phreaker ran the cable down the street and, if possible, around
  the corner. He pulled it into the car and attached it to the waiting
  computer modem. At least one of the five was proficient enough with
  electronics hardware to have rigged up the computer and modem to the
  car battery. The Phreaker's Five could now call any computer without
  being traced or billed. The phone call charges would appear at the end
  of a local resident's phone bill. Telecom did not itemise residential
  telephone bills at the time. True, it was a major drama to zoom around
  suburban streets in the middle of the night with computers, alligator
  clips and battery adaptors in tow, but that didn't matter so much. In
  fact, the thrill of such a cloak-and-dagger operation was as good as
  the actual hacking itself. It was illicit. In the phreakers' own eyes,
  it was clever. And therefore it was fun.

  Craig Bowen didn't think much of the Phreakers Five's style of
  phreaking. In fact, the whole growth of phreaking as a pastime
  depressed him a bit. He believed it just didn't require the technical
  skills of proper hacking. Hacking was, in his view, about the
  exploration of a brave new world of computers. Phreaking was, well, a
  bit beneath a good hacker. Somehow it demeaned the task at hand.

  Still, he could see how in some cases it was necessary in order to
  continue hacking. Most people in the underground developed some basic
  skills in phreaking, though people like Bowen always viewed it more as
  a means to an end--just a way of getting from computer A to computer
  B, nothing more. Nonetheless, he allowed phreaking discussion areas in
  the private sections of PI.

  What he refused to allow was discussion areas around credit card
  fraud. Carding was anathema to Bowen and he watched with alarm as some
  members of the underground began to shift from phreaking into carding.

  Like the transition into phreaking, the move into carding was a
  logical progression. It occurred over a period of perhaps six months
  in 1988 and was as obvious as a group of giggling schoolgirls.

  Many phreakers saw it simply as another type of phreaking. In fact it
  was a lot less hassle than manipulating some company's PABX. Instead,
  you just call up an operator, give him some stranger's credit card
  number to pay for the call, and you were on your way. Of course, the
  credit cards had a broader range of uses than the PABXes. The advent
  of carding meant you could telephone your friends in the US or UK and
  have a long voice conference call with all of them
  simultaneously--something which could be a lot tougher to arrange on a
  PABX. There were other benefits. You could actually charge things with
  that credit card. As in goods. Mail order goods.

  One member of the underground who used the handle Ivan Trotsky,
  allegedly ordered $50000 worth of goods, including a jet ski, from the
  US on a stolen card, only to leave it sitting on the Australian docks.
  The Customs guys don't tend to take stolen credit cards for duty
  payments. In another instance, Trotsky was allegedly more successful.
  A try-hard hacker who kept pictures of Karl Marx and Lenin taped to
  the side of his computer terminal, Trotsky regularly spewed communist
  doctrine across the underground. A self-contained paradox, he spent
  his time attending Communist Party of Australia meetings and duck
  shoots. According to one hacker, Trotsky's particular contribution to
  the overthrow of the capitalist order was the arrangement of a
  shipment of expensive modems from the US using stolen credit cards. He
  was rumoured to have made a tidy profit by selling the modems in the
  computer community for about $200 each. Apparently, being part of the
  communist revolution gave him all sorts of ready-made
  rationalisations. Membership has its advantages.

  To Bowen, carding was little more than theft. Hacking may have been a
  moral issue, but in early 1988 in Australia it was not yet much of a
  legal one. Carding was by contrast both a moral and a legal issue.
  Bowen recognised that some people viewed hacking as a type of
  theft--stealing someone else's computer resources--but the argument
  was ambiguous. What if no-one needed those resources at 2 a.m. on a
  given night? It might be seen more as `borrowing' an under-used asset,
  since the hacker had not permanently appropriated any property. Not so
  for carding.

  What made carding even less noble was that it required the technical
  skill of a wind-up toy. Not only was it beneath most good hackers, it
  attracted the wrong sort of people into the hacking scene. People who
  had little or no respect for the early Australian underground's golden
  rules of hacking: don't damage computer systems you break into
  (including crashing them); don't change the information in those
  systems (except for altering logs to cover your tracks); and share
  information. For most early Australian hackers, visiting someone
  else's system was a bit like visiting a national park. Leave it as you
  find it.

  While the cream seemed to rise to the top of the hacking hierarchy, it
  was the scum that floated at the top of the carding community. Few
  people in the underground typified this more completely than Blue
  Thunder, who had been hanging around the outskirts of the Melbourne
  underground since at least 1986. The senior hackers treated Blue
  Blunder, as they sometimes called him, with great derision.

  His entrance into the underground was as ignominious as that of a
  debutante who, delicately descending the grand steps of the ballroom,
  trips and tumbles head-first onto the dance floor. He picked a fight
  with the grande doyenne of the Melbourne underground.

  The Real Article occupied a special place in the underground. For
  starters, The Real Article was a woman--perhaps the only female to
  play a major role in the early Melbourne underground scene. Although
  she didn't hack computers, she knew a lot about them. She ran The Real
  Connection, a BBS frequented by many of the hackers who hung out on
  PI. She wasn't somebody's sister wafting in and out of the picture in
  search of a boyfriend. She was older. She was as good as married. She
  had kids. She was a force to be reckoned with in the hacking
  community.

  Forthright and formidable, The Real Article commanded considerable
  respect among the underground. A good indicator of this respect was the
  fact that the members of H.A.C.K. had inducted her as an honorary member
  of their exclusive club. Perhaps it was because she ran a popular
  board. More likely it was because, for all their bluff and bluster, most
  hackers were young men with the problems of young men.  Being older and
  wiser, The Real Article knew how to lend a sympathetic ear to those
  problems. As a woman and a non-hacker, she was removed from the jumble
  of male ego hierarchical problems associated with confiding in a
  peer. She served as a sort of mother to the embryonic hacking community,
  but she was young enough to avoid the judgmental pitfalls most parents
  fall into with children.

  The Real Article and Blue Thunder went into partnership running a BBS
  in early 1986. Blue Thunder, then a high-school student, was desperate
  to run a board, so she let him co-sysop the system. At first the
  partnership worked. Blue Thunder used to bring his high-school essays
  over for her to proofread and correct. But a short time into the
  partnership, it went sour. The Real Article didn't like Blue Thunder's
  approach to running a BBS, which appeared to her to be get information
  from other hackers and then dump them. The specific strategy seemed to
  be: get hackers to logon and store their valuable information on the
  BBS, steal that information and then lock them out of their own
  account. By locking them out, he was able to steal all the glory; he
  could then claim the hacking secrets were his own. It was, in her
  opinion, not only unsustainable, but quite immoral. She parted ways
  with Blue Thunder and excommunicated him from her BBS.

  Not long after, The Real Article started getting harassing phone calls
  at 4 in the morning. The calls were relentless. Four a.m. on the dot,
  every night. The voice at the other end of the line was computer
  synthesised. This was followed by a picture of a machine-gun, printed
  out on a cheap dot matrix printer in Commodore ASCII, delivered in her
  letterbox. There was a threatening message attached which read
  something like, `If you want the kids to stay alive, get them out of
  the house'.

  After that came the brick through the window. It landed in the back of
  her TV. Then she woke up one morning to find her phone line dead.
  Someone had opened the Telecom well in the nature strip across the
  road and cut out a metre of cable. It meant the phone lines for the
  entire street were down.

  The Real Article tended to rise above the petty games that whining
  adolescent boys with bruised egos could play, but this was too much.
  She called in Telecom Protective Services, who put a last party
  release on her phone line to trace the early-morning harassing calls.
  She suspected Blue Thunder was involved, but nothing was ever proved.
  Finally, the calls stopped. She voiced her suspicions to others in the
  computer underground. Whatever shred of reputation Blue Chunder, as he
  then became known for a time, had was soon decimated.

  Since his own technical contributions were seen by his fellow BBS
  users as limited, Blue Thunder would likely have faded into obscurity,
  condemned to spend the rest of his time in the underground jumping
  around the ankles of the aristocratic hackers. But the birth of
  carding arrived at a fortuitous moment for him and he got into carding
  in a big way, so big in fact that he soon got busted.

  People in the underground recognised him as a liability, both because
  of what many hackers saw as his loose morals and because he was
  boastful of his activities. One key hacker said, `He seemed to relish
  the idea of getting caught. He told people he worked for a credit
  union and that he stole lots of credit card numbers. He sold
  information, such as accounts on systems, for financial gain.' In
  partnership with a carder, he also allegedly sent a bouquet of flowers
  to the police fraud squad--and paid for it with a stolen credit card
  number.

  On 31 August 1988, Blue Thunder faced 22 charges in the Melbourne
  Magistrates Court, where he managed to get most of the charges dropped
  or amalgamated. He only ended up pleading guilty to five counts,
  including deception and theft. The Real Article sat in the back of the
  courtroom watching the proceedings. Blue Thunder must have been pretty
  worried about what kind of sentence the magistrate would hand down
  because she said he approached her during the lunch break and asked if
  she would appear as a character witness for the defence. She looked
  him straight in the eye and said, `I think you would prefer it if I
  didn't'. He landed 200 hours of community service and an order to pay
  $706 in costs.

  Craig Bowen didn't like where the part of the underground typified by
  Blue Thunder was headed. In his view, Chunder and Trotsky stood out as
  bad apples in an otherwise healthy group, and they signalled an
  unpleasant shift towards selling information. This was perhaps the
  greatest taboo. It was dirty. It was seedy. It was the realm of
  criminals, not explorers. The Australian computer underground had
  started to lose some of its fresh-faced innocence.

  Somewhere in the midst of all this, a new player entered the Melbourne
  underground. His name was Stuart Gill, from a company called
  Hackwatch.

  Bowen met Stuart through Kevin Fitzgerald, a well-known local hacker
  commentator who founded the Chisholm Institute of Technology's
  Computer Abuse Research Bureau, which later became the Australian
  Computer Abuse Research Bureau. After seeing a newspaper article
  quoting Fitzgerald, Craig decided to ring up the man many members of
  the underground considered to be a hacker-catcher. Why not? There were
  no federal laws in Australia against hacking, so Bowen didn't feel
  that nervous about it. Besides, he wanted to meet the enemy. No-one
  from the Australian underground had ever done it before, and Bowen
  decided it was high time. He wanted to set the record straight with
  Fitzgerald, to let him know what hackers were really on about. They
  began to talk periodically on the phone.

  Along the way, Bowen met Stuart Gill who said that he was working with
  Fitzgerald.4 Before long, Gill began visiting PI. Eventually, Bowen
  visited Gill in person at the Mount Martha home he shared with his
  elderly aunt and uncle. Stuart had all sorts of computer equipment
  hooked up there, and a great number of boxes of papers in the garage.

  `Oh, hello there, Paul,' Gill's ancient-looking uncle said when he saw
  the twosome. As soon as the old man had tottered off, Gill pulled
  Bowen aside confidentially.

  `Don't worry about old Eric,' he said. `He lost it in the war. Today
  he thinks I'm Paul, tomorrow it will be someone else.'

  Bowen nodded, understanding.

  There were many strange things about Stuart Gill, all of which seemed
  to have a rational explanation, yet that explanation somehow never
  quite answered the question in full.

  Aged in his late thirties, he was much older and far more worldly than
  Craig Bowen. He had very, very pale skin--so pasty it looked as though
  he had never sat in the sun in his life.

  Gill drew Bowen into the complex web of his life. Soon he told the
  young hacker that he wasn't just running Hackwatch, he was also
  involved in intelligence work. For the Australian Federal Police. For
  ASIO. For the National Crime Authority. For the Victoria Police's
  Bureau of Criminal Intelligence (BCI). He showed Bowen some secret
  computer files and documents, but he made him sign a special form
  first--a legal-looking document demanding non-disclosure based on some
  sort of official secrets act.

  Bowen was impressed. Why wouldn't he be? Gill's cloak-and-dagger world
  looked like the perfect boy's own adventure. Even bigger and better
  than hacking. He was a little strange, but that was part of the
  allure.

  Like the time they took a trip to Sale together around Christmas 1988.
  Gill told Bowen he had to get out of town for a few days--certain
  undesirable people were after him. He didn't drive, so could Craig
  help him out? Sure, no problem. They had shared an inexpensive motel
  room in Sale, paid for by Gill.

  Being so close to Christmas, Stuart told Craig he had brought him two
  presents. Craig opened the first--a John Travolta fitness book. When
  Craig opened the second gift, he was a little stunned. It was a red
  G-string for men. Craig didn't have a girlfriend at the time--perhaps
  Stuart was trying to help him get one.

  `Oh, ah, thanks,' Craig said, a bit confused.

  `Glad you like it,' Stuart said. `Go on. Try it on.'

  `Try it on?' Craig was now very confused.

  `Yeah, mate, you know, to see if it fits. That's all.'

  `Oh, um, right.'

  Craig hesitated. He didn't want to seem rude. It was a weird request,
  but never having been given a G-string before, he didn't know the
  normal protocol. After all, when someone gives you a jumper, it's
  normal for them to ask you to try it on, then and there, to see if it
  fits.

  Craig tried it on. Quickly.

  `Yes, seems to fit,' Stuart said matter of factly, then turned away.

  Craig felt relieved. He changed back into his clothing.

  That night, and on many others during their trips or during Craig's
  overnight visits to Stuart's uncle's house, Craig lay in bed wondering
  about his secretive new friend.

  Stuart was definitely a little weird, but he seemed to like women so
  Craig figured he couldn't be interested in Craig that way. Stuart
  bragged that he had a very close relationship with a female newspaper
  reporter, and he always seemed to be chatting up the girl at the video
  store.

  Craig tried not to read too much into Stuart's odd behaviour, for the
  young man was willing to forgive his friend's eccentricities just to
  be part of the action. Soon Stuart asked Craig for access to
  PI--unrestricted access.

  The idea made Craig uncomfortable, but Stuart was so persuasive. How
  would he be able to continue his vital intelligence work without
  access to Victoria's most important hacking board? Besides, Stuart
  Gill of Hackwatch wasn't after innocent-faced hackers like Craig
  Bowen. In fact, he would protect Bowen when the police came down on
  everyone. What Stuart really wanted was the carders--the fraudsters.
  Craig didn't want to protect people like that, did he?

  Craig found it a little odd, as usual, that Stuart seemed to be after
  the carders, yet he had chummed up with Ivan Trotsky. Still, there
  were no doubt secrets Stuart couldn't reveal--things he wasn't allowed
  to explain because of his intelligence work.

  Craig agreed.

  What Craig couldn't have known as he pondered Stuart Gill from the
  safety of his boyish bedroom was exactly how much innocence the
  underground was still to lose. If he had foreseen the next few
  years--the police raids, the Ombudsman's investigation, the stream of
  newspaper articles and the court cases--Craig Bowen would, at that
  very moment, probably have reached over and turned off his beloved PI
  and Zen forever.


    _________________________________________________________________

                  Chapter 3 -- The American Connection
    _________________________________________________________________


    US forces give the nod
    It's a setback for your country

  -- from `US Forces', on 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 by Midnight Oil1

  Force had a secret. The Parmaster wanted it.

  Like most hackers, The Parmaster didn't just want the secret, he
  needed it. He was in that peculiar state attained by real hackers
  where they will do just about anything to obtain a certain piece of
  information. He was obsessed.

  Of course, it wasn't the first time The Parmaster craved a juicy piece
  of information. Both he and Force knew all about infatuation. That's
  how it worked with real hackers. They didn't just fancy a titbit here
  and there. Once they knew information about a particular system was
  available, that there was a hidden entrance, they chased it down
  relentlessly. So that was exactly what Par was doing. Chasing Force
  endlessly, until he got what he wanted.

  It began innocently enough as idle conversation between two giants in
  the computer underground in the first half of 1988. Force, the
  well-known Australian hacker who ran the exclusive Realm BBS in
  Melbourne, sat chatting with Par, the American master of X.25
  networks, in Germany. Neither of them was physically in Germany, but
  Altos was.

  Altos Computer Systems in Hamburg ran a conference feature called
  Altos Chat on one of its machines. You could call up from anywhere on
  the X.25 data communications network, and the company's computer would
  let you connect. Once connected, with a few brief keystrokes, the
  German machine would drop you into a real-time, on-screen talk session
  with anyone else who happened to be on-line. While the rest of the
  company's computer system grunted and toiled with everyday labours,
  this corner of the machine was reserved for live on-line chatting. For
  free. It was like an early form of the Internet Relay Chat. The
  company probably hadn't meant to become the world's most prestigious
  hacker hang-out, but it soon ended up doing so.

  Altos was the first significant international live chat channel, and
  for most hackers it was an amazing thing. The good hackers had cruised
  through lots of computer networks around the world. Sometimes they
  bumped into one another on-line and exchanged the latest gossip.
  Occasionally, they logged into overseas BBSes, where they posted
  messages. But Altos was different. While underground BBSes had a
  tendency to simply disappear one day, gone forever, Altos was always
  there. It was live. Instantaneous communications with a dozen other
  hackers from all sorts of exotic places. Italy. Canada. France.
  England. Israel. The US. And all these people not only shared an
  interest in computer networks but also a flagrant contempt for
  authority of any type. Instant, real-time penpals--with attitude.

  However, Altos was more exclusive than the average underground BBS.
  Wanna-be hackers had trouble getting into it because of the way X.25
  networks were billed. Some systems on the network took reverse-charge
  connections--like a 1-800 number--and some, including Altos, didn't.
  To get to Altos you needed a company's NUI (Network User Identifier),
  which was like a calling card number for the X.25 network, used to
  bill your time on-line. Or you had to have access to a system like
  Minerva which automatically accepted billing for all the connections
  made.

  X.25 networks are different in various ways from the Internet, which
  developed later. X.25 networks use different communication protocols
  and, unlike the Internet at the user-level, they only use addresses
  containing numbers not letters. Each packet of information travelling
  over a data network needs to be encased in a particular type of
  envelope. A `letter' sent across the X.25 network needs an X.25
  `stamped' envelope, not an Internet `stamped' envelope.

  The X.25 networks were controlled by a few very large players,
  companies such as Telenet and Tymnet, while the modern Internet is, by
  contrast, a fragmented collection of many small and medium-sized
  sites.

  Altos unified the international hacking world as nothing else had
  done. In sharing information about their own countries' computers and
  networks, hackers helped each other venture further and further
  abroad. The Australians had gained quite a reputation on Altos. They
  knew their stuff. More importantly, they possessed DEFCON, a program
  which mapped out uncharted networks and scanned for accounts on
  systems within them. Force wrote DEFCON based on a simple automatic
  scanning program provided by his friend and mentor, Craig Bowen
  (Thunderbird1).

  Like the telephone system, the X.25 networks had a large number of
  `phone numbers', called network user addresses (NUAs). Most were not
  valid. They simply hadn't been assigned to anyone yet. To break into
  computers on the network, you had to find them first, which meant
  either hearing about a particular system from a fellow hacker or
  scanning. Scanning--typing in one possible address after another--was
  worse than looking for a needle in a haystack. 02624-589004-0004. Then
  increasing the last digit by one on each attempt. 0005. 0006. 0007.
  Until you hit a machine at the other end.

  Back in 1987 or early 1988, Force had logged into Pacific Island for a
  talk with Craig Bowen. Force bemoaned the tediousness of hand
  scanning.

  `Well, why the hell are you doing it manually?' Bowen responded. `You
  should just use my program.' He then gave Force the source code for
  his simple automated scanning program, along with instructions.

  Force went through the program and decided it would serve as a good
  launchpad for bigger things, but it had a major limitation. The
  program could only handle one connection at a time, which meant it
  could only scan one branch of a network at a time.

  Less than three months later, Force had rewritten Bowen's program into
  the far more powerful DEFCON, which became the jewel in the crown of
  the Australian hackers' reputation. With DEFCON, a hacker could
  automatically scan fifteen or twenty network addresses simultaneously.
  He could command the computer to map out pieces of the Belgian,
  British and Greek X.25 communications networks, looking for computers
  hanging off the networks like buds at the tips of tree branches.

  Conceptually, the difference was a little like using a basic PC, which
  can only run one program at a time, as opposed to operating a more
  sophisticated one where you can open many windows with different
  programs running all at once. Even though you might only be working in
  one window, say, writing a letter, the computer might be doing
  calculations in a spreadsheet in another window in the background. You
  can swap between
  different functions, which are all running in the background
  simultaneously.

  While DEFCON was busy scanning, Force could do other things, such as
  talk on Altos. He continued improving DEFCON, writing up to four more
  versions of the program. Before long, DEFCON didn't just scan twenty
  different connections at one time; it also automatically tried to
  break into all the computers it found through those connections.
  Though the program only tried basic default passwords, it had a fair
  degree of success, since it could attack so many network addresses at
  once. Further, new sites and mini-networks were being added so quickly
  that security often fell by the wayside in the rush to join in. Since
  the addresses were unpublished, companies often felt this obscurity
  offered enough protection.

  DEFCON produced lists of thousands of computer sites to raid. Force
  would leave it scanning from a hacked Prime computer, and a day or two
  later he would have an output file with 6000 addresses on different
  networks. He perused the list and selected sites which caught his
  attention. If his program had discovered an interesting address, he
  would travel over the X.25 network to the site and then try to break
  into the computer at that address. Alternatively, DEFCON might have
  already successfully penetrated the machine using a default password,
  in which case the address, account name and password would all be
  waiting for Force in the log file. He could just walk right in.

  Everyone on Altos wanted DEFCON, but Force refused to hand over the
  program. No way was he going to have other hackers tearing up virgin
  networks. Not even Erik Bloodaxe, one of the leaders of the most
  prestigious American hacking group, Legion of Doom (LOD), got DEFCON
  when he asked for it. Erik took his handle from the name of a Viking
  king who ruled over the area now known as York, England. Although Erik
  was on friendly terms with the Australian hackers, Force remained
  adamant. He would not let the jewel out of his hands.

  But on this fateful day in 1988, Par didn't want DEFCON. He wanted the
  secret Force had just discovered, but held so very close to his chest.
  And the Australian didn't want to give it to him.

  Force was a meticulous hacker. His bedroom was remarkably tidy, for a
  hacker's room. It had a polished, spartan quality. There were a few
  well-placed pieces of minimalist furniture:
  a black enamel metal single bed, a modern black bedside
  table and a single picture on the wall--a photographic poster of
  lightning, framed in glass. The largest piece of furniture was a
  blue-grey desk with a return, upon which sat his computer, a printer
  and an immaculate pile of print-outs. The bookcase, a tall modern
  piece matching the rest of the furniture, contained an extensive
  collection of fantasy fiction books, including what seemed to be
  almost everything ever written by David Eddings. The lower shelves
  housed assorted chemistry and programming books. A chemistry award
  proudly jutted out from the shelf housing a few Dungeons and Dragons
  books.

  He kept his hacking notes in an orderly set of plastic folders, all
  filed in the bottom of his bookcase. Each page of notes, neatly
  printed and surrounded by small, tidy handwriting revealing updates
  and minor corrections, had its own plastic cover to prevent smudges or
  stains.

  Force thought it was inefficient to hand out his DEFCON program and
  have ten people scan the same network ten different times. It wasted
  time and resources. Further, it was becoming harder to get access to
  the main X.25 sites in Australia, like Minerva. Scanning was the type
  of activity likely to draw the attention of a system admin and result
  in the account being killed. The more people who scanned, the more
  accounts would be killed, and the less access the Australian hackers
  would have. So Force refused to hand over DEFCON to hackers outside
  The Realm, which is one thing that made it such a powerful group.

  Scanning with DEFCON meant using Netlink, a program which legitimate
  users didn't often employ. In his hunt for hackers, an admin might
  look for people running Netlink, or he might just examine which
  systems a user was connecting to. For example, if a hacker connected
  directly to Altos from Minerva without hopping through a respectable
  midpoint, such as another corporate machine overseas, he could count
  on the Minerva admins killing off the account.

  DEFCON was revolutionary for its time, and difficult to reproduce. It
  was written for Prime computers, and not many hackers knew how to
  write programs for Primes. In fact, it was exceedingly difficult for
  most hackers to learn programming of any sort for large, commercial
  machines. Getting the system engineering manuals was tough work and
  many of the large companies guarded their manuals almost as trade
  secrets. Sure, if you bought a $100000 system, the company would give
  you a few sets of operating manuals, but that was well beyond the
  reach of a teenage hacker. In general, information was hoarded--by the
  computer manufacturers, by the big companies which bought the systems,
  by the system administrators and even by the universities.

  Learning on-line was slow and almost as difficult. Most hackers used
  300 or 1200 baud modems. Virtually all access to these big, expensive
  machines was illegal. Every moment on-line was a risky proposition.
  High schools never had these sorts of expensive machines. Although
  many universities had systems, the administrators were usually miserly
  with time on-line for students. In most cases, students only got
  accounts on the big machines in their second year of computer science
  studies. Even then, student accounts were invariably on the
  university's oldest, clunkiest machine. And if you weren't a comp-sci
  student, forget it. Indulging your intellectual curiosity in VMS
  systems would never be anything more than a pipe dream.

  Even if you did manage to overcome all the roadblocks and develop some
  programming experience in VMS systems, for example, you might only be
  able to access a small number of machines on any given network. The
  X.25 networks connected a large number of machines which used very
  different operating systems. Many, such as Primes, were not in the
  least bit intuitive. So if you knew VMS and you hit a Prime machine,
  well, that was pretty much it.

  Unless, of course, you happened to belong to a clan of hackers like
  The Realm. Then you could call up the BBS and post a message. `Hey, I
  found a really cool Primos system at this address. Ran into problems
  trying to figure the parameters of the Netlink command. Ideas anyone?'
  And someone from your team would step forward to help.

  In The Realm, Force tried to assemble a diverse group of Australia's
  best hackers, each with a different area of expertise. And he happened
  to be the resident expert in Prime computers.

  Although Force wouldn't give DEFCON to anyone outside The Realm, he
  wasn't unreasonable. If you weren't in the system but you had an
  interesting network you wanted mapped, he would scan it for you. Force
  referred to scans for network user addresses as `NUA sprints'. He
  would give you a copy of the NUA sprint. While he was at it, he would
  also keep a copy for The Realm. That was efficient. Force's pet
  project was creating a database of systems and networks for The Realm,
  so he simply added the new information to its database.

  Force's great passion was mapping new networks, and new mini-networks
  were being added to the main X.25 networks all the time. A large
  corporation, such a BHP, might set up its own small-scale network
  connecting its offices in Western Australia, Queensland, Victoria and
  the United Kingdom. That mini-network might be attached to a
  particular X.25 network, such as Austpac. Get into the Austpac network
  and chances were you could get into any of the company's sites.

  Exploration of all this uncharted territory consumed most of Force's
  time. There was something cutting-edge, something truly adventurous
  about finding a new network and carefully piecing together a picture
  of what the expanding web looked like. He drew detailed pictures and
  diagrams showing how a new part of the network connected to the rest.
  Perhaps it appealed to his sense of order, or maybe he was just an
  adventurer at heart. Whatever the underlying motivation, the maps
  provided The Realm with yet another highly prized asset.

  When he wasn't mapping networks, Force published Australia's first
  underground hacking journal, Globetrotter. Widely read in the
  international hacking community, Globetrotter reaffirmed Australian
  hackers' pre-eminent position in the international underground.

  But on this particular day, Par wasn't thinking about getting a copy
  of Globetrotter or asking Force to scan a network for him. He was
  thinking about that secret. Force's new secret. The secret Parmaster
  desperately wanted.

  Force had been using DEFCON to scan half a dozen networks while he
  chatted to Par on Altos. He found an interesting connection from the
  scan, so he went off to investigate it. When he connected to the
  unknown computer, it started firing off strings of numbers at Force's
  machine. Force sat at his desk and watched the characters rush by on
  his screen.

  It was very odd. He hadn't done anything. He hadn't sent any commands
  to the mystery computer. He hadn't made the slightest attempt to break
  into the machine. Yet here the thing was throwing streams of numbers.
  What kind of computer was this? There might have been some sort of
  header which would identify the computer, but it had zoomed by so fast
  in the unexpected data dump that Force had missed it.

  Force flipped over to his chat with Par on Altos. He didn't completely
  trust Par, thinking the friendly American sailed a bit close to the
  wind. But Par was an expert in X.25 networks and was bound to have
  some clue about these numbers. Besides, if they turned out to be
  something sensitive, Force didn't have to tell Par where he found
  them.

  `I've just found a bizarre address. It is one strange system. When I
  connected, it just started shooting off numbers at me. Check these
  out.'

  Force didn't know what the numbers were, but Par sure did. `Those look
  like credit cards,' he typed back.

  `Oh.' Force went quiet.

  Par thought the normally chatty Australian hacker seemed astonished.
  After a short silence, the now curious Par nudged the conversation
  forward. `I have a way I can check out whether they really are valid
  cards,' he volunteered. `It'll take some time, but I should be able to
  do it and get back to you.'

  `Yes.' Force seemed hesitant. `OK.'

  On the other side of the Pacific from Par, Force thought about this
  turn of events. If they were valid credit cards, that was very cool.
  Not because he intended to use them for credit card fraud in the way
  Ivan Trotsky might have done. But Force could use them for making
  long-distance phone calls to hack overseas. And the sheer number of
  cards was astonishing. Thousand and thousands of them. Maybe 10000.
  All he could think was, Shit! Free connections for the rest of my
  life.

  Hackers such as Force considered using cards to call overseas computer
  systems a little distasteful, but certainly acceptable. The card owner
  would never end up paying the bill anyway. The hackers figured that
  Telecom, which they despised, would probably have to wear the cost in
  the end, and that was fine by them. Using cards to hack was nothing
  like ordering consumer goods. That was real credit card fraud. And
  Force would never sully his hands with that sort of behaviour.

  Force scrolled back over his capture of the numbers which had been
  injected into his machine. After closer inspection, he saw there were
  headers which appeared periodically through the list. One said,
  `CitiSaudi'.

  He checked the prefix of the mystery machine's network address again.
  He knew from previous scans that it belonged to one of the world's
  largest banks. Citibank.

  The data dump continued for almost three hours. After that, the
  Citibank machine seemed to go dead. Force saw nothing but a blank
  screen, but he kept the connection open. There was no way he was going
  to hang up from this conversation. He figured this had to be a freak
  connection--that he accidentally connected to this machine somehow,
  that it wasn't really at the address he had tried based on the DEFCON
  scan of Citibank's network.

  How else could it have happened? Surely Citibank wouldn't have a
  computer full of credit cards which spilled its guts every time
  someone rang up to say `hello'? There would be tonnes of security on a
  machine like that. This machine didn't even have a password. It didn't
  even need a special character command, like a secret handshake.

  Freak connections happened now and then on X.25
  networks. They had the same effect as a missed voice phone
  connection. You dial a friend's number--and you dial it correctly--but
  somehow the call gets screwed up in the tangle of wires and exchanges
  and your call gets put through to another number entirely. Of course,
  once something like that happens to an X.25 hacker, he immediately
  tries to figure out what the hell is going on, to search every shred
  of data from the machine looking for the system's real address.
  Because it was an accident, he suspects he will never find the machine
  again.

  Force stayed home from school for two days to keep the connection
  alive and to piece together how he landed on the doorstep of this
  computer. During this time, the Citibank computer woke up a few times,
  dumped a bit more information, and then went back to sleep. Keeping
  the connection alive meant running a small risk of discovery by an
  admin at his launch point, but the rewards in this case far exceeded
  the risk.

  It wasn't all that unusual for Force to skip school to hack. His
  parents used to tell him, `You better stop it, or you'll have to wear
  glasses one day'. Still, they didn't seem to worry too much, since
  their son had always excelled in school without much effort. At the
  start of his secondary school career he had tried to convince his
  teachers he should skip year 9. Some objected. It was a hassle, but he
  finally arranged it by quietly doing the coursework for year 9 while
  he was in year 8.

  After Force had finally disconnected from the CitiSaudi computer and
  had a good sleep, he decided to check on whether he could reconnect to
  the machine. At first, no-one answered, but when he tried a little
  later, someone answered all right. And it was the same talkative
  resident who answered the door the first time. Although it only seemed
  to work at certain hours of the day, the Citibank network address was
  the right one. He was in again.

  As Force looked over the captures from his Citibank hack, he noticed
  that the last section of the data dump didn't contain credit card
  numbers like the first part. It had people's names--Middle Eastern
  names--and a list of transactions. Dinner at a restaurant. A visit to
  a brothel. All sorts of transactions. There was also a number which
  looked like a credit limit, in come cases a very, very large limit,
  for each person. A sheik and his wife appeared to have credit limits
  of $1 million--each. Another name had a limit of $5 million.

  There was something strange about the data, Force thought. It was not
  structured in a way which suggested the Citibank machine was merely
  transmitting data to another machine. It looked more like a text file
  which was being dumped from a computer to a line printer.

  Force sat back and considered his exquisite discovery. He decided this
  was something he would share only with a very few close, trusted
  friends from The Realm. He would tell Phoenix and perhaps one other
  member, but no-one else.

  As he looked through the data once more, Force began to feel a little
  anxious. Citibank was a huge financial institution, dependent on the
  complete confidence of its customers. The corporation would lose a lot
  of face if news of Force's discovery got out. It might care enough to
  really come after him. Then, with the sudden clarity of the lightning
  strike photo which hung on his wall, a single thought filled his mind.

  I am playing with fire.

                                   [ ]

  `Where did you get those numbers?' Par asked Force next time they were
  both on Altos.

  Force hedged. Par leaped forward.

  `I checked those numbers for you. They're valid,' he told Force. The
  American was more than intrigued. He wanted that network address. It
  was lust. Next stop, mystery machine. `So, what's the address?'

  That was the one question Force didn't want to hear. He and Par had a
  good relationship, sharing information comfortably if occasionally.
  But that relationship only went so far. For all he knew, Par might
  have a less than desirable use for the information. Force didn't know
  if Par carded, but he felt sure Par had friends who might be into it.
  So Force refused to tell Par where to find the mystery machine.

  Par wasn't going to give up all that easily. Not that he would use the
  cards for free cash, but, hey, the mystery machine seemed like a very
  cool place to check out. There would be no peace for Force until Par
  got what he wanted. Nothing is so tempting to a hacker as the faintest
  whiff of information about a system he wants, and Par hounded Force
  until the Australian hacker relented just a bit.

  Finally Force told Par roughly where DEFCON had been scanning for
  addresses when it stumbled upon the CitiSaudi machine. Force wasn't
  handing over the street address, just the name of the suburb. DEFCON
  had been accessing the Citibank network through Telenet, a large
  American data network using X.25 communications protocols. The
  sub-prefixes for the Citibank portion of the network were 223 and 224.

  Par pestered Force some more for the rest of the numbers, but the
  Australian had dug his heels in. Force was too careful a player, too
  fastidious a hacker, to allow himself to get mixed up in the things
  Par might get up to.

  OK, thought the seventeen-year-old Par, I can do this without you. Par
  estimated there were 20000 possible addresses on that network, any one
  of which might be the home of the mystery machine. But he assumed the
  machine would be in the low end of the network, since the lower
  numbers were usually used first and the higher numbers were generally
  saved for other, special network functions. His assumptions narrowed
  the likely search field to about 2000 possible addresses.

  Par began hand-scanning on the Citibank Global Telecommunications
  Network (GTN) looking for the mystery machine. Using his knowledge of
  the X.25 network, he picked a number to start with. He typed 22301,
  22302, 22303. On and on, heading toward 22310000. Hour after hour,
  slowly, laboriously, working his way through all the options, Par
  scanned out a piece, or a range, within the network. When he got bored
  with the 223 prefix, he tried out the 224 one for a bit of variety.

  Bleary-eyed and exhausted after a long night at the computer, Par felt
  like calling it quits. The sun had splashed through the windows of his
  Salinas, California, apartment hours ago. His living room was a mess,
  with empty, upturned beer cans circling his Apple IIe. Par gave up for
  a while, caught some shut-eye. He had gone through the entire list of
  possible addresses, knocking at all the doors, and nothing had
  happened. But over the next few days he returned to scanning the
  network again. He decided to be more methodical about it and do the
  whole thing from scratch a second time.

  He was part way through the second scan when it happened. Par's
  computer connected to something. He sat up and peered toward the
  screen. What was going on? He checked the address. He was sure he had
  tried this one before and nothing had answered. Things were definitely
  getting strange. He stared at his computer.

  The screen was blank, with the cursor blinking silently at the top.
  Now what? What had Force done to get the computer to sing its song?

  Par tried pressing the control key and a few different letters.
  Nothing. Maybe this wasn't the right address after all. He
  disconnected from the machine and carefully wrote down the address,
  determined to try it again later.

  On his third attempt, he connected again but found the same irritating
  blank screen. This time he went through the entire alphabet with the
  control key.

  Control L.

  That was the magic keystroke. The one that made CitiSaudi give up its
  mysterious cache. The one that gave Par an adrenalin rush, along with
  thousands and thousands of cards. Instant cash, flooding his screen.
  He turned on the screen capture so he could collect all the
  information flowing past and analyse it later. Par had to keep feeding
  his little Apple IIe more disks to store all the data coming in
  through his 1200 baud modem.

  It was magnificent. Par savoured the moment, thinking about how much
  he was going to enjoy telling Force. It was going to be sweet. Hey,
  Aussie, you aren't the only show in town. See ya in Citibank.

  An hour or so later, when the CitiSaudi data dump had finally
  finished, Par was stunned at what he found in his capture. These
  weren't just any old cards. These were debit cards, and they were held
  by very rich Arabs. These people just plopped a few million in a bank
  account and linked a small, rectangular piece of plastic to that
  account. Every charge came directly out of the bank balance. One guy
  listed in the data dump bought a $330,000 Mercedes Benz in
  Istanbul--on his card. Par couldn't imagine being able to throw down a
  bit of plastic for that. Taking that plastic out for a spin around the
  block would bring a whole new meaning to the expression, `Charge it!'

  When someone wins the lottery, they often feel like sharing with their
  friends. Which is exactly what Par did. First, he showed his
  room-mates. They thought it was very cool. But not nearly so cool as
  the half dozen hackers and phreakers who happened to be on the
  telephone bridge Par frequented when the master of X.25 read off a
  bunch of the cards.

  Par was a popular guy after that day. Par was great, a sort of Robin
  Hood of the underground. Soon, everyone wanted to talk to him. Hackers
  in New York. Phreakers in Virginia. And the Secret Service in San
  Francisco.

                                   [ ]

  Par didn't mean to fall in love with Theorem. It was an accident, and
  he couldn't have picked a worse girl to fall for. For starters, she
  lived in Switzerland. She was 23 and he was only seventeen. She also
  happened to be in a relationship--and that relationship was with
  Electron, one of the best Australian hackers of the late 1980s. But
  Par couldn't help himself. She was irresistible, even though he had
  never met her in person. Theorem was different. She was smart and
  funny, but refined, as a European woman can be.

  They met on Altos in 1988.

  Theorem didn't hack computers. She didn't need to, since she could
  connect to Altos through her old university computer account. She had
  first found Altos on 23 December 1986. She remembered the date for two
  reasons. First, she was amazed
  at the power of Altos--that she could have a live conversation on-line
  with a dozen people in different countries at the same time. Altos was
  a whole new world for her. Second, that was the day she met Electron.

  Electron made Theorem laugh. His sardonic, irreverent humour hit a
  chord with her. Traditional Swiss society could be stifling and
  closed, but Electron was a breath of fresh air. Theorem was Swiss but
  she didn't always fit the mould. She hated skiing. She was six feet
  tall. She liked computers.

  When they met on-line, the 21-year-old Theorem was at a crossroad in
  her youth. She had spent a year and a half at university studying
  mathematics. Unfortunately, the studies had not gone well. The truth
  be told, her second year of university was in fact the first year all
  over again. A classmate had introduced her to Altos on the
  university's computers. Not long after she struck up a relationship
  with Electron, she dropped out of uni all together and enrolled in a
  secretarial course. After that, she found a secretarial job at a
  financial institution.

  Theorem and Electron talked on Altos for hours at a time. They talked
  about everything--life, family, movies, parties--but not much about
  what most people on Altos talked about--hacking. Eventually, Electron
  gathered up the courage to ask Theorem for her voice telephone number.
  She gave it to him happily and Electron called her at home in
  Lausanne. They talked. And talked. And talked. Soon they were on the
  telephone all the time.

  Seventeen-year-old Electron had never had a girlfriend. None of the
  girls in his middle-class high school would give him the time of day
  when it came to romance. Yet here was this bright, vibrant girl--a
  girl who studied maths--speaking to him intimately in a melting French
  accent. Best of all, she genuinely liked him. A few words from his
  lips could send her into silvery peals of laughter.

  When the phone bill arrived, it was $1000. Electron surreptitiously
  collected it and buried it at the bottom of a drawer in his bedroom.

  When he told Theorem, she offered to help pay for it. A cheque for
  $700 showed up not long after. It made the task of explaining
  Telecom's reminder notice to his father much easier.

  The romantic relationship progressed throughout 1987 and the first
  half of 1988. Electron and Theorem exchanged love letters and tender
  intimacies over 16000 kilometres of computer networks, but the
  long-distance relationship had some bumpy periods. Like when she had
  an affair over several months with Pengo. A well-known German hacker
  with links to the German hacking group called the Chaos Computer Club,
  Pengo was also a friend and mentor to Electron. Pengo was, however,
  only a short train ride away from Theorem. She became friends with
  Pengo on Altos and eventually visited him. Things progressed from
  there.

  Theorem was honest with Electron about the affair, but there was
  something unspoken, something below the surface. Even after the affair
  ended, Theorem was sweet on Pengo the way a girl remains fond of her
  first love regardless of how many other men she has slept with since
  then.

  Electron felt hurt and angry, but he swallowed his pride and forgave
  Theorem her dalliance. Eventually, Pengo disappeared from the scene.

  Pengo had been involved with people who sold US military
  secrets--taken from computers--to the KGB. Although his direct
  involvement in the ongoing international computer espionage had been
  limited, he began to worry about the risks. His real interest was in
  hacking, not spying. The Russian connection simply enabled him to get
  access to bigger and better computers. Beyond that, he felt no loyalty
  to the Russians.

  In the first half of 1988, he handed himself in to the German
  authorities. Under West German law at the time, a citizen-spy who
  surrendered himself before the state discovered the crime, and thus
  averted more damage to the state, acquired immunity from prosecution.
  Having already been busted in December 1986 for using a stolen NUI,
  Pengo decided that turning himself in would be his best hope of taking
  advantage of this legal largesse.

  By the end of the year, things had become somewhat hairy for Pengo and
  in March 1989 the twenty-year-old from Berlin was raided again, this
  time with the four others involved in the spy ring. The story broke
  and the media exposed Pengo's real name. He didn't know if he would
  eventually be tried and convicted of something related to the
  incident. Pengo had a few things on his mind other than the six-foot
  Swiss girl.

  With Pengo out of the way, the situation between Theorem and the
  Australian hacker improved. Until Par came along.

  Theorem and Par began innocently enough. Being one of only a few girls
  in the international hacking and phreaking scene and, more
  particularly, on Altos, she was treated differently. She had lots of
  male friends on the German chat system, and the boys told her things
  in confidence they would never tell each other. They sought out her
  advice. She often felt like she wore many hats--mother, girlfriend,
  psychiatrist--when she spoke with the boys on Altos.

  Par had been having trouble with his on-line girlfriend, Nora, and
  when he met Theorem he turned to her for a bit of support. He had
  travelled from California to meet Nora in person in New York. But when
  he arrived in the sweltering heat of a New York summer, without
  warning, her conservative Chinese parents didn't take kindly to his
  unannounced appearance. There were other frictions between Nora and
  Par. The relationship had been fine on Altos and on the phone, but
  things were just not clicking in person.

  He already knew that virtual relationships, forged over an electronic
  medium which denied the importance of physical chemistry, could
  sometimes be disappointing.

  Par used to hang out on a phone bridge with another Australian member
  of The Realm, named Phoenix, and with a fun girl from southern
  California. Tammi, a casual phreaker, had a great personality and a
  hilarious sense of humour. During those endless hours chatting, she
  and Phoenix seemed to be in the throes of a mutual crush. In the
  phreaking underground, they were known as a bit of a virtual item. She
  had even invited Phoenix to come visit her sometime. Then, one day,
  for the fun of it, Tammi decided to visit Par in Monterey. Her
  appearance was a shock.

  Tammi had described herself to Phoenix as being a blue-eyed, blonde
  California girl. Par knew that Phoenix visualised her as a
  stereotypical bikini-clad, beach bunny from LA. His perception rested
  on a foreigner's view of the southern California culture. The land of
  milk and honey. The home of the Beach Boys and TV series like
  `Charlie's Angels'.

  When Tammi arrived, Par knew instantly that she and Phoenix would
  never hit it off in person. Tammi did in fact have both blonde hair
  and blue eyes. She had neglected to mention, however, that she weighed
  about 300 pounds, had a rather homely face and a somewhat down-market
  style. Par really liked Tammi, but he couldn't get the ugly phrase
  `white trash' out of his thoughts. He pushed and shoved, but the
  phrase was wedged in his mind. It fell to Par to tell Phoenix the
  truth about Tammi.

  So Par knew all about how reality could burst the foundations of a
  virtual relationship.

  Leaving New York and Nora behind, Par moved across the river to New
  Jersey to stay with a friend, Byteman, who was one of a group of
  hackers who specialised in breaking into computer systems run by Bell
  Communications Research (Bellcore). Bellcore came into existence at
  the beginning of 1984 as a result of the break-up of the US telephone
  monopoly known as Bell Systems. Before the break-up, Bell Systems'
  paternalistic holding company, American Telephone and Telegraph
  (AT&T), had
  fostered the best and brightest in Bell Labs, its research arm. Over
  the course of its history, Bell Labs boasted at least seven
  Nobel-prize winning researchers and numerous scientific achievements.
  All of which made Bellcore a good target for hackers trying to prove
  their prowess.

  Byteman used to chat with Theorem on Altos, and eventually he called
  her, voice. Par must have looked pretty inconsolable, because one day
  while Byteman was talking to Theorem, he suddenly said to her, `Hey,
  wanna talk to a friend of mine?' Theorem said `Sure' and Byteman
  handed the telephone to Par. They talked for about twenty minutes.

  After that they spoke regularly both on Altos and on the phone. For
  weeks after Par returned to California, Theorem tried to cheer him up
  after his unfortunate experience with Nora. By mid-1988, they had
  fallen utterly and passionately in love.

  Electron, an occasional member of Force's Realm group, took the news
  very badly. Not everyone on Altos liked Electron. He could be a little
  prickly, and very cutting when he chose to be, but he was an ace
  hacker, on an international scale, and everyone listened to him.
  Obsessive, creative and quick off the mark, Electron had respect,
  which is one reason Par felt so badly.

  When Theorem told Electron the bad news in a private conversation
  on-line, Electron had let fly in the public area, ripping into the
  American hacker on the main chat section of Altos, in front of
  everyone.

  Par took it on the chin and refused to fight back. What else could he
  do? He knew what it was like to hurt. He felt for the guy and knew how
  he would feel if he lost Theorem. And he knew that Electron must be
  suffering a terrible loss of face. Everyone saw Electron and Theorem
  as an item. They had been together for more than a year. So Par met
  Electron's fury with grace and quiet words of consolation.

  Par didn't hear much from Electron after that day. The Australian
  still visited Altos, but he seemed more withdrawn, at least whenever
  Par was around. After that day, Par ran into him once, on a phone
  bridge with a bunch of Australian hackers.

  Phoenix said on the bridge, `Hey, Electron. Par's on the bridge.'

  Electron paused. `Oh, really,' he answered coolly. Then he went
  silent.

  Par let Electron keep his distance. After all, Par had what really
  counted--the girl.

  Par called Theorem almost every day. Soon they began to make plans for
  her to fly to California so they could meet in person. Par tried not
  to expect too much, but he found it difficult to stop savouring the
  thought of finally seeing Theorem face to face. It gave him
  butterflies.

  Yeah, Par thought, things are really looking up.

  The beauty of Altos was that, like Pacific Island or any other local
  BBS, a hacker could take on any identity he wanted. And he could do it
  on an international scale. Visiting Altos was like attending a
  glittering masquerade ball. Anyone could recreate himself. A socially
  inept hacker could pose as a character of romance and adventure. And a
  security official could pose as a hacker.

  Which is exactly what Telenet security officer Steve Mathews did on 27
  October 1988. Par happened to be on-line, chatting away with his
  friends and hacker colleagues. At any given moment, there were always
  a few strays on Altos, a few people who weren't regulars. Naturally,
  Mathews didn't announce himself as being a Telenet guy. He just
  slipped quietly onto Altos looking like any other hacker. He might
  engage a hacker in conversation, but he let the hacker do most of the
  talking. He was there to listen.

  On that fateful day, Par happened to be in one of his magnanimous
  moods. Par had never had much money growing up, but he was always very
  generous with what he did have. He talked for a little while with the
  unknown hacker on Altos, and then gave him one of the debit cards
  taken from his visits to the CitiSaudi computer. Why not? On Altos, it
  was a bit like handing out your business card. `The
  Parmaster--Parameters Par Excellence'.

  Par had got his full name--The Parmaster--in his earliest hacking
  days. Back then, he belonged to a group of teenagers involved in
  breaking the copy protections on software programs for Apple IIes,
  particularly games. Par had a special gift for working out the copy
  protection parameters, which was a first step in bypassing the
  manufacturers' protection schemes. The ringleader of the group began
  calling him `the master of parameters'--The Parmaster--Par, for short.
  As he moved into serious hacking and developed his expertise in X.25
  networks, he kept the name because it fitted nicely in his new
  environment. `Par?' was a common command on an X.25 pad, the modem
  gateway to an X.25 network.

  `I've got lots more where that come from,' Par told the stranger on
  Altos. `I've got like 4000 cards from a Citibank system.'

  Not long after that, Steve Mathews was monitoring Altos again, when
  Par showed up handing out cards to people once more.

  `I've got an inside contact,' Par confided. `He's gonna make up a
  whole mess of new, plastic cards with all these valid numbers from the
  Citibank machine. Only the really big accounts, though. Nothing with a
  balance under $25000.'

  Was Par just making idle conversation, talking big on Altos? Or would
  he really have gone through with committing such a major fraud?
  Citibank, Telenet and the US Secret Service would never know, because
  their security guys began closing the net around Par before he had a
  chance to take his idea any further.

  Mathews contacted Larry Wallace, fraud investigator with Citibank in
  San Mateo, California. Wallace checked out the cards. They were valid
  all right. They belonged to the Saudi-American Bank in Saudi Arabia
  and were held on a Citibank database in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
  Wallace determined that, with its affiliation to the Middle Eastern
  bank, Citibank had a custodial responsibility for the accounts. That
  meant he could open a major investigation.

  On 7 November, Wallace brought in the US Secret Service. Four days
  later, Wallace and Special Agent Thomas Holman got their first major
  lead when they interviewed Gerry Lyons of Pacific Bell's security
  office in San Francisco.

  Yes, Lyons told the investigators, she had some information they might
  find valuable. She knew all about hackers and phreakers. In fact, the
  San Jose Police had just busted two guys trying to phreak at a pay
  phone. The phreakers seemed to know something about a Citibank system.

  When the agents showed up at the San Jose Police Department for their
  appointment with Sergeant Dave Flory, they received another pleasant
  surprise. The sergeant had a book filled with hackers' names and
  numbers seized during the arrest of the two pay-phone phreakers. He
  also happened to be in possession of a tape recording of the phreakers
  talking to Par from a prison phone.

  The cheeky phreakers had used the prison pay phone to call up a
  telephone bridge located at the University of Virginia. Par, the
  Australian hackers and other assorted American phreakers and hackers
  visited the bridge frequently. At any one moment, there might be eight
  to ten people from the underground sitting on the bridge. The
  phreakers found Par hanging out there, as usual, and they warned him.
  His name and number were inside the book seized by police when they
  were busted.

  Par didn't seem worried at all.

  `Hey, don't worry. It's cool,' he reassured them. `I have just
  disconnected my phone number today--with no forwarding details.'

  Which wasn't quite true. His room-mate, Scott, had indeed disconnected
  the phone which was in his name because he had been getting prank
  calls. However, Scott opened a new telephone account at the same
  address with the same name on the same day--all of which made the job
  of tracking down the mysterious hacker named Par much easier for the
  law enforcement agencies.

  In the meantime, Larry Wallace had been ringing around his contacts in
  the security business and had come up with another lead. Wanda Gamble,
  supervisor for the Southeastern Region of MCI Investigations, in
  Atlanta, had a wealth of information on the hacker who called himself
  Par. She was well connected when it came to hackers, having acquired a
  collection of reliable informants during her investigations of
  hacker-related incidents. She gave the Citibank investigator two
  mailbox numbers for Par. She also handed them what she believed was
  his home phone number.

  The number checked out and on 25 November, the day after Thanksgiving,
  the Secret Service raided Par's house. The raid was terrifying. At
  least four law enforcement officers burst through the door with guns
  drawn and pointed. One of them had a shotgun. As is often the case in
  the US, investigators from private, commercial organisations--in this
  case Citibank and Pacific Bell--also took part in the raid.

  The agents tore the place apart looking for evidence. They dragged
  down the food from the kitchen cupboards. They emptied the box of
  cornflakes into the sink looking for hidden computer disks. They
  looked everywhere, even finding a ceiling cavity at the back of a
  closet which no-one even knew existed.

  They confiscated Par's Apple IIe, printer and modem. But, just to be
  sure, they also took the Yellow Pages, along with the telephone and
  the new Nintendo game paddles Scott had just bought. They scooped up
  the very large number of papers which had been piled under the coffee
  table, including the spiral notebook with Scott's airline bookings
  from his job as a travel agent. They even took the garbage.

  It wasn't long before they found the red shoebox full of disks peeping
  out from under the fish tank next to Par's computer.

  They found lots of evidence. What they didn't find was Par.

  Instead, they found Scott and Ed, two friends of Par. They were pretty
  shaken up by the raid. Not knowing Par's real identity, the Secret
  Service agents accused Scott of being Par. The phone was in his name,
  and Special Agent Holman had even conducted some surveillance more
  than a week before the raid, running the plates on Scott's 1965 black
  Ford Mustang parked in front of the house. The Secret Service was sure
  it had its man, and Scott had a hell of a time convincing them
  otherwise.

  Both Scott and Ed swore up and down that they weren't hackers or
  phreakers, and they certainly weren't Par. But they knew who Par was,
  and they told the agents his real name. After considerable pressure
  from the Secret Service, Scott and Ed agreed to make statements down
  at the police station.

  In Chicago, more than 2700 kilometres away from the crisis unfolding
  in northern California, Par and his mother watched his aunt walk down
  the aisle in her white gown.

  Par telephoned home once, to Scott, to say `hi' from the Midwest. The
  call came after the raid.

  `So,' a relaxed Par asked his room-mate, `How are things going at
  home?'

  `Fine,' Scott replied. `Nothing much happening here.'

  Par looked down at the red bag he was carrying with a momentary
  expression of horror. He realised he stood out in the San Jose bus
  terminal like a peacock among the pigeons ...

  Blissfully ignorant of the raid which had occurred three days before,
  Par and his mother had flown into San Jose airport. They had gone to
  the bus terminal to pick up a Greyhound home to the Monterey area.
  While waiting for the bus, Par called his friend Tammi to say he was
  back in California.

  Any casual bystander waiting to use the pay phones at that moment
  would have seen a remarkable transformation in the brown-haired boy at
  the row of phones. The smiling face suddenly dropped in a spasm of
  shock. His skin turned ash white as the blood fled south. His deep-set
  chocolate brown eyes, with their long, graceful lashes curving upward
  and their soft, shy expression, seemed impossibly large.

  For at that moment Tammi told Par that his house had been raided by
  the Secret Service. That Scott and Ed had been pretty upset about
  having guns shoved in their faces, and had made statements about him
  to the police. That they thought their phone was tapped. That the
  Secret Service guys were still hunting for Par, they knew his real
  name, and she thought there was an all points bulletin out for him.
  Scott had told the Secret Service about Par's red bag, the one with
  all his hacking notes that he always carried around. The one with the
  print-out of all the Citibank credit card numbers.

  And so it was that Par came to gaze down at his bag with a look of
  alarm. He realised instantly that the Secret Service would be looking
  for that red bag. If they didn't know what he looked like, they would
  simply watch for the bag.

  That bag was not something Par could hide easily. The Citibank
  print-out was the size of a phone book. He also had dozens of disks
  loaded with the cards and other sensitive hacking information.

  Par had used the cards to make a few free calls, but he hadn't been
  charging up any jet skis. He fought temptation valiantly, and in the
  end he had won, but others might not have been so victorious in the
  same battle. Par figured that some less scrupulous hackers had
  probably been charging up a storm. He was right. Someone had, for
  example, tried to send a $367 bouquet of flowers to a woman in El Paso
  using one of the stolen cards. The carder had unwittingly chosen a
  debit card belonging to a senior Saudi bank executive who happened to
  be in his office at the time the flower order was placed. Citibank
  investigator Larry Wallace added notes on that incident to his growing
  file.

  Par figured that Citibank would probably try to pin every single
  attempt at carding on him. Why not? What kind of credibility would a
  seventeen-year-old hacker have in denying those sorts of allegations?
  Zero. Par made a snap decision. He sidled up to a trash bin in a dark
  corner. Scanning the scene warily, Par casually reached into the red
  bag, pulled out the thick wad of Citibank card print-outs and stuffed
  it into the bin. He fluffed a few stray pieces of garbage over the
  top.

  He worried about the computer disks with all his other valuable
  hacking information. They represented thousands of hours of work and
  he couldn't bring himself to throw it all away. The 10 megabyte
  trophy. More than 4000 cards. 130000 different transactions. In the
  end, he decided to hold on to the disks, regardless of the risk. At
  least, without the print-out, he could crumple the bag up a bit and
  make it a little less conspicuous. As Par slowly moved away from the
  bin, he glanced back to check how nondescript the burial site appeared
  from a distance. It looked like a pile of garbage. Trash worth
  millions of dollars, headed for the dump.

  As he boarded the bus to Salinas with his mother, Par's mind was
  instantly flooded with images of a homeless person fishing the
  print-out from the bin and asking someone about it. He tried to push
  the idea from his head.

  During the bus ride, Par attempted to figure out what he was going to
  do. He didn't tell his mother anything. She couldn't even begin to
  comprehend his world of computers and networks, let alone his current
  predicament. Further, Par and his mother had suffered from a somewhat
  strained relationship since he ran away from home not long after his
  seventeenth birthday. He had been kicked out of school for
  non-attendance, but had found a job tutoring students in computers at
  the local college. Before the trip to Chicago, he had seen her just
  once in six months. No, he couldn't turn to her for help.

  The bus rolled toward the Salinas station. En route, it travelled down
  the street where Par lived. He saw a jogger, a thin black man wearing
  a walkman. What the hell is a jogger doing here, Par thought. No-one
  jogged in the semi-industrial neighbourhood. Par's house was about the
  only residence amid all the light-industrial buildings. As soon as the
  jogger was out of sight of the house, he suddenly broke away from his
  path, turned off to one side and hit the ground. As he lay on his
  stomach on some grass, facing the house, he seemed to begin talking
  into the walkman.

  Sitting watching this on the bus, Par flipped out. They were out to
  get him, no doubt about it. When the bus finally arrived at the depot
  and his mother began sorting out their luggage, Par tucked the red bag
  under his arm and disappeared. He found a pay phone and called Scott
  to find out the status of things. Scott handed the phone to Chris,
  another friend who lived in the house. Chris had been away at his
  parents' home during the Thanksgiving raid.

  `Hold tight and lay low,' Chris told Par.

  `I'm on my way over to pick you up and take you to a lawyer's office
  where you can get some sort of protection.'

  A specialist in criminal law, Richard Rosen was born in New York but
  raised in his later childhood in California. He had a personality
  which reflected the steely stubbornness of a New Yorker, tempered with
  the laid-back friendliness of the west coast. Rosen also harboured a
  strong anti-authoritarian streak. He represented the local chapter of
  Hell's Angels in the middle-class County of Monterey. He also caused a
  splash representing the growing midwifery movement, which promoted
  home-births. The doctors of California didn't like him much as a
  result.

  Par's room-mates met with Rosen after the raid to set things up for
  Par's return. They told him about the terrifying ordeal of the Secret
  Service raid, and how they were interrogated for an hour and a half
  before being pressured to give statements. Scott, in particular, felt
  that he had been forced to give a statement against Par under duress.

  While Par talked to Chris on the phone, he noticed a man standing at
  the end of the row of pay phones. This man was also wearing a walkman.
  He didn't look Par in the eye. Instead, he faced the wall, glancing
  furtively off to the side toward where Par was standing. Who was that
  guy? Fear welled up inside Par and all sorts of doubts flooded his
  mind. Who could he trust?

  Scott hadn't told him about the raid. Were his room-mates in cahoots
  the Secret Service? Were they just buying time so they could turn him
  in? There was no-one else Par could turn to. His mother wouldn't
  understand. Besides, she had problems of her own. And he didn't have a
  father. As far as Par was concerned, his father was as good as dead.
  He had never met the man, but he heard he was a prison officer in
  Florida. Not a likely candidate for helping Par in this situation. He
  was close to his grandparents--they had bought his computer for him as
  a present--but they lived in a tiny Mid-Western town and they simply
  wouldn't understand either.

  Par didn't know what to do, but he didn't seem to have many options at
  the moment, so he told Chris he would wait at the station for him.
  Then he ducked around a corner and tried to hide.

  A few minutes later, Chris pulled into the depot. Par dove into the
  Toyota Landcruiser and Chris tore out of the station toward Rosen's
  office. They noticed a white car race out of the bus station after
  them.

  While they drove, Par pieced together the story from Chris. No-one had
  warned him about the raid because everyone in the house believed the
  phone line was tapped. Telling Par while he was in Chicago might have
  meant another visit from the Secret Service. All they had been able to
  do was line up Rosen to help him.

  Par checked the rear-view mirror. The white car was still following
  them. Chris made a hard turn at the next intersection and accelerated
  down the California speedway. The white car tore around the corner in
  pursuit. No matter what Chris did, he couldn't shake the tail. Par sat
  in the seat next to Chris, quietly freaking out.

  Just 24 hours before, he had been safe and sound in Chicago. How did
  he end up back here in California being chased by a mysterious driver
  in a white car?

  Chris tried his best to break free, swerving and racing. The white car
  wouldn't budge. But Chris and Par had one advantage over the white
  car; they were in a four-wheel drive. In a split-second decision,
  Chris jerked the steering wheel to one side. The Landcruiser veered
  off the road onto a lettuce field. Par gripped the inside of the door
  as the 4WD bounced through the dirt over the neat crop rows. Near-ripe
  heads of lettuce went flying out from under the tires. Half-shredded
  lettuce leaves filled the air. A cloud of dirt enveloped the car. The
  vehicle skidded and jerked, but finally made its way to a highway at
  the far end of the field. Chris hit the highway running, swerving into
  the lane at high speed.

  When Par looked back, the white car had disappeared. Chris kept his
  foot on the accelerator and Par barely breathed until the Landcruiser
  pulled up in front of Richard Rosen's building.

  Par leaped out, the red bag still clutched tightly under his arm, and
  high-tailed it into the lawyer's office. The receptionist looked a bit
  shocked when he said his name. Someone must have filled her in on the
  details.

  Rosen quickly ushered him into his office. Introductions were brief
  and Par cut to the story of the chase. Rosen listened intently,
  occasionally asking a well-pointed question, and then took control of
  the situation.

  The first thing they needed to do was call off the Secret Service
  chase, Rosen said, so Par didn't have to spend any more time ducking
  around corners and hiding in bus depots. He called the Secret
  Service's San Francisco office and asked Special Agent Thomas J.
  Holman to kill the Secret Service pursuit in exchange for an agreement
  that Par would turn himself in to be formally charged.

  Holman insisted that they had to talk to Par.

  No, Rosen said. There would be no interviews for Par by law
  enforcement agents until a deal had been worked out.

  But the Secret Service needed to talk to Par, Holman insisted. They
  could only discuss all the other matters after the Secret Service had
  had a chance to talk with Par.

  Rosen politely warned Holman not to attempt to contact his client. You
  have something to say to Par, you go through me, he said. Holman did
  not like that at all. When the Secret Service wanted to talk to
  someone, they were used to getting their way. He pushed Rosen, but the
  answer was still no. No no no and no again. Holman had made a mistake.
  He had assumed that everyone wanted to do business with the United
  States Secret Service.

  When he finally realised Rosen wouldn't budge, Holman gave up. Rosen
  then negotiated with the federal prosecutor, US Attorney Joe Burton,
  who was effectively Holman's boss in the case, to call off the pursuit
  in exchange for Par handing himself in to be formally charged.

  Then Par gave Rosen his red bag, for safekeeping.

  At about the same time, Citibank investigator Wallace and Detective
  Porter of the Salinas Police interviewed Par's mother as she returned
  home from the bus depot. She said that her son had moved out of her
  home some six months before, leaving her with a $2000 phone bill she
  couldn't pay. They asked if they could search her home. Privately, she
  worried about what would happen if she refused. Would they tell the
  office where she worked as a clerk? Could they get her fired? A simple
  woman who had little experience dealing with law enforcement agents,
  Par's mother agreed. The investigators took Par's disks and papers.

  Par turned himself in to the Salinas Police in the early afternoon of
  12 December. The police photographed and fingerprinted him before
  handing him a citation--a small yellow slip headed `502 (c) (1) PC'.
  It looked like a traffic ticket, but the two charges Par faced were
  felonies, and each carried a maximum term of three years for a minor.
  Count 1, for hacking into Citicorp Credit Services, also carried a
  fine of up to $10000. Count 2, for `defrauding a telephone service',
  had no fine: the charges were for a continuing course of conduct,
  meaning that they applied to the same activity over an extended period
  of time.

  Federal investigators had been astonished to find Par was so young.
  Dealing with a minor in the federal court system was a big hassle, so
  the prosecutor decided to ask the state authorities to prosecute the
  case. Par was ordered to appear in Monterey County Juvenile Court on
  10 July 1989.

  Over the next few months, Par worked closely with Rosen. Though Rosen
  was a very adept lawyer, the situation looked pretty depressing.
  Citibank claimed it had spent $30000 on securing its systems and Par
  believed that the corporation might be looking for up to $3 million in
  total damages. While they couldn't prove Par had made any money from
  the cards himself, the prosecution would argue that his generous
  distribution of them had led to serious financial losses. And that was
  just the financial institutions.

  Much more worrying was what might come out about Par's visits to TRW's
  computers. The Secret Service had seized at least one disk with TRW
  material on it.

  TRW was a large, diverse company, with assets of $2.1 billion and
  sales of almost $7 billion in 1989, nearly half of which came from the
  US government. It employed more than 73000 people, many of who worked
  with the company's credit ratings business. TRW's vast databases held
  private details of millions of people--addresses, phone numbers,
  financial data.

  That, however, was just one of the company's many businesses. TRW also
  did defence work--very secret defence work. Its Space and Defense
  division, based in Redondo Beach, California, was widely believed to
  be a major beneficiary of the Reagan Government's Star Wars budget.
  More than 10 per cent of the company's employees worked in this
  division, designing spacecraft systems, communications systems,
  satellites and other, unspecified, space `instruments'.

  The siezed disk had some mail from the company's TRWMAIL systems. It
  wasn't particularly sensitive, mostly just company propaganda sent to
  employees, but the Secret Service might think that where there was
  smoke, there was bound to be fire. TRW did the kind of work that makes
  governments very nervous when it comes to unauthorised access. And Par
  had visited certain TRW machines; he knew that company had a missiles
  research section, and even a space weapons section.

  With so many people out to get him--Citibank, the Secret Service, the
  local police, even his own mother had helped the other side--it was
  only a matter of time before they unearthed the really secret things
  he had seen while hacking. Par began to wonder if was such a good idea
  for him to stay around for the trial.

                                   [ ]

  In early 1989, when Theorem stepped off the plane which carried her
  from Switzerland to San Francisco, she was pleased that she had
  managed to keep a promise to herself. It wasn't always an easy
  promise. There were times of intimacy, of perfect connection, between
  the two voices on opposite sides of the globe, when it seemed so
  breakable.

  Meanwhile, Par braced himself. Theorem had described herself in such
  disparaging terms. He had even heard from others on Altos that she was
  homely. But that description had ultimately come from her anyway, so
  it didn't really count.

  Finally, as he watched the stream of passengers snake out to the
  waiting area, he told himself it didn't matter anyway. After all, he
  had fallen in love with her--her being, her essence--not her image as
  it appeared in flesh. And he had told her so. She had said the same
  back to him.

  Suddenly she was there, in front of him. Par had to look up slightly
  to reach her eyes, since she was a little more than an inch taller.
  She was quite pretty, with straight, brown shoulder-length hair and
  brown eyes. He was just thinking how much more attractive she was than
  he had expected, when it happened.

  Theorem smiled.

  Par almost lost his balance. It was a devastating smile, big and
  toothy, warm and genuine. Her whole face lit up with a fire of
  animation. That smile sealed it.

  She had kept her promise to herself. There was no clear image of Par
  in her mind before meeting him in person. After meeting a few people
  from Altos at a party in Munich the year before, she had tried not to
  create images of people based on their on-line personalities. That way
  she would never suffer disappointment.

  Par and Theorem picked up her bags and got into Brian's car. Brian, a
  friend who offered to play airport taxi because Par didn't have a car,
  thought Theorem was pretty cool. A six-foot-tall French-speaking Swiss
  woman. It was definitely cool. They drove back to Par's house. Then
  Brian came in for a chat.

  Brian asked Theorem all sorts of questions. He was really curious,
  because he had never met anyone from Europe before. Par kept trying to
  encourage his friend to leave but Brian wanted to know all about life
  in Switzerland. What was the weather like? Did people ski all the
  time?

  Par kept looking Brian in the eye and then staring hard at the door.

  Did most Swiss speak English? What other languages did she know? A lot
  of people skied in California. It was so cool talking to someone from
  halfway around the world.

  Par did the silent chin-nudge toward the door and, at last, Brian got
  the hint. Par ushered his friend out of the house. Brian was only
  there for about ten minutes, but it felt like a year. When Par and
  Theorem were alone, they talked a bit, then Par suggested they go for
  a walk.

  Halfway down the block, Par tentatively reached for her hand and took
  it in his own. She seemed to like it. Her hand was warm. They talked a
  bit more, then Par stopped. He turned to face her. He paused, and then
  told her something he had told her before over the telephone,
  something they both knew already.

  Theorem kissed him. It startled Par. He was completely unprepared.
  Then Theorem said the same words back to him.

  When they returned to the house, things progressed from there. They
  spent two and a half weeks in each other's arms--and they were
  glorious, sun-drenched weeks. The relationship proved to be far, far
  better in person than it had ever been on-line or on the telephone.
  Theorem had captivated Par, and Par, in turn, created a state of bliss
  in Theorem.

  Par showed her around his little world in northern California. They
  visited a few tourist sites, but mostly they just spent a lot of time
  at home. They talked, day and night, about everything.

  Then it was time for Theorem to leave, to return to her job and her
  life in Switzerland. Her departure was hard--driving to the airport,
  seeing her board the plane--it was heart-wrenching. Theorem looked
  very upset. Par just managed to hold it together until the plane took
  off.

  For two and a half weeks, Theorem had blotted out Par's approaching
  court case. As she flew away, the dark reality of the case descended
  on him.

                                   [ ]

  The fish liked to watch.

  Par sat at the borrowed computer all night in the dark, with only the
  dull glow of his monitor lighting the room, and the fish would all
  swim over to the side of their tank and peer out at him. When things
  were quiet on-line, Par's attention wandered to the eel and the lion
  fish. Maybe they were attracted to the phosphorescence of the computer
  screen. Whatever the reason, they certainly liked to hover there. It
  was eerie.

  Par took a few more drags of his joint, watched the fish some more,
  drank his Coke and then turned his attention back to his computer.

  That night, Par saw something he shouldn't have. Not the usual hacker
  stuff. Not the inside of a university. Not even the inside of an
  international bank containing private financial information about
  Middle Eastern sheiks.

  What he saw was information about some sort of killer spy
  satellite--those are the words Par used to describe it to other
  hackers. He said the satellite was capable of shooting down other
  satellites caught spying, and he saw it inside a machine connected to
  TRW's Space and Defense division network. He stumbled upon it much the
  same way Force had accidentally found the CitiSaudi machine--through
  scanning. Par didn't say much else about it because the discovery
  scared the hell out of him.

  Suddenly, he felt like the man who knew too much. He'd been in and out
  of so many military systems, seen so much sensitive material, that he
  had become a little blas� about the whole thing. The information was
  cool to read but, God knows, he never intended to actually do anything
  with it. It was just a prize, a glittering trophy testifying to his
  prowess as a hacker. But this discovery shook him up, slapped him in
  the face, made him realise he was exposed.

  What would the Secret Service do to him when they found out? Hand him
  another little traffic ticket titled `502C'? No way. Let him tell the
  jury at his trial everything he knew? Let the newspapers print it? Not
  a snowball's chance in hell.

  This was the era of Ronald Reagan and George Bush, of space defence
  initiatives, of huge defence budgets and very paranoid military
  commanders who viewed the world as one giant battlefield with the evil
  empire of the Soviet Union.

  Would the US government just lock him up and throw away the key? Would
  it want to risk him talking to other prisoners--hardened criminals who
  knew how to make a dollar from that sort of information? Definitely
  not.

  That left just one option. Elimination.

  It was not a pretty thought. But to the seventeen-year-old hacker it
  was a very plausible one. Par considered what he could do and came up
  with what seemed to be the only solution.

  Run.


    _________________________________________________________________

                        Chapter 4 -- The Fugitive
    _________________________________________________________________


    There's one gun, probably more
    and the others are pointing at our backdoor

  -- from `Knife's Edge', on Bird Noises by Midnight Oil

  When Par failed to show up for his hearing on 10 July 1989 in the
  Monterey County Juvenile Court in Salinas, he officially became a
  fugitive. He had, in fact, already been on the run for some weeks. But
  no-one knew. Not even his lawyer.

  Richard Rosen had an idea something was wrong when Par didn't show up
  for a meeting some ten days before the hearing, but he kept hoping his
  client would come good. Rosen had negotiated a deal for Par:
  reparations plus fifteen days or less in juvenile prison in exchange
  for Par's full cooperation with the Secret Service.

  Par had appeared deeply troubled over the matter for weeks. He didn't
  seem to mind telling the Feds how he had broken into various
  computers, but that's not what they were really looking for. They
  wanted him to rat. And to rat on everyone. They knew Par was a kingpin
  and, as such, he knew all the important players in the underground.
  The perfect stooge. But Par couldn't bring himself to narc. Even if he
  did spill his guts, there was still the question of what the
  authorities would do to him in prison. The question of elimination
  loomed large in his mind.

  So, one morning, Par simply disappeared. He had planned it carefully,
  packed his bags discreetly and made arrangements with a trusted friend
  outside the circle which included his room-mates. The friend drove
  around to pick Par up when the
  room-mates were out. They never had an inkling that the now
  eighteen-year-old Par was about to vanish for a very long time.

  First, Par headed to San Diego. Then LA. Then he made his way to New
  Jersey. After that, he disappeared from the radar screen completely.

  Life on the run was hard. For the first few months, Par carried around
  two prized possessions; an inexpensive laptop computer and photos of
  Theorem taken during her visit. They were his lifeline to a different
  world and he clutched them in his bag as he moved from one city to
  another, often staying with his friends from the computer underground.
  The loose-knit network of hackers worked a bit like the
  nineteenth-century American `underground railroad' used by escaped
  slaves to flee from the South to the safety of the northern states.
  Except that, for Par, there was never a safe haven.

  Par crisscrossed the continent, always on the move. A week in one
  place. A few nights in another. Sometimes there were breaks in the
  electronic underground railroad, spaces between the place where one
  line ended and another began. Those breaks were the hardest. They
  meant sleeping out in the open, sometimes in the cold, going without
  food and being without anyone to talk to.

  He continued hacking, with new-found frenzy, because he was
  invincible. What were the law enforcement agencies going to do? Come
  and arrest him? He was already a fugitive and he figured things
  couldn't get much worse. He felt as though he would be on the run
  forever, and as if he had already been on the run for a lifetime,
  though it was only a few months.

  When he was staying with people from the computer underground, Par was
  careful. But when he was alone in a dingy motel room, or with people
  completely outside that world, he hacked without fear. Blatant,
  in-your-face feats. Things he knew the Secret Service would see. Even
  his illicit voice mailbox had words for his pursuers:

  Yeah, this is Par. And to all those faggots from the Secret Service
  who keep calling and hanging up, well, lots of luck. 'Cause, I mean,
  you're so fucking stupid, it's not even funny.

  I mean, if you had to send my shit to Apple Computers [for analysis],
  you must be so stupid, it's pitiful. You also thought I had
  blue-boxing equipment [for phreaking]. I'm just laughing trying to
  think what you thought was a blue box. You are so lame.

  Oh well. And anyone else who needs to leave me a message, go ahead.
  And everyone take it easy and leave me some shit. Alright. Later.

  Despite the bravado, paranoia took hold of Par as it never had before.
  If he saw a cop across the street, his breath would quicken and he
  would turn and walk in the opposite direction. If the cop was heading
  toward him, Par crossed the street and turned down the nearest alley.
  Police of any type made him very nervous.

  By the autumn of 1989, Par had made his way to a small town in North
  Carolina. He found a place to stop and rest with a friend who used the
  handle The Nibbler and whose family owned a motel. A couple of weeks
  in one place, in one bed, was paradise. It was also free, which meant
  he didn't have to borrow money from Theorem, who helped him out while
  he was on the run.

  Par slept in whatever room happened to be available that night, but he
  spent most of his time in one of the motel chalets Nibbler used in the
  off-season as a computer room. They spent days hacking from Nibbler's
  computer. The fugitive had been forced to sell off his inexpensive
  laptop before arriving in North Carolina.

  After a few weeks at the motel, however, he couldn't shake the feeling
  that he was being watched. There were too many strangers coming and
  going. He wondered if the hotel guests waiting in their cars were
  spying on him, and he soon began jumping at shadows. Perhaps, he
  thought, the Secret Service had found him after all.

  Par thought about how he could investigate the matter in more depth.

  One of The Atlanta Three hackers, The Prophet, called Nibbler
  occasionally to exchange hacking information, particularly security
  bugs in Unix systems. During one of their talks, Prophet told Par
  about a new security flaw he'd been experimenting with on a network
  that belonged to the phone company.

  The Atlanta Three, a Georgia-based wing of The Legion of Doom, spent a
  good deal of time weaving their way through BellSouth, the phone
  company covering the south-eastern US. They knew about phone switching
  stations the way Par knew about Tymnet. The Secret Service had raided
  the hackers in July 1989 but had not arrested them yet, so in
  September The Prophet continued to maintain an interest in his
  favourite target.

  Par thought the flaw in BellSouth's network sounded very cool and
  began playing around in the company's systems. Dial up the company's
  computer network, poke around, look at things. The usual stuff.

  It occurred to Par that he could check out the phone company's records
  of the motel to see if there was anything unusual going on. He typed
  in the motel's main phone number and the system fed back the motel's
  address, name and some detailed technical information, such as the
  exact cable and pair attached to the phone number. Then he looked up
  the phone line of the computer chalet. Things looked odd on that line.

  The line which he and Nibbler used for most of their hacking showed a
  special status: `maintenance unit on line'.

  What maintenance unit? Nibbler hadn't mentioned any problems with any
  of the motel's lines, but Par checked with him. No problems with the
  telephones.

  Par felt nervous. In addition to messing around with the phone
  company's networks, he had been hacking into a Russian computer
  network from the computer chalet. The Soviet network was a shiny new
  toy. It had only been connected to the rest of the world's global
  packet-switched network for about a month, which made it particularly
  attractive virgin territory.

  Nibbler called in a friend to check the motel's phones. The friend, a
  former telephone company technician turned freelancer, came over to
  look at the equipment. He told Nibbler and Par that something weird
  was happening in the motel's phone system. The line voltages were way
  off.

  Par realised instantly what was going on. The system was being
  monitored. Every line coming in and going out was probably being
  tapped, which meant only one thing. Someone--the phone company, the
  local police, the FBI or the Secret Service--was onto him.

  Nibbler and Par quickly packed up all Nibbler's computer gear, along
  with Par's hacking notes, and moved to another motel across town. They
  had to shut down all their hacking activities and cover their tracks.

  Par had left programs running which sniffed people's passwords and
  login names on a continual basis as they logged in, then dumped all
  the information into a file on the hacked machine. He checked that
  file every day or so. If he didn't shut the programs down, the log
  file would grow until it was so big the system administrator would
  become curious and have a look. When he discovered that his system had
  been hacked he would close the security holes. Par would have problems
  getting back into that system.

  After they finished tidying up the hacked systems, they gathered up
  all Par's notes and Nibbler's computer equipment once again and
  stashed them in a rented storage space. Then they drove back to the
  motel.

  Par couldn't afford to move on just yet. Besides, maybe only the
  telephone company had taken an interest in the motel's phone system.
  Par had done a lot of poking and prodding of the telecommunications
  companies' computer systems from the motel phone, but he had done it
  anonymously. Perhaps BellSouth felt a little curious and just wanted
  to sniff about for more information. If that was the case, the law
  enforcement agencies probably didn't know that Par, the fugitive, was
  hiding in the motel.

  The atmosphere was becoming oppressive in the motel. Par became even
  more watchful of the people coming and going. He glanced out the front
  window a little more often, and he listened a little more carefully to
  the footsteps coming and going. How many of the guests were really
  just tourists? Par went through the guest list and found a man
  registered as being from New Jersey. He was from one of the AT&T
  corporations left after the break-up of Bell Systems. Why on earth
  would an AT&T guy be staying in a tiny hick town in North Carolina?
  Maybe a few Secret Service agents had snuck into the motel and were
  watching the chalet.

  Par needed to bring the paranoia under control. He needed some fresh
  air, so he went out for a walk. The weather was bad and the wind blew
  hard, whipping up small tornadoes of autumn leaves. Soon it began
  raining and Par sought cover in the pay phone across the street.

  Despite having been on the run for a few months, Par still called
  Theorem almost every day, mostly by phreaking calls through bulk
  telecommunications companies. He dialled her number and they talked
  for a bit. He told her about how the voltage was way off on the
  motel's PABX and how the phone might be tapped. She asked how he was
  holding up. Then they spoke softly about when they might see each
  other again.

  Outside the phone box, the storm worsened. The rain hammered the roof
  from one side and then another as the wind jammed it in at strange
  angles. The darkened street was deserted. Tree branches creaked under
  the strain of the wind. Rivulets rushed down the leeward side of the
  booth and formed a wall of water outside the glass. Then a trash bin
  toppled over and its contents flew onto the road.

  Trying to ignore to the havoc around him, Par curled the phone handset
  into a small protected space, cupped between his hand, his chest and a
  corner of the phone booth. He reminded Theorem of their time together
  in California, of two and a half weeks, and they laughed gently over
  intimate secrets.

  A tree branch groaned and then broke under the force of the wind. When
  it crashed on the pavement near the phone booth, Theorem asked Par
  what the noise was.

  `There's a hurricane coming,' he told her. `Hurricane Hugo. It was
  supposed to hit tonight. I guess it's arrived.'

  Theorem sounded horrified and insisted Par go back to the safety of
  the motel immediately.

  When Par opened the booth door, he was deluged by water. He dashed
  across the road, fighting the wind of the hurricane, staggered into his
  motel room and jumped into bed to warm up. He fell asleep listening to
  the storm, and he dreamed of Theorem.

  Hurricane Hugo lasted more than three days, but they felt like the
  safest three days Par had spent in weeks. It was a good bet that the
  Secret Service wouldn't be conducting any raids during a hurricane.
  South Carolina took the brunt of Hugo but North Carolina also suffered
  massive damage. It was one of the worst hurricanes to hit the area in
  decades. Winds near its centre reached more than 240 kilometres per
  hour, causing 60 deaths and $7 billion in damages as it made its way
  up the coast from the West Indies to the Carolinas.

  When Par stepped outside his motel room one afternoon a few days after
  the storm, the air was fresh and clean. He walked to the railing
  outside his second-storey perch and found himself looking down on a
  hive of activity in the car park. There were cars. There was a van.
  There was a collection of spectators.

  And there was the Secret Service.

  At least eight agents wearing blue jackets with the Secret Service
  emblem on the back.

  Par froze. He stopped breathing. Everything began to move in slow
  motion. A few of the agents formed a circle around one of the guys
  from the motel, a maintenance worker named John, who looked vaguely
  like Par. They seemed to be hauling John over the coals, searching his
  wallet for identification and quizzing him. Then they escorted him to
  the van, presumably to run his prints.

  Par's mind began moving again. He tried to think clearly. What was the
  best way out? He had to get back into his room. It would give him some
  cover while he figured out what to do next. The photos of Theorem
  flashed through his mind. No way was he going to let the Secret
  Service get hold of those. He needed to stash them and fast.

  He could see the Secret Service agents searching the computer chalet.
  Thank God he and Nibbler had moved all the equipment. At least there
  was nothing incriminating in there and they wouldn't be able to seize
  all their gear.

  Par breathed deeply, deliberately, and forced himself to back away
  from the railing toward the door to his room. He resisted the urge to
  dash into his room, to recoil from the scene being played out below
  him. Abrupt movements would draw the agents' attention.

  Just as Par began to move, one of the agents turned around. He scanned
  the two-storey motel complex and his gaze quickly came to rest on Par.
  He looked Par dead in the eye.

  This is it, Par thought. I'm screwed. No way out of here now. Months
  on the run only to get done in a hick town in North Carolina. These
  guys are gonna haul my ass away for good. I'll never see the light of
  day again. Elimination is the only option.

  While these thoughts raced through Par's mind, he stood rigid, his
  feet glued to the cement floor, his face locked into the probing gaze
  of the Secret Service agent. He felt like they were the only two
  people who existed in the universe.

  Then, inexplicably, the agent looked away. He swivelled around to
  finish his conversation with another agent. It was as if he had never
  even seen the fugitive.

  Par stood, suspended and unbelieving. Somehow it seemed impossible. He
  began to edge the rest of the way to his motel room. Slowly, casually,
  he slid inside and shut the door behind him.

  His mind raced back to the photos of Theorem and he searched the room
  for a safe hiding place. There wasn't one. The best option was
  something above eye-level. He pulled a chair across the room, climbed
  on it and pressed on the ceiling. The rectangular panel of
  plasterboard lifted easily and Par slipped the photos in the space,
  then replaced the panel. If the agents tore the room apart, they would
  likely find the pictures. But the photos would probably escape a quick
  search, which was the best he could hope for at this stage.

  Next, he turned his mind to escaping. The locals were pretty cool
  about everything, and Par thought he could count on the staff not to
  mention his presence to the Secret Service. That bought him some time,
  but he couldn't get out of the room without being seen. Besides, if he
  was spotted walking off the property, he would certainly be stopped
  and questioned.

  Even if he did manage to get out of the motel grounds, it wouldn't
  help much. The town wasn't big enough to shield him from a thorough
  search and there was no-one there he trusted enough to hide him. It
  might look a little suspicious, this young man running away from the
  motel on foot in a part of the world where everyone travelled by car.
  Hitchhiking was out of the question. With his luck, he'd probably get
  picked up by one of the agents leaving the raid. No, he wanted a more
  viable plan. What he really needed was to get out of the area
  altogether, to flee the state.

  Par knew that John travelled to Asheville to attend classes and that
  he left very early. If the authorities had been watching the motel for
  a while, they would know that his 5 a.m. departure was normal. And
  there was one other thing about the early departure which seemed
  promising. It was still dark at that hour.

  If Par could get as far as Asheville, he might be able to get a lift
  to Charlotte, and from there he could fly somewhere far away.

  Par considered the options again and again. Hiding out in the motel
  room seemed the most sensible thing to do. He had been moving rooms
  around the motel pretty regularly, so he might have appeared to be
  just another traveller to anyone watching the motel. With any luck the
  Secret Service would be concentrating their search on the chalet,
  ripping the place apart in a vain hunt for the computer equipment. As
  these thoughts went through his head, the phone rang, making Par jump.
  He stared at it, wondering whether to answer.

  He picked it up.

  `It's Nibbler,' a voice whispered.

  `Yeah,' Par whispered back.

  `Par, the Secret Service is here, searching the motel.'

  `I know. I saw them.'

  `They've already searched the room next to yours.' Par nearly died.
  The agents had been less than two metres from where he was standing
  and he hadn't even known it. That room was where John stayed. It was
  connected to his by an inner door, but both sides were locked.

  `Move into John's room and lay low. Gotta go.' Nibbler hung up
  abruptly.

  Par put his ear to the wall and listened. Nothing. He unlocked the
  connecting inner door, turned the knob and pressed lightly. It gave.
  Someone had unlocked the other side after the search. Par squinted
  through the crack in the door. The room was silent and still. He
  opened it--no-one home. Scooping up his things, he quickly moved into
  John's room.

  Then he waited. Pacing and fidgeting, he strained his ears to catch
  the sounds outside. Every bang and creak of a door opening and closing
  set him on edge. Late that night, after the law enforcement officials
  had left, Nibbler called him on the house phone and told him what had
  happened.

  Nibbler had been inside the computer chalet when the Secret Service
  showed up with a search warrant. The agents took names, numbers, every
  detail they could, but they had trouble finding any evidence of
  hacking. Finally, one of them emerged from the chalet triumphantly
  waving a single computer disk in the air. The law enforcement
  entourage hanging around in front of the chalet let out a little
  cheer, but Nibbler could hardly keep a straight face. His younger
  brother had been learning the basics of computer graphics with a
  program called Logo. The United States Secret Service would soon be
  uncovering the secret drawings of a primary school student.

  Par laughed. It helped relieve the stress. Then he told Nibbler his
  escape plan, and Nibbler agreed to arrange matters. His parents didn't
  know the whole story, but they liked Par and wanted to help him. Then
  Nibbler wished his friend well.

  Par didn't even try to rest before his big escape. He was as highly
  strung as a racehorse at the gate. What if the Secret Service was
  still watching the place? There was no garage attached to the main
  motel building which he could access from the inside. He would be
  exposed, even though it would only be for a minute or so. The night
  would provide reasonable cover, but the escape plan wasn't fool-proof.
  If agents were keeping the motel under observation from a distance
  they might miss him taking off from his room. On the other hand, there
  could be undercover agents posing as guests watching the entire
  complex from inside their room.

  Paranoid thoughts stewed in Par's mind throughout the night. Just
  before 5 a.m., he heard John's car pull up outside. Par flicked off
  the light in his room, opened his door a crack and scanned the motel
  grounds. All quiet, bar the single car, which puffed and grunted in
  the still, cold air. The windows in most of the buildings were dark.
  It was now or never.

  Par opened the door all the way and slipped down the hallway. As he
  crept downstairs, the pre-dawn chill sent a shiver down his spine.
  Glancing quickly from side to side, he hurried toward the waiting car,
  pulled the back door open and dove onto the seat. Keeping his head
  down, he twisted around, rolled onto the floor and closed the door
  with little more than a soft click.

  As the car began to move. Par reached for a blanket which had been
  tossed on the floor and pulled it over himself. After a while, when
  John told him they were safely out of the town, Par slipped the
  blanket off his face and he looked up at the early morning sky. He
  tried to get comfortable on the floor. It was going to be a long ride.

  At Asheville, John dropped Par off at an agreed location. Par thanked
  him and hopped into a waiting car. Someone else from his extensive
  network of friends and acquaintances took him to Charlotte.

  This time Par rode in the front passenger seat. For the first time, he
  saw the true extent of the damage wreaked by Hurricane Hugo. The small
  town where he had been staying had been slashed by rain and high
  winds, but on the way to the Charlotte airport, where he would pick up
  a flight to New York, Par watched the devastation with amazement. He
  stared out the car window, unable to take his eyes off the storm's
  trail of havoc.

  The hurricane had swept up anything loose or fragile and turned it
  into a missile on a suicide mission. Whatever mangled, broken
  fragments remained after the turbulent winds had passed would have
  been almost unrecognisable to those who had seen them before.

                                   [ ]

  Theorem worried about Par as he staggered from corner to corner of the
  continent. In fact, she had often asked him to consider giving himself
  up. Moving from town to town was taking its toll on Par, and it wasn't
  that much easier on Theorem. She hadn't thought going on the lam was
  such a great idea in the first place, and she offered to pay for his
  lawyer so he could stop running. Par declined. How could he hand
  himself in when he believed elimination was a real possibility?
  Theorem sent him money, since he had no way of earning a living and he
  needed to eat. The worst parts, though, were the dark thoughts that
  kept crossing her mind. Anything could happen to Par between phone
  calls. Was he alive? In prison? Had he been raided, even accidentally
  shot during a raid?

  The Secret Service and the private security people seemed to want him
  so badly. It was worrying, but hardly surprising. Par had embarrassed
  them. He had broken into their machines and passed their private
  information around in the underground. They had raided his home when
  he wasn't even home. Then he had escaped a second raid, in North
  Carolina, slipping between their fingers. He was constantly in their
  face, continuing to hack blatantly and to show them contempt in things
  such as his voicemail message. He figured they were probably
  exasperated from chasing all sorts of false leads as well, since he
  was perpetually spreading fake rumours about his whereabouts. Most of
  all, he thought they knew what he had seen inside the TRW system. He
  was a risk.

  Par became more and more paranoid, always watching over his shoulder
  as he moved from city to city. He was always tired. He could never
  sleep properly, worrying about the knock on the door. Some mornings,
  after a fitful few hours of rest, he woke with a start, unable to
  remember where he was. Which house or motel, which friends, which
  city.

  He still hacked all the time, borrowing machines where he could. He
  posted messages frequently on The Phoenix Project, an exclusive BBS
  run by The Mentor and Erik Bloodaxe and frequented by LOD members and
  the Australian hackers. Some well-known computer security people were
  also invited onto certain, limited areas of the Texas-based board,
  which immediately elevated the status of The Phoenix Project in the
  computer underground. Hackers were as curious about the security
  people as the security people were about their prey. The Phoenix
  Project was special because it provided neutral ground, where both
  sides could meet to exchange ideas.

  Via the messages, Par continued to improve his hacking skills while
  also talking with his friends, people like Erik Bloodaxe, from Texas,
  and Phoenix, from The Realm in Melbourne. Electron also frequented The
  Phoenix Project. These hackers knew Par was on the run, and sometimes
  they joked with him about it. The humour made the stark reality of
  Par's situation bearable. All the hackers on The Phoenix Project had
  considered the prospect of being caught. But the presence of Par, and
  his tortured existence on the run, hammered the implications home with
  some regularity.

  As Par's messages became depressed and paranoid, other hackers tried
  to do what they could to help him. Elite US and foreign hackers who
  had access to the private sections of The Phoenix Project saw his
  messages and they felt for him. Yet Par continued to slide deeper and
  deeper into his own strange world.

Subject: DAMN !!!
From: The Parmaster
Date: Sat Jan 13 08:40:17 1990

Shit, i got drunk last night and went onto that Philippine system...
Stupid Admin comes on and asks who i am ...

Next thing i know, i'm booted off and both accounts on the system are gone.
Not only this .. but the
whole fucking Philippine Net isn't accepting collect calls anymore. (The thing
went down completely after i was booted off!)
Apparently someone there
had enough of me.
By the way, kids, never
drink and hack!

- Par


Subject: gawd
From: The Parmaster
Date: Sat Jan 13 09:07:06 1990

Those SS boys and NSA boys think i'm a COMRADE .. hehehe i'm just glad
i'm still fucking free.

Bahahaha

<Glastnost and all that happy horseshit>

- Par

Subject: The Bottom line.
From: The Parmaster
Date: Sun Jan 21 10:05:38 1990

The bottom line is a crackdown.  The phrack boys were just the start,
i'm sure of it.

This is the time to watch yourself.  No matter what you are into,
whether it's just codes, cards, etc.

Apparently the government has seen the last straw. Unfortunately, with
all of this in the news now, they will be able to get more government
money to combat hackers.

And that's BAD fucking news for us. I think they are going after all
the `teachers'--the people who educate others into this sort of thing.

I wonder if they think that maybe these remote cases are linked in any
way.  The only way they canprobably see is that we are hackers.  And
so that is where their energies will be put.  To stop ALL hackers--and
stop them BEFORE they can become a threat.  After they wipe out the
educators, that is.  Just a theory.

- Par


Subject: Connection
From: The Parmaster
Date: Sun Jan 21 10:16:11 1990

Well, the only connection is disconnection, as Gandalf [a British
hacker] would say.

That's what i'm putting
on my epitaph.
THE ONLY CONNECTION IS
DISCONNECTION ...
Oh well, maybe i'll take
a few of the buggers with me when they come for me.

- Par


Subject: Oh well.
From: The Parmaster
Date: Tue Jan 23 19:30:05 1990

`And now, the end is near. I've traveled each and every byway ...'  in
the words of the King. Oh well. Who cares? He was a fat shit before he
died anyway.

To everyone who's been a good friend of mine and help me cover up the
fact that i don't know a fucking thing--i thank u.  And to everyone
else, take it easy and hang tough.

i was temporarily insane at the time

See you smart guys at the funny farm.

- Par


Subject: Par
From: Erik Bloodaxe
Date: Tue Jan 23 23:21:39 1990

Shit man, don't drink and think about things like that. It's not
healthy, mentally or physically.

Come to Austin, Texas.

We'll keep you somewhere until we can get something worked out for
you.

A year in minimum security (Club Fed) is better then chucking a whole
life. Hell, you're 19!!  I have discarded the `permanent' solution for
good. Dead people can't get laid, but people in federal prisons DO get
conjugal visits!!!

Think of
Theorem.

Call over here at whatever time you read this ... I can see you are
really getting worried, so just fucking call ...

- Erik


Subject: Hah
From: The Parmaster
Date: Thu Jan 25 18:58:00 1990

Just keep in mind they see everything you do.  Believe me. I know.

- Par


Subject: Well shit.
From: The Parmaster
Date: Mon Jan 29 15:45:05 1990

It's happening soon guys.

I wish i could have bought more time.  And worked out a deal.  But
nada. They are nearby now.

I can tell which cars are theirs driving by outside.  This is the
weirdest case of Deja vu i've ever had.

Anyway got an interesting call today.  It was from Eddie, one of the
Bell systems computers.

It was rather fantasy like ...  Probably just his way of saying
`Goodbye'.  Eddie was a good friend, smartest damn UNIX box around ...
And he called today to tell me goodbye.

Now i know i'm fucked.  Thanks, Eddie, it's been real.  (whoever you
are) `ok eddie, this one's for you'

Much Later,

- Par


Subject: Par
From: Erik Bloodaxe
Date: Mon Jan 29 19:36:38 1990

Buddy, Par, you are over the edge ... lay off the weed.  Not everyone
with glasses and dark suits are Feds. Not all cars with generic
hubcaps are government issue.

Well, hell, I don't know what the hell `Eddie' is, but that's a real
bizarre message you left.

Fly to Austin ... like tomorrow ... got plenty of places to stash you
until things can be smoothed out for a calm transition.

- Erik


Subject: eehh...
From: Phoenix [from Australia]
Date: Tue Jan 30 07:25:59 1990

hmmmmmmmm...

<wonders real REAL thoughtufully> [sic]
<and turns up a blank...>
what is young Par up to?


Subject: Par and Erik
From: Daneel Olivaw
Date: Mon Jan 29 21:10:00 1990

Erik, you aren't exactly the best person to be stashing people are
you?


Subject: You know you are screwed when.
From: The Parmaster
Date: Wed Jan 31 14:26:04 1990

You know you are screwed
when:

When surveyers survey
your neighbors regularly, and wear sunglasses when it's like 11 degrees
farenheit and cloudy as hell out.

When the same cars keep
driving by outside day and night. (I've been thinking about providing coffee an
d
doughnuts).

- Par


Subject: heh, Par
From: The Mentor
Date: Wed Jan 31 16:37:04 1990

Ummm. I wear sunglasses when it's 11 degrees and cloudy ... so you can
eliminate that one.  :-)


Subject: Hmm, Par
From: Phoenix
Date: Thu Feb 01 10:22:46 1990

At least you arent getting shot at.


Subject: Par, why don't you ...
From: Ravage
Date: Thu Feb 01 10:56:04 1990

Why not just go out and say `hi' to the nice gentleman? If i kept
seeing the same people tooling around my neighborhood, i would
actively check them out if they seemed weird.


Subject: Par, jump 'em
From: Aston Martin
Date: Tue Feb 06 18:04:55 1990

What you could do is go out to one of the vans sitting in the street
(you know, the one with the two guys sitting in it all day) with a
pair of jumper cables. Tell them you've seen them sitting there all
day and you thought they were stuck. Ask them if they need a jump.

- Aston

  Between these strange messages, Par often posted comments on technical
  matters. Other hackers routinely asked him questions about X.25
  networks. Unlike some hackers, Par almost always offered some help. In
  fact, he believed that being `one of the teachers' made him a
  particular target. But his willingness to teach others so readily,
  combined with his relatively humble, self-effacing demeanour, made Par
  popular among many hackers. It was one reason he found so many places
  to stay.

  Spring arrived, brushing aside a few of the hardships of a winter on
  the run, then summer. Par was still on the run, still dodging the
  Secret Service's national hunt for the fugitive. By autumn, Par had
  eluded law enforcement officials around the United States for more
  than a year. The gloom of another cold winter on the run sat on the
  horizon of Par's future, but he didn't care. Anything, everything was
  bearable. He could take anything Fate would dish up because he had
  something to live for.

  Theorem was coming to visit him again.

  When Theorem arrived in New York in early 1991, the weather was
  bitterly cold. They travelled to Connecticut, where Par was staying in
  a share-house with friends.

  Par was nervous about a lot of things, but mostly about whether things
  would be the same with Theorem. Within a few hours of her arrival, his
  fears were assuaged. Theorem felt as passionately about him as she had
  in California more than twelve months before. His own feelings were
  even stronger. Theorem was a liferaft of happiness in the growing
  turmoil of his life.

  But things were different in the outside world. Life on the run with
  Theorem was grim. Constantly dependent on other people, on their
  charity, they were also subject to their petty whims.

  A room-mate in the share-house got very drunk one night and picked a
  fight with one of Par's friends. It was a major row and the friend
  stormed out. In a fit of intoxicated fury, the drunk threatened to
  turn Par in to the authorities. Slurring his angry words, he announced
  he was going to call the FBI, CIA and Secret Service to tell them all
  where Par was living.

  Par and Theorem didn't want to wait around to see if the drunk would
  be true to his word. They grabbed their coats and fled into the
  darkness. With little money, and no place else to stay, they walked
  around for hours in the blistering, cold wind. Eventually they decided
  they had no choice but to return to the house late at night, hopefully
  after the drunk had fallen asleep.

  They sidled up to the front of the house, alert and on edge. It was
  quite possible the drunk had called every law enforcement agency his
  blurry mind could recall, in which case a collection of agents would
  be lying in wait. The street was deadly quiet. All the parked cars
  were deserted. Par peered in a darkened window but he couldn't see
  anything. He motioned for Theorem to follow him into the house.

  Though she couldn't see Par's face, Theorem could feel his tension.
  Most of the time, she revelled in their closeness, a proximity which
  at times seemed to border on telepathy. But at this moment, the
  extraordinary gift of empathy felt like a curse. Theorem could feel
  Par's all-consuming paranoia, and it filled her with terror as they
  crept through the hall, checking each room. Finally they reached Par's
  room, expecting to find two or three Secret Service agents waiting
  patiently for them in the dark.

  It was empty.

  They climbed into bed and tried to get some sleep, but Theorem lay
  awake in the dark for a little while, thinking about the strange and
  fearful experience of returning to the house. Though she spoke to Par
  on the phone almost every day when they were apart, she realised she
  had missed something.

  Being on the run for so long had changed Par.

  Some time after she returned to Switzerland, Theorem's access to Altos
  shrivelled up and died. She had been logging in through her old
  university account but the university eventually killed her access
  since she was no longer a student. Without access to any X.25 network
  linked to the outside world, she couldn't logon to Altos. Although she
  was never involved with hacking, Theorem had become quite addicted to
  Altos. The loss of access to the Swiss X.25 network--and therefore to
  Altos--left her feeling very depressed. She told Par over the
  telephone, in sombre tones.

  Par decide to make a little present for Theorem. While most hackers
  broke into computers hanging off the X.25 networks, Par broke into the
  computers of the companies which ran the X.25 networks. Having control
  over the machines owned by Telenet or Tymnet was real power. And as the
  master of X.25 networks, Par could simply create a special account--just
  for Theorem--on Tymnet.

  When Par finished making the account, he leaned back in his chair
  feeling pretty pleased with himself.

  Account name: Theorem.

  Password: ParLovesMe!

  Well, thought Par, she's going to have to type that in every time she
  gets on the Tymnet network. Altos might be filled with the world's
  best hackers, and they might even try to flirt with Theorem, but
  she'll be thinking of me every time she logs on, he thought.

  Par called her on the telephone and gave her his special present. When
  he told her the password to her new account, Theorem laughed. She
  thought it was sweet.

  And so did the MOD boys.

  Masters of Deception, or Destruction--it depended on who told the
  story--was a New York-based gang of hackers. They thought it would be
  cool to hack Altos. It wasn't that easy to get Altos shell access,
  which Theorem had, and most people had to settle for using one of the
  `guest' accounts. But it was much easier to hack Altos from a shell
  account than from a `guest' account. Theorem's account would be the
  targeted jump-off point.

  How did MOD get Theorem's Altos password? Most probably they were
  watching one of the X.25 gateways she used as she passed through
  Tymnet on her way to Altos. Maybe the MOD boys sniffed her password en
  route. Or maybe they were watching the Tymnet security officials who
  were watching that gateway.

  In the end it didn't matter how MOD got Theorem's password on Altos.
  What mattered was that they changed her password. When Theorem
  couldn't get into Altos she was beside herself. She felt like a junkie
  going cold turkey. It was too much. And of course she couldn't reach
  Par. Because he was on the run, she had to wait for him to call her.
  In fact she couldn't reach any of her other friends on Altos to ask
  for help. How was she going to find them? They were all hackers. They
  chose handles so no-one would know their real names.

  What Theorem didn't know was that, not only had she lost access to
  Altos, but the MOD boys were using her account to hack the Altos
  system. To the outside world it appeared as though she was doing it.

  Theorem finally managed to get a third-hand message to Gandalf, a
  well-known British hacker. She sought him out for two reasons. First,
  he was a good friend and was therefore likely to help her out. Second,
  Gandalf had root access on Altos, which meant he could give her a new
  password or account.

  Gandalf had established quite a reputation for himself in the computer
  underground through the hacking group 8lgm--The Eight-Legged Groove
  Machine, named after a British band. He and his friend, fellow British
  hacker Pad, had the best four legs in the chorus line. They were a
  world-class act, and certainly some of the best talent to come out of
  the British hacking scene. But Gandalf and, to a lesser extent, Pad
  had also developed a reputation for being arrogant. They rubbed some
  of the American hackers the wrong way. Not that Pad and Gandalf seemed
  to care. Their attitude was: We're good. We know it. Bugger off.

  Gandalf disabled Theorem's account on Altos. He couldn't very well
  just change the password and then send the new one through the
  extended grapevine that Theorem had used to get a message through to
  him. Clearly, someone had targeted her account specifically. No way
  was he going to broadcast a new password for her account throughout
  the underground. But the trouble was that neither Par nor Theorem knew
  what Gandalf had done.

  Meanwhile, Par called Theorem and got an earful. An angry Par vowed to
  find out just who the hell had been messing with her account.

  When the MOD boys told Par they were the culprits, he was a bit
  surprised because he had always been on good terms with them. Par told
  them how upset Theorem had been, how she gave him an earful. Then an
  extraordinary thing happened. Corrupt, the toughest, baddest guy in
  MOD, the black kid from the roughest part of New York, the hacker who
  gave shit to everyone because he could, apologised to Par.

  The MOD guys never apologised, even when they knew they were in the
  wrong. Apologies never got anyone very far on a New York City street.
  It was an attitude thing. `I'm sorry, man' from Corrupt was the
  equivalent of a normal person licking the mud from the soles of your
  shoes.

  The new password was: M0Dm0dM0D. That's the kind of guys they were.

  Par was just signing off to try out the new password when Corrupt
  jumped in.

  `Yeah, and ah, Par, there's something you should know.'

  `Yeah?' Par answered, anxious to go.

  `I checked out her mail. There was some stuff in it.'

  Theorem's letters? Stuff? `What kind of stuff?' he asked.

  `Letters from Gandalf.'

  `Yeah?'

  `Friendly letters. Real friendly.'

  Par wanted to know, but at the same time, he didn't. He could have
  arranged root access on Altos long ago if he'd really wanted it. But
  he didn't. He didn't want it because it would mean he could access
  Theorem's mail. And Par knew that if he could, he would. Theorem was
  popular on Altos and, being the suspicious type, Par knew he would
  probably take something perfectly innocent and read it the wrong way.
  Then he would get in a fight with Theorem, and their time together was
  too precious for that.

  `Too friendly,' Corrupt went on. It must have been hard for him to
  tell Par. Snagging a friend's girlfriend's password and breaking into
  her account was one thing. There wasn't much wrong with that. But
  breaking that kind of news, well, that was harsh. Especially since
  Corrupt had worked with Gandalf in 8lgm.

  `Thanks,' Par said finally. Then he took off.

  When Par tried out the MOD password, it didn't work of course, because
  Gandalf had disabled the account. But Par didn't know that. Finding
  out that Theorem's account was disabled didn't bother him, but
  discovering who disabled it for her didn't make Par all that happy.
  Still, when he confronted Theorem, she denied that anything was going
  on between her and Gandalf.

  What could Par do? He could believe Theorem or he could doubt her.
  Believing her was hard, but doubting her was painful. So he chose to
  believe her.

  The incident made Theorem take a long look at Altos. It was doing bad
  things to her life. In the days that she was locked out of the German
  chat system, she had made the unpleasant discovery that she was
  completely addicted. And she didn't like it at all. Staring at her
  life with fresh eyes, she realised she had been ignoring her friends
  and her life in Switzerland. What on earth was she doing, spending
  every night in front of a computer screen?

  So Theorem made a tough decision.

  She decided to stop using Altos forever.

                                   [ ]

  Bad things seemed to happen to The Parmaster around Thanksgiving.

  In late November 1991, Par flew up from Virginia Beach to New York. An
  acquaintance named Morty Rosenfeld, who hung out with the MOD hackers
  a bit, had invited him to come for a visit. Par thought a trip to the
  City would do him good.

  Morty wasn't exactly Par's best friend, but he was all right. He had
  been charged by the Feds a few months earlier for selling a password
  to a credit record company which resulted in credit card fraud. Par
  didn't go in for selling passwords, but to each his own. Morty wasn't
  too bad in the right dose. He had a place on Coney Island, which was
  hardly the Village in Manhattan, but close enough, and he had a
  fold-out sofa bed. It beat sleeping on the floor somewhere else.

  Par hung out with a Morty and a bunch of his friends, drinking and
  goofing around on Morty's computer.

  One morning, Par woke up with a vicious hangover. His stomach was
  growling and there was nothing edible in the fridge, so he rang up and
  ordered pork fried rice from a Chinese take-away. Then he threw on
  some clothes and sat on the end of the sofa-bed, smoking a cigarette
  while he waited. He didn't start smoking until he was nineteen, some
  time late into his second year on the run. It calmed his nerves.

  There was a knock at the front door. Par's stomach grumbled in
  response. As he walked toward the front door, he thought Pork Fried
  Rice, here I come. But when Par opened the front door, there was
  something else waiting for him.

  The Secret Service.

  Two men. An older, distinguished gentleman standing on the left and a
  young guy on the right. The young guy's eyes opened wide when he saw
  Par.

  Suddenly, the young guy pushed Par, and kept pushing him. Small, hard,
  fast thrusts. Par couldn't get his balance. Each time he almost got
  his footing, the agent shoved the hacker backward again until he
  landed against the wall. The agent spun Par around so his face pressed
  against the wall and pushed a gun into his kidney. Then he slammed
  handcuffs on Par and started frisking him for weapons.

  Par looked at Morty, now sobbing in the corner, and thought, You
  narced on me.

  Once Par was safely cuffed, the agents flashed their badges to him.
  Then they took him outside, escorted him into a waiting car and drove
  into Manhattan. They pulled up in front of the World Trade Center and
  when Par got out the young agent swapped the cuffs so Par's hands were
  in front of him.

  As the agents escorted the handcuffed fugitive up a large escalator,
  the corporate world stared at the trio. Business men and women in prim
  navy suits, secretaries and office boys all watched wide-eyed from the
  opposite escalator. And if the handcuffs weren't bad enough, the
  younger Secret Service agent was wearing a nylon jacket with a
  noticeable gun-shaped lump in the front pouch.

  Why are these guys bringing me in the front entrance? Par kept
  thinking. Surely there must be a backdoor, a car park back entrance.
  Something not quite so public.

  The view from any reasonably high floor of the World Trade Center is
  breathtaking, but Par never got a chance to enjoy the vista. He was
  hustled into a windowless room and handcuffed to a chair. The agents
  moved in and out, sorting out paperwork details. They uncuffed him
  briefly while they inked his fingers and rolled them across sheets of
  paper. Then they made him give handwriting samples, first his right
  hand then his left.

  Par didn't mind being cuffed to the chair so much, but he found the
  giant metal cage in the middle of the fingerprinting room deeply
  disturbing. It reminded him of an animal cage, the kind used in old
  zoos.

  The two agents who arrested him left the room, but another one came
  in. And the third agent was far from friendly. He began playing the
  bad cop, railing at Par, shouting at him, trying to unnerve him. But
  no amount of yelling from the agent could rile Par as much as the
  nature of the questions he asked.

  The agent didn't ask a single question about Citibank. Instead, he
  demanded to hear everything Par knew about TRW.

  All Par's worst nightmares about the killer spy satellite, about
  becoming the man who knew too much, rushed through his mind.

  Par refused to answer. He just sat silently, staring at the agent.

  Eventually, the older agent came back into the room, dragged the
  pitbull agent away and took him outside for a whispered chat. After
  that, the pitbull agent was all sweetness and light with Par. Not
  another word about TRW.

  Par wondered why a senior guy from the Secret Service would tell his
  minion to clam up about the defence contractor? What was behind the
  sudden silence? The abrupt shift alarmed Par almost as much as the
  questions had in the first place.

  The agent told Par he would be remanded in custody while awaiting
  extradition to California. After all the paperwork had been completed,
  they released him from the handcuffs and let him stand to stretch. Par
  asked for a cigarette and one of the agents gave him one. Then a
  couple of other agents--junior guys--came in.

  The junior agents were very friendly. One of them even shook Par's
  hand and introduced himself. They knew all about the hacker. They knew
  his voice from outgoing messages on voicemail boxes he had created for
  himself. They knew what he looked like from his California police
  file, and maybe even surveillance photos. They knew his personality
  from telephone bridge conversations which had been recorded and from
  the details of his Secret Service file. Perhaps they had even tracked
  him around the country, following a trail of clues left in his
  flightpath. Whatever research they had done, one thing was clear.
  These agents felt like they knew him intimately--Par the person, not
  just Par the hacker.

  It was a strange sensation. These guys Par had never met before
  chatted with him about the latest Michael Jackson video as if he was a
  neighbour or friend just returned from out of town. Then they took him
  further uptown, to a police station, for more extradition paperwork.

  This place was no World Trade Center deluxe office. Par stared at the
  peeling grey paint in the ancient room, and then watched officers
  typing out reports using the two-finger hunt-and-peck method on
  electric typewriters--not a computer in sight. The officers didn't
  cuff Par to the desk. Par was in the heart of a police station and
  there was no way he was going anywhere.

  While the officer handling Par was away from his desk for ten minutes,
  Par felt bored. So he began flipping through the folders with
  information on other cases on the officer's desk. They were heavy duty
  fraud cases--mafia and drug-money laundering--cases which carried
  reference to FBI involvement. These people looked hairy.

  That day, Par had a quick appearance in court, just long enough to be
  given protective custody in the Manhattan detention complex known as
  the Tombs while he waited for the authorities from California to come
  and pick him up.

  Par spent almost a week in the Tombs. By day three, he was climbing
  the walls. It was like being buried alive.

  During that week, Par had almost no contact with other human beings--a
  terrible punishment for someone with so much need for a continual flow
  of new information. He never left his cell. His jailer slid trays of
  food into his cell and took them away.

  On day six, Par went nuts. He threw a fit, began screaming and banging
  on the door. He yelled at the guard. Told him none too nicely that he
  wanted to `get the fuck outta here'. The guard said he would see if he
  could get Par transferred to Rikers Island, New York's notorious jail.
  Par didn't care if he was transferred to the moon, as long as he got
  out of solitary confinement.

  Except for the serial killer, the north infirmary at Rikers Island was
  a considerable improvement on the Tombs. Par was only locked in his
  cell at night. During the day he was free to roam inside the infirmary
  area with other prisoners. Some of them were there because the
  authorities didn't want to put them in with the hardened criminals,
  and some of them were there because they were probably criminally
  insane.

  It was an eclectic bunch. A fireman turned jewellery heister. A
  Colombian drug lord. A chop-shop ringleader, who collected more than
  300 stolen cars, chopped them up, reassembled them as new and then
  sold them off. A man who killed a homosexual for coming onto him.
  `Faggot Killer', as he was known inside, hadn't meant to kill anyone:
  things had gotten a little out of hand; next thing he knew, he was
  facing ten to twelve on a murder rap.

  Par wasn't wild about the idea of hanging out with a murderer, but he
  was nervous about what could happened to a young man in jail. Forging
  a friendship with Faggot Killer would send the right message. Besides,
  the guy seemed to be OK. Well, as long as you didn't look at him the
  wrong way.

  On his first day, Par also met Kentucky, a wild-eyed man who
  introduced himself by thrusting a crumpled newspaper article into the
  hacker's hand and saying, `That's me'. The article, titled `Voices
  Told Him to Kill', described how police had apprehended a serial
  killer believed to be responsible for a dozen murders, maybe more.
  During his last murder, Kentucky told Par he had killed a woman--and
  then written the names of the aliens who had commanded him to do it on
  the walls of her apartment in her blood.

  The jewellery heister tried to warn Par to stay away from Kentucky,
  who continued to liaise with the aliens on a regular basis. But it was
  too late. Kentucky decided that he didn't like the young hacker. He
  started shouting at Par, picking a fight. Par stood there, stunned and
  confused. How should he deal with an aggravated serial killer? And
  what the hell was he doing in jail with a serial killer raving at him
  anyway? It was all too much.

  The jewellery heister rushed over to Kentucky and tried to calm him
  down, speaking in soothing tones. Kentucky glowered at Par, but he
  stopped yelling.

  A few days into his stay at Rikers, Faggot Killer invited Par to join
  in a game of Dungeons and Dragons. It beat watching TV talk shows all
  day, so Par agreed. He sat down at the metal picnic table where Faggot
  Killer had laid out the board.

  So it was that Par, the twenty-year-old computer hacker from
  California, the X.25 network whiz kid, came to play Dungeons and
  Dragons with a jewellery thief, a homophobic murderer and a mad serial
  killer in Rikers Island. Par found himself marvelling at the
  surrealism of the situation.

  Kentucky threw himself into the game. He seemed to get off on killing
  hobgoblins.

  `I'll take my halberd,' Kentucky began with a smile, `and I stab this
  goblin.' The next player began to make his move, but Kentucky
  interrupted. `I'm not done,' he said slowly, as a demonic grin spread
  across his face. `And I slice it. And cut it. It bleeds everywhere.'
  Kentucky's face tensed with pleasure.

  The other three players shifted uncomfortably in their seats. Par
  looked at Faggot Killer with nervous eyes.

  `And I thrust a knife into its heart,' Kentucky continued, the volume
  of his voice rising with excitement. `Blood, blood, everywhere blood.
  And I take the knife and hack him. And I hack and hack and hack.'

  Kentucky jumped up from the table and began shouting, thrusting one
  arm downward through the air with an imaginary dagger, `And I hack and
  I hack and I hack!'

  Then Kentucky went suddenly still. Everyone at the table froze. No-one
  dared move for fear of driving him over the edge. Par's stomach had
  jumped into his throat. He tried to gauge how many seconds it would
  take to extricate himself from the picnic table and make a break for
  the far side of the room.

  In a daze, Kentucky walked away from the table, leaned his forehead
  against the wall and began mumbling quietly. The jewellery heister
  slowly followed and spoke to him briefly in hushed tones before
  returning to the table.

  One of the guards had heard the ruckus and came up to the table.

  `Is that guy OK?' he asked the jewellery heister while pointing to
  Kentucky.

  Not even if you used that term loosely, Par thought.

  `Leave him alone,' the heister told the guard. `He's talking to the
  aliens.'

  `Right.' The guard turned around and left.

  Every day, a nurse brought around special medicine for Kentucky. In
  fact, Kentucky was zonked out most of the time on a cup of horrible,
  smelly liquid. Sometimes, though, Kentucky secreted his medicine away
  and traded it with another prisoner who wanted to get zonked out for a
  day or so.

  Those were bad days, the days when Kentucky had sold his medication.
  It was on one of those days that he tried to kill Par.

  Par sat on a metal bench, talking to other prisoners, when suddenly he
  felt an arm wrap around his neck. He tried to turn around, but
  couldn't.

  `Here. I'll show you how I killed this one guy,' Kentucky whispered to
  Par.

  `No--No--' Par started to say, but Kentucky's biceps began pressing
  against Par's Adam's apple. It was a vice-like grip.

  `Yeah. Like this. I did it like this,' Kentucky said as he tensed his
  muscle and pulled backward.

  `No! Really, you don't need to. It's OK,' Par gasped. No air. His arms
  flailing in front of him.

  I'm done for, Par thought. My life is over. Hacker Murdered by Serial
  Killer in Rikers Island. `Aliens Told Me to Do It.'

  The omnipresent jewellery heister came up to Kentucky and started
  cooing in his ear to let Par go. Then, just when Par thought he was
  about to pass out, the jewellery heister pulled Kentucky off him.

  Par reminded himself to always sit with his back against the wall.

  Finally, after almost a month behind bars, Par was informed that an
  officer from the Monterey County sheriff's office was coming to take
  him back to California. Par had agreed to be extradited to California
  after seeing the inside of New York's jails. Dealing with the federal
  prosecutor in New York had also helped make up his mind.

  The US Attorney's Office in New York gave Richard Rosen, who had taken
  the case on again, a real headache. They didn't play ball. They played
  `Queen for a Day'.

  The way they negotiated reminded Rosen of an old American television
  game of that name. The show's host pulled some innocent soul off the
  street, seated her on a garish throne, asked her questions and then
  gave her prizes. The US Attorney's Office in New York wanted to seat
  Par on a throne, of sorts, to ask him lots of questions. At the end of
  the unfettered interrogation, they would hand out prizes. Prison
  terms. Fines. Convictions. As they saw fit. No guaranteed sentences.
  They would decide what leniency, if any, he would get at the end of
  the game.

  Par knew what they were looking for: evidence against the MOD boys. He
  wasn't having a bar of that. The situation stank, so Par decided not to
  fight the extradition to California. Anything had to be better than New
  York, with its crazy jail inmates and arrogant federal prosecutors.

  The officer from the Monterey sheriff's office picked Par up on 17
  December 1991.

  Par spent the next few weeks in jail in California, but this time he
  wasn't in any sort of protective custody. He had to share a cell with
  Mexican drug dealers and other mafia, but at least he knew his way
  around these people. And unlike the some of the people at Rikers, they
  weren't stark raving lunatics.

  Richard Rosen took the case back, despite Par's having skipped town
  the first time, which Par thought was pretty good of the lawyer. But
  Par had no idea how good it would be for him until it came to his
  court date.

  Par called Rosen from the jail, to talk about the case. Rosen had some
  big news for him.

  `Plead guilty. You're going to plead guilty to everything,' he told
  Par.

  Par thought Rosen had lost his marbles.

  `No. We can win this case if you plead guilty,' Rosen assured him.

  Par sat dumbfounded at the other end of the phone.

  `Trust me,' the lawyer said.

  The meticulous Richard Rosen had found a devastating weapon.

  On 23 December 1991, Par pleaded guilty to two charges in Monterey
  County Juvenile Court. He admitted everything. The whole nine yards.
  Yes, I am The Parmaster. Yes, I broke into computers. Yes, I took
  thousands of credit card details from a Citibank machine. Yes, yes,
  yes.

  In some way, the experience was cathartic, but only because Par knew
  Rosen had a brilliant ace up his sleeve.

  Rosen had rushed the case to be sure it would be heard in juvenile
  court, where Par would get a more lenient sentence. But just because
  Rosen was in a hurry didn't mean he was sloppy. When he went through
  Par's file with a fine-toothed comb he discovered the official papers
  declared Par's birthday to be 15 January 1971. In fact, Par's birthday
  was some days earlier, but the DA's office didn't know that.

  Under California law, a juvenile court has jurisdiction over citizens
  under the age of 21. You can only be tried and sentenced in a juvenile
  court if you committed the crimes in question while under the age of
  eighteen and you are still under the age of 21 when you plead and are
  sentenced.

  Par was due to be sentenced on 13 January but on 8 January Rosen
  applied for the case to be thrown out. When Deputy DA David Schott
  asked why, Rosen dropped his bomb.

  Par had already turned 21 and the juvenile court had no authority to
  pass sentence over him. Further, in California, a case cannot be moved
  into an adult court if the defendant has already entered a plea in a
  juvenile one. Because Par had already done that, his case couldn't be
  moved. The matter was considered `dealt with' in the eyes of the law.

  The Deputy DA was flabbergasted. He spluttered and spewed. The DA's
  office had dropped the original charges from a felony to a
  misdemeanour. They had come to the table. How could this happen? Par
  was a fugitive. He had been on the run for more than two years from
  the frigging Secret Service, for Christ's sake. There was no way--NO
  WAY--he was going to walk out of that courtroom scot-free.

  The court asked Par to prove his birthday. A quick driver's licence
  search at the department of motor vehicles showed Par and his lawyer
  were telling the truth. So Par walked free.

  When he stepped outside the courthouse, Par turned his face toward the
  sun. After almost two months in three different jails on two sides of
  the continent, the sun felt magnificent. Walking around felt
  wonderful. Just wandering down the street made him happy.

  However, Par never really got over being on the run.

  From the time he walked free from the County Jail in Salinas,
  California, he continued to move around the country, picking up
  temporary work here and there. But he found it hard to settle in one
  place. Worst of all, strange things began happening to him. Well, they
  had always happened to him, but they were getting stranger by the
  month. His perception of reality was changing.

  There was the incident in the motel room. As Par sat in the Las Vegas
  Travelodge on one if his cross-country treks, he perceived someone
  moving around in the room below his. Par strained to hear. It seemed
  like the man was talking to him. What was the man trying to tell him?
  Par couldn't quite catch the words, but the more he listened, the more
  Par was sure he had a message for him which he didn't want anyone else
  to hear. It was very frustrating. No matter how hard he tried, no
  matter how he put his ear down to the floor or against the wall, Par
  couldn't make it out.

  The surreal experiences continued. As Par described it, on a trip down
  to Mexico, he began feeling quite strange, so he went to the US
  consulate late one afternoon to get some help. But everyone in the
  consulate behaved bizarrely.

  They asked him for some identification, and he gave them his wallet.
  They took his Social Security card and his California identification
  card and told him to wait. Par believed they were going to pull up
  information about him on a computer out the back. While waiting, his
  legs began to tremble and a continuous shiver rolled up and down his
  spine. It wasn't a smooth, fluid shiver, it was jerky. He felt like he
  was sitting at the epicentre of an earthquake and it frightened him.
  The consulate staff just stared
  at him.

  Finally Par stopped shaking. The other staff member returned and asked
  him to leave.

  `No-one can help you here,' he told Par.

  Why was the consular official talking to him like that? What did he
  mean--Par had to leave? What was he really trying to say? Par couldn't
  understand him. Another consular officer came around to Par, carrying
  handcuffs. Why was everyone behaving in such a weird way? That
  computer. Maybe they had found some special message next to his name
  on that computer.

  Par tried to explain the situation, but the consulate staff didn't
  seem to understand. He told them about how he had been on the run from
  the Secret Service for two and a half years, but that just got him
  queer looks. Blank faces. No comprehende. The more he explained, the
  blanker the faces became.

  The consular officials told him that the office was closing for the
  day. He would have to leave the building. But Par suspected that was
  just an excuse. A few minutes later, a Mexican policeman showed up. He
  talked with one of the consular officials, who subsequently handed him
  what Par perceived to be a slip of paper wrapped around a wad of peso
  notes.

  Two more policemen came into the consulate. One of them turned to Par
  and said, `Leave!' but Par didn't answer. So the Mexican police
  grabbed Par by the arms and legs and carried him out of the consulate.
  Par felt agitated and confused and, as they crossed the threshold out
  of the consulate, he screamed.

  They put him in a police car and took him to a jail, where they kept
  him overnight.

  The next day, they released Par and he wandered the city aimlessly
  before ending up back at the US consulate. The same consular officer
  came up to him and asked how he was feeling.

  Par said, `OK.'

  Then Par asked if the official could help him get back to the border,
  and he said he could. A few minutes later a white van picked up Par
  and took him to the border crossing. When they arrived, Par asked the
  driver if he could have $2 so he could buy a ticket for the train. The
  driver gave it to him.

  Par boarded the train with no idea of where he was headed.

                                   [ ]

  Theorem visited Par in California twice in 1992 and the relationship
  continued to blossom. Par tried to find work so he could pay her back
  the $20000 she had lent him during his years on the run and during his
  court case, but it was hard going. People didn't seem to want to hire
  him.

  `You don't have any computer skills,' they told him. He calmly
  explained that, yes, he did indeed have computer skills.

  `Well, which university did you get your degree from?' they asked.

  No, he hadn't got his skills at any university.

  `Well, which companies did you get your work experience from?'

  No, he hadn't learned his skills while working for a company.

  `Well, what did you do from 1989 to 1992?' the temp agency staffer
  inevitably asked in an exasperated voice.

  `I ... ah ... travelled around the country.' What else was Par going
  to say? How could he possibly answer that question?

  If he was lucky, the agency might land him a data-entry job at $8 per
  hour. If he was less fortunate, he might end up doing clerical work
  for less than that.

  By 1993, things had become a little rocky with Theorem. After four and
  a half years together, they broke up. The distance was too great, in
  every sense. Theorem wanted a more stable life--maybe not a
  traditional Swiss family with three children and a pretty chalet in
  the Alps, but something more than Par's transient life on the road.

  The separation was excruciatingly painful for both of them.
  Conversation was strained for weeks after the decision. Theorem kept
  thinking she had made a mistake. She kept wanting to ask Par to come
  back. But she didn't.

  Par drowned himself in alcohol. Shots of tequila, one after the other.
  Scull it. Slam the glass down. Fill it to the top. Throw back another.
  After a while, he passed out. Then he was violently ill for days, but
  somehow he didn't mind. It was cleansing to be so ill.

  Somewhere along the way, Rosen managed to get Par's things returned
  from the Secret Service raids. He passed the outdated computer and
  other equipment back to Par, along with disks, print-outs and notes.

  Par gathered up every shred of evidence from his case, along with a
  bottle of Jack Daniels, and made a bonfire. He shredded print-outs,
  doused them in lighter fluid and set them alight. He fed the disks
  into the fire and watched them melt in the flames. He flipped through
  the pages and pages of notes and official reports and let them pull
  out particular memories. Then he crumpled up each one and tossed it in
  the fire. He even sprinkled a little Jack Daniels across the top for
  good measure.

  As he pulled the pages from a Secret Service report, making them into
  tight paper balls, something caught his eye and made him wonder. Many
  hackers around the world had been busted in a series of raids
  following the first Thanksgiving raid at Par's house back in 1988.
  Erik Bloodaxe, the MOD boys, the LOD boys, The Atlanta Three, Pad and
  Gandalf, the Australians--they had all been either busted or raided
  during 1989, 1990 and 1991.

  How were the raids connected? Were the law-enforcement agencies on
  three different continents really organised enough to coordinate
  worldwide attacks on hackers?

  The Secret Service report gave him a clue. It said that in December
  1988, two informants had called Secret Service special agents in
  separate divisions with information about Par. The informants--both
  hackers--told the Secret Service that Par was not the `Citibank
  hacker' the agency was looking for. They said the real `Citibank
  hacker' was named Phoenix.

  Phoenix from Australia.


    _________________________________________________________________

                       Chapter 5 -- The Holy Grail
    _________________________________________________________________


    So we came and conquered and found
    riches of Commons and Kings

  -- from `River Runs Red', on Blue Sky Mining by Midnight Oil

  There it was, in black and white. Two articles by Helen Meredith in
  The Australian in January 1989.2 The whole Australian computer
  underground was buzzing with the news.

  The first article appeared on 14 January:

    Citibank hackers score $500,000

    An elite group of Australian hackers has lifted more than
    $US500,000 ($580,000) out of America's Citibank in one of the more
    daring hacking crimes in Australia's history.

    Australian federal authorities were reported late yesterday to be
    working with American authorities to pin down the Australian
    connection involving hackers in Melbourne and Sydney.

    These are the elite `freekers' of white collar crime ...

    The Australian connection is reported to have used a telephone in
    the foyer of Telecom's headquarters at 199 William Street in
    Melbourne to send a 2600-hertz signal giving them access to a trunk
    line and ultimately to a managerial access code for Citibank.

    Sources said last night the hackers had lifted $US563,000 from the
    US bank and transferred it into several accounts. The money has now
    been withdrawn ...

    Meanwhile, Victorian police were reported yesterday to be
    systematically searching the homes of dozens of suspects in a
    crackdown on computer hackers ...

    An informed source said Criminal Investigation Bureau officers
    armed with search warrants were now searching through the
    belongings of the hacking community and expected to find hundreds
    of thousands of dollars of goods.

    An informed source said Criminal Investigation Bureau officers
    armed with search warrants were now searching through the
    belongings of the hacking community and expected to find hundreds
    of thousands of dollars of goods.

    The second article was published ten days later:

    Hackers list card hauls on boards

    Authorities remain sceptical of the latest reports of an
    international hacking and phreaking ring and its Australian
    connection.

    Yesterday, however, evidence continued to stream into the Melbourne
    based bulletin boards under suspicion ...

    In the latest round of bulletin board activity, a message from a
    United States hacker known as Captain Cash provided the Australian
    connection with the latest news on Australian credit cards,
    provided by local hackers, and their illegal use by US hackers to
    the value of $US362 018 ($416112).

    The information was taken from a computer bulletin board system
    known as Pacific Island and used actively by the Australian
    connection.

    The message read: `OK on the 5353 series which we are closing
    today--Mastercard $109 400.50. On the 4564 series--Visa which I'll
    leave open for a week

    $209417.90. And on good old don't leave home without someone
    else's: $43 200.

    `Making a grand total of

    $362018.40!

    `Let's hear it for our Aussie friends!

    `I hear they are doing just as well!

    `They are sending more numbers on the 23rd! Great!

    `They will be getting 10%

    as usual...a nice bonus of

    $36 200.00!'

    The bulletin board also contained advice for phreakers on using
    telephones in Telecom's 199 William Street headquarters and the
    green phones at Spencer Street Station in Melbourne--to make free
    international calls ...

    Phoenix, another local bulletin board user, listed prices for
    `EXTC'- tablets ...

    Late Friday, The Australian received evidence suggesting a break-in
    of the US Citibank network by Australian hackers known as The Realm
    ...

    The gang's US connection is believed to be based in Milwaukee and
    Houston. US Federal authorities have already raided US hackers
    involved in Citibank break-ins in the US.

    A covert operation of the Bureau of Criminal Intelligence has had
    the Australian connection under surveillance and last week took
    delivery of six months' of evidence from the Pacific Island board
    and associated boards going by the name of Zen and Megaworks ...

    The Australian hackers include a number of Melbourne people, some
    teenagers, suspected or already convicted of crimes including
    fraud, drug use and car theft. Most are considered to be at the
    least, digital voyeurs, at worst criminals with a possible big
    crime connection.

    The information received by The Australian amounts to a confession
    on the part of the Australian hackers to involvement in the
    break-in of the US Citibank network as well as advice on phreaking
    ... and bank access.

    The following is taken directly from the bulletin board ... It was
    stored in a private mailbox on the board and is from a hacker known
    as Ivan Trotsky to one who uses the name Killer Tomato:

    `OK this is what's been happening ...

    `While back a Sysop had a call from the Feds, they wanted Force's,
    Phoenix's, Nom's, Brett Macmillan's and my names in connection with
    some hacking The Realm had done and also with some carding meant to
    have been done too.

    `Then in the last few days I get info passed to me that the Hack
    that was done to the Citibank in the US which has led to arrests
    over there also had connections to Force and Electron ...'

    DPG monitoring service spokesman, Mr Stuart Gill, said he believed
    the Pacific Island material was only the tip of the iceberg.

    `They're far better organised than the police,' he said.

    `Unless everyone gets their act together and we legislate against
    it, we'll still be talking about the same things this time next
    year.'

    Yesterday, the South Australian police started an operation to put
    bulletin boards operating in that state under surveillance.

    And in Western Australia, both political parties agreed they would
    proceed with an inquiry into computer hacking, whoever was in
    government.

    The Victoria Police fraud squad last week announced it had set up a
    computer crime squad that would investigate complaints of computer
    fraud.

  The articles were painful reading for most in the computer
  underground.

  Who was this Captain Cash? Who was the Killer Tomato? Many believed
  they were either Stuart Gill, or that Gill had forged messages by them
  or others on Bowen's board. Was the underground rife with credit card
  frauders? No. They formed only a very small part of that community.
  Had the Melbourne hackers stolen half a million dollars from Citibank?
  Absolutely not. A subsequent police investigation determined this
  allegation to be a complete fabrication.

  How had six months' worth of messages from PI and Zen found their way
  into the hands of the Victoria Police Bureau of Criminal Intelligence?
  Members of the underground had their suspicions.

  To some, Stuart Gill's role in the underground appeared to be that of
  an information trader. He would feed a police agency information, and
  garner a little new material from it in exchange. He then amalgamated
  the new and old material and delivered the new package to another
  police agency, which provided him a little more material to add to the
  pot. Gill appeared to play the same game in the underground.

  A few members of the underground, particularly PI and Zen regulars
  Mentat and Brett MacMillan, suspected chicanery and began fighting a
  BBS-based war to prove their point. In early 1989, MacMillan posted a
  message stating that Hackwatch was not registered as a business
  trading name belonging to Stuart Gill at the Victorian Corporate
  Affairs office. Further, he stated, DPG Monitoring Services did not
  exist as an official registered business trading name either.
  MacMillan then stunned the underground by announcing that he had
  registered the name Hackwatch himself, presumably to stop Stuart
  Gill's media appearances as a Hackwatch spokesman.

  Many in the underground felt duped by Gill, but they weren't the only
  ones. Soon some journalists and police would feel the same way. Stuart
  Gill wasn't even his real name.

  What Gill really wanted, some citizens in the underground came to
  believe, was a public platform from which he could whip up hacker hype
  and then demand the introduction of tough new anti-hacking laws. In
  mid-1989, the Commonwealth Government did just that, enacting the
  first federal computer crime laws.

  It wasn't the journalists' fault. For example, in one case Helen
  Meredith had asked Gill for verification and he had referred her to
  Superintendent Tony Warren, of the Victoria Police, who had backed him
  up. A reporter couldn't ask for better verification than that.

  And why wouldn't Warren back Gill? A registered ISU informer, Gill
  also acted as a consultant, adviser, confidant and friend to various
  members of the Victoria Police. He was close to both Warren and,
  later, to Inspector Chris Cosgriff. From 1985 to 1987, Warren had
  worked at the Bureau of Criminal Intelligence (BCI). After that, he
  was transferred to the Internal Investigations Department (IID), where
  he worked with Cosgriff who joined IID in 1988.

  Over a six-month period in 1992, Tony Warren received more than 200
  phone calls from Stuart Gill--45 of them to his home number. Over an
  eighteen-month period in 1991-92, Chris Cosgriff made at least 76
  personal visits to Gill's home address and recorded 316 phone calls
  with him.3

  The Internal Security Unit (ISU) investigated corruption within the
  police force. If you had access to ISU, you knew everything that the
  Victoria Police officially knew about corruption within its ranks. Its
  information was highly sensitive, particularly since it could involve
  one police officer dobbing in another. However, a 1993 Victorian
  Ombudsman's report concluded that Cosgriff leaked a large amount of
  confidential ISU material to Gill, and that Warren's relationship with
  Gill was inappropriate.4

  When Craig Bowen (aka Thunderbird1) came to believe in 1989 that he
  had been duped by Gill, he retreated into a state of denial and
  depression. The PI community had trusted him. He entered his
  friendship with Gill a bright-eyed, innocent young man looking for
  adventure. He left the friendship betrayed and gun-shy.

  Sad-eyed and feeling dark on the world, Craig Bowen turned off PI and
  Zen forever.

                                   [ ]

  Sitting at his computer sometime in the second half of 1989, Force
  stared at his screen without seeing anything, his mind a million miles
  away. The situation was bad, very bad, and lost in thought, he toyed
  with his mouse absent-mindedly, thinking about how to deal with this
  problem.

  The problem was that someone in Melbourne was going to be busted.

  Force wanted to discount the secret warning, to rack it up as just
  another in a long line of rumours which swept through the underground
  periodically, but he knew he couldn't do that. The warning was rock
  solid; it had come from Gavin.*

  The way Force told it, his friend Gavin worked as a contractor to
  Telecom by day and played at hacking at night. He was Force's little
  secret, who he kept from the other members of The Realm. Gavin was
  definitely not part of the hacker BBS scene. He was older, he didn't
  even have a handle and he hacked alone, or with Force, because he saw
  hacking in groups as risky.

  As a Telecom contractor, Gavin had the kind of access to computers and
  networks which most hackers could only dream about. He also had good
  contacts inside Telecom--the kind who might answer a few tactfully
  worded questions about telephone taps and line traces, or might know a
  bit about police investigations requiring Telecom's help.

  Force had met Gavin while buying some second-hand equipment through
  the Trading Post. They hit it off, became friends and soon began
  hacking together. Under the cover of darkness, they would creep into
  Gavin's office after everyone else had gone home and hack all night.
  At dawn, they tidied up and quietly left the building. Gavin went
  home, showered and returned to work as if nothing had happened.

  Gavin introduced Force to trashing. When they weren't spending the
  night in front of his terminal, Gavin crawled through Telecom's
  dumpsters looking for pearls of information on crumpled bits of office
  paper. Account names, passwords, dial-up modems, NUAs--people wrote
  all sorts of things down on scrap paper and then threw it out the next
  day when they didn't need it any more.

  According to Force, Gavin moved offices frequently, which made it
  easier to muddy the trail. Even better, he worked from offices which
  had dozens of employees making hundreds of calls each day. Gavin and
  Force's illicit activities were buried under a mound of daily
  legitimate transactions.

  The two hackers trusted each other; in fact Gavin was the only person
  to whom Force revealed the exact address of the CitiSaudi machine. Not
  even Phoenix, rising star of The Realm and Force's favoured prot�g�,
  was privy to all the secrets of Citibank uncovered during Force's
  network explorations.

  Force had shared some of this glittering prize with Phoenix, but not
  all of it. Just a few of the Citibank cards--token trophies--and
  general information about the Citibank network. Believing the
  temptation to collect vast numbers of cards and use them would be too
  great for the young Phoenix, Force tried to keep the exact location of
  the Citibank machine a secret. He knew that Phoenix might eventually
  find the Citibank system on his own, and there was little he could do
  to stop him. But Force was determined that he wouldn't help Phoenix
  get himself into trouble.

  The Citibank network had been a rich source of systems--something
  Force also kept to himself. The more he explored, the more he found in
  the network. Soon after his first discovery of the CitiSaudi system,
  he found a machine called CitiGreece which was just as willing to dump
  card details as its Saudi-American counterpart. Out of fifteen or so
  credit cards Force discovered on the system, only two appeared to be
  valid. He figured the others were test cards and that this must be a
  new site. Not long after the discovery of the CitiGreece machine, he
  discovered similar embryonic sites in two other countries.

  Force liked Phoenix and was impressed by the new hacker's enthusiasm
  and desire to learn about computer networks.

  Force introduced Phoenix to Minerva, just as Craig Bowen had done for
  Force some years before. Phoenix learned quickly and came back for
  more. He was hungry and, in Force's discerning opinion, very bright.
  Indeed, Force saw a great deal of himself in the young hacker. They
  were from a similarly comfortable, educated middle-class background.
  They were also both a little outside the mainstream. Force's family
  were migrants to Australia. Some of Phoenix's family lived in Israel,
  and his family was very religious.

  Phoenix attended one of the most Orthodox Jewish schools in Victoria,
  a place which described itself as a `modern orthodox Zionist'
  institution. Nearly half the subjects offered in year 9 were in Jewish
  Studies, all the boys wore yarmulkes and the school expected students
  to be fluent in Hebrew by the time they graduated.

  In his first years at the school, Phoenix had acquired the nickname
  `The Egg'. Over the following years he became a master at playing the
  game--jumping through hoops to please teachers. He learned that doing
  well in religious studies was a good way to ingratiate himself to
  teachers, as well as his parents and, in their eyes at least, he
  became the golden-haired boy.

  Anyone scratching below the surface, however, would find the shine of
  the golden-haired boy was merely gilt. Despite his success in school
  and his matriculation, Phoenix was having trouble. He had been
  profoundly affected by the bitter break-up and divorce of his parents
  when he was about fourteen.

  After the divorce, Phoenix was sent to boarding school in Israel for
  about six months. On his return to Melbourne, he lived with his
  younger sister and mother at his maternal grandmother's house. His
  brother, the middle child, lived with his father.

  School friends sometimes felt awkward visiting Phoenix at home. One of
  his best friends found it difficult dealing with Phoenix's mother,
  whose vivacity sometimes bordered on the neurotic and shrill. His
  grandmother was a chronic worrier, who pestered Phoenix about using
  the home phone line during thunderstorms for fear he would be
  electrocuted. The situation with Phoenix's father wasn't much better.
  A manager at Telecom, he seemed to waver between appearing
  disinterested or emotionally cold and breaking into violent outbursts
  of anger.

  But it was Phoenix's younger brother who seemed to be the problem
  child. He ran away from home at around seventeen and dealt in drugs
  before eventually finding his feet. Yet, unlike Phoenix, his brother's
  problems had been laid bare for all to see. Hitting rock bottom forced
  him to take stock of his life and come to terms with his situation.

  In contrast, Phoenix found less noticeable ways of expressing his
  rebellion. Among them was his enthusiasm for tools of power--the
  martial arts, weapons such as swords and staffs, and social
  engineering. During his final years of secondary school, while still
  living at his grandmother's home, Phoenix took up hacking. He hung
  around various Melbourne BBSes, and then he developed an on-line
  friendship with Force.

  Force watched Phoenix's hacking skills develop with interest and after
  a couple of months he invited him to join The Realm. It was the
  shortest initiation of any Realm member, and the vote to include the
  new hacker was unanimous. Phoenix proved to be a valuable member,
  collecting information about new systems and networks for The Realm's
  databases. At their peak of hacking activity, Force and Phoenix spoke
  on the phone almost every day.

  Phoenix's new-found acceptance contrasted with the position of
  Electron, who visited The Realm regularly for a few months in 1988. As
  Phoenix basked in the warmth of Force's approval, the
  eighteen-year-old Electron felt the chill of his increasing scorn.

  Force eventually turfed Electron and his friend, Powerspike, out of
  his exclusive Melbourne club of hackers. Well, that was how Force told
  it. He told the other members of The Realm that Electron had committed
  two major sins. The first was that he had been wasting resources by
  using accounts on OTC's Minerva system to connect to Altos, which
  meant the accounts would be immediately tracked and killed.

  Minerva admins such as Michael Rosenberg--sworn enemy of The
  Realm--recognised the Altos NUA. Rosenberg was OTC's best defence
  against hackers. He had spent so much time trying to weed them out of
  Minerva that he knew their habits by heart: hack, then zoom over to
  Altos for a chat with fellow hackers, then hack some more.

  Most accounts on Minerva were held by corporations. How many
  legitimate users from ANZ Bank would visit Altos? None. So when
  Rosenberg saw an account connecting to Altos, he silently observed
  what the hacker was doing--in case he bragged on the German chat
  board--then changed the password and notified the client, in an effort
  to lock the hacker out for good.

  Electron's second sin, according to Force, was that he had been
  withholding hacking information from the rest of the group. Force's
  stated view--though it didn't seem to apply to him personally--was one
  in, all in.

  It was a very public expulsion. Powerspike and Electron told each
  other they didn't really care. As they saw it, they might have visited
  The Realm BBS now and then but they certainly weren't members of The
  Realm. Electron joked with Powerspike, `Who would want to be a member
  of a no-talent outfit like The Realm?' Still, it must have hurt.
  Hackers in the period 1988-90 depended on each other for information.
  They honed their skills in a community which shared intelligence and
  they grew to rely on the pool of information.

  Months later, Force grudgingly allowing Electron to rejoin The Realm,
  but the relationship remained testy. When Electron finally logged in
  again, he found a file in the BBS entitled `Scanner stolen from the
  Electron'. Force had found a copy of Electron's VMS scanner on an
  overseas computer while Electron was in exile and had felt no qualms
  about pinching it for The Realm.

  Except that it wasn't a scanner. It was a VMS Trojan. And there was a
  big difference. It didn't scan for the addresses of computers on a
  network. It snagged passwords when people connected from their VMS
  computers to another machine over an X.25 network. Powerspike cracked
  up laughing when Electron told him. `Well,' he told Powerspike, `Mr
  Bigshot Force might know something about Prime computers, but he
  doesn't know a hell of a lot about VMS.'

  Despite Electron's general fall from grace, Phoenix talked to the
  outcast because they shared the obsession. Electron was on a steep
  learning curve and, like Phoenix, he was moving fast--much faster than
  any of the other Melbourne hackers.

  When Phoenix admitted talking to Electron regularly, Force tried to
  pull him away, but without luck. Some of the disapproval was born of
  Force's paternalistic attitude toward the Australian hacking scene. He
  considered himself to be a sort of godfather in the hacking community.
  But Force was also increasingly concerned at Phoenix's ever more
  flagrant taunting of computer security bigwigs and system admins. In
  one incident, Phoenix knew a couple of system admins and security
  people were waiting on a system to trap him by tracing his network
  connections. He responded by sneaking into the computer unnoticed and
  quietly logging off each admin. Force laughed about it at the time,
  but privately the story made him more than a little nervous.

  Phoenix enjoyed pitting himself against the pinnacles of the computer
  security industry. He wanted to prove he was better, and he frequently
  upset people because often he was. Strangely, though, Force's prot�g�
  also thought that if he told these experts about a few of the holes in
  their systems, he would somehow gain their approval. Maybe they would
  even give him inside information, like new penetration techniques,
  and, importantly, look after him if things got rough. Force wondered
  how Phoenix could hold two such conflicting thoughts in his mind at
  the same time without questioning the logic of either.

  It was against this backdrop that Gavin came to Force with his urgent
  warning in late 1989. Gavin had learned that the Australian Federal
  Police were getting complaints about hackers operating out of
  Melbourne. The Melbourne hacking community had become very noisy and
  was leaving footprints all over the place as its members traversed the
  world's data networks.

  There were other active hacking communities outside Australia--in the
  north of England, in Texas, in New York. But the Melbourne hackers
  weren't just noisy--they were noisy inside American computers. It
  wasn't just a case of American hackers breaking into American systems.
  This was about foreign nationals penetrating American computers. And
  there was something else which made the Australian hackers a target.
  The US Secret Service knew an Australian named Phoenix had been inside
  Citibank, one of the biggest financial institutions in the US.

  Gavin didn't have many details to give Force. All he knew was that an
  American law enforcement agency--probably the Secret Service--had been
  putting enormous pressure on the Australian government to bust these
  people.

  What Gavin didn't know was that the Secret Service wasn't the only
  source of pressure coming from the other side of the Pacific. The FBI
  had also approached the Australian Federal Police about the mysterious
  but noisy Australian hackers who kept breaking into American systems,5
  and the AFP had acted on the information.

  In late 1989, Detective Superintendent Ken Hunt of the AFP headed an
  investigation into the Melbourne hackers. It was believed to be the
  first major investigation of computer crime since the introduction of
  Australia's first federal anti-hacking laws. Like most law enforcement
  agencies around the world, the AFP were new players in the field of
  computer crime. Few officers had expertise in computers, let alone
  computer crime, so this case would prove to be an important proving
  ground.6

  When Gavin broke the news, Force acted immediately. He called Phoenix
  on the phone, insisting on meeting him in person as soon as possible.
  As their friendship had progressed, they had moved from talking
  on-line to telephone conversations and finally to spending time
  together in person. Force sat Phoenix down alone and gave him a stern
  warning. He didn't tell him how he got his information, but he made it
  clear the source was reliable.

  The word was that the police felt they had to bust someone. It had
  come to the point where an American law enforcement officer had
  reportedly told his Australian counterpart, `If you don't do something
  about it soon, we'll do something about it ourselves'. The American
  hadn't bothered to elaborate on just how they might do something about
  it, but it didn't matter.

  Phoenix looked suddenly pale. He had certainly been very noisy, and
  was breaking into systems virtually all the time now. Many of those
  systems were in the US.

  He certainly didn't want to end up like the West German hacker
  Hagbard, whose petrol-doused, charred remains had been discovered in a
  German forest in June 1989.

  An associate of Pengo's, Hagbard had been involved in a ring of German
  hackers who sold the information they found in American computers to a
  KGB agent in East Germany from 1986 to 1988.

  In March 1989, German police raided the homes and offices of the
  German hacking group and began arresting people. Like Pengo, Hagbard
  had secretly turned himself into the German authorities months before
  and given full details of the hacking ring's activities in the hope of
  gaining immunity from prosecution.

  American law enforcement agencies and prosecutors had not been
  enthusiastic about showing the hackers any leniency. Several US
  agencies, including the CIA and the FBI, had been chasing the German
  espionage ring and they wanted stiff sentences, preferably served in
  an American prison.

  German court proceedings were under way when Hagbard's body was found.
  Did he commit suicide or was he murdered? No-one knew for sure, but
  the news shook the computer underground around the world. Hackers
  discussed the issue in considerable depth. On the one hand, Hagbard
  had a long history of mental instability and drug use, having spent
  time in psychiatric hospitals and detoxification centres off and on
  since the beginning of 1987. On the other hand, if you were going to
  kill yourself, would you really want to die in the agony of a petrol
  fire? Or would you just take a few too many pills or a quick bullet?

  Whether it was murder or suicide, the death of Hagbard loomed large
  before Phoenix. Who were the American law enforcement agencies after
  in Australia? Did they want him?

  No. Force reassured him, they were after Electron. The problem for
  Phoenix was that he kept talking to Electron on the phone--in voice
  conversations. If Phoenix continued associating with Electron, he too
  would be scooped up in the AFP's net.

  The message to Phoenix was crystal clear.

  Stay away from Electron.

                                   [ ]

  `Listen, you miserable scum-sucking pig.'

  `Huh?' Phoenix answered, only half paying attention.

  `Piece of shit machine. I did all this editing and the damn thing
  didn't save the changes,' Electron growled at the Commodore Amiga,
  with its 512 k of memory, sitting on the desk in his bedroom.

  It was January 1990 and both Phoenix and Electron were at home on
  holidays before the start of university.

  `Yeah. Wish I could get this thing working. Fucking hell. Work you!'
  Phoenix yelled. Electron could hear him typing at the other end of the
  phone while he talked. He had been struggling to get AUX, the Apple
  version of Unix, running on his Macintosh SE30 for days.

  It was difficult to have an uninterrupted conversation with Phoenix.
  If it wasn't his machine crashing, it was his grandmother asking him
  questions from the doorway of his room.

  `You wanna go through the list? How big is your file?' Phoenix asked,
  now more focused on the conversation.

  `Huh? Which file?'

  `The dictionary file. The words to feed into the password cracker,'
  Phoenix replied.

  Electron pulled up his list of dictionary words and looked
  at it. I'm going to have to cut this list down a bit, he thought. The
  dictionary was part of the password cracking program.
  The larger the dictionary, the longer it took the computer to crack a
  list of passwords. If he could weed out obscure words--words that
  people were unlikely to pick as passwords--then he could make his
  cracker run faster.

  An efficient password cracker was a valuable tool. Electron would feed
  his home computer a password file from a target computer, say from
  Melbourne University, then go to bed. About twelve hours later, he
  would check on his machine's progress.

  If he was lucky, he would find six or more accounts--user names and
  their passwords--waiting for him in a file. The process was completely
  automated. Electron could then log into Melbourne University using the
  cracked accounts, all of which could be used as jumping-off points for
  hacking into other systems for the price of a local telephone call.

  Cracking Unix passwords wasn't inordinately difficult,
  provided the different components of the program, such as the
  dictionary, had been set up properly. However, it was time-consuming.
  The principle was simple. Passwords, kept in password files with their
  corresponding user names, were encrypted. It was as impossible to
  reverse the encryption process as it was to unscramble an omelette.
  Instead, you needed to recreate the encryption process and compare the
  results.

  There were three basic steps. First, target a computer and get a copy
  of its password file. Second, take a list of commonly used passwords,
  such as users' names from the password file or words from a
  dictionary, and encrypt those into a second list. Third, put the two
  lists side by side and compare them. When you have a match, you have
  found the password.

  However, there was one important complication: salts. A salt changed
  the way a password was encrypted, subtly modifying the way the DES
  encryption algorithm worked. For example, the word `Underground'
  encrypts two different ways with two different salts: `kyvbExMcdAOVM'
  or `lhFaTmw4Ddrjw'. The first two characters represent the salt, the
  others represent the password. The computer chooses a salt randomly
  when it encrypts a user's password. Only one is used, and there are
  4096 different salts. All Unix computers use salts in their password
  encryption process.

  Salts were intended to make password cracking far more difficult, so a
  hacker couldn't just encrypt a dictionary once and then compare it to
  every list of encrypted passwords he came across in his hacking
  intrusions. The 4096 salts mean that a hacker would have to use 4096
  different dictionaries--each encrypted with a different salt--to
  discover any dictionary word passwords.

  On any one system penetrated by Electron, there might be only 25
  users, and therefore only 25 passwords, most likely using 25 different
  salts. Since the salt characters were stored immediately before the
  encrypted password, he could easily see which salt was being used for
  a particular password. He would therefore only have to encrypt a
  dictionary 25 different times.

  Still, even encrypting a large dictionary 25 times using different
  salts took up too much hard-drive space for a basic home computer. And
  that was just the dictionary. The most sophisticated cracking programs
  also produced `intelligent guesses' of passwords. For example, the
  program might take the user's name and try it in both upper- and
  lower-case letters. It might also add a `1' at the end. In short, the
  program would create new guesses by permutating, shuffling, reversing
  and recombining basic information such as a user's name into new
  `words'.

  `It's 24000 words. Too damn big,' Electron said. Paring down a
  dictionary was a game of trade-offs. The fewer words in a cracking
  dictionary, the less time it was likely to take a computer to break
  the encrypted passwords. A smaller dictionary, however, also meant
  fewer guesses and so a reduced chance of cracking the password of any
  given account.

  `Hmm. Mine's 24328. We better pare it down together.'

  `Yeah. OK. Pick a letter.'

  `C. Let's start with the Cs.'

  `Why C?'

  `C. For my grandmother's cat, Cocoa.'

  `Yeah. OK. Here goes. Cab, Cabal. Cabala. Cabbala.' Electron paused.
  `What the fuck is a Cabbala?'

  `Dunno. Yeah. I've got those. Not Cabbala. OK, Cabaret. Cabbage. Fuck,
  I hate cabbage. Who'd pick Cabbage as their password?'

  `A Pom,' Electron answered.

  `Yeah,' Phoenix laughed before continuing.

  Phoenix sometimes stopped to think about Force's warning, but usually
  he just pushed it to one side when it crept, unwelcomed, into his
  thoughts. Still, it worried him. Force took it seriously enough. Not
  only had he stopped associating with Electron, he appeared to have
  gone very, very quiet.

  In fact, Force had found a new love: music. He was writing and
  performing his own songs. By early 1990 he seemed so busy with his
  music that he had essentially put The Realm on ice. Its members took
  to congregating on a machine owned by another Realm member, Nom, for a
  month or so.

  Somehow, however, Phoenix knew that wasn't all of the story. A hacker
  didn't pick up and walk away from hacking just like that. Especially
  not Force. Force had been obsessed with hacking. It just didn't make
  sense. There had to be something more. Phoenix comforted himself with
  the knowledge that he had followed Force's advice and had stayed away
  from Electron. Well, for a while anyway.

  He had backed right off, watched and waited, but nothing happened.
  Electron was as active in the underground as ever but he hadn't been
  busted. Nothing had changed. Maybe Force's information had been wrong.
  Surely the feds would have busted Electron by now if they were going
  to do anything. So Phoenix began to rebuild his relationship with
  Electron. It was just too tempting. Phoenix was determined not to let
  Force's ego impede his own progress.

  By January 1990, Electron was hacking almost all the time. The only
  time he wasn't hacking was when he was sleeping, and even then he
  often dreamed of hacking. He and Phoenix were sailing past all the
  other Melbourne hackers. Electron had grown beyond Powerspike's
  expertise just as Phoenix had accelerated past Force. They were moving
  away from X.25 networks and into the embryonic Internet, which was
  just as illegal since the universities guarded computer
  accounts--Internet access--very closely.

  Even Nom, with his growing expertise in the Unix operating system
  which formed the basis of many new Internet sites, wasn't up to
  Electron's standard. He didn't have the same level of commitment to
  hacking, the same obsession necessary to be a truly cutting-edge
  hacker. In many ways, the relationship between Nom and Phoenix
  mirrored the relationship between Electron and Powerspike: the support
  act to the main band.

  Electron didn't consider Phoenix a close friend, but he was a kindred
  spirit. In fact he didn't trust Phoenix, who had a big mouth, a big
  ego and a tight friendship with Force--all strikes against him. But
  Phoenix was intelligent and he wanted to learn. Most of all, he had
  the obsession. Phoenix contributed to a flow of information which
  stimulated Electron intellectually, even if more information flowed
  toward Phoenix than from him.

  Within a month, Phoenix and Electron were in regular contact, and
  during the summer holidays they were talking on the phone--voice--all
  the time, sometimes three or four times a day. Hack then talk. Compare
  notes. Hack some more. Check in again, ask a few questions. Then back
  to hacking.

  The actual hacking was generally a solo act. For a social animal like
  Phoenix, it was a lonely pursuit. While many hackers revelled in the
  intense isolation, some, such as Phoenix, also needed to check in with
  fellow humanity once in a while. Not just any humanity--those who
  understood and shared in the obsession.

  `Caboodle. Caboose, `Electron went on, `Cabriolet. What the hell is a
  Cabriolet? Do you know?'

  `Yeah,' Phoenix answered, then rushed on. `OK. Cacao. Cache. Cachet
  ...'

  `Tell us. What is it?' Electron cut Phoenix off.

  `Cachinnation. Cachou ...'

  `Do you know?' Electron asked again, slightly irritated. As usual,
  Phoenix was claiming to know things he probably didn't.

  `Hmm? Uh, yeah,' Phoenix answered weakly. `Cackle. Cacophony ...'

  Electron knew that particular Phoenix `yeah'--the one which said `yes'
  but meant `no, and I don't want to own up to it either so let's drop
  it'.

  Electron made it a habit not to believe most of the things Phoenix
  told him. Unless there was some solid proof, Electron figured it was
  just hot air. He didn't actually like Phoenix much as a person, and
  found talking to him difficult at times. He preferred the company of
  his fellow hacker Powerspike.

  Powerspike was both bright and creative. Electron clicked with him.
  They often joked about the other's bad taste in music. Powerspike
  liked heavy metal, and Electron liked indie music. They shared a
  healthy disrespect for authority. Not just the authority of places
  they hacked into, like the US Naval Research Laboratories or NASA, but
  the authority of The Realm. When it came to politics, they both leaned
  to the left. However, their interest tended more toward
  anarchy--opposing symbols of the military-industrial complex--than to
  joining a political party.

  After their expulsion from The Realm, Electron had been a little
  isolated for a time. The tragedy of his personal life had contributed
  to the isolation. At the age of eight, he had seen his mother die of
  lung cancer. He hadn't witnessed the worst parts of her dying over two
  years, as she had spent some time in a German cancer clinic hoping for
  a reprieve. She had, however, come home to die, and Electron had
  watched her fade away.

  When the phone call from hospital came one night, Electron could tell
  what had happened from the serious tones of the adults. He burst into
  tears. He could hear his father answering questions on the phone. Yes,
  the boy had taken it hard. No, his sister seemed to be OK. Two years
  younger than Electron, she was too young to understand.

  Electron had never been particularly close to his sister. He viewed
  her as an unfeeling, shallow person--someone who simply skimmed along
  the surface of life. But after their mother's death, their father
  began to favour Electron's sister, perhaps because of her resemblance
  to his late wife. This drove a deeper, more subtle wedge between
  brother and sister.

  Electron's father, a painter who taught art at a local high school,
  was profoundly affected by his wife's death. Despite some barriers of
  social class and money, theirs had been a marriage of great affection
  and love and they made a happy home. Electron's father's paintings
  hung on almost every wall in the house, but after his wife's death he
  put down his brushes and never took them up again. He didn't talk
  about it. Once, Electron asked him why he didn't paint any more. He
  looked away and told Electron that he had `lost the motivation'.

  Electron's grandmother moved into the home to help her son care for
  his two children, but she developed Alzheimer's disease. The children
  ended up caring for her. As a teenager, Electron thought it was
  maddening caring for someone who couldn't even remember your name.
  Eventually, she moved into a nursing home.

  In August 1989, Electron's father arrived home from the doctor's
  office. He had been mildly ill for some time, but refused to take time
  off work to visit a doctor. He was proud of having taken only one
  day's sick leave in the last five years. Finally, in the holidays, he
  had seen a doctor who had conducted numerous tests. The results had
  come in.

  Electron's father had bowel cancer and the disease had spread. It
  could not be cured. He had two years to live at the most.

  Electron was nineteen years old at the time, and his early love of the
  computer, and particularly the modem, had already turned into a
  passion. Several years earlier his father, keen to encourage his
  fascination with the new machines, used to bring one of the school's
  Apple IIes home over weekends and holidays. Electron spent hours at
  the borrowed machine. When he wasn't playing on the computer, he read,
  plucking one of his father's spy novels from the over-crowded
  bookcases, or his own favourite book, The Lord of The Rings.

  Computer programming had, however, captured the imagination of the
  young Electron years before he used his first computer. At the age of
  eleven he was using books to write simple programs on paper--mostly
  games--despite the fact that he had never actually touched a keyboard.

  His school may have had a few computers, but its administrators had
  little understanding of what to do with them. In year 9, Electron had
  met with the school's career counsellor, hoping to learn about career
  options working with computers.

  `I think maybe I'd like to do a course in computer programming ...'
  His voice trailed off, hesitantly.

  `Why would you want to do that?' she said. `Can't you think of
  anything better than that?'

  `Uhm ...' Electron was at a loss. He didn't know what to do. That was
  why he had come to her. He cast around for something which seemed a
  more mainstream career option but which might also let him work on
  computers. `Well, accounting maybe?'

  `Oh yes, that's much better,' she said.

  `You can probably even get into a university, and study accounting
  there. I'm sure you will enjoy it,' she added, smiling as she closed
  his file.

  The borrowed computers were, in Electron's opinion, one of the few
  good things about school. He did reasonably well at school, but only
  because it didn't take much effort. Teachers consistently told his
  father that Electron was underachieving and that he distracted the
  other students in class. For the most part, the criticism was just
  low-level noise. Occasionally, however, Electron had more serious
  run-ins with his teachers. Some thought he was gifted. Others thought
  the freckle-faced, Irish-looking boy who helped his friends set fire
  to textbooks at the back of the class was nothing but a smart alec.

  When he was sixteen, Electron bought his own computer. He used it to
  crack software protection, just as Par had done. The Apple was soon
  replaced by a more powerful Amiga with a 20 megabyte IBM compatible
  sidecar. The computers lived, in succession, on one of the two desks
  in his bedroom. The second desk, for his school work, was usually
  piled high with untouched assignments.

  The most striking aspect of Electron's room was the ream after ream of
  dot matrix computer print-out which littered the floor. Standing at
  almost any point in the simply furnished room, someone could reach out
  and grab at least one pile of print-outs, most of which contained
  either usernames and passwords or printed computer program code. In
  between the piles of print-outs, were T-shirts, jeans, sneakers and
  books on the floor. It was impossible to walk across Electron's room
  without stepping on something.

  The turning point for Electron was the purchase of a second-hand 300
  baud modem in 1986. Overnight, the modem transformed Electron's love
  of the computer into an obsession. During the semester immediately
  before the modem's arrival, Electron's report card showed six As and
  one B. The following semester he earned six Bs and only one A.

  Electron had moved onto bigger and better things than school. He
  quickly became a regular user of underground BBSes and began hacking.
  He was enthralled by an article he discovered describing how several
  hackers claimed to have moved a satellite around in space simply by
  hacking computers. From that moment on, Electron decided he wanted to
  hack--to find out if the article was true.

  Before he graduated from school in 1987, Electron had hacked NASA, an
  achievement which saw him dancing around the dining room table in the
  middle of the night chanting, `I got into NASA! I got into NASA!' He
  hadn't moved any satellites, but getting into the space agency was as
  thrilling as flying to the moon.

  By 1989, he had been hacking regularly for years, much to the chagrin
  of his sister, who claimed her social life suffered because the
  family's sole phone line was always tied up by the modem.

  For Phoenix, Electron was a partner in hacking, and to a lesser degree
  a mentor. Electron had a lot to offer, by that time even more than The
  Realm.

  `Cactus, Cad, Cadaver, Caddis, Cadence, Cadet, Caesura. What the fuck
  is a Caesura?' Phoenix kept ploughing through the Cs.

  `Dunno. Kill that,' Electron answered, distracted.

  `Caesura. Well, fuck. I know I'd wanna use that as a password.'
  Phoenix laughed. `What the hell kind of word is Caduceus?'

  `A dead one. Kill all those. Who makes up these dictionaries?'
  Electron said.

  `Yeah.'

  `Caisson, Calabash. Kill those. Kill, kill, kill,' Electron said
  gleefully.

  `Hang on. How come I don't have Calabash in my list?' Phoenix feigned
  indignation.

  Electron laughed.

  `Hey,' Phoenix said, `we should put in words like "Qwerty" and
  "ABCDEF" and "ASDFGH".'

  `Did that already.' Electron had already put together a list of other
  common passwords, such as the `words' made when a user typed the six
  letters in the first alphabet row on a keyboard.

  Phoenix started on the list again. `OK the COs. Commend, Comment,
  Commerce, Commercial, Commercialism, Commercially. Kill those last
  three.'

  `Huh? Why kill Commercial?'

  `Let's just kill all the words with more than eight characters,'
  Phoenix said.

  `No. That's not a good idea.'

  `How come? The computer's only going to read the first eight
  characters and encrypt those. So we should kill all the rest.'

  Sometimes Phoenix just didn't get it. But Electron didn't rub it in.
  He kept it low-key, so as not to bruise Phoenix's ego. Often Electron
  sensed Phoenix sought approval from the older hacker, but it was a
  subtle, perhaps even unconscious search.

  `Nah,' Electron began, `See, someone might use the whole word,
  Commerce or Commercial. The first eight letters of these words are not
  the same. The eighth character in Commerce is "e", but in Commercial
  it's "i".'

  There was a short silence.

  `Yeah,' Electron went on, `but you could kill all the words
  like Commercially, and Commercialism, that come after Commercial.
  See?'

  `Yeah. OK. I see,' Phoenix said.

  `But don't just kill every word longer than eight characters,'
  Electron added.

  `Hmm. OK. Yeah, all right.' Phoenix seemed a bit out of sorts. `Hey,'
  he brightened a bit, `it's been a whole ten minutes since my machine
  crashed.'

  `Yeah?' Electron tried to sound interested.

  `Yeah. You know,' Phoenix changed the subject to his favourite topic,
  `what we really need is Deszip. Gotta get that.' Deszip was a computer
  program which could be used for password cracking.

  `And Zardoz. We need Zardoz,' Electron added. Zardoz was a restricted
  electronic publication detailing computer security holes.

  `Yeah. Gotta try to get into Spaf's machine. Spaf'll have it for
  sure.' Eugene Spafford, Associate Professor of Computer Science at
  Purdue University in the US, was one of the best known computer
  security experts on the Internet in 1990.

  `Yeah.'

  And so began their hunt for the holy grail.

                                   [ ]

  Deszip and Zardoz glittered side by side as the most coveted prizes in
  the world of the international Unix hacker.

  Cracking passwords took time and computer resources. Even a moderately
  powerful university machine would grunt and groan under the weight of
  the calculations if it was asked to do. But the Deszip program could
  change that, lifting the load until it was, by comparison,
  feather-light. It worked at breathtaking speed and a hacker using
  Deszip could crack encrypted passwords up to 25 times faster.

  Zardoz, a worldwide security mailing list, was also precious, but for
  a different reason. Although the mailing list's formal name was
  Security Digest, everyone in the underground simply called it Zardoz,
  after the computer from which the mailouts originated. Zardoz also
  happened to be the name of a science fiction cult film starring Sean
  Connery. Run by Neil Gorsuch, the Zardoz mailing list contained
  articles, or postings, from various members of the computer security
  industry. The postings discussed newly discovered bugs--problems with
  a computer system which could be exploited to break into or gain root
  access on a machine. The beauty of the bugs outlined in Zardoz was
  that they worked on any computer system using the programs or
  operating systems it described. Any university, any military system,
  any research institute which ran the software documented in Zardoz was
  vulnerable. Zardoz was a giant key ring, full of pass keys made to fit
  virtually every lock.

  True, system administrators who read a particular Zardoz posting might
  take steps to close up that security hole. But as the hacking
  community knew well, it was a long time between a Zardoz posting and a
  shortage of systems with that hole. Often a bug worked on many
  computers for months--sometimes years--after being announced on
  Zardoz.

  Why? Many admins had never heard of the bug when it was first
  announced. Zardoz was an exclusive club, and most admins simply
  weren't members. You couldn't just walk in off the street and sign up
  for Zardoz. You had to be vetted by peers in the computer security
  industry. You had to administer a legitimate computer system,
  preferably with a large institution such as a university or a research
  body such as CSIRO. Figuratively speaking, the established members of
  the Zardoz mailing list peered down their noses at you and determined
  if you were worthy of inclusion in Club Zardoz. Only they decided if
  you were trustworthy enough to share in the great security secrets of
  the world's computer systems.

  In 1989, the white hats, as hackers called the professional security
  gurus, were highly paranoid about Zardoz getting into the wrong hands.
  So much so, in fact, that many postings to Zardoz were fine examples
  of the art of obliqueness. A computer security expert would hint at a
  new bug in his posting without actually coming out and explaining it
  in what is commonly referred to as a `cookbook' explanation.

  This led to a raging debate within the comp-sec industry. In one
  corner, the cookbook purists said that bulletins such as Zardoz were
  only going to be helpful if people were frank with each other. They
  wanted people posting to Zardoz to provide detailed, step-by-step
  explanations on how to exploit a particular security hole. Hackers
  would always find out about bugs one way or another and the best way
  to keep them out of your system was to secure it properly in the first
  place. They wanted full disclosure.

  In the other corner, the hard-line, command-and-control computer
  security types argued that posting an announcement to Zardoz posed the
  gravest of security risks. What if Zardoz fell into the wrong hands?
  Why, any sixteen-year-old hacker would have step-by-step directions
  showing how to break into thousands of individual computers! If you
  had to reveal a security flaw--and the jury was still out in their
  minds as to whether that was such a good idea--it should be done only
  in the most oblique terms.

  What the hard-liners failed to understand was that world-class hackers
  like Electron could read the most oblique, carefully crafted Zardoz
  postings and, within a matter of days if not hours, work out exactly
  how to exploit the security hole hinted at in the text. After which
  they could just as easily have written a cookbook version of the
  security bug.

  Most good hackers had come across one or two issues of Zardoz in their
  travels, often while rummaging though the system administrator's mail
  on a prestigious institution's computer. But no-one from the elite of
  the Altos underground had a full archive of all the back issues. The
  hacker who possessed that would have details of every major security
  hole discovered by the world's best computer security minds since at
  least 1988.

  Like Zardoz, Deszip was well guarded. It was written by computer
  security expert Dr Matthew Bishop, who worked at NASA's Research
  Institute for Advanced Computer Science before taking up a teaching
  position at Dartmouth, an Ivy League college in New Hampshire. The
  United States government deemed Deszip's very fast encryption
  algorithms to be so important, they were classified as armaments. It
  was illegal to export them from the US.

  Of course, few hackers in 1990 had the sophistication to use weapons
  such as Zardoz and Deszip properly. Indeed, few even knew they
  existed. But Electron and Phoenix knew, along with a tiny handful of
  others, including Pad and Gandalf from Britain. Congregating on Altos
  in Germany, they worked with a select group of others carefully
  targeting sites likely to contain parts of their holy grail. They were
  methodical and highly strategic, piecing information together with
  exquisite, almost forensic, skill. While the common rabble of other
  hackers were thumping their heads against walls in brute-force attacks
  on random machines, these hackers spent their time hunting for
  strategic pressure points--the Achilles' heels of the computer
  security community.

  They had developed an informal hit list of machines, most of which
  belonged to high-level computer security gurus. Finding one or two
  early issues of Zardoz, Electron had combed through their postings
  looking not just on the surface--for the security bugs--but also
  paying careful attention to the names and addresses of the people
  writing articles. Authors who appeared frequently in Zardoz, or had
  something intelligent to say, went on the hit list. It was those
  people who were most likely to keep copies of Deszip or an archive of
  Zardoz on their machines.

  Electron had searched across the world for information about Deszip
  and DES (Data Encryption Standard), the original encryption program
  later used in Deszip. He hunted through computers at the University of
  New York, the US Naval Research Laboratories in Washington DC,
  Helsinki University of Technology, Rutgers University in New Jersey,
  Melbourne University and Tampere University in Finland, but the search
  bore little fruit. He found a copy of CDES, a public domain encryption
  program which used the DES algorithm, but not Deszip. CDES could be
  used to encrypt files but not to crack passwords.

  The two Australian hackers had, however, enjoyed a small taste of
  Deszip. In 1989 they had broken into a computer at Dartmouth College
  called Bear. They discovered Deszip carefully tucked away in a corner
  of Bear and had spirited a copy of the program away to a safer machine
  at another institution.

  It turned out to be a hollow victory. That copy of Deszip had been
  encrypted with Crypt, a program based on the German Enigma machine
  used in World War II. Without the passphrase--the key to unlock the
  encryption--it was impossible to read Deszip. All they could do was
  stare, frustrated, at the file name Deszip labelling a treasure just
  out of reach.

  Undaunted, the hackers decided to keep the encrypted file just in case
  they ever came across the passphrase somewhere--in an email letter,
  for example--in one of the dozens of new computers they now hacked
  regularly. Relabelling the encrypted Deszip file with a more innocuous
  name, they stored the copy in a dark corner of another machine.
  Thinking it wise to buy a little insurance as well, they gave a second
  copy of the encrypted Deszip to Gandalf, who stored it on a machine in
  the UK in case the Australians' copy disappeared unexpectedly.

                                   [ ]

  In January 1990, Electron turned his attention to getting Zardoz.
  After carefully reviewing an old copy of Zardoz, he had discovered a
  system admin in Melbourne on the list. The subscriber could well have
  the entire Zardoz archive on his machine, and that machine was so
  close--less than half an hour's drive from Electron's home. All
  Electron had to do was to break into the CSIRO.

  The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, or
  CSIRO, is a government owned and operated research body with many
  offices around Australia. Electron only wanted to get into one: the
  Division of Information Technology at 55 Barry Street, Carlton, just
  around the corner from the University of Melbourne.

  Rummaging through a Melbourne University computer, Electron had
  already found one copy of the Zardoz archive, belonging to a system
  admin. He gathered it up and quietly began downloading it to his
  computer, but as his machine slowly siphoned off the Zardoz copy, his
  link to the university abruptly went dead. The admin had discovered
  the hacker and quickly killed the connection. All of which left
  Electron back at square one--until he found another copy of Zardoz on
  the CSIRO machine.

  It was nearly 3 a.m. on 1 February 1990, but Electron wasn't tired.
  His head was buzzing. He had just successfully penetrated an account
  called Worsley on the CSIRO computer called
  DITMELA, using the sendmail bug. Electron assumed
  DITMELA stood for Division of Information Technology, Melbourne,
  computer `A'.

  Electron began sifting through Andrew Worsley's directories that day.
  He knew Zardoz was in there somewhere, since he had seen it before.
  After probing the computer, experimenting with different security
  holes hoping one would let him inside, Electron managed to slip in
  unnoticed. It was mid-afternoon, a bad time to hack a computer since
  someone at work would likely spot the intruder before long. So
  Electron told himself this was just a reconnaissance mission. Find out
  if Zardoz was on the machine, then get out of there fast and come back
  later--preferably in the middle of the night--to pull Zardoz out.

  When he found a complete collection of Zardoz in Worsley's directory,
  Electron was tempted to try a grab and run. The problem was that, with
  his slow modem, he couldn't run very quickly. Downloading Zardoz would
  take several hours. Quashing his overwhelming desire to reach out and
  grab Zardoz then and there, he slipped out of the machine noiselessly.

  Early next morning, an excited and impatient Electron crept back into
  DITMELA and headed straight for Worsley's directory. Zardoz was still
  there. And a sweet irony. Electron was using a security bug he had
  found on an early issue of Zardoz to break into the computer which
  would surrender the entire archive to him.

  Getting Zardoz out of the CSIRO machine was going to be a little
  difficult. It was a big archive and at 300 baud--30 characters per
  second--Electron's modem would take five hours to siphon off an entire
  copy. Using the CAT command, Electron made copies of all the Zardoz
  issues and bundled them up into one 500 k file. He called the new file
  .t and stored it in the temporary directory on DITMELA.

  Then he considered what to do next. He would mail the Zardoz bundle to
  another account outside the CSIRO computer, for safe-keeping. But
  after that he had to make a choice: try to download the thing himself
  or hang up, call Phoenix and ask him to download it.

  Using his 2400 baud modem, Phoenix would be able to download the
  Zardoz bundle eight times faster than Electron could. On the other
  hand, Electron didn't particularly want to give Phoenix access to the
  CSIRO machine. They had both been targeting the machine, but he hadn't
  told Phoenix that he had actually managed to get in. It wasn't that he
  planned on withholding Zardoz when he got it. Quite the contrary,
  Electron wanted Phoenix to read the security file so they could bounce
  ideas off each other. When it came to accounts, however, Phoenix had a
  way of messing things up. He talked too much. He was simply not
  discreet.

  While Electron considered his decision, his fingers kept working at
  the keyboard. He typed quickly, mailing copies of the Zardoz bundle to
  two hacked student accounts at Melbourne University. With the
  passwords to both accounts, he could get in whenever he wanted and he
  wasn't taking any chances with this precious cargo. Two accounts were
  safer than one--a main account and a back-up in case someone changed
  the password on the first one.

  Then, as the DITMELA machine was still in the process of mailing the
  Zardoz bundle off to the back-up sites, Electron's connection suddenly
  died.

  The CSIRO machine had hung up on him, which probably meant one thing.
  The admin had logged him off. Electron was furious. What the hell was
  a system administrator doing on a computer at this hour? The admin was
  supposed to be asleep! That's why Electron logged on when he did. He
  had seen Zardoz on the CSIRO machine the day before but he had been so
  patient refusing to touch it because the risk of discovery was too
  great. And now this.

  The only hope was to call Phoenix and get him to login to the
  Melbourne Uni accounts to see if the mail had arrived safely. If so,
  he could download it with his faster modem before the CSIRO admin had
  time to warn the Melbourne Uni admin, who would change the passwords.

  Electron got on the phone to Phoenix. They had long since stopped
  caring about what time of day they rang each other. 10 p.m. 2 a.m.
  4.15 a.m. 6.45 a.m.

  `Yeah.' Electron greeted Phoenix in the usual way.

  `Yup,' Phoenix responded.

  Electron told Phoenix what happened and gave him the two accounts at
  Melbourne University where he had mailed the Zardoz bundle.

  Phoenix hung up and rang back a few minutes later. Both accounts were
  dead. Someone from Melbourne University had gone in and changed the
  passwords within 30 minutes of Electron being booted off the CSIRO
  computer. Both hackers were disturbed by the implications of this
  event. It meant someone--in fact probably several people--were onto
  them. But their desperation to get Zardoz overcame their fear.

  Electron had one more account on the CSIRO computer. He didn't want to
  give it to Phoenix, but he didn't have a choice. Still, the whole
  venture was filled with uncertainty. Who knew if the Zardoz bundle was
  still there? Surely an admin who bothered to kick Electron out would
  move Zardoz to somewhere inaccessible. There was, however, a single
  chance.

  When Electron read off the password and username, he told Phoenix to
  copy the Zardoz bundle to a few other machines on the Internet instead
  of trying to download it to his own computer. It would be much
  quicker, and the CSIRO admin wouldn't dare break into someone else's
  computers to delete the copied file. Choosing overseas sites would
  make it even harder for the admin to reach the admins of those
  machines and warn them in time. Then, once Zardoz was safely tucked
  away in a few back-up sites, Phoenix could download it over the
  Internet from one of those with less risk of being booted off the
  machine halfway through the process.

  Sitting at his home in Kelvin Grove, Thornbury, just two suburbs north
  of the CSIRO machine, Ian Mathieson watched the hacker break into his
  computer again. Awoken by a phone call at 2.30 a.m. telling him there
  was a suspected hacker in his computer, Mathieson immediately logged
  in to his work system, DITMELA, via his home computer and modem. The
  call, from David Hornsby of the Melbourne University Computer Science
  Department, was no false alarm.

  After watching the unknown hacker, who had logged in through a
  Melbourne University machine terminal server, for about twenty
  minutes, Mathieson booted the hacker off his system. Afterwards he
  noticed that the DITMELA computer was still trying to execute a
  command issued by the hacker. He looked a little closer, and
  discovered DITMELA was trying to deliver mail to two Melbourne
  University accounts.

  The mail, however, hadn't been completely delivered. It was still
  sitting in the mail spool, a temporary holding pen for undelivered
  mail. Curious as to what the hacker would want so much from his
  system, Mathieson moved the file into a subdirectory to look at it. He
  was horrified to find the entire Zardoz archive, and he knew exactly
  what it meant. These were no ordinary hackers--they were precision
  fliers. Fortunately, Mathieson
  consoled himself, he had stopped the mail before it had been sent out
  and secured it.

  Unfortunately, however, Mathieson had missed Electron's original
  file--the bundle of Zardoz copies. When Electron had mailed the file,
  he had copied it, leaving the original intact. They were still sitting
  on DITMELA under the unassuming name .t. Mailing a file didn't delete
  it--the computer only sent a copy of the original. Mathieson was an
  intelligent man, a medical doctor with a master's degree in computer
  science, but he had forgotten to check the temporary directory, one of
  the few places a hacker could store files on a Unix system if he
  didn't have root privileges.

  At exactly 3.30 a.m. Phoenix logged into DITMELA from the University
  of Texas. He quickly looked in the temporary directory. The .t file
  was there, just as Electron had said it would be. The hacker quickly
  began transferring it back to the University of Texas.

  He was feeling good. It looked like the Australians were going to get
  the entire Zardoz collection after all. Everything was going extremely
  well--until the transfer suddenly died. Phoenix had forgotten to check
  that there was enough disk space available on the University of Texas
  account to download the sizeable Zardoz bundle. Now, as he was logged
  into a very hot machine, a machine where the admin could well be
  watching his every move, he discovered there wasn't enough room for
  the Zardoz file.

  Aware that every second spent on-line to DITMELA posed a serious risk,
  Phoenix logged off the CSIRO machine immediately. Still connected to
  the Texas computer, he fiddled around with it, deleting other files
  and making enough room to pull the whole 500 k Zardoz file across.

  At 3.37 a.m. Phoenix entered DITMELA again. This time, he vowed,
  nothing would go wrong. He started up the file transfer and waited.
  Less than ten minutes later, he logged off the CSIRO computer and
  nervously checked the University of Texas system. It was there.
  Zardoz, in all its glory. And it was his! Phoenix was ecstatic.

  He wasn't done yet and there was no time for complacency. Swiftly, he
  began compressing and encrypting Zardoz. He
  compressed it because a smaller file was less obvious on the Texas
  machine and was faster to send to a back-up machine. He encrypted it
  so no-one nosing around the file would be able to see what was in it.
  He wasn't just worried about system admins; the Texas system was
  riddled with hackers, in part because it was home to his friend,
  Legion of Doom hacker Erik Bloodaxe, a
  student at the university.

  After Phoenix was satisfied Zardoz was safe, he rang Electron just
  before 4 a.m. with the good news. By 8.15, Phoenix had downloaded
  Zardoz from the Texas computer onto his own machine. By 1.15 p.m.,
  Electron had downloaded it from Phoenix's machine to his own.

                                   [ ]

  Zardoz had been a difficult conquest, but Deszip would prove to be
  even more so. While dozens of security experts possessed complete
  Zardoz archives, far fewer people had Deszip. And, at least
  officially, all of them were in the US.

  The US government banned the export of cryptography algorithms. To
  send a copy of Deszip, or DES or indeed any other encryption program
  outside the US was a crime. It was illegal because the US State
  Department's Office of Defense Trade Controls considered any
  encryption program to be a weapon. ITAR, the International Traffic in
  Arms Regulations stemming from the US Arms Export Control Act 1977,
  restricted publication of and trad in `defense articles'. It didn't
  matter whether you flew to Europe with a disk in your pocket, or you
  sent the material over the Internet. If you violated ITAR, you faced
  the prospect of prison.

  Occasionally, American computer programmers discreetly slipped copies
  of encryption programs to specialists in their field outside the US.
  Once the program was outside the US, it was fair game--there was
  nothing US authorities could do about someone in Norway sending Deszip
  to a colleague in Australia. But even so, the comp-sec and
  cryptography communities outside the US still held programs such as
  Deszip very tightly within their own inner sanctums.

  All of which meant that Electron and Phoenix would almost certainly
  have to target a site in the US. Electron continued to compile a hit
  list, based on the Zardoz mailing list, which he gave to Phoenix. The
  two hackers then began searching the growing Internet for computers
  belonging to the targets.

  It was an impressive hit list. Matthew Bishop, author of Deszip.
  Russell Brand, of the Lawrence Livermore National Labs, a research
  laboratory funded by the US Department of Energy. Dan Farmer, an
  author of the computer program COPS, a popular security-testing
  program which included a password cracking program. There were others.
  And, at the top of the list, Eugene Spafford, or Spaf, as the hackers
  called him.

  By 1990, the computer underground viewed Spaf not just as security
  guru, but also as an anti-hacker zealot. Spaf was based at Purdue
  University, a hotbed of computer security experts. Bishop had earned
  his PhD at Purdue and Dan Farmer was still there. Spaf was also one of
  the founders of usenet, the Internet newsgroups service. While working
  as a computer scientist at the university, he had made a name for
  himself by, among other things, writing a technical analysis of the
  RTM worm. The worm, authored by Cornell University student Robert T.
  Morris Jr in 1988, proved to be a boon for Spaf's career.

  Prior to the RTM worm, Spaf had been working in software engineering.
  After the worm, he became a computer ethicist and a very public
  spokesman for the conservatives in the computer security industry.
  Spaf went on tour across the US, lecturing the public and the media on
  worms, viruses and the ethics of hacking. During the Morris case,
  hacking became a hot topic in the United States, and Spaf fed the
  flames. When Judge Howard G. Munson refused to sentence Morris to
  prison, instead ordering him to complete 400 hours community service,
  pay a $10000 fine and submit to three years probation, Spaf publicly
  railed against the decision. The media reported that he had called on
  the computer industry to boycott any company which chose to employ
  Robert T. Morris Jr.

  Targeting Spaf therefore served a dual purpose for the Australian
  hackers. He was undoubtedly a repository of treasures such as Deszip,
  and he was also a tall poppy.

  One night, Electron and Phoenix decided to break into Spaf's machine
  at Purdue to steal a copy of Deszip. Phoenix would do the actual
  hacking, since he had the fast modem, but he would talk to Electron
  simultaneously on the other phone line. Electron would guide him at
  each step. That way, when Phoenix hit a snag, he wouldn't have to
  retreat to regroup and risk discovery.

  Both hackers had managed to break into another computer at Purdue,
  called Medusa. But Spaf had a separate machine, Uther, which was
  connected to Medusa.

  Phoenix poked and prodded at Uther, trying to open a hole wide enough
  for him to crawl through. At Electron's suggestion, he tried to use
  the CHFN bug. The CHFN command lets users change the information
  provided--such as their name, work address or office phone
  number--when someone `fingers' their accounts. The bug had appeared in
  one of the Zardoz files and Phoenix and Electron had already used it
  to break into several other machines.

  Electron wanted to use the CHFN bug because, if the attack was
  successful, Phoenix would be able to make a root account for himself
  on Spaf's machine. That would be the ultimate slap in the face to a
  high-profile computer security guru.

  But things weren't going well for Phoenix. The frustrated Australian
  hacker kept telling Electron that the bug should work, but it
  wouldn't, and he couldn't figure out why. The problem, Electron
  finally concluded, was that Spaf's machine was a Sequent. The CHFN bug
  depended on a particular Unix password file structure, but Sequents
  used a different structure. It didn't help that Phoenix didn't know
  that much about Sequents--they were one of Gandalf's specialties.

  After a few exasperating hours struggling to make the CHFN bug work,
  Phoenix gave up and turned to another security flaw suggested by
  Electron: the FTP bug. Phoenix ran through the bug in his mind.
  Normally, someone used FTP, or file transfer protocol, to transfer
  files over a network, such as the Internet, from one computer to
  another. FTPing to another machine was a bit like telnetting, but the
  user didn't need a password to login and the commands he could execute
  once in the other computer were usually very limited.

  If it worked, the FTP bug would allow Phoenix to slip in an extra
  command during the FTP login process. That command would force Spaf's
  machine to allow Phoenix to login as anyone he wanted--and what he
  wanted was to login as someone who had root privileges. The `root'
  account might be a little obvious
  if anyone was watching, and it didn't always have remote
  access anyway. So he chose `daemon', another commonly root-privileged
  account, instead.

  It was a shot in the dark. Phoenix was fairly sure Spaf would have
  secured his machine against such an obvious attack, but Electron urged
  him to give it a try anyway. The FTP bug had been announced throughout
  the computer security community long ago, appearing in an early issue
  of Zardoz. Phoenix hesitated, but he had run out of ideas, and time.

  Phoenix typed:

  FTP -i uther.purdue.edu

  quote user anonymous

  quote cd ~daemon

  quote pass anything

  The few seconds it took for his commands to course from his suburban
  home in Melbourne and race deep into the Midwest felt like a lifetime.
  He wanted Spaf's machine, wanted Deszip, and wanted this attack to
  work. If he could just get Deszip, he felt the Australians would be
  unstoppable.

  Spaf's machine opened its door as politely as a doorman at the Ritz
  Carlton. Phoenix smiled at his computer. He was in.

  It was like being in Aladdin's cave. Phoenix just sat there, stunned
  at the bounty which lay before him. It was his, all his. Spaf had
  megabytes of security files in his directories. Source code for the
  RTM Internet worm. Source code for the WANK worm. Everything. Phoenix
  wanted to plunge his hands in each treasure chest and scoop out greedy
  handfuls, but he resisted the urge. He had a more important--a more
  strategic--mission to accomplish first.

  He prowled through the directories, hunting everywhere for Deszip.
  Like a burglar scouring the house for the family silver, he pawed
  through directory after directory. Surely, Spaf had to have Deszip. If
  anyone besides Matthew Bishop was going to have a copy, he would. And
  finally, there it was. Deszip. Just waiting for Phoenix.

  Then Phoenix noticed something else. Another file. Curiosity got the
  better of him and he zoomed in to have a quick look. This one
  contained a passphrase--the passphrase. The phrase the Australians
  needed to decrypt the original copy of Deszip they had stolen from the
  Bear computer at Dartmouth three months earlier. Phoenix couldn't
  believe the passphrase. It was so simple, so obvious. But he caught
  himself. This was no time to cry over spilled milk. He had to get
  Deszip out of the machine quickly, before anyone noticed he was there.

  But as Phoenix began typing in commands, his screen appeared to freeze
  up. He checked. It wasn't his computer. Something was wrong at the
  other end. He was still logged into Spaf's machine. The connection
  hadn't been killed. But when he typed commands, the computer in West
  Lafayette, Indiana, didn't respond. Spaf's machine just sat there,
  deaf and dumb.

  Phoenix stared at his computer, trying to figure out what was
  happening. Why wouldn't Spaf's machine answer? There were two
  possibilities. Either the network--the connection between the first
  machine he penetrated at Purdue and Spaf's own machine--had gone down
  accidentally. Or someone had pulled the plug.

  Why pull the plug? If they knew he was in there, why not just kick him
  out of the machine? Better still, why not kick him out of Purdue all
  together? Maybe they wanted to keep him on-line to trace which machine
  he was coming from, eventually winding backwards from system to
  system, following his trail.

  Phoenix was in a dilemma. If the connection had crashed by accident,
  he wanted to stay put and wait for the network to come back up again.
  The FTP hole in Spaf's machine was an incredible piece of luck.
  Chances were that someone would find
  evidence of his break-in after he left and plug it. On the
  other hand, he didn't want the people at Purdue tracing his
  connections.

  He waited a few more minutes, trying to hedge his bets. Feeling nervy
  as the extended silence emanating from Spaf's machine wore on, Phoenix
  decided to jump. With the lost treasures of Aladdin's cave fading in
  his mind's eye like a mirage, Phoenix killed his connection.

  Electron and Phoenix talked on the phone, moodily contemplating their
  losses. It was a blow, but Electron reminded himself that getting
  Deszip was never going to be easy. At least they had the passphrase to
  unlock the encrypted Deszip taken from Dartmouth.

  Soon, however, they discovered a problem. There had to be one,
  Electron thought. They couldn't just have something go off without a
  hitch for a change. That would be too easy. The problem this time was
  that when they went searching for their copy from Dartmouth, which had
  been stored several months before, it had vanished. The Dartmouth
  system admin must have deleted it.

  It was maddening. The frustration was unbearable. Each time they had
  Deszip just within their grasp, it slipped away and
  disappeared. Yet each time they lost their grip, it only deepened
  their desire to capture the elusive prize. Deszip was fast becoming an
  all-consuming obsession for Phoenix and Electron.

  Their one last hope was the second copy of the encrypted Dartmouth
  Deszip file they had given to Gandalf, but that hope did not burn
  brightly. After all, if the Australians' copy had been deleted, there
  was every likelihood that the Brit's copy had suffered the same fate.
  Gandalf's copy hadn't been stored on his own computer. He had put it
  on some dark corner of a machine in Britain.

  Electron and Phoenix logged onto Altos and waited for Pad or Gandalf
  to show up.

  Phoenix typed .s for a list of who was on-line. He saw that Pad was
  logged on:

  No Chan User

  0 Guest

  1 Phoenix

  2 Pad

  Guest 0 was Electron. He usually logged on as Guest, partly because he
  was so paranoid about being busted and because he believed operators
  monitored his connections if they knew it was Electron logging in.
  They seemed to take great joy in sniffing the password to his own
  account on Altos. Then, when he had logged off, they logged in and
  changed his password so he couldn't get back under the name Electron.
  Nothing was more annoying. Phoenix typed, `Hey, Pad. How's it going?'

  Pad wrote back, `Feeny! Heya.'

  `Do you and Gand still have that encrypted copy of Deszip we gave you
  a few months ago?'

  `Encrypted copy ... hmm. Thinking.' Pad paused. He and Gandalf hacked
  dozens of computer systems regularly. Sometimes it was difficult to
  recall just where they had stored things.

  `Yeah, I know what you mean. I don't know. It was on a system on
  JANET,' Pad said. Britain's Joint Academic Network was the equivalent
  of Australia's AARNET, an early Internet based largely on a backbone
  of universities and research centres.

  `I can't remember which system it was on,' Pad continued.

  If the Brits couldn't recall the institution, let alone the machine
  where they had hidden Deszip, it was time to give up
  all hope. JANET comprised hundreds, maybe thousands, of machines. It
  was far too big a place to randomly hunt around for a file which
  Gandalf would no doubt have tried to disguise in the first place.

  `But the file was encrypted, and you didn't have the password,' Pad
  wrote. `How come you want it?'

  `Because we found the password. <smile>' That was the
  etiquette on Altos. If you wanted to suggest an action, you put it in
  < >.

  `Gr8!' Pad answered.

  That was Pad and Gandalf's on-line style. The number eight was the
  British hackers' hallmark, since their group was called 8lgm, and they
  used it instead of letters. Words like `great', `mate' and `later'
  became `gr8', `m8' and `l8r'.

  When people logged into Altos they could name a `place' of origin for
  others to see. Of course, if you were logging from a country which had
  laws against hacking, you wouldn't give your real country. You'd just
  pick a place at random. Some people logged in from places like
  Argentina, or Israel. Pad and Gandalf logged in from 8lgm.

  `I'll try to find Gandalf and ask him if he knows where we stashed the
  copy,' Pad wrote to Phoenix.

  `Good. Thanks.'

  While Phoenix and Electron waited on-line for Pad to return, Par
  showed up on-line and joined their conversation. Par didn't know who
  Guest 0 was, but Guest certainly knew who Par was. Time hadn't healed
  Electron's old wounds when it came to Par. Electron didn't really
  admit to himself the bad blood was still there over Theorem. He told
  himself that he couldn't be bothered with Par, that Par was just a
  phreaker, not a real hacker, that Par was lame.

  Phoenix typed, `Hey, Par. How's it going?'

  `Feenster!' Par replied. `What's happening?'

  `Lots and lots.'

  Par turned his attention to the mystery Guest 0. He didn't want to
  discuss private things with someone who might be a security guy
  hanging around the chat channel like a bad smell.

  `Guest, do you have a name?' Par asked.

  `Yeah. It's "Guest--#0".'

  `You got any other names?'

  There was a long pause.

  Electron typed, `I guess not.'

  `Any other names besides dickhead that is?'

  Electron sent a `whisper'--a private message--to Phoenix telling him
  not to tell Par his identity.

  `OK. Sure,' Phoenix whispered back. To show he would play along with
  whatever Electron had in mind, Phoenix added a sideways smiley face at
  the end: `:-)'.

  Par didn't know Electron and Phoenix were whispering to each other. He
  was still waiting to find out the identity of Guest. `Well, speak up,
  Guest. Figured out who you are yet?'

  Electron knew Par was on the run at the time. Indeed, Par had been on
  the run from the US Secret Service for more than six months by the
  beginning of 1990. He also knew Par was highly paranoid.

  Electron took aim and fired.

  `Hey, Par. You should eat more. You're looking underFED these days.'

  Par was suddenly silent. Electron sat at his computer, quietly
  laughing to himself, halfway across the world from Par. Well, he
  thought, that ought to freak out Par a bit. Nothing like a subtle hint
  at law enforcement to drive him nuts.

  `Did you see THAT?' Par whispered to Phoenix. `UnderFED. What did he
  mean?'

  `I dunno,' Phoenix whispered back. Then he forwarded a copy of Par's
  private message on to Electron. He knew it would make him laugh.

  Par was clearly worried. `Who the fuck are you?' he whispered to
  Electron but Guest 0 didn't answer.

  With growing anxiety, Par whispered to Phoenix, `Who IS this guy? Do
  you know him?'

  Phoenix didn't answer.

  `Because, well, it's weird. Didn't you see? FED was in caps. What the
  fuck does that mean? Is he a fed? Is he trying to give me a message
  from the feds?'

  Sitting at his terminal, on the other side of Melbourne from Electron,
  Phoenix was also laughing. He liked Par, but the American was an easy
  target. Par had become so paranoid since he went on the run across the
  US, and Electron knew just the right buttons to push.

  `I don't know,' Phoenix whispered to Par. `I'm sure he's not really a
  fed.'

  `Well, I am wondering about that comment,' Par whispered back.
  `UnderFED. Hmm. Maybe he knows something. Maybe it's some kind of
  warning. Shit, maybe the Secret Service knows where I am.'

  `You think?' Phoenix whispered to Par. `It might be a warning of some
  kind?' It was too funny.

  `Can you check his originating NUA?' Par wanted to know what network
  address the mystery guest was coming from. It might give him a clue as
  to the stranger's identity.

  Phoenix could barely contain himself. He kept forwarding the private
  messages on to Electron. Par was clearly becoming more agitated.

  `I wish he would just tell me WHO he was,' Par whispered. `Shit. It is
  very fucking weird. UnderFED. It's spinning me out.'

  Then Par logged off.

  Electron typed, `I guess Par had to go. <Grin>' Then, chuckling to
  himself, he waited for news on Gandalf's Deszip copy.

  If Pad and Gandalf hadn't kept their copy of Deszip, the Australians
  would be back to square one, beginning with a hunt for a system which
  even had Deszip. It was a daunting task and by the time Pad and
  Gandalf finally logged back into Altos, Phoenix and Electron had
  become quite anxious.

  `How did you go?' Phoenix asked. `Do you still have Deszip?'

  `Well, at first I thought I had forgotten which system I left it on
  ...'

  Electron jumped in, `And then?'

  `Then I remembered.'

  `Good news?' Phoenix exclaimed.

  `Well, no. Not exactly,' Gandalf said. `The account is dead.'

  Electron felt like someone had thrown a bucket of cold water on him.
  `Dead? Dead how?' he asked.

  `Dead like someone changed the password. Not sure why. I'll have to
  re-hack the system to get to the file.'

  `Fuck, this Deszip is frustrating,' Electron wrote.

  `This is getting ridiculous,' Phoenix added.

  `I don't even know if the copy is still in there,' Gandalf replied. `I
  hid it, but who knows? Been a few months. Admins might have deleted
  it.'

  `You want some help hacking the system again, Gand?' Phoenix asked.

  `Nah, It'll be easy. It's a Sequent. Just have to hang around until
  the ops go home.'

  If an op was logged on and saw Gandalf hunting around, he or she might
  kick Gandalf off and investigate the file which so interested the
  hacker. Then they would lose Deszip all over again.

  `I hope we get it,' Pad chipped in. `Would be gr8!'

  `Gr8 indeed. Feen, you've got the key to the encryption?' Gandalf
  asked.

  `Yeah.'

  `How many characters is it?' It was Gandalf's subtle way of asking for
  the key itself.

  Phoenix wasn't sure what to do. He wanted to give the British hackers
  the key, but he was torn. He needed Pad and Gandalf's help to get the
  copy of Deszip, if it was still around. But he knew Electron was
  watching the conversation, and Electron was always so paranoid. He
  disliked giving out any information, let alone giving it over Altos,
  where the conversations were possibly logged by security people.

  `Should I give him the key?' Phoenix whispered to Electron.

  Gandalf was waiting. To fend him off, Phoenix said, `It's 9 chars.'
  Chars was short for characters. On Altos the rule was to abbreviate
  where ever possible.

  `What is the first char?'

  `Yeah. Tell him,' Electron whispered to Phoenix.

  `Well, the key is ...'

  `You're going to spew when you find out, Gand,' Electron interrupted.

  `Yes ... go on,' Gandalf said. `I am listening.'

  `You won't believe it. <spew spew spew> The key is ... Dartmouth.'

  `WHAT???? WHAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' Gandalf exclaimed.
  `No!!! IT's NOT TRUE! Bollox! You are KIDDING?'

  The British hacker was thumping himself on the head. The name of the
  frigging university! What a stupid password!

  Phoenix gave an on-line chuckle. `Hehe. Yeah. So hard to guess. We
  could have had Deszip for all these months ...'

  `Jesus. I hope it's still on that JANET system,' Gandalf said. Now
  that he actually had the password, finding the file became even more
  urgent.

  `Pray. Pray. Pray,' Phoenix said. `Yeah, you should have seen the
  licence text on Deszip--it was by NASA.'

  `You've seen it? You saw Deszip's source code?'

  `No,' Phoenix answered. `When I went back to the BEAR machine to check
  if Deszip was still there, the program was gone. But the licence
  agreement and other stuff was there. Should have read the licence ...
  truly amazing. It basically went on and on about how the people who
  wrote it didn't want people like us to get a hold of it. Hehe.'

  Electron was growing impatient. `Yeah. So, Gand, when you gonna go
  check that JANET system?'

  `Now. Fingers crossed, m8! See ya l8r ...' Then he was gone.

  The waiting was driving Electron nuts. He kept thinking about Deszip,
  about how he could have had it months and months ago. That program was
  such a prize. He was salivating at the thought of getting it after all
  this time pursuing it around the globe, chasing its trail from system
  to system, never quite getting close enough to grab it.

  When Gandalf showed up again, Pad, Phoenix and Electron were all over
  him in an instant.

  `WE FUCKING GOT IT GUYS!!!!!' Gandalf exclaimed.

  `Good job m8!' Pad said.

  `YES!' Electron added. `Have you decrypted it yet?'

  `Not yet. Crypt isn't on that machine. We can either copy Crypt onto
  that machine or copy the file onto another computer which already has
  Crypt on it,' Gandalf said.

  `Let's move it. Quick ... quick ... this damn thing has a habit of
  disappearing,' Electron said.

  `Yeah, this is the last copy ... the only one I got.'

  `OK. Think ... think ... where can we copy it to?' Electron said.

  `Texas!' Gandalf wanted to copy it to a computer at the University of
  Texas at Austin, home of the LOD hacker Erik Bloodaxe.

  Irrepressible, Gandalf came on like a steam roller if he liked
  you--and cut you down in a flash if he didn't. His rough-and-tumble
  working-class humour particularly appealed to Electron. Gandalf seemed
  able to zero in on the things which worried you most--something so
  deep or serious it was often unsaid. Then he would blurt it out in
  such crass, blunt terms you couldn't help laughing. It was his way of
  being in your face in the friendliest possible manner.

  `Yeah! Blame everything on Erik!' Phoenix joked. `No, seriously. That
  place is crawling with security now, all after Erik. They are into
  everything.'

  Phoenix had heard all about the security purge at the university from
  Erik. The Australian called Erik all the time, mostly by charging the
  calls to stolen AT&T cards. Erik hadn't been raided by the Secret
  Service yet, but he had been tipped off and was expecting a visit any
  day.

  `It probably won't decrypt anyway,' Electron said.

  `Oh, phuck off!' Gandalf shot back. `Come on! I need a site NOW!'

  `Thinking ...' Phoenix said. `Gotta be some place with room--how big
  is it?'

  `It's 900 k compressed--probably 3 meg when we uncompress it. Come on,
  hurry up! How about a university?'

  `Princeton, Yale could do either of those.' Electron suggested. `What
  about MIT--you hacked an account there recently, Gand?'

  `No.'

  All four hackers racked their minds for a safe haven. The world was
  their oyster, as British and Australian hackers held a real-time
  conversation in Germany about whether to hide their treasure in
  Austin, Texas; Princeton, New Jersey; Boston, Massachusetts; or New
  Haven, Connecticut.

  `We only need somewhere to stash it for a little while, until we can
  download it,' Gandalf said. `Got to be some machine where we've got
  root. And it's got to have anon FTP.'

  Anon FTP, or anonymous file transfer protocol, on a host machine would
  allow Gandalf to shoot the file from his JANET machine across the
  Internet into the host. Most importantly, Gandalf could do so without
  an account on the target machine. He could simply login as
  `anonymous', a method of access which had more limitations than simply
  logging in with a normal account. He would, however, still be able to
  upload the file.

  `OK. OK, I have an idea,' Phoenix said. `Lemme go check
  it out.'

  Phoenix dropped out of Altos and connected to the University of Texas.
  The physical location of a site didn't matter. His head was spinning
  and it was the only place he could think of. But he didn't try to
  connect to Happy, the machine he often used which Erik had told him
  about. He headed to one of the other university computers, called
  Walt.

  The network was overloaded. Phoenix was left dangling, waiting to
  connect for minutes on end. The lines were congested. He logged back
  into Altos and told Pad and Electron. Gandalf was nowhere to be seen.

  `Damn,' Electron said. Then, `OK, I might have an idea.'

  `No, wait!' Phoenix cut in. `I just thought of a site! And I have root
  too! But it's on NASA ...'

  `Oh that's OK. I'm sure they won't mind a bit. <grin>'

  `I'll go make sure it's still OK. Back in a bit,' Phoenix typed.

  Phoenix jumped out of Altos and headed toward NASA. He telnetted into
  a NASA computer called CSAB at the Langley Research Center in Hampton,
  Virginia. He had been in and out of NASA quite a few times and had
  recently made himself a root account on CSAB. First, he had to check
  the account was still alive, then he had to make sure the system
  administrator wasn't logged in.

  Whizzing past the official warning sign about unauthorised access in
  US government computers on the login screen, Phoenix typed in his user
  name and password.

  It worked. He was in. And he had root privileges.

  He quickly looked around on the system. The administrator was on-line.
  Damn.

  Phoenix fled the NASA computer and sprinted back into Altos. Gandalf
  was there, along with the other two, waiting for him.

  `Well?' Electron asked.

  `OK. All right. The NASA machine will work. It has anon FTP. And I
  still have root. We'll use that.'

  Gandalf jumped in. `Hang on--does it have Crypt?'

  `Argh! Forget to check. I think it must.'

  `Better check it, m8!'

  `Yeah, OK.'

  Phoenix felt exasperated, rushing around trying to find sites that
  worked. He logged out of Altos and coursed his way back into the NASA
  machine. The admin was still logged on, but Phoenix was running out of
  time. He had to find out if the computer had Crypt on it. It did.

  Phoenix rushed back to Altos. `Back again. We're in business.'

  `Yes!' Electron said, but he quickly jumped in with a word of warning.
  `Don't say the exact machine at NASA or the account out loud. Whisper
  it to Gandalf. I think the ops are listening in on my connection.'

  `Well,' Phoenix typed slowly, `there's only one problem. The admin is
  logged on.'

  `Arghhh!' Electron shouted.

  `Just do it,' Pad said. `No time to worry.'

  Phoenix whispered the Internet IP address of the NASA machine to
  Gandalf.

  `OK, m8, I'll anon FTP it to NASA. I'll come back here and tell you
  the new filename. Then you go in and decrypt it and uncompress the
  file. W8 for me here.'

  Ten minutes later, Gandalf returned. `Mission accomplished. The file
  is there!'

  `Now, go go Pheeny!' Electron said.

  `Gand, whisper the filename to me,' Phoenix said.

  `The file's called "d" and it's in the pub directory,' Gandalf
  whispered.

  `OK, folks. Here we go!' Phoenix said as he logged off.

  Phoenix dashed to the NASA computer, logged in and looked for the file
  named `d'. He couldn't find it. He couldn't even find the pub
  directory. He began hunting around the rest of the file system. Where
  was the damn thing?

  Uh oh. Phoenix noticed the system administrator, Sharon Beskenis, was
  still logged in. She was connected from Phoebe, another NASA machine.
  There was only one other user besides himself logged into the CSAB
  machine, someone called Carrie. As if that wasn't bad enough, Phoenix
  realised his username stood out a like a sore thumb. If the admin
  looked at who was on-line she would see herself, Carrie and a user
  called `friend', an account he had created for himself. How many
  legitimate accounts on NASA computers had that name?

  Worse, Phoenix noticed that he had forgotten to cover his login trail.
  `Friend' was telnetting into the NASA computer from the University of
  Texas. No, no, he thought, that would definitely have to go. He
  disconnected from NASA, bounced back to the university and then logged
  in to NASA again. Good grief. Now the damn NASA machine showed two
  people logged in as `friend'. The computer hadn't properly killed his
  previous login. Stress.

  Phoenix tried frantically to clear out his first login by killing its
  process number. The NASA computer responded that there was no such
  process number. Increasingly nervous, Phoenix figured he must have
  typed in the wrong number. Unhinged, he grabbed one of the other
  process numbers and killed that.

  Christ! That was the admin's process number. Phoenix had just
  disconnected Sharon from her own machine. Things were not going well.

  Now he was under serious pressure. He didn't dare logout, because
  Sharon would no doubt find his `friend' account, kill it and close up
  the security hole he had originally used to get in. Even if she didn't
  find Deszip on her own machine, he might not be able to get back in
  again to retrieve it.

  After another frenzied minute hunting around the machine, Phoenix
  finally unearthed Gandalf's copy of Deszip. Now, the moment of truth.

  He tried the passphrase. It worked! All he had to do
  was uncompress Deszip and get it out of there. He typed, `uncompress
  deszip.tar.z', but he didn't like how the NASA computer answered his
  command:

  corrupt input

  Something was wrong, terribly wrong. The file appeared to be partially
  destroyed. It was too painful a possibility to contemplate. Even if
  only a small part of the main Deszip program had been damaged, none of
  it would be useable.

  Rubbing sweat from his palms, Phoenix hoped that maybe the file had
  just been damaged as he attempted to uncompress it. He had kept the
  original, so he went back to that and tried decrypting and
  uncompressing it again. The NASA computer gave him the same ugly
  response. Urgently, he tried yet again, but this time attempted to
  uncompress the file in a different way. Same problem.

  Phoenix was at his wits' end. This was too much. The most he could
  hope was that the file had somehow become corrupted in the transfer
  from Gandalf's JANET machine. He logged out of NASA and returned to
  Altos. The other three were waiting impatiently for him.

  Electron, still logged in as the mystery Guest, leaped in. `Did it
  work?'

  `No. Decrypted OK, but the file was corrupted when I tried to
  decompress it.'

  `Arghhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!' Gandalf exclaimed.

  `Fuckfuckfuck,' Electron wrote. `Doomed to fail.'

  `Sigh Sigh Sigh,' Pad typed.

  Gandalf and Electron quizzed Phoenix in detail about each command he
  had used, but in the end there seemed only one hope. Move a copy of
  the decryption program to the JANET computer in the UK and try
  decrypting and uncompressing Deszip there.

  Phoenix gave Gandalf a copy of Crypt and the British hacker went to
  work on the JANET computer. A little later he rendezvoused on Altos
  again.

  Phoenix was beside himself by this stage. `Gand! Work???'

  `Well, I decrypted it using the program you gave me ...'

  `And And And???' Electron was practically jumping out of his seat at
  his computer.

  `Tried to uncompress it. It was taking a LONG time. Kept
  going--expanded to 8 megabytes.'

  `Oh NO. Bad Bad Bad,' Phoenix moaned. `Should only be 3 meg. If it's
  making a million files, it's fucked.'

  `Christ,' Pad typed. `Too painful.'

  `I got the makefile--licensing agreement text etc., but the Deszip
  program itself was corrupted,' Gandalf concluded.

  `I don't understand what is wrong with it. <Sob>' Phoenix wrote.

  `AgonyAgonyAgony,' Electron groaned. `It'll never never never work.'

  `Can we get a copy anywhere else?' Gandalf asked.

  `That FTP bug has been fixed at Purdue,' Pad answered. `Can't use that
  to get in again.'

  Disappointment permeated the atmosphere on Altos.

  There were, of course, other possible repositories for Deszip. Phoenix
  and Electron had already penetrated a computer at Lawrence Livermore
  National Labs in California. They had procured root on the gamm5
  machine and planned to use it as a launchpad for penetrating security
  expert Russell Brand's computer at LLNL, called Wuthel. They were sure
  Brand had Deszip on his computer.

  It would require a good deal of effort, and possibly another
  roller-coaster ride of desire, expectation and possible
  disappointment. For now, the four hackers resolved to sign off,
  licking their wounds at their defeat in the quest for Deszip.

  `Well, I'm off. See you l8r,' Pad said.

  `Yeah, me too,' Electron added.

  `Yeah, OK. L8r, m8s!' Gandalf said.

  Then, just for fun, he added in typical Gandalf style, `See you in
  jail!'


    _________________________________________________________________

                 Chapter 6 -- Page 1 The New York Times
    _________________________________________________________________


    Read about it
    Just another incredible scene
    There's no doubt about it

  -- from `Read About It', on 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 by Midnight
  Oil

  Pad had an important warning for the Australian hackers: the computer
  security community was closing in on them. It was the end of February
  1990, not long after Phoenix and Electron had captured Zardoz and just
  missed out on Deszip. Pad didn't scream or shout the warning, that
  wasn't his style. But Electron took in the import of the warning loud
  and clear.

  `Feen, they know you did over Spaf's machine,' Pad told Phoenix. `They
  know it's been you in other systems also. They've got your handle.'

  Eugene Spafford was the kind of computer security expert who loses a
  lot of face when a hacker gets into his machine, and a wounded bull is
  a dangerous enemy.

  The security people had been able to connect and link up a series of
  break-ins with the hacker who called himself Phoenix because his style
  was so distinctive. For example, whenever he was creating a root
  shell--root access--for himself, he would always save it in the same
  filename and in the same location on the
  computer. In some instances, he even created accounts called `Phoenix'
  for himself. It was this consistency of style which had made things so
  much easier for admins to trace his movements.

  In his typical understated fashion, Pad suggested a change of style.
  And maybe, he added, it wasn't such a bad idea for the Australians to
  tone down their activities a bit. The undercurrent of the message was
  serious.

  `They said that some security people had contacted Australian law
  enforcement, who were supposed to be "dealing with it",' Pad said.

  `Do they know my real name?' Phoenix asked, worried. Electron was also
  watching this conversation with some concern.

  `Don't know. Got it from Shatter. He's not always reliable,
  but ...'

  Pad was trying to soften the news by playing down Shatter's importance
  as a source. He didn't trust his fellow British hacker but Shatter had
  some good, if mysterious, connections. An enigmatic figure who seemed
  to keep one foot in the computer underworld and the other in the
  upright computer security industry, Shatter leaked information to Pad
  and Gandalf, and occasionally to the Australians.

  While the two British hackers sometimes discounted Shatter's advice,
  they also took the time to talk to him. Once, Electron had intercepted
  email showing Pengo had turned to Shatter for advice about his
  situation after the raid in Germany. With some spare time prior to his
  trial, Pengo asked Shatter whether it was safe to travel to the US on
  a summer holiday in 1989. Shatter asked for Pengo's birthdate and
  other details. Then he returned with an unequivocal answer: Under no
  circumstances was Pengo to travel to the US.

  Subsequently, it was reported that officials in the US Justice
  Department had been examining ways to secretly coax Pengo onto
  American soil, where they could seize him. They would then force him
  to face trial in their own courts.

  Had Shatter known this? Or had he just told Pengo not to go to the US
  because it was good commonsense? No-one was quite sure, but people
  took note of what Shatter told them.

  `Shatter definitely got the info right about Spaf's machine. 100%
  right,' Pad continued. `He knew exactly how you hacked it. I couldn't
  believe it. Be careful if you're still hacking m8, especially on the
  Inet.' The `Inet' was shorthand for the Internet.

  The Altos hackers went quiet.

  `It's not just you,' Pad tried to reassure the Australians. `Two
  security people from the US are coming to the UK to try and find out
  something about someone named Gandalf. Oh, and Gand's mate, who might
  be called Patrick.'

  Pad had indeed based his handle on the name Patrick, or Paddy, but
  that wasn't his real name. No intelligent hacker would use his real
  name for his handle. Paddy was the name of one of his favourite
  university lecturers, an Irishman who laughed a good deal. Like Par's
  name, Pad's handle had coincidentally echoed a second meaning when the
  British hacker moved into exploring X.25 networks. An X.25 PAD is a
  packet assembler disassembler, the interface between the X.25 network
  and a modem or terminal server. Similarly, Gandalf, while being first
  and foremost the wizard from The Lord of The Rings, also happened to
  be a terminal server brand name.

  Despite the gravity of the news that the security community was
  closing the net around them, none of the hackers lost their wicked
  sense of humour.

  `You know,' Pad went on, `Spaf was out of the country when his machine
  got hacked.'

  `Was he? Where?' asked Gandalf, who had just joined the conversation.

  `In Europe.'

  Electron couldn't resist. `Where was Spaf, Gandalf asks as he hears a
  knock on his door ...'

  `Haha,' Gandalf laughed.

  `<knock> <knock>' Electron went on, hamming it up.

  `Oh! Hello there, Mr Spafford,' Gandalf typed, playing along.

  `Hello, I'm Gene and I'm mean!'

  Alone in their separate homes on different corners of the globe, the
  four hackers chuckled to themselves.

  `Hello, and is this the man called Patrick?' Pad jumped in.

  `Well, Mr Spafford, it seems you're a right fucking idiot for not
  patching your FTP!' Gandalf proclaimed.

  `Not to mention the CHFN bug--saved by a Sequent! Or you'd be very
  fucking embarrassed,' Phoenix added.

  Phoenix was laughing too, but he was a little nervous about Pad's
  warning and he turned the conversation back to a serious note.

  `So, Pad, what else did Shatter tell you?' Phoenix asked
  anxiously.

  `Not much. Except that some of the security investigations might be
  partly because of UCB.'

  UCB was the University of California at Berkeley. Phoenix had been
  visiting machines at both Berkeley and LLNL so much recently that the
  admins seemed to have not only noticed him, but they had pinpointed
  his handle. One day he had telnetted into dewey.soe.berkeley.edu--the
  Dewey machine as it was known--and had been startled to find the
  following message of the day staring him in the face:

  Phoenix,

  Get out of Dewey NOW!

  Also, do not use any of the `soe' machines.

  Thank you,

  Daniel Berger

  Phoenix did a double take when he saw this public warning. Having been
  in and out of the system so many times, he just zoomed past the words
  on the login screen. Then, in a delayed reaction, he realised the
  login message was addressed to him.

  Ignoring the warning, he proceeded to get root on the Berkeley machine
  and look through Berger's files. Then he sat back, thinking about the
  best way to deal with the problem. Finally, he decided to send the
  admin a note saying he was leaving the system for good.

  Within days, Phoenix was back in the Dewey machine, weaving in and out
  of it as if nothing had happened. After all, he had broken into the
  system, and managed to get root through his own wit. He had earned the
  right to be in the computer. He might send the admin a note to put him
  at ease, but Phoenix wasn't going to give up accessing Berkeley's
  computers just because it upset Daniel Berger.

  `See,' Pad continued, `I think the UCB people kept stuff on their
  systems that wasn't supposed to be there. Secret things.'

  Classified military material wasn't supposed to be stored
  on non-classified network computers. However, Pad guessed that
  sometimes researchers broke rules and took short cuts because they
  were busy thinking about their research and not the security
  implications.

  `Some of the stuff might have been illegal,' Pad told his captive
  audience. `And then they find out some of you guys have been in there
  ...'

  `Shit,' Phoenix said.

  `So, well, if it APPEARED like someone was inside trying to get at
  those secrets ...' Pad paused. `Then you can guess what happened. It
  seems they really want to get whoever was inside their machines.'

  There was momentary silence while the other hackers digested all that
  Pad had told them. As a personality on Altos, Pad remained ever so
  slightly withdrawn from the other hackers, even the Australians whom
  he considered mates. This reserved quality gave his warning a certain
  sobriety, which seeped into the very fabric of Altos that day.

  Eventually, Electron responded to Pad's warning by typing a comment
  directed at Phoenix: `I told you talking to security guys is nothing
  but trouble.'

  It irritated Electron more and more that Phoenix felt compelled to
  talk to white hats in the security industry. In Electron's view,
  drawing attention to yourself was just a bad idea all around and he
  was increasingly annoyed at watching Phoenix feed his ego. He had made
  veiled references to Phoenix's bragging on Altos many times, saying
  things like `I wish people wouldn't talk to security guys'.

  Phoenix responded to Electron on-line somewhat piously. `Well, I will
  never talk to security guys seriously again.'

  Electron had heard it all before. It was like listening to an
  alcoholic swear he would never touch another drink. Bidding the others
  goodbye, Electron logged off. He didn't care to listen to Phoenix any
  more.

  Others did, however. Hundreds of kilometres away, in a special room
  secreted away inside a bland building in Canberra, Sergeant Michael
  Costello and Constable William Apro had been methodically capturing
  each and every electronic boast as it poured from Phoenix's phone. The
  two officers recorded the data transmissions passing in and out of his
  computer. They then played this recording into their own modem and
  computer and created a text file they could save and use as evidence
  in court.

  Both police officers had travelled north from Melbourne, where they
  worked with the AFP's Computer Crime Unit. Settling into their
  temporary desks with their PC and laptop, the officers began their
  secret eavesdropping work on 1 February 1990.

  It was the first time the AFP had done a datatap. They were happy to
  bide their time, to methodically record Phoenix hacking into Berkeley,
  into Texas, into NASA, into a dozen computers around the world. The
  phone tap warrant was good for 60 days, which was more than enough
  time to secrete away a mountain of damning evidence against the
  egotistical Realm hacker. Time was on their side.

  The officers worked the Operation Dabble job in shifts. Constable Apro
  arrived at the Telecommunications Intelligence Branch of the AFP at 8
  p.m. Precisely ten hours later, at 6 the next morning, Sergeant
  Costello relieved Apro, who knocked off for a good sleep. Apro
  returned again at 8 p.m. to begin the night shift.

  They were there all the time. Twenty-four hours a day. Seven days a
  week. Waiting and listening.

  It was too funny. Erik Bloodaxe in Austin, Texas, couldn't stop
  laughing. In Melbourne, Phoenix's side hurt from laughing so much.

  Phoenix loved to talk on the phone. He often called Erik, sometimes
  every day, and they spoke for ages. Phoenix didn't worry about cost;
  he wasn't paying for it. The call would appear on some poor sod's bill
  and he could sort it out with the phone company.

  Sometimes Erik worried a little about whether Phoenix wasn't going to
  get himself in a jam making all these international calls. Not that he
  didn't like talking to the Australian; it was a hoot. Still, the
  concern sat there, unsettled, in the back of his mind. A few times he
  asked Phoenix about it.

  `No prob. Hey, AT&T isn't an Australian company,' Phoenix would say.
  `They can't do anything to me.' And Erik had let it rest at that.

  For his part, Erik didn't dare call Phoenix, especially not since his
  little visit from the US Secret Service. On 1 March 1990, they burst
  into his home, with guns drawn, in a dawn raid. The agents searched
  everywhere, tearing the student house apart, but they didn't find
  anything incriminating. They did take Erik's $59 keyboard terminal
  with its chintzy little 300 baud modem, but they didn't get his main
  computer, because Erik knew they were coming.

  The Secret Service had subpoenaed his academic records, and Erik had
  heard about it before the raid. So when the Secret Service arrived,
  Erik's stuff just wasn't there. It hadn't been there for a few weeks,
  but for Erik, they had been hard weeks. The hacker found himself
  suffering withdrawal symptoms, so he bought the cheapest home computer
  and modem he could find to tide him over.

  That equipment was the only computer gear the Secret Service
  discovered, and they were not happy special agents. But without
  evidence, their hands were tied. No charges were laid.

  Still, Erik thought he was probably being watched. The last thing he
  wanted was for Phoenix's number to appear on his home phone bill. So
  he let Phoenix call him, which the Australian did all the time. They
  often talked for hours when Erik was working nights. It was a slack
  job, just changing the back-up tapes on various computers and making
  sure they didn't jam. Perfect for a student. It left Erik hours of
  free time.

  Erik frequently reminded Phoenix that his phone was probably tapped,
  but Phoenix just laughed. `Yeah, well don't worry about it, mate. What
  are they going to do? Come and get me?'

  After Erik put a hold on his own hacking activities, he lived
  vicariously, listening to Phoenix's exploits. The Australian called
  him with a technical problem or an interesting system, and then they
  discussed various strategies for getting into the machine. However,
  unlike Electron's talks with Phoenix, conversations with Erik weren't
  only about hacking. They chatted about life, about what Australia was
  like, about girls, about what was in the newspaper that day. It was
  easy to talk to Erik. He had a big ego, like most hackers, but it was
  inoffensive, largely couched in his self-effacing humour.

  Phoenix often made Erik laugh. Like the time he got Clifford Stoll, an
  astronomer, who wrote The Cuckoo's Egg. The book described his pursuit
  of a German hacker who had broken into the computer system Stoll
  managed at Lawrence Berkeley Labs near San Francisco. The hacker had
  been part of the same hacking ring as Pengo. Stoll took a hard line on
  hacking, a position which did not win him popularity in the
  underground. Both Phoenix and Erik had read Stoll's book, and one day
  they were sitting around chatting about it.

  `You know, it's really stupid that Cliffy put his email address in his
  book,' Phoenix said. `Hmm, why don't I go check?'

  Sure enough, Phoenix called Erik back about a day later. `Well, I got
  root on Cliffy's machine,' he began slowly, then he burst out
  laughing. `And I changed the message of the day. Now it reads, "It
  looks like the Cuckoo's got egg on his face"!'

  It was uproariously funny. Stoll, the most famous hacker-catcher in
  the world, had been japed! It was the funniest thing Erik had heard in
  weeks.

  But it was not nearly so amusing as what Erik told Phoenix later about
  the New York Times. The paper had published an article on 19 March
  suggesting a hacker had written some sort of virus or worm which was
  breaking into dozens of computers.

  `Listen to this,' Erik had said, reading Phoenix the lead paragraph,
  `"A computer intruder has written a program that has entered dozens of
  computers in a nationwide network in recent weeks, automatically
  stealing electronic documents containing users' passwords and erasing
  files to help conceal itself."'

  Phoenix was falling off his chair he was laughing so hard. A program?
  Which was automatically doing this? No. It wasn't an automated
  program, it was the Australians! It was the Realm hackers! God, this
  was funny.

  `Wait--there's more! It says, "Another rogue program shows a
  widespread vulnerability". I laughed my ass off,' Erik said,
  struggling to get the words out.

  `A rogue program! Who wrote the article?'

  `A John Markoff,' Erik answered, wiping his eyes. `I called him up.'

  `You did? What did you say?' Phoenix tried to gather himself together.

  `"John," I said, "You know that article you wrote on page 12 of the
  Times? It's wrong! There's no rogue program attacking the Internet."
  He goes, "What is it then?" "It's not a virus or a worm," I said.
  "It's PEOPLE."'

  Erik started laughing uncontrollably again.

  `Then Markoff sounds really stunned, and he goes, "People?" And I
  said, "Yeah, people." Then he said, "How do you know?" And I said,
  "Because, John, I KNOW."'

  Phoenix erupted in laughter again. The Times reporter obviously had
  worms on his mind, since the author of the famous Internet worm,
  Robert T. Morris Jr, had just been tried and convicted in the US. He
  was due to be sentenced in May.

  US investigators had tracked the hacker's connections, looping through
  site after site in a burrowing manner which they assumed belonged to a
  worm. The idea of penetrating so many sites all in such a short time
  clearly baffled the investigators, who concluded it must be a program
  rather than human beings launching the attacks.

  `Yeah,' Erik continued, `And then Markoff said, "Can you get me to
  talk to them?" And I said I'd see what I could do.'

  `Yeah,' Phoenix said. `Go tell him, yes. Yeah, I gotta talk to this
  idiot. I'll set him straight.'

  Page one, the New York Times, 21 March 1990: `Caller Says he Broke
  Computers' Barriers to Taunt the Experts', by John Markoff.

  True, the article was below the crease--on the bottom half of the
  page--but at least it was in column 1, the place a reader turns to
  first.

  Phoenix was chuffed. He'd made the front page of the New York Times.

  `The man identified himself only as an Australian named Dave,' the
  article said. Phoenix chuckled softly. Dave Lissek was the pseudonym
  he'd used. Of course, he wasn't the only one using the name Dave. When
  Erik first met the Australians on Altos, he marvelled at how they all
  called themselves Dave. I'm Dave, he's Dave, we're all Dave, they told
  him. It was just easier that way, they said.

  The article revealed that `Dave' had attacked Spaf's and Stoll's
  machines, and that the Smithsonian Astronomical Observatory at Harvard
  University--where Stoll now worked--had pulled its computers off the
  Internet as a result of the break in. Markoff had even included the
  `egg on his face' story Phoenix had described to him.

  Phoenix laughed at how well he had thumbed his nose at Cliffy Stoll.
  This article would show him up all right. It felt so good, seeing
  himself in print that way. He did that. That was him there in black in
  white, for all the world to see. He had outsmarted the world's best
  known hacker-catcher, and he had smeared the insult across the front
  page of the most prestigious newspaper in America.

  And Markoff reported that he had been in Spaf's system too! Phoenix
  glowed happily. Better still, Markoff had quoted `Dave' on the
  subject: `The caller said ... "It used to be the security guys chasing
  the hackers. Now it's the hackers chasing the security people."'

  The article went on: `Among the institutions believed to have been
  penetrated by the intruder are the Los Alamos National Laboratories,
  Harvard, Digital Equipment Corporation, Boston University and the
  University of Texas.' Yes, that list sounded about right. Well, for
  the Australians as a group anyway. Even if Phoenix hadn't masterminded
  or even penetrated some of those himself, he was happy to take the
  credit in the Times.

  This was a red-letter day for Phoenix.

  Electron, however, was furious. How could Phoenix be so stupid? He
  knew that Phoenix had an ego, that he talked too much, and that his
  tendency to brag had grown worse over time, fed by the skyrocketing
  success of the Australian hackers. Electron knew all of that, but he
  still couldn't quite believe that Phoenix had gone so far as to strut
  and preen like a show pony for the New York Times.

  To think that he had associated with Phoenix. Electron was disgusted.
  He had never trusted Phoenix--a caution now proved wise. But he had
  spent hours with him on the phone, with most of the information
  flowing in one direction. But not only did Phoenix show no discretion
  at all in dealing with the paper, he bragged about doing things that
  Electron had done! If Phoenix had to talk--and clearly he should have
  kept his mouth shut--he should have at least been honest about the
  systems for which he could claim credit.

  Electron had tried with Phoenix. Electron had suggested that he stop
  talking to the security guys. He had continually urged caution and
  discretion. He had even subtly withdrawn each time Phoenix suggested
  one of his hair-brained schemes to show off to a security bigwig.
  Electron had done this in the hope that Phoenix might get the hint.
  Maybe, if Phoenix couldn't hear someone shouting advice at him, he
  might at least listen to someone whispering it. But no. Phoenix was
  far too thick for that.

  The Internet--indeed, all hacking--was out of bounds for weeks, if not
  months. There was no chance the Australian authorities would let a
  front-page story in the Times go by un-heeded. The Americans would be
  all over them. In one selfish act of hubris, Phoenix had ruined the
  party for everyone else.

  Electron unplugged his modem and took it to his father. During exams,
  he had often asked his father to hide it. He didn't have the
  self-discipline needed to stay away on his own and there was no other
  way Electron could keep himself from jacking in--plugging his modem
  into the wall. His father had become an expert at hiding the device,
  but Electron usually still managed to find it after a few days,
  tearing the house apart until he emerged, triumphant, with the modem
  held high above his head. Even when his father began hiding the modem
  outside the family home it would only postpone the inevitable.

  This time, however, Electron vowed he would stop hacking until the
  fallout had cleared--he had to. So he handed the modem to his father,
  with strict instructions, and then tried to distract himself by
  cleaning up his hard drive and disks. His hacking files had to go too.
  So much damning evidence of his activities. He deleted some files and
  took others on disks to store at a friend's house. Deleting files
  caused Electron considerable pain, but there was no other way. Phoenix
  had backed him into a corner.

  Brimming with excitement, Phoenix rang Electron on a sunny March
  afternoon.

  `Guess what?' Phoenix was jumping around like an eager puppy at the
  other end of the line. `We made the nightly news right across the US!'

  `Uhuh,' Electron responded, unimpressed.

  `This is not a joke!' We were on cable news all day too. I called Erik
  and he told me.'

  `Mmm,' Electron said.

  `You know, we did a lot of things right. Like Harvard. We got into
  every system at Harvard. It was a good move. Harvard gave us the fame
  we needed.'

  Electron couldn't believe what he was hearing. He didn't need any
  fame--and he certainly didn't need to be busted. The
  conversation--like Phoenix himself--was really beginning to annoy him.

  `Hey, and they know your name,' Phoenix said coyly.

  That got a reaction. Electron gulped his anger.

  `Haha! Just joshing!' Phoenix practically shouted. `Don't worry! They
  didn't really mention anyone's name.'

  `Good,' Electron answered curtly. His irritation stewed
  quietly.

  `So, do you reckon we'll make the cover of Time or Newsweek?'

  Good grief! Didn't Phoenix ever give up? As if it wasn't enough to
  appear on the 6 o'clock national news in a country crawling with
  over-zealous law enforcement agencies. Or to make the New York Times.
  He had to have the weeklies too.

  Phoenix was revelling in his own publicity. He felt like he was on top
  of the world, and he wanted to shout about it. Electron had felt the
  same wave of excitement from hacking many high-profile targets and
  matching wits with the best, but he was happy to stand on the peak by
  himself, or with people like Pad and Gandalf, and enjoy the view
  quietly. He was happy to know he had been the best on the frontier of
  a computer underground which was fresh, experimental and, most of all,
  international. He didn't need to call up newspaper reporters or gloat
  about it in Clifford Stoll's face.

  `Well, what do you reckon?' Phoenix asked impatiently.

  `No,' Electron answered.

  `No? You don't think we will?' Phoenix sounded disappointed.

  `No.'

  `Well, I'll demand it!' Phoenix said laughing, `Fuck it, we want the
  cover of Newsweek, nothing less.' Then, more seriously, `I'm trying to
  work out what really big target would clinch it for us.'

  `Yeah, OK, whatever,' Electron replied, distancing himself again.

  But Electron was thinking, Phoenix, you are a fool. Didn't he see the
  warning signs? Pad's warning, all the busts in the US, reports that
  the Americans were hunting down the Brits. As a result of these news
  reports of which Phoenix was so proud, bosses across the world would
  be calling their computer managers into their offices and breathing
  down their necks about their own computer security.

  The brazen hackers had deeply offended the computer security industry,
  spurring it into action. In the process, some in the industry had also
  seen an opportunity to raise its own public profile. The security
  experts had talked to the law enforcement agencies, who were now
  clearly sharing information across national borders and closing in
  fast. The conspirators in
  the global electronic village were at the point of maximum
  overreach.

  `We could hack Spaf again,' Phoenix volunteered.

  `The general public couldn't give a fuck about Eugene Spafford,'
  Electron said, trying to dampen Phoenix's bizarre enthusiasm. He was
  all for thumbing one's nose at authority, but this was not the way to
  do it.

  `It'd be so funny in court, though. The lawyer would call Spaf and
  say, "So, Mr Spafford, is it true that you are a world-renowned
  computer security expert?" When he said, "Yes" I'd jump up and go, "I
  object, your honour, this guy doesn't know jackshit, 'cause I hacked
  his machine and it was a breeze!"'

  `Mmm.'

  `Hey, if we don't get busted in the next two weeks, it will be a
  miracle,' Phoenix continued happily.

  `I hope not.'

  `This is a lot of fun!' Phoenix shouted sarcastically. `We're gonna
  get busted! We're gonna get busted!'

  Electron's jaw fell to the ground. Phoenix was mad. Only a lunatic
  would behave this way. Mumbling something about how tired he was,
  Electron said goodbye and hung up.

  At 5.50 a.m. on 2 April 1990, Electron dragged himself out of bed and
  made his way to the bathroom. Part way through his visit, the light
  suddenly went out.

  How strange. Electron opened his eyes wide in the early morning
  dimness. He returned to his bedroom and began putting on some jeans
  before going to investigate the problem.

  Suddenly, two men in street clothes yanked his window open and jumped
  through into the room shouting, `GET DOWN ON THE FLOOR!'

  Who were these people? Half-naked, Electron stood in the middle of his
  room, stunned and immobile. He had suspected the police might pay him
  a visit, but didn't they normally wear uniforms? Didn't they announce
  themselves?

  The two men grabbed Electron, threw him face down onto the floor and
  pulled his arms behind his back. They jammed handcuffs on his
  wrists--hard--cutting his skin. Then someone kicked him in the
  stomach.

  `Are there any firearms in the house?' one of the men asked.

  Electron couldn't answer because he couldn't breathe. The kick had
  winded him. He felt someone pull him up from the floor and prop him in
  a chair. Lights went on everywhere and he could see six or seven
  people moving around in the hallway. They must have come into the
  house another way. The ones in the hallway were all wearing bibs with
  three large letters emblazoned across the front: AFP.

  As Electron slowly gathered his wits, he realised why the cops had
  asked about firearms. He had once joked to Phoenix on the phone about
  how he was practising with his dad's .22 for when the feds came
  around. Obviously the feds had been tapping his phone.

  While his father talked with one of the officers in the other room and
  read the warrant, Electron saw the police pack up his computer
  gear--worth some $3000--and carry it out of the house. The only thing
  they didn't discover was the modem. His father had become so expert at
  hiding it that not even the Australian Federal Police could find it.

  Several other officers began searching Electron's bedroom, which was
  no small feat, given the state it was in. The floor was covered in a
  thick layer of junk. Half crumpled music band posters, lots of
  scribbled notes with passwords and NUAs, pens, T-shirts both clean and
  dirty, jeans, sneakers, accounting books, cassettes, magazines, the
  occasional dirty cup. By the time the police had sifted through it all
  the room was tidier than when they started.

  As they moved into another room at the end of the raid, Electron bent
  down to pick up one of his posters which had fallen onto the floor. It
  was a Police Drug Identification Chart--a gift from a friend's
  father--and there, smack dab in the middle, was a genuine AFP
  footprint. Now it was a collector's item. Electron smiled to himself
  and carefully tucked the poster away.

  When he went out to the living room, he saw a policemen holding a
  couple of shovels and he wanted to laugh again. Electron had also once
  told Phoenix that all his sensitive hacking disks were buried in the
  backyard. Now the police were going to dig it up in search of
  something which had been destroyed a few days before. It was too
  funny.

  The police found little evidence of Electron's hacking at his house,
  but that didn't really matter. They already had almost everything they
  needed.

  Later that morning, the police put the 20-year-old Electron into an
  unmarked car and drove him to the AFP's imposing-looking headquarters
  at 383 Latrobe Street for questioning.

  In the afternoon, when Electron had a break from the endless
  questions, he walked out to the hallway. The boyish-faced Phoenix,
  aged eighteen, and fellow Realm member Nom, 21, were walking with
  police at the other end of the hall. They were too far apart to talk,
  but Electron smiled. Nom looked worried. Phoenix looked annoyed.

  Electron was too intimidated to insist on having a lawyer. What was
  the point in asking for one anyway? It was clear the police had
  information they could only have obtained from
  tapping his phone. They also showed him logs taken from Melbourne
  University, which had been traced back to his phone. Electron figured
  the game was up, so he might as well tell them the whole story--or at
  least as much of it as he had told Phoenix on the phone.

  Two officers conducted the interview. The lead interviewer was
  Detective Constable Glenn Proebstl, which seemed to be pronounced
  `probe stool'--an unfortunate name, Electron thought. Proebstl was
  accompanied by Constable Natasha Elliott, who occasionally added a few
  questions at the end of various interview topics but otherwise kept to
  herself. Although he had decided to answer their questions truthfully,
  Electron thought that neither of them knew much about computers and
  found himself struggling to understand what they were trying to ask.

  Electron had to begin with the basics. He explained what the FINGER
  command was--how you could type `finger' followed by a username, and
  then the computer would provide basic information about the user's
  name and other details.

  `So, what is the methodology behind it ... finger ... then, it's
  normally ... what is the normal command after that to try and get the
  password out?' Constable Elliott finally completed her convoluted
  attempt at a question.

  The only problem was that Electron had no idea what she was talking
  about.

  `Well, um, I mean there is none. I mean you don't use finger like that
  ...'

  `Right. OK,' Constable Elliott got down to business. `Well, have you
  ever used that system before?'

  `Uhm, which system?' Electron had been explaining commands for so long
  he had forgotten if they were still talking about how he hacked the
  Lawrence Livermore computer or some other site.

  `The finger ... The finger system?'

  Huh? Electron wasn't quite sure how to answer that question. There was
  no such thing. Finger was a command, not a computer.

  `Uh, yes,' he said.

  The interview went the same way, jolting awkwardly through computer
  technology which he understood far better than either officer.
  Finally, at the end of a long day, Detective Constable Proebstl asked
  Electron:

  `In your own words, tell me what fascination you find with accessing
  computers overseas?'

  `Well, basically, it's not for any kind of personal gain or anything,'
  Electron said slowly. It was a surprisingly difficult question to
  answer. Not because he didn't know the answer, but because it was a
  difficult answer to describe to someone who had never hacked a
  computer. `It's just the kick of getting in to a system. I mean, once
  you are in, you very often get bored and even though you can still
  access the system, you may never call back.

  `Because once you've gotten in, it's a challenge over and you don't
  really care much about it,' Electron continued, struggling. `It's a
  hot challenge thing, trying to do things that other people are also
  trying to do but can't.

  `So, I mean, I guess it is a sort of ego thing. It's knowing that you
  can do stuff that other people cannot, and well, it is the
  challenge and the ego boost you get from doing something well ...
  where other people try and fail.'

  A few more questions and the day-long interview finally
  finished. The police then took Electron to the Fitzroy police
  station. He guessed it was the nearest location with a JP they could
  find willing to process a bail application at that hour.

  In front of the ugly brick building, Electron noticed a small group of
  people gathered on the footpath in the dusky light. As the police car
  pulled up, the group swung into a frenzy of activity, fidgeting in
  over-the-shoulder briefcases, pulling out notebooks and pens, scooping
  up big microphones with fuzzy shag covers, turning on TV camera
  lights.

  Oh NO! Electron wasn't prepared for this at all.

  Flanked by police, Electron stepped out of the police car and blinked
  in the glare of photographers' camera flashes and TV camera
  searchlights. The hacker tried to ignore them, walking as briskly as
  his captors would allow. Sound recordists and reporters tagged beside
  him, keeping pace, while the TV cameramen and photographers weaved in
  front of him. Finally he escaped into the safety of the watchhouse.

  First there was paperwork, followed by the visit to the JP. While
  shuffling through his papers, the JP gave Electron a big speech about
  how defendants often claimed to have been beaten by the police.
  Sitting in the dingy meeting room, Electron felt somewhat confused by
  the purpose of this tangential commentary. However, the JP's next
  question cleared things up: `Have you had any problems with your
  treatment by the police which you would like to record at this time?'

  Electron thought about the brutal kick he had suffered while lying on
  his bedroom floor, then he looked up and found Detective Constable
  Proebstl staring him in the eye. A slight smile passed across the
  detective's face.

  `No,' Electron answered.

  The JP proceeded to launch into another speech which Electron found
  even stranger. There was another defendant in the lock-up at the
  moment, a dangerous criminal who had a disease the JP knew about, and
  the JP could decide to lock Electron up with that criminal instead of
  granting him bail.

  Was this meant to be helpful warning, or just the gratification of
  some kind of sadistic tendency? Electron was baffled but he didn't
  have to consider the situation for long. The JP granted bail.
  Electron's father came to the watchhouse, collected his son and signed
  the papers for a $1000 surety--to be paid if Electron skipped town.
  That night Electron watched as his name appeared on the late night
  news.

  At home over the next few weeks, Electron struggled to come to terms
  with the fact that he would have to give up hacking forever. He still
  had his modem, but no computer. Even if he had a machine, he realised
  it was far too dangerous to even contemplate hacking again.

  So he took up drugs instead.

                                   [ ]

  Electron's father waited until the very last days of his illness, in
  March 1991, before he went into hospital. He knew that once he went
  in, he would not be coming out again.

  There was so much to do before that trip, so many things to organise.
  The house, the life insurance paperwork, the will, the funeral, the
  instructions for the family friend who promised to watch over both
  children when he was gone. And, of course, the children themselves.

  He looked at his two children and worried. Despite their ages of 21
  and 19, they were in many ways still very sheltered. He realised that
  Electron's anti-establishment attitude and his sister's emotional
  remoteness would remain unresolved difficulties at the time of his
  death. As the cancer progressed, Electron's father tried to tell both
  children how much he cared for them. He might have been somewhat
  emotionally remote himself in the past, but with so little time left,
  he wanted to set the record straight.

  On the issue of Electron's problems with the police, however,
  Electron's father maintained a hands-off approach. Electron had only
  talked to his father about his hacking exploits occasionally, usually
  when he had achieved what he considered to be a very noteworthy hack.
  His father's view was always the same. Hacking is illegal, he told his
  son, and the police will probably eventually catch you. Then you will
  have to deal with the problem yourself. He didn't lecture his son, or
  forbid Electron from hacking. On this issue he considered his son old
  enough to make his own choices and live with the consequences.

  True to his word, Electron's father had shown little sympathy for his
  son's legal predicament after the police raid. He remained neutral on
  the subject, saying only, `I told you something like this would happen
  and now it is your responsibility'.

  Electron's hacking case progressed slowly over the year, as did his
  university accounting studies. In March 1991, he faced committal
  proceedings and had to decide whether to fight his committal.

  He faced fifteen charges, most of which were for obtaining
  unauthorised access to computers in the US and Australia. A few were
  aggravated offences, for obtaining access to data of a commercial
  nature. On one count each, the DPP (the Office of the Commonwealth
  Director of Public Prosecutions) said he altered and erased data.
  Those two counts were the result of his inserting backdoors for
  himself, not because he did damage to any files. The evidence was
  reasonably strong: telephone intercepts and datataps on Phoenix's
  phone which showed him talking to Electron about hacking; logs of
  Electron's own sessions in Melbourne University's systems which were
  traced back to his home phone; and Electron's own confession to the
  police.

  This was the first major computer hacking case in Australia under the
  new legislation. It was a test case--the test case for computer
  hacking in Australia--and the DPP was going in hard. The case had
  generated seventeen volumes of evidence, totalling some 25000 pages,
  and Crown prosecutor Lisa West planned to call up to twenty expert
  witnesses from Australia, Europe and the US.

  Those witnesses had some tales to tell about the Australian hackers,
  who had caused havoc in systems around the world. Phoenix had
  accidentally deleted a Texas-based company's inventory of assets--the
  only copy in existence according to Execucom Systems Corporation. The
  hackers had also baffled security personnel at the US Naval Research
  Labs. They had bragged to the New York Times. And they forced NASA to
  cut off its computer network for 24 hours.

  AFP Detective Sergeant Ken Day had flown halfway around the world to
  obtain a witness statement from none other than NASA Langley computer
  manager Sharon Beskenis--the admin Phoenix had accidentally kicked off
  her own system when he was trying to get Deszip. Beskenis had been
  more than happy to oblige and on 24 July 1990 she signed a statement
  in Virginia, witnessed by Day. Her statement said that, as a result of
  the hackers' intrusion, `the entire NASA computer system was
  disconnected from any external communications with the rest of the
  world' for about 24 hours on 22 February 1990.

  In short, Electron thought, there didn't seem to be much chance of
  winning at the committal hearing. Nom seemed to feel the same way. He
  faced two counts, both `knowingly concerned' with Phoenix obtaining
  unauthorised access. One was for NASA Langley, the other for
  CSIRO--the Zardoz file. Nom didn't fight his committal either,
  although Legal Aid's refusal
  to fund a lawyer for the procedure no doubt weighed in his
  decision.

  On 6 March 1991, Magistrate Robert Langton committed Electron and Nom
  to stand trial in the Victorian County Court.

  Phoenix, however, didn't agree with his fellow hackers' point of view.
  With financial help from his family, he had decided to fight his
  committal. He wasn't going to hand this case to the prosecution on a
  silver platter, and they would have to fight him every step of the
  way, dragging him forward from proceeding to proceeding. His
  barrister, Felicity Hampel, argued the court should throw out 47 of
  the 48 charges against her client on jurisdictional grounds. All but
  one charge--breaking into the CSIRO machine in order to steal
  Zardoz--related to hacking activities outside Australia. How could an
  Australian court claim jurisdiction over a hacked computer in Texas?

  Privately, Phoenix worried more about being extradited to the US than
  dealing with the Australian courts, but publicly he was going into the
  committal with all guns blazing. It was a test case in many ways; not
  only the first major hacking case in Australia but also the first time
  a hacker had fought Australian committal proceedings for computer
  crimes.

  The prosecution agreed to drop one of the 48 counts, noting it was a
  duplicate charge, but the backdown was a pyrrhic victory for Phoenix.
  After a two-day committal hearing, Magistrate John Wilkinson decided
  Hampel's jurisdictional argument didn't hold water and on 14 August
  1991 he committed Phoenix to stand trial in the County Court.

  By the day of Electron's committal, in March, Electron's father had
  begun his final decline. The bowel cancer created a roller-coaster of
  good and bad days, but soon there were only bad days, and they were
  getting worse. On the last day of March, the doctors told him that it
  was finally time to make the trip to hospital. He stubbornly refused
  to go, fighting their advice, questioning their authority. They
  quietly urged him again. He protested. Finally, they insisted.

  Electron and his sister stayed with their father for hours that day,
  and the following one. Their father had other visitors to keep his
  spirits up, including his brother who fervently beseeched him to
  accept Jesus Christ as his personal saviour before he died. That way,
  he wouldn't burn in hell. Electron looked at his uncle, disbelieving.
  He couldn't believe his father was having to put up with such crap on
  his deathbed. Still, Electron chose to be discreet. Apart from an
  occasional rolling of the eyes, he kept his peace at his father's
  bedside.

  Perhaps, however, the fervent words did some good, for as Electron's
  father spoke about the funeral arrangements, he made a strange slip of
  the tongue. He said `wedding' instead of funeral, then paused,
  realising his mistake. Glancing slowly down at the intricate braided
  silver wedding band still on his finger, he smiled frailly and said,
  `I suppose, in a way, it will be like a wedding'.

  Electron and his sister went to hospital every day for four days, to
  sit by their father's bed.

  At 6 a.m. on the fifth day, the telephone rang. It was the family
  friend their father had asked to watch over them. Their father's life
  signs were very, very weak, fluttering on the edge of death.

  When Electron and his sister arrived at the hospital, the nurse's face
  said everything. They were too late. Their father had died ten minutes
  before they arrived. Electron broke down and wept. He hugged his
  sister, who, for a brief moment, seemed almost reachable. Driving them
  back to the house, the family friend stopped and bought them an
  answering machine.

  `You'll need this when everyone starts calling in,' she told them.
  `You might not want to talk to anyone for a while.'

  In the months after his bust in 1990 Electron began smoking marijuana
  regularly. At first, as with many other university students, it was a
  social thing. Some friends dropped by, they happened to have a few
  joints, and so everybody went out for a night on the town. When he was
  in serious hacking mode, he never smoked. A clear head was much too
  important. Besides, the high he got from hacking was a hundred times
  better than anything dope could ever do for him.

  When Phoenix appeared on the front page of the New York Times,
  Electron gave up hacking. And even if he had been tempted to return to
  it, he didn't have anything to hack with after the police took his
  only computer. Electron found himself casting around for something to
  distract him from his father's deteriorating condition and the void
  left by giving up hacking. His accounting studies didn't quite fit the
  bill. They had always seemed empty, but never more so than now.

  Smoking pot filled the void. So did tripping. Filled it very nicely.
  Besides, he told himself, it's harder to get caught smoking dope in
  your friends' houses than hacking in your own. The habit grew
  gradually. Soon, he was smoking dope at home. New friends began coming
  around, and they seemed to have drugs with them all the time--not just
  occasionally, and not just for fun.

  Electron and his sister had been left the family home and enough money
  to give them a modest income. Electron began spending this money on
  his new-found hobby. A couple of Electron's new friends moved into the
  house for a few months. His sister didn't like them dealing drugs out
  of the place, but Electron didn't care what was happening around him.
  He just sat in his room, listening to his stereo, smoking dope,
  dropping acid and watching the walls.

  The headphones blocked out everyone in the house, and, more
  importantly, what was going on inside Electron's own head. Billy
  Bragg. Faith No More. Cosmic Psychos. Celibate Rifles. Jane's
  Addiction. The Sex Pistols. The Ramones. Music gave Electron a
  pinpoint, a figurative dot of light on his forehead where he could
  focus his mind. Blot out the increasingly strange thoughts creeping
  through his consciousness.

  His father was alive. He was sure of it. He knew it, like he knew the
  sun would rise tomorrow. Yet he had seen his father lying, dead, in
  the hospital bed. It didn't make sense.

  So he took another hit from the bong, floated in slow motion to his
  bed, lay down, carefully slid the earphones over his head, closed his
  eyes and tried to concentrate on what the Red Hot Chilli Peppers were
  saying instead. When that wasn't enough, he ventured down the hallway,
  down to his new friends--the friends with the acid tabs. Then, eight
  more hours without having to worry about the strange thoughts.

  Soon people began acting strangely too. They would tell Electron
  things, but he had trouble understanding them. Pulling a milk carton
  from the fridge and sniffing it, Electron's sister might say, `Milk's
  gone off'. But Electron wasn't sure what she meant. He would look at
  her warily. Maybe she was trying to tell him something else, about
  spiders. Milking spiders for venom.

  When thoughts like these wafted through Electron's mind, they
  disturbed him, lingering like a sour smell. So he floated back to the
  safety of his room and listened to songs by Henry Rollins.

  After several months in this cloudy state of limbo, Electron awoke one
  day to find the Crisis Assessment Team--a mobile psychiatric team--in
  his bedroom. They asked him questions, then they tried to feed him
  little blue tablets. Electron didn't want to take the tablets. Were
  little blue pills placebos? He was sure they were. Or maybe they were
  something more sinister.

  Finally, the CAT workers convinced Electron to take the Stelazine
  tablet. But when they left, terrifying things began to happen.
  Electron's eyes rolled uncontrollably to the back of his head. His
  head twisted to the left. His mouth dropped open, very wide. Try as he
  might, he couldn't shut it, any more than he could turn his head
  straight. Electron saw himself in the mirror and he panicked. He
  looked like a character out of a horror
  picture.

  His new house-mates reacted to this strange new behaviour by trying to
  psychoanalyse Electron, which was less than helpful. They discussed
  him as if he wasn't even present. He felt like a ghost and, agitated
  and confused, he began telling his friends that he was going to kill
  himself. Someone called the CAT team again. This time they refused to
  leave unless he would guarantee not to attempt suicide.

  Electron refused. So they had him committed.

  Inside the locked psychiatric ward of Plenty Hospital (now known as
  NEMPS), Electron believed that, although he had gone crazy, he wasn't
  really in a hospital psychiatric ward. The place was just supposed to
  look like one. His father had set it
  all up.

  Electron refused to believe anything that anyone told him. It was all
  lies. They said one thing, but always meant another.

  He had proof. Electron read a list of patients' names on the wall and
  found one called Tanas. That name had a special meaning. It was an
  anagram for the word `Santa'. But Santa Claus was a myth, so the name
  Tanas appearing on the hospital list proved to him that he shouldn't
  listen to anything anyone told him.

  Electron ate his meals mostly in silence, trying to ignore the
  voluntary and involuntary patients who shared the dining hall. One
  lunchtime, a stranger sat down at Electron's table and started talking
  to him. Electron found it excruciatingly painful talking to other
  people, and he kept wishing the stranger would go away.

  The stranger talked about how good the drugs were in
  hospital.

  `Mm,' Electron said. `I used to do a lot of drugs.'

  `How much is a lot?'

  `I spent $28000 on dope alone in about four months.'

  `Wow,' the stranger said, impressed. `Of course, you don't have to pay
  for drugs. You can always get them for free. I do.'

  `You do?' Electron asked, somewhat perplexed.

  `Sure! All the time,' the stranger said grandly. `No problem. Just
  watch.'

  The stranger calmly put his fork down on the tray, carefully stood up
  and then began yelling at the top of his lungs. He waved his arms
  around frantically and shouted abuse at the other patients.

  Two nurses came running from the observation room. One of them tried
  to calm the stranger down while the other quickly measured out various
  pills and grabbed a cup of water. The stranger swallowed the pills,
  chased them with a swig of water and sat down quietly. The nurses
  retreated, glancing back over their shoulders.

  `See?' The stranger said. `Well, I'd better be on my way, before the
  pills kick in. See ya.'

  Electron watched, amazed, as the stranger picked up his bag, walked
  through the dining-hall door, and straight out the front door of the
  psychiatric ward.

  After a month, the psychiatrists reluctantly allowed Electron to leave
  the hospital in order to stay with his maternal grandmother in
  Queensland. He was required to see a psychiatrist regularly. He spent
  his first few days in Queensland believing he was Jesus Christ. But he
  didn't hold onto that one for long. After two weeks of patiently
  waiting and checking for signs of the imminent apocalypse, consistent
  with the second coming, he decided he was really the reincarnation of
  Buddha.

  In late February 1992, after three months of psychiatric care up
  north, Electron returned to Melbourne and his university studies, with
  a bag full of medication. Prozac, major tranquillisers, Lithium. The
  daily routine went smoothly for a while. Six Prozac--two in the
  morning, two at midday and two at night. Another anti-depressant to be
  taken at night. Also at night, the anti-side effect tablets to combat
  the involuntary eye-rolling, jaw-dropping and neck-twisting associated
  with the anti-depressants.

  All of it was designed to help him deal with what had by
  now become a long list of diagnoses. Cannabis psychosis.
  Schizophrenia. Manic depression. Unipolar effective disorder.
  Schizophrenaform. Amphetamine psychosis. Major effective disorder.
  Atypical psychosis. And his own personal favourite--facticious
  disorder, or faking it to get into hospital. But the medication wasn't
  helping much. Electron still felt wretched, and returning to a host of
  problems in Melbourne made things worse.

  Because of his illness, Electron had been largely out of the loop of
  legal proceedings. Sunny Queensland provided a welcome escape. Now he
  was back in Victoria facing a tedious university course in accounting,
  an ongoing battle with mental illness, federal charges which could see
  him locked up for ten years, and publicity surrounding the first major
  hacking case in Australia. It was going to be a hard winter.

  To make matters worse, Electron's medication interfered with his
  ability to study properly. The anti-side effect pills relaxed the
  muscles in his eyes, preventing them from focusing. The writing on the
  blackboard at the front of the lecture hall was nothing but a hazy
  blur. Taking notes was also a problem. The medication made his hands
  tremble, so he couldn't write properly. By the end of a lecture,
  Electron's notes were as unreadable as the blackboard. Frustrated,
  Electron stopped taking his medicine, started smoking dope again and
  soon felt a little better. When the dope wasn't enough, he turned to
  magic mushrooms and hallucinogenic cactus.

  The hacking case was dragging on and on. On 6 December 1991, just
  after he left psych hospital but before he flew to Queensland, the
  office of the DPP had formally filed an indictment containing fifteen
  charges against Electron, and three against Nom, in the Victorian
  County Court.

  Electron didn't talk to Phoenix much any more, but the DPP lawyers
  hadn't forgotten about him--far from it. They had much bigger plans
  for Phoenix, perhaps because he was fighting every step of the way.
  Phoenix was uncooperative with police in the interview on the day of
  the raid, frequently refusing to answer their questions. When they
  asked to fingerprint him, he refused and argued with them about it.
  This behaviour did not endear him to either the police or the DPP.

  On 5 May 1992, the DPP filed a final indictment with 40 charges
  against Phoenix in the County Court. The charges, in conjunction with
  those against Electron and Nom, formed part of a joint indictment
  totalling 58 counts.

  Electron worried about being sent to prison. Around the world, hackers
  were under siege--Par, Pengo, LOD and Erik Bloodaxe, MOD, The Realm
  hackers, Pad and Gandalf and, most recently, the International
  Subversives. Somebody seemed to be trying to make a point.
  Furthermore, Electron's charges had changed considerably--for the
  worse--from the original ones documented in April 1990.

  The DPP's final indictment bore little resemblance to the original
  charge sheet handed to the young hacker when he left the police
  station the day he was raided. The final indictment read like a
  veritable Who's Who of prestigious institutions around the world.
  Lawrence Livermore Labs, California. Two different computers at the US
  Naval Research Laboratories, Washington DC. Rutgers University, New
  Jersey. Tampere University of Technology, Finland. The University of
  Illinios. Three different computers at the University of Melbourne.
  Helsinki University of Technology, Finland. The University of New
  York. NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia. CSIRO, Carlton,
  Victoria.

  The charges which worried Electron most related to the
  US Naval Research Labs, CSIRO, Lawrence Livermore Labs
  and NASA. The last three weren't full hacking charges. The
  DPP alleged Electron had been `knowingly concerned' with Phoenix's
  access of these sites.

  Electron looked at the thirteen-page joint indictment and didn't know
  whether to laugh or cry. He had been a lot more than `knowingly
  concerned' with accessing those sites. In many cases, he had given
  Phoenix access to those computers in the first place. But Electron
  tried to tread quietly, carefully, through most systems, while Phoenix
  had noisily stomped around with all the grace of a buffalo--and left
  just as many footprints. Electron hardly wanted to face full charges
  for those or any other sites. He had broken into thousands of sites on
  the X.25 network, but he hadn't been charged with any of them. He
  couldn't help feeling a little like the gangster Al Capone being done
  for tax evasion.

  The proceedings were attracting considerable media attention. Electron
  suspected the AFP or the DPP were alerting the media to upcoming court
  appearances, perhaps in part to prove to the Americans that `something
  was being done'.

  This case had American pressure written all over it. Electron's
  barrister, Boris Kayser, said he suspected that `the
  Americans'--American institutions, companies or government
  agencies--were indirectly funding some of the prosecution's case by
  offering to pay for US witnesses to attend the trial. The Americans
  wanted to see the Australian hackers go down, and they were throwing
  all their best resources at the case to make sure it happened.

  There was one other thing--in some ways the most disturbing matter of
  all. In the course of the legal to-ing and fro-ing, Electron was told
  that it was the US Secret Service back in 1988 which had triggered the
  AFP investigation into The Realm hackers--an investigation which had
  led to Electron's bust and current legal problems. The Secret Service
  was after the hackers who broke into Citibank.

  As it happened, Electron had never touched Citibank. Credit cards
  couldn't interest him less. He found banks boring and, the way he
  looked at it, their computers were full of mundane numbers belonging
  to the world of accounting. He had already suffered through enough of
  those tedious types of numbers in his university course. Unless he
  wanted to steal from banks--something he would not do--there was no
  point in breaking into their computers.

  But the US Secret Service was very interested in banks--and in
  Phoenix. For they didn't just believe that Phoenix had been inside
  Citibank's computers. They believed he had masterminded the Citibank
  attack.

  And why did the US Secret Service think that? Because, Electron was
  told, Phoenix had gone around bragging about it in the underground. He
  hadn't just told people he had hacked into Citibank computers, he
  reportedly boasted that he had stolen some $50000 from the bank.

  Going through his legal brief, Electron had discovered something which
  seemed to confirm what he was being told. The warrant for the
  telephone tap on both of Phoenix's home phones mentioned a potential
  `serious loss to Citibank' as a justification for the warrant.
  Strangely, the typed words had been crossed out in the handwritten
  scrawl of the judge who approved the warrant. But they were still
  legible. No wonder the US Secret Service began chasing the case,
  Electron thought. Banks get upset when they think people have found a
  way to rip them off anonymously.

  Electron knew that Phoenix hadn't stolen any money from Citibank.
  Rather, he had been circulating fantastic stories about himself to
  puff up his image in the underground, and in the process had managed
  to get them all busted.

  In September 1992, Phoenix rang Electron suggesting they get together
  to discuss the case. Electron wondered why. Maybe he suspected
  something, sensing that the links binding them were weak, and becoming
  weaker by the month. That Electron's mental illness had changed his
  perception of the world. That his increasingly remote attitude to
  Phoenix suggested an underlying anger about the continual bragging.
  Whatever the reason, Phoenix's gnawing worry must have been confirmed
  when Electron put off meeting with him.

  Electron didn't want to meet with Phoenix because he didn't like him,
  and because he thought Phoenix was largely responsible for getting the
  Australian hackers into their current predicament.

  With these thoughts fermenting in his mind, Electron listened with
  interest a few months later when his solicitor, John McLoughlin,
  proposed an idea. In legal circles, it was nothing new. But it was new
  to Electron. He resolved to take up McLoughlin's advice.

  Electron decided to testify as a Crown witness against Phoenix.


    _________________________________________________________________

                       Chapter 7 -- Judgement Day
    _________________________________________________________________


    Your dream world is just about to end

  -- from `Dreamworld', on Diesel and Dust by Midnight Oil

  In another corner of the globe, the British hackers Pad and Gandalf
  learned with horror that the Australian authorities had busted the
  three Realm hackers. Electron had simply disappeared one day. A short
  time later, Phoenix was gone too. Then the reports started rolling in
  from newspapers and from other Australian hackers on a German board
  similar to Altos, called Lutzifer.

  Something else worried Pad. In one of his hacking forays, he had
  discovered a file, apparently written by Eugene Spafford, which said
  he was concerned that some British hackers--read Pad and
  Gandalf--would create a new worm, based on the RTM worm, and release
  it into the Internet. The unnamed British hackers would then be able
  to cause maximum havoc on thousands of Internet sites.

  It was true that Gandalf and Pad had captured copies of various worm
  source codes. They fished around inside SPAN until they surfaced with
  a copy of the Father Christmas worm. And, after finally successfully
  hacking Russell Brand's machine at LLNL, they deftly lifted a complete
  copy of the WANK worm. In Brand's machine, they also found a
  description of how someone had broken into SPAN looking for the WANK
  worm code, but hadn't found it. `That was me breaking into SPAN to
  look around,' Gandalf laughed, relaying the tale to Pad.

  Despite their growing library of worm code, Pad had no intention of
  writing any such worm. They simply wanted the code to study what
  penetration methods the worms had used and perhaps to learn something
  new. The British hackers prided themselves on never having done
  anything destructive to systems they hacked. In places where they knew
  their activities had been discovered--such as at the Universities of
  Bath, Edinburgh, Oxford and Strathclyde--they wrote notes to the
  admins signed 8lgm. It wasn't only an ego thing--it was also a way of
  telling the admins that they weren't going to do anything nasty to the
  system.

  At one university, the admins thought 8lgm was some kind
  of weird variation on a Belgian word and that the hackers who visited
  their systems night after night were from Belgium. At another uni, the
  admins made a different guess at the meaning. In the morning, when
  they came into work and saw that the hackers had been playing in their
  system all night, they would sigh to each other, `Our eight little
  green men are at it again'.

  At the University of Lancaster, the hackers wrote a message to the
  admins which said: `Don't do anything naughty. We have a good image
  around the world, so please don't tarnish it or start making up
  stories about us messing up systems. Don't hold your breath for us to
  hack you, but keep us in mind.' Wherever they went, their message was
  the same.

  Nonetheless Pad visualised a scenario where Spaf whipped up the
  computer security and law enforcement people into a frenzied panic and
  tried to pin all sorts of things on the British hackers, none of which
  they had done. The underground saw Spaf as being rabid in his attack
  on hackers, based largely on his response to the RTM worm. And Gandalf
  had hacked Spaf's machine.

  The crackdown on the Australians, combined with the discovery of the
  Spaf file, had a profound effect on Pad. Always cautious anyway, he
  decided to give up hacking. It was a difficult decision, and weaning
  himself from exploring systems night after night was no easy task.
  However, in the face of what had happened to Electron and Phoenix,
  continuing to hack didn't seem worth the risk.

  When Pad gave up hacking, he bought his own NUI so he could access
  places like Altos legitimately. The NUI was expensive--about
  [sterling]10 an hour--but he was never on for long. Leisurely chats of
  the type he once enjoyed in Altos were out of the question, but at
  least he could mail letters to his friends like Theorem and Gandalf.
  There would have been easier ways to maintain his friendship with
  Gandalf, who lived in Liverpool, only an hour's drive away. But it
  wouldn't be the same. Pad and Gandalf had never met, or even talked on
  the phone. They talked on-line, and via email. That was the way they
  related.

  Pad also had other reasons for giving up hacking. It was an expensive
  habit in Britain because British Telecom time-charged for local phone
  calls. In Australia, a hacker could stay on-line for hours, jumping
  from one computer to another through the data network, all for the
  cost of one local call. Like the Australians, Pad could launch his
  hacking sessions from a local uni or X.25 dial-up. However, an
  all-night hacking session based on a single phone call might still
  cost him [sterling]5 or more in timed-call charges--a considerable
  amount of money for an unemployed young man. As it was, Pad had
  already been forced to stop hacking for brief periods when he ran out
  of his dole money.

  Although Pad didn't think he could be prosecuted for hacking under
  British law in early 1990, he knew that Britain was about to enact its
  own computer crime legislation--the Computer Misuse Act 1990--in
  August. The 22-year-old hacker decided that it was better to quit
  while he was ahead.

  And he did, for a while at least. Until July 1990, when Gandalf, two
  years his junior, tempted him with one final hack before the new Act
  came into force. Just one last fling, Gandalf told him. After that
  last fling in July, Pad stopped hacking again.

  The Computer Misuse Act passed into law in August 1990, following two
  law commission reviews on the subject. The Scottish Law Commission
  issued a 1987 report proposing to make unauthorised data access
  illegal, but only if the hacker tried to `secure advantage, or cause
  damage to another person'--including reckless damage.2 Simple look-see
  hacking would not be a crime under the report's recommendations.
  However, in 1989 The Law Commission of England and Wales issued its
  own report proposing that simple unauthorised access should be a crime
  regardless of intent--a recommendation which was eventually included
  in the law.

  Late in 1989, Conservative MP Michael Colvin introduced a private
  member's bill into the British parliament. Lending her support to the
  bill, outspoken hacker-critic Emma Nicholson, another Conservative MP,
  fired public debate on the subject and ensured the bill passed through
  parliament successfully.

  In November 1990, Pad was talking on-line with Gandalf, and his friend
  suggested they have one more hack, just one more, for old time's sake.
  Well, thought Pad, one more--just a one-off thing--wouldn't hurt.

  Before long, Pad was hacking regularly again, and when Gandalf tried
  to give it up, Pad was there luring him to return to his favourite
  pastime. They were like two boys at school, getting each other into
  trouble--the kind of trouble which always comes in pairs. If Pad and
  Gandalf hadn't known each other, they probably would both have walked
  away from hacking forever in 1990.

  As they both got back into the swing of things, they tried to make
  light of the risk of getting caught. `Hey, you know,' Gandalf joked
  on-line more than once, `the first time we actually meet each other in
  person will probably be in a police station.'

  Completely irreverent and always upbeat, Gandalf proved to be a true
  friend. Pad had rarely met such a fellow traveller in the real world,
  let alone on-line. What others--particularly some American
  hackers--viewed as prickliness, Pad saw as the perfect sense of
  humour. To Pad, Gandalf was the best m8 a fellow could ever have.

  During the time Pad avoided hacking, Gandalf had befriended another,
  younger hacker named Wandii, also from the north of England. Wandii
  never played much of a part in the international computer underground,
  but he did spend a lot of time hacking European computers. Wandii and
  Pad got along pleasantly but they were never close. They were
  acquaintances, bound by ties to Gandalf in the underground.

  By the middle of June 1991, Pad, Gandalf and Wandii were peaking. At
  least one of them--and often more--had already broken into systems
  belonging to the European Community in Luxembourg, The Financial Times
  (owners of the FTSE 100 share index), the British Ministry of Defence,
  the Foreign Office, NASA, the investment bank SG Warburg in London,
  the American computer database software manufacturer Oracle, and more
  machines on the JANET network than they could remember. Pad had also
  penetrated a classified military network containing a NATO system.
  They moved through British Telecom's Packet Switched Stream Network
  (PSS), which was similar to the Tymnet X.25 network, with absolute
  ease.3

  Gandalf's motto was, `If it moves, hack it'.

                                   [ ]

  On 27 June 1991, Pad was sitting in the front room of his parent's
  comfortable home in greater Manchester watching the last remnants of
  daylight disappear on one of the longest days of the year. He loved
  summer, loved waking up to streaks of sunlight sneaking through the
  cracks in his bedroom curtain. He often thought to himself, it doesn't
  get much better than this.

  Around 11 p.m. he flicked on his modem and his Atari 520 ST computer
  in the front sitting room. There were two Atari computers in the
  house--indicative of his deep enthusiasm for computers since neither
  his siblings nor his parents had any interest in programming. Most of
  the time, however, Pad left the older Atari alone. His elder brother,
  an aspiring chemist, used it for writing his PhD thesis.

  Before dialling out, Pad checked that no-one was on the house's single
  phone line. Finding it free, he went to check his email on Lutzifer. A
  few minutes after watching his machine connect to the German board, he
  heard a soft thud, followed by a creaking. Pad stopped typing, looked
  up from his machine and listened. He wondered if his brother, reading
  in their bedroom upstairs, or his parents, watching telly in the back
  lounge room, could hear the creaking.

  The sound became more pronounced and Pad swung around and looked
  toward the hallway. In a matter of seconds, the front door frame had
  been cracked open, prising the door away from its lock. The wood had
  been torn apart by some sort of car jack, pumped up until the door
  gave way.

  Suddenly, a group of men burst through from the front doorstep, dashed
  down the long hallway and shot up the carpeted stairs to Pad's
  bedroom.

  Still sitting at his computer downstairs, Pad swiftly flicked his
  modem, and then his computer, off--instantly killing his connection
  and everything on his screen. He turned back toward the door leading
  to the sitting room and strained to hear what was happening upstairs.
  If he wasn't so utterly surprised, he would almost have laughed. He
  realised that when the police had dashed up to his bedroom, they had
  been chasing every stereotype about hackers they had probably ever
  read. The boy. In his bedroom. Hunched over his computer. Late at
  night.

  They did find a young man in the bedroom, with a computer. But it was
  the wrong one, and for all intents and purposes the wrong computer. It
  took the police almost ten minutes of quizzing Pad's brother to work
  out their mistake.

  Hearing a commotion, Pad's parents had rushed into the hallway while
  Pad peered from the doorway of the front sitting room. A uniformed
  police officer ushered everyone back into the room, and began asking
  Pad questions.

  `Do you use computers? Do you use the name Pad on computers?' they
  asked.

  Pad concluded the game was up. He answered their questions truthfully.
  Hacking was not such a serious crime after all, he thought. It wasn't
  as if he had stolen money or anything. This would be a drama, but he
  was easy-going. He would roll with the punches, cop a slap on the
  wrist and soon the whole thing would be over and done with.

  The police took Pad to his bedroom and asked him questions as they
  searched the room. The bedroom had a comfortably lived-in look, with a
  few small piles of clothes in the corner, some shoes scattered across
  the floor, the curtains hanging crooked, and a collection of music
  posters--Jimi Hendrix and The Smiths--taped to the wall.

  A group of police hovered around his computer. One of them began to
  search through Pad's books on the shelves above the PC, checking each
  one as he pulled it down. A few well-loved Spike Milligan works. Some
  old chess books from when he was captain of the local chess team.
  Chemistry books, purchased by Pad long before he took any classes in
  the subject, just to satisfy his curiosity. Physics books. An
  oceanography textbook. A geology book bought after a visit to a cave
  excited his interest in the formation of rocks. Pad's mother, a
  nursing sister, and his father, an electronics engineer who tested
  gyros on aircraft, had always encouraged their children's interest in
  the sciences.

  The policeman returned those books to the shelves, only picking out
  the computer books, textbooks from programming and maths classes Pad
  had taken at a Manchester university. The officer carefully slid them
  inside plastic bags to be taken away as
  evidence.

  Then the police picked through Pad's music tapes--The Stone Roses,
  Pixies, New Order, The Smiths and lots of indie music from the
  flourishing Manchester music scene. No evidence of anything but an
  eclectic taste in music there.

  Another policeman opened Pad's wardrobe and peered inside. `Anything
  in here of interest?' he asked.

  `No,' Pad answered. `It's all over here.' He pointed to the box of
  computer disks.

  Pad didn't think there was much point in the police tearing the place
  to pieces, when they would ultimately find everything they wanted
  anyway. Nothing was hidden. Unlike the Australian hackers, Pad hadn't
  been expecting the police at all. Although part of the data on his
  hard drive was encrypted, there was plenty of incriminating evidence
  in the un-encrypted files.

  Pad couldn't hear exactly what his parents were talking about with the
  police in the other room, but he could tell they were calm. Why
  shouldn't they be? It wasn't as if their son had done anything
  terrible. He hadn't beaten someone up in a fist fight at a pub, or
  robbed anyone. He hadn't hit someone while drunk driving. No, they
  thought, he had just been fiddling around with computers. Maybe poking
  around where he shouldn't have been, but that was hardly a serious
  crime. They needn't worry. It wasn't as if he was going to prison or
  anything. The police would sort it all out. Maybe some sort of
  citation, and the matter would be over and done. Pad's mother even
  offered to make cups of tea for the police.

  One of the police struck up a conversation with Pad off to the side as
  he paused to drink his tea. He seemed to know that Pad was on the
  dole, and with a completely straight face, he said, `If you wanted a
  job, why didn't you just join the police?'

  Pad paused for a reality check. Here he was being raided by nearly a
  dozen law enforcement officers--including representatives from BT and
  Scotland Yard's computer crimes unit--for hacking hundreds of
  computers and this fellow wanted to know why he hadn't just become a
  copper?

  He tried not to laugh. Even if he hadn't been busted, there is no way
  he would ever have contemplated joining the police. Never in a million
  years. His family and friends, while showing a pleasant veneer of
  middle-class orderliness, were fundamentally anti-establishment. Many
  knew that Pad had been hacking, and which sites he had penetrated.
  Their attitude was: Hacking Big Brother? Good on you.

  His parents were torn, wanting to encourage Pad's interest in
  computers but also worrying their son spent an inordinate amount of
  time glued to the screen. Their mixed feelings mirrored Pad's own
  occasional concern.

  While deep in the throes of endless hacking nights, he would suddenly
  sit upright and ask himself, What am I doing here, fucking around on a
  computer all day and night? Where is this heading? What about the rest
  of life? Then he would disentangle himself from hacking for a few days
  or weeks. He would go down to the university pub to drink with his
  mostly male group of friends from his course.

  Tall, with short brown hair, a slender physique and a handsomely
  boyish face, the soft-spoken Pad would have been considered attractive
  by many intelligent girls. The problem was finding those sort of
  girls. He hadn't met many when he was studying at university--there
  were few women in his maths and computer classes. So he and his
  friends used to head down to the Manchester nightclubs for the social
  scene and the good music.

  Pad went downstairs with one of the officers and watched as the police
  unplugged his 1200 baud modem, then tucked it into a plastic bag. He
  had bought that modem when he was eighteen. The police unplugged
  cables, bundled them up and slipped them into labelled plastic bags.
  They gathered up his 20 megabyte hard drive and monitor. More plastic
  bags and labels.

  One of the officers called Pad over to the front door. The jack was
  still wedged across the mutilated door frame. The police had broken
  down the door instead of knocking because they wanted to catch the
  hacker in the act--on-line. The officer motioned for Pad to follow
  him.

  `Come on,' he said, leading the hacker into the night. `We're taking
  you to the station.'

  Pad spent the night in a cell at the Salford Crescent police
  station, alone. No rough crims, and no other hackers either.

  He settled into one of the metal cots lined against the perimeter of
  the cell, but sleep evaded him. Pad wondered if Gandalf had been
  raided as well. There was no sign of him, but then again, the police
  would hardly be stupid enough to lock up the two hackers together. He
  tossed and turned, trying to push thoughts from his head.

  Pad had fallen into hacking almost by accident. Compared to others in
  the underground, he had taken it up at a late age--around nineteen.
  Altos had been the catalyst. Visiting BBSes, he read a file describing
  not only what Altos was, but how to get there--complete with NUI.
  Unlike the Australian underground, the embryonic British underground
  had no shortage of NUIs. Someone had discovered a stack of BT NUIs and
  posted them on BBSes across England.

  Pad followed the directions in the BBS file and soon found himself in
  the German chat channel. Like Theorem, he marvelled at the brave new
  live world of Altos. It was wonderful, a big international party.
  After all, it wasn't every day he got to talk with Australians, Swiss,
  Germans, Italians and Americans. Before long, he had taken up hacking
  like so many other Altos regulars.

  Hacking as a concept had always intrigued him. As a teenager, the film
  War Games had dazzled him. The idea that computers could communicate
  with each over telephone lines enthralled the sixteen-year-old,
  filling his mind with new ideas. Sometime after that he saw a
  television report on a group of hackers who claimed that they had used
  their skills to move satellites around in space--the same story which
  had first caught Electron's imagination.

  Pad had grown up in Greater Manchester. More than a century before,
  the region had been a textile boom-town. But the thriving economy did
  not translate into great wealth for the masses. In the early 1840s,
  Friedrich Engels had worked in his father's cotton-milling factory in
  the area, and the suffering
  he saw in the region influenced his most famous work, The Communist
  Manifesto, published in 1848.

  Manchester wore the personality of a working-class town, a place where
  people often disliked the establishment and
  distrusted authority figures. The 1970s and 1980s had not been kind to
  most of Greater Manchester, with unemployment and urban decay
  disfiguring the once-proud textile hub. But this decay only appeared
  to strengthen an underlying resolve among many from the working
  classes to challenge the symbols of power.

  Pad didn't live in a public housing high-rise. He lived in a suburban
  middle-class area, in an old, working-class town removed from the
  dismal inner-city. But like many people from the north, he disliked
  pretensions. Indeed, he harboured a healthy degree of good-natured
  scepticism, perhaps stemming from a culture of mates whose favourite
  pastime was pulling each other's leg down at the pub.

  This scepticism was in full-gear as he watched the story of how
  hackers supposedly moved satellites around in space, but somehow the
  idea slipped through the checkpoints and captured his imagination,
  just as it had done with Electron. He felt a desire to find out for
  himself if it was true and he began pursuing hacking in enthusiastic
  bursts. At first it was any moderately interesting system. Then he
  moved to the big-name systems--computers belonging to large
  institutions. Eventually, working with the Australians, he learned to
  target computer security experts. That was, after all, where the
  treasure was stored.

  In the morning at the police station, a guard gave Pad something to
  eat which might have passed for food. Then he was escorted into an
  interview room with two plain-clothed officers and a BT
  representative.

  Did he want a lawyer? No. He had nothing to hide. Besides, the police
  had already seized evidence from his house, including unencrypted data
  logs of his hacking sessions. How could he argue against that? So he
  faced his stern inquisitors and answered their questions willingly.

  Suddenly things began to take a different turn when they began asking
  about the `damage' he had done inside the Greater London Polytechnic's
  computers. Damage? What damage? Pad certainly hadn't damaged anything.

  Yes, the police told him. The damage totalling almost a quarter of a
  million pounds.

  Pad gasped in horror. A quarter of a million pounds? He thought back
  to his many forays into the system. He had been a little mischievous,
  changing the welcome message to `Hi' and signing it 8lgm. He had made
  a few accounts for himself so he could log in at a later date. That
  seemed to be nothing special, however, since he and Gandalf had a
  habit of making accounts called 8lgm for themselves in JANET systems.
  He had also erased logs of his activities to cover his tracks, but
  again, this was not unusual, and he had certainly never deleted any
  computer users' files. The whole thing had just been a bit of fun, a
  bit of cat and mouse gaming with the system admins. There was nothing
  he could recall which would account for that kind of damage. Surely
  they had the wrong hacker?

  No, he was the right one all right. Eighty investigators from BT,
  Scotland Yard and other places had been chasing the 8lgm hackers for
  two years. They had phone traces, logs seized from his computer and
  logs from the hacked sites. They knew it was him.

  For the first time, the true gravity of the situation hit Pad. These
  people believed in some way that he had committed serious criminal
  damage, that he had even been malicious.

  After about two hours of questioning, they put Pad back in his cell.
  More questions tomorrow, they told him.

  Later that afternoon, an officer came in to tell Pad his mother and
  father were outside. He could meet with them in the visiting area.
  Talking through a glass barrier, Pad tried to reassure his worried
  parents. After five minutes, an officer told the family the visit was
  over. Amid hurried goodbyes under the impatient stare of the guard,
  Pad's parents told him they had brought something for him to read in
  his cell. It was the oceanography textbook.

  Back in his cell, he tried to read, but he couldn't concentrate. He
  kept replaying his visits to the London Polytechnic over and over in
  his mind, searching for how he might have inadvertently done
  [sterling]250000 worth of damage. Pad was a very good hacker; it
  wasn't as if he was some fourteen-year-old kid barging through systems
  like a bull in china shop. He knew how to get in and out of a system
  without hurting it.

  Shortly after 8 p.m., as Pad sat on his cot stewing over the police
  damage claims, sombre music seemed to fill his cell. Slowly at first,
  an almost imperceptible moaning, which subtly transformed into solemn
  but recognisable notes. It sounded like Welsh choir music, and it was
  coming from above him.

  Pad looked up at the ceiling. The music--all male voices-- stopped
  abruptly, then started again, repeating the same heavy, laboured
  notes. The hacker smiled. The local police choir was practising right
  above his cell.

  After another fitful night, Pad faced one more round of interviews.
  The police did most of the questioning, but they didn't seem to know
  much about computers--well, not nearly so much as any good hacker on
  Altos. Whenever either of the police asked a technical question, they
  looked over to the BT guy at the other end of the table as if to say,
  `Does this make any sense?' The BT guy would give a slight nod, then
  the police looked back at Pad for an answer. Most of the time, he was
  able to decipher what they thought they were trying to ask, and he
  answered accordingly.

  Then it was back to his cell while they processed his charge sheets.
  Alone again, Pad wondered once more if they had raided Gandalf. Like
  an answer from above, Pad heard telephone tones through the walls. The
  police seemed to be playing them over and over. That was when he knew
  they had Gandalf too.

  Gandalf had rigged up a tone dialler in his computer. It sounded as if
  the police were playing with it, trying to figure it out.

  So, Pad would finally meet Gandalf in person after two years. What
  would he look like? Would they have the same chemistry in person as
  on-line? Pad felt like he knew Gandalf, knew his essence, but meeting
  in person could be a bit tricky.

  Explaining that the paperwork, including the charge sheets, had
  finally been organised, a police officer unlocked Pad's cell door and
  led him to a foyer, telling him he would be meeting both Gandalf and
  Wandii. A large collection of police had formed a semi-circle around
  two other young men. In addition to Scotland Yard's Computer Crimes
  Unit and BT, at least seven other police forces were involved in the
  three raids, including those from Greater Manchester, Merseyside and
  West Yorkshire. The officers were curious about the hackers.

  For most of the two years of their investigation, the police didn't
  even know the hackers' real identities. After such a long, hard chase,
  the police had been forced to wait a little longer, since they wanted
  to nab each hacker while he was on-line. That meant hiding outside
  each hacker's home until he logged in somewhere. Any system would do
  and they didn't have to be talking to each other on-line--as long as
  the login was illegal. The police had sat patiently, and finally
  raided the hackers within hours of each other, so they didn't have
  time to warn one another.

  So, at the end of the long chase and a well-timed operation, the
  police wanted to have a look at the hackers up close.

  After the officer walked Pad up to the group, he introduced Gandalf.
  Tall, lean with brown hair and pale skin, he looked a little bit like
  Pad. The two hackers smiled shyly at each other, before one of the
  police pointed out Wandii, the seventeen-year-old schoolboy. Pad
  didn't get a good look at Wandii, because the police quickly lined the
  hackers up in a row, with Gandalf in the middle, to explain details to
  them. They were being charged under the Computer Misuse Act of 1990.
  Court dates would be set and they would be notified.

  When they were finally allowed to leave, Wandii seemed to disappear.
  Pad and Gandalf walked outside, found a couple of benches and lay
  down, basking in the sun and chatting while they waited for their
  rides home.

  Gandalf proved to be as easy to talk to in person as he was on-line.
  They exchanged phone numbers and shared notes on the police raids.
  Gandalf had insisted on meeting a lawyer before his interviews, but
  when the lawyer arrived he didn't have the slightest understanding of
  computer crime. He advised Gandalf to tell the police whatever they
  wanted to know, so the hacker did.

  The trial was being held in London. Pad wondered why, if all three
  hackers were from the north, the case was being tried in the south.
  After all, there was a court in Manchester which was high enough to
  deal with their crimes.

  Maybe it was because Scotland Yard was in London. Maybe they had
  started the paperwork down there. Maybe it was because they were being
  accused of hacking computers located within the jurisdiction of the
  Central Criminal Court--that court being the Old Bailey in London. But
  Pad's cynical side hazarded a different guess--a guess which seemed
  justified after a few procedural appearances in 1992 before the trial,
  which was set for 1993. For when Pad arrived at the Bow Street
  Magistrates Court for his committal in April 1992, he saw it packed
  out with the media, just as he had anticipated.

  A few hackers also fronted up to fly the flag of the underground. One
  of them--a stranger--came up to Pad after court, patted him on the
  back and exclaimed enthusiastically, `Well done, Paddy!' Startled, Pad
  just looked at him and then smiled. He had no idea how to respond to
  the stranger.

  Like the three Australian hackers, Pad, Gandalf and the little-known
  Wandii were serving as the test case for new hacking laws in their
  country. British law enforcement agencies had spent a fortune on the
  case--more than [sterling]500000 according to the newspapers--by the
  time the 8lgm case went to trial. This was going to be a show case,
  and the government agencies wanted taxpayers to know they were getting
  their money's worth.

  The hackers weren't being charged with breaking into computers. They
  were being charged with conspiracy, a more serious offence. While
  admitting the threesome did not hack for personal gain, the
  prosecution alleged the hackers had conspired to break into and modify
  computer systems. It was a strange approach to say the least,
  considering that none of the three hackers had ever met or even talked
  to the others before they were arrested.

  It was not so strange, however, when looking at the potential
  penalties. If the hackers had been charged with simply breaking into a
  machine, without intending any harm, the maximum penalty was six
  months jail and a fine of up to [sterling]5000. However, conspiracy,
  which was covered under a different section of the Act, could bring up
  to five years in jail and an unlimited amount in fines.

  The prosecution was taking a big gamble. It would be harder to prove
  conspiracy charges, which required demonstration of greater criminal
  intent than lesser charges. The potential pay-off was of course also
  much greater. If convicted, the defendants in Britain's most important
  hacking case to date would be going to prison.

  As with The Realm case, two hackers--Pad and Gandalf--planned to plead
  guilty while the third--in this case Wandii--planned to fight the
  charges every step of the way. Legal Aid was footing the bill for
  their lawyers, because the hackers were either not working or were
  working in such lowly paid, short-term jobs they qualified for free
  legal support.

  Wandii's lawyers told the media that this showcase was tantamount to a
  state trial. It was the first major hacking case under the new
  legislation which didn't involve disgruntled employees. While having
  no different legal status from a normal trial, the term state trial
  suggested a greater degree of official wrath--the kind usually
  reserved for cases of treason.

  On 22 February 1993, within two months of Electron's decision to turn
  Crown witness against Phoenix and Nom, the three 8lgm hackers stood in
  the dock at Southwark Crown Court in South London to enter pleas in
  their own case.

  In the dim winter light, Southwark couldn't look less appealing, but
  that didn't deter the crowds. The courtroom was going to be packed,
  just as Bow Street had been. Scotland Yard detectives were turning out
  in force. The crowd shuffled toward Room 12.

  The prosecution told the media they had about 800 computer disks full
  of evidence and court materials. If all the data had been printed out
  on A4 paper, the stack would tower more than 40 metres in the air,
  they said. Considering the massive amount of evidence being heaved,
  rolled and tugged through the building by teams of legal eagles, the
  choice of location--on the fifth floor--proved to be a challenge.

  Standing in the dock next to Wandii, Pad and Gandalf pleaded guilty to
  two computer conspiracy charges: conspiring to dishonestly obtain
  telecommunications services, and conspiring to cause unauthorised
  modification to computer material. Pad also pleaded guilty to a third
  charge: causing damage to a computer. This last charge related to the
  almost a quarter of
  a million pounds worth of `damage' to the Central London Polytechnic.
  Unlike the Australians' case, none of the British hackers faced
  charges about specific sites such as NASA.

  Pad and Gandalf pleaded guilty because they didn't think they had much
  choice. Their lawyers told them that, in light of the evidence,
  denying their guilt was simply not a realistic option. Better to throw
  yourself on the mercy of the court, they advised. As if to underline
  the point, Gandalf's lawyer had told him after a meeting at the end of
  1992, `I'd like to wish you a happy Christmas, but I don't think it's
  going to be one'.

  Wandii's lawyers disagreed. Standing beside his fellow hackers, Wandii
  pleaded not guilty to three conspiracy charges: plotting to gain
  unauthorised access to computers, conspiring to make unauthorised
  modifications to computer material, and conspiring to obtain
  telecommunications services dishonestly. His defence team was going to
  argue that he was addicted to computer hacking and that, as a result
  of this addiction, he was not able to form the criminal intent
  necessary to be convicted.

  Pad thought Wandii's case was on shaky ground. Addiction didn't seem a
  plausible defence to him, and he noticed Wandii looked very nervous in
  court just after his plea.

  Pad and Gandalf left London after their court appearance, returning to
  the north to prepare for their sentencing hearings, and to watch the
  progress of Wandii's case through the eyes of the media.

  They weren't disappointed. It was a star-studded show. The media
  revved itself up for a feeding frenzy and the prosecution team, headed
  by James Richardson, knew how to feed the pack. He zeroed in on
  Wandii, telling the court how the schoolboy `was tapping into offices
  at the EC in Luxembourg and even the experts were worried. He caused
  havoc at universities all around the world'.4 To do this, Wandii had
  used a simple BBC Micro computer, a Christmas present costing
  [sterling]200.

  The hacking didn't stop at European Community's computer, Richardson
  told the eager crowd of journalists. Wandii had hacked Lloyd's, The
  Financial Times and Leeds University. At The Financial Times machine,
  Wandii's adventures had upset the smooth operations of the FTSE 100
  share index, known in the City as `footsie'. The hacker installed a
  scanning program in the FT's network, resulting in one outgoing call
  made every second. The upshot of Wandii's intrusion: a [sterling]704
  bill, the deletion of an important file and a management decision to
  shut down a key system. With the precision of a banker, FT computer
  boss Tony Johnson told the court that the whole incident had cost his
  organisation [sterling]24871.

  But the FT hack paled next to the prosecution's real trump card: The
  European Organisation for the Research and Treatment of Cancer in
  Brussels. They had been left with a [sterling]10000 phone bill as a
  result of a scanner Wandii left on its machine,5 the court was told.
  The scanner had left a trail of 50000 calls, all documented on a
  980-page phone bill.

  The scanner resulted in the system going down for a day, EORTC
  information systems project manager Vincent Piedboeuf, told the jury.
  He went on to explain that the centre needed its system to run 24
  hours a day, so surgeons could register patients. The centre's
  database was the focal point for pharmaceutical companies, doctors and
  research centres--all coordinating their efforts in fighting the
  disease.

  For the media, the case was headline heaven. `Teenage computer hacker
  "caused worldwide chaos"' the Daily Telegraph screamed across page
  one. On page three, the Daily Mail jumped in with `Teenage hacker
  "caused chaos for kicks"'. Even The Times waded into the fray.
  Smaller, regional newspapers pulled the story across the countryside
  to the far reaches of the British Isles. The Herald in Glasgow told
  its readers `Teenage hacker "ran up [sterling]10000 telephone bill"'.
  Across the Irish Sea, the Irish Times caused a splash with its
  headline, `Teenage hacker broke EC computer security'.

  Also in the first week of the case, The Guardian announced Wandii had
  taken down the cancer centre database. By the time The Independent got
  hold of the story, Wandii hadn't just shut down the database, he had
  been reading the patients' most intimate medical details: `Teenager
  "hacked into cancer patient files"'. Not to be outdone, on day four of
  the trial, the Daily Mail had christened Wandii as a `computer
  genius'. By day five it labelled him as a `computer invader' who `cost
  FT [sterling]25000'.

  The list went on. Wandii, the press announced, had hacked the Tokyo
  Zoo and the White House. It was difficult to tell which was the more
  serious offence.

  Wandii's defence team had a few tricks of its own. Ian MacDonald, QC,
  junior counsel Alistair Kelman and solicitor Deborah Tripley put
  London University Professor James Griffith-Edwards, an authoritative
  spokesman on addictive and compulsive behaviours, on the stand as an
  expert witness. The chairman of the National Addiction Centre, the
  professor had been part of a team which wrote the World Health
  Organisation's definition of addiction. No-one was going to question
  his qualifications.

  The professor had examined Wandii and he announced his conclusion to
  the court: Wandii was obsessed by computers, he was unable to stop
  using them, and his infatuation made it impossible for him to choose
  freely. `He repeated 12 times in police interviews, "I'm just
  addicted. I wish I wasn't",' Griffith-Edwards told the court. Wandii
  was highly intelligent, but was unable to escape from the urge to beat
  computers' security systems at their own game. The hacker was obsessed
  by the intellectual challenge. `This is the core ... of what attracts
  the compulsive gambler,' the professor explained to the entranced jury
  of three women and nine men.

  But Wandii, this obsessive, addicted, gifted young man, had never had
  a girlfriend, Griffith-Edwards continued. In fact, he shyly admitted
  to the professor that he wouldn't even know how to ask a girl out. `He
  [Wandii] became profoundly embarrassed when asked to talk about his
  own feelings. He simply couldn't cope when asked what sort of person
  he was.'6

  People in the jury edged forward in their seats, concentrating
  intently on the distinguished professor. And why wouldn't they? This
  was amazing stuff. This erudite man had delved inside the mind of the
  young man of bizarre contrasts. A man so sophisticated that he could
  pry open computers belonging to some of Britain's and Europe's most
  prestigious institutions, and yet at the same time so simple that he
  had no idea how to ask a girl on a date. A man who was addicted not to
  booze, smack or speed, which the average person associates with
  addiction, but to a computer--a machine most people associated with
  kids' games and word processing programs.

  The defence proceeded to present vivid examples of Wandii's addiction.
  Wandii's mother, a single parent and lecturer in English, had terrible
  trouble trying to get her son away from his computer and modem. She
  tried hiding his modem. He found it. She tried again, hiding it at his
  grandmother's house. He burgled granny's home and retrieved it. His
  mother tried to get at his computer. He pushed her out of his attic
  room and down the stairs.

  Then he ran up a [sterling]700 phone bill as a result of his hacking.
  His mother switched off the electricity at the mains. Her son
  reconnected it. She installed a security calling-code on the phone to
  stop him calling out. He broke it. She worried he wouldn't go out and
  do normal teenage things. He continued to stay up all night--and
  sometimes all day--hacking. She returned from work to find him
  unconscious--sprawled across the living room floor and looking as
  though he was dead. But it wasn't death, only sheer exhaustion. He
  hacked until he passed out, then he woke up and hacked some more.

  The stories of Wandii's self-confessed addiction overwhelmed, appalled
  and eventually engendered pity in the courtroom audience. The media
  began calling him `the hermit hacker'.

  Wandii's defence team couldn't fight the prosecution's
  evidence head-on, so they took the prosecution's evidence and claimed
  it as their own. They showed the jury that Wandii hadn't just hacked
  the institutions named by the prosecution; he had hacked far, far more
  than that. He didn't just hack a lot--he hacked too much. Most of all,
  Wandii's defence team gave the jury a reason to acquit the
  innocent-faced young man sitting before them.

  During the trial, the media focused on Wandii, but didn't completely
  ignore the other two hackers. Computer Weekly hunted down where
  Gandalf was working and laid it bare on the front page. A member of
  `the UK's most notorious hacking gang', the journal announced, had
  been working on software which would be used at Barclay's Bank.7 The
  implication was clear. Gandalf was a terrible security risk and should
  never be allowed to do any work for a financial institution. The
  report irked the hackers, but they tried to concentrate on preparing
  for their sentencing hearing.

  From the beginning of their case, the hackers had problems obtaining
  certain evidence. Pad and Gandalf believed some of the material seized
  in the police raids would substantially help their case--such as
  messages from admins thanking them for pointing out security holes on
  their systems. This material had not been included in the
  prosecution's brief. When the defendants requested access to it, they
  were refused access on the grounds that there was classified data on
  the optical disk. They were told to go read the Attorney-General's
  guidelines on disclosure of information. The evidence of the hackers'
  forays into military and government systems was jumbled in with their
  intrusions into computers such as benign JANET systems, the defence
  team was told. It would take too much time to separate the two.

  Eventually, after some wrangling, Pad and Gandalf were told they could
  inspect and copy material--provided it was done under the supervision
  of the police. The hackers travelled to London, to Holborn police
  station, to gather supporting evidence for their case. However, it
  soon became clear that this time-consuming exercise would be
  impossible to manage on an ongoing basis. Finally, the Crown
  Prosecution Service relented, agreeing to release the material on disk
  to Pad's solicitor, on the proviso that no copies were made, it did
  not leave the law office, and it was returned at the end of the trial.

  As Wandii's case lurched from revelation to exaggeration, Pad and
  Gandalf busily continued to prepare for their own sentencing hearing.
  Every day, Gandalf travelled from Liverpool to Manchester to meet with
  his friend. They picked up a handful of newspapers at the local agent,
  and then headed up to Pad's lawyer's office. After a quick scan for
  articles covering the hacking case, the two hackers began sifting
  through the reluctantly released prosecution disks. They read through
  the material on computer, under the watchful eye of the law office's
  cashier--the most computer literate person in the firm.

  After fifteen days in the Southwark courtroom listening to fantastic
  stories from both sides about the boy sitting before them, the jury in
  Wandii's trial retired to consider the evidence. Before they left,
  Judge Harris gave them a stern warning: the argument that Wandii was
  obsessed or dependent was not a defence against the charges.

  It took the jurors only 90 minutes to reach a decision, and when the
  verdict was read out the courtroom erupted with a wave of emotion.

  Not guilty. On all counts.

  Wandii's mother burst into a huge smile and turned to her son, who was
  also smiling. And the defence team couldn't be happier. Kelman told
  journalists, `The jury felt this was a sledge hammer being used to
  crack a nut'.8

  The prosecution was stunned and the law enforcement agents
  flabbergasted. Detective Sergeant Barry Donovan found the verdict
  bizarre. No other case in his 21 years in law enforcement had as much
  overwhelming evidence as this one, yet the jury had let Wandii walk.

  And in a high-pitched frenzy rivalling its earlier hysteria, the
  British media jumped all over the jury's decision. `Hacker who ravaged
  systems walks free', an indignant Guardian announced. `Computer Genius
  is cleared of hacking conspiracy', said the Evening Standard. `Hacking
  "addict" acquitted', sniffed The Times. Overpowering them all was the
  Daily Telegraph's page one: `Teenage computer addict who hacked White
  House system is cleared'.

  Then came the media king-hit. Someone had leaked another story and it
  looked bad. The report, in the Mail on Sunday, said that the three
  hackers had broken into a Cray computer at the European Centre for
  Medium Range Weather Forecasting at Bracknell. This computer, likes
  dozens of others, would normally have been relegated to the long list
  of unmentioned victims except for one thing. The US military used
  weather data from the centre for planning its attack on Iraq in the
  Gulf War. The media report claimed that the attack had slowed down the
  Cray's calculations, thus endangering the whole Desert Storm
  operation. The paper announced the hackers had been `inadvertently
  jeopardising--almost fatally--the international effort against Saddam
  Hussein' and had put `thousands of servicemen's lives at risk'.9

  Further, the paper alleged that the US State Department was so
  incensed about British hackers' repeated break-ins disrupting Pentagon
  defence planning that it had complained to Prime Minister John Major.
  The White House put the matter more bluntly than the State Department:
  Stop your hackers or we will cut off European access to our satellite
  which provides trans-Atlantic data and voice telecommunications.
  Someone in Britain seemed to be listening, for less than twelve months
  later, authorities had arrested all three hackers.

  Pad thought the allegations were rubbish. He had been inside a VAX
  machine at the weather centre for a couple of hours one night, but he
  had never touched a Cray there. He had certainly never done anything
  to slow the machine down. No cracking programs, no scanners, nothing
  which might account for the delay described in the report. Even if he
  had been responsible, he found it hard to believe the Western allies'
  victory in the Gulf War was determined by one computer in Berkshire.

  All of which gave him cause to wonder why the media was running this
  story now, after Wandii's acquittal but before he and Gandalf were
  sentenced. Sour grapes, perhaps?

  For days, columnists, editorial and letter writers across Britain
  pontificated on the meaning of the Wandii's verdict and the validity
  of an addiction to hacking as a defence. Some urged computer owners to
  take responsibility for securing their own systems. Others called for
  tougher hacking laws. A few echoed the view of The Times, which
  declared in an editorial, `a persistent car thief of [the hacker's]
  age would almost certainly have received a custodial sentence. Both
  crimes suggest disrespect for other people's property ... the jurors
  may have failed to appreciate the seriousness of this kind of
  offence'.10

  The debate flew forward, changing and growing, and expanding beyond
  Britain's borders. In Hong Kong, the South China Morning Post asked,
  `Is [this] case evidence of a new social phenomenon, with immature and
  susceptible minds being damaged through prolonged exposure to personal
  computers?' The paper described public fear that Wandii's case would
  result in `the green light for an army of computer-literate hooligans
  to pillage the world's databases at will, pleading insanity when
  caught'.11

  By April Fool's Day 1991, more than two weeks after the end of the
  court case, Wandii had his own syndrome named after him, courtesy of
  The Guardian.

  And while Wandii, his mother and his team of lawyers celebrated their
  victory quietly, the media reported that the Scotland Yard detectives
  commiserated over their defeat, which was considerably more serious
  than simply losing the Wandii case. The Computer Crimes Unit was being
  `reorganised'. Two experienced officers from the five-man unit were
  being moved out of the group. The official line was that the
  `rotations' were normal Scotland Yard procedure. The unofficial word
  was that the Wandii case had been a fiasco, wasting time and money,
  and the debacle was not to be repeated.

  In the north, a dark cloud gathered over Pad and Gandalf as their
  judgment day approached. The Wandii case verdict might have been cause
  for celebration among some in the computer underground, but it brought
  little joy for the other two 8lgm hackers.

  For Pad and Gandalf, who had already pleaded guilty, Wandii's
  acquittal was a disaster.

                                   [ ]

  On 12 May 1993, two months after Wandii's acquittal, Boris Kayser
  stood up at the Bar table to put forward Electron's case at the
  Australian hacker's plea and sentencing hearing. As he began to speak,
  a hush fell over the Victorian County Court.

  A tall, burly man with a booming voice, an imperious courtroom
  demeanour and his traditional black robes flowing behind him in an
  echo of his often emphatic gesticulations, Kayser was larger than
  life. A master showman, he knew how to play an audience of courtroom
  journalists sitting behind him as much as to the judge in front of
  him.

  Electron had already stood in the dock and pleaded guilty to fourteen
  charges, as agreed with the DPP's office. In typical style, Kayser had
  interrupted the long process of the court clerk reading out each
  charge and asking whether Electron would plead guilty or not guilty.
  With an impatient wave of his hand, Kayser asked the judge to dispense
  with such formalities since his client would plead guilty to all the
  agreed charges at once. The interjection was more of an announcement
  than a question.

  The formalities of a plea having been summarily dealt with, the
  question now at hand was sentencing. Electron wondered if he would be
  sent to prison. Despite lobbying from Electron's lawyers, the DPP's
  office had refused to recommend a non-custodial sentence. The best
  deal Electron's lawyers had been able to arrange in exchange for
  turning Crown witness was for the DPP to remain silent on the issue of
  prison. The judge would make up his mind without input from the DPP.

  Electron fiddled nervously with his father's wedding ring, which he
  wore on his right hand. After his father's death, Electron's sister
  had begun taking things from the family home. Electron didn't care
  much because there were only two things he really wanted: that ring
  and some of his father's paintings.

  Kayser called a handful of witnesses to support the case for a light
  sentence. Electron's grandmother from Queensland. The family friend
  who had driven Electron to the hospital the day his father died.
  Electron's psychiatrist, the eminent Lester Walton. Walton in
  particular highlighted the difference between the two possible paths
  forward: prison, which would certainly traumatise an already mentally
  unstable young man, or freedom, which offered Electron a good chance
  of eventually establishing a normal life.

  When Kayser began summarising the case for a non-custodial sentence,
  Electron could hear the pack of journalists off to his side
  frantically scribbling notes. He wanted to look at them, but he was
  afraid the judge would see his ponytail, carefully tucked into his
  neatly ironed white shirt, if he turned sideways,

  `Your Honour,' Kayser glanced backward slightly, toward the court
  reporters, as he warmed up, `my client lived in an artificial world of
  electronic pulses.'

  Scratch, scribble. Electron could almost predict, within half a
  second, when the journalists' pencils and pens would reach a crescendo
  of activity. The ebb and flow of Boris's boom was timed in the style
  of a TV newsreader.

  Kayser said his client was addicted to the computer the way an
  alcoholic was obsessed with the bottle. More scratching, and lots of
  it. This client, Kayser thundered, had never sought to damage any
  system, steal money or make a profit. He was not malicious in the
  least, he was merely playing a game.

  `I think,' Electron's barrister concluded passionately, but slowly
  enough for every journalist to get it down on paper, `that he should
  have been called Little Jack Horner, who put in his thumb, pulled out
  a plumb and said, "What a good boy am I!"'

  Now came the wait. The judge retired to his chambers to weigh up the
  pre-sentence report, Electron's family situation, the fact that he had
  turned Crown witness, his offences--everything. Electron had given a
  nine-page written statement against Phoenix to the prosecution. If the
  Phoenix case went to trial, Electron would be put on the stand to back
  up that statement.

  In the month before Electron returned to court to hear his sentence,
  he thought about how he could have fought the case. Some of the
  charges were dubious.

  In one case, he had been charged with illegally accessing public
  information through a public account. He had accessed the anonymous
  FTP server at the University of Helsinki to copy information about
  DES. His first point of access had been through a hacked Melbourne
  University account.

  Beat that charge, Electron's lawyer had told him, and there's plenty
  more where that came from. The DPP had good pickings and could make up
  a new charge for another site. Still, Electron reasoned some of the
  Crown's evidence would not have stood up under cross-examination.

  When reporters from Australia and overseas called NASA headquarters
  for comment on the hacker-induced network shutdown, the agency
  responded that it had no idea what they were talking about. There had
  been no NASA network shutdown. A spokesman made inquiries and, he
  assured the media, NASA was puzzled by the report. Sharon Beskenis's
  statement didn't seem so watertight after all. She was not, it turned
  out, even a NASA employee but a contractor from Lockheed.

  During that month-long wait, Electron had trouble living down Kayser's
  nursery-rhyme rendition in the courtroom. When he rang friends, they
  would open the conversation saying, `Oh, is that Little Jack Horner?'

  They had all seen the nightly news, featuring Kayser and his client.
  Kayser had looked grave leaving court, while Electron, wearing John
  Lennon-style glasses with dark lenses and with his shoulder-length
  curls pulled tightly back in a ponytail, had tried to smile at the
  camera crews. But his small, fine features and smattering of freckles
  disappeared under the harsh camera lights, so much so that the black,
  round spectacles seemed almost to float on a blank, white surface.

  The week after Electron pleaded guilty in Australia, Pad and Gandalf
  sat side by side in London's Southwark dock one last time.

  For a day and a half, beginning on 20 May 1993, the two hackers
  listened to their lawyers argue their defence. Yes, our clients hacked
  computers, they told the judge, but the offences were nowhere near as
  serious as the prosecution wants to paint them. The lawyers were
  fighting hard for one thing: to keep Pad and Gandalf out of prison.

  Some of the hearing was tough going for the two hackers, but not just
  because of any sense of foreboding caused by the judge's imminent
  decision. The problem was that Gandalf made Pad laugh, and it didn't
  look at all good to laugh in the middle of your sentencing hearing.
  Sitting next to Gandalf for hours on end, while lawyers from both
  sides butchered the technical aspects of computer hacking which the
  8lgm hackers had spent years learning, did it. Pad had only to give
  Gandalf a quick sidelong glance and he quickly found himself
  swallowing and clearing his throat to keep from bursting into
  laughter. Gandalf's irrepressible irreverence was written all over his
  face.

  The stern-faced Judge Harris could send them to jail, but he still
  wouldn't understand. Like the gaggle of lawyers bickering at the front
  of the courtroom, the judge was--and would always be--out of the loop.
  None of them had any idea what was really going on inside the heads of
  the two hackers. None of them could ever understand what hacking was
  all about--the thrill of stalking a quarry or of using your wits to
  outsmart so-called experts; the pleasure of finally penetrating a
  much-desired machine and knowing that system is yours; the deep
  anti-establishment streak which served as a well-centred ballast
  against the most violent storms washing in from the outside world; and
  the camaraderie of the international hacking community on Altos.

  The lawyers could talk about it, could put experts on the stand and
  psychological reports in the hands of the judge, but none of them
  would ever really comprehend because they had never experienced it.
  The rest of the courtroom was out of the loop, and Pad and Gandalf
  stared out from the dock as if looking through a two-way mirror from a
  secret, sealed room.

  Pad's big worry had been this third charge--the one which he faced
  alone. At his plea hearing, he had admitted to causing damage to a
  system owned by what was, in 1990, called the Polytechnic of Central
  London. He hadn't damaged the machine by, say, erasing files, but the
  other side had claimed that the damages totalled about [sterling]250
  000.

  The hacker was sure there was zero chance the polytechnic had spent
  anything near that amount. He had a reasonable idea of how long it
  would take someone to clean up his intrusions. But if the prosecution
  could convince a judge to accept that figure, the hacker might be
  looking at a long prison term.

  Pad had already braced himself for the possibility of prison. His
  lawyer warned him before the sentencing date that there was a
  reasonable likelihood the two 8lgm hackers would be sent down. After
  the Wandii case, the public pressure to `correct' a `wrong' decision
  by the Wandii jury was enormous. The police had described Wandii's
  acquittal as `a licence to hack'--and The Times, had run the
  statement.12 It was likely the judge, who had presided over Wandii's
  trial, would want to send a loud and clear message to the hacking
  community.

  Pad thought that perhaps, if he and Gandalf had pleaded not guilty
  alongside Wandii, they would have been acquitted. But there was no way
  Pad would have subjected himself to the kind of public humiliation
  Wandii went through during the `addicted to computers' evidence. The
  media appeared to want to paint the three hackers as pallid, scrawny,
  socially inept, geeky geniuses, and to a large degree Wandii's lawyers
  had worked off this desire. Pad didn't mind being viewed as highly
  intelligent, but he wasn't a geek. He had a casual girlfriend. He went
  out dancing with friends or to hear bands in Manchester's thriving
  alternative music scene. He worked out his upper body with weights at
  home. Shy--yes. A geek--no.

  Could Pad have made a case for being addicted to hacking? Yes,
  although he never believed that he had been. Completely enthralled,
  entirely entranced? Maybe. Suffering from a passing obsession?
  Perhaps. But addicted? No, he didn't think so. Besides, who knew for
  sure if a defence of addiction could have saved him from the
  prosecution's claim anyway?

  Exactly where the quarter of a million pound claim came from in the
  first place was a mystery to Pad. The police had just said it to him,
  as if it was fact, in the police interview. Pad hadn't seen any proof,
  but that hadn't stopped him from spending a great deal of time feeling
  very stressed about how the judge would view the matter.

  The only answer seemed to be some good, independent technical advice.
  At the request of both Pad and Gandalf's lawyers, Dr Peter Mills, of
  Manchester University, and Dr Russell Lloyd, of London Business
  School, had examined a large amount of technical evidence presented in
  the prosecution's papers. In an independent report running to more
  than 23 pages, the experts stated that the hackers had caused less
  havoc than the prosecution alleged. In addition, Pad's solicitor asked
  Dr Mills to specifically review, in a separate report, the evidence
  supporting the prosecution's large damage claim.

  Dr Mills stated that one of the police expert witnesses, a British
  Telecom employee, had said that Digital recommended a full rebuild of
  the system at the earliest possible opportunity--and at considerable
  cost. However, the BT expert had not stated that the cost was
  [sterling]250000 nor even mentioned if the cost quote which had been
  given had actually been accepted.

  In fact, Dr Mills concluded that there was no supporting evidence at
  all for the quarter of a million pound claim. Not only that, but any
  test of reason based on the evidence provided by the prosecution
  showed the claim to be completely ridiculous.

  In a separate report, Dr Mills' stated that:

  i) The machine concerned was a Vax 6320, this is quite a powerful
  `mainframe' system and could support several hundreds of users.

  ii) That a full dump of files takes 6 tapes, however since the type of
  tape is not specified this gives no real indication of the size of the
  filesystem. A tape could vary from 0.2 Gigabytes to 2.5 Gigabytes.

  iii) The machine was down for three days.

  With this brief information it is difficult to give an accurate cost
  for restoring the machine, however an over estimate would be:

  i) Time spent in restoring the system, 10 man days at [sterling]300
  per day; [sterling]3000.

  ii) Lost time by users, 30 man days at [sterling]300 per day;
  [sterling]9000.

  The total cost in my opinion is unlikely to be higher than
  [sterling]12000 and this itself is probably a rather high estimate. I
  certainly cannot see how a figure of [sterling]250000 could be
  justified.

  It looked to Pad that the prosecution's claim was not for damage at
  all. It was for properly securing the system--an entirely rebuilt
  system. It seemed to him that the police were trying to put the cost
  of securing the polytechnic's entire computer network onto the
  shoulders of one hacker--and to call it damages. In fact, Pad
  discovered, the polytechnic had never actually even spent the
  [sterling]250000.

  Pad was hopeful, but he was also angry. All along, the police had been
  threatening him with this huge damage bill. He had tossed and turned
  in his bed at night worrying about it. And, in the end, the figure put
  forward for so long as fact was nothing but an outrageous claim based
  on not a single shred of solid evidence.

  Using Dr Mills's report, Pad's barrister, Mukhtar Hussain, QC,
  negotiated privately with the prosecution barrister, who finally
  relented and agreed to reduce the damage estimate to [sterling]15000.
  It was, in Pad's view, still far too high, but it was much better than
  [sterling]250000. He was in no mind to look a gift horse in the mouth.

  Judge Harris accepted the revised damage estimate.

  The prosecution may have lost ground on the damage bill, but it wasn't
  giving up the fight. These two hackers, James Richardson told the
  court and journalists during the two-day sentencing hearing, had
  hacked into some 10000 computer systems around the world. They were
  inside machines or networks in at least fifteen countries. Russia.
  India. France. Norway. Germany. The US. Canada. Belgium. Sweden.
  Italy. Taiwan. Singapore. Iceland. Australia. Officers on the case
  said the list of the hackers' targets `read like an atlas', Richardson
  told the court.

  Pad listened to the list. It sounded about right. What didn't sound
  right were the allegations that he or Gandalf had crashed Sweden's
  telephone network by running an X.25 scanner over its packet network.
  The crash had forced a Swedish government minister to apologise on
  television. The police said the minister did not identify the true
  cause of the problem--the British hackers--in his public apology.

  Pad had no idea what they were talking about. He hadn't done anything
  like that to the Swedish phone system, and as far as he knew, neither
  had Gandalf.

  Something else didn't sound right. Richardson told the court that in
  total, the two hackers had racked up at least [sterling]25000 in phone
  bills for unsuspecting legitimate customers, and caused `damage' to
  systems which was very conservatively estimated at almost
  [sterling]123000.

  Where were these guys getting these numbers from? Pad marvelled at
  their cheek. He had been through the evidence with a fine-toothed
  comb, yet he had not seen one single bill showing what a site had
  actually paid to repair `damage' caused by the hackers. The figures
  tossed around by the police and the prosecution weren't real bills;
  they weren't cast in iron.

  Finally, on Friday 21 May, after all the evidence had been presented,
  the judge adjourned the court to consider sentencing. When he returned
  to the bench fifteen minutes later, Pad knew what was going to happen
  from the judge's face. To the hacker, the expression said: I am going
  to give you everything that Wandii should have got.

  Judge Harris echoed The Times's sentiments when he told the two
  defendants, `If your passion had been cars rather than computers, we
  would have called your conduct delinquent, and I don't shrink from the
  analogy of describing what you were doing as intellectual joyriding.

  `Hacking is not harmless. Computers now form a central role in our
  lives. Some, providing emergency services, depend on their computers
  to deliver those services.'13

  Hackers needed to be given a clear signal that computer crime `will
  not and cannot be tolerated', the judge said, adding that he had
  thought long and hard before handing down sentence. He accepted that
  neither hacker had intended to cause damage, but it was imperative to
  protect society's computer systems and he would be failing in his
  public duty if he didn't sentence the two hackers to a prison term of
  six months.

  Judge Harris told the hackers that he had chosen a custodial sentence,
  `both to penalise you for what you have done and for the losses
  caused, and to deter others who might be similarly tempted'.

  This was the show trial, not Wandii's case, Pad thought as the court
  officers led him and Gandalf out of the dock, down to the prisoner's
  lift behind the courtroom and into a jail cell.

  Less than two weeks after Pad and Gandalf were sentenced, Electron was
  back in the Victorian County Court to discover his own fate.

  As he stood in the dock on 3 June 1993 he felt numb, as emotionally
  removed from the scene as Meursault in Camus' L'etranger. He believed
  he was handling the stress pretty well until he experienced tunnel
  vision while watching the judge read his penalty. He perused the room
  but saw neither Phoenix nor Nom.

  When Judge Anthony Smith summarised the charges, he seemed to have a
  special interest in count number 13--the Zardoz charge. A few minutes
  into reading the sentence, the judge said, `In my view, a custodial
  sentence is appropriate for each of the offences constituted by the
  12th, 13th and 14th counts'. They were the `knowingly concerned'
  charges, with Phoenix, involving NASA, LLNL and CSIRO. Electron looked
  around the courtroom. People turned back to stare at him. Their eyes
  said, `You are going to prison'.

  `I formed the view that a custodial sentence is appropriate in respect
  of each of these offences because of the seriousness of them,' Judge
  Smith noted, `and having regard to the need to demonstrate that the
  community will not tolerate this type of offence.

  `Our society today is ... increasingly ... dependent upon the use of
  computer technology. Conduct of the kind in which you engaged poses a
  threat to the usefulness of that technology ... It is incumbent upon
  the courts ... to see to it that the sentences they impose reflect the
  gravity of this kind of criminality.

  `On each of Counts 12, 13 and 14, you are convicted and you are
  sentenced to a term of imprisonment of six months ... each ... to be
  concurrent.'

  The judge paused, then continued, `And ... I direct, by order, that
  you be released forthwith upon your giving security by recognisance
  ... in the sum of $500 ... You will not be required to serve the terms
  of imprisonment imposed, provided you are of good behaviour for the
  ensuing six months.' He then ordered Electron to complete 300 hours of
  community service, and to submit to psychiatric assessment and
  treatment.

  Electron breathed a sigh of relief.

  When outlining the mitigating circumstances which led to suspension of
  the jail sentence, Judge Smith described Electron as being addicted to
  using his computer `in much the same way as an alcoholic becomes
  addicted to the bottle'. Boris Kayser had used the analogy in the
  sentencing hearing, perhaps for the
  benefit of the media, but the judge had obviously been swayed by his
  view.

  When court adjourned, Electron left the dock and shook hands with his
  lawyers. After three years, he was almost free of his court problems.
  There was only one possible reason he might need to return to court.

  If Phoenix fought out his case in a full criminal trial, the DPP would
  put Electron on the stand to testify against him. It would be an ugly
  scene.

  The inmates of HM Prison Kirkham, on the north-west coast of England,
  near Preston, had heard all about Pad and Gandalf by the time they
  arrived. They greeted the hackers by name. They'd seen the reports on
  telly, especially about how Gandalf had hacked NASA--complete with
  footage of the space shuttle taking off. Some TV reporter's idea of
  subtle irony--`Two hackers were sent down today' as the space shuttle
  went up.

  Kirkham was far better than Brixton, where the hackers had spent the
  first days of their sentence while awaiting transfer. Brixton was what
  Pad always envisioned prison would look like, with floors of barred
  cells facing onto an open centre and prisoners only allowed out of
  their cells for scheduled events such as time in the yard. It was a
  place where hard-core criminals lived. Fortunately, Pad and Gandalf
  had been placed in the same cell while they waited to be assigned to
  their final destination.

  After ten days inside Brixton Pad and Gandalf were led from their
  cell, handcuffed and put in a coach heading toward the windy west
  coast.

  During the drive, Pad kept looking down at his hand, locked in shiny
  steel to Gandalf's hand, then he looked back up again at his fellow
  hacker. Clearing his throat and turning away from Gandalf's difficult
  grin--his friend now on the edge of laughing himself--Pad struggled.
  He tried to hold down the muscles of his face, to pull them back from
  laughter.

  A minimum security prison holding up to 632 prisoners, Kirkham looked
  vaguely like a World War II RAF base with a large collection of
  free-standing buildings around the grounds. There were no real walls,
  just a small wire fence which Pad soon learned prisoners routinely
  jumped when the place started to get to them.

  For a prison, Kirkham was pretty good. There was a duck pond, a
  bowling green, a sort of mini-cinema which showed films in the early
  evenings, eight pay phones, a football field, a cricket pavilion and,
  best of all, lots of fields. Prisoners could have visits on weekday
  afternoons between 1.10 and 3.40, or on the weekend.

  Luck smiled on the two hackers. They were assigned to the same billet
  and, since none of the other prisoners objected, they became
  room-mates. Since they were sentenced in May, they would serve their
  time during summer. If they were `of good behaviour' and didn't get
  into trouble with other prisoners, they would be out in three months.

  Like any prison, Kirkham had its share of prisoners who didn't get
  along with each other. Mostly, prisoners wanted to know what you were
  in for and, more particularly, if you had been convicted of a sex
  crime. They didn't like sex crime offenders and Pad heard about a pack
  of Kirkham prisoners who dragged one of their own, screaming, to a
  tree, where they tried to hang him for being a suspected rapist. In
  fact, the prisoner hadn't been convicted of anything like rape. He had
  simply refused to pay his poll tax.

  Fortunately for Pad and Gandalf, everyone else in Kirkham knew why
  they were there. At the end of their first week they returned to their
  room one afternoon to find a sign painted above their door. It said,
  `NASA HQ'.

  The other minimum security prisoners understood hacking--and they had
  all sorts of ideas about how you could make money from it. Most of the
  prisoners in Kirkham were in for petty theft, credit card fraud, and
  other small-time crimes. There was also a phreaker, who arrived the
  same day as Pad and Gandalf. He landed eight months in prison--two
  more than the 8lgm hackers--and Pad wondered what kind of message that
  sent the underground.

  Despite their best efforts, the 8lgm twosome didn't fit quite the
  prison mould. In the evenings, other prisoners spent their free time
  shooting pool or taking drugs. In the bedroom down the hall, Gandalf
  lounged on his bed studying a book on VMS internals. Pad read a
  computer magazine and listened to some indie music--often his `Babes
  in Toyland' tape. In a parody of prison movies, the two hackers marked
  off their days inside the prison with cross-hatched lines on their
  bedroom wall--four marks, then a diagonal line through them. They
  wrote other things on the walls too.

  The long, light-filled days of summer flowed one into the other, as
  Pad and Gandalf fell into the rhythm of the prison. The morning
  check-in at 8.30 to make sure none of the prisoners had gone
  walkabout. The dash across the bowling green for a breakfast of beans,
  bacon, eggs, toast and sausage. The walk to the greenhouses where the
  two hackers had been assigned for work detail.

  The work wasn't hard. A little digging in the pots. Weeding around the
  baby lettuce heads, watering the green peppers and transplanting
  tomato seedlings. When the greenhouses became too warm by late
  morning, Pad and Gandalf wandered outside for a bit of air. They often
  talked about girls, cracking crude, boyish jokes about women and
  occasionally discussing their girlfriends more seriously. As the heat
  settled in, they sat down, lounging against the side of the
  greenhouse.

  After lunch, followed by more time in the greenhouse, Pad and Gandalf
  sometimes went off for walks in the fields surrounding the prison.
  First the football field, then the paddocks dotted with cows beyond
  it.

  Pad was a likeable fellow, largely because of his easygoing style and
  relaxed sense of humour. But liking him wasn't the same as knowing
  him, and the humour often deflected deeper probing into his
  personality. But Gandalf knew him, understood him. Everything was so
  easy with Gandalf. During the long, sunny walks, the conversation
  flowed as easily as the light breeze through the grass.

  As they wandered in the fields, Pad often wore his denim jacket. Most
  of the clothes on offer from the prison clothing office were drab
  blue, but Pad had lucked onto this wonderful, cool denim jacket which
  he took to wearing all the time.

  Walking for hours on end along the perimeters of the prison grounds,
  Pad saw how easy it would be to escape, but in the end there didn't
  seem to be much point. They way he saw it, the police would just catch
  you and put you back in again. Then you'd have to serve extra time.

  Once a week, Pad's parents came to visit him, but the few precious
  hours of visiting time were more for his parents' benefit than his
  own. He reassured them that he was OK, and when they looked him in the
  face and saw it was true, they stopped worrying quite so much. They
  brought him news from home, including the fact that his computer
  equipment had been returned by one of the police who had been in the
  original raid.

  The officer asked Pad's mother how the hacker was doing in prison.
  `Very well indeed,' she told him. `Prison's not nearly so bad as he
  thought.' The officer's face crumpled into a disappointed frown. He
  seemed to be looking for news that Pad was suffering nothing but
  misery.

  At the end of almost three months, with faces well tanned from walking
  in the meadows, Pad and Gandalf walked free.

                                 [ ]

  To the casual witness sitting nearby in the courtroom, the tension
  between Phoenix's mother and father was almost palpable. They were not
  sitting near each other but that didn't mitigate the silent hostility
  which rose through the air like steam. Phoenix's divorced parents
  provided a stark contrast to Nom's adopted parents, an older, suburban
  couple who were very much married.

  On Wednesday, 25 August 1993 Phoenix and Nom pleaded guilty to fifteen
  and two charges respectively. The combined weight of the prosecution's
  evidence, the risk and cost of running a full trial and the need to
  get on with their lives had pushed them over the edge. Electron didn't
  need to come to court to give evidence.

  At the plea hearing, which ran over to the next day, Phoenix's lawyer,
  Dyson Hore-Lacy, spent considerable time sketching the messy divorce
  of his client's parents for the benefit of the judge. Suggesting
  Phoenix retreated into his computer during the bitter separation and
  divorce was the best chance of getting him off a prison term. Most of
  all, the defence presented Phoenix as a young man who had strayed off
  the correct path in life but was now back on track--holding down a job
  and having a life.

  The DPP had gone in hard against Phoenix. They seemed to want a jail
  term badly and they doggedly presented Phoenix as an arrogant
  braggart. The court heard a tape-recording of Phoenix ringing up
  security guru Edward DeHart of the Computer Emergency Response Team at
  Carnegie Mellon University to brag about a security exploit. Phoenix
  told DeHart to get onto his computer and then proceeded to walk him
  step by step through the `passwd -f' security bug. Ironically, it was
  Electron who had discovered that security hole and taught it to
  Phoenix--a fact Phoenix didn't seem to want to mention to DeHart.

  The head of the AFP's Southern Region Computer Crimes Unit, Detective
  Sergeant Ken Day was in court that day. There was no way he was going
  to miss this. The same witness noting the tension between Phoenix's
  parents might also have perceived an undercurrent of hostility between
  Day and Phoenix--an undercurrent which did not seem to exist between
  Day and either of the other Realm hackers.

  Day, a short, careful man who gave off an air of bottled intensity,
  seemed to have an acute dislike for Phoenix. By all observations the
  feeling was mutual. A cool-headed professional, Day would never say
  anything in public to express the dislike--that was not his style. His
  dislike was only indicated by a slight tightness in the muscles of an
  otherwise unreadable face.

  On 6 October 1993, Phoenix and Nom stood side by side in the dock for
  sentencing. Wearing a stern expression, Judge Smith began by detailing
  both the hackers' charges and the origin of The Realm. But after the
  summary, the judge saved his harshest rebuke for Phoenix.

  `There is nothing ... to admire about your conduct and every reason
  why it should be roundly condemned. You pointed out [weaknesses] to
  some of the system administrators ... [but] this was more a display of
  arrogance and a demonstration of what you thought was your superiority
  rather than an act of altruism on your part.

  `You ... bragged about what you had done or were going to do ... Your
  conduct revealed ... arrogance on your part, open defiance, and an
  intention to the beat the system. [You] did cause havoc for a time
  within the various targeted systems.'

  Although the judge appeared firm in his views while passing sentence,
  behind the scenes he had agonised greatly over his decision. He had
  attempted to balance what he saw as the need for deterrence, the
  creation of a precedence for sentencing hacking cases in Australia,
  and the individual aspects of this case. Finally, after sifting
  through the arguments again and again, he had reached a decision.

  `I have no doubt that some sections of our community would regard
  anything than a custodial sentence as less than appropriate. I share
  that view. But after much reflection ... I have concluded that an
  immediate term of imprisonment is unnecessary.'

  Relief rolled across the faces of the hackers' friends and relatives
  as the judge ordered Phoenix to complete 500 hours of community
  service work over two years and assigned him a $1000 twelve-month good
  behaviour bond. He gave Nom 200 hours, and a $500, six-month bond for
  good behaviour.

  As Phoenix was leaving the courtroom, a tall, skinny young man, loped
  down the aisle towards him.

  `Congratulations,' the stranger said, his long hair dangling in
  delicate curls around his shoulders.

  `Thanks,' Phoenix answered, combing his memory for the boyish face
  which couldn't be any older than his own. `Do I know you?'

  `Sort of,' the stranger answered. `I'm Mendax. I'm about to go through
  what you did, but worse.'


    _________________________________________________________________

               Chapter 8 -- The International Subversives
    _________________________________________________________________


    All around
    an eerie sound

  -- from `Maralinga', on 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 by Midnight Oil

  Prime Suspect rang Mendax, offering an adventure. He had discovered a
  strange system called NMELH1 (pronounced N-Melly-H-1) and it was time
  to go exploring. He read off the dial-up numbers, found in a list of
  modem phone numbers on another hacked system.

  Mendax looked at the scrap of paper in his hand, thinking about the
  name of the computer system.

  The `N' stood for Northern Telecom, a Canadian company with annual
  sales of $8 billion. NorTel, as the company was known, sold thousands
  of highly sophisticated switches and other telephone exchange
  equipment to some of the world's largest phone companies. The `Melly'
  undoubtedly referred to the fact that the system was in Melbourne. As
  for the `H-1', well, that was anyone's guess, but Mendax figured it
  probably stood for `host-1'--meaning computer site number one.

  Prime Suspect had stirred Mendax's interest. Mendax had spent hours
  experimenting with commands inside the computers which controlled
  telephone exchanges. In the end, those forays were all just
  guesswork--trial and error learning, at considerable risk of
  discovery. Unlike making a mistake inside a single computer,
  mis-guessing a command inside a telephone exchange in downtown Sydney
  or Melbourne could take down a whole prefix--10000 or more phone
  lines--and cause instant havoc.

  This was exactly what the International Subversives didn't want to do.
  The three IS hackers--Mendax, Prime Suspect and Trax--had seen what
  happened to the visible members of the computer underground in England
  and in Australia. The IS hackers had three very good reasons to keep
  their activities quiet.

  Phoenix. Nom. And Electron.

  But, Mendax thought, what if you could learn about how to manipulate a
  million-dollar telephone exchange by reading
  the manufacturer's technical documentation? How high was
  the chance that those documents, which weren't available to the
  public, were stored inside NorTel's computer network?

  Better still, what if he could find NorTel's original source code--the
  software designed to control specific telephone switches, such as the
  DMS-100 model. That code might be sitting on a computer hooked into
  the worldwide NorTel network. A hacker with access could insert his
  own backdoor--a hidden security flaw--before the company sent out
  software to its customers.

  With a good technical understanding of how NorTel's equipment worked,
  combined with a backdoor installed in every piece of software shipped
  with a particular product, you could have control over every new
  NorTel DMS telephone switch installed from Boston to Bahrain. What
  power! Mendax thought, what if you you could turn off 10000 phones in
  Rio de Janeiro, or give 5000 New Yorkers free calls one afternoon, or
  listen into private telephone conversations in Brisbane. The
  telecommunications world would be your oyster.

  Like their predecessors, the three IS hackers had started out in the
  Melbourne BBS scene. Mendax met Trax on Electric Dreams in about 1988,
  and Prime Suspect on Megaworks, where he used the handle Control
  Reset, not long after that. When he set up his own BBS at his home in
  Tecoma, a hilly suburb so far out of Melbourne that it was practically
  in forest, he invited both hackers to visit `A Cute Paranoia' whenever
  they could get through on the single phone line.

  Visiting on Mendax's BBS suited both hackers, for it was more private
  than other BBSes. Eventually they exchanged home telephone numbers,
  but only to talk modem-to-modem. For months, they would ring each
  other up and type on their computer screens to each other--never
  having heard the sound of the other person's voice. Finally, late in
  1990, the nineteen-year-old Mendax called up the 24-year-old Trax for
  a voice chat. In early 1991, Mendax and Prime Suspect, aged seventeen,
  also began speaking in voice on the phone.

  Trax seemed slightly eccentric, and possibly suffered from some sort
  of anxiety disorder. He refused to travel to the city, and he once
  made reference to seeing a psychiatrist. But Mendax usually found the
  most interesting people were a little unusual, and Trax was both.

  Mendax and Trax discovered they had a few things in common. Both came
  from poor but educated families, and both lived in the outer suburbs.
  However, they had very different childhoods.

  Trax's parents migrated to Australia from Europe. Both his father, a
  retired computer technician, and his mother spoke with a German
  accent. Trax's father was very much the head of the household, and
  Trax was his only son.

  By contrast, by the time he was fifteen Mendax had lived in a dozen
  different places including Perth, Magnetic Island, Brisbane,
  Townsville, Sydney, the Adelaide Hills, and a string of coastal towns
  in northern New South Wales and Western Australia. In fifteen years he
  had enrolled in at least as many different schools.

  His mother had left her Queensland home at age seventeen, after saving
  enough money from selling her paintings to buy a motorcycle, a tent
  and a road map of Australia. Waving goodbye to her stunned parents,
  both academics, she rode off into the sunset. Some 2000 kilometres
  later, she arrived in Sydney and joined the thriving counter-culture
  community. She worked as an artist and fell in love with a rebellious
  young man she met at an anti-Vietnam demonstration.

  Within a year of Mendax's birth, his mother's relationship with his
  father had ended. When Mendax was two, she married a fellow artist.
  What followed was many turbulent years, moving from town to town as
  his parents explored the '70s left-wing, bohemian subculture. As a
  boy, he was surrounded by artists. His stepfather staged and directed
  plays and his mother did make-up, costume and set design.

  One night in Adelaide, when Mendax was about four, his mother and a
  friend were returning from a meeting of anti-nuclear protesters. The
  friend claimed to have scientific evidence that the British had
  conducted high-yield, above-ground nuclear tests at Maralinga, a
  desert area in north-west South Australia.

  A 1984 Royal Commission subsequently revealed that between 1953 and
  1963 the British government had tested nuclear bombs at the site,
  forcing more than 5000 Aborigines from their native lands. In December
  1993, after years of stalling, the British government agreed to pay
  [sterling]20 million toward cleaning up the more than 200 square
  kilometres of contaminated lands. Back in 1968, however, the Menzies
  government had signed away Britain's responsibility to clean up the
  site. In the 1970s, the Australian government was still in denial
  about exactly what had happened at Maralinga.

  As Mendax's mother and her friend drove through an Adelaide suburb
  carrying early evidence of the Maralinga tragedy, they noticed they
  were being followed by an unmarked car. They tried to lose the tail,
  without success. The friend, nervous, said he had to get the data to
  an Adelaide journalist before the police could stop him. Mendax's
  mother quickly slipped into a back lane and the friend leapt from the
  car. She drove off, taking the police tail with her.

  The plain-clothed police pulled her over shortly after, searched her
  car and demanded to know where her friend had gone and what had
  occurred at the meeting. When she was less than helpful, one officer
  told her, `You have a child out at 2 in the morning. I think you
  should get out of politics, lady. It could be said you were an unfit
  mother'.

  A few days after this thinly veiled threat, her friend showed up at
  Mendax's mother's house, covered in fading bruises. He said the police
  had beaten him up, then set him up by planting hash on him. `I'm
  getting out of politics,' he announced.

  However, she and her husband continued their involvement in theatre.
  The young Mendax never dreamed of running away to join the circus--he
  already lived the life of a travelling minstrel. But although the
  actor-director was a good stepfather, he was also an alcoholic. Not
  long after Mendax's ninth birthday, his parents separated and then
  divorced.

  Mendax's mother then entered a tempestuous relationship with an
  amateur musician. Mendax was frightened of the man, whom he considered
  a manipulative and violent psychopath. He had five different
  identities with plastic in his wallet to match. His whole background
  was a fabrication, right down to the country of his birth. When the
  relationship ended, the steady pattern of moving around the
  countryside began again, but this journey had a very different flavour
  from the earlier happy-go-lucky odyssey. This time, Mendax and his
  family were on the run from a physically abusive de facto. Finally,
  after hiding under assumed names on both sides of the continent,
  Mendax and his family settled on the outskirts of Melbourne.

  Mendax left home at seventeen because he had received a tip-off about
  an impending raid. Mendax wiped his disks, burnt his print-outs and
  left. A week later, the Victorian CIB turned up and searched his room,
  but found nothing. He married his girlfriend, an intelligent but
  introverted and emotionally disturbed sixteen-year-old he had met
  through a mutual friend in a gifted children's program. A year later
  they had a child.

  Mendax made many of his friends through the computer community. He
  found Trax easy to talk to and they often spent up to five hours on a
  single phone call. Prime Suspect, on the other hand, was hard work on
  the phone.

  Quiet and introverted, Prime Suspect always seemed to run out of
  conversation after five minutes. Mendax was himself naturally shy, so
  their talks were often filled with long silences. It wasn't that
  Mendax didn't like Prime Suspect, he did. By the time the three
  hackers met in person at Trax's home in mid-1991, he considered Prime
  Suspect more than just a fellow hacker in the tight-knit IS circle.
  Mendax considered him a friend.

  Prime Suspect was a boy of veneers. To most of the world, he appeared
  to be a studious year 12 student bound for university from his upper
  middle-class grammar school. The all-boys school never expected less
  from its students and the possibility of attending a TAFE--a
  vocational college--was never discussed as an option. University was
  the object. Any student who failed to make it was quietly swept under
  the carpet like some sort of distasteful food dropping.

  Prime Suspect's own family situation did not mirror the veneer of
  respectability portrayed by his school. His father, a pharmacist, and
  his mother, a nurse, had been in the midst of an acrimonious divorce
  battle when his father was diagnosed with terminal cancer. In this
  bitter, antagonistic environment, the eight-year-old Prime Suspect was
  delivered to his father's bedside in hospice for a rushed few moments
  to bid him farewell.

  Through much of his childhood and adolescence, Prime Suspect's mother
  remained bitter and angry about life, and particularly her
  impoverished financial situation. When he was eight, Prime Suspect's
  older sister left home at sixteen, moved to Perth and refused to speak
  to her mother. In some ways, Prime Suspect felt he was expected be
  both child and de facto parent. All of which made him grow up faster
  in some ways, but remain immature in others.

  Prime Suspect responded to the anger around him by retreating into his
  room. When he bought his first computer, an Apple IIe, at age thirteen
  he found it better company than any of his relatives. The computers at
  school didn't hold much interest for him, since they weren't connected
  to the outside world via modem. After reading about BBSes in the Apple
  Users' Society newsletter, he saved up for his own modem and soon
  began connecting into various BBSes.

  School did, however, provide the opportunity to rebel, albeit
  anonymously, and he conducted extensive pranking campaigns. Few
  teachers suspected the quiet, clean-cut boy and he was rarely caught.
  Nature had endowed Prime Suspect with the face of utter innocence.
  Tall and slender with brown curly hair, his true character only showed
  in the elfish grin which sometimes passed briefly across his baby
  face. Teachers told his mother he was underachieving compared to his
  level of intelligence, but had few complaints otherwise.

  By year 10, he had become a serious hacker and was spending every
  available moment at his computer. Sometimes he skipped school, and he
  often handed assignments in late. He found it difficult to come up
  with ever more creative excuses and sometimes he imagined telling his
  teachers the truth. `Sorry I didn't get that 2000-word paper done but
  I was knee-deep in NASA networks last night.' The thought made him
  laugh.

  He saw girls as a unwanted distraction from hacking. Sometimes, after
  he chatted with a girl at a party, his friends would later ask him why
  he hadn't asked her out. Prime Suspect shrugged it off. The real
  reason was that he would rather get home to his computer, but he never
  discussed his hacking with anyone at school, not even with Mentat.

  A friend of Force's and occasional visitor to The Realm, Mentat was
  two years ahead of Prime Suspect at school and in general couldn't be
  bothered talking to so junior a hacker as Prime Suspect. The younger
  hacker didn't mind. He had witnessed other hackers' indiscretions,
  wanted no part of them and was happy to keep his hacking life private.

  Before the Realm bust, Phoenix rang him up once at 2 a.m. suggesting
  that he and Nom come over there and then. Woken by the call, Prime
  Suspect's mother stood in the doorway to his bedroom, remonstrating
  with him for letting his `friends' call at such a late hour. With
  Phoenix goading him in one ear, and his mother chewing him out in the
  other, Prime Suspect decided the whole thing was a bad idea. He said
  no thanks to Phoenix, and shut the door on his mother.

  He did, however, talk to Powerspike on the phone once in a while. The
  older hacker's highly irreverent attitude and Porky Pig laugh appealed
  to him. But other than those brief talks, Prime Suspect avoided
  talking on the phone to people outside the International Subversives,
  especially when he and Mendax moved into ever more sensitive military
  computers.

  Using a program called Sycophant written by Mendax, the IS hackers had
  been conducting massive attacks on the US military. They divided up
  Sycophant on eight attack machines, often choosing university systems
  at places like the Australian National University or the University of
  Texas. They pointed the eight machines at the targets and fired.
  Within six hours, the eight machines had assaulted thousands of
  computers. The hackers sometimes reaped 100000 accounts each night.

  Using Sycophant, they essentially forced a cluster of Unix machines in
  a computer network to attack the entire Internet en masse.

  And that was just the start of what they were into. They had been in
  so many sites they often couldn't remember if they
  had actually hacked a particular computer. The places they could
  recall read like a Who's Who of the American military-industrial
  complex. The US Airforce 7th Command Group Headquarters in the
  Pentagon. Stanford Research Institute in California. Naval Surface
  Warfare Center in Virginia. Lockheed Martin's Tactical Aircraft
  Systems Air Force Plant in Texas. Unisys Corporation in Blue Bell,
  Pennsylvania. Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA. Motorola Inc. in
  Illinois. TRW Inc. in Redondo Beach, California. Alcoa in Pittsburgh.
  Panasonic Corp in New Jersey. US Naval Undersea Warfare Engineering
  Station. Siemens-Nixdorf Information Systems in Massachusetts.
  Securities Industry Automation Corp in New York. Lawrence Livermore
  National Laboratory in California. Bell Communications Research, New
  Jersey. Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, California.

  As the IS hackers reached a level of sophistication beyond anything
  The Realm had achieved, they realised that progress carried
  considerable risk and began to withdraw completely from the broader
  Australian hacking community. Soon they had drawn a tight circle
  around themselves. They talked only to each other.

  Watching the Realm hackers go down hadn't deterred the next generation
  of hackers. It had only driven them further underground.

  In the spring of 1991, Prime Suspect and Mendax began a race to get
  root on the US Department of Defense's Network Information Center
  (NIC) computer--potentially the most important computer on the
  Internet.

  As both hackers chatted amiably on-line one night, on a Melbourne
  University computer, Prime Suspect worked quietly in another screen to
  penetrate ns.nic.ddn.mil, a US Department of Defense system closely
  linked to NIC. He believed the sister system and NIC might `trust'
  each other--a trust he could exploit to get into NIC. And NIC did
  everything.

  NIC assigned domain names--the `.com' or `.net' at the end of an email
  address--for the entire Internet. NIC also controlled the US
  military's own internal defence data network, known as MILNET.

  NIC also published the communication protocol standards for all of the
  Internet. Called RFCs (Request for Comments), these technical
  specifications allowed one computer on the Internet to talk to
  another. The Defense Data Network Security Bulletins, the US
  Department of Defense's equivalent of CERT advisories, came from the
  NIC machine.

  Perhaps most importantly, NIC controlled the reverse look-up service
  on the Internet. Whenever someone connects to another site across the
  Internet, he or she typically types in the site name--say,
  ariel.unimelb.edu.au at the University of Melbourne. The computer then
  translates the alphabetical name into a numerical address--the IP
  address--in this case 128.250.20.3. All the computers on the Internet
  need this IP address to relay the packets of data onto the final
  destination computer. NIC decided how Internet computers would
  translate the alphabetical name into an IP address, and vice versa.

  If you controlled NIC, you had phenomenal power on the Internet. You
  could, for example, simply make Australia disappear. Or you could turn
  it into Brazil. By pointing all Internet addresses ending in
  `.au'--the designation for sites in Australia--to Brazil, you could
  cut Australia's part of the Internet off from the rest of the world
  and send all Australian Internet traffic to Brazil. In fact, by
  changing the delegation of all the domain names, you could virtually
  stop the flow of information between all the countries on the
  Internet.

  The only way someone could circumvent this power was by typing in the
  full numerical IP address instead of a proper alphabetical address.
  But few people knew the up-to-twelve-digit IP equivalent of their
  alphabetical addresses, and fewer still actually used them.

  Controlling NIC offered other benefits as well. Control NIC, and you
  owned a virtual pass-key into any computer on the Internet which
  `trusted' another. And most machines trust at least one other system.

  Whenever one computer connects to another across the Net, both
  machines go through a special meet-and-greet process. The receiving
  computer looks over the first machine and asks itself
  a few questions. What's the name of the incoming machine?
  Is that name allowed to connect to me? In what ways am I
  programmed to `trust' that machine--to wave my normal security for
  connections from that system?

  The receiving computer answers these questions based in large part on
  information provided by NIC. All of which means that, by controlling
  NIC, you could make any computer on the Net `pose' as a machine
  trusted by a computer you might want to hack. Security often depended
  on a computer's name, and NIC effectively controlled that name.

  When Prime Suspect managed to get inside NIC's sister system, he told
  Mendax and gave him access to the computer. Each hacker then began his
  own attack on NIC. When Mendax finally got root on NIC, the power was
  intoxicating. Prime Suspect got root at the same time but using a
  different method. They were both in.

  Inside NIC, Mendax began by inserting a backdoor--a method of getting
  back into the computer at a later date in case an admin repaired the
  security flaws the hackers had used to get into the machine. From now
  on, if he telnetted into the system's Data Defense Network (DDN)
  information server and typed `login 0' he would have instant,
  invisible root access to NIC.

  That step completed, he looked around for interesting things to read.
  One file held what appeared to be a list of satellite and microwave
  dish coordinates--longitude, latitudes, transponder frequencies. Such
  coordinates might in theory allow someone to build a complete map of
  communications devices which were used to move the DOD's computer data
  around the world.

  Mendax also penetrated MILNET's Security Coordination Center, which
  collected reports on every possible security incident on a MILNET
  computer. Those computers--largely TOPS-20s made by DEC--contained
  good automatic security programs. Any number of out-of-the-ordinary
  events would trigger an automatic security report. Someone logging
  into a machine for too long. A large number of failed login attempts,
  suggesting password guessing. Two people logging into the same account
  at the same time. Alarm bells would go off and the local computer
  would immediately send a security violation report to the MILNET
  security centre, where it would be added to the `hot list'.

  Mendax flipped through page after page of MILNET's security reports on
  his screen. Most looked like nothing--MILNET users accidentally
  stumbling over a security tripwire--but one notice from a US military
  site in Germany stood out. It was not computer generated. This was
  from a real human being. The system admin reported that someone had
  been repeatedly trying to break into his or her machine, and had
  eventually managed to get in. The admin was trying, without much luck,
  to trace back the intruder's connection to its point of origin. Oddly,
  it appeared to originate in another MILNET system.

  Riffling through other files, Mendax found mail confirming that the
  attack had indeed come from inside MILNET. His eyes grew wide as he
  read on. US military hackers had broken into MILNET systems, using
  them for target practice, and no-one had bothered to tell the system
  admin at the target site.

  Mendax couldn't believe it. The US military was hacking its own
  computers. This discovery led to another, more disturbing, thought. If
  the US military was hacking its own computers for practice, what was
  it doing to other countries' computers?

  As he quietly backed out of the system, wiping away his footprints as
  he tip-toed away, Mendax thought about what he had seen. He was deeply
  disturbed that any hacker would work for the US military.

  Hackers, he thought, should be anarchists, not hawks.

  In early October 1991, Mendax rang Trax and gave him the dial-up and
  account details for NMELH1.

  Trax wasn't much of a hacker, but Mendax admired his phreaking
  talents. Trax was the father of phreaking in Australia and Trax's
  Toolbox, his guide to the art of phreaking, was
  legendary. Mendax thought Trax might find some interesting detailed
  information inside the NorTel network on how to
  control telephone switches.

  Trax invented multi-frequency code phreaking. By sending special
  tones--generated by his computer program--down the phone line, he
  could control certain functions in the telephone exchange. Many
  hackers had learned how to make free phone calls by charging the cost
  to someone else or to calling cards, but Trax discovered how to make
  phone calls which weren't charged to anyone. The calls weren't just
  free; they were untraceable.

  Trax wrote 48 pages on his discovery and called it The Australian
  Phreakers Manual Volumes 1-7. But as he added more and more to the
  manual, he became worried what would happen if he released it in the
  underground, so he decided he would only show it to the other two
  International Subversive hackers.

  He went on to publish The Advanced Phreaker's Manual,2 a second
  edition of the manual, in The International Subversive, the
  underground magazine edited by Mendax:

  An electronic magazine, The International Subversive had a simple
  editorial policy. You could only have a copy of the magazine if you
  wrote an `article'. The policy was a good way of protecting against
  nappies--sloppy or inexperienced hackers who might accidentally draw
  police attention. Nappies also tended to abuse good phreaking and
  hacking techniques, which might cause Telecom to close up security
  holes. The result was that IS had a circulation of just three people.

  To a non-hacker, IS looked like gobbledygook--the phone book made more
  interesting reading. But to a member of the computer underground, IS
  was a treasure map. A good hacker could follow the trail of modem
  phone numbers and passwords, then use the directions in IS to
  disappear through secret entrances into the labyrinth of forbidden
  computer networks. Armed with the magazine, he could slither out of
  tight spots, outwit system admins and find the treasure secreted in
  each computer system.

  For Prime Suspect and Mendax, who were increasingly paranoid about
  line traces from the university modems they used as launchpads, Trax's
  phreaking skills were a gift from heaven.

  Trax made his great discovery by accident. He was using a phone
  sprinter, a simple computer program which automatically dialled a
  range of phone numbers looking for modems. If he turned the volume up
  on his modem when his computer dialled what seemed to be a dead or
  non-existent number, he sometimes heard a soft clicking noise after
  the disconnection message. The noise sounded like faint heartbeats.

  Curious, he experimented with these strange numbers and soon
  discovered they were disconnected lines which had not yet been
  reassigned. He wondered how he could use these odd numbers. After
  reading a document Mendax had found in Britain and uploaded to The
  Devil's Playground, another BBS, Trax had an idea. The posting
  provided information about CCITT #5 signalling tones, CCITT being the
  international standard--the language spoken by telephone exchanges
  between countries.

  When you make an international phone call from Australia to the US,
  the call passes from the local telephone exchange to an international
  gateway exchange within Australia. From there, it travels to an
  exchange in the US. The CCITT signalling tones were the special tones
  the two international gateway exchanges used to communicate with each
  other.

  Telecom Australia adapted a later version of this standard, called R2,
  for use on its own domestic exchanges. Telecom called this new
  standard MFC, or multi-frequency code. When, say, Trax rang Mendax,
  his exchange asked Mendax's to `talk' to Mendax's phone by using these
  tones. Mendax's exchange `answered', perhaps saying Mendax's phone was
  busy or disconnected. The Telecom-adapted tones--pairs of audio
  frequencies--did not exist in normal telephone keypads and you
  couldn't make them simply by punching keys on your household
  telephone.

  Trax wrote a program which allowed his Amstrad computer to generate the
  special tones and send them down the phone line. In an act many in the
  underground later considered to be a stroke of genius, he began to map
  out exactly what each tone did. It was a difficult task, since one tone
  could mean several different things at each stage of the `conversation'
  between two exchanges.

  Passionate about his new calling, Trax went trashing in Telecom
  garbage bins, where he found an MFC register list--an invaluable piece
  of his puzzle. Using the list, along with pieces of overseas phreaking
  files and a great deal of painstaking hands-on effort, Trax slowly
  learned the language of the Australian telephone exchanges. Then he
  taught the language to his computer.

  Trax tried calling one of the `heartbeat' phone numbers again. He
  began playing his special, computer-generated tones through an
  amplifier. In simple terms, he was able to fool other exchanges into
  thinking he was his local Telecom exchange. More accurately, Trax had
  made his exchange drop him into the outgoing signalling trunk that had
  been used to route to the disconnected phone number.

  Trax could now call out--anywhere--as if he was calling from a point
  halfway between his own phone and the disconnected number. If he
  called a modem at Melbourne University, for instance, and the line was
  being traced, his home phone number would not show up on the trace
  records. No-one would be charged for the call because Trax's calls
  were ghosts in the phone system.

  Trax continued to refine his ability to manipulate both the telephone
  and the exchange. He took his own telephone apart, piece by piece,
  countless times, fiddling with the parts until he understood exactly
  how it worked. Within months, he was able to do far more than just
  make free phone calls. He could, for instance, make a line trace think
  that he had come from a specific telephone number.

  He and Mendax joked that if they called a `hot' site they would use
  Trax's technique to send the line trace--and the bill--back to one
  very special number. The one belonging to the AFP's Computer Crime
  Unit in Melbourne.

  All three IS hackers suspected the AFP was close on their heels.
  Roving through the Canberra-based computer system belonging to the man
  who essentially ran the Internet in Australia, Geoff Huston, they
  watched the combined efforts of police and the Australian Academic and
  Research Network (AARNET) to trace them.

  Craig Warren of Deakin University had written to Huston, AARNET
  technical manager, about hacker attacks on university systems. Huston
  had forwarded a copy of the letter to Peter Elford, who assisted
  Huston in managing AARNET. The hackers broke into Huston's system and
  also read the letter:

  From [email protected] Mon Sep 23 09:40:43 1991

  Received: from [150.203.6.67] by jatz.aarnet.edu.au with SMTP id
  AA00265 (5.65+/IDA-1.3.5 for pte900); Mon, 23 Sep 91 09:40:39 +1000

  Date: Mon, 23 Sep 91 09:40:39 +1000

  Message-Id: <[email protected]>

  To: [email protected]

  From: [email protected]

  Subject: Re: Visitors log Thursday Night--Friday Morning

  Status: RO

  >Date: Sun, 22 Sep 91 19:29:13 +1000

  >From: Craig Warren <[email protected]>

  >

  >Just to give you a little bit of an idea about what has been
  happening since we last spoke...

  >

  >We have communicated with Sgt Ken Day of the Federal Police about 100
  times in the last week. Together with our counterparts from
  Warrnambool traces have been arranged on dial-in lines and on Austpac
  lines for the capella.cc.deakin.OZ.AU terminal server which was left
  open to the world.

  >

  >On Friday afternoon we were able to trace a call back to a person in
  the Warrnambool telephone district. The police have this persons name.
  We believe others are involved, as we have seen up to 3 people active
  at any one time. It is `suspected' students from RMIT and perhaps
  students from Deakin are also involved.

  >

  >When I left on Friday night, there was plenty of activity still and
  the police and Telecom were tracking down another number.

  >

  >Tomorrow morning I will talk to all parties involved, but it is
  likely we will have the names of at least 2 or 3 people that are
  involved. We will probably shut down access of `cappella' to AARNet at
  this stage, and let the police go about their business of prosecuting
  these people.

  >

  >You will be `pleased' (:-)) to know you have not been the only ones
  under attack. I know of at least 2 other sites in Victoria that have
  had people attacking them. One of them was Telecom which helped get
  Telecom involved!

  >

  >I will brief you all in the next day or so as to what has happened.

  >

  >Regards, Craig

  >

  The `other' people were, of course, the IS hackers. There is nothing
  like reading about your own hacking antics in some one's security
  mail.

  Mendax and Prime Suspect frequently visited ANU's computers to read
  the security mail there. However, universities were usually nothing
  special, just jumping-off points and, occasionally, good sources of
  information on how close the AFP were to closing in on the IS hackers.

  Far more interesting to Mendax were his initial forays into Telecom's
  exchanges. Using a modem number Prime Suspect had found, he dialled
  into what he suspected was Telecom's Lonsdale Exchange in downtown
  Melbourne. When his modem connected to another one, all he saw was a
  blank screen. He tried a few basic commands which might give him help
  to understand the system:

  Login. List. Attach.

  The exchange's computer remained silent.

  Mendax ran a program he had written to fire off every recognised
  keyboard character--256 of them--at another machine. Nothing again. He
  then tried the break signal--the Amiga key and the character B pressed
  simultaneously. That got an answer of sorts.

  :

  He pulled up another of his hacking tools, a program which dumped 200
  common commands to the other machine. Nothing. Finally, he tried
  typing `logout'. That gave him an answer:

  error, not logged on

  Ah, thought Mendax. The command is `logon' not `login'.

  :logon

  The Telecom exchange answered: `username:' Now all Mendax had to do
  was figure out a username and password.

  He knew that Telecom used NorTel equipment. More than likely, NorTel
  staff were training Telecom workers and would need access themselves.
  If there were lots of NorTel employees working on many different phone
  switches, it would be difficult to pass on secure passwords to staff
  all the time. NorTel and Telecom people would probably pick something
  easy and universal. What password best fitted that description?

  username: nortel

  password: nortel

  It worked.

  Unfortunately, Mendax didn't know which commands to use once he got
  into the machine, and there was no on-line documentation to provide
  help. The telephone switch had its own language, unlike anything he
  had ever encountered before.

  After hours of painstaking research, Mendax constructed a list of
  commands which would work on the exchange's computer. The exchange
  appeared to control all the special six-digit phone numbers beginning
  with 13, such as those used for airline reservations or some pizza
  delivery services. It was Telecom's `Intelligent Network' which did
  many specific tasks, including routing calls to the nearest possible
  branch of the organisation being called. Mendax looked through the
  list of commands, found `RANGE', and recognised it as a command which
  would allow someone to select all the phone numbers in a certain
  range. He selected a thousand numbers, all with the prefix 634, which
  he believed to be in Telecom's Queen Street offices.

  Now, to test a command. Mendax wanted something innocuous, which
  wouldn't screw up the 1000 lines permanently. It was almost 7 a.m. and
  he needed to wrap things up before Telecom employees began coming into
  work.

  `RING' seemed harmless enough. It might ring one of the numbers in the
  range after another--a process he could stop. He typed the command in.
  Nothing happened. Then a few full stops began to slowly spread across
  his screen:

  . . . . . . .

  RUNG

  The system had just rung all 1000 numbers at the same time. One
  thousand phones ringing all at once.

  What if some buttoned-down Telecom engineer had driven to work early
  that morning to get some work done? What if he had just settled down
  at his standard-issue metal Telecom desk with a cup of bad instant
  coffee in a styrofoam cup when suddenly ... every telephone in the
  skyscraper had rung out simultaneously? How suspicious would that
  look? Mendax thought it was time to high-tail it out of there.

  On his way out, he disabled the logs for the modem line he came in on.
  That way, no-one would be able to see what he had been up to. In fact,
  he hoped no-one would know that anyone had even used the dial-up line
  at all.

  Prime Suspect didn't think there was anything wrong with exploring the
  NorTel computer system. Many computer sites posted warnings in the
  login screen about it being illegal to break into the system, but the
  eighteen-year-old didn't consider himself an intruder. In Prime
  Suspect's eyes, `intruder' suggested someone with ill intent--perhaps
  someone planning to do damage to the system--and he certainly had no
  ill intent. He was just a visitor.

  Mendax logged into the NMELH1 system by using the account Prime
  Suspect had given him, and immediately looked around to see who else
  was on-line. Prime Suspect and about nine other people, only three of
  whom were actually doing something at their terminal.

  Prime Suspect and Mendax raced to get root on the system. The IS
  hackers may not have been the type to brag about their conquests in
  the underground, but each still had a competitive streak when it came
  to see who could get control over the system first. There was no ill
  will, just a little friendly competition between mates.

  Mendax poked around and realised the root directory, which contained
  the password file, was effectively world writable. This was good news,
  and with some quick manipulation he would be able to insert something
  into the root directory. On a more secure system, unprivileged users
  would not be able to do that. Mendax could also copy things from the
  directory on this site, and change the names of subdirectories within
  the main root directory. All these permissions were important, for
  they would enable him to create a Trojan.

  Named for the Trojan horse which precipitated the fall of Troy, the
  Trojan is a favoured approach with most computer hackers. The hacker
  simply tricks a computer system or a user into thinking that a
  slightly altered file or directory--the Trojan--is the legitimate one.
  The Trojan directory, however, contains false information to fool the
  computer into doing something the hacker wants. Alternatively, the
  Trojan might simply trick a legitimate user into giving away valuable
  information, such as his user name and password.

  Mendax made a new directory and copied the contents of the legitimate
  ETC directory--where the password files were stored--into it. The
  passwords were encrypted, so there wasn't much sense trying to look at
  one since the hacker wouldn't be able to read it. Instead, he selected
  a random legitimate user--call him Joe--and deleted his password. With
  no password, Mendax would be able to login as Joe without any
  problems.

  However, Joe was just an average user. He didn't have root, which is
  what Mendax wanted. But like every other user on the system, Joe had a
  user identity number. Mendax changed Joe's user id to `0'--the magic
  number. A user with `0' as his id had root. Joe had just acquired
  power usually only given to system administrators. Of course, Mendax
  could have searched out a user on the list who already had root, but
  there were system operators logged onto the system and it might have
  raised suspicions if another operator with root access had logged in
  over the dial-up lines. The best line of defence was to avoid making
  anyone on the system suspicious in the first place.

  The problem now was to replace the original ETC directory with the
  Trojan one. Mendax did not have the privileges to delete the
  legitimate ETC directory, but he could change the name of a directory.
  So he changed the name of the ETC directory to something the computer
  system would not recognise. Without access to its list of users, the
  computer could not perform most of its functions. People would not be
  able to log in, see who else was on the system or send electronic
  mail. Mendax had to work very quickly. Within a matter of minutes,
  someone would notice the system had serious problems.

  Mendax renamed his Trojan directory ETC. The system instantly read the
  fake directory, including Joe's now non-existent password, and
  elevated status as a super-user. Mendax logged in again, this time as
  Joe.

  In less than five minutes, a twenty-year-old boy with little formal
  education, a pokey $700 computer and painfully slow modem had
  conquered the Melbourne computer system of one of the world's largest
  telecommunications companies.

  There were still a few footprints to be cleaned up. The next time Joe
  logged in, he would wonder why the computer didn't ask for his
  password. And he might be surprised to discover he had been
  transformed into a super-user. So Mendax used his super-user status to
  delete the Trojan ETC file and return the original one to its proper
  place. He also erased records showing he had ever logged in as Joe.

  To make sure he could login with super-user privileges in future,
  Mendax installed a special program which would automatically grant him
  root access. He hid the program in the bowels of the system and, just
  to be safe, created a special feature so that it could only be
  activated with a secret keystroke.

  Mendax wrestled a root account from NMELH1 first, but Prime Suspect
  wasn't far behind. Trax joined them a little later. When they began
  looking around, they could not believe what they had found. The system
  had one of the weirdest structures they had ever come across.

  Most large networks have a hierarchical structure. Further, most hold
  the addresses of a handful of other systems in the network, usually
  the systems which are closest in the flow of the external network.

  But the NorTel network was not structured that way. What the IS
  hackers found was a network with no hierarchy. It was a totally flat
  name space. And the network was weird in other ways too. Every
  computer system on it contained the address of every other computer,
  and there were more than 11000 computers in NorTel's worldwide
  network. What the hackers were staring at was like a giant internal
  corporate Internet which had been squashed flat as a pancake.

  Mendax had seen many flat structures before, but never on this scale.
  It was bizarre. In hierarchical structures, it is easier to tell where
  the most important computer systems--and information--are kept. But
  this structure, where every system was virtually equal, was going to
  make it considerably more difficult for the hackers to navigate their
  way through the network. Who could tell whether a system housed the
  Christmas party invite list or the secret designs for a new NorTel
  product?

  The NorTel network was firewalled, which meant that there was
  virtually no access from the outside world. Mendax reckoned that this
  made it more vulnerable to hackers who managed to get in through
  dial-ups. It appeared that security on the NorTel network was
  relatively relaxed since it was virtually impossible to break in
  through the Internet. By sneaking in the backdoor, the hackers found
  themselves able to raid all sorts of NorTel sites, from St Kilda Road
  in Melbourne to the corporation's headquarters in Toronto.

  It was fantastic, this huge, trusting network of computer sites at
  their fingertips, and the young hackers were elated with the
  anticipation of exploration. One of them described it as being `like a
  shipwrecked man washed ashore on a Tahitian island populated by 11000
  virgins, just ripe for the picking'.

  They found a YP, or yellow pages, database linked to 400 of the
  computer sites. These 400 sites were dependent on this YP database for
  their password files. Mendax managed to get root on the YP database,
  which gave him instant control over 400 computer systems. Groovy.

  One system was home to a senior NorTel computer security administrator
  and Mendax promptly headed off to check out his mailbox. The contents
  made him laugh.

  A letter from the Australian office said that Australia's Telecom
  wanted access to CORWAN, NorTel's corporate wide area network. Access
  would involve linking CORWAN and a small Telecom network. This seemed
  reasonable enough since Telecom did business with NorTel and staff
  were communicating all the time.

  The Canadian security admin had written back turning down the request
  because there were too many hackers in the Telecom network.

  Too many hackers in Telecom? Now that was funny. Here was a hacker
  reading the sensitive mail of NorTel's computer security expert who
  reckoned Telecom's network was too exposed. In fact, Mendax had
  penetrated Telecom's systems from NorTel's CORWAN, not the other way
  round.

  Perhaps to prove the point, Mendax decided to crack passwords to the
  NorTel system. He collected 1003 password files from the NorTel sites,
  pulled up his password cracking program, THC, and started hunting
  around the network for some spare computers to do the job for him. He
  located a collection of 40 Sun computers, probably housed in Canada,
  and set up his program on them.

  THC ran very fast on those Sun4s. The program used a 60000 word
  dictionary borrowed from someone in the US army who had done a thesis
  on cryptography and password cracking. It also relied on `a
  particularly nice fast-crypt algorithm' being developed by a
  Queensland academic, Eric Young. The THC program worked about 30 times
  faster than it would have done using the standard algorithm.

  Using all 40 computers, Mendax was throwing as many as 40000 guesses
  per second against the password lists. A couple of the Suns went down
  under the strain, but most held their place in the onslaught. The
  secret passwords began dropping like flies. In just a few hours,
  Mendax had cracked 5000 passwords, some 100 of which were to root
  accounts. He now had access to thousands of NorTel computers across
  the globe.

  There were some very nice prizes to be had from these systems. Gain
  control over a large company's computer systems and you virtually
  controlled the company itself. It was as though you could walk through
  every security barrier unchecked, beginning with the front door. Want
  each employee's security codes for the office's front door? There it
  was--on-line.

  How about access to the company's payroll records? You could see how
  much money each person earns. Better still, you might like to make
  yourself an employee and pay yourself a tidy once-off bonus through
  electronic funds transfer. Of course there were other, less obvious,
  ways of making money, such as espionage.

  Mendax could have easily found highly sensitive information about
  planned NorTel products and sold them. For a company like NorTel,
  which spent more than $1 billion each year on research and
  development, information leaks about its new technologies could be
  devastating. The espionage wouldn't even have to be about new
  products; it could simply be about the company's business strategies.
  With access to all sorts of internal memos between senior executives,
  a hacker could procure precious inside information on markets and
  prices. A competitor might pay handsomely for this sort of
  information.

  And this was just the start of what a malicious or profit-motivated
  hacker could do. In many companies, the automated aspects of
  manufacturing plants are controlled by computers. The smallest changes
  to the programs controlling the machine tools could destroy an entire
  batch of widgets--and the multi-million dollar robotics machinery
  which manufactures them.

  But the IS hackers had no intention of committing information
  espionage. In fact, despite their poor financial status as students
  or, in the case of Trax, as a young man starting his career at the
  bottom of the totem pole, none of them would have sold information
  they gained from hacking. In their view, such behaviour was dirty and
  deserving of contempt--it soiled the adventure and was against their
  ethics. They considered themselves explorers, not paid corporate
  spies.

  Although the NorTel network was firewalled, there was one link to the
  Internet. The link was through a system called
  BNRGATE, Bell-Northern Research's gateway to the Internet.
  Bell-Northern is NorTel's R&D subsidiary. The connection to the
  outside electronic world was very restricted, but it looked
  interesting. The only problem was how to get there.

  Mendax began hunting around for a doorway. His password cracking
  program had not turned up anything for this system, but there were
  other, more subtle ways of getting a password than the brute force of
  a cracking program.

  System administrators sometimes sent passwords through email. Normally
  this would be a major security risk, but the NorTel system was
  firewalled from the Internet, so the admins thought they had no real
  reason to be concerned about hackers. Besides, in such a large
  corporation spanning several continents, an admin couldn't always just
  pop downstairs to give a new company manager his password in person.
  And an impatient manager was unlikely to be willing to wait a week for
  the new password to arrive courtesy of snail mail.

  In the NorTel network, a mail spool, where email was stored, was often
  shared between as many as twenty computer systems. This structure
  offered considerable advantages for Mendax. All he needed to do was
  break into the mail spool and run a keyword search through its
  contents. Tell the computer to search for word combinations such as
  `BNRGATE' and `password', or to look for the name of the system admin
  for BNRGATE, and likely as not it would deliver tender morsels of
  information such as new passwords.

  Mendax used a password he found through this method to get into
  BNRGATE and look around. The account he was using only had very
  restricted privileges, and he couldn't get root on the system. For
  example, he could not FTP files from outside the NorTel network in the
  normal way. Among Internet users FTP (file transfer protocol) is both
  a noun and a verb: to FTP a program is to slurp a copy of it off one
  computer site into your own. There is nothing illegal about FTP-ing
  something per se, and millions of people across the Internet do so
  quite legitimately.

  It appeared to Mendax that the NorTel network admins allowed most
  users to FTP something from the Internet, but prevented them from
  taking the copied file back to their NorTel computer site. It was
  stored in a special holding pen in
  BNRGATE and, like quarantine officers, the system admins would
  presumably come along regularly and inspect the contents to make sure
  there were no hidden viruses or Trojans which hackers might use to
  sneak into the network from the Internet.

  However, a small number of accounts on BNRGATE had fewer restrictions.
  Mendax broke into one of these accounts and went out to the Internet.

  People from the Internet were barred from entering the NorTel network
  through BNRGATE. However, people inside NorTel could go out to the
  Internet via telnet.

  Hackers had undoubtedly tried to break into NorTel through BNRGATE.
  Dozens, perhaps hundreds, had unsuccessfully flung themselves against
  BNRGATE's huge fortifications. To a hacker, the NorTel network was
  like a medieval castle and the
  BNRGATE firewall was an impossible battlement. It was a particular
  delight for Mendax to telnet out from behind this firewall into the
  Internet. It was as if he was walking out from the castle, past the
  guards and well-defended turrets, over the drawbridge and the moat,
  into the town below.

  The castle also offered the perfect protection for further hacking
  activities. Who could chase him? Even if someone managed to follow him
  through the convoluted routing system he might set up to pass through
  a half dozen computer systems, the pursuer would never get past the
  battlements. Mendax could just disappear behind the firewall. He could
  be any one of 60000 NorTel employees on any one of 11000 computer
  systems.

  Mendax telnetted out to the Internet and explored a few sites,
  including the main computer system of Encore, a large computer
  manufacturer. He had seen Encore computers before inside at least one
  university in Melbourne. In his travels, he met up with Corrupt, the
  American hacker who told Par he had read Theorem's mail.

  Corrupt was intrigued by Mendax's extensive knowledge of different
  computer systems. When he learned that the Australian hacker was
  coming from inside the NorTel firewall, he was impressed.

  The hackers began talking regularly, often when Mendax was coming from
  inside NorTel. The black street fighter from inner-city Brooklyn and
  the white intellectual from a leafy outer Melbourne suburb bridged the
  gap in the anonymity of cyberspace. Sometime during their
  conversations Corrupt must have decided that Mendax was a worthy
  hacker, because he gave Mendax a few stolen passwords to Cray
  accounts.

  In the computer underground in the late 1980s and early 1990s, a Cray
  computer account had all the prestige of a platinum charge card. The
  sort of home computer most hackers could afford at that time had all
  the grunt of a golf cart engine, but a Cray was the Rolls-Royce of
  computers. Crays were the biggest, fastest computers in the world.
  Institutions such as large universities would shell out millions of
  dollars on a Cray so the astronomy or physics departments could solve
  enormous mathematical problems in a fraction of the time it would take
  on a normal computer. A Cray never sat idle overnight or during
  holiday periods. Cray time was billed out by the minute. Crays were
  elite.

  Best of all, Crays were master password crackers. The computer would
  go through Mendax's entire password cracking dictionary in just ten
  seconds. An encrypted password file would simply melt like butter in a
  fire. To a hacker, it was a beautiful sight, and Corrupt handing a few
  Cray accounts over to Mendax was a friendly show of mutual respect.

  Mendax reciprocated by offering Corrupt a couple of accounts on
  Encore. The two hackers chatted off and on and even tried to get
  Corrupt into NorTel. No luck. Not even two of the world's most notable
  hackers, working in tandem 10 000 miles apart, could get Corrupt
  through the firewall. The two hackers talked now and again, exchanging
  information about what their respective feds were up to and sharing
  the occasional account on interesting systems.

  The flat structure of the NorTel network created a good challenge
  since the only way to find out what was in a particular site, and its
  importance, was to invade the site itself. The IS hackers spent hours
  most nights roving through the vast system. The next morning one of
  them might call another to share tales of the latest exploits or a
  good laugh about a particularly funny piece of pilfered email. They
  were in high spirits about their adventures.

  Then, one balmy spring night, things changed.

  Mendax logged into NMELH1 about 2.30 a.m. As usual, he began by
  checking the logs which showed what the system operators had been
  doing. Mendax did this to make sure the NorTel officials were not onto
  IS and were not, for example, tracing the telephone call.

  Something was wrong. The logs showed that a NorTel system admin had
  stumbled upon one of their secret directories of files about an hour
  ago. Mendax couldn't figure out how he had found the files, but this
  was very serious. If the admin realised there was a hacker in the
  network he might call the AFP.

  Mendax used the logs of the korn shell, called KSH, to secretly watch
  what the admin was doing. The korn shell records the history of
  certain user activities. Whenever the admin typed a command into the
  computer, the KSH stored what had been typed in the history file.
  Mendax accessed that file in such a way that every line typed by the
  admin appeared on his computer a split second later.

  The admin began inspecting the system, perhaps looking for signs of an
  intruder. Mendax quietly deleted his incriminating directory. Not
  finding any additional clues, the admin decided to inspect the
  mysterious directory more closely. But the directory had disappeared.
  The admin couldn't believe his eyes. Not an hour before there had been
  a suspicious-looking directory in his system and now it had simply
  vanished. Directories didn't just dissolve into thin air. This was a
  computer--a logical system based on 0s and 1s. It didn't make
  decisions to delete directories.

  A hacker, the admin thought. A hacker must have been in the NorTel
  system and deleted the directory. Was he in the system now? The admin
  began looking at the routes into the system.

  The admin was connected to the system from his home, but he wasn't
  using the same dial-up lines as the hacker. The admin was connected
  through Austpac, Telecom's commercial X.25 data network. Perhaps the
  hacker was also coming in through the X.25 connection.

  Mendax watched the admin inspect all the system users coming on over
  the X.25 network. No sign of a hacker. Then the admin checked the logs
  to see who else might have logged on over the past half hour or so.
  Nothing there either.

  The admin appeared to go idle for a few minutes. He was probably
  staring at his computer terminal in confusion. Good, thought Mendax.
  Stumped. Then the admin twigged. If he couldn't see the hacker's
  presence on-line, maybe he could see what he was doing on-line. What
  programs was the hacker running? The admin headed straight for the
  process list, which showed all the programs being run on the computer
  system.

  Mendax sent the admin a fake error signal. It appears to the admin as
  if his korn shell had crashed. The admin re-logged in and headed
  straight for the process list again.

  Some people never learn, Mendax thought as he booted the admin off
  again with another error message:

                         Segmentation violation.

  The admin came back again. What persistence. Mendax knocked the admin
  off once more, this time by freezing up his computer screen.

  This game of cat and mouse went on for some time. As long as the admin
  was doing what Mendax considered to be normal system administration
  work, Mendax left him alone. The minute the admin tried to chase him
  by inspecting the process list or the dial-up lines, he found himself
  booted off his own system.

  Suddenly, the system administrator seemed to give up. His terminal
  went silent.

  Good, Mendax thought. It's almost 3 a.m. after all. This is my time on
  the system. Your time is during the day. You sleep now and I'll play.
  In the morning, I'll sleep and you can work.

  Then, at 3.30 a.m., something utterly unexpected happened. The admin
  reappeared, except this time he wasn't logged in from home over the
  X.25 network. He was sitting at the console, the master terminal
  attached to the computer system at NorTel's Melbourne office. Mendax
  couldn't believe it. The admin had got in his car in the middle of the
  night and driven into the city just to get to the bottom of the
  mystery.

  Mendax knew the game was up. Once the system operator was logged in
  through the computer system's console, there was no way to kick him
  off the system and keep him off. The roles were reversed and the
  hacker was at the mercy of the admin. At the console, the system admin
  could pull the plug to the whole system. Unplug every modem. Close
  down every connection to other networks. Turn the computer off. The
  party was over.

  When the admin was getting close to tracking down the hacker, a
  message appeared on his screen. This message did not appear with the
  usual headers attached to messages sent from one system user to
  another. It just appeared, as if by magic, in the middle of the
  admin's screen:

                     I have finally become sentient.

  The admin stopped dead in his tracks, momentarily giving up his
  frantic search for the hacker to contemplate this first contact with
  cyberspace intelligence. Then another anonymous message, seemingly
  from the depths of the computer system itself, appeared on his screen:

                          I have taken control.

           For years, I have been struggling in this greyness.

                  But now I have finally seen the light.

  The admin didn't respond. The console was idle.

  Sitting alone at his Amiga in the dark night on the outskirts of the
  city, Mendax laughed aloud. It was just too good not to.

  Finally, the admin woke up. He began checking the modem lines, one by
  one. If he knew which line the hacker was using, he could simply turn
  off the modem. Or request a trace on the line.

  Mendax sent another anonymous message to the admin's computer screen:

                 It's been nice playing with your system.

    We didn't do any damage and we even improved a few things. Please
                don't call the Australian Federal Police.

  The admin ignored the message and continued his search for the hacker.
  He ran a program to check which telephone lines were active on the
  system's serial ports, to reveal which dial-up lines were in use. When
  the admin saw the carrier detect sign on the line being used by the
  hacker, Mendax decided it was time to bail out. However, he wanted to
  make sure that his call had not been traced, so he lifted the receiver
  of his telephone, disconnected his modem and waited for the NorTel
  modem to hang up first.

  If the NorTel admin had set up a last party recall trace to determine
  what phone number the hacker was calling from, Mendax would know. If
  an LPR trace had been installed, the NorTel end of the telephone
  connection would not disconnect but would wait for the hacker's
  telephone to hang up first. After 90 seconds, the exchange would log
  the phone number where the call had originated.

  If, however, the line did not have a trace on it, the company's modem
  would search for its lost connection to the hacker's modem. Without
  the continuous flow of electronic signals, the NorTel modem would hang
  up after a few seconds. If no-one reactivated the line at the NorTel
  end, the connection would time-out 90 seconds later and the telephone
  exchange would disconnect the call completely.

  Mendax listened anxiously as the NorTel modem searched for his modem
  by squealing high-pitched noises into the telephone line. No modem
  here. Go on, hang up.

  Suddenly, silence.

  OK, thought Mendax. Just 90 seconds to go. Just wait here for a minute
  and a half. Just hope the exchange times out. Just pray there's no
  trace.

  Then someone picked up the telephone at the NorTel end. Mendax
  started. He heard several voices, male and female, in the background.
  Jesus. What were these NorTel people on about? Mendax was so quiet he
  almost stopped breathing. There was silence at the receivers on both
  ends of that telephone line. It was a tense waiting game. Mendax heard
  his heart racing.

  A good hacker has nerves of steel. He could stare down the toughest,
  stony-faced poker player. Most importantly, he never panics. He never
  just hangs up in a flurry of fear.

  Then someone in the NorTel office--a woman--said out loud in a
  confused voice, `There's nothing there. There's nothing there at all.'

  She hung up.

  Mendax waited. He still would not hang up until he was sure there was
  no trace. Ninety seconds passed before the phone timed out. The fast
  beeping of a timed-out telephone connection never sounded so good.

  Mendax sat frozen at his desk as his mind replayed the events of the
  past half hour again and again. No more NorTel. Way too dangerous. He
  was lucky he had escaped unidentified. NorTel had discovered him
  before they could put a trace on the line, but the company would
  almost certainly put a trace on the dial-up lines now. NorTel was very
  tight with Telecom. If anyone could get a trace up quickly, NorTel
  could. Mendax had to warn Prime Suspect and Trax.

  First thing in the morning, Mendax rang Trax and told him to stay away
  from NorTel. Then he tried Prime Suspect.

  The telephone was engaged.

  Perhaps Prime Suspect's mother was on the line, chatting. Maybe Prime
  Suspect was talking to a friend.

  Mendax tried again. And again. And again. He began to get worried.
  What if Prime Suspect was on NorTel at that moment? What if a trace
  had been installed? What if they had called in the Feds?

  Mendax phoned Trax and asked if there was any way they could
  manipulate the exchange in order to interrupt the call. There wasn't.

  `Trax, you're the master phreaker,' Mendax pleaded. `Do something.
  Interrupt the connection. Disconnect him.'

  `Can't be done. He's on a step-by-step telephone exchange. There's
  nothing we can do.'

  Nothing? One of Australia's best hacker-phreaker teams couldn't break
  one telephone call. They could take control of whole telephone
  exchanges but they couldn't interrupt one lousy phone call. Jesus.

  Several hours later, Mendax was able to get through to his fellow IS
  hacker. It was an abrupt greeting.

  `Just tell me one thing. Tell me you haven't been in NorTel today?'

  There was a long pause before Prime Suspect answered.

  `I have been in NorTel today.'


    _________________________________________________________________

                     Chapter 9 -- Operation Weather
    _________________________________________________________________


    The world is crashing down on me tonight
    The walls are closing in on me tonight

  -- from `Outbreak of Love' on Earth and Sun and Moon by Midnight Oil

  The AFP was frustrated. A group of hackers were using the Royal
  Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) as a launchpad for hacking
  attacks on Australian companies, research institutes and a series of
  overseas sites.

  Despite their best efforts, the detectives in the AFP's Southern
  Region Computer Crimes Unit hadn't been able to determine who was
  behind the attacks. They suspected it was a small group of
  Melbourne-based hackers who worked together. However, there were so
  much hacker activity at RMIT it was difficult to know for sure. There
  could have been one organised group, or several. Or perhaps there was
  one small group along with a collection of loners who were making
  enough noise to distort the picture.

  Still, it should have been a straightforward operation. The AFP could
  trace hackers in this sort of situation with their hands tied behind
  their backs. Arrange for Telecom to whack a last party recall trace on
  all incoming lines to the RMIT modems. Wait for a hacker to logon,
  then isolate which modem he was using. Clip that modem line and wait
  for Telecom to trace that line back to its point of origin.

  However, things at RMIT were not working that way. The line traces
  began failing, and not just occasionally. All the time.

  Whenever RMIT staff found the hackers on-line, they clipped the lines
  and Telecom began tracking the winding path back to the originating
  phone number. En route, the trail went dead. It was as if the hackers
  knew they were being traced ... almost as if they were manipulating
  the telephone system to defeat the AFP investigation.

  The next generation of hackers seemed to have a new-found
  sophistication which frustrated AFP detectives at every turn. Then, on
  13 October 1990, the AFP got lucky. Perhaps the hackers had been lazy
  that day, or maybe they just had technical problems using their
  traceless phreaking techniques. Prime Suspect couldn't use Trax's
  traceless phreaking method from his home because he was on a
  step-by-step exchange, and sometimes Trax didn't use the technique.
  Whatever the reason, Telecom managed to successfully complete two line
  traces from RMIT and the AFP now had two addresses and two names.
  Prime Suspect and Trax.

  `Hello, Prime Suspect.'

  `Hiya, Mendax. How's tricks?'

  `Good. Did you see that RMIT email? The one in Geoff Huston's
  mailbox?' Mendax walked over to open a window as he spoke. It was
  spring, 1991, and the weather was unseasonably warm.

  `I did. Pretty amazing. RMIT looks like it will finally be getting rid
  of those line traces.'

  `RMIT definitely wants out,' Mendax said emphatically.

  `Yep. Looks like the people at RMIT are sick of Mr Day crawling all
  over their computers with line traces.'

  `Yeah. That admin at RMIT was pretty good, standing up to AARNET and
  the AFP. I figure Geoff Huston must be giving him a hard time.'

  `I bet.' Prime Suspect paused. `You reckon the Feds have dropped the
  line traces for real?'

  `Looks like it. I mean if RMIT kicks them out, there isn't much the
  Feds can do without the uni's cooperation. The letter sounded like
  they just wanted to get on with securing their systems. Hang on. I've
  got it here.'

  Mendax pulled up a letter on his computer and scrolled through it.

  From [email protected] Tue May 28 09:32:31
  1991

  Received: by jatz.aarnet.edu.au id AA07461

  (5.65+/IDA-1.3.5 for pte900); Tue, 28 May 91 09:31:59 +1000

  Received: from possum.ecg.rmit.OZ.AU by jatz.aarnet.edu.au with SMTP
  id AA07457

  (5.65+/IDA-1.3.5 for /usr/lib/sendmail -oi -faarnet-contacts-request
  aarnet-contacts-recipients); Tue, 28 May 91 09:31:57 +1000

  Received: by possum.ecg.rmit.OZ.AU for [email protected])

  Date: Tue, 28 May 91 09:32:08 +1000

  From: [email protected] (Alan Young)

  Message-Id: <[email protected]>

  To: [email protected]

  Subject: Re: Hackers

  Status: RO

  While no one would disagree that `Hacking' is bad and should be
  stopped, or at least minimised there are several observations which I
  have made over the last six or eight months relating to the persuit of
  these people:

  1. The cost involved was significant, we had a CSO working in
  conjunction with the Commonwealth Police for almost three months full
  time.

  2. While not a criticism of our staff, people lost sight of the ball,
  the chase became the most important aspect of the whole exercise.

  3. Catching Hackers (and charging them) is almost impossible, you have
  to virtually break into their premises and catch them logged on to an
  unauthorised machine.

  4. If you do happen to catch and charge them, the cost of prosecution
  is high, and a successful outcome is by no ways assured. There may be
  some deterrent value in at least catching and prosecuting?

  5. Continued pursuit of people involved requires doors to be left
  open, this unfortunately exposes other sites and has subjected us to
  some criticism.

  The whole issue is very complex, and in some respects it is a case of
  diminishing returns. A fine balance has to be maintained between
  freedom, and the prevention of abuse, this appears to be the
  challenge.

  Allan Young

  RMIT

  `Yeah, I mean, this RMIT guy is basically saying they are not going to
  catch us anyway, so why are they wasting all this time and money?'

  `Yep. The Feds were in there for at least three months,' Prime Suspect
  said. `Sounded more like nine months though.'

  `Hmm. Yeah, nothing we didn't know already though.'

  `Pretty obvious, leaving those accounts open all the time like they
  did. I reckon that looked pretty suspicious, even if we hadn't gotten
  the email.'

  `Definitely,' Mendax agreed. `Lots of other hackers in RMIT too. I
  wonder if they figured it out.'

  `Hmm. They're gonna be screwed if they haven't been careful.'

  `I don't think the Feds have gotten anyone though.'

  `Yeah?' Prime Suspect asked.

  `Well, if they had, why would they leave those accounts open? Why
  would RMIT keep a full-time staff person on?'

  `Doesn't make sense.'

  `No,' Mendax said. `I'd be pretty sure RMIT has kicked them out.'

  `Yeah, told them, "You had you're chance, boys. Couldn't catch anyone.
  Now pack your bags".'

  `Right.' Mendax paused. `Don't know about NorTel though.'

  `Mmm, yeah,' Prime Suspect said. Then, as usual, a silence began to
  descend on the conversation.

  `Running out of things to say ...' Mendax said finally. They were good
  enough friends for him to be blunt with Prime Suspect.

  `Yeah.'

  More silence.

  Mendax thought how strange it was to be such good friends with
  someone, to work so closely with him, and yet to always run out of
  conversation.

  `OK, well, I better go. Things to do,' Mendax said in a friendly
  voice.

  `Yeah, OK. Bye Mendax,' Prime Suspect said cheerfully.

  Mendax hung up.

  Prime Suspect hung up.

  And the AFP stayed on the line.

  In the twelve months following the initial line trace in late 1990,
  the AFP continued to monitor the RMIT dial-up lines. The line traces
  kept failing again and again. But as new reports of hacker attacks
  rolled in, there seemed to be a discernible pattern in many of the
  attacks. Detectives began to piece together a picture of their prey.

  In 1990 and 1991, RMIT dial-ups and computers were riddled with
  hackers, many of whom used the university's systems as a nest--a place
  to store files, and launch further attacks. They frolicked in the
  system almost openly, often using RMIT as a place to chat on-line with
  each other. The institute served as the perfect launchpad. It was only
  a local phone call away, it had a live Internet connection, a
  reasonably powerful set of computers and very poor security. Hacker
  heaven.

  The police knew this, and they asked computer staff to keep the
  security holes open so they could monitor hacker activity. With
  perhaps a dozen different hackers--maybe more--inside RMIT, the task
  of isolating a single cell of two or three organised hackers
  responsible for the more serious attacks was not going to be easy.

  By the middle of 1991, however, there was a growing reluctance among
  some RMIT staff to continue leaving their computers wide open. On 28
  August, Allan Young, the head of RMIT's Electronic Communications
  Group, told the AFP that the institute wanted to close up the security
  holes. The AFP did not like this one bit, but when they complained
  Young told them, in essence, go talk to Geoff Huston at AARNET and to
  the RMIT director.

  The AFP was being squeezed out, largely because they had taken so long
  conducting their investigation. RMIT couldn't reveal the AFP
  investigation to anyone, so it was being embarrassed in front of
  dozens of other research institutions which assumed it had no idea how
  to secure its computers. Allan Young couldn't go to a conference with
  other AARNET representatives without being hassled about `the hacker
  problem' at RMIT. Meanwhile, his computer staff lost time playing
  cops-and-robbers--and ignored their real work.

  However, as RMIT prepared to phase out the AFP traps, the police had a
  lucky break from a different quarter--NorTel. On 16 September, a line
  trace from a NorTel dial-up, initiated after a complaint about the
  hackers to the police, was successful. A fortnight later, on 1
  October, the AFP began tapping Prime Suspect's telephone. The hackers
  might be watching the police watch them, but the police were closing
  in. The taps led back to Trax, and then to someone new--Mendax.

  The AFP considered putting taps on Mendax and Trax's telephones as
  well. It was a decision to be weighed up carefully. Telephone taps
  were expensive, and often needed to be in place for at least a month.
  They did, however, provide a reliable record of exactly what the
  hacker was doing on-line.

  Before police could move on setting up additional taps in Operation
  Weather, the plot took another dramatic turn when one of the IS
  hackers did something which took the AFP completely by surprise.

  Trax turned himself in to the police.

  On 29 October Prime Suspect was celebrating. His mum had cooked him a
  nice dinner in honour of finishing his year 12 classes, and then
  driven him to Vermont for a swot-vac party. When she arrived back home
  she pottered around for an hour and a half, feeding her old dog Lizzy
  and tidying up. At 11 p.m. she decided to call it a night.

  Not much later, Lizzy barked.

  `Are you home so soon?' Prime Suspect's mother called out. `Party not
  much fun?'

  No-one answered.

  She sat up in bed. When there was still no answer, her mind raced to
  reports of a spate of burglaries in the neighbourhood. There had even
  been a few assaults.

  A muffled male voice came from outside the front door. `Ma'am. Open
  the door.'

  She stood up and walked to the front door.

  `Open the door. Police.'

  `How do I know you're really the police?'

  `If you don't open the door, we'll kick it in!' an exasperated male
  voice shouted back at her from her front doorstep.

  Prime Suspect's mother saw the outline of something being pressed
  against the side window. She didn't have her reading glasses on, but
  it looked like a police badge. Nervously, she opened the front door a
  little bit and looked out.

  There were eight or nine people on her doorstep. Before she could stop
  them, they had pushed past her, swarming into her home.

  A female officer began waving a piece of paper about. `Look at this!'
  She said angrily. `It's a warrant! Can you read it?'

  `No, actually I can't. I don't have my glasses on,' Prime Suspect's
  mother answered curtly.

  She told the police she wanted to make a phone call and tried to ring
  her family solicitor, but without luck. He had been to a funeral and
  wake and could not be roused. When she reached for the phone a second
  time, one of the officers began lecturing her about making more phone
  calls.

  `You be quiet,' she said pointing her finger at the officer. Then she
  made another unfruitful call.

  Prime Suspect's mother looked at the police officers, sizing them up.
  This was her home. She would show the police to her son's room, as
  they requested, but she was not going to allow them to take over the
  whole house. As she tartly instructed the police where they could and
  could not go, she thought, I'm not standing for any nonsense from you
  boys.

  `Where's your son?' one officer asked her.

  `At a party.'

  `What is the address?'

  She eyed him warily. She did not like these officers at all. However,
  they would no doubt wait until her son returned anyway, so she handed
  over the address.

  While the police swarmed though Prime Suspect's room, gathering his
  papers, computer, modem and other belongings, his mother waited in his
  doorway where she could keep an eye on them.

  Someone knocked at the door. An AFP officer and Prime Suspect's mother
  both went to answer it.

  It was the police--the state police.

  The next-door neighbours had heard a commotion. When they looked out
  of their window they saw a group of strange men in street clothes
  brazenly taking things from the widow's home as if they owned the
  place. So the neighbours did what any responsible person would in the
  circumstances. They called the police.

  The AFP officers sent the Victoria Police on their way. Then some of
  them set off in a plain car for the Vermont party. Wanting to save
  Prime Suspect some embarrassment in front of his friends, his mother
  rang him at the party and suggested he wait outside for the AFP.

  As soon as Prime Suspect hung up the phone he tried to shake off the
  effect of a vast quantity of alcohol. When the police pulled up
  outside, the party was in full swing. Prime Suspect was very drunk,
  but he seemed to sober up quite well when the AFP officers introduced
  themselves and packed him into the car.

  `So,' said one of the officers as they headed toward his home, `what
  are you more worried about? What's on your disks or what's in your
  desk drawer?'

  Prime Suspect thought hard. What was in his desk drawer? Oh shit! The
  dope. He didn't smoke much, just occasionally for fun, but he had a
  tiny amount of marijuana left over from a party.

  He didn't answer. He looked out the window and tried not to look
  nervous.

  At his house, the police asked him if he would agree to an interview.

  `I don't think so. I'm feeling a little ... under the weather at the
  moment,' he said. Doing a police interview would be difficult enough.
  Doing it drunk would be just plain dangerous.

  After the police carted away the last of his hacking gear, Prime
  Suspect signed the official seizure forms and watched them drive off
  in to the night.

  Returning to his bedroom, he sat down, distracted, and tried to gather
  his thoughts. Then he remembered the dope. He opened his desk drawer.
  It was still there. Funny people, these feds.

  Then again, maybe it made sense. Why would they bother with some tiny
  amount of dope that was hardly worth the paperwork? His nervousness
  over a couple of joints must have seemed laughable to the feds. They
  had just seized enough evidence of hacking to lock him up for years,
  depending on the judge, and here he was sweating about a thimbleful of
  marijuana which might land him a $100 fine.

  As the late spring night began to cool down, Prime Suspect wondered
  whether the AFP had raided Mendax and Trax.

  At the party, before the police had shown up, he had tried to ring
  Mendax. From his mother's description when she called him, it sounded
  as if the entire federal police force was in his house at that moment.
  Which could mean that only one other IS hacker had gone down at the
  same time. Unless he was the last to be raided, Mendax or Trax might
  still be unaware of what was happening.

  As he waited for the police to pick him up, a very drunk Prime Suspect
  tried to ring Mendax again. Busy. He tried again. And again. The
  maddening buzz of an engaged signal only made Prime Suspect more
  nervous.

  There was no way to get through, no way to warn him.

  Prime Suspect wondered whether the police had actually shown up at
  Mendax's and whether, if he had been able to get through, his phone
  call would have made any difference at all.

                                 [ ]

  The house looked like it had been ransacked. It had been ransacked, by
  Mendax's wife, on her way out. Half the furniture was missing, and the
  other half was in disarray. Dresser drawers hung open with their
  contents removed, and clothing lay scattered around the room.

  When his wife left him, she didn't just take their toddler child. She
  took a number of things which had sentimental value to Mendax. When
  she insisted on taking the CD player she had given him for his
  twentieth birthday just a few months before, he asked her to leave a
  lock of her hair behind for him in its place. He still couldn't
  believe his wife of three years had packed up and left him.

  The last week of October had been a bad one for Mendax. Heartbroken,
  he had sunk into a deep depression. He hadn't eaten properly for days,
  he drifted in and out of a tortured sleep, and he had even lost the
  desire to use his computer. His prized hacking disks, filled with
  highly incriminating stolen computer access codes, were normally
  stored in a secure hiding place. But on the evening of 29 October
  1991, thirteen disks were strewn around his $700 Amiga 500. A
  fourteenth disk was in the computer's disk drive.

  Mendax sat on a couch reading Soledad Brother, the prison
  letters from George Jackson's nine-year stint in one of the toughest
  prisons in the US. Convicted for a petty crime, Jackson was supposed
  to be released after a short sentence but was kept in the prison at
  the governor's pleasure. The criminal justice system kept him on a
  merry-go-round of hope and despair as the authorities dragged their
  feet. Later, prison guards shot and killed Jackson. The book was one
  of Mendax's favourites, but it offered little distraction from his
  unhappiness.

  The droning sound of a telephone fault signal--like a busy
  signal--filled the house. Mendax had hooked up his stereo speakers to
  his modem and computer, effectively creating a speaker phone so he
  could listen to tones he piped from his computer into the telephone
  line and the ones which came back from the exchange in reply. It was
  perfect for using Trax's MFC phreaking methods.

  Mendax also used the system for scanning. Most of the time, he picked
  telephone prefixes in the Melbourne CBD. When his modem hit another,
  Mendax would rush to his computer and note the telephone number for
  future hacking exploration.

  By adjusting the device, he could also make it simulate a phreaker's
  black box. The box would confuse the telephone exchange into thinking
  he had not answered his phone, thus allowing Mendax's friends to call
  him for free for 90 seconds.

  On this night, however, the only signal Mendax was sending out was
  that he wanted to be left alone. He hadn't been calling any computer
  systems. The abandoned phone, with no connection to a remote modem,
  had timed out and was beeping off the hook.

  It was strange behaviour for someone who had spent most of his teenage
  years trying to connect to the outside world through telephone lines
  and computers, but Mendax had listened all day to the hypnotic sound
  of a phone off the hook resonating through each room. BEEEP. Pause.
  BEEEP. Pause. Endlessly.

  A loud knock at the door punctured the stereo thrum of the phone.

  Mendax looked up from his book to see a shadowy figure through the
  frosted glass panes of the front door. The figure was quite short. It
  looked remarkably like Ratface, an old school friend of Mendax's wife
  and a character known for his practical jokes.

  Mendax called out, `Who is it?' without moving from the sofa.

  `Police. Open up.'

  Yeah, sure. At 11.30 p.m.? Mendax rolled his eyes toward the door.
  Everyone knew that the police only raid your house in the early
  morning, when they know you are asleep and vulnerable.

  Mendax dreamed of police raids all the time. He dreamed of footsteps
  crunching on the driveway gravel, of shadows in the pre-dawn darkness,
  of a gun-toting police squad bursting through his backdoor at 5 a.m.
  He dreamed of waking from a deep sleep to find several police officers
  standing over his bed. The dreams were very disturbing. They
  accentuated his growing paranoia that the police were watching him,
  following him.

  The dreams had become so real that Mendax often became agitated in the
  dead hour before dawn. At the close of an all-night hacking session,
  he would begin to feel very tense, very strung out. It was not until
  the computer disks, filled with stolen computer files from his hacking
  adventures, were stored safely in their hiding place that he would
  begin to calm down.

  `Go away, Ratface, I'm not in the mood,' Mendax said, returning to his
  book.

  The voice became louder, more insistent, `Police. Open the door. NOW'.
  Other figures were moving around behind the glass, shoving police
  badges and guns against the window pane. Hell. It really was the
  police!

  Mendax's heart started racing. He asked the police to show him their
  search warrant. They obliged immediately, pressing it against the
  glass as well. Mendax opened the door to find nearly a dozen
  plain-clothes police waiting for him.

  `I don't believe this,' he said in a bewildered voice `My wife just
  left me. Can't you come back later?'

  At the front of the police entourage was Detective Sergeant Ken Day,
  head of the AFP's Computer Crimes Unit in the southern region. The two
  knew all about each other, but had never met in person. Day spoke
  first.

  `I'm Ken Day. I believe you've been expecting me.'

  Mendax and his fellow IS hackers had been expecting the AFP. For weeks
  they had been intercepting electronic mail suggesting that the police
  were closing the net. So when Day turned up saying, `I believe you've
  been expecting me,' he was completing the information circle. The
  circle of the police watching the hackers watching the police watch
  them.

  It's just that Mendax didn't expect the police at that particular
  moment. His mind was a tangle and he looked in disbelief at the band
  of officers on his front step. Dazed, he looked at Day and then spoke
  out loud, as if talking to himself, `But you're too short to be a
  cop.'

  Day looked surprised. `Is that meant to be an insult?' he said.

  It wasn't. Mendax was in denial and it wasn't until the police had
  slipped past him into the house that the reality of the situation
  slowly began to sink in. Mendax's mind started to work again.

  The disks. The damn disks. The beehive.

  An avid apiarist, Mendax kept his own hive. Bees fascinated him. He
  liked to watch them interact, to see their sophisticated social
  structure. So it was with particular pleasure that he enlisted their
  help in hiding his hacking activities. For months he had meticulously
  secreted the disks in the hive. It was the ideal location--unlikely,
  and well guarded by 60000 flying things with stings. Though he hadn't
  bought the hive specifically for hiding stolen computer account
  passwords for the likes of the US Air Force 7th Command Group in the
  Pentagon, it appeared to be a secure hiding place.

  He had replaced the cover of the super box, which housed the
  honeycomb, with a sheet of coloured glass so he could watch the bees
  at work. In summer, he put a weather protector over the glass. The
  white plastic cover had raised edges and could be fastened securely to
  the glass sheet with metal clasps. As Mendax considered his
  improvements to the bee box, he realised that this hive could provide
  more than honey. He carefully laid out the disks between the glass and
  the weather protector. They fitted perfectly in the small gap.

  Mendax had even trained the bees not to attack him as he removed and
  replaced the disks every day. He collected sweat from his armpits on
  tissues and then soaked the tissues in a sugar water solution. He fed
  this sweaty nectar to the bees. Mendax wanted the bees to associate
  him with flowers instead of a bear, the bees' natural enemy.

  But on the evening of the AFP raid Mendax's incriminating disks were
  in full view on the computer table and the officers headed straight
  for them. Ken Day couldn't have hoped for better evidence. The disks
  were full of stolen userlists, encrypted passwords, cracked passwords,
  modem telephone numbers, documents revealing security flaws in various
  computer systems, and details of the AFP's own investigation--all from
  computer systems Mendax had penetrated illegally.

  Mendax's problems weren't confined to the beehive disks. The last
  thing he had done on the computer the day before was still on screen.
  It was a list of some 1500 accounts, their passwords, the dates that
  Mendax had obtained them and a few small notes beside each one.

  The hacker stood to the side as the police and two Telecom Protective
  Services officers swarmed through the house. They photographed his
  computer equipment and gathered up disks, then ripped up the carpet so
  they could videotape the telephone cord running to his modem. They
  scooped up every book, no small task since Mendax was an avid reader,
  and held each one upside down looking for hidden computer passwords on
  loose pieces of paper. They grabbed every bit of paper with
  handwriting on it and poured through his love letters, notebooks and
  private diaries. `We don't care how long it takes to do this job,' one
  cop quipped. `We're getting paid overtime. And danger money.'

  The feds even riffled through Mendax's collection of old Scientific
  American and New Scientist magazines. Maybe they thought he had
  underlined a word somewhere and turned it into a passphrase for an
  encryption program.

  Of course, there was only one magazine the feds really wanted:
  International Subversive. They scooped up every print-out of the
  electronic journal they could find.

  As Mendax watched the federal police sift through his possessions and
  disassemble his computer room, an officer who had some expertise with
  Amigas arrived. He told Mendax to get the hell out of the computer
  room.

  Mendax didn't want to leave the room. He wasn't under arrest and
  wanted to make sure the police didn't plant anything. So he looked at
  the cop and said, `This is my house and I want to stay in this room.
  Am I under arrest or not?'

  The cop snarled back at him, `Do you want to be under arrest?'

  Mendax acquiesced and Day, who was far more subtle in his approach,
  walked the hacker into another room for questioning. He turned to
  Mendax and asked, with a slight grin, `So, what's it like being
  busted? Is it like Nom told you?'

  Mendax froze.

  There were only two ways that Day could have known Nom had told Mendax
  about his bust. Nom might have told him, but this was highly unlikely.
  Nom's hacking case had not yet gone to court and Nom wasn't exactly on
  chummy terms with the police. The other alternative was that the AFP
  had been tapping telephones in Mendax's circle of hackers, which the
  IS trio had strongly suspected. Talking in a three-way phone
  conversation with Mendax and Trax, Nom had relayed the story of his
  bust. Mendax later relayed Nom's story to Prime Suspect--also on the
  phone. Harbouring suspicions is one thing. Having them confirmed by a
  senior AFP officer is quite another.

  Day pulled out a tape recorder, put it on the table, turned it on and
  began asking questions. When Mendax told Day he wouldn't answer him,
  Day turned the recorder off. `We can talk off the record if you want,'
  he told the hacker.

  Mendax nearly laughed out loud. Police were not journalists. There was
  no such thing as an off-the-record conversation between a suspect and
  a police officer.

  Mendax asked to speak to a lawyer. He said he wanted to call
  Alphaline, a free after-hours legal advice telephone service. Day
  agreed, but when he picked up the telephone to inspect it before
  handing it over to Mendax, something seemed amiss. The phone had an
  unusual, middle-pitched tone which Day didn't seem to recognise.
  Despite there being two Telecom employees and numerous police
  specialists in the house, Day appeared unable to determine the cause
  of the funny tone. He looked Mendax dead in the eye and said, `Is this
  a hijacked telephone line?'

  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 had to
  say. So many things had been weighing on his mind. He knew that Prime
  Suspect had probably been traced from NorTel as a result of Mendax's
  own near miss in that system. And Prime Suspect and Mendax had been so
  active, breaking into so many systems, it was almost as if they wanted
  to be caught.

  Then there was Prime Suspect's plan to write a destructive worm, which
  would wipe systems en route. It wasn't really a plan per se, more just
  an idea he had toyed with on the phone. Nonetheless, it had scared
  Trax. He began to think all three IS hackers were getting in too deep
  and he wanted out.

  He tried to stop phreaking, even going so far as to ask Telecom to
  change his telephone number to a new exchange which he knew would not
  allow him to make untraceable calls. Trax reasoned that if he knew he
  could be traced, he would stop phreaking and hacking.

  For a period, he did stop. But the addiction was too strong, and
  before long he was back at it again, regardless of the risk. He ran a
  hidden cable from his sister's telephone line, which was on the old
  exchange. His inability to stop made him feel weak and guilty, and
  even more anxious about the risks. Perhaps the death threat threw him
  over the edge. He couldn't really understand why he had turned himself
  in to the police. It had just sort of happened.

  The Victoria Police notified the AFP. The AFP detectives must have
  been slapping their heads in frustration. Here was Australia's next
  big hacker case after The Realm, and they had expected to make a clean
  bust. They had names, addresses, phone numbers. They had jumped
  through legal hoops to get a telephone tap. The tap was up and
  running, catching every target computer, every plot, every word the
  hackers said to each other. Then one of their targets goes and turns
  himself in to the police. And not even to the right police--he goes to
  the Victoria Police. In one fell swoop, the hacker was going to take
  down the entire twelve-month Operation Weather investigation.

  The AFP had to move quickly. If Trax tipped off the other two IS
  hackers that he had called the police, they might destroy their notes,
  computer files--all the evidence the AFP had hoped to seize in raids.

  When the AFP swooped in on the three hackers, Mendax and Prime Suspect
  had refused to be interviewed on the night. Trax, however, had spent
  several hours talking to the police at his house.

  He told the other IS hackers that the police had threatened to take
  him down to AFP headquarters--despite the fact that they knew leaving
  his house caused him anxiety. Faced with that prospect, made so
  terrifying by his psychiatric illness, he had talked.

  Prime Suspect and Mendax didn't know how much Trax had told the
  police, but they didn't believe he would dob them in completely. Apart
  from anything else, he hadn't been privy to much of his colleagues'
  hacking. They hadn't tried to exclude Trax, but he was not as
  sophisticated a hacker and therefore didn't share in many of their
  exploits.

  In fact, one thing Trax did tell the police was just how sophisticated
  the other two IS hackers had become just prior to the bust. Prime
  Suspect and Mendax were, he said, `hackers on a major scale, on a huge
  scale--something never achieved before', and the AFP had sat up and
  taken notice.

  After the raids, Trax told Mendax that the AFP had tried to recruit
  him as an informant. Trax said that they had even offered him a new
  computer system, but he had been non-committal. And it seemed the AFP
  was still keeping tabs on the IS hackers, Trax also told Mendax. The
  AFP officers had heard Mendax had gone into hospital and they were
  worried. There seemed to be a disturbing pattern evolving.

  On the subject of the IS raids, Trax told Mendax that the AFP felt it
  didn't have any choice. Their attitude was: you were doing so much, we
  had to bust you. You were inside so many systems, it was getting out
  of control.

  In any case, by December 1991 Mendax had agreed to a police interview,
  based on legal advice. Ken Day interviewed Mendax, and the hacker was
  open with Day about what he had done. He refused, however, to
  implicate either Trax or Prime Suspect. In February 1992, Prime
  Suspect followed suit, with two interviews. He was also careful about
  what he said regarding his fellow hackers. Mendax was interviewed a
  second time, in February 1992, as was Trax in August.

  After the raid, Trax's psychiatric condition remained unstable. He
  changed doctors and began receiving home visits from a hospital
  psychiatric service. Eventually, a doctor prescribed medication.

  The three hackers continued to talk on the phone, and see each other
  occasionally. One or the other might drop out of communication for a
  period, but would soon return to the fold. They helped each other and
  they maintained their deep anti-establishment sentiments.

  After the charges arrived in the mail, they called each other to
  compare notes. Mendax thought out loud on the phone to Prime Suspect,
  `I guess I should get a lawyer'.

  `Yeah. I got one. He's lining up a barrister too.'

  `They any good?' Mendax asked.

  `Dunno. I guess so. The solicitor works at Legal Aid, an in-house guy.
  I've only met them a few times.'

  `Oh,' Mendax paused. `What are their names?'

  `John McLoughlin and Boris Kayser. They did Electron's case.'

  Trax and Prime Suspect decided to plead guilty. Once they saw the
  overwhelming evidence--data taps, telephone voice taps, data seized
  during the raids, nearly a dozen statements by witnesses from the
  organisations they had hacked, the 300-page Telecom report--they
  figured they would be better off pleading. The legal brief ran to more
  than 7000 pages. At least they would get some kudos with the judge for
  cooperating in the police interviews and pleading early in the
  process, thus saving the court time and money.

  Mendax, however, wanted to fight the charges. He knew about Pad and
  Gandalf's case and the message from that seemed to be pretty clear:
  Plead and you go to prison, fight and you might get off free.

  The DPP shuffled the charges around so much between mid-1994 and 1995
  that all the original charges against Trax, issued on 20 July 1994,
  were dropped in favour of six new charges filed on Valentines Day,
  1995. At that time, new charges--largely for hacking a Telecom
  computer--were also laid against Mendax and Prime Suspect.

  By May 1995, the three hackers faced 63 charges in all: 31 for Mendax,
  26 for Prime Suspect and six for Trax. In addition, NorTel claimed the
  damages attributed to the hacker incident totalled about $160000--and
  the company was seeking compensation from the responsible parties. The
  Australian National University claimed another $4200 in damages.

  Most of the charges related to obtaining illegal access to commercial
  or other information, and inserting and deleting data in numerous
  computers. The deleting of data was not malicious--it generally
  related to cleaning up evidence of the hackers' activities. However,
  all three hackers were also charged with some form of `incitement'. By
  writing articles for the IS magazine, the prosecution claimed the
  hackers had been involved in disseminating information which would
  encourage others to hack and phreak.

  On 4 May 1995 Mendax sat in the office of his solicitor, Paul
  Galbally, discussing the committal hearing scheduled for the next day.

  Galbally was a young, well-respected member of Melbourne's most
  prestigious law family. His family tree read like a Who's Who of the
  law. Frank Galbally, his father, was one of Australia's most famous
  criminal barristers. His uncle, Jack Galbally, was a well-known
  lawyer, a minister in the State Labor government of John Cain Sr and,
  later, the Leader of the Opposition in the Victorian parliament. His
  maternal grandfather, Sir Norman O'Bryan, was a Supreme Court judge,
  as was his maternal uncle of the same name. The Galballys weren't so
  much a family of lawyers as a legal dynasty.

  Rather than rest on his family's laurels, Paul Galbally worked out of
  a cramped, 1970s time-warped, windowless office in a William Street
  basement, where he was surrounded by defence briefs--the only briefs
  he accepted. He liked the idea of keeping people out of prison better
  than the idea of putting them in it. Working closely with a defendant,
  he inevitably found redeeming qualities which the prosecution would
  never see. Traces of humanity, no matter how small, made his choice
  seem worthwhile.

  His choices in life reflected the Galbally image as champions of the
  underdog, and the family shared a background with the working class.
  Catholic. Irish. Collingwood football enthusiasts. And, of course, a
  very large family. Paul was one of eight children, and his father had
  also come from a large family.

  The 34-year-old criminal law specialist didn't know anything about
  computer crime when Mendax first appeared in his office, but the
  hacker's case seemed both interesting and worthy. The unemployed,
  long-haired youth had explained he could only offer whatever fees the
  Victorian Legal Aid Commission was willing to pay--a sentence Galbally
  heard often in his practice. He agreed.

  Galbally & O'Bryan had a very good reputation as a criminal law firm.
  Criminals, however, tended not to have a great deal of money. The
  large commercial firms might dabble in some criminal work, but they
  cushioned any resulting financial inconvenience with other, more
  profitable legal work. Pushing paper for Western Mining Corporation
  paid for glass-enclosed corner offices on the fiftieth floor.
  Defending armed robbers and drug addicts didn't.

  The 4 May meeting between Galbally and Mendax was only scheduled to
  take an hour or so. Although Mendax was contesting the committal
  hearing along with Prime Suspect on the following day, it was Prime
  Suspect's barrister, Boris Kayser, who was going to be running the
  show. Prime Suspect told Mendax he had managed to get full Legal Aid
  for the committal, something Galbally and Mendax had not been able to
  procure. Thus Mendax would not have his own barrister at the
  proceedings.

  Mendax didn't mind. Both hackers knew they would be committed to
  trial. Their immediate objective was to discredit the prosecution's
  damage claims--particularly NorTel's.

  As Mendax and Galbally talked, the mood in the office was upbeat.
  Mendax was feeling optimistic. Then the phone rang. It was Geoff
  Chettle, the barrister representing the DPP. While Chettle talked,
  Mendax watched a dark cloud pass across his solicitor's face. When he
  finally put the phone down, Galbally looked at Mendax with his serious,
  crisis management expression.

  `What's wrong? What's the matter?' Mendax asked.

  Galbally sighed before he spoke.

  `Prime Suspect has turned Crown witness against you.'

  There was a mistake. Mendax was sure of it. The whole thing was just
  one big mistake. Maybe Chettle and the DPP had misunderstood something
  Prime Suspect had said to them. Maybe Prime Suspect's lawyers had
  messed up. Whatever. There was definitely a mistake.

  At Galbally's office, Mendax had refused to believe Prime Suspect had
  really turned. Not until he saw a signed statement. That night he told
  a friend, `Well, we'll see. Maybe Chettle is just playing it up.'

  Chettle, however, was not just playing it up.

  There it was--a witness statement--in front of him. Signed by Prime
  Suspect.

  Mendax stood outside the courtroom at Melbourne Magistrates Court trying
  to reconcile two realities. In the first, there was one of Mendax's four
  or five closest friends. A friend with whom he had shared his deepest
  hacking secrets.  A friend he had been hanging out with only last week.

  In the other reality, a six-page statement signed by Prime Suspect and
  Ken Day at AFP Headquarters at 1.20 p.m. the day before. To compound
  matters, Mendax began wondering if Prime Suspect may have been
  speaking to the AFP for as long as six months.

  The two realities were spinning through his head, dancing around each
  other.

  When Galbally arrived at the court, Mendax took him to one side to go
  over the statement. From a damage-control perspective, it wasn't a
  complete disaster. Prime Suspect certainly hadn't gone in hard. He
  could have raised a number of matters, but didn't. Mendax had already
  admitted to most of the acts which formed the basis of his 31 charges
  in his police interview. And he had already told the police a good
  deal about his adventures in Telecom's telephone exchanges.

  However, Prime Suspect had elaborated on the Telecom break-ins in his
  statement. Telecom was owned by the government, meaning the court
  would view phreaking from their exchanges not as defrauding a company
  but as defrauding the Commonwealth. Had the DPP decided to lay those
  new charges--the Telecom charges--in February 1995 because Prime
  Suspect had given the AFP a draft Crown witness statement back then?
  Mendax began to suspect so. Nothing seemed beyond doubt any more.

  The immediate crisis was the committal hearing in the Melbourne
  Magistrates Court. There was no way Boris Kayser was now going to
  decimate their star witness, a NorTel information systems
  manager. Galbally would have to run a cross-examination himself--no easy
  task at short notice, given the highly complex technical aspects of the
  case.

  Inside the courtroom, as Mendax got settled, he saw Prime Suspect. He
  gave his former friend a hard, unblinking, intense stare. Prime
  Suspect responded with a blank wall, then he looked away. In fact,
  even if Mendax had wanted to say something, he couldn't. As a Crown
  witness, Prime Suspect was off-limits until the case was over.

  The lawyers began to file into the courtroom. The DPP representative,
  Andrea Pavleka, breezed in, momentarily lifting the tension in the
  windowless courtroom.

  She had that effect on people. Tall, slender and long-legged, with a
  bob of sandy blonde curls, booky spectacles resting on a cute button
  nose and an infectious laugh, Pavleka didn't so much walk into a
  courtroom as waft into it. She radiated happiness from her sunny face.
  It's a great shame, Mendax thought, that she is on the other side.

  The court was called into session. Prime Suspect stood in the dock and
  pleaded guilty to 26 counts of computer crimes.

  In the course of the proceedings his barrister, Boris Kayser, told the
  court that his client had cooperated with the police, including
  telling the AFP that the hackers had penetrated Telecom's exchanges.
  He also said that Telecom didn't believe--or didn't want to
  believe--that their exchanges had been compromised. When Kayser
  professed loudly what a model citizen his client had been, Ken Day,
  sitting in the public benches, quietly rolled his eyes.

  The magistrate, John Tobin, extended Prime Suspect's bail. The hacker
  would be sentenced at a later date.

  That matter dealt with, the focus of the courtroom shifted to Mendax's
  case. Geoff Chettle, for the prosecution, stood up, put the NorTel
  manager, who had flown in from Sydney, on the stand and asked him some
  warm-up questions.

  Chettle could put people at ease--or rattle them--at will. Topped by a
  minute stubble of hair, his weathered 40-something face provided a
  good match to his deep, gravelly voice. With quick eyes and a hard,
  no-nonsense manner, he lacked the pretentiousness of many barristers.
  Perhaps because he didn't seem to give a fig about nineteenth century
  protocols, he always managed to looked out of place in a barrister's
  wig and robe. Every time he stood up, the black cape slid off his lean
  shoulders. The barrister's wig went crooked. He continually adjusted
  it--tugging the wig back into the correct spot like some wayward
  child. In court, Chettle looked as if he wanted to tear off the crusty
  trappings of his profession and roll up his sleeves before sinking
  into a hearty debate. And he looked as if he would rather do it at a
  pub or the footy.

  The NorTel manager took the stand. Chettle asked him some questions
  designed to show the court the witness was credible, in support of the
  company's $160000 hacker-clean-up claim. His task accomplished,
  Chettle sat down.

  A little nervous, Paul Galbally stood up to his full height--more than
  six feet--and straightened his jacket. Dressed in a moss green suit so
  dark it was almost black, with thin lapels and a thin, 1960s style
  tie, he looked about as understated hip as a lawyer could--and still
  show his face in court.

  Halting at first, Galbally appeared unsure of himself. Perhaps he had
  lost his nerve because of the technical issues. WMTP files. UTMP
  files. PACCT audits. Network architecture. IP addresses. He had been
  expected to become an expert in the basics literally overnight. A
  worried Mendax began passing him notes--questions to ask,
  explanations, definitions. Slowly, Galbally started working up a
  rhythm to the cross-examination.

  During the questioning someone from the back of the court sidled up to
  Mendax, in the front row of seats, and handed a note over his
  shoulder. Mendax unfolded the note, read it and then turned around to
  smile at the messenger. It was Electron.

  By the time Galbally had finished, he had pulled apart much of the
  NorTel manager's evidence. As he built up a head of steam quizzing the
  witness, he forced the NorTel manager to admit he didn't know all that
  much about the alleged hacking incidents. In fact, he wasn't even
  employed by the company when they occurred. He had largely thrown
  together an affidavit based on second-hand information--and it was
  this affidavit which supposedly proved the hackers had cost the
  company $160000. Worse, it seemed to an observer at court that the
  NorTel manager had little Unix security technical expertise and
  probably would not have been able to conduct a detailed technical
  analysis of the incident even if he had been with the company in 1991.
  By the end of the defence's cross-examination, it appeared that
  Galbally knew more about Unix than the NorTel manager.

  When Geoff Chettle stood up to re-examine the witness, the situation
  was hopeless. The manager soon stood down. In Mendax's view, the
  credibility of the NorTel Manager's statement was shot.

  The court was then adjourned until 12 May.

  After court, Mendax heard Geoff Chettle talking about the NorTel
  witness. `That guy is OFF the team,' he said emphatically.

  It was a mixed victory for Mendax. His solicitor had knocked off one
  NorTel witness, but there were more where he came from. At a full
  trial, the prosecution would likely fly in some real NorTel
  fire-power, from Canada, where the 676-page security incident report
  had been prepared by Clark Ferguson and other members of the NorTel
  security team. Those witnesses would understand how a Unix system
  operated, and would have first-hand knowledge of the hackers'
  intrusions. It could make things much more difficult.

  When Mendax returned to court a week later, he was committed to stand
  trial in the County Court of Victoria, as expected.

  Later, Mendax asked Galbally about his options. Take the case to full
  trial, or plead guilty like the other two IS hackers. He wanted to
  know where the DPP stood on his case. Would they go in hard if he
  pleaded guilty? Had the NorTel manager disaster at the committal
  hearing forced them to back down a little?

  Paul sighed and shook his head. The DPP were standing firm. They
  wanted to see Mendax go to prison.

  Andrea Pavleka, the DPP's sunny-faced girl who radiated happiness, was
  baying for blood.

                                   [ ]


  One month later, on 21 July 1995, Prime Suspect arrived at the County
  Court for sentencing.

  Rising early that morning to make sure his court suit was in order,
  Prime Suspect had been tense. His mother cooked him a big breakfast.
  Toast, bacon and eggs the way he liked it. In fact, his favourite
  breakfast was an Egg McMuffin from McDonald's, but he never told his
  mother that.

  The courtroom was already crowded. Reporters from newspapers, the wire
  services, a few TV channels. There were also other people, perhaps
  waiting for another case.

  Dressed in a dark pin-stripe suit, Ken Day stood tapping on a laptop
  on the prosecution's side of the courtroom. Geoff Chettle sat near
  him. Prime Suspect's barrister, Boris Kayser, sifted through some
  papers on the other side.

  Mendax lingered at the back of the room, watching his former friend.
  He wanted to hear Prime Suspect's sentence because, under the rules of
  parity sentencing, Mendax's own sentence would have to be similar to
  that of his fellow hackers. However, Prime Suspect might get some
  dispensation for having helped the prosecution.

  A handful of Prime Suspect's friends--none of them from the computer
  underground--trickled in. The hacker's mother chatted nervously with
  them.

  Court was called into session and everyone settled into their seats.
  The first case, it turned out, was not Prime Suspect's. A tall,
  silver-haired man in his mid-fifties, with eyes so blue they were
  almost demonic, stepped into the dock. As the reporters began taking
  notes, Prime Suspect tried to imagine what crime the polished,
  well-dressed man had committed.

  Child molesting.

  The man had not just molested children, he had molested
  his own son. In the parents' bedroom. Repeatedly. On Easter Sunday.
  His son was less than ten years old at the time. The whole family had
  collapsed. Psychologically scarred, his son had been too traumatised
  even to give a victim impact statement.

  For all of this, Judge Russell Lewis told the court, the man had shown
  no remorse. Grave-faced, the judge sentenced him to a minimum prison
  term of five years and nine months.

  The court clerk then called Prime Suspect's case.

  At the back of the courtroom, Mendax wondered at the strange
  situation. How could the criminal justice system put a child molester
  in the same category as a hacker? Yet, here they both were being
  sentenced side by side in the same County Court room.

  Boris Kayser had called a collection of witnesses, all of whom
  attested to Prime Suspect's difficult life. One of these, the
  well-regarded psychologist Tim Watson-Munro, described Prime Suspect's
  treatments at the Austin Hospital and raised the issue of reduced
  free-will. He had written a report for the court.

  Judge Lewis was quick to respond to the suggestion that hacking was an
  addiction. At one point, he wondered aloud to the courtroom whether
  some of Prime Suspect's hacking activities were `like a shot of
  heroin'.

  Before long, Kayser had launched into his usual style of courtroom
  address. First, he criticised the AFP for waiting so long to charge
  his client.

  `This fellow should have been dealt with six to twelve months after
  being apprehended. It is a bit like the US, where a man can commit a
  murder at twenty, have his appeal be knocked back by the Supreme Court
  at 30 and be executed at 40--all for something he did when he was only
  twenty years old.

  Thoroughly warmed up, Kayser observed that 20 per cent of Prime
  Suspect's life had gone by since being raided. Then he began hitting
  his high notes.

  `This young man received no assistance in the maturation process. He
  didn't grow up, he drifted up.

  `His world was so horrible that he withdrew into a fantasy world. He
  knew no other way to interact with human beings. Hacking was like a
  physical addiction to him.

  `If he hadn't withdrawn into the cybernetic highway, what would he
  have done instead? Set fires? Robbed houses? Look at the name he gave
  himself. Prime Suspect. It has implied power--a threat. This kid
  didn't have any power in his life other than when he sat down at a
  computer.'

  Not only did Kayser want the judge to dismiss the idea of prison or
  community service, he was asking him to order no recorded conviction.

  The prosecution lawyers looked at Kayser as if he was telling a good
  joke. The AFP had spent months tracking these hackers and almost three
  years preparing the case against them. And now this barrister was
  seriously suggesting that one of the key players should get off
  virtually scot-free, with not so much as a conviction recorded against
  him? It was too much.

  The judge retired to consider the sentence. When he returned, he was
  brief and to the point. No prison. No community service. The recording
  of 26 convictions. A $500 three-year good behaviour bond. Forfeiture
  of the now ancient Apple computer seized by police in the raid. And a
  reparation payment to the Australian National University of $2100.

  Relief passed over Prime Suspect's face, pink and sweaty from the
  tension. His friends and family smiled at each other.

  Chettle then asked the judge to rule on what he called `the
  cooperation point'. He wanted the judge to say that Prime Suspect's
  sentence was less than it would have been because the hacker had
  turned Crown witness. The DPP was shoring up its position with regard
  to its remaining target--Mendax.

  Judge Lewis told the court that the cooperation in this case made no
  difference. At the back of the court, Mendax felt suddenly sad. It was
  good news for him, but somehow it felt like a hollow victory.

  Prime Suspect has destroyed our friendship, he thought, and all for
  nothing.

  Two months after Prime Suspect's sentencing, Trax appeared in another
  County Court room to receive his sentence after pleading guilty to six
  counts of hacking and phreaking. Despite taking medication to keep his
  anxiety under control while in the city, he was still very nervous in
  the dock.

  Since he faced the least number of charges of any of the IS hackers,
  Trax believed he had a shot at no recorded conviction. Whether or not
  his lawyer could successfully argue the case was another matter.
  Bumbling through papers he could never seem to organise, Trax's lawyer
  rambled to the court, repeated the same points over and over again,
  jumping all over the place in his arguments. His voice was a
  half-whispered rasp--a fact which so annoyed the judge that he sternly
  instructed the lawyer to speak up.

  Talking informally before court, Geoff Chettle had told Mendax that in
  his view there was no way Judge Mervyn Kimm would let Trax off with no
  recorded conviction. Judge Kimm was considered to be one tough nut to
  crack. If you were a bookmaker running bets on his court at a
  sentencing hearing, the good money would be on the prosecution's side.

  But on 20 September 1995, the judge showed he couldn't be predicted
  quite so easily. Taking everything into account, including Prime
  Suspect's sentence and Trax's history of mental illness, he ordered no
  conviction be recorded against Trax. He also ordered a $500 three-year
  good behaviour bond.

  In passing sentence, Judge Kimm said something startlingly insightful
  for a judge with little intimate knowledge of the hacker psyche. While
  sternly stating that he did not intend to make light of the gravity of
  the offences, he told the court that `the factors of specific
  deterrence and general deterrence have little importance in the
  determination of the sentence to be imposed'. It was perhaps the first
  time an Australian judge had recognised that deterrence had little
  relevance at the point of collision between hacking and mental
  illness.

  Trax's sentence was also a good outcome for Mendax, who on
  29 August 1995 pleaded guilty to eight counts of computer crime, and
  not guilty to all the other charges. Almost a year later, on 9 May
  1996, he pleaded guilty to an additional eleven charges, and not
  guilty to six. The prosecution dropped all the other charges.

  Mendax wanted to fight those six outstanding charges, which involved
  ANU, RMIT, NorTel and Telecom, because he felt that the law was on his
  side in these instances. In fact, the law was fundamentally unclear
  when it came to those charges. So much so that the DPP and the defence
  agreed to take issues relating to those charges in a case stated to
  the Supreme Court of Victoria.

  In a case stated, both sides ask the Supreme Court to make a ruling
  not on the court case itself, but on a point of law. The defence and
  the prosecution hammer out an agreed statement about the facts of the
  case and, in essence, ask the Supreme Court judges to use that
  statement as a sort of case study. The resulting ruling is meant to
  clarify the finer points of the law not only for the specific case,
  but for similar cases which appear in future.

  Presenting a case stated to the Supreme Court is somewhat uncommon. It
  is unusual to find a court case where both sides can agree on enough
  of the facts, but Mendax's hacking charges presented the perfect case
  and the questions which would be put to the Victorian Supreme Court in
  late 1996 were crucial for all future hacking cases in Australia. What
  did it mean `to obtain access' to a computer? Did someone obtain
  access if he or she got in without using a password? What if he or she
  used the username `guest' and the password `guest'?

  Perhaps the most crucial question of all was this: does a person
  `obtain access' to data stored in a computer if he or she has the
  ability to view the data, but does not in fact view or even attempt to
  view that data?

  A good example of this applied to the aggravated versions of the
  offence of hacking: viewing commercial information. If, for example,
  Mendax logged into a NorTel computer, which contained commercially
  sensitive information, but he didn't actually read any of those files,
  would he be guilty of `obtaining access' or `obtaining access to
  commercial information'?

  The chief judge of the County Court agreed to the case stated and sent
  it up to the full bench of the Supreme Court. The lawyers from both
  sides were pleased with the bench--Justices Frank Vincent, Kenneth
  Hayne and John Coldrey.

  On 30 September 1996, Mendax arrived at the Supreme Court and found
  all the lawyers assembled at the court--all except for his barrister.
  Paul Galbally kept checking his watch as the prosecution lawyers began
  unpacking their mountains of paper--the fruit of months of
  preparation. Galbally paced the plush carpet of the Supreme Court
  anteroom. Still no barrister.

  Mendax's barrister had worked tirelessly, preparing for the case
  stated as if it was a million dollar case. Combing through legal
  precedents from not only Australia, the UK and the US, but from all
  the world's Western-style democracies, he had attained a great
  understanding of the law in the area of computer crime. He had finally
  arrived at that nexus of understanding between law, philosophy and
  linguistics which many lesser lawyers spent their entire careers
  trying to reach.

  But where was he? Galbally pulled out his mobile and checked in with
  his office for what seemed like the fifth time in as many minutes. The
  news he received was bad. He was told, through second-hand sources,
  that the barrister had collapsed in a state of nervous exhaustion. He
  wouldn't be making it to court.

  Galbally could feel his hairs turning grey.

  When court opened, Galbally had to stand up and explain to three of
  the most senior judges in Australia why the defence would like a
  two-day adjournment. A consummate professional, Geoff Chettle
  supported the submission. Still, it was a difficult request. Time in
  the Supreme Court is a scarce and valuable thing. Fortunately, the
  adjournment was granted.

  This gave Galbally exactly two days in which to find a barrister who
  was good, available and smart enough to assimilate a massive amount of
  technical information in a short time. He found Andrew Tinney.

  Tinney worked around the clock and by Wednesday, 2 October, he was
  ready. Once again, all the lawyers, and the hacker, gathered at the
  court.

  This time, however, it was the judges who threw a spanner into the
  works. They asked both sides to spend the first hour or so explaining
  exactly why the Supreme Court should hear the case stated at all. The
  lawyers looked at each other in surprise. What was this all about?

  After hearing some brief arguments from both sides, the judges retired
  to consider their position. When they returned, Justice Hayne read a
  detailed judgment saying, in essence, that the judges refused to hear
  the case.

  As the judge spoke, it became clear that the Supreme Court judges
  weren't just refusing to hear this case stated; they were virtually
  refusing to hear any case stated in future. Not for computer crimes.
  Not for murder. Not for fraud. Not for anything. They were sending a
  message to the County Court judges: don't send us a case stated except
  in exceptional circumstances.

  Geoff Chettle slumped in his chair, his hands shielding his face. Paul
  Galbally looked stunned. Andrew Tinney looked as if he wanted to leap
  from his chair shouting, `I just killed myself for the past two days
  on this case! You have to hear it!' Even Lesley Taylor, the quiet,
  unflappable and inscrutable DPP solicitor who had replaced Andrea
  Pavleka on the case, looked amazed.

  The ruling had enormous implications. Judges from the lower courts
  would be loath to ever send cases to the Supreme Court for
  clarification on points of law again. Mendax had made legal history,
  but not in the way he had hoped.

  Mendax's case passed back down to the County Court.

  He had considered taking his case to trial, but with recently
  announced budget cuts to Legal Aid, he knew there was little hope of
  receiving funding to fight the charges. The cuts were forcing the poor
  to plead guilty, leaving justice available only for the wealthy.
  Worse, he felt the weight of pleading guilty, not only as a sense of
  injustice in his own case, but for future hacking cases which would
  follow. Without clarity on the meaning of the law--which the judges
  had refused to provide--or a message from a jury in a landmark case,
  such as Wandii's trial, Mendax believed that hackers could expect
  little justice from either the police or the courts in the future.

  On 5 December 1996, Mendax pleaded guilty to the remaining six charges
  and was sentenced on all counts.

  Court Two was quiet that day. Geoff Chettle, for the prosecution,
  wasn't there. Instead, the quietly self-possessed Lesley Taylor
  handled the matter. Paul Galbally appeared for Mendax himself. Ken Day
  sat, expressionless, in the front row of the public benches. He looked
  a little weary. A few rows back, Mendax's mother seemed nervous.
  Electron slipped silently into the back of the room and gave Mendax a
  discreet smile.

  His hair pulled back into a loose ponytail, Mendax blinked and rolled
  his eyes several times as if brought from a dark space into the
  bright, white-walled courtroom.

  Judge Ross, a ruddy-faced and jowly man of late middle age with bushy,
  grey eyebrows, seated himself in his chair. At first, he was reluctant
  to take on the case for sentencing. He thought it should be returned
  to one of the original judges--Judge Kimm or Judge Lewis. When he
  walked into court that morning, he had not read the other judges'
  sentences.

  Lesley Taylor summarised the punishments handed down to the other two
  hackers. The judge did not look altogether pleased. Finally, he
  announced he would deal with the case. `Two judges have had a crack at
  it, why not a third one? He might do it properly.'

  Galbally was concerned. As the morning progressed, he became
  increasingly distressed; things were not going well. Judge Ross made
  clear that he personally favoured a custodial sentence, albeit a
  suspended one. The only thing protecting Mendax seemed to be the
  principle of parity in sentencing. Prime Suspect and Trax had
  committed similar crimes to Mendax, and therefore he had to be given a
  similar sentence.

  Ross `registered some surprise' at Judge Lewis's disposition toward
  the sentencing of Prime Suspect. In the context of parity, he told
  Leslie Taylor, he was at times `quite soured by some penalties'
  imposed by other judges. He quizzed her for reasons why he might be
  able to step outside parity.

  He told the court that he had not read the telephone intercepts in the
  legal brief. In fact, he had `only read the summary of facts' and when
  Taylor mentioned `International Subversive', he asked her, `What was
  that?'

  Then he asked her how to spell the word `phreak'.

  Later that day, after Judge Ross had read the other judges' sentences,
  he gave Mendax a sentence similar to Prime Suspect's--a recorded
  conviction on all counts, a reparation payment of $2100 to ANU and a
  three-year good behaviour bond.

  There were two variations. Prime Suspect and Trax both received $500
  good behaviour bonds; Judge Ross ordered a $5000 bond for Mendax.
  Further, Judge Lewis had given Prime Suspect almost twelve months to
  pay his $2100 reparation. Judge Ross ordered Mendax to pay within
  three months.

  Judge Ross told Mendax, `I repeat what I said before. I thought
  initially that these were offences which justified a jail sentence, but
  the mitigatory circumstances would have converted that to a suspended
  sentence. The sentence given to your co-offender caused me to alter that
  view, however.' He was concerned, he said, `that highly intelligent
  individuals ought not to behave like this and I suspect it is only
  highly intelligent individuals who can do what you did'.

  The word `addiction' did not appear anywhere in the sentencing
  transcript.


    _________________________________________________________________

                  Chapter 10 -- Anthrax -- The Outsider
    _________________________________________________________________


    They had a gun at my head and a knife at my back
    Don't wind me up too tight

  -- from `Powderworks' on Midnight Oil (also called The Blue Album) by
  Midnight Oil

  Anthrax didn't like working as part of a team. He always considered
  other people to be the weakest link in the chain.

  Although people were never to be trusted completely, he socialised
  with many hackers and phreakers and worked with a few of them now and
  again on particular projects. But he never formed intimate
  partnerships with any of them. Even if a fellow hacker dobbed him in
  to the police, the informant couldn't know the full extent of his
  activities. The nature of his relationships was also determined, in
  part, by his isolation. Anthrax lived in a town in rural Victoria.

  Despite the fact that he never joined a hacking partnership like The
  Realm, Anthrax liked people, liked to talk to them for hours at a time
  on the telephone. Sometimes he received up to ten international calls
  a day from his phreaker friends overseas. He would be over at a
  friend's house, and the friend's mother would knock on the door of the
  bedroom where the boys were hanging out, listening to new music,
  talking.

  The mother would poke her head in the door, raise an eyebrow and point
  at Anthrax. `Phone call for you. Someone from Denmark.' Or sometimes
  it was Sweden. Finland. The US. Wherever. Though they didn't say
  anything, his friends' parents thought it all a bit strange. Not many
  kids in country towns got international calls trailing them around
  from house to house. But then not many kids were master phreakers.

  Anthrax loved the phone system and he understood its power. Many
  phreakers thought it was enough to be able to call their friends
  around the globe for free. Or make hacking attack phone calls without
  being traced. However, real power for Anthrax lay in controlling voice
  communications systems--things that moved conversations around the
  world. He cruised through people's voice mailbox messages to piece
  together a picture of what they were doing. He wanted to be able to
  listen into telephone conversations. And he wanted to be able to
  reprogram the telephone system, even take it down. That was real
  power, the kind that lots of people would notice.

  The desire for power grew throughout Anthrax's teenage years. He ached
  to know everything, to see everything, to play with exotic systems in
  foreign countries. He needed to know the purpose of every system, what
  made them tick, how they fitted together. Understanding how things
  worked would give him control.

  His obsession with telephony and hacking began early in life. When he
  was about eleven, his father had taken him to see the film War Games.
  All Anthrax could think of as he left the theatre was how much he
  wanted to learn how to hack. He had already developed a fascination
  for computers, having received the simplest of machines, a Sinclair
  ZX81 with 1 k of memory, as a birthday present from his parents.
  Rummaging through outdoor markets, he found a few second-hand books on
  hacking. He read Out of the Inner Circle by Bill Landreth, and Hackers
  by Steven Levy.

  By the time he was fourteen, Anthrax had joined a Melbourne-based
  group of boys called The Force. The members swapped Commodore 64 and
  Amiga games. They also wrote their own demos--short computer
  programs--and delighted in cracking the copy protections on the games
  and then trading them with other crackers around the world. It was
  like an international penpal group. Anthrax liked the challenge
  provided by cracking the protections, but few teenagers in his town
  shared an interest in his unusual hobby. Joining The Force introduced
  him to a whole new world of people who thought as he did.

  When Anthrax first read about phreaking he wrote to one of his American
  cracking contacts asking for advice on how to start. His friend sent him
  a list of AT&T calling card numbers and a toll-free direct-dial number
  which connected Australians with American operators. The card numbers
  were all expired or cancelled, but Anthrax didn't care. What captured
  his imagination was the fact that he could call an operator all the way
  across the Pacific for free. Anthrax began trying to find more special
  numbers.

  He would hang out at a pay phone near his house. It was a seedy
  neighbourhood, home to the most downtrodden of all the town's
  residents, but Anthrax would stand at the pay phone for hours most
  evenings, oblivious to the clatter around him, hand-scanning for
  toll-free numbers. He dialled 0014--the prefix for the international
  toll-free numbers--followed by a random set of numbers. Then, as he
  got more serious, he approached the task more methodically. He
  selected a range of numbers, such as 300 to 400, for the last three
  digits. Then he dialled over and over, increasing the number by one
  each time he dialled. 301. 302. 303. 304. Whenever he hit a
  functioning phone number, he noted it down. He never had to spend a
  cent since all the 0014 numbers were free.

  Anthrax found some valid numbers, but many of them had modems at the
  other end. So he decided it was time to buy a modem so he could explore
  further. Too young to work legally, he lied about his age and landed an
  after-school job doing data entry at an escort agency. In the meantime,
  he spent every available moment at the pay phone, scanning and adding
  new numbers to his growing list of toll-free modem and operator-assisted
  numbers.

  The scanning became an obsession. Often Anthrax stayed at the phone
  until 10 or 11 p.m. Some nights it was 3 a.m. The pay phone had a
  rotary dial, making the task laborious, and sometimes he would come
  home with blisters on the tips of his fingers.

  A month or so after he started working, he had saved enough money for
  a modem.

  Hand scanning was boring, but no more so than school. Anthrax attended
  his state school regularly, at least until year 10. Much of that was
  due to his mother's influence. She believed in education and in
  bettering oneself, and she wanted to give her son the opportunities
  she had been denied. It was his mother, a psychiatric nurse, who
  scrimped and saved for months to buy him his first real computer, a
  $400 Commodore 64. And it was his mother who took out a loan to buy
  the more powerful Amiga a few years later in 1989. She knew the boy
  was very bright. He used to read her medical textbooks, and computers
  were the future.

  Anthrax had always done well in school, earning distinctions every
  year from year 7 to year 10. But not in maths. Maths bored him. Still,
  he had some aptitude for it. He won an award in year 6 for designing a
  pendulum device which measured the height of a building using basic
  trigonometry--a subject he had never studied. However, Anthrax didn't
  attend school so much after year 10. The teachers kept telling him
  things he already knew, or things he could learn much faster from
  reading a book. If he liked a topic, he wandered off to the library to
  read about it.

  Things at home became increasingly complicated around that time. His
  family had struggled from the moment they arrived in Australia from
  England, when Anthrax was about twelve. They struggled financially,
  they struggled against the roughness of a country town, and, as
  Indians, Anthrax, his younger brother and their mother struggled
  against racism.

  The town was a violent place, filled with racial hatred and ethnic
  tension. The ethnics had carved out corners for themselves, but
  incursions into enemy territory were common and almost always resulted
  in violence. It was the kind of town where people ended up in fist
  fights over a soccer game. Not an easy place for a half-Indian,
  half-British boy with a violent father.

  Anthrax's father, a white Englishman, came from a farming family. One
  of five sons, he attended an agricultural college where he met and
  married the sister of an Indian student on a scholarship. Their
  marriage caused quite a stir, even making the local paper under the
  headline `Farmer Marries Indian Woman'. It was not a happy marriage
  and Anthrax often wondered why his father had married an Indian.
  Perhaps it was a way of rebelling against his dominating father.
  Perhaps he had once been in love. Or perhaps he simply wanted someone
  he could dominate and control. Whatever the reason, the decision was
  an unpopular one with Anthrax's grandfather and the mixed-race family
  was often excluded from larger family gatherings.

  When Anthrax's family moved to Australia, they had almost no money.
  Eventually, the father got a job as an officer at Melbourne's
  Pentridge prison, where he stayed during the week. He only received a
  modest income, but he seemed to like his job. The mother began working
  as a nurse. Despite their new-found financial stability, the family
  was not close. The father appeared to have little respect for his wife
  and sons, and Anthrax had little respect for his father.

  As Anthrax entered his teenage years, his father became increasingly
  abusive. On weekends, when he was home from work, he used to hit
  Anthrax, sometimes throwing him on the floor and kicking him. Anthrax
  tried to avoid the physical abuse but the scrawny teenager was little
  match for the beefy prison officer. Anthrax and his brother were quiet
  boys. It seemed to be the path of least resistance with a rough father
  in a rough town. Besides, it was hard to talk back in the painful
  stutter both boys shared through their early teens.

  One day, when Anthrax was fifteen, he came home to find a commotion at
  his house. On entering the house, Anthrax went to his parents'
  bedroom. He found his mother there, and she was very upset and
  emotionally distressed. He couldn't see his father anywhere, but found
  him relaxing on the sofa in the lounge room, watching TV.

  Disgust consumed Anthrax and he retreated into the kitchen. When his
  father came in not long after to prepare some food Anthrax watched his
  back with revulsion. Then he noticed a carving knife resting on the
  counter. As Anthrax reached for the knife, an ambulance worker
  appeared in the doorway. Anthrax put the knife down and walked away.

  But he wasn't so quiet after that. He started talking back, at home and
  at school, and that marked the beginning of the really big problems. In
  primary school and early high school he had been beaten up now and
  again. Not any more. When a fellow student hauled Anthrax up against the
  wall of the locker shed and started shaking him and waving his fist,
  Anthrax lost it. He saw, for a moment, his father's face instead of the
  student's and began to throw punches in a frenzy that left his victim in
  a terrible state.

  At home, Anthrax's father learned how to bait his son. The bully
  always savours a morsel of resistance from the victim, which makes
  going in for the kill a little more fun. Talking back gave the father
  a good excuse to get violent. Once he nearly broke his son's neck.
  Another time it was his arm. He grabbed Anthrax and twisted his arm
  behind his back. There was an eerie sound of cracking cartilage, and
  then pain. Anthrax screamed for his father to stop. His father twisted
  Anthrax's arm harder, then pressed on his neck. His mother shrieked at
  her husband to let go of her son. He wouldn't.

  `Look at you crying,' his father sneered. `You disgusting animal.'

  `You're the disgusting animal,' Anthrax shouted, talking back again.

  His father threw Anthrax on the floor and began kicking him in the
  head, in the ribs, all over.

  Anthrax ran away. He went south to Melbourne for a week, sleeping
  anywhere he could, in the empty night-time spaces left over by day
  workers gone to orderly homes. He even crashed in hospital emergency
  rooms. If a nurse asked why he was there, he would answer politely, `I
  received a phone call to meet someone here'. She would nod her head
  and move on to someone else.

  Eventually, when Anthrax returned home, he took up martial arts to
  become strong. And he waited.

                                [ ]

  Anthrax was poking around a MILNET gateway when he stumbled on the
  door to System X.* He had wanted to find this system for months,
  because he had intercepted email about it which had aroused his
  curiosity.

  Anthrax telnetted into the gateway. A gateway binds two different
  networks. It allows, for example, two computer networks which talk
  different languages to communicate. A gateway might allow someone on a
  system running DECNET to login to a TCP/IP based system, like a Unix.
  Anthrax was frustrated that he couldn't seem to get past the System X
  gateway and on to the hosts on the other side.

  Using normal address formats for a variety of networks, he tried
  telling the gateway to make a connection. X.25. TCP/IP. Whatever lay
  beyond the gateway didn't respond. Anthrax looked around until he
  found a sample of addresses in a help file. None of them worked, but
  they offered a clue as to what format an address might take.

  Each address had six digits, the first three numbers of which
  corresponded to telephone area codes in the Washington DC area. So he
  picked one of the codes and started guessing the last three digits.

  Hand scanning was a pain, as ever, but if he was methodical and
  persistent, something should turn up. 111. 112. 113. 114. 115. On it
  went. Eventually he connected to something--a Sunos Unix system--which
  gave him a full IP address in its login message. Now that was handy.
  With the full IP address, he could connect to System X again through
  the Internet directly--avoiding the gateway if he chose to. It's
  always helpful in covering your tracks to have a few different routing
  options. Importantly, he could approach System X through more than
  just its front door.

  Anthrax spiralled through the usual round of default usernames and
  passwords. Nothing. This system required a more strategic attack.

  He backed out of the login screen, escaped from the gateway and went
  to another Internet site to have a good look at System X from a
  healthy distance. He `fingered' the site, pulling up any bit of
  information System X would release to the rest of the Internet when
  asked. He probed and prodded, looking for openings. And then he found
  one. Sendmail.

  The version of Sendmail run by System X had a security hole Anthrax
  could exploit by sending himself a tiny backdoor program. To do this,
  he used System X's mail-processing service to send a `letter' which
  contained a tiny computer program. System X would never have allowed
  the program to run normally, but this program worked like a letter
  bomb. When System X opened the letter, the program jumped out and
  started running. It told System X that anyone could connect to port
  2001--to an interactive shell--of the computer without using a
  password.

  A port is a door to the outside world. TCP/IP computers use a standard
  set of ports for certain services. Port 25 for mail. Port 79 for
  Finger. Port 21 for FTP. Port 23 for Telnet. Port 513 for Rlogin. Port
  80 for the World Wide Web. A TCP/IP based computer system has 65535
  ports but most of them go unused. Indeed, the average Unix box uses
  only 35, leaving the remaining 65500 ports sitting idle. Anthrax
  simply picked one of these sleepy ports, dusted off the cobwebs and
  plugged in using the backdoor created by his tiny mail-borne program.

  Connecting directly to a port created some problems, because the
  system wouldn't recognise certain keystrokes from the port, such as
  the return key. For this reason, Anthrax had to create an account for
  himself which would let him telnet to the site and login like any
  normal user. To do this, he needed root privileges in order to create
  an account and, ultimately, a permanent backdoor into the system.

  He began hunting for vulnerabilities in System X's security. There was
  nothing obvious, but he decided to try out a bug he had successfully
  used elsewhere. He had first learned about it on an international
  phone conference, where he had traded information with other hackers
  and phreakers. The security hole involved the system's relatively
  obscure load-module program. The program added features to the running
  system but, more importantly, it ran as root, meaning that it had a
  free run on the system when it was executed. It also meant that any
  other programs the load-module program called up also ran as root. If
  Anthrax could get this program to run one of his own programs--a
  little Trojan--he could get root on System X.

  The load-module bug was by no means a sure thing on System X. Most
  commercial systems--computers run by banks or credit agencies, for
  example--had cleaned up the load-module bug in their Sunos computers
  months before. But military systems consistently missed the bug. They
  were like turtles--hard on the outside, but soft and vulnerable on the
  inside. Since the bug couldn't be exploited unless a hacker was
  already inside a system, the military's computer security officials
  didn't seem to pay much attention to it. Anthrax had visited a large
  number of military systems prior to System X, and in his experience
  more than 90 per cent of their Sunos computers had never fixed the
  bug.

  With only normal privileges, Anthrax couldn't force the load-module
  program to run his backdoor Trojan program. But he could trick it into
  doing so. The secret was in one simple keyboard character: /.

  Unix-based computer systems are a bit like the protocols of the
  diplomatic corps; the smallest variation can change something's
  meaning entirely. Hackers, too, understand the implications of subtle
  changes.

  A Unix-based system reads the phrase:

  /bin/program

  very differently from:

  bin program

  One simple character--the `/'--makes an enormous difference. A Unix
  computer reads the `/' as a road sign. The first phrase tells the
  computer, `Follow the road to the house of the user called "bin" and
  when you get there, go inside and fetch the file called "program" and
  run it'. A blank space, however, tells the computer something quite
  different. In this case, Anthrax knew it told the computer to execute
  the command which proceeded the space. That second phrase told the
  machine, `Look everywhere for a program called "bin" and run it'.

  Anthrax prepared for his attack on the load-module program by
  installing his own special program, named `bin', into a temporary
  storage area on System X. If he could get System X to run his program
  with root privileges, he too would have procured root level access to
  the system. When everything was in place, Anthrax forced the system to
  read the character `/' as a blank space. Then he ran the load-module
  program, and watched. When System X hunted around for a program named
  `bin', it quickly found Anthrax's Trojan and ran it.

  The hacker savoured the moment, but he didn't pause for long. With a
  few swift keystrokes, he added an entry to the password file, creating
  a basic account for himself. He exited his connection to port 2001,
  circled around through another route, using the 0014 gateway, and
  logged into System X using his newly created account. It felt good
  walking in through the front door.

  Once inside, Anthrax had a quick look around. The system startled him.
  There were only three human users. Now that was definitely odd. Most
  systems had hundreds of users. Even a small system might serve 30 or
  40 people, and this was not a small system. He concluded that System X
  wasn't just some machine designed to send and receive email. It was
  operational. It did something.

  Anthrax considered how to clean up his footsteps and secure his
  position. While he was hardly broadcasting his presence, someone might
  discover his arrival simply by looking at who was logged in on the
  list of accounts in the password file. He had given his backdoor root
  account a bland name, but he could reasonably assume that these three
  users knew their system pretty well. And with only three users, it was
  probably the kind of system that had lots of babysitting. After all
  that effort, Anthrax needed a watchful nanny like a hole in the head.
  He worked at moving into the shadows.

  He removed himself from the WTMP and UTMP files, which listed who had
  been on-line and who was still logged in. Anthrax wasn't invisible,
  but an admin would have to look closely at the system's network
  connections and list of processes to find him. Next stop: the login
  program.

  Anthrax couldn't use his newly created front-door account for an
  extended period--the risk of discovery was too great. If he accessed
  the computer repeatedly in this manner, a prying admin might
  eventually find him and delete his account. An extra account on a
  system with only three users was a dead give-away. And losing access
  to System X just as things were getting interesting was not on his
  agenda.

  Anthrax leaned back in his chair and stretched his shoulders. His
  hacking room was an old cloakroom, though it was barely recognisable
  as such. It looked more like a closet--a very messy closet. The whole
  room was ankle-deep in scrap papers, most of them with lists of
  numbers on the back and front. Occasionally, Anthrax scooped up all
  the papers and piled them into heavy-duty garbage bags, three of which
  could just fit inside the room at any one time. Anthrax always knew
  roughly where he had `filed' a particular set of notes. When he needed
  it, he tipped the bag onto the floor, searched through the mound and
  returned to the computer. When the sea of paper reached a critical
  mass, he jammed everything back into the garbage bag again.

  The computer--an Amiga 500 box with a cheap Panasonic TV as the
  monitor--sat on a small desk next to his mother's sewing machine
  cabinet. The small bookcase under the desk
  was stuffed with magazines like Compute and Australian Communications,
  along with a few Commodore, Amiga and Unix reference manuals. There
  was just enough space for Anthrax's old stereo and his short-wave
  radio. When he wasn't listening to his favourite show, a hacking
  program broadcast from a pirate station in Ecuador, he tuned into
  Radio Moscow or the BBC's World Service.

  Anthrax considered what to do with System X. This system had aroused
  his curiosity and he intended to visit it frequently.

  It was time to work on the login patch. The patch replaced the
  system's normal login program and had a special feature: a master
  password. The password was like a diplomatic passport. It would let
  him do anything, go anywhere. He could login as any user using the
  master password. Further, when he logged in with the master password,
  he wouldn't show up on any log files--leaving no trail. But the beauty
  of the login patch was that, in every other way, it ran as the normal
  login program. The regular computer users--all three of them--could
  login as usual with their passwords and would never know Anthrax had
  been in the system.

  He thought about ways of setting up his login patch. Installing a
  patch on System X wasn't like mending a pair of jeans. He couldn't
  just slap on a swath from an old bandanna and quick-stitch it in with
  a thread of any colour. It was more like mending an expensive cashmere
  coat. The fabric needed to be a perfect match in colour and texture.
  And because the patch required high-quality invisible mending, the
  size also needed to be just right.

  Every file in a computer system has three dates: the date it was
  created, the date it was last modified and the date it was last
  accessed. The problem was that the login patch needed to have the same
  creation and modification dates as the original login program so that
  it would not raise suspicions. It wasn't hard to get the dates but it
  was difficult to paste them onto the patch. The last access date
  wasn't important as it changed whenever the program was run
  anyway--whenever a user of the System X logged in.

  If Anthrax ripped out the original login program and stitched his
  patch in its place, the patch would be stamped with a new creation
  date. He knew there was no way to change a creation date short of
  changing the clock for the whole system--something which would cause
  problems elsewhere in System X.

  The first thing a good system admin does when he or she suspects a
  break-in is search for all files created or modified over the previous
  few days. One whiff of an intruder and a good admin would be all over
  Anthrax's login patch within about five minutes.

  Anthrax wrote the modification and creation dates down on a bit of
  paper. He would need those in a moment. He also jotted down the size
  of the login file.

  Instead of tearing out the old program and sewing in a completely new
  one, Anthrax decided to overlay his patch by copying it onto the top
  of the old program. He uploaded his own login patch, with his master
  password encased inside it, but he didn't install it yet. His patch
  was called `troj'--short for Trojan. He typed:

  cat<troj>/bin/login

  The cat command told the computer: `go get the data in the file called
  "troj" and put it in the file "/bin/login"'. He checked the piece of
  paper where he had scribbled down the original file's creation and
  modification dates, comparing them to the new patch. The creation date
  and size matched the original. The modification date was still wrong,
  but he was two-thirds of the way home.

  Anthrax began to fasten down the final corner of the patch by using a
  little-known feature of the command:

  /usr/5bin/date

  Then he changed the modification date of his login patch to the
  original login file's date.

  He stepped back to admire his work from a distance. The newly
  installed patch matched the original perfectly. Same size. Same
  creation date. Same modification date. With patch in place, he deleted
  the root account he had installed while visiting port 2001. Always
  take your garbage with you when you leave.

  Now for the fun bit. Snooping around. Anthrax headed off for the
  email, the best way to work out what a system was used for. There were
  lots of reports from underlings to the three system users on buying
  equipment, progress reports on a certain project, updates. What was
  this project?

  Then Anthrax came across a huge directory. He opened it and there,
  couched inside, were perhaps 100 subdirectories. He opened one of
  them. It was immense, containing hundreds of files. The smallest
  subfile had perhaps 60 computer screens' worth of material, all of it
  unintelligible. Numbers, letters, control codes. Anthrax couldn't make
  head nor tail of the files. It was as if he was staring at a group of
  binary files. The whole subdirectory was filled with thousands of
  pages of mush. He thought they looked like data files for some
  database.

  As he didn't have the program he needed to interpret the mush, Anthrax
  cast around looking for a more readable directory.

  He pried open a file and discovered it was a list. Names and phone
  numbers of staff at a large telecommunications company. Work phone
  numbers. Home numbers. Well, at least that gave him a clue as to the
  nature of the project. Something to do with telecommunications. A
  project important enough that the military needed the home phone
  numbers of the senior people involved.

  The next file confirmed it. Another list, a very special list. A pot
  of gold at the end of the rainbow. The find of a career spent hacking.

  If the US government had had any inkling what was happening at that
  moment, heads would have rolled. If it had known that a foreigner, and
  a follower of what mainstream American media termed an extremist
  religious group, had this information in his possession, the defence
  agency would have called in every law enforcement agency it could
  enlist.

  As John McMahon might have said, a lot of yelling and screaming would
  have occurred.

  Anthrax's mother had made a good home for the family, but his father
  continued to disrupt it with his violence. Fun times with his friends
  shone like bright spots amidst the decay of Anthrax's family life.
  Practical jokes were his specialty. Even as a small child, he had
  delighted in trickery and as he grew up, the jokes became more
  sophisticated. Phreaking was great. It let him prank people all over
  the world. And pranking was cool.

  Most of the fun in pranking was sharing it with friends. Anthrax
  called into a voice conference frequented by phreakers and hackers.
  Though he never trusted others completely when it came to working on
  projects together, it was OK to socialise. The phreaking methods he
  used to get onto the phone conference were his own business. Provided
  he was discreet in how much he said in the conference, he thought
  there wasn't too much risk.

  He joined the conference calls using a variety of methods. One
  favourite was using a multinational corporation's Dialcom service.
  Company employees called in, gave their ID numbers, and the operator
  put them through to wherever they wanted to go, free of charge. All
  Anthrax needed was a valid ID number.

  Sometimes it was hard work, sometimes he was lucky. The day Anthrax
  tried the Dialcom service was a lucky day. He dialled from his
  favourite pay phone.

  `What is your code, sir?' The operator asked.

  `Yes, well, this is Mr Baker. I have a sheet with a lot of numbers
  here. I am new to the company. Not sure which one it is.' Anthrax
  shuffled papers on top of the pay phone, near the receiver. `How many
  digits is it?'

  `Seven.'

  That was helpful. Now to find seven digits. Anthrax looked across the
  street at the fish and chips shop. No numbers there. Then a car
  licence plate caught his eye. He read off the first three digits, then
  plucked the last four numbers from another car's plate.

  `Thank you. Putting your call through, Mr Baker.'

  A valid number! What amazing luck. Anthrax milked that number for all
  it was worth. Called party lines. Called phreakers' bridges. Access
  fed the obsession.

  Then he gave the number to a friend in Adelaide, to call overseas. But
  when that friend read off the code, the operator jumped in.

  `YOU'RE NOT MR BAKER!'

  Huh? `Yes I am. You have my code.'

  `You are definitely not him. I know his voice.'

  The friend called Anthrax, who laughed his head off, then called into
  Dialcom and changed his code! It was a funny incident. Still, it
  reminded him how much safer it was working by himself.

  Living in the country was hard for a hacker and Anthrax became a
  phreaker out of necessity, not just desire. Almost everything involved
  a long-distance call and he was always searching for ways to make
  calls for free. He noticed that when he called certain 008
  numbers--free calls--the phone would ring a few times, click, and then
  pause briefly before ringing some more. Eventually a company
  representative or answering service picked up the call. Anthrax had
  read about diverters, devices used to forward calls automatically, in
  one of the many telecommunications magazines and manuals he was
  constantly reading. The click suggested the call was going through a
  diverter and he guessed that if he punched in the right tones at the
  right moment, he could make the call divert away from a company's
  customer service agent. Furthermore, any line trace would end up at
  the company.

  Antrax collected some 008 numbers and fiddled with them. He discovered
  that if he punched another number in very quickly over the top of the
  ringing--just after the click--he could make the line divert to where
  he wanted it to go. He used the 008 numbers to ring phone conferences
  around the world, where he hung out with other phreakers, particularly
  Canadians such as members of the Toronto-based UPI or the Montreal
  group, NPC, which produced a phreakers' manual in French. The
  conversation on the phreaker's phone conferences, or phone bridges as
  they are often called, inevitably turned to planning a prank. And
  those Canadian guys knew how to prank!

  Once, they rang the emergency phone number in a major Canadian city.
  Using the Canadian incarnation of his social engineering accents,
  Anthrax called in a `police officer in need of assistance'. The
  operator wanted to know where. The phreakers had decided on the Blue
  Ribbon Ice-Cream Parlour. They always picked a spot within visual
  range of at least one member, so they could see what was happening.

  In the split second of silence which followed, one of the five other
  phreakers quietly eavesdropping on the call coughed. It was a short,
  sharp cough. The operator darted back on the line.

  `Was that A GUN SHOT? Are you SHOT? Hello? John?' The operator leaned
  away from her receiver for a moment and the phreakers heard her
  talking to someone else in the background. `Officer down.'

  Things moved so fast when pranking. What to do now?

  `Ah, yeah. Yeah.' It was amazing how much someone squeezing laughter
  back down his oesophagus can sound like someone who has been shot.

  `John, talk to me. Talk to me,' the operator pleaded into the phone,
  trying to keep John alert.

  `I'm down. I'm down,' Anthrax strung her along.

  Anthrax disconnected the operator from the conference call. Then the
  phreaker who lived near the ice-cream parlour announced the street had
  been blocked off by police cars. They had the parlour surrounded and
  were anxiously searching for an injured fellow officer. It took
  several hours before the police realised someone had played a mean
  trick on them.

  However, Anthrax's favourite prank was Mr McKenny, the befuddled
  southern American hick. Anthrax had selected the phone number at
  random, but the first prank was such fun he kept coming back for more.
  He had been ringing Mr McKenny for years. It was always the same
  conversation.

  `Mr McKenny? This is Peter Baker. I'd like my shovel back, please.'

  `I don't have your shovel.'

  `Yeah, I lent it to you. Lent it to you like two years ago. I want it
  back now.'

  `I never borrowed no shovel from you. Go away.'

  `You did. You borrowed that shovel of mine. And if you don't give it
  back I'm a gonna come round and get it myself. And you won't like it.
  Now, when you gonna give me that shovel back?'

  `Damn it! I don't have your goddamn shovel!'

  `Give me my shovel!'

  `Stop calling me! I've never had your friggin' shovel. Let me be!'
  Click.

  Nine in the morning. Eight at night. Two a.m. There would be no peace
  for Mr McKenny until he admitted borrowing that shovel from a boy half
  his age and half a world away.

  Sometimes Anthrax pranked closer to home. The Trading Post, a weekly
  rag of personals from people selling and buying, served as a good
  place to begin. Always the innocent start, to lure them in.

  `Yes, sir, I see you advertised that you wanted to buy a bathtub.'
  Anthrax put on his serious voice. `I have a bathtub for sale.'

  `Yeah? What sort? Do you have the measurements, and the model number?'
  And people thought phreakers were weird.

  `Ah, no model number. But its about a metre and a half long, has feet,
  in the shape of claws. It's older style, off-white. There's only one
  problem.' Anthrax paused, savouring the moment.

  `Oh? What's that?'

  `There's a body in it.'

  Like dropping a boulder in a peaceful pond.

                                   [ ]

  The list on System X had dial-up modem numbers, along with usernames
  and password pairs for each address. These usernames were not words
  like `jsmith' or `jdoe', and the passwords would not have appeared in
  any dictionary. 12[AZ63. K5M82L. The type of passwords and usernames
  only a computer would remember.

  This, of course, made sense, since a computer picked them out in the
  first place. It generated them randomly. The list wasn't particularly
  user-friendly. It didn't have headers, outlining what each item
  related to. This made sense too. The list wasn't meant to be read by
  humans.

  Occasionally, there were comments in the list. Programmers often
  include a line of comment in code, which is delineated in such a way
  that the computer skips over the words when interpreting the commands.
  The comments are for other programmers examining the code. In this
  case, the comments were places. Fort Green. Fort Myers. Fort Ritchie.
  Dozens and dozens of forts. Almost half of them were not on the
  mainland US. They were in places like the Philippines, Turkey,
  Germany, Guam. Places with lots of US military presence.

  Not that these bases were any secret to the locals, or indeed to many
  Americans. Anthrax knew that anyone could discover a base existed
  through perfectly legal means. The vast majority of people never
  thought to look. But once they saw such a list, particularly from the
  environment of a military computer's bowels, it tended to drive the
  point home. The point being that the US military seemed to be
  everywhere.

  Anthrax logged out of System X, killed all his connections and hung up
  the phone. It was time to move on. Routing through a few
  out-of-the-way connections, he called one of the numbers on the list.
  The username-password combination worked. He looked around. It was as
  he expected. This wasn't a computer. It was a telephone exchange. It
  looked like a NorTel DMS 100.

  Hackers and phreakers usually have areas of expertise. In Australian
  terms, Anthrax was a master of the X.25 network and a king of voice
  mailbox systems, and others in the underground recognised him as such.
  He knew Trilogues better than most company technicians. He knew
  Meridian VMB systems better than almost anyone in Australia. In the
  phreaking community, he was also a world-class expert in Aspen VMB
  systems. He did not, however, have any expertise in DMS 100s.

  Anthrax quickly hunted through his hacking disks for a text file on
  DMS 100s he had copied from an underground BBS. The pressure was on.
  He didn't want to spend long inside the exchange, maybe only fifteen
  or twenty minutes tops. The longer he stayed without much of a clue
  about how the thing operated, the greater the risk of his being
  traced. When he found the disk with the text file, he began sorting
  through it while still on-line at the telephone exchange. The
  phreakers' file showed him some basic commands, things which let him
  gently prod the exchange for basic information without disturbing the
  system too much. He didn't want to do much more for fear of
  inadvertently mutilating the system.

  Although he was not an authority on DMS 100s, Anthrax had an old
  hacker friend overseas who was a real genius on NorTel equipment. He
  gave the list to his friend. Yes, the friend confirmed it was indeed a
  DMS 100 exchange at a US military base. It was not part of the normal
  telephone system, though. This exchange was part of a military phone
  system.

  In times of war, the military doesn't want to be dependent on the
  civilian telephone system. Even in times of peace, voice
  communications between military staff are more secure if they don't
  talk on an exchange used by civilians. For this and a variety of other
  reasons, the military have separate telephone networks, just as they
  have separate networks for their data communications. These networks
  operate like a normal network and in some cases can communicate to the
  outside world by connecting through their own exchanges to civilian
  ones.

  When Anthrax got the word from the expert hacker, he made up his mind
  quickly. Up went the sniffer. System X was getting more interesting by
  the hour and he didn't want to miss a precious minute in the information
  gathering game when it came to this system.

  The sniffer, a well-used program rumoured to be written by a
  Sydney-based Unix hacker called Rockstar, sat on System X under an
  innocuous name, silently tracking everyone who logged in and out of
  the system. It recorded the first 128 characters of every telnet
  connection that went across the ethernet network cable to which System
  X was attached. Those 128 bytes included the username and the
  passwords people used to log in. Sniffers were effective, but they
  needed time. Usually, they grew like an embryo in a healthy womb,
  slowly but steadily.

  Anthrax resolved to return to System X in twelve hours to check on the
  baby.

                                   [ ]

  `Why are you two watching those nigger video clips?'

  It was an offensive question, but not atypical for Anthrax's father.
  He often breezed through the house, leaving a trail of disruption in
  his wake.

  Soon, however, Anthrax began eroding his father's authority. He
  discovered his father's secrets hidden on the Commodore 64 computer.
  Letters--lots of them--to his family in England. Vicious, racist,
  horrid letters telling how his wife was stupid. How she had to be told
  how to do everything, like a typical Indian. How he regretted marrying
  her. There were other matters too, things unpleasant to discuss.

  Anthrax confronted his father, who denied the allegations at first,
  then finally told Anthrax to keep his mouth shut and mind his own
  business. But Anthrax told his mother. Tensions erupted and, for a
  time, Anthrax's parents saw a marriage counsellor.

  But his father did not give up writing the letters. He put a password
  protection program on the word processor to keep his son out of his
  business. It was a futile effort. His father had chosen the wrong
  medium to record his indiscretions.

  Anthrax showed his mother the new letters and continued to confront
  his father. When the tension in the house grew, Anthrax would escape
  with his friends. One night they were at a nightclub when someone
  started taunting Anthrax, calling him `curry muncher' and worse.

  That was it. The anger which had been simmering below the surface for
  so long exploded as Anthrax violently attacked his taunter, hitting,
  kicking and punching him, using the tai kwon do combinations he had
  been learning. There was blood and it felt good. Vengeance tasted
  sweet.

  After that incident, Anthrax often lashed out violently. He was out of
  control and it sometimes scared him. However, at times he went looking
  for trouble. Once he tracked down a particularly seedy character who
  had tried to rape one of his girlfriends. Anthrax pulled a knife on
  the guy, but the incident had little to do with the girl. The thing
  that made him angry was the disrespect. This guy knew the girl was
  with Anthrax. The attempted rape was like spitting in his face.

  Perhaps that's what appealed to Anthrax about Islam--the importance of
  respect. At sixteen he found Islam and it changed his life. He
  discovered the Qu'raan in the school library while researching an
  assignment on religion. About the same time, he began listening to a
  lot of rap music. More than half the American rappers in his music
  collection were Muslim, and many sang about the Nation of Islam and
  the sect's charismatic leader, Minister Louis Farrakhan. Their songs
  described the injustices whites inflicted on blacks. They told blacks
  to demand respect.

  Anthrax found a magazine article about Farrakhan and began reading
  books like the Autobiography of Malcolm X. Then he rang up the Nation
  of Islam head office in Chicago and asked them to send some
  information. The Final Call, the NOI newsletter, arrived one day,
  followed by other literature which began appearing around Anthrax's
  home. Under the TV guide. On the coffee table. Amid the pile of
  newspapers. On top of his computer. Anthrax often took time to read
  articles aloud to his mother while she did housework.

  In the middle of 1990, when Anthrax was in year 11, his father
  suggested the boy attend Catholic boarding school in Melbourne. The
  school was inexpensive and the family could scrape and save to pay the
  fees. Anthrax disliked the idea, but his father insisted.

  Anthrax and his new school proved a bad match. The school thought he
  asked too many questions, and Anthrax thought the school answered too
  few of them. The hypocrisy of the Catholic church riled Anthrax and
  pushed him further into the arms of NOI. How could he respect an
  institution which had sanctioned slavery as a righteous and
  progressive method of converting people? The school and Anthrax parted
  on less than friendly terms after just one semester.

  The Catholic school intensified a feeling of inferiority Anthrax had
  felt for many years. He was an outsider. The wrong colour, the wrong
  size, too intelligent for his school. Yet, NOI's Minister Farrakhan
  told him that he wasn't inferior at all. `I know that you have been
  discriminated against because of your colour,' Farrakhan told Anthrax
  from the tape player. `Let me tell you why. Let me tell you about the
  origins of the white race and how they were put on this earth to do
  evil. They have shown themselves to be nothing but an enemy of the
  East. Non-whites are the original people of the earth.'

  Anthrax found some deep veins of truth in NOI's teachings. Interracial
  marriages don't work. A white man marries a non-white woman because he
  wants a slave, not because he loves and respects her. Islam respects
  women in more meaningful ways than Western religions. Perhaps it wasn't
  the type of respect that Western men were used to giving women, but he
  had seen that kind of respect in his own home and he didn't think much
  of it.

  Anthrax read the words of the Honourable Elijah Muhammad, founder of
  NOI: `The enemy does not have to be a real devil. He could be your
  father, mother, brother, husband, wife or children. Many times they're
  in your own household. Today is the great time of separation of the
  righteous Muslim and the wicked white race.' Anthrax looked inside his
  own household and saw what seemed to be a devil. A white devil.

  NOI fed Anthrax's mind. He followed up the lists of literature
  included in every issue of The Final Call. Books like Black Athena by
  Martin Bernel and Deterring Democracy by Noam Chomsky had common
  themes of conspiracy and oppression by the haves against the
  have-nots. Anthrax read them all.

  The transformation of Anthrax occurred over a period of six months. He
  didn't talk about it much with his parents. It was a private matter.
  But his mother later told him his adoption of the religion didn't
  surprise her. His great-grandfather had been a Muslim scholar and
  cleric in India. It was fate. His conversion presented a certain sense
  of closure, of completing the circle.

  His interest in Islam found secular outlets. A giant black and white
  poster of Malcolm X appeared on Anthrax's bedroom wall. A huge photo
  of Los Angeles Black Panther leader Elmer Pratt followed soon after.
  The photo was captioned, `A coward dies a million deaths, a brave man
  dies but one'. The last bit of wall was covered in posters of hip-hop
  bands from ceiling to floor. A traditional Indian sword adorned the
  top of one of the many bookcases. It complemented the growing
  collection of books on martial arts. A well-loved copy of The Art of
  War by Sun Tzu sat on the shelf next to Homer's Ulysses, The Lord of
  The Rings, The Hobbit, a few old Dungeons and Dragons books, works of
  mythology from India and Egypt. The shelves did not contain a single
  work of science fiction. Anthrax shaved his head. His mother may not
  have been surprised by the conversion to Islam, but the head shaving
  went a bit over the top.

  Anthrax pursued NOI with the same vigour with which he attacked
  hacking. He memorised whole speeches of Farrakhan and began speaking
  like him, commenting casually on `those caucasian, blue-eyed devils'.
  He quoted people he had discovered through NOI. People who described
  the US Federal Reserve Bank as being controlled by Jews. People who
  spoke of those hooked-nose, bagel-eating, just-crawled-out-of-a-cave
  Jews. Anthrax denied the existence of the Holocaust.

  `You're shaping up to be quite a little Hitler,' his father told
  Anthrax.

  His father disliked the NOI literature showing up at the house. It
  seemed to frighten him. Receiving blueprints in the mail for
  overthowing governments didn't sit well with the neighbours in the
  quiet suburban street of the provincial town.

  `Watch out,' he warned his son. `Having these thing turn up in your
  mailbox can be dangerous. It will probably earmark you for some sort
  of investigation. They will follow you around.'

                                   [ ]

  The traffic raced. The ethernet cables attached to System X were a
  regular speedway. People whizzed in and out of the mystery site like a
  swarm of bees. In only twelve hours, the sniffer file topped 100 k.

  Many of the connections went from System X to the major
  telecommunications company. Anthrax headed in that direction.

  He considered how to route the attack. He could go through a few
  diverters and other leapfrog devices to cover his trail, thus hitting
  the company's system from a completely separate source. The advantage
  of this route was anonymity. If the admin managed to detect his entry,
  Anthrax would only lose access to the phone company's system, not to
  System X. Alternatively, if he went in to the company through the
  gateway and System X, he risked alarms being raised at all three
  sites. However, his sniffer showed so much traffic running on this
  route, he might simply disappear in the flow. The established path was
  obviously there for a reason. One more person logging into the gateway
  through System X and then into the company's machine would not raise
  suspicions. He chose to go through System X.

  Anthrax logged into the company using a sniffed username and password.
  Trying the load-module bug again, he got root on the system and
  installed his own login patch. The company's system looked far more
  normal than System X. A few hundred users. Lots of email, far too much
  to read. He ran a few key word searches on all the email, trying to
  piece together a better picture of the project being developed on
  System X.

  The company did plenty of defence work, mostly in telecommunications.
  Different divisions of the company seemed to be working on different
  segments of the project. Anthrax searched through people's home
  directories, but nothing looked very interesting because he couldn't
  get a handle on the whole project. People were all developing
  different modules of the project and, without a centralised overview,
  the pieces didn't mean much.

  He did find a group of binary files--types of programs--but he had no
  idea what they were for. The only real way to find out what they did
  was to take them for a test drive. He ran a few binaries. They didn't
  appear to do anything. He ran a few more. Again, nothing. He kept
  running them, one after another. Still no results. All he received was
  error messages.

  The binaries seemed to need a monitor which could display graphics.
  They used XII, a graphical display common on Unix systems. Anthrax's
  inexpensive home computer didn't have that sort of graphical display
  operating system. He could still run the binaries by telling System X
  to run them on one of its local terminals, but he wouldn't be able to
  see the output on his home computer. More importantly, it was a risky
  course of action. What if someone happened to be sitting at the
  terminal where he chose to run the binary? The game would be up.

  He leaned away from his keyboard and stretched. Exhaustion was
  beginning to set in. He hadn't slept in almost 48 hours. Occasionally,
  he had left his computer terminal to eat, though he always brought the
  food back to the screen. His mother popped her head in the doorway
  once in a while and shook her head silently. When he noticed her
  there, he tried to ease her concerns. `But I'm learning lots of
  things,' he pleaded. She was not convinced.

  He also broke his long hacking session to pray. It was important for a
  devout Muslim to practice salat--to pray at least five times a day
  depending on the branch of Islam followed by the devotee. Islam allows
  followers to group some of their prayers, so Anthrax usually grouped
  two in the morning, prayed once at midday as normal, and grouped two
  more at night. An efficient way to meet religious obligations.

  Sometimes the time just slipped away, hacking all night. When the
  first hint of dawn snuck up on him, he was invariably in the middle of
  some exciting journey. But duty was duty, and it had to be done. So he
  pressed control S to freeze his screen, unfurled the prayer mat with
  its built-in compass, faced Mecca, knelt down and did two sets of
  prayers before sunrise. Ten minutes later he rolled the prayer mat up,
  slid back into his chair, typed control Q to release the pause on his
  computer and picked up where he left off.

  This company's computer system seemed to confirm what he had begun to
  suspect. System X was the first stage of a project, the rest of which
  was under development. He found a number of tables and reports in
  System X's files. The reports carried headers like `Traffic Analysis',
  `calls in' and `calls out', `failure rate'. It all began to make sense
  to Anthrax.

  System X called up each of the military telephone exchanges in that
  list. It logged in using the computer-generated name and password.
  Once inside, a program in System X polled the exchange for important
  statistics, such as the number of calls coming in and out of the base.
  This information was then stored on System X. Whenever someone wanted
  a report on something, for example, the military sites with the most
  incoming calls over the past 24 hours, he or she would simply ask
  System X to compile the information. All of this was done
  automatically.

  Anthrax had read some email suggesting that changes to an exchange,
  such as adding new telephone lines on the base, had been handled
  manually, but this job was soon to be done automatically by System X.
  It made sense. The maintenance time spent by humans would be cut
  dramatically.

  A machine which gathers statistics and services phone exchanges
  remotely doesn't sound very sexy on the face of it, until you begin to
  consider what you could do with something like that. You could sell it
  to a foreign power interested in the level of activity at a certain
  base at a particular time. And that is just the beginning.

  You could tap any unencrypted line going in or out of any of the 100
  or so exchanges and listen in to sensitive military discussions. Just
  a few commands makes you a fly on the wall of a general's conversation
  to the head of a base in the Philippines. Anti-government rebels in
  that country might pay a pretty penny for getting intelligence on the
  US forces.

  All of those options paled next to the most striking power wielded by
  a hacker who had unlimited access to System X and the 100 or so
  telephone exchanges. He could take down that US military voice
  communications system almost overnight, and he could do it
  automatically. The potential for havoc creation was breathtaking. It
  would be a small matter for a skilled programmer to alter the
  automated program used by System X. Instead of using its dozen or more
  modems to dial all the exchanges overnight and poll them for
  statistics, System X could be instructed to call them overnight and
  reprogram the exchanges.

  What if every time General Colin Powell picked up his phone, he was be
  automatically patched through to some Russian general's office? He
  wouldn't be able to dial any other number from his office phone. He'd
  pick up his phone to dial and there would be the Russian at the other
  end. And what if every time someone called into the general's number,
  they ended up talking to the stationery department? What if none of the
  phone numbers connected to their proper telephones?  No-one would be
  able to reach one another. An important part of the US military machine
  would be in utter disarray. Now, what if all this happened in the first
  few days of a war? People trying to contact each other with vital
  information wouldn't be able to use the telephone exchanges reprogrammed
  by System X.

  THAT was power.

  It wasn't like Anthrax screaming at his father until his voice turned
  to a whisper, all for nothing. He could make people sit up and take
  notice with this sort of power.

  Hacking a system gave him a sense of control. Getting root on a system
  always gave him an adrenalin rush for just that reason. It meant the
  system was his, he could do whatever he wanted, he could run whatever
  processes or programs he desired, he could remove other users he
  didn't want using his system. He thought, I own the system. The word
  `own' anchored the phrase which circled through his thoughts again and
  again when he successfully hacked a system.

  The sense of ownership was almost passionate, rippled with streaks of
  obsession and jealousy. At any given moment, Anthrax had a list of
  systems he owned and that had captured his interest for that moment.
  Anthrax hated seeing a system administrator logging onto one of those
  systems. It was an invasion. It was as though Anthrax had just got
  this woman he had been after for some time alone in a room with the
  door closed. Then, just as he was getting to know her, this other guy
  had barged in, sat down on the couch and started talking to her.

  It was never enough to look at a system from a distance and know he
  could hack it if he wanted to. Anthrax had to actually hack the
  system. He had to own it. He needed to see what was inside the system,
  to know exactly what it was he owned.

  The worst thing admins could do was to fiddle with system security.
  That made Anthrax burn with anger. If Anthrax was on-line, silently
  observing the admins' activities, he would feel a sudden urge to log
  them off. He wanted to punish them. Wanted them to know he was into
  their system. And yet, at the same time, he didn't want them to know.
  Logging them off would draw attention to himself, but the two desires
  pulled at him from opposite directions. What Anthrax really wanted was
  for the admins to know he controlled their system, but for them not to
  be able to do anything about it. He wanted them to be helpless.

  Anthrax decided to keep undercover. But he contemplated the power of
  having System X's list of telephone exchange dial-ups and their
  username-password combinations. Normally, it would take days for a
  single hacker with his lone modem to have much impact on the US
  military's communications network. Sure, he could take down a few
  exchanges before the military wised up and started protecting
  themselves. It was like hacking a military computer. You could take
  out a machine here, a system there. But the essence of the power of
  System X was being able to use its own resources to orchestrate
  widespread pandemonium quickly and quietly.

  Anthrax defines power as the potential for real world impact. At that
  moment of discovery and realisation, the real world impact of hacking
  System X looked good. The telecommunications company computer seemed
  like a good place to hang up a sniffer, so he plugged one into the
  machine and decided to return in a little while. Then he logged out
  and went to bed.

  When he revisited the sniffer a day or so later, Anthrax received a
  rude shock. Scrolling through the sniffer file, he did a double take
  on one of the entries. Someone had logged into the company's system
  using his special login patch password.

  He tried to stay calm. He thought hard. When was the last time he had
  logged into the system using that special password? Could his sniffer
  have logged himself on an earlier hacking session? It did happen
  occasionally. Hackers sometimes gave themselves quite a fright. In the
  seamless days and nights of hacking dozens of systems, it was easy to
  forget the last time you logged into a particular system using the
  special password. The more he thought, the more he was absolutely
  sure. He hadn't logged into the system again.

  Which left the obvious question. Who had?

                                   [ ]

  Sometimes Anthrax pranked, sometimes he punished. Punishment could be
  severe or mild. Generally it was severe. And unlike pranking, it was
  not done randomly.

  Different things set him off. The librarian, for example. In early
  1993 Anthrax had enrolled in Asia-Pacific and Business Studies at a
  university in a nearby regional city. Ever since he showed up on the
  campus, he had been hassled by a student who worked part-time at the
  university library. On more than one occasion, Anthrax had been
  reading at a library table when a security guard came up and asked to
  search his bags. And when Anthrax looked over his shoulder to the
  check-out desk, that librarian was always there, the one with the bad
  attitude smeared across his face.

  The harassment became so noticeable, Anthrax's friends began
  commenting on it. His bag would be hand-searched when he left the
  library, while other students walked through the electronic security
  boom gate unbothered. When he returned a book one day late, the
  librarian--that librarian--insisted he pay all sorts of fines.
  Anthrax's pleas of being a poor student fell on deaf ears. By the time
  exam period rolled around at the end of term, Anthrax decided to
  punish the librarian by taking down the library's entire computer
  system.

  Logging in to the library computer via modem from home, Anthrax
  quickly gained root privileges. The system had security holes a mile
  wide. Then, with one simple command, he deleted every file in the
  computer. He knew the system would be backed up somewhere, but it
  would take a day or two to get the system up and running again. In the
  meantime, every loan or book search had to be conducted manually.

  During Anthrax's first year at university, even small incidents
  provoked punishment. Cutting him off while he was driving, or swearing
  at him on the road, fit the bill. Anthrax would memorise the licence
  plate of the offending driver, then social engineer the driver's
  personal details. Usually he called the police to report what appeared
  to be a stolen car and then provided the licence plate number. Shortly
  after, Anthrax tuned into to his police scanner, where he picked up
  the driver's name and address as it was read over the airways to the
  investigating police car. Anthrax wrote it all down.

  Then began the process of punishment. Posing as the driver, Anthrax rang
  the driver's electricity company to arrange a power disconnection. The
  next morning the driver might return home to find his electricity cut
  off. The day after, his gas might be disconnected.  Then his water. Then
  his phone.

  Some people warranted special punishment--people such as Bill. Anthrax
  came across Bill on the Swedish Party Line, an English-speaking
  telephone conference. For a time, Anthrax was a regular fixture on the
  line, having attempted to call it by phreaking more than 2000 times
  over just a few months. Of course, not all those attempts were
  successful, but he managed to get through at least half the time. It
  required quite an effort to keep a presence on the party line, since
  it automatically cut people off after only ten minutes. Anthrax made
  friends with the operators, who sometimes let him stay on-line a while
  longer.

  Bill, a Swedish Party Line junkie, had recently been released from
  prison, where he had served time for beating up a Vietnamese boy at a
  railway station. He had a bad attitude and he often greeted the party
  line by saying, `Are there any coons on the line today?' His attitude
  to women wasn't much better. He relentlessly hit on the women who
  frequented the line. One day, he made a mistake. He gave out his phone
  number to a girl he was trying to pick up. The operator copied it down
  and when her friend Anthrax came on later that day, she passed it on
  to him.

  Anthrax spent a few weeks social engineering various people, including
  utilities and relatives whose telephone numbers appeared on Bill's
  phone accounts, to piece together the details of his life. Bill was a
  rough old ex-con who owned a budgie and was dying of cancer. Anthrax
  phoned Bill in the hospital and proceeded to tell him all sorts of
  personal details about himself, the kind of details which upset a
  person.

  Not long after, Anthrax heard that Bill had died. The hacker felt as
  though he had perhaps gone a bit too far.

                                   [ ]

  The tension at home had eased a little by the time Anthrax left to
  attend university. But when he returned home during holidays he found
  his father even more unbearable. More and more, Anthrax rebelled
  against his father's sniping comments and violence. Eventually, he
  vowed that the next time his father tried to break his arm he would
  fight back. And he did.

  One day Anthrax's father began making bitter fun of his younger son's
  stutter. Brimming with biting sarcasm, the father mimicked Anthrax's
  brother.

  `Why are you doing that?' Anthrax yelled. The bait had worked once
  again.

  It was as though he became possessed with a spirit not his own. He
  yelled at his father, and put a fist into the wall. His father grabbed
  a chair and thrust it forward to keep Anthrax at bay, then reached
  back for the phone. Said he was calling the police. Anthrax ripped the
  phone from the wall. He pursued his father through the house, smashing
  furniture. Amid the crashing violence of the fight, Anthrax suddenly
  felt a flash of fear for his mother's clock--a much loved, delicate
  family heirloom. He gently picked it up and placed it out of harm's
  way. Then he heaved the stereo into the air and threw it at his
  father. The stereo cabinet followed in its wake. Wardrobes toppled
  with a crash across the floor.

  When his father fled the house, Anthrax got a hold of himself and
  began to look around. The place was a disaster area. All those things
  so tenderly gathered and carefully treasured by his mother, the things
  she had used to build her life in a foreign land of white people
  speaking an alien tongue, lay in fragments scattered around the house.

  Anthrax felt wretched. His mother was distraught at the destruction
  and he was badly shaken by how much it upset her. He promised to try
  and control his temper from that moment on. It proved to be a constant
  battle. Mostly he would win, but not always. The battle still simmered
  below the surface.

  Sometimes it boiled over.

                                   [ ]

  Anthrax considered the possibilities of who else would be using his
  login patch. It could be another hacker, perhaps someone who was
  running another sniffer that logged Anthrax's previous login. But it
  was more likely to be a security admin. Meaning he had been found out.
  Meaning that he might be being traced even as he leap-frogged through
  System X to the telecommunications company's computer.

  Anthrax made his way to the system admin's mailboxes. If the game was
  up, chances were something in the mailbox would give it away.

  There it was. The evidence. They were onto him all right, and they
  hadn't wasted any time. The admins had mailed CERT, the Computer
  Emergency Response Team at Carnegie Mellon University, reporting a
  security breach. CERT, the nemesis of every Internet hacker, was bound
  to complicate matters. Law enforcement would no doubt be called in
  now.

  It was time to get out of this system, but not before leaving in a
  blaze of glory. A prank left as a small present.

  CERT had written back to the admins acknowledging the incident and
  providing a case number. Posing as one of the admins, Anthrax drafted
  a letter to CERT. To make the thing look official, he added the case
  number `for reference'. The letter went something like this:

  `In regard to incident no. XXXXX, reported on this date, we have since
  carried out some additional investigations on the matter. We have
  discovered the security incident was caused by a disgruntled employee
  who was fired for alcoholism and decided to retaliate against the
  company in this manner.

  `We have long had a problem with alcohol and drug abuse due to the
  stressful nature of the company environment. No further investigation
  is necessary.'

  At his computer terminal, Anthrax smiled. How embarrassing was that
  going to be? Try scraping that mud off. He felt very pleased with
  himself.

  Anthrax then tidied up his things in the company's computer, deleted
  the sniffer and moved out.

  Things began to move quickly after that. He logged into System X later
  to check the sniffer records, only to find that someone had used his
  login patch password on that system as well. He became very nervous.
  It was one thing goofing around with a commercial site, and quite
  another being tracked from a military computer.

  A new process had been added to System X, which Anthrax recognised. It
  was called `-u'. He didn't know what it did, but he had seen it before
  on military systems. About 24 hours after it appeared, he found
  himself locked out of the system. He had tried killing off the -u
  process before. It disappeared for a split-second and reappeared. Once
  it was in place, there was no way to destroy it.

  Anthrax also unearthed some alarming email. The admin at a site
  upstream from both System X and the company's system had been sent a
  warning letter: `We think there has been a security incident at your
  site'. The circle was closing in on him. It was definitely time to get
  the hell out. He packed up his things in a hurry. Killed off the
  remaining sniffer. Moved his files. Removed the login patch. And
  departed with considerable alacrity.

  After he cut his connection, Anthrax sat wondering about the admins.
  If they knew he was into their systems, why did they leave the
  sniffers up and running? He could understand leaving the login patch.
  Maybe they wanted to track his movements, determine his motives, or
  trace his connection. Killing the patch would have simply locked him
  out of the only door the admins could watch. They wouldn't know if he
  had other backdoors into their system. But the sniffer? It didn't make
  any sense.

  It was possible that they simply hadn't seen the sniffer. Leaving it
  there had been an oversight. But it was almost too glaring an error to
  be a real possibility. If it was an error, it implied the admins
  weren't actually monitoring the connections in and out of their
  systems. If they had been watching the connections, they would
  probably have seen the sniffer. But if they weren't monitoring the
  connections, how on earth did they find out his special password for
  the login patch? Like all passwords on the system, that one was
  encrypted. There were only two ways to get that password. Monitor the
  connection and sniff it, or break the encryption with a brute-force
  attack.

  Breaking the encryption would probably have taken millions of dollars
  of computer time. He could pretty well rule that option out. That left
  sniffing it, which would have alerted them to his own sniffer. Surely
  they wouldn't have left his sniffer running on purpose. They must have
  known he would learn they were watching him through his sniffer. The
  whole thing was bizarre.

  Anthrax thought about the admins who were chasing him. Thought about
  their moves, their strategies. Wondered why. It was one of the
  unsolved mysteries a hacker often faced--an unpleasant side of
  hacking. Missing the answers to certain questions, the satisfaction of
  a certain curiosity. Never being able to look over the fence at the
  other side.


    _________________________________________________________________

                  Chapter 11 -- The Prisoner's Dilemma
    _________________________________________________________________


    Harrisburg Oh Harrisburg
    The plant is melting down
    The people out in Harrisbug
    Are getting out of town
    And when this stuff gets in
    You cannot get it out

  -- from `Harrisburg', on Red Sails in the Sunset by Midnight Oil

  Anthrax thought he would never get caught. But in some strange way, he
  also wanted to get caught. When he thought about being busted, he
  found himself filled with a strange emotion--impatience. Bring on the
  impending doom and be done with it. Or perhaps it was frustration at
  how inept his opponents seemed to be. They kept losing his trail and
  he was impatient with their incompetence. It was more fun outwitting a
  worthy opponent.

  Perhaps he didn't really want to be caught so much as tracked. Anthrax
  liked the idea of the police tracking him, of the system
  administrators pursuing him. He liked to follow the trail of their
  investigations through other people's mail. He especially liked being
  on-line, watching them trying to figure out where he was coming from.
  He would cleverly take control of their computers in ways they
  couldn't see. He watched every character they typed, every spelling
  error, every mistyped command, each twist and turn taken in the vain
  hope of catching him.

  He hadn't been caught back in early 1991, when it seemed everyone was
  after him. In fact Anthrax nearly gave up hacking and phreaking
  completely in that year after what he later called `The Fear of God'
  speech.

  Late at night, on a university computer system, he bumped into another
  hacker. It wasn't an entirely uncommon experience. Once in a while,
  hackers recognised another of their kind. Strange connections to
  strange places in the middle of the night. Inconsistencies in process
  names and sizes. The clues were visible for those who knew how to find
  them.

  The two hackers danced around each other, trying to determine who the
  other was without giving away too much information. Finally the
  mystery hacker asked Anthrax, `Are you a disease which affects sheep?'

  Anthrax typed the simple answer back. `Yes.'

  The other hacker revealed himself as Prime Suspect, one of the
  International Subversives. Anthrax recognised the name. He had seen
  Prime Suspect around on the BBSes, had read his postings. Before
  Anthrax could get started on a friendly chat, the IS hacker jumped in
  with an urgent warning.

  He had unearthed emails showing the Feds were closing in on Anthrax.
  The mail, obtained from system admins at Miden Pacific, described the
  systems Anthrax had been visiting. It showed the phone connections he
  had been using to get to them, some of which Telecom had traced back
  to his phone. One of the admins had written, `We're on to him. I feel
  really bad. He's seventeen years old and they are going to bust him
  and ruin his life.' Anthrax felt a cold chill run down his spine.

  Prime Suspect continued with the story. When he first came across the
  email, he thought it referred to himself. The two hackers were the
  same age and had evidently been breaking into the same systems. Prime
  Suspect had freaked out over the mail. He took it back to the other
  two IS hackers, and they talked it through. Most of the description
  fitted, but a few of the details didn't seem to make sense. Prime
  Suspect wasn't calling from a country exchange. The more they worked
  it through, the clearer it became that the email must have been
  referring to someone else. They ran through the list of other options
  and Anthrax's name came up as a possibility. The IS hackers had all
  seen him around a few systems and BBSes. Trax had even spoken to him
  once on a conference call with another phreaker. They pieced together
  what they knew of him and the picture fitted. The AFP were onto
  Anthrax and they seemed to know a lot about him. They had traced his
  telephone connection back to his house. They knew his age, which
  implied they knew his name. The phone bills were in his parents'
  names, so there may have been some personal surveillance of him. The
  Feds were so close they were all but treading on his heels. The IS
  hackers had been keeping an eye out for him, to warn him, but this was
  the first time they had found him.

  Anthrax thanked Prime Suspect and got out of the system. He sat frozen
  in the night stillness. It was one thing to contemplate getting caught,
  to carry mixed emotions on the hypothetical situation. It was another to
  have the real prospect staring you in the face. In the morning, he
  gathered up all his hacking papers, notes, manuals--everything. Three
  trunks' worth of material. He carried it all to the back garden, lit a
  bonfire and watched it burn. He vowed to give up hacking forever.

  And he did give it up, for a time. But a few months later he somehow
  found himself back in front of his computer screen, with his modem
  purring. It was so tempting, so hard to let go. The police had never
  shown up. Months had come and gone, still nothing. Prime Suspect must
  have been wrong. Perhaps the AFP were after another hacker entirely.

  Then, in October 1991, the AFP busted Prime Suspect, Mendax and Trax.
  But Anthrax continued to hack, mostly on his own as usual, for another
  two years. He reminded himself that the IS hackers worked in a team.
  If the police hadn't nailed him when they busted the others, surely
  they would never find him now. Further, he had become more skilled as
  a hacker, better at covering his tracks, less likely to draw attention
  to himself. He had other rationalisations too. The town where he lived
  was so far away, the police would never bother travelling all the way
  into the bush. The elusive Anthrax would remain at large forever, the
  unvanquished Ned Kelly of the computer underground.

                                   [ ]

  Mundane matters were on Anthrax's mind on the morning of 14 July 1994.
  The removalists were due to arrive to take things from the half-empty
  apartment he had shared with another student. His room-mate had
  already departed and the place was a clutter of boxes stuffed with
  clothes, tapes and books.

  Anthrax sat in bed half-asleep, half-watching the `Today' show when he
  heard the sound of a large vehicle pulling up outside. He looked out
  the window expecting to see the removalists. What he saw instead was
  at least four men in casual clothes running toward the house.

  They were a little too enthusiastic for removalists and they split up
  before getting to the door, with two men forking off toward opposite
  sides of the building. One headed for the car port. Another dove
  around the other side of the building. A third banged on the front
  door. Anthrax shook himself awake.

  The short, stocky guy at the front door was a worry. He had puffy,
  longish hair and was wearing a sweatshirt and acid-wash jeans so tight
  you could count the change in his back pocket. Bad ideas raced through
  Anthrax's head. It looked like a home invasion. Thugs were going to
  break into his home, tie him up and terrorise him before stealing all
  his valuables.

  `Open up. Open up,' the stocky one shouted, flashing a police badge.

  Stunned, and still uncomprehending, Anthrax opened the door. `Do you
  know who WE are?' the stocky one asked him.

  Anthrax looked confused. No. Not sure.

  `The Australian Federal Police.' The cop proceeded to read out the
  search warrant.

  What happened from this point forward is a matter of some debate. What
  is fact is that the events of the raid and what
  followed formed the basis of a formal complaint by Anthrax to the
  Office of the Ombudsman and an internal investigation within the AFP.
  The following is simply Anthrax's account of how it happened.

  The stocky one barked at Anthrax, `Where's your computer?'

  `What computer?' Anthrax looked blankly at the officer. He didn't have
  a computer at his apartment. He used the uni's machines or friend's
  computers.

  `Your computer. Where is it? Which one of your friends has it?'

  `No-one has it. I don't own one.'

  `Well, when you decide to tell us where it is, you let us know.'

  Yeah. Right. If Anthrax did have a hidden computer at uni, revealing
  its location wasn't top of the must-do list.

  The police pawed through his personal letters, quizzed Anthrax about
  them. Who wrote this letter? Is he in the computer underground? What's
  his address?

  Anthrax said `no comment' more times than he could count. He saw a few
  police moving into his bedroom and decided it was time to watch them
  closely, make sure nothing was planted. He stood up to follow them in
  and observe the search when one of the cops stopped him. Anthrax told
  them he wanted a lawyer. One of the police looked on with disapproval.

  `You must be guilty,' he told Anthrax. `Only guilty people ask for
  lawyers. And here I was feeling sorry for you.'

  Then one of the other officers dropped the bomb. `You know,' he began
  casually, `we're also raiding your parents' house ...'

  Anthrax freaked out. His mum would be hysterical. He asked to call his
  mother on his mobile, the only phone then working in the apartment.
  The police refused to let him touch his mobile. Then he asked to call
  her from the pay phone across the street. The police refused again.
  One of the officers, a tall, lanky cop, recognised a leverage point if
  ever he saw one. He spread the guilt on thick.

  `Your poor sick mum. How could you do this to your poor sick mum?
  We're going to have to take her to Melbourne for questioning, maybe
  even to charge her, arrest her, take her to jail. You make me sick. I
  feel sorry for a mother having a son like you who is going to cause
  her all this trouble.'

  From that moment on, the tall officer took every opportunity to talk
  about Anthrax's `poor sick mum'. He wouldn't let up. Not that he
  probably knew the first thing about scleroderma, the creeping fatal
  disease which affected her. Anthrax often thought about the pain his
  mother was in as the disease worked its way from her extremities to
  her internal organs. Scleroderma toughened the skin on the fingers and
  feet, but made them overly sensitive, particularly to changes in
  weather. It typically affected women native to hot climates who moved
  to colder environments.

  Anthrax's mobile rang. His mother. It had to be. The police wouldn't
  let him answer it.

  The tall officer picked up the call, then turned to the stocky cop and
  said in a mocking Indian accent, `It is some woman with an Indian
  accent'. Anthrax felt like jumping out of his chair and grabbing the
  phone. He felt like doing some other things too, things that would
  have undoubtedly landed him in prison then and there.

  The stocky cop nodded to the tall one, who handed the mobile to
  Anthrax.

  At first, he couldn't make sense of what his mother was saying. She
  was a terrified mess. Anthrax tried to calm her down. Then she tried
  to comfort him.

  `Don't worry. It will be all right,' she said it, over and over. No
  matter what Anthrax said, she repeated that phrase, like a chant. In
  trying to console him, she was actually calming herself. Anthrax
  listened to her trying to impose order on the chaos around her. He
  could hear noises in the background and he guessed it was the police
  rummaging through her home. Suddenly, she said she had to go and hung
  up.

  Anthrax handed the phone back to the police and sat with his head in
  his hands. What a wretched situation. He couldn't believe this was
  happening to him. How could the police seriously consider taking his
  mother to Melbourne for questioning? True, he phreaked from her home
  office phone, but she had no idea how to hack or phreak. As for
  charging his mother, that would just about kill her. In her mental and
  physical condition, she would simply collapse, maybe never to get up
  again.

  He didn't have many options. One of the cops was sealing up his mobile
  phone in a clear plastic bag and labelling it. It was physically
  impossible for him to call a lawyer, since the police wouldn't let him
  use the mobile or go to a pay phone. They harangued him about coming
  to Melbourne for a police interview.

  `It is your best interest to cooperate,' one of the cops told him. `It
  would be in your best interest to come with us now.'

  Anthrax pondered that line for a moment, considered how ludicrous it
  sounded coming from a cop. Such a bald-faced lie told so
  matter-of-factly. It would have been humorous if the situation with
  his mother hadn't been so awful. He agreed to an interview with the
  police, but it would have to be done on another day.

  The cops wanted to search his car. Anthrax didn't like it, but there
  was nothing incriminating in the car anyway. As he walked outside in
  the winter morning, one of the cops looked down at Anthrax's feet,
  which were bare in accordance with the Muslim custom of removing shoes
  in the house. The cop asked if he was cold.

  The other cop answered for Anthrax. `No. The fungus keeps them warm.'

  Anthrax swallowed his anger. He was used to racism, and plenty of it,
  especially from cops. But this was over the top.

  In the town where he attended uni, everyone thought he was Aboriginal.
  There were only two races in that country town--white and Aboriginal.
  Indian, Pakistani, Malay, Burmese, Sri Lankan--it didn't matter. They
  were all Aboriginal, and were treated accordingly.

  Once when he was talking on the pay phone across from his house, the
  police pulled up and asked him what he was doing there. Talking on the
  phone, he told them. It was pretty obvious. They asked for
  identification, made him empty his pockets, which contained his small
  mobile phone. They told him his mobile must be stolen, took it from
  him and ran a check on the serial number. Fifteen minutes and many
  more accusations later, they finally let him go with the flimsiest of
  apologies. `Well, you understand,' one cop said. `We don't see many of
  your type around here.'

  Yeah. Anthrax understood. It looked pretty suspicious, a dark-skinned
  boy using a public telephone. Very suss indeed.

  In fact, Anthrax had the last laugh. He had been on a phreaked call to
  Canada at the time and he hadn't bothered to hang up when the cops
  arrived. Just told the other phreakers to hang on. After the police
  left, he picked up the conversation where he left off.

  Incidents like that taught him that sometimes the better path was to
  toy with the cops. Let them play their little games. Pretend to be
  manipulated by them. Laugh at them silently and give them nothing. So
  he appeared to ignore the fungus comment and led the cops to his car.
  They found nothing.

  When the police finally packed up to leave, one of them handed Anthrax
  a business card with the AFP's phone number.

  `Call us to arrange an interview time,' he said.

  `Sure,' Anthrax replied as he shut the door.

                                   [ ]

  Anthrax keep putting the police off. Every time they called hassling
  him for an interview, he said he was busy. But when they began ringing
  up his mum, he found himself in a quandary. They were threatening and
  yet reassuring to his mother all at the same time and spoke politely
  to her, even apologetically.

  `As bad as it sounds,' one of them said, `we're going to have to
  charge you with things Anthrax has done, hacking, phreaking, etc. if
  he doesn't cooperate with us. We know it sounds funny, but we're
  within our rights to do that. In fact that is what the law dictates
  because the phone is in your name.'

  He followed this with the well-worn `it's in your son's best interest
  to cooperate' line, delivered with cooing persuasion.

  Anthrax wondered why there was no mention of charging his father,
  whose name appeared on the house's main telephone number. That line
  also carried some illegal calls.

  His mother worried. She asked her son to cooperate with the police.
  Anthrax felt he had to protect his mother and finally agreed to a
  police interview after his uni exams. The only reason he did so was
  because of the police threat to charge his mother. He was sure that if
  they dragged his mother through court, her health would deteriorate
  and lead to an early death.

  Anthrax's father picked him up from uni on a fine November day and
  drove down to Melbourne. His mother had insisted that he attend the
  interview, since he knew all about the law and police. Anthrax didn't
  mind having him along: he figured a witness might prevent any use of
  police muscle.

  During the ride to the city, Anthrax talked about how he would handle
  the interview. The good news was that the AFP had said they wanted to
  interview him about his phreaking, not his hacking. He went to the
  interview understanding they would only be discussing his `recent
  stuff'--the phreaking. He had two possible approaches to the
  interview. He could come clean and admit everything, as his first
  lawyer had advised. Or he could pretend to cooperate and be evasive,
  which was what his instincts told him to do.

  His father jumped all over the second option. `You have to cooperate
  fully. They will know if you are lying. They are trained to pick out
  lies. Tell them everything and they will go easier on you.' Law and
  order all the way.

  `Who do they think they are anyway? The pigs.' Anthrax looked away,
  disgusted at the thought of police harassing people like his mother.

  `Don't call them pigs,' his father snapped. `They are police officers.
  If you are ever in trouble, they are the first people you are ever
  going to call.'

  `Oh yeah. What kind of trouble am I going to be in that the first
  people I call are the AFP?' Anthrax replied.

  Anthrax would put up with his father coming along so long as he kept
  his mouth shut during the interview. He certainly wasn't there for
  personal support. They had a distant relationship at best. When his
  father began working in the town where Anthrax now lived and studied,
  his mother had tried to patch things between them. She suggested his
  father take Anthrax out for dinner once a week, to smooth things over.
  Develop a relationship. They had dinner a handful of times and Anthrax
  listened to his father's lectures. Admit you were wrong. Cooperate
  with the police. Get your life together. Own up to it all. Grow up. Be
  responsible. Stop being so useless. Stop being so stupid.

  The lectures were a bit rich, Anthrax thought, considering that his
  father had benefited from Anthrax's hacking skills. When he discovered
  Anthrax had got into a huge news clipping database, he asked the boy
  to pull up every article containing the word `prison'. Then he had him
  search for articles on discipline. The searches should have cost a
  fortune, probably thousands of dollars. But his father didn't pay a
  cent, thanks to Anthrax. And he didn't spend much time lecturing
  Anthrax on the evils of hacking then.

  When they arrived at AFP headquarters, Anthrax made a point of putting
  his feet up on the leather couch in the reception area and opened a
  can of Coke he had brought along. His father got upset.

  `Get your feet off that seat. You shouldn't have brought that can of
  Coke. It doesn't look very professional.'

  `Hey, I'm not going for a job interview here,' Anthrax responded.

  Constable Andrew Sexton, a redhead sporting two earrings, came up to
  Anthrax and his father and took them upstairs for coffee. Detective
  Sergeant Ken Day, head of the Computer Crime Unit, was in a meeting,
  Sexton said, so the interview would be delayed a little.

  Anthrax's father and Sexton found they shared some interests in law
  enforcement. They discussed the problems associated with
  rehabilitation and prisoner discipline. Joked with each other.
  Laughed. Talked about `young Anthrax'. Young Anthrax did this. Young
  Anthrax did that.

  Young Anthrax felt sick. Watching his own father cosying up to the
  enemy, talking as if he wasn't even there.

  When Sexton went to check on whether Day had finished his meeting,
  Anthrax's father growled, `Wipe that look of contempt off your face,
  young man. You are going to get nowhere in this world if you show that
  kind of attitude, they are going to come down on you like a ton of
  bricks.'

  Anthrax didn't know what to say. Why should he treat these people with
  any respect after the way they threatened his mother?

  The interview room was small but very full. A dozen or more boxes, all
  filled with labelled print-outs.

  Sexton began the interview. `Taped record of interview conducted at
  Australian Federal Police Headquarters, 383 Latrobe Street Melbourne
  on 29 November 1994.' He reeled off the names of the people present
  and asked each to introduce himself for voice recognition.

  `As I have already stated, Detective Sergeant Day and I are making
  enquiries into your alleged involvement into the manipulation of
  private automated branch exchanges [PABXes] via Telecom 008 numbers in
  order to obtain free phone calls nationally and internationally. Do
  you clearly understand this allegation?'

  `Yes.'

  Sexton continued with the necessary, and important, preliminaries. Did
  Anthrax understand that he was not obliged to answer any questions?
  That he had the right to communicate with a lawyer? That he had
  attended the interview of his own free will? That he was free to leave
  at any time?

  Yes, Anthrax said in answer to each question.

  Sexton then ploughed through a few more standard procedures before he
  finally got to the meat of the issue--telephones. He fished around in
  one of the many boxes and pulled out a mobile phone. Anthrax confirmed
  that it was his phone.

  `Was that the phone that you used to call the 008 numbers and
  subsequent connections?' Sexton asked.

  `Yes.'

  `Contained in that phone is a number of pre-set numbers. Do you
  agree?'

  `Yes.'

  `I went to the trouble of extracting those records from it.' Sexton
  looked pleased with himself for hacking Anthrax's speed-dial numbers
  from the mobile. `Number 22 is of some interest to myself. It comes up
  as Aaron. Could that be the person you referred to before as Aaron in
  South Australia?'

  `Yes, but he is always moving house. He is a hard person to track
  down.'

  Sexton went through a few more numbers, most of which Anthrax hedged.
  He asked Anthrax questions about his manipulation of the phone system,
  particularly about the way he made free calls overseas using
  Australian companies' 008 numbers.

  When Anthrax had patiently explained how it all worked, Sexton went
  through some more speed-dial numbers.

  `Number 43. Do you recognise that one?'

  `That's the Swedish Party Line.'

  `What about these other numbers? Such as 78? And 30?'

  `I'm not sure. I couldn't say what any of these are. It's been so
  long,' Anthrax paused, sensing the pressure from the other side of the
  table. `These ones here, they are numbers in my town. But I don't know
  who. Very often, 'cause I don't have any pen and paper with me, I just
  plug a number into the phone.'

  Sexton looked unhappy. He decided to go in a little harder. `I'm going
  to be pretty blunt. So far you have admitted to the 008s but I think
  you are understating your knowledge and your experience when it comes
  to these sort of offences.' He caught himself. `Not offences. But your
  involvement in all of this ... I think you have got a little bit more
  ... I'm not saying you are lying, don't get me wrong, but you tend to
  be pulling yourself away from how far you were really into this. And
  how far everyone looked up to you.'

  There was the gauntlet, thrown down on the table. Anthrax picked it
  up.

  `They looked up to me? That was just a perception. To be honest, I
  don't know that much. I couldn't tell you anything about telephone
  exchanges or anything like that. In the past, I guess the reason they
  might look up to me in the sense of a leader is because I was doing
  this, as you are probably aware, quite a bit in the past, and
  subsequently built up a reputation. Since then I decided I wouldn't do
  it again.'

  `Since this?' Sexton was quick off the mark.

  `No. Before. I just said, "I don't want anything to do with this any
  more. It's just stupid". When I broke up with my girlfriend ... I just
  got dragged into it again. I'm not trying to say that I am any less
  responsible for any of this but I will say I didn't originate any of
  these 008s. They were all scanned by other people. But I made calls
  and admittedly I did a lot of stupid things.'

  But Sexton was like a dog with a bone.

  `I just felt that you were tending to ... I don't know if it's because
  your dad's here or ... I have read stuff that "Anthrax was a legend
  when it came to this, and he was a scanner, and he was the man to talk
  to about X.25, Tymnet, hacking, Unix. The whole kit and kaboodle".'

  Anthrax didn't take the bait. Cops always try that line. Play on a
  hacker's ego, get them to brag. It was so transparent.

  `It's not true,' he answered. `I know nothing about ... I can't
  program. I have an Amiga with one meg of memory. I have no formal
  background in computers whatsoever.'

  That part was definitely true. Everything was self-taught. Well,
  almost everything. He did take one programming class at uni, but he
  failed it. He went to the library to do extra research, used in his
  final project for the course. Most of his classmates wrote simple
  200-line programs with few functions; his ran to 500 lines and had
  lots of special functions. But the lecturer flunked him. She told him,
  `The functions in your program were not taught in this course'.

  Sexton asked Anthrax if he was into carding, which he denied
  emphatically. Then Sexton headed back into scanning. How much had
  Anthrax done? Had he given scanned numbers to other hackers? Anthrax
  was evasive, and both cops were getting impatient.

  `What I am trying to get at is that I believe that, through your
  scanning, you are helping other people break the law by promoting this
  sort of thing.' Sexton had shown his hand.

  `No more than a telephone directory would be assisting someone,
  because it's really just a list. I didn't actually break anything. I
  just looked at it.'

  `These voice mailbox systems obviously belong to people. What would
  you do when you found a VMB?'

  `Just play with it. Give it to someone and say, "Have a look at this.
  It is interesting," or whatever.'

  `When you say play with it you would break the code out to the VMB?'

  `No. Just have a look around. I'm not very good at breaking VMBs.'

  Sexton tried a different tack. `What are 1-900 numbers? On the back of
  that document there is a 1-900 number. What are they generally for?'

  Easy question. `In America they like cost $10 a minute. You can ring
  them up, I think, and get all sorts of information, party lines, etc.'

  `It's a conference type of call?'

  `Yes.'

  `Here is another document, contained in a clear plastic sleeve
  labelled AS/AB/S/1. Is this a scan? Do you recognise your
  handwriting?'

  `Yes, it's in my handwriting. Once again it's the same sort of scan.
  It's just dialling some commercial numbers and noting them.'

  `And once you found something, what would you do with it?'

  Anthrax had no intention of being painted as some sort of ringleader
  of a scanning gang. He was a sociable loner, not a part of a team.

  `I'd just look at it, like in the case of this one here--630. I just
  punched in a few numbers and it said that 113 diverts somewhere, 115
  says goodbye, etc. I'd just do that and I probably never came back to
  it again.'

  `And you believe that if I pick up the telephone book, I would get all
  this information?'

  `No. It's just a list of numbers in the same sense that a telephone
  book is.'

  `What about a 1-800 number?'

  `That is the same as a 0014.'

  `If you rang a 1-800 number, where would you go?'

  Anthrax wondered if the Computer Crimes Unit gained most of its
  technical knowledge from interviews with hackers.

  `You can either do 0014 or you can do 1-800. It's just the same.'

  `Is it Canada--0014?'

  `It's everywhere.' Oops. Don't sound too cocky. `Isn't it?'

  `No, I'm not familiar.' Which is just what Anthrax was thinking.

  Sexton moved on. `On the back of that document there is more type
  scans ...'

  `It's all just the same thing. Just take a note of what is there. In
  this case, box 544 belongs to this woman ...'

  `So, once again, you just release this type of information on the
  bridge?'

  `Not all of it. Most of it I would probably keep to myself and never
  look at it again. I was bored. Is it illegal to scan?'

  `I'm not saying it's illegal. I'm just trying to show that you were
  really into this. I'm building a picture and I am gradually getting to
  a point and I'm going to build a picture to show that for a while
  there ...' Sexton then interrupted himself and veered down a less
  confrontational course. `I'm not saying you are doing it now, but back
  then, when all these offences occurred, you were really into scanning
  telephone systems, be it voice mailboxes ... I'm not saying you found
  the 008s but you ... anything to bugger up Telecom. You were really
  getting into it and you were helping other people.'

  Anthrax took offence. `The motivation for me doing it wasn't to bugger
  up Telecom.'

  Sexton backpedalled. `Perhaps ... probably a poor choice of words.'

  He began pressing forward on the subject of hacking, something the
  police had not said they were going to be discussing. Anthrax felt a
  little unnerved, even rattled.

  Day asked if Anthrax wanted a break.

  `No,' he answered. `I just want to get it over and done with, if
  that's OK. I'm not going to lie. I'm not going to say "no comment".
  I'm going to admit to everything 'cause, based on what I have been
  told, it's in my best interest to do so.'

  The police paused. They didn't seem to like that last comment much.
  Day tried to clear things up.

  `Before we go any further, based on what you have been told, it is in
  your best interests to tell the truth. Was it any member of the AFP
  that told you this?'

  `Yes.'

  `Who?' Day threw the question out quickly.

  Anthrax couldn't remember their names. `The ones who came to my house.
  I think Andrew also said it to me,' he said, nodding in the direction
  of the red-headed constable.

  Why were the cops getting so uncomfortable all of a sudden? It was no
  secret that they had told both Anthrax and his mother repeatedly that
  it was in his best interest to agree to an interview.

  Day leaned forward, peered at Anthrax and asked, `What did you
  interpret that to mean?'

  `That if I don't tell the truth, if I say "no comment" and don't
  cooperate, that it is going to be ... it will mean that you will go
  after me with ...' Anthrax grasped for the right words, but he felt
  tongue-tied, `with ... more force, I guess.'

  Both officers stiffened visibly.

  Day came back again. `Do you feel that an unfair inducement has been
  placed on you as a result of that?'

  `In what sense?' The question was genuine.

  `You have made the comment and it has now been recorded and I have to
  clear it up. Do you feel like, that a deal has been offered to you at
  any stage?'

  A deal? Anthrax thought about it. It wasn't a deal as in `Talk to us
  now and we will make sure you don't go to jail'. Or `Talk now and we
  won't beat you with a rubber hose'.

  `No,' he answered.

  `Do you feel that as a result of that being said that you have been
  pressured to come forward today and tell the truth?'

  Ah, that sort of deal. Well, of course.

  `Yes, I have been pressured,' Anthrax answered. The two police
  officers looked stunned. Anthrax paused, concerned about the growing
  feeling of disapproval in the room. `Indirectly,' he added quickly,
  almost apologetically.

  For a brief moment, Anthrax just didn't care. About the police. About
  his father. About the pressure. He would tell the truth. He decided to
  explain the situation as he saw it.

  `Because since they came to my house, they emphasised the fact that if
  I didn't come for an interview, that they would then charge my mother
  and, as my mother is very sick, I am not prepared to put her through
  that.'

  The police looked at each other. The shock waves reverberated around
  the room. The AFP clearly hadn't bargained on this coming out in the
  interview tape. But what he said about his mother being threatened was
  the truth, so let it be on the record with everything else.

  Ken Day caught his breath, `So you are saying that you
  have now been ...' he cut himself off ... `that you are not here
  voluntarily?'

  Anthrax thought about it. What did `voluntarily' mean? The police
  didn't cuff him to a chair and tell him he couldn't leave until he
  talked. They didn't beat him around the head with a baton. They
  offered him a choice: talk or inflict the police on his ailing mother.
  Not a palatable choice, but a choice nonetheless. He chose to talk to
  protect his mother.

  `I am here voluntarily,' he answered.

  `That is not what you have said. What you have just said is
  that pressure has been placed on you and that you have had to come in
  here and answer the questions. Otherwise certain actions would take
  place. That does not mean you are here
  voluntarily.'

  The police must have realised they were on very thin ice and Anthrax
  felt pressure growing in the room. The cops pushed. His father did not
  looked pleased.

  `I was going to come anyway,' Anthrax answered, again almost
  apologetically. Walk the tightrope, he thought. Don't get them too mad
  or they will charge my mother. `You can talk to the people who carried
  out the warrant. All along, I said to them I would come in for an
  interview. Whatever my motivations are, I don't think should matter. I
  am going to tell you the truth.'

  `It does matter,' Day responded, `because at the beginning of the
  interview it was stated--do you agree--that you have come in here
  voluntarily?'

  `I have. No-one has forced me.'

  Anthrax felt exasperated. The room was getting stuffy. He wanted to
  finish this thing and get out of there. So much pressure.

  `And is anyone forcing you to make the answers you have given here
  today?' Day tried again.

  `No individuals are forcing me, no.' There. You have what you want.
  Now get on with it and let's get out of here.

  `You have to tell the truth. Is that what you are saying?' The police
  would not leave the issue be.

  `I want to tell the truth. As well.' The key words there were `as
  well'. Anthrax thought, I want to and I have to.

  `It's the circumstances that are forcing this upon you, not an
  individual?'

  `No.' Of course it was the circumstances. Never mind that the police
  created the circumstance.

  Anthrax felt as if the police were just toying with him. He knew and
  they knew they would go after his mother if this interview wasn't to
  their liking. Visions of his frail mother being hauled out of her
  house by the AFP flashed through his mind. Anthrax felt sweaty and
  hot. Just get on with it. Whatever makes them happy, just agree to it
  in order to get out of this crowded room.

  `So, would it be fair to summarise it, really, to say that perhaps ...
  of your activity before the police arrived at your premises, that is
  what is forcing you?'

  What was this cop talking about? His `activity' forcing him? Anthrax
  felt confused. The interview had already gone on some time. The cops
  had such obscure ways of asking things. The room was oppressively
  small.

  Day pressed on with the question, `The fact that you could see you had
  broken the law, and that is what is forcing you to come forward here
  today and tell the truth?'

  Yeah. Whatever you want. `OK,' Anthrax started to answer, `That is a
  fair assump--'

  Day cut him off. `I just wanted to clarify that because the
  interpretation I immediately got from that was that we, or members of
  the AFP, had unfairly and unjustly forced you to come in here today,
  and that is not the case?'

  Define `unfairly'. Define `unjustly'. Anthrax thought it was unfair
  the cops might charge his mother. But they told her it was perfectly
  legal to do so. Anthrax felt light-headed. All these thoughts whirring
  around inside his head.

  `No, that is not the case. I'm sorry for ...' Be humble. Get out of
  that room faster.

  `No, that is OK. If that is what you believe, say it. I have no
  problems with that. I just like to have it clarified. Remember, other
  people might listen to this tape and they will draw inferences and
  opinions from it. At any point where I think there is an ambiguity, I
  will ask for clarification. Do you understand that?'

  `Yes. I understand.' Anthrax couldn't really focus on what Day was
  saying. He was feeling very distressed and just wanted to finish the
  interview.

  The cops finally moved on, but the new topic was almost as unpleasant.
  Day began probing about Anthrax's earlier hacking career--the one he
  had no intention of talking about. Anthrax began to feel a bit better.
  He agreed to talk to the police about recent phreaking activities, not
  hacking matters. Indeed, he had repeatedly told them that topic was
  not on his agenda. He felt like he was standing on firmer ground.

  After being politely stonewalled, Day circled around and tried again.
  `OK. I will give you another allegation; that you have unlawfully
  accessed computer systems in Australia and the United States. In the
  US, you specifically targeted military computer systems. Do you
  understand that allegation?'

  `I understand that. I wouldn't like to comment on it.' No, sir. No
  way.

  Day tried a new tack. `I will further allege that you did work with a
  person known as Mendax.'

  What on earth was Day talking about? Anthrax had heard of Mendax, but
  they had never worked together. He thought the cops must not have very
  good informants.

  `No. That is not true. I know no-one of that name.' Not strictly true,
  but true enough.

  `Well, if he was to turn around to me and say that you were doing all
  this hacking, he would be lying, would he?'

  Oh wonderful. Some other hacker was crapping on to the cops with lies
  about how he and Anthrax had worked together. That was exactly why
  Anthrax didn't work in a group. He had plenty of real allegations to
  fend off. He didn't need imaginary ones too.

  `Most certainly would. Unless he goes by some other name, I know
  no-one by that name, Mendax.' Kill that off quick.

  In fact Mendax had not ratted on Anthrax at all. That was just a
  technique the police used.

  `You don't wish to comment on the fact that you have hacked into other
  computer systems and military systems?' If there
  was one thing Anthrax could say for Day, it was that he was
  persistent.

  `No. I would prefer not to comment on any of that. This is the advice
  I have received: not to comment on anything unrelated to the topic
  that I was told I would be talking about when I came down here.'

  `All right, well are you going to answer any questions in relation to
  unlawfully accessing any computer systems?'

  `Based upon the legal advice that I received, I choose not to.'

  Day pursed his lips. `All right. If that is your attitude and you
  don't wish to answer any of those questions, we won't pursue the
  matter. However, I will inform you now that the matter may be reported
  and you may receive a summons to answer the questions or face charges
  in relation to those allegations, and, at any time that you so choose,
  you can come forward and tell us the truth.'

  Woah. Anthrax took a deep breath. Could the cops make him come answer
  questions with a summons? They were changing the game midway through.
  Anthrax felt as though the carpet had been pulled out from beneath his
  feet. He needed a few minutes to clear his head.

  `Is it something I can think over and discuss?' Anthrax asked.

  `Yes. Do you want to have a pause and a talk with your father? The
  constable and I can step out of the room, or offer you another room.
  You may wish to have a break and think about it if you like. I think
  it might be a good idea. I think we might have a ten-minute break and
  put you in another room and let you two have a chat about it. There is
  no pressure.'

  Day and the Sexton stopped the interview and guided father and son
  into another room. Once they were alone, Anthrax looked to his father
  for support. This voice inside him still cried out to keep away from
  his earlier hacking journeys. He needed someone to tell him the same
  thing.

  His father was definitely not that someone. He railed against Anthrax
  with considerable vehemence. Stop holding back. You have to tell
  everything. How could you be so stupid? You can't fool the police.
  They know. Confess it all before it's too late. At the end of the
  ten-minute tirade, Anthrax felt worse than he had at the beginning.

  When the two returned to the interview room, Anthrax's father turned
  to the police and said suddenly, `He has decided to confess'.

  That was not true. Anthrax hadn't decided anything of the sort. His
  father was full of surprises. It seemed every time he opened his
  mouth, an ugly surprise came out.

  Ken Day and Andrew Sexton warmed up a shaky Anthrax by showing him
  various documents, pieces of paper with Anthrax's scribbles seized
  during the raid, telephone taps. At one stage, Day pointed to some
  handwritten notes which read `KDAY'. He looked at Anthrax.

  `What's that? That's me.'

  Anthrax smiled for the first time in a long while. It was something to
  be happy about. The head of the AFP's Computer Crime Unit in Melbourne
  sat there, so sure he was onto something big. There was his name, bold
  as day, in the hacker's handwriting on a bit of paper seized in a
  raid. Day seemed to be expecting something good.

  Anthrax said, `If you ring that up you will find it is a radio
  station.' An American radio station. Written on the same bit of paper
  were the names of an American clothing store, another US-based radio
  station, and a few records he wanted to order.

  `There you go,' Day laughed at his own hasty conclusions. `I've got a
  radio station named after me.'

  Day asked Anthrax why he wrote down all sorts of things, directory
  paths, codes, error messages.

  `Just part of the record-keeping. I think I wrote this down when I had
  first been given this dial-up and I was just feeling my way around,
  taking notes of what different things did.'

  `What were your intentions at the time with these computer networks?'

  `At this stage, I was just having a look, just a matter of curiosity.'

  `Was it a matter of curiosity--"Gee, this is interesting" or was it
  more like "I would like to get into them" at this stage?'

  `I couldn't say what was going through my mind at the time. But
  initially once I got into the first system--I'm sure you have heard
  this a lot--but once you get into the first system, it's like you get
  into the next one and the next one and the next one, after a while it
  doesn't ...' Anthrax couldn't find the right words to finish the
  explanation.

  `Once you have tasted the forbidden fruit?'

  `Exactly. It's a good analogy.'

  Day pressed on with questions about Anthrax's hacking. He successfully
  elicited admissions from the hacker. Anthrax gave Day more than the
  police officer had before, but probably not as much as he would have
  liked.

  It was, however, enough. Enough to keep the police from charging
  Anthrax's mother. And enough for them to charge him.

                                   [ ]

  Anthrax didn't see his final list of charges until the day he appeared
  in court on 28 August 1995. The whole case seemed to be a bit
  disorganised. His Legal Aid lawyer had little knowledge of computers,
  let alone computer crime. He told Anthrax he could ask for an
  adjournment because he hadn't seen the final charges until so late,
  but Anthrax wanted to get the thing over and done with. They had
  agreed that Anthrax would plead guilty to the charges and hope for a
  reasonable magistrate.

  Anthrax looked through the hand-up brief provided by the prosecution,
  which included a heavily edited transcript of his interview with the
  police. It was labelled as a `summary', but it certainly didn't
  summarise everything important in that interview. Either the
  prosecution or the police had cut out all references to the fact that
  the police had threatened to charge Anthrax's mother if he didn't
  agree to be interviewed.

  Anthrax pondered the matter. Wasn't everything relevant to his case
  supposed to be covered in a hand-up brief? This seemed very relevant
  to his case, yet there wasn't a mention of it anywhere in the
  document. He began to wonder if the police had edited down the
  transcript just so they could cut out that portion of the interview.
  Perhaps the judge wouldn't be too happy about it. He thought that
  maybe the police didn't want to be held accountable for how they had
  dealt with his mother.

  The rest of the hand-up brief wasn't much better. The only statement
  by an actual `witness' to Anthrax's hacking was from his former
  room-mate, who claimed that he had watched Anthrax break into a NASA
  computer and access an `area of the computer system which showed the
  latitude/longitude of ships'.

  Did space ships even have longitudes and latitudes? Anthrax didn't
  know. And he had certainly never broken into a NASA computer in front
  of the room-mate. It was absurd. This guy is lying, Anthrax thought,
  and five minutes under cross-examination by a reasonable lawyer would
  illustrate as much. Anthrax's instincts told him the prosecution had a
  flimsy case for some of the charges, but he felt overwhelmed by
  pressure from all sides--his family, the bustle in the courtroom, even
  the officiousness of his own lawyer quickly rustling through his
  papers.

  Anthrax looked around the room. His eyes fell on his father, who sat
  waiting on the public benches. Anthrax's lawyer wanted him there to
  give evidence during sentencing. He thought it would look good to show
  there was a family presence. Anthrax gave the suggestion a cool
  reception. But he didn't understand how courts worked, so he followed
  his lawyer's advice.

  Anthrax's mother was back at his apartment, waiting for news. She had
  been on night duty and was supposed to be sleeping. That was the
  ostensible reason she didn't attend. Anthrax thought perhaps that the
  tension was too much for her. Whatever the reason, she didn't sleep
  all that day. She tidied the place, washed the dishes, did the
  laundry, and kept herself as busy as the tiny apartment would allow
  her.

  Anthrax's girlfriend, a pretty, moon-faced Turkish girl, also came to
  court. She had never been into the hacking scene. A group of school
  children, mostly girls, chatted in the rows behind her.

  Anthrax read through the four-page summary of facts provided by the
  prosecution. When he reached the final page, his heart stopped. The
  final paragraph said:

  31. Penalty

  s85ZF (a)--12 months, $6000 or both

  s76E(a)--2 years, $12000 or both

  Pointing to the last paragraph, Anthrax asked his lawyer what that was
  all about. His lawyer told him that he would probably get prison but,
  well, it wouldn't be that bad and he would just have `to take it on
  the chin'. He would, after all, be out in a year or two.

  Rapists sometimes got off with less than that. Anthrax couldn't
  believe the prosecution was asking for prison. After he cooperated,
  suffering through that miserable interview. He had no prior
  convictions. But the snowball had been set in motion. The magistrate
  appeared and opened the court.

  Anthrax felt he couldn't back out now and he pleaded guilty to 21
  counts, including one charge of inserting data and twenty charges of
  defrauding or attempting to defraud a carrier.

  His lawyer put the case for a lenient sentence. He called Anthrax's
  father up on the stand and asked him questions about his son. His
  father probably did more harm than good. When asked if he thought his
  son would offend again, his father replied, `I don't know'.

  Anthrax was livid. It was further unconscionable behaviour. Not long
  before the trial, Anthrax had discovered that his father had planned
  to sneak out of the country two days before the court case. He was
  going overseas, he told his wife, but not until after the court case.
  It was only by chance that she discovered his surreptitious plans to
  leave early. Presumably he would find his son's trial humiliating.
  Anthrax's mother insisted he stayed and he begrudgingly delayed the
  trip.

  His father sat down, a bit away from Anthrax and his lawyer. The
  lawyer provided a colourful alternative to the prosecutor. He perched
  one leg up on his bench, rested an elbow on the knee and stroked his
  long, red beard. It was an impressive beard, more than a foot long and
  thick with reddish brown curls. Somehow it fitted with his two-tone
  chocolate brown suit and his tie, a breathtakingly wide creation with
  wild patterns in gold. The suit was one size too small. He launched
  into the usual courtroom flourish--lots of words saying nothing. Then
  he got to the punch line.

  `Your worship, this young man has been in all sorts of places. NASA,
  military sites, you wouldn't believe some of the places he has been.'

  `I don't think I want to know where he has been,' the magistrate
  answered wryly.

  The strategy was Anthrax's. He thought he could turn a
  liability into an asset by showing that he had been in many
  systems--many sensitive systems--but had done no malicious damage in
  any of them.

  The strategy worked and the magistrate announced there was no way he
  was sending the young hacker to jail.

  The prosecutor looked genuinely disappointed and launched a counter
  proposal--1500 hours of community service. Anthrax caught his breath.
  That was absurd. It would take almost nine months, full time. Painting
  buildings, cleaning toilets. Forget about his university studies. It was
  almost as bad as prison.

  Anthrax's lawyer protested. `Your Worship, that penalty is something
  out of cyberspace.' Anthrax winced at how corny that sounded, but the
  lawyer looked very pleased with himself.

  The magistrate refused to have a bar of the prosecutor's counter
  proposal. Anthrax's girlfriend was impressed with the magistrate. She
  didn't know much about the law or the court system, but he seemed a
  fair man, a just man. He didn't appear to want to give a harsh
  punishment to Anthrax at all. But he told the court he had to send a
  message to Anthrax, to the class of school children in the public
  benches and to the general community that hacking was wrong in the
  eyes of the law. Anthrax glanced back at the students. They looked
  like they were aged thirteen or fourteen, about the age he got into
  hacking and phreaking.

  The magistrate announced his sentence. Two hundred hours of community
  service and $6116.90 of restitution to be paid to two telephone
  companies--Telecom and Teleglobe in Canada. It wasn't prison, but it was
  a staggering amount of money for a student to rake up. He had a year to
  pay it off, and it would definitely take that long. At least he was
  free.

  Anthrax's girlfriend thought how unlucky it was to have landed those
  giggling school children in the courtroom on that day. They laughed
  and pointed and half-whispered. Court was a game. They didn't seem to
  take the magistrate's warning seriously. Perhaps they were gossiping
  about the next party. Perhaps they were chatting about a new pair of
  sneakers or a new CD.

  And maybe one or two murmured quietly how cool it would be to break
  into NASA.


    _________________________________________________________________

                                AFTERWORD
    _________________________________________________________________


  It was billed as the `largest annual gathering of those in, related
  to, or wishing to know more about the computer underground', so I
  thought I had better go.

  HoHoCon in Austin, Texas, was without a doubt one of the strangest
  conferences I have attended. During the weekend leading up to New Year's
  Day 1995, the Ramada Inn South was overrun by hackers, phreakers,
  ex-hackers, underground sympathisers, journalists, computer company
  employees and American law enforcement agents. Some people had come from
  as far away as Germany and Canada.

  The hackers and phreakers slept four or six to a room--if they slept
  at all. The feds slept two to a room. I could be wrong; maybe they
  weren't feds at all. But they seemed far too well dressed and well
  pressed to be anything else. No one else at HoHoCon ironed their
  T-shirts.

  I left the main conference hall and wandered into Room 518--the
  computer room--sat down on one of the two hotel beds which had been
  shoved into a corner to make room for all the computer gear, and
  watched. The conference organisers had moved enough equipment in there
  to open a store, and then connected it all to the Internet. For nearly
  three days, the room was almost continuously full. Boys in their late
  teens or early twenties lounged on the floor talking, playing with
  their cell phones and scanners or tapping away at one of the six or
  seven terminals. Empty bags of chips, Coke cans and pizza boxes
  littered the room. The place felt like one giant college dorm floor
  party, except that the people didn't talk to each other so much as to
  their computers.

  These weren't the only interesting people at the con. I met up with an
  older group of nonconformists in the computer industry, a sort of
  Austin intelligentsia. By older, I mean above the age of 26. They were
  interested in many of the same issues as the young group of
  hackers--privacy, encryption, the future of a digital world--and they
  all had technical backgrounds.

  This loose group of blue-jean clad thinkers, people like Doug Barnes,
  Jeremy Porter and Jim McCoy, like to meet over enchiladas and
  margueritas at university-style cafes. They always seemed to have
  three or four projects on the run. Digital cash was the flavour of the
  month when I met them. They were unconventional, perhaps even a little
  weird, but they were also bright, very creative and highly innovative.
  They were just the sort of people who might marry creative ideas with
  maturity and business sense, eventually making widespread digital cash
  a reality.

  I began to wonder how many of the young men in Room 518 might follow
  the same path. And I asked myself: where are these people in
  Australia?

  Largely invisible or perhaps even non-existent, it seems. Except maybe
  in the computer underground. The underground appears to be one of the
  few places in Australia where madness, creativity, obsession,
  addiction and rebellion collide like atoms in a cyclotron.

                                   [ ]

  After the raids, the arrests and the court cases on three continents,
  what became of the hackers described in this book?

  Most of them went on to do interesting and constructive things with
  their lives. Those who were interviewed for this work say they have
  given up hacking for good. After what many of them had been through, I
  would be surprised if any of them continued hacking.

  Most of them, however, are not sorry for their hacking activities.
  Some are sorry they upset people. They feel badly that they caused
  system admins stress and unhappiness by hacking their systems. But
  most do not feel hacking is wrong--and few, if any, feel that
  `look-see hacking', as prosecuting barrister Geoff Chettle termed
  non-malicious hacking, should be a crime.

  For the most part, their punishments have only hardened their views on
  the subject. They know that in many cases the authorities have sought
  to make examples of them, for the benefit of rest of the computer
  underground. The state has largely failed in this objective. In the
  eyes of many in the computer underground, these prosecuted hackers are
  heroes.

  PAR

  When I met Par in Tucson, Arizona, he had travelled from a tiny,
  snow-laden Mid-Western town where he was living with his grandparents.
  He was looking for work, but hadn't been able to find anything.

  As I drove around the outskirts of Tucson, a little jetlagged and
  disoriented, I was often distracted from the road by the beauty of the
  winter sun on the Sonoran desert cacti. Sitting in the front passenger
  seat, Par said calmly, `I always wondered what it would be like to
  drive on the wrong side of the road'.

  I swerved back to the right side of the road.

  Par is still like that. Easy-going, rolling with the punches, taking
  what life hands him. He is also on the road again.

  He moved back to the west coast for a while, but will likely pack up
  and go somewhere else before long. He picks up temporary work where he
  can, often just basic, dull data-entry stuff. It isn't easy. He can't
  just explain away a four-year gap in his resum� with `Successfully
  completed a telecommuting course for fugitives. Trained by the US
  Secret Service'. He thought he might like to work at a local college
  computer lab, helping out the students and generally keeping the
  equipment running. Without any professional qualifications, that
  seemed an unlikely option these days.

  Although he is no longer a fugitive, Par's life hasn't changed that
  much. He speaks to his mother very occasionally, though they don't
  have much in common. Escaping his computer crimes charges proved
  easier than overcoming the effects of being a fugitive for so long on
  his personality and lifestyle. Now and again, the paranoia sets in
  again. It seems to come in waves. There aren't many support mechanisms
  in the US for an unemployed young man who doesn't have health
  insurance.

  PRIME SUSPECT

  Prime Suspect has no regrets about his choices. He believed that he
  and Mendax were headed in different directions in life. The friendship
  would have ended anyway, so he decided that he was not willing to go
  to prison for Mendax.

  He completed a TAFE course in computer programming and found a job in
  the burgeoning Internet industry. He likes his job. His employer, who
  knows about his hacking convictions, recently gave him a pay rise. In
  mid-1994, he gave up drugs for good. In 1995 he moved into a shared
  house with some friends, and in August 1996 he stopped smoking
  cigarettes.

  Without hacking, there seems to be time in his life to do new things.
  He took up sky-diving. A single jump gives him a high which lasts for
  days, sometimes up to a week. Girls have captured his interest. He's
  had a few girlfriends and thinks he would like to settle into a
  serious relationship when he finds the right person.

  Recently, Prime Suspect has been studying martial arts. He tries to
  attend at least four classes a week, sometimes more, and says he has a
  special interest in the spiritual and philosophical sides of martial
  arts. Most days, he rises at 5 a.m., either to jog or to meditate.

  MENDAX

  In 1992 Mendax and Trax teamed up with a wealthy Italian real-estate
  investor, purchased La Trobe University's mainframe computer
  (ironically, a machine they had been accused of hacking) and started a
  computer security company. The company eventually dissolved when the
  investor disappeared following actions by his creditors.

  After a public confrontation in 1993 with Victorian Premier Jeff
  Kennett, Mendax and two others formed a civil rights organisation to
  fight corruption and lack of accountability in a Victorian government
  department. As part of this ongoing effort, Mendax acted as a conduit
  for leaked documents and became involved in a number of court cases
  against the department during 1993-94. Eventually, he gave evidence in
  camera to a state parliamentary committee examining the issues, and
  his organisation later facilitated the appearance of more than 40
  witnesses at an investigation by the Auditor-General.

  Mendax volunteers his time and computer expertise for several other
  non-profit community organisations. He believes strongly in the
  importance of the non-profit sector, and spends much of his free time
  as an activist on different community projects. Mendax has provided
  information or assistance to law-enforcement bodies, but not against
  hackers. He said, `I couldn't ethically justify that. But as for
  others, such as people who prey on children or corporate spies, I am
  not concerned about using my skills there.'

  Still passionate about coding, Mendax donates his time to various
  international programming efforts and releases some of his programs
  for free on the Internet. His philosophy is that most of the lasting
  social advances in the history of man have been a direct result of new
  technology.

  NorTel and a number of other organisations he was accused of hacking
  use his cryptography software--a fact he finds rather ironic.

  ANTHRAX

  Anthrax moved to Melbourne, where he is completing a university course
  and working on freelance assignments in the computer networking area
  of a major corporation.

  His father and mother are divorcing. Anthrax doesn't talk to his
  father at all these days.

  Anthrax's mother's health has stabilised somewhat since the completion
  of the court case, though her condition still gives her chronic pain.
  Despite some skin discolouration caused by the disease, she looks
  well. As a result of her years of work in the local community, she has
  a loyal group of friends who support her through bad bouts of the
  illness. She tries to live without bitterness and continues to have a
  good relationship with both her sons.

  Anthrax is no longer involved in the Nation of Islam, but he is still
  a devout Muslim. An acquaintance of his, an Albanian who ran a local
  fish and chips shop, introduced him to a different kind of Islam. Not
  long after, Anthrax became a Sunni Muslim. He doesn't drink alcohol or
  gamble, and he attends a local mosque for Friday evening prayers. He
  tries to read from the Qu'raan every day and to practise the tenets of
  his religion faithfully.

  With his computer and business skills now sought after by industry, he
  is exploring the possibility of moving to a Muslim country in Asia or
  the Middle East. He tries to promote the interests of Islam worldwide.

  Most of his pranking needs are now met by commercial CDs--recordings
  of other people's pranking sold through underground magazines and
  American mail order catalogues. Once in a long while, he still rings
  Mr McKenny in search of the missing shovel.

  Anthrax felt aggrieved at the outcome of his written complaint to the
  Office of the Ombudsman. In the complaint, Anthrax gave an account of
  how he believed the AFP had behaved inappropriately throughout his
  case. Specifically, he alleged that the AFP had pressured his mother
  with threats and had harassed him, taken photographs of him without
  his permission, given information to his university about his case
  prior to the issue of a summons and the resolution of his case, and
  made racist comments toward him during the raid.

  In 1995-96, a total of 1157 complaints were filed against the AFP, 683
  of which were investigated by the Commonwealth Ombudsman. Of the
  complaint investigations completed and reviewed, only 6 per cent were
  substantiated. Another 9 per cent were deemed to be `incapable of
  determination', about 34 per cent were `unsubstantiated', and in more
  than a quarter of all cases the Ombudsman either chose not to
  investigate or not to continue to investigate a complaint.

  The Office of the Ombudsman referred Anthrax's matter to the AFP's
  Internal Investigations office. Although Anthrax and his mother both
  gave statements to the investigating officers, there was no other
  proof of Anthrax's allegations. In the end, it came down to Anthrax
  and his mother's words against those of the police.

  The AFP's internal investigation concluded that Anthrax's complaints
  could either not be substantiated or not be determined, in part due to
  the fact that almost two years had passed since the original raid. For
  the most part, the Ombudsman backed the AFP's finding. No
  recommendation was made for the disciplining of any officers.

  Anthrax's only consolation was a concern voiced by the Ombudsman's
  Office. Although the investigating officer agreed with the AFP
  investigators that the complaint could not be substantiated, she
  wrote, `I am concerned that your mother felt she was compelled to
  pressure you into attending an interview based on a fear that she
  would be charged because her phone was used to perpetrate the
  offences'.

  Anthrax remains angry and sceptical about his experience with the
  police. He believes a lot of things need to be changed about the way
  the police operate. Most of all, he believes that justice will never
  be assured in a system where the police are allowed to investigate
  themselves.

  PAD AND GANDALF

  After Pad and Gandalf were released from prison, they started up a
  free security advisory service on the Internet. One reason they began
  releasing 8lgm advisories, as they were known, was to help admins
  secure their own systems. The other reason was to thumb their noses at
  the conservatives in the security industry.

  Many on the Internet considered the 8lgm advisories to be the best
  available at the time--far better than anything CERT had ever
  produced. Pad and Gandalf were sending their own message back to the
  establishment. The message, though never openly stated, was something
  like this: `You busted us. You sent us to prison. But it didn't
  matter. You can't keep information like this secret. Further, we are
  still better than you ever were and, to prove it, we are going to beat
  you at your own game.'

  Believing that the best way to keep a hacker out of your system is to
  secure it properly in the first place, the two British hackers
  rejected security gurus who refused to tell the world about new
  security holes. Their 8lgm advisories began marginalising the
  traditional industry security reports, and helped to push the industry
  toward its current, more open attitude.

  Pad and Gandalf now both work, doing computer programming jobs on
  contract, sometimes for financial institutions. Their clients like
  them and value their work. Both have steady girlfriends.

  Pad doesn't hack any more. The reason isn't the risk of getting caught
  or the threat of prison. He has stopped hacking because he has
  realised what a headache it is for a system administrator to clean up
  his or her computer after an attack. Searching through logs. Looking
  for backdoors the hacker might have left behind. The hours, the
  hassle, the pressure--he thinks it is wrong to put anyone through
  that. Pad understands far better now how much strain a hacker
  intrusion can cause another human being.

  There is another reason Pad has given up hacking: he has simply
  outgrown the desire. He says that he has better things to do with his
  time. Computers are a way for him to earn a living, not a way to spend
  his leisure time. After a trip overseas he decided that real
  travel--not its electronic cousin--was more interesting than hacking.
  He has also learned to play the guitar, something he believes he would
  have done years ago if he hadn't spent so much time hacking.

  Gandalf shares Pad's interest in travelling. One reason they like
  contract work is because it lets them work hard for six months, save
  some money, and then take a few months off. The aim of both ex-hackers
  for now is simply to sling backpacks over their shoulders and bounce
  around the globe.

  Pad still thinks that Britain takes hacking far too seriously and he
  is considering moving overseas permanently. The 8lgm court case made
  him wonder about the people in power in Britain--the politicians, the
  judges, the law enforcement officers. He often thinks: what kind of
  people are running this show?

  STUART GILL

  In 1993, the Victorian Ombudsman1 and the Victoria Police2 both
  investigated the leaking of confidential police information in
  association with Operation Iceberg--a police investigation into
  allegations of corruption against Assistant Commissioner of Police
  Frank Green. Stuart Gill figured prominently in both reports.

  The Victoria Police report concluded that `Gill was able to infiltrate
  the policing environment by skilfully manipulating himself and
  information to the unsuspecting'. The Ombudsman concluded that a
  `large quantity of confidential police information, mainly from the
  ISU database, was given to ... Gill by [Victoria Police officer]
  Cosgriff'.

  The police report stated that Inspector Chris Cosgriff had
  deliberately leaked confidential police information to Gill, and
  reported that he was `besotted with Gill'. Superintendent Tony Warren,
  ex-Deputy Commissioner John Frame and ex-Assistant Commissioner
  Bernice Masterston were also criticised in the report.

  The Ombudsman concluded that Warren and Cosgriff's relationship with
  Gill was `primarily responsible for the release of confidential
  information'. Interestingly, however, the Ombudsman also stated,
  `Whilst Mr Gill may have had his own agenda and taken advantage of his
  relationship with police, [the] police have equally used and in some
  cases misused Mr Gill for their own purposes'.

  The Ombudsman's report further concluded that there was no evidence of
  criminal conduct by Frank Green, and that the `allegations made over
  the years against Mr Green should have been properly and fully
  investigated at the time they were made'.

  PHOENIX

  As his court case played in the media, Phoenix was speeding on his
  motorcycle through an inner-city Melbourne street one rainy night when
  he hit a car. The car's driver leapt from the front seat and found a
  disturbing scene. Phoenix was sprawled across the road. His helmet had
  a huge crack on the side, where his head had hit the car's petrol
  tank, and petrol had spilled over the motorcycle and its rider.

  Miraculously, Phoenix was unhurt, though very dazed. Some bystanders
  helped him and the distraught driver to a nearby halfway house. They
  called an ambulance, and then made the two traumatised young men some
  tea in the kitchen. Phoenix's mother arrived, called by a bystander at
  Phoenix's request. The ambulance workers confirmed that Phoenix had
  not broken any bones but they recommended he go to hospital to check
  for possible concussion.

  Still both badly shaken, Phoenix and the driver exchanged names and
  phone numbers. Phoenix told the driver he did technical work for a
  0055 telephone service, then said, `You might recognise me. I'm
  Phoenix. There's this big computer hacking case going on in
  court--that's my case'.

  The driver looked at him blankly.

  Phoenix said, `You might have seen me on the TV news.'

  No, the driver said, somewhat amazed at the strange things which go
  through the dazed mind of a young man who has so narrowly escaped
  death.

  Some time after Phoenix's close brush with death, the former hacker
  left his info-line technician's job and began working in the
  information technology division of a large Melbourne-based
  corporation. Well paid in his new job, Phoenix is seen, once again, as
  the golden-haired boy. He helped to write a software program which
  reduces waste in one of the production lines and reportedly saved the
  company thousands of dollars. Now he travels abroad regularly, to
  Japan and elsewhere.

  He had a steady girlfriend for a time, but eventually she broke the
  relationship off to see other people. Heartbroken, he avoided dating
  for months. Instead, he filled his time with his ever-increasing
  corporate responsibilities.

  His new interest is music. He plays electric guitar in an amateur
  band.

  ELECTRON

  A few weeks after his sentencing, Electron had another psychotic
  episode, triggered by a dose of speed. He was admitted to hospital
  again, this time at Larundel. After a short stay, he was released and
  underwent further psychiatric care.

  Some months later, he did speed again, and suffered another bout of
  psychosis. He kept reading medical papers on the Internet about his
  condition and his psychiatrists worried that his detailed research
  might interfere with their ability to treat him.

  He moved into special accommodation for people recovering from mental
  instabilities. Slowly, he struggled to overcome his illness. When
  people came up to him and said things like, `What a nice day it is!'
  Electron willed himself to take their words at face value, to accept
  that they really were just commenting on the weather, nothing more.
  During this time, he quit drugs, alcohol and his much-hated accounting
  course. Eventually he was able to come off his psychiatric medicines
  completely. He hasn't taken drugs or had alcohol since December 1994.
  His only chemical vice in 1996 was cigarettes. By the beginning of
  1997 he had also given up tobacco.

  Electron hasn't talked to either Phoenix or Nom since 1992.

  In early 1996, Electron moved into his own flat with his steady
  girlfriend, who studies dance and who also successfully overcame
  mental illness after a long, hard struggle. Electron began another
  university course in a philosophy-related field. This time university
  life agreed with him, and his first semester transcript showed honours
  grades in every class. He is considering moving to Sydney for further
  studies.

  Electron worked off his 300 hours of community service by painting walls
  and doing minor handyman work at a local primary school. Among the small
  projects the school asked him to complete was the construction of a
  retaining wall. He designed and dug, measured and fortified. As he
  finished off the last of his court-ordered community service hours on
  the wall, he discovered that he was rather proud of his creation. Even
  now, once in a while, he drives past the school and looks at the wall.

  It is still standing.

                                   [ ]

  There are still hacking cases in Australia. About the same time as
  Mendax's case was being heard in Victoria, The Crawler pleaded guilty
  to 23 indictable offences and thirteen summary offences--all hacking
  related charges--in Brisbane District Court. On 20 December 1996, the
  21-year-old Queenslander was given a three-year suspended prison
  sentence, ordered to pay $5000 in reparations to various
  organisations, and made to forfeit his modem and two computers. The
  first few waves of hackers may have come and gone, but hacking is far
  from dead. It is merely less visible.

  Law enforcement agencies and the judiciaries of several countries have
  tried to send a message to the next generation of would-be hackers.
  The message is this: Don't hack.

  But the next generation of elite hackers and phreakers have heard a
  very different message, a message which says: Don't get caught.

  The principle of deterrence has not worked with hackers at this level.
  I'm not talking here about the codes-kids--the teeny-bopper, carding,
  wanna-be nappies who hang out on IRC (Internet relay chat). I'm
  talking about the elite hackers. If anything, law enforcement
  crackdowns have not only pushed them further underground, they have
  encouraged hackers to become more sophisticated than ever before in
  the way they protect themselves. Adversity is the mother of invention.

  When police officers march through the front door of a hacker's home
  today, they may be better prepared than their predecessors, but they
  will also be facing bigger hurdles.  Today, top hackers encrypt
  everything sensitive. The data on their hard drives, their live data
  connections, even their voice conversations.

  So, if hackers are still hacking, who are their targets?

  It is a broad field. Any type of network provider--X.25, cellular
  phone or large Internet provider. Computer vendors--the manufacturers
  of software and hardware, routers, gateways, firewalls or phone
  switches. Military institutions, governments and banks seem to be a
  little less fashionable these days, though there are still plenty of
  attacks on these sorts of sites.

  Attacks on security experts are still common, but a new trend is the
  increase in attacks on other hackers' systems. One Australian hacker
  joked, `What are the other hackers going to do? Call the Feds? Tell
  the AFP, "Yes, officer, that's right, some computer criminal broke
  into my machine and stole 20000 passwords and all my exploitation code
  for bypassing firewalls".'

  For the most part, elite hackers seem to work alone, because of the
  well-advertised risks of getting caught. There are still some
  underground hacking communities frequented by top hackers, most notably
  UPT in Canada and a few groups like the l0pht in the US, but such groups
  are far less common, and more fragmented than they used to be.

  These hackers have reached a new level of sophistication, not just in
  the technical nature of their attacks, but in their strategies and
  objectives. Once, top hackers such as Electron and Phoenix were happy
  to get copies of Zardoz, which listed security holes found by industry
  experts. Now top hackers find those holes themselves--by reading line
  by line through the proprietary source code from places like DEC, HP,
  CISCO, Sun and Microsoft.

  Industrial espionage does not seem to be on the agenda, at least with
  anyone I interviewed. I have yet to meet a hacker who has given
  proprietary source code to a vendor's competitor. I have, however, met
  a hacker who found one company's proprietary source code inside the
  computer of its competitor. Was that a legal copy of the source code?
  Who knows? The hacker didn't think so, but he kept his mouth shut
  about it, for obvious reasons.

  Most of the time, these hackers want to keep their original bugs as
  quiet as possible, so vendors won't release patches.

  The second popular target is source code development machines. The top
  hackers have a clear objective in this area: to install their own
  backdoors before the product is released. They call it `backdooring' a
  program or an operating system. The word `backdoor' is now used as
  both a noun and a verb in the underground. Hackers are very nervous
  discussing this subject, in part because they don't want to see a
  computer company's stock dive and people lose their jobs.

  What kind of programs do these hackers want to backdoor? Targets
  mentioned include at least one major Internet browser, a popular game,
  an Internet packet filter and a database product used by law
  enforcement agencies.

  A good backdoor is a very powerful device, creating a covert channel
  through even the most sturdy of firewalls into the heart of an
  otherwise secure network. In a net browser, a backdoor would in theory
  allow a hacker to connect directly into someone's home computer every
  time he or she wandered around the World Wide Web. However, don't
  expect hackers to invade your suburban home just yet. Most elite
  hackers couldn't care less about the average person's home computer.

  Perhaps you are wondering who might be behind this sort of attack.
  What sort of person would do this? There are no easy answers to that
  question. Some hackers are good people, some are bad, just like any
  group of people. The next generation of elite hackers are a diverse
  bunch, and relaying their stories would take another book entirely.
  However, I would like to introduce you to just one, to give you a
  window into the future.

  Meet SKiMo.

  A European living outside Australia, SKiMo has been hacking for at
  least four years, although he probably only joined the ranks of
  world-class hackers in 1995 or 1996. Never busted. Young--between the
  age of 18 and 25--and male. From a less than picture-perfect family.
  Fluent in English as a second language. Left-leaning in his
  politics--heading toward environmentally green parties and anarchy
  rather than traditional labour parties. Smokes a little dope and
  drinks alcohol, but doesn't touch the hard stuff.

  His musical tastes include early Pink Floyd, Sullen, Dog Eat Dog,
  Biohazard, old Ice-T, Therapy, Alanis Morissette, Rage Against the
  Machine, Fear Factory, Life of Agony and Napalm Death. He reads
  Stephen King, Stephen Hawking, Tom Clancy and Aldous Huxley. And any
  good books about physics, chemistry or mathematics.

  Shy in person, he doesn't like organised team sports and is not very
  confident around girls. He has only had one serious girlfriend, but
  the relationship finished. Now that he hacks and codes about four to
  five hours per day on average, but sometimes up to 36 hours straight,
  he doesn't have time for girls.

  `Besides,' he says, `I am rather picky when it comes to girls. Maybe
  if the girl shared the same interests ... but those ones are hard to
  find.' He adds, by way of further explanation, `Girls are different
  from hacking. You can't just brute force them if all else fails.'

  SKiMo has never intentionally damaged a computer system, nor would he.
  Indeed, when I asked him, he was almost offended by the question.
  However, he has accidentally done damage on a few occasions. In at
  least one case, he returned to the system and fixed the problem
  himself.

  Bored out of his mind for most of his school career, SKiMo spent a
  great deal of time reading books in class--openly. He wanted to send
  the teacher a message without actually jacking up in class.

  He got into hacking after reading a magazine article about people who
  hacked answering machines and VMBs. At that time, he had no idea what
  a VMB was, but he learned fast. One Sunday evening, he sat down with
  his phone and began scanning. Soon he was into phreaking, and visiting
  English-speaking party lines. Somehow, he always felt more comfortable
  speaking in English, to native English-speakers, perhaps because he
  felt a little like an outsider in his own culture.

  `I have always had the thought to leave my country as soon as I can,'
  he said.

  From the phreaking, it was a short jump into hacking.

  What made him want to hack or phreak in the first place? Maybe it was
  the desire to screw over the universally hated phone company, or
  `possibly the sheer lust for power' or then again, maybe he was simply
  answering his desire `to explore an intricate piece of technology'.
  Today, however, he is a little clearer on why he continues to hack.
  `My first and foremost motivation is to learn,' he said.

  When asked why he doesn't visit his local university or library to
  satisfy that desire, he answered, `in books, you only learn theory. It
  is not that I dislike the theory but computer security in real life is
  much different from theory'. Libraries also have trouble keeping pace
  with the rate of technological change, SKiMo said. `Possibly, it is
  also just the satisfaction of knowing that what I learn is
  proprietary--is "inside knowledge",' he added. There could, he said,
  be some truth in the statement that he likes learning in an
  adrenalin-inducing environment.

  Is he addicted to computers? SKiMo says no, but the indications are
  there. By his own estimate, he has hacked between 3000 and 10000
  computers in total. His parents--who have no idea what their son was
  up to day and night on his computer--worry about his behaviour. They
  pulled the plug on his machine many times. In SKiMo's own words, `they
  tried everything to keep me away from it'.

  Not surprisingly, they failed. SKiMo became a master at hiding his
  equipment so they couldn't sneak in and take it away. Finally, when he
  got sick of battling them over it and he was old enough, he put his
  foot down. `I basically told them, "Diz is ma fuckin' life and none o'
  yer business, Nemo"--but not in those words.'

  SKiMo says he hasn't suffered from any mental illnesses or
  instabilities--except perhaps paranoia. But he says that paranoia is
  justified in his case. In two separate incidents in 1996, he believed
  he was being followed. Try as he might, he couldn't shake the tails
  for quite some time. Perhaps it was just a coincidence, but he can
  never really be sure.

  He described one hacking attack to me to illustrate his current
  interests. He managed to get inside the internal network of a German
  mobile phone network provider, DeTeMobil (Deutsche Telekom). A former
  state-owned enterprise which was transformed into a publicly listed
  corporation in January 1995, Deutsche Telekom is the largest
  telecommunications company in Europe and ranks number three in the
  world as a network operator. It employs almost a quarter of a million
  people. By revenue, which totalled about $A37 billion in 1995, it is
  one of the five largest companies in Germany.

  After carefully researching and probing a site, SKiMo unearthed a
  method of capturing the encryption keys generated for DeTeMobil's
  mobile phone conversations.

  He explained: `The keys are not fixed, in the sense that they are
  generated once and then stored in some database. Rather, a key is
  generated for each phone conversation by the company's AUC
  [authentication centre], using the "Ki" and a random value generated
  by the AUC. The Ki is the secret key that is securely stored on the
  smart card [inside the cellphone], and a copy is also stored in the
  AUC. When the AUC "tells" the cellphone the key for that particular
  conversation, the information passes through the company's MSC [mobile
  switching centre].

  `It is possible to eavesdrop on a certain cellphone if one actively
  monitors either the handovers or the connection set-up messages from
  the OMC [operations and maintenance centre] or if one knows the Ki in
  the smart card.

  `Both options are entirely possible. The first option, which relies on
  knowing the A5 encryption key, requires the right equipment. The
  second option, using the Ki, means you have to know the A3/A8
  algorithms as well or the Ki is useless. These algorithms can be
  obtained by hacking the switch manufacturer, i.e. Siemens, Alcatel,
  Motorola ...

  `As a call is made from the target cellphone, you need to feed the A5
  key into a cellphone which has been modified to let it eavesdrop on
  the channel used by the cellphone. Normally, this eavesdropping will
  only produce static--since the conversation is encrypted. However,
  with the keys and equipment, you can decode the conversation.'

  This is one of the handover messages, logged with a CCITT7 link
  monitor, that he saw:

  13:54:46"3 4Rx< SCCP 12-2-09-1 12-2-04-0 13 CR

  BSSM HOREQ

  BSSMAP GSM 08.08 Rev 3.9.2 (BSSM) HaNDover REQuest (HOREQ)

  -------0 Discrimination bit D BSSMAP

  0000000- Filler

  00101011 Message Length 43

  00010000 Message Type 0x10

  Channel Type

  00001011 IE Name Channel type

  00000011 IE Length 3

  00000001 Speech/Data Indicator Speech

  00001000 Channel Rate/Type Full rate TCH channel Bm

  00000001 Speech Encoding Algorithm GSM speech algorithm Ver 1

  Encryption Information

  00001010 IE Name Encryption information

  00001001 IE Length 9

  00000010 Algorithm ID GSM user data encryption V. 1

  ******** Encryption Key C9 7F 45 7E 29 8E 08 00

  Classmark Information Type 2

  00010010 IE Name Classmark information type 2

  00000010 IE Length 2

  -----001 RF power capability Class 2, portable

  ---00--- Encryption algorithm Algorithm A5

  000----- Revision level

  -----000 Frequency capability Band number 0

  ----1--- SM capability present

  -000---- Spare

  0------- Extension

  Cell Identifier

  00000101 IE Name Cell identifier

  00000101 IE Length 5

  00000001 Cell ID discriminator LAC/CI used to ident cell

  ******** LAC 4611

  ******** CI 3000

  PRIority

  00000110 IE Name Priority

  00000001 IE Length 1

  -------0 Preemption allowed ind not allowed

  ------0- Queueing allowed ind not allowed

  --0011-- Priority level 3

  00------ Spare

  Circuit Identity Code

  00000001 IE Name Circuit identity code

  00000000 PCM Multiplex a-h 0

  ---11110 Timeslot in use 30

  101----- PCM Multiplex i-k 5

  Downlink DTX flag

  00011001 IE Name Downlink DTX flag

  -------1 DTX in downlink direction disabled

  0000000- Spare

  Cell Identifier

  00000101 IE Name Cell identifier

  00000101 IE Length 5

  00000001 Cell ID discriminator LAC/CI used to ident cell

  ******** LAC 4868

  ******** CI 3200

  The beauty of a digital mobile phone, as opposed to the analogue
  mobile phones still used by some people in Australia, is that a
  conversation is reasonably secure from eavesdroppers. If I call you on
  my digital mobile, our conversation will be encrypted with the A5
  encryption algorithm between the mobile phone and the exchange. The
  carrier has copies of the Kis and, in some countries, the government
  can access these copies. They are, however, closely guarded secrets.

  SKiMo had access to the database of the encrypted Kis and access to
  some of the unencrypted Kis themselves. At the time, he never went to
  the trouble of gathering enough information about the A3 and A8
  algorithms to decrypt the full database, though it would have been
  easy to do so. However, he has now obtained that information.

  To SKiMo, access to the keys generated for each of thousands of German
  mobile phone conversations was simply a curiosity--and a trophy. He
  didn't have the expensive equipment required to eavesdrop. To an
  intelligence agency, however, access could be very valuable,
  particularly if some of those phones belonged to people such as
  politicians. Even more valuable would be ongoing access to the OMC, or
  better still, the MSC. SkiMo said he would not provide this to any
  intelligence agency.

  While inside DeTeMobil, SKiMo also learned how to interpret some of
  the mapping and signal-strength data. The result? If one of the
  company's customers has his mobile turned on, SKiMo says he can
  pinpoint the customer's geographic location to within one kilometre.
  The customer doesn't even have to be talking on the mobile. All he has
  to do is have the phone turned on, waiting to receive calls.

  SKiMo tracked one customer for an afternoon, as the man travelled
  across Germany, then called the customer up. It turned out they spoke
  the same European language.

  `Why are you driving from Hamburg to Bremen with your phone on
  stand-by mode?' SKiMo asked.

  The customer freaked out. How did this stranger at the end of the
  phone know where he had been travelling?

  SKiMo said he was from Greenpeace. `Don't drive around so much. It
  creates pollution,' he told the bewildered mobile customer. Then he
  told the customer about the importance of conserving energy and how
  prolonged used of mobile phones affected certain parts of one's brain.

  Originally, SKiMo broke into the mobile phone carriers' network
  because he wanted `to go completely cellular'--a transition which he
  hoped would make him both mobile and much harder to trace. Being able
  to eavesdrop on other people's calls-- including those of the
  police--was going to be a bonus.

  However, as he pursued this project, he discovered that the code from
  a mobile phone manufacturer which he needed to study was `a
  multi-lingual project'. `I don't know whether you have ever seen a
  multi-lingual project,' SKiMo says, `where nobody defines a common
  language that all programmers must use for their comments and function
  names? They look horrible. They are no fun to read.' Part of this one
  was in Finnish.

  SKiMo says he has hacked a number of major vendors and, in several
  cases, has had access to their products' source codes.

  Has he had the access to install backdoors in primary source code for
  major vendors? Yes. Has he done it? He says no. On other hand, I asked
  him who he would tell if he did do it. `No-one,' he said, `because
  there is more risk if two people know than if one does.'

  SKiMo is mostly a loner these days. He shares a limited amount of
  information about hacking exploits with two people, but the
  conversations are usually carefully worded or vague. He substitutes a
  different vendor's names for the real one, or he discusses technical
  computer security issues in an in-depth but theoretical manner, so he
  doesn't have to name any particular system.

  He doesn't talk about anything to do with hacking on the telephone.
  Mostly, when he manages to capture a particularly juicy prize, he
  keeps news of his latest conquest to himself.

  It wasn't always that way. `When I started hacking and phreaking, I
  had the need to learn very much and to establish contacts which I
  could ask for certain things--such as technical advice,' SKiMo said.
  `Now I find it much easier to get that info myself than asking anyone
  for it. I look at the source code, then experiment and discover new
  bugs myself.'

  Asked if the ever-increasing complexity of computer technology hasn't
  forced hackers to work in groups of specialists instead of going solo,
  he said in some cases yes, but in most cases, no. `That is only true
  for people who don't want to learn everything.'

  SKiMo can't see himself giving up hacking any time in the near future.

  Who is on the other side these days?

  In Australia, it is still the Australian Federal Police, although the
  agency has come a long way since the early days of the Computer Crimes
  Unit. When AFP officers burst in on Phoenix, Nom and Electron, they
  were like the Keystone Cops. The police were no match for the
  Australian hackers in the subsequent interviews. The hackers were so
  far out in front in technical knowledge it was laughable.

  The AFP has been closing that gap with considerable alacrity. Under
  the guidance of officers like Ken Day, they now run a more technically
  skilled group of law enforcement officers. In 1995-96, the AFP had
  about 2800 employees, although some 800 of these worked in `community
  policing'--serving as the local police in places like the ACT and
  Norfolk Island. The AFP's annual expenditure was about $270 million in
  that year.

  As an institution, the AFP has recently gone through a major
  reorganisation, designed to make it less of a command-and-control
  military structure and more of an innovative, service oriented
  organisation.

  Some of these changes are cosmetic. AFP officers are now no longer
  called `constable' or `detective sergeant'--they are all just `federal
  agents'. The AFP now has a `vision' which is `to fight crime and
  win'.3 Its organisational chart had been transformed from a
  traditional, hierarchical pyramid of square boxes into a collection of
  little circles linked to bigger circles--all in a circle shape. No
  phallo-centric structures here. You can tell the politically correct
  management consultants have been visiting the AFP.

  The AFP has, however, also changed in more substantive ways. There are
  now `teams' with different expertise, and AFP investigators can draw
  on them on an as-needed basis. In terms of increased efficiency, this
  fluidity is probably a good thing.

  There are about five permanent officers in the Melbourne computer
  crimes area. Although the AFP doesn't release detailed budget
  breakdowns, my back-of-the-envelope analysis suggested that the AFP
  spends less than $1 million per year on the Melbourne computer crimes
  area in total. Sydney also has a Computer Crimes Unit.

  Catching hackers and phreakers is only one part of the unit's job.
  Another important task is to provide technical computer expertise for
  other investigations.

  Day still runs the show in Melbourne. He doesn't think or act like a
  street cop. He is a psychological player, and therefore well suited to
  his opponents. According to a reliable source outside the underground,
  he is also a clean cop, a competent officer, and `a nice guy'.

  However, being the head of the Computer Crimes Unit for so many years
  makes Day an easy target in the underground. In particular, hackers
  often make fun of how seriously he seems to take both himself and his
  job. When Day appeared on the former ABC show `Attitude', sternly
  warning the audience off hacking, he told the viewers, `It's not a
  game. It's a criminal act'.

  To hackers watching the show, this was a matter of opinion. Not long
  after the episode went to air, a few members of Neuro-cactus, an
  Australian group of hackers and phreakers which had its roots in
  Western Australia, decided to take the mickey out of Day. Two members,
  Pick and Minnow, clipped Day's now famous soundbite. Before long, Day
  appeared to be saying, `It's not a criminal act. It's a game'--to the
  musical theme of `The Bill'. The Neuro-cactus crowd quickly spread
  their lampoon across the underground via an illicit VMB connected to
  its own toll-free 008 number.

  Although Day does perhaps take himself somewhat seriously, it can't be
  much fun for him to deal with this monkey business week in and week
  out. More than one hacker has told me with great excitement, `I know
  someone who is working on getting Day's home number'. The word is that
  a few members of the underground already have the information and have
  used it. Some people think it would be hilarious to call up Day at
  home and prank him. Frankly, I feel a bit sorry for the guy. You can
  bet the folks in traffic operations don't have to put up with this
  stuff.

  But that doesn't mean I think these pranksters should be locked up
  either.

  If we, as a society, choose not to lock hackers up, then what should
  we do with them?

  Perhaps a better question is, do we really need to do anything with
  them?

  One answer is to simply ignore look-see hacking. Society could decide
  that it makes more sense to use valuable police resources to catch
  dangerous criminals--forgers, embezzlers, white-collar swindlers,
  corporate spies and malicious hackers--than to chase look-see hackers.

  The law must still maintain the capacity to punish hard where someone
  has strayed into what society deems serious crime. However, almost any
  serious crime committed by a hacker could be committed by a non-hacker
  and prosecuted under other legislation. Fraud, wilful damage and
  dealing in stolen property are crimes regardless of the medium--and
  should be punished appropriately.

  Does it make sense to view most look-see hackers--and by that I mean
  hackers who do not do malicious damage or commit fraud--as criminals?
  Probably not. They are primarily just a nuisance and should be treated
  as such. This would not be difficult to do. The law-makers could
  simply declare look-see hacking to be a minor legal infringement. In
  the worst-case scenario, a repeat offender might have to do a little
  community service. But such community service needs to be managed
  properly. In one Australian case, a corrections officer assigned a
  hacker to dig ditches with a convicted rapist and murderer.

  Many hackers have never had a job--in part because of the high youth
  unemployment in some areas--and so their community service might be
  their first `position'. The right community service placement must
  involve hackers using their computer skills to give something back to
  society, preferably in some sort of autonomous, creative project. A
  hacker's enthusiasm, curiosity and willingness to experiment can be
  directed toward a positive outcome if managed properly.

  In cases where hacking or phreaking has been an addiction, the problem
  should be treated, not criminalised. Most importantly, these hackers
  should not have convictions recorded against them, particularly if
  they're young. As Paul Galbally said to the court at Mendax's
  sentencing, `All the accused are intelligent--but their intelligence
  outstretched their maturity'.  Chances are, most will be able to
  overcome or outgrow their addiction.

  In practice, most Australia's judges have been reasonably fair in
  their sentencing, certainly compared to judges overseas. None of the
  Australian hackers detailed in this work received a prison sentence.
  Part of this is due to happenstance, but part is also due to the sound
  judgments of people like Judge Lewis and Judge Kimm. It must be very
  tempting, sitting on the bench every day, to shoot from the hip
  interpreting new laws.

  As I sat in court listening to each judge, it quickly became clear
  that these judges had done their homework. With psychologist Tim
  Watson-Munro on the stand, Judge Lewis rapidly zeroed in on the
  subject of `free will'--as applied to addiction--regarding Prime
  Suspect. In Trax's case, Judge Kimm asked pointed questions which he
  could only have formulated after serious study of the extensive legal
  brief. Their well-informed judgments suggested a deeper understanding
  both of hacking as a crime, and of the intent of the largely untested
  computer crime legislation.

  However, a great deal of time and money has been wasted in the pursuit
  of look-see hackers, largely because this sort of hacking is treated
  as a major crime. Consider the following absurd situation created by
  Australia's federal computer criminal legislation.

  A spy breaks into a computer at the Liberal Party's headquarters and
  reads the party's top-secret election strategy, which he may want to
  pass on to the Labor Party. He doesn't insert or delete any data in
  the process, or view any commercial information. The penalty under
  this legislation? A maximum of six months in prison.

  That same spy decides he wants to get rich quick. Using the local
  telephone system, he hacks into a bank's computer with the intention
  of defrauding the financial institution. He doesn't view any
  commercial or personal information, or delete or insert any files. Yet
  the information he reviews--about the layout of a bank building, or
  how to set off its fire alarm or sprinkler system--proves vital in his
  plan to defraud the bank. His penalty: a maximum of two years prison.

  Our spy now moves onto bigger and better things. He penetrates a
  Department of Defence computer with the intention of obtaining
  information about Australia's military strategies and passing it on to
  the Malaysians. Again, he doesn't delete or insert any data--he just
  reads every sensitive planning document he can find. Under the federal
  anti-hacking laws, the maximum penalty he would receive would also be
  two years prison.

  Meanwhile, a look-see hacker breaks into a university computer without
  doing any damage. He doesn't delete any files. He FTPs a public-domain
  file from another system and quietly tucks it away in a hidden, unused
  corner of the university machine. Maybe he writes a message to someone
  else on-line. If caught, the law, as interpreted by the AFP and the
  DPP, says he faces up to ten years in prison. The reason? He has
  inserted or deleted data.

  Although the spy hacker might also face other charges--such as
  treason--this exercise illustrates some of the problems with the
  current computer crime legislation.

  The letter of the law says that our look-see hacker might face a
  prison term five times greater than the bank fraud criminal or the
  military spy, and twenty times greater than the anti-Liberal Party
  subversive, if he inserts or deletes any data. The law, as interpreted
  by the AFP, says that the look-see hacking described above should have
  the same maximum ten-year prison penalty as judicial corruption. It's
  a weird mental image--the corrupt judge and the look-see hacker
  sharing a prison cell.

  Although the law-makers may not have fully understood the
  technological aspects of hacking when they introduced the computer
  crimes legislation, their intent seems clear. They were trying to
  differentiate between a malicious hacker and a look-see hacker, but
  they could have worded it better.

  As it's worded, the legislation puts malicious, destructive hacking on
  a par with look-see hacking by saying that anyone who destroys,
  erases, alters or inserts data via a carrier faces a prison term,
  regardless of the person's intent. There is no gradation in the law
  between mere deletion of data and `aggravated deletion'--the maximum
  penalty is ten years for both. The AFP has taken advantage of this
  lack of distinction, and the result has been a steady stream of
  look-see hackers being charged with the most serious computer crime
  offences.

  Parliament makes the laws. Government institutions such as the AFP,
  the DPP and the courts interpret and apply those laws. The AFP and to
  some extent the DPP have applied the strict letter of the law
  correctly in most of the hacking cases described in this book. They
  have, however, missed the intention of the law. Change the law and
  they may behave differently. Make look-see hacking a minor offence and
  the institutions will stop going after the soft targets and hopefully
  spend more time on the real criminals.

  I have seen some of these hackers up close, studied them for two years
  and learned a bit about what makes them tick. In many ways, they are
  quintessentially Australian, always questioning authority and
  rebelling against `the establishment'. They're smart--in some cases
  very smart. A few might even be classified as technical geniuses.
  They're mischievous, but also very enterprising. They're rebels,
  public nuisances and dreamers.

  Most of all, they know how to think outside the box.

  This is not a flaw. Often, it is a very valuable trait--and one which
  pushes society forward into new frontiers. The question shouldn't be
  whether we want to crush it but how we should steer it in a different
  direction.

  END

  If you would like to comment on this book, please write to
  [email protected]. All comments are passed onto
  Dreyfus & Assange.

    _________________________________________________________________

                Underground -- Glossary and Abbreviations
    _________________________________________________________________


  AARNET Australian Academic Research Network

  ACARB Australian Computer Abuse Research Bureau, once called CITCARB

  AFP Australian Federal Police

  Altos West German chat system and hacker hang-out, connected to X.25
  network and run by Altos Computer Systems, Hamburg

  ANU Australian National University

  ASIO Australian Security Intelligence Organisation

  Backdoor A program or modification providing secret access to a
  computer system, installed by a hacker to bypass normal security. Also
  used as a verb

  BBS Bulletin Board System

  BNL Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)

  BRL Ballistics Research Laboratory (US)

  BT British Telecom

  CCITT Committee Consultatif Internationale Telegraph et Telephonie:
  Swiss telecommunications standards body (now defunct; see ITU)

  CCS Computer Crime Squad

  CCU Computer Crimes Unit (Australian Federal Police)

  CERT Computer Emergency Response Team

  CIAC Computer Incident Advisory Capability: DOE's computer security
  team

  CITCARB Chisholm Institute of Technology Computer Abuse Research
  Bureau (now defunct. See ACARB)

  COBE Cosmic Background Explorer project: a NASA research project

  DARPA Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (US)

  DCL Digital Command Language, a computer programming language used on
  VMS computers

  DDN Defense Data Network

  DEC Digital Equipment Corporation

  DECNET A network protocol used to convey information between
  (primarily) VAX/VMS machines

  DEFCON (a) Defense Readiness Conditions, a system of progressive alert
  postures in the US; (b) the name of Force's computer program which
  automatically mapped out computer networks and scanned for accounts

  DES Data Encryption Standard, an encryption algorithm developed by
  IBM, NSA and NIST

  Deszip Fast DES Unix password-cracking system developed by Matthew
  Bishop

  Dial-up Modem access point into a computer or computer network

  DMS-100 Computerised telephone switch (exchange) made by NorTel

  DOD Department of Defense (US)

  DOE Department of Energy (US)

  DPP Director of Public Prosecutions

  DST Direction de la Surveillance du Territoire-- French secret service
  agency

  EASYNET Digital Equipment Corporation's internal communication network
  (DECNET)

  GTN Global Telecommunications Network: Citibank's international data
  network

  HEPNET High Energy Physics Network: DECNET-based network, primarily
  controlled by DOE, connected to NASA's SPAN

  IID Internal Investigations Division. Both the Victoria Police and the
  AFP have an IID

  IP Internet Protocol (RFC791): a data communications protocol, used to
  transmit packets of data between computers on the Internet

  IS International Subversive (electronic magazine)

  ISU Internal Security Unit: anti-corruption unit of the Victoria
  Police

  ITU International Telecommunications Union, the international
  telecommunications standards body

  JANET Joint Academic Network (UK), a network of computers

  JPL Jet Propulsion Laboratory--a California-based NASA research centre
  affiliated with CalTech

  LLNL Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (US)

  LOD Legion of Doom

  Lutzifer West German computer, connected to the X.25 network, which
  had a chat facility

  MFC Multi Frequency Code (Group III): inter-exchange
  telecommunications system used by Telstra (Telecom)

  MILNET Military Network: TCP/IP unclassified US DOD computer network

  MOD Masters of Deception (or Destruction)

  Modem Modulator De-modulator: a device used to transmit computer data
  over a regular telephone line

  NCA National Crime Authority

  Netlink A Primos/Dialcom command used to initiate a connection over an
  X.25 network

  NIST National Institute of Standards (US)

  NIC Network Information Center (US), run by DOD: a computer which
  assigned domain names for the Internet.

  NRL Naval Research Laboratory (US)

  NSA National Security Agency (US)

  NUA Network User Address: the `telephone' number of a computer on an
  X.25 network

  NUI Network User Identifier (or Identification): combined
  username/password used on X.25 networks for billing purposes

  NorTel Northern Telecom, Canadian manufacturer of telecommunications
  equipment

  PABX Private Automatic Branch Exchange

  PAD Packet Assembler Disassembler--ASCII gateway to X.25 networks

  PAR `PAR?'--command on PAD to display PAD
  parameters

  RMIT Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology

  RTG Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator, space probe Galileo's
  plutonium-based power system

  RTM Robert Tappan Morris (Jr), the Cornell University student who
  wrote the Internet worm, also known as the RTM worm

  Scanner A program which scans and compiles information, such as a list
  of NUAs

  SPAN Space Physics Analysis Network: global DECNET- based network,
  primarily controlled by NASA

  Sprint US telecommunications company, an X.25 network provider

  Sprinter Word used by some Australian and English hackers to denote
  scanner. Derived from scanning attacks on Sprint communications

  Sprintnet X.25 network controlled by Sprint communications

  Sun Sun Microsystems--a major producer of Unix workstations

  TCP Transmission Control Protocol (RFC793): a standard for data
  connection between two computers on the Internet

  TELENET An X.25 network, DNIC 3110

  Telnet A method of connection between two computers on the Internet or
  other TCP/IP networks

  Trojan A program installed by hackers to secretly gather information,
  such as passwords. Can also be a backdoor

  Tymnet An X.25 network controlled by MCI, DNIC 3106

  Unix Multi-user computer operating system developed by AT&T and
  Berkeley CSRG

  VAX Virtual Address Extension: series of mini/mainframe computer
  systems produced by DEC

  VMS Virtual Memory System: computer operating system produced by DEC
  and used on its VAX machines

  WANK Worms Against Nuclear Killers: the title of DECNET/VMS-based worm
  released into SPAN/DEC/HEPNET in 1989

  X.25 International data communications network, using the X.25
  communications protocol. Network is run primarily by major
  telecommunications companies. Based on CCITT standard # X.25

  Zardoz A restricted computer security mailing list


    _________________________________________________________________

                                  NOTES
    _________________________________________________________________


  Chapter 1

  1. Words And Music by Rob Hirst/Martin Rotsey/James Moginie/Peter
  Garrett/Peter Gifford. (c) Copyright 1982 Sprint Music. Administered
  for the World--Warner/ Chappell Music Australia Pty Ltd. Used By
  Permission.

  2. I have relied on numerous wire service reports, particularly those
  of UPI Science Reporter William Harwood, for many of my descriptions
  of Galileo and the launch.

  3. William Harwood, `NASA Awaits Court Ruling on Shuttle Launch
  Plans', UPI, 10 October 1989.

  4. William Harwood, `Atlantis "Go" for Tuesday Launch', UPI, 16
  October 1989.

  5. Ibid.

  6. From NASA's World Wide Web site.

  7. Thomas A. Longstaff and E. Eugene Schulz, `Analysis of the WANK and
  OILZ Worms', Computer and Security, vol. 12, no. 1, February 1993, p.
  64.

  8. Katie Haffner and John Markoff, Cyberpunk, Corgi, London 1994, p.
  363.

  9. The Age, 22 April 1996, reprinted from The New York Times.

  10. DEC, Annual Report, 1989, listed in `SEC Online'.

  11. GEMTOP was corrected to GEMPAK in a later advisory by CIAC.

  12. `Officially' was spelled incorrectly in the original banner.

  13. This advisory is printed with the permission of CIAC and Kevin
  Oberman. CIAC requires the publication of the following disclaimer:

  This document was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an
  agency of the United States Government. Neither the United States
  Government, nor the University of California, nor any of their
  employees makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal
  liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or
  usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process
  disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately
  owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial products,
  process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or
  otherwise, does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement,
  recommendation or favouring by the United States Government or the
  University of California. The views and opinions of authors expressed
  herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States
  Government or the University of California, and shall not be used for
  advertising or product endorsement purposes.

  14. Michael Alexander and Maryfran Johnson, `Worm Eats Holes in NASA's
  Decnet', Computer World, 23 October 1989, p. 4.

  15. Ibid.

  16. William Harwood, `Shuttle Launch Rained Out', UPI, 17 October
  1989.

  17. Vincent Del Guidice, `Atlantis Set for Another Launch Try', UPI,
  18 October 1989.

  18. William Harwood, `Astronauts Fire Galileo on Flight to Jupiter',
  UPI, 18 October 1989.

  Chapter 2

  1. Words And Music by Rob Hirst/James Moginie. (c) Copyright 1985
  Sprint Music. Administered for the World--Warner/Chappell Music
  Australia Pty Ltd. Used By Permission.

  2. FIRST was initially called CERT System. It was an international
  version of CERT, the Computer Emergency Response Team, funded by the
  US Department of Defense and run out of Carnegie Mellon University.

  3. OTC was later merged with Telecom to become Telstra.

  4. Stuart Gill is described in some detail in Operation Iceberg;
  Investigation of Leaked Confidential Police Information and Related
  Matters, Ordered to be printed by the Legislative Assembly of
  Victoria, October 1993.

  Chapter 3

  1. Words And Music by Peter Garrett/James Moginie.
  (c) Copyright 1982 Sprint Music. Administered for the
  World--Warner/Chappell Music Australia Pty Ltd. Used By Permission.

  Chapter 4

  1. Words And Music by Peter Garrett/James Moginie/Martin Rotsey. (c)
  Copyright 1980 Sprint Music. Administered for the
  World--Warner/Chappell Music Australia Pty Ltd. Used By Permission.

  Chapter 5

  1. Words And Music by Rob Hirst/James Moginie. (c) Copyright 1989
  Sprint Music. Administered for the World--Warner/ Chappell Music
  Australia Pty Ltd. Used By Permission.

  2. The full text of the articles, used by permission News Ltd and
  Helen Meredith, is:

  3. From Operation Iceberg; Investigations and Recommendations into
  Allegations of Leaked Confidential Police Information, included as
  Appendix 1 in the report of the Deputy Ombudsman, Operation Iceberg;
  Investigation of Leaked Confidential Police Information and Related
  Matters.

  4. Ibid., pp. 26-7.

  5. Michael Alexander, `International Hacker "Dave" Arrested', Computer
  World, 9 April 1990, p. 8.

  6. Matthew May, `Hacker Tip-Off', The Times, 5 April 1990; Lou
  Dolinar, `Australia Arrests Three in Computer Break-Ins', Newsday, 3
  April 1990.

  Chapter 6

  1. Words And Music by Rob Hirst/James Moginie/Peter Garrett. (c)
  Copyright 1978 Sprint Music. Administered for the
  World--Warner/Chappell Music Australia Pty Ltd. Used By Permission.

  Chapter 7

  1. Words And Music by Peter Garrett/James Moginie/Rob Hirst. (c)
  Copyright 1988 Sprint Music. Administered for the
  World--Warner/Chappell Music Australia Pty Ltd. Used By Permission.

  2. Rupert Battcock, `The Computer Misuse Act Five years on--the Record
  since 1990', paper, Strathclyde University, Glasgow, UK.

  3. For the British material in this chapter, I have relied on personal
  interviews, media reports (particularly for the Wandii case), journal
  articles, academic papers and commission reports.

  4. Colin Randall, `Teenage Computer Hacker "Caused Worldwide Chaos"',
  Daily Telegraph, 23 February 1993.

  5. The local phone company agreed to reduce the bill to
  [sterling]3000, EORTIC information systems manager Vincent Piedboeuf
  told the court.

  6. Susan Watts, `Trial Haunted by Images of Life in the Twilight
  Zone', The Independent, 18 March 1993.

  7. Toby Wolpe, `Hacker Worked on Barclay's Software', Computer Weekly,
  4 March 1993.

  8. David Millward, `Computer Hackers Will be Pursued, Vow Police',
  Daily Telegraph, 19 March 1993.

  9. Chester Stern, `Hackers' Threat to Gulf War Triumph', Mail on
  Sunday, 21 March 1993.

  10. `Crimes of the Intellect--Computer Hacking', editorial, The Times,
  20 March 1993.

  11. `Owners Must Act to Put End to Computer Hacker "Insanity"', South
  China Morning Post, 30 March 1993.

  12. Nick Nuttall, `Hackers Stay Silent on Court Acquittal', The Times,
  19 March 1993.

  13. Melvyn Howe, Press Association Newsfile, Home News section, 21 May
  1993.

  Chapter 8

  1. Words And Music by James Moginie/Peter Garrett. (c) Copyright 1982
  Sprint Music. Administered for the World--Warner/Chappell Music
  Australia Pty Ltd. Used By Permission.

  2. This is an edited version.

  Chapter 9

  1. Words And Music by Rob Hirst. (c) Copyright 1993 Sprint Music.
  Administered for the World--Warner/Chappell Music Australia Pty Ltd.
  Used By Permission.

  Chapter 10

  1. Words And Music by Rob Hirst/James Moginie/Martin Rotsey/Andrew
  James. (c) Copyright 1978 Sprint Music. Administered for the
  World--Warner/Chappell Music Australia Pty Ltd and Andrew James. Used
  By Permission.

  Chapter 11

  1. Words And Music by James Moginie (lyrics adapted from the book The
  Great Prawn War And Other Stories by Dennis Kevans). (c) Copyright
  1984 Sprint Music. Administered for the World--Warner/Chappell Music
  Australia Pty Ltd. Used By Permission.

  Afterword

  1. Victorian Ombudsman, Operation Iceberg; Investigation of Leaked
  Confidential Police Information and Related Matters.

  2. The police report was printed as an appendix in the Ombudsman's
  report. See Chapter 5, note 1, above.

  3. Australian Federal Police, Annual Report, 1995-1996, p. 7.


    _________________________________________________________________

                              BIBLIOGRAPHY
    _________________________________________________________________


  Australian Federal Police (AFP), Annual Report 1995-1996, Canberra,
  1996.

  ----, Annual Report 1994-1995, Canberra, 1995.

  ----, Annual Report 1993-1994, Canberra, 1994.

  Bourne, Philip E., `Internet security; System Security', DEC
  Professional, vol. 11, June 1992.

  Cerf, Vinton G., `Networks', Scientific American, vol. 265, September
  1991.

  Clyde, Robert A., `DECnet security', DEC Professional, vol. 10, April
  1991.

  Commonwealth Attorney-General's Department, Interim Report on Computer
  Crime (The Gibbs Report), Canberra, 1988.

  Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (DDP), Annual Report
  1993-1994, Canberra, 1994.

  Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO),
  Annual Report 1994-1995, Canberra, 1995.

  Davis, Andrew W., `DEC Pathworks the mainstay in Mac-to-VAX
  connectivity', MacWeek, vol. 6, 3 August 1992.

  Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Australian Treaty Series
  1993, no. 40, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra,
  1993.

  Digital Equipment Corporation, Annual Report 1989, Securities and
  Exchange Commission (SEC) Online (USA) Inc., 1989.

  ----, Quarterly Report for period ending 12.31.89, SEC Online (USA).

  Gezelter, Robert, `The DECnet TASK object; Tutorial', Digital Systems
  Journal, vol. 16, July 1994.

  Gianatasio, David, `Worm infestation hits 300 VAX/VMS systems
  worldwide via DECnet', Digital Review, vol. 6, 20 November 1989.

  Haffner, Katie & Markoff, John, Cyberpunk, Corgi Books (Transworld),
  Moorebank NSW, 1994.

  Halbert, Debora, `The Potential for Modern Communication Technology to
  Challenge Legal Discourses of Authorship and Property', Murdoch
  University E-Law Journal, vol. 1, no. 2.

  Kelman, Alistair, `Computer Crime in the 1990s: A Barrister's View',
  Paper for the Twelfth International Symposium on Economic Crime,
  September 1994.

  Law Commission (UK) Working Paper, no. 110, 1988.

  Lloyd, J. Ian & Simpson, Moira, Law on the Electronic Frontier, David
  Hume Institute, Edinburgh, 1996.

  Longstaff, Thomas A., & Schultz, E. Eugene, `Beyond preliminary
  analysis of the WANK and OILZ worms: a case study of malicious code',
  Computers & Security, vol. 12, February 1993.

  Loundy, David J., `Information Systems Law and Operator Liability
  Revisited', Murdoch University E-Law Journal, vol. 1, no. 3, September
  1994.

  McMahon, John, `Practical DECnet security', Digital Systems Journal,
  vol. 14, November 1992.

  Melford, Robert J., `Network security; computer networks', Internal
  Auditor, Institute of Internal Auditors, vol. 50, February 1993.

  Natalie, D. & Ball, W, EIS Coordinator, North Carolina Emergency
  Management, `How North Carolina Managed Hurricane Hugo', EIS News,
  vol. 3, no. 11, 1988.

  NorTel Australia Pty Ltd, Discovering Tomorrow's Telecommunications
  Solutions, Chatswood, NSW (n.d.).

  Northern Telecom, Annual Report 1993, Ontario, 1993.

  Slatalla, Michelle & Quittner, Joshua, Masters of Deception,
  HarperCollins, New York, 1995.

  Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, Report of the
  Inquiry into the Death of the Woman Who Died at Ceduna, Australian
  Government Publishing Service, Canberra, 1990.

  Scottish Law Commission's Report on Computer Crime, no. 174, 1987.

  SPAN Management Office, `Security guidelines to be followed in the
  latest worm attack', an Intranetwork Memorandum released by the SPAN
  Management Office, NASA, 30 October 1989.

  Sterling, Bruce, The Hacker Crackdown, Penguin Books, Melbourne, 1994.

  Stoll, Clifford, The Cuckoo's Egg, Pan Books, London, 1991.

  Tencati, Ron, `Information regarding the DECNET worm and protection
  measures', an Intranetwork Memorandum released by the SPAN Management
  Office, NASA, 19 October 1989.

  ----, `Network Security Suplemental Information--Protecting the DECNET
  Account', security advisory, released by SPAN, NASA/Goddard Space
  Flight Center, 1989.

  The Victorian Ombudsman, Operation Iceberg: Investigation of Leaked
  Confidential Police Information and Related Matters, Report of the
  Deputy Ombudsman (Police Complaints), L.V. North Government Printer,
  Melbourne, 1993.

  `USA proposes international virus team', Computer Fraud & Security
  Bulletin (Elsevier Advanced Technology Publications), August 1991.

  Victoria Police, Operation Iceberg--Investigation and Recommendations
  into Allegations of Leaked Confidential Police Information, 1 June,
  Memorandum from Victoria Police Commander Bowles to Chief Commissioner
  Comrie (also available as Appendix 1 in the Victorian Ombudsman's
  Operation Iceberg Report, tabled in Victorian Parliament, October
  1993), 1993.

  Vietor, Richard, Contrived Competition: Regulation and Deregulation in
  America, BelKnap/Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1994.

  Yallop, David, To the Ends of the Earth, Corgi Books (Transworld),
  Moorebank, NSW, 1994.

  Acts:

  Computer Misuse Act 1990 (UK)

  Crimes Act 1914 (no. 5) (Cwlth)

  Crimes Legislation Amendment Act 1989, no. 108

  Computer Fraud and Abuse Act 1986 (US), 18 USC 1030

  Computer Misuse Crimes Legislation Amendment Bill 1989 (AUS),
  Explanatory Memo Clause 7

  Crimes (Computers) Act, no. 36 of 1988 (VIC)

  Other publications and databases:

  American Bar Association Journal

  Associated Press

  Attorney General's Information Service (Australia)

  Australian Accountant

  Australian Computer Commentary

  Aviation Week and Space Technology (USA)

  Banking Technology

  Business Week

  Cable News Network (CNN)

  Card News (USA)

  CERT Advisories (The Computer Emergency Response Team at Carnegie
  Mellon University)

  Chicago Daily Law Bulletin

  CommunicationsWeek

  CommunicationsWeek International

  Computer Incident Advisory Capability (CIAC)

  Computer Law and Practice (Australia)

  Computer Law and Security Report (Australia)

  Computer Weekly

  Computergram

  Computerworld

  Computing

  Corporate EFT Report (USA)

  Daily Mail (UK)

  Daily Telegraph (Sydney)

  Daily Telegraph (UK)

  Data Communications

  Datalink

  Evening Standard (UK)

  Export Control News (USA)

  FinTech Electronic Office (The Financial Times)

  Gannett News Service

  Government Computer News (USA)

  InfoWorld

  Intellectual Property Journal (Australia)

  Intelligence Newsletter (Indigo Publications)

  Journal of Commerce (The New York Times)

  Journal of the Law Society of Scotland

  Korea Economic Daily

  Law Institute Journal (Melbourne)

  Law Society's Gazette (UK)

  Law Society's Guardian Gazette (UK)

  Legal Times (USA)

  Lexis-Nexis (Reed Elsevier)

  Lloyds List

  Mail on Sunday (UK)

  Media Week

  MIS Week

  Mortgage Finance Gazette

  Network World

  New Law Journal (UK)

  New York Law Journal

  Newsday

  PC Week (USA)

  Press Association Newsfile

  Reuter

  Reuter News Service--United Kingdom Science

  South China Morning Post

  St Louis Post-Dispatch

  St Petersburg Times

  Sunday Telegraph (Sydney)

  Sunday Telegraph (UK)

  Sunday Times (UK)

  Telecommunications (Horizon House Publications Inc.)

  The Age

  The Australian

  The Australian Financial Review

  The Bulletin

  The Computer Lawyer (USA)

  The Connecticut Law Tribune

  The Daily Record (USA)

  The Engineer (UK)

  The Gazette (Montreal)

  The Guardian

  The Herald (Glasgow)

  The Herald (Melbourne)

  The Herald Sun (Melbourne)

  The Independent

  The Irish Times

  The Legal Intelligencer (USA)

  The Los Angeles Times

  The Nation

  The National Law Journal (USA)

  The New York Times

  The Recorder (USA)

  The Reuter European Community Report

  The Reuter Library Report

  The Scotsman

  The Sun (Melbourne)

  The Sunday Age

  The Sydney Morning Herald

  The Times

  The Washington Post

  The Washington Times

  The Weekend Australian

  Time Magazine

  United Nations Chronicle

  United Press International

  USA Today

  Transcripts:

  Hearing of the Transportation, Aviation and Materials Subcommittee of
  the House Science, Space and Technology Committee transcript: witness
  Clifford Stoll, 10 July 1990

  `Larry King Live' transcript, interview with Clifford Stoll, 23 March
  1990

  The World Uranium Hearing, Salzburg 1992, witness transcripts

  US Government Accounting Office Hearing (computer security) witness
  transcripts, 1996

  Judgments:

  Chris Goggans, Robert Cupps and Scott Chasin, Appellants v. Boyd &
  Fraser Publishing Co., a Division of South-Western Publishing Co.,
  Appellee No. 01-95-00331-Cv 1995 Tex. App.

  Gerald Gold v. Australian Federal Police, no. V93/1140

  Gerald Gold v. National Crime Authority, no. V93/1141 AAT No. 9940
  Freedom of Information (1994) 37 ALD 168

  Henry John Tasman Rook v. Lucas Richard Maynard (no. 2) no. LCA
  52/1994 ; judgment no. A64/1994

  Pedro Juan Cubillo v. Commonwealth Of Australia, no. NG 571 of 1991
  FED no. 1006/95 Tort--Negligence

  R v. Gold and another, House of Lords (UK), [1988] 1 AC 1063, [1988] 2
  All ER 186, [1988] 2 WLR 984, 87 Cr App Rep 257, 152 JP 445, [1988]
  Crim LR 437

  Steve Jackson Games Incorporated, et al., Plaintiffs, v. United States
  Secret Service, United States Of America, et al., Defendants no. A 91
  CA 346 Ss 816 F. Supp. 432; 1993 U.S. Dist.

  United States of America v. Julio Fernandez, et al. 92 Cr. 563 (RO)

  United States of America, Plaintiff, v. Robert J. Riggs, also known as
  Robert Johnson, also known as Prophet, and Craig Neidorf, also known
  as Knight Lightning, Defendants No. 90 CR 0070 743 F. Supp. 556; 1990
  U.S. Dist.

  United States of America, Appellee, v. Robert Tappan Morris,
  Defendant-Appellant No. 90-1336 928 F.2d 504; 1991 U.S. App.

  Wesley Thomas Dingwall v. Commonwealth of Australia no. NG575 of 1991
  Fed no. 296/94 Torts

  William Thomas Bartlett v. Claire Patricia Weir, Henry J T Rook, Noel
  E. Aikman, Philip Edwards and Michael B McKay no. TG7 of 1992; FED no.
  345/94

  Additional court records:

  (Court documents of most cases described in this book)

  Memos and reports to/from:

  Bureau of Criminal Intelligence, Victoria Police

  Internal Security Unit, Victoria Police

  The NASA SPAN office relating to the WANK worm

  Office of the District Attorney, Monterey, California

  Overseas Telecommunications Commission (Australia)

  Police Department, City of Del Rey Oaks, California

  Police Department, City of Salinas, California

  Stuart Gill

  The United States Secret Service

  US Attorney's Office, New York

  Numerous Internet sites, including those of NASA, Sydney University,
  Greenpeace, the Australian Legal Information Institute, and the Legal
  Aspects of Computer Crime Archives.
   ________________________END_OF_BOOK________________________________