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April, 1984 ." II'''.'
VOf.liMI,· ()NL NUMREII FO/jll
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At thi, lime AT&T providl:d substandard 'ervice to Iho people for the ,arne prices.' The 3% 10," in phone u,agcdue to lack of operators wa, pmbablyea,ily made up by people making an .",. effort to dial direct and by lhe fact that ,orne of the calls we'" being handled by scabbing ,upervisory Ie,.•,: em ployee', And '0, the company nots pure profit: 3 week 'triko x S2S0/week x 675.000 workers = 5506.250,000) Phillip, also note> lbal because managers and supervisors "ere dc;ng tho Ji"}' wor~ of the phone oompany, ,he,e people could not work on new proj,cts. This means that ,"eral hundred million dollar< would nol be inve'ted in expendilUr.. on new project' because lhere is no one 10 do lhe work. So AT&T would get interest on lhi. money during lhe strike and even for some limeaner it was souled unlil work had re,umed. Thi' yields ,everal million mOre dollars in profit fur AT&T. AT&T probahly made OUt direclly Wilh o\'£r half a billion dollars from tho ",ike, Al the same time companies like New York Telephone sought lO delay a $160 million rate illCfease '0 it cuuld .sk for anotner iricrease 10 refieel new conlracts, As part of lne ,wl.menl 21 day' later, lOp e.aft workers go' a 5.5% increase fo. lhe !irst )'Oar of their 3 yearcontr'CI and L5% for eaoh of lhe noxl two ye.rs. They .lso gOI a $31 million training fund (S4/i per employee) to help them deal Wilh new lechnology and remain employable numan" All of theso ~gains" .re sun,idized by In. half a billion dollars gaining loIS of inlerest which AT&T did not hav.to pay to lh.ir emploYees, AT&T.t !irst offored • ridiculous 3.5% increase for lhe firsl year and no increa,e for tho next two. bul after losing 5.8% of lheir salary by striking. workers !lO1 a 5,5% ;ncr',""e above the Co,t of liying whleh Is probably em;rel}' ,ubsidlzed by lhe strike it'elf and by rate increase,. h', certainly nifty doal for M. BelL Their workers blow off sleam aod p.v for lheir own rai,es.•"d stockholders d"n't have 10 wurry one bil, The strike had its effecl on theconsume,- A, weall know, many were dialing, touehloning", or fedialing their call, almosl like u,ual and olhers were severely inconvenienced by a few managers and supervi,ors ,,'ork;ng a, long distance or direclory a"istanee oPOrators often for many hours of overtime, New inSlallalion> came to a 'landstill and m'nv wer< backlogged for s,wer.l month,. Any emergen~y repai':' had to be h.ndled hy ,upervisory personnel, But afler all lhi._ the SlIme fat phon. bin Came 10 reopie's hom<s,h. next month, Wilhout any delay. In actualily. ".er> cannOl complain to or boyeotl the phone company a. they could the Otbb.>ge-Palch@ manufaeWr<", in our earlier >cenario. Tney cannol m.ke AT&T or their lu",,1 company do anything hcoau,e eaCh customer is a, unimporlam as each emplo)'Oe. We. a, customers. arc all dependent on the phone, We h.'e at Iea,t one ill each home. We are hilled if we use il or nOlo and a", billed mnre t" Ita'" it ,hut "IT I'M a month or two, We are all '" dependent nn thc Ii"", thaI run inloourhOOle,and nn the "''''. 'md a half milli"n p"~pl,,'nc; that ab.,,'rh our ",,,"oy ,nat the ""npl"inl> "I' an\' "'''' ,,,'"Icn lhuu,and, ,,1' '" arc ~uLte \I,de". All uf lhi' 'Jlili')' I,i,,'" lite ","aning 'If thi, 11'",,1) wa, ulHilt~",'nll-" ""n'mlktJ al"""1 ",e1u,i,",}' h "",- "m"r;II'\. ," in Ihe name "I IHIIl"'" ,pirit. wll "" Lh,' Jiw" ilLtle,
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THE TROUBLE WITH TELEMAIL GTE is practically inviting intrusions, and odds are they'll get plenty l""1 mon' h. two
,,1' o~r "porte" 10(1k a trip 10 Nation. I
I'"blie Radio 'lOdio, in Now York to reveal a very
inlere
with ""me, like 'A YROI.L. (;OVTA 1+ AI R.~. ,"'d .fA I' A N. On ton "I ;III tl,i,. it 1<"" (d·t' no.trh' a wC'd '" d",.
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acc"-', 10 tbese accounts, even aher they were expo,cd un nalionwide radio. What Our reporters proved here is that Telemail i, either unable or unwilling 10 proteot its customers. Unable'! Tha, hardly soem, likel}'. After all. most computer bullelin hoard, run by high school kid5 are able 10 protoct their u,e,,' aCCounts from outsiders, Wby ""n't one of tbe large't and mo't expcn"ive electro~ic mail ,)"tems do the same:> Apparently. what we have here is a company lhat ha, grown too. big too soOn. and i, now unable 10 overcomo the inertia that its siU; ha, c,"at,d, How to Really Hue F~n OTIce a hac~er manage, to gel Into a Telemail account. be', really ,et. By typing 01 R "a' command mode. he Can get a listing of everyone ,hat the account i,allowed to sec· their usernamo. full name. eampany aTId divi,ion. and ",er number, He oan ,ee any user if be figures out thtir full u,ername or user number. Typing OIR USERNAME Or OIR USER NUMBER will give all of the above information about that person. if he exists. F,om the buge list that DIR "generat'" (wbich ta~e:; a couple of hours 10 print at 300 baud). a hacke, can scan for pa"word, that are ddault,. fir1 message; nn Tclemnil i, in,tanl and ,hcro', never a hU'y ,ignal, More imp", .. "tl;- thougb. rcle"'ail ,eem, t<> be beck"ning lhe hade" t<> "nme back home. 1.1'1"""1,' ,,/i"f ,hi" (/1'''''1.' ,m.' ",II<'f '1>1.•' i., "·IIt' ," ! a ,!<:!;mll ",...IJ", ,or ,,.,,,·,11<" ,1,".'·'1'" ,,-,'i,,>! del«<,I,., 1"'1'1"<1. (".'0""";1'''11111,,,' I"',·A,....,
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Bell Credit Card Abuse Soars Hu'g<: phon. bills an: being ..nllo innocent people all over the country. So huge, in fact, Ihal they can't be .enl in envelope'-they com. in boxes. In ihe past month and a half, thi' ,cen. has begun to proUferate. A, predicted on these page. in February, Ih. AT&T death ,tar cards are crating all kind' of problem,. All that anyone has 10 do is glance al one of them to obtain a valid AT&T code. And thai'S .Jtll<:tly whal people are doing. Some of th... folks are, in fact, '0 oC\!anized that Ihe code' are used for practically 24 hours a day. with new call' 'tarting a, often as 3 times 'a minute from all differenl parts of the COUniry. Ifs rapidly becoming one of the easiest ways to make free phone calb, and best of all, irs Ihrough an old friend; Ma BellI While AT&T h.al; put illl.lfin a rather vulnerable pOSilion, Ih.y are not complelely without'defen'e. Any tim. tliat a credil card call il plaeed. the ouroher lhallhe call is being placed from is m:orded and senl to the eultomer. Most phreaks know ;,nooah I\(It 10 do,lhis kind of thing from their home or local paYJlbo.... Meanwhile, tbefe is a lllIIior cracJ<down nnderway in las V.gas eonceming unaulhori,ed use of MO. Sprint, and ITT (A T&Ti' rumoured 10 alsn be involved here). It seems thaI hundred, of people in Ihal gambUng Inwn were passing code' around. '"'" FBIelJlims thallh. persons involved are 110/ phone phraks, 'bul thaI phreakers and hack.rs may have b•• n hired to do !be'actualcode-finding.
Electronics Create Portable Prisons ",. N._ Y",' T;_
ce'ario Romero, a 2:J..year...,ld New Mexico lruck driv.r, recently ..ived a 30 day sentence for di$o;lbeying a police officer. He never had to leave his home. Romero Will confined al home by a plastic box lhe silOof a cigarette package Ihal W.. &tl'llPped 10 his ankle. This device emi" radio s;,nata which wowd have informed thc aUlhorities if Romero ,strayed mnre 1"-0 ISO rut from his telephone. The anklet emits a radio> sianal every 30 to 9Q seconds which is pleked up,by a ,roan receiver connected to Ihe t.lephon. oUllet in Ihe wearer's bome. Th. re<>eiver relays the signal to a computer Ihal i. monilored by Ibe aulhorities. The prinloulII indicate each lime the wear.r exceeds the Iso-rnol lilllit aDd,each time be lries to remoyo the anklet or unplua tbe re<;eiver. District Allorn.y Sleven Schiff of the Se<:nnd J~dicial District 'aid, MFor someime Ute a firsl-tiine shoplifter, it could be used as a mild puni.hmenl, requiring the person to ,tay home nighlll aDel woekend. rOf a spe<:n.ed liroe." The U.S. Justice Depanmcnl has expressed an intere't in this monitoring system.
414's Plead Guilty
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Two ynuna mi!tl, Mlb members of the 414 compuler .nthusiam group, pleadfll guilty to two mi'demeanor charges on Marcll 16. C,,,rald Wondra of We,' Allis. WI and 'nmOlhy D,
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Winslow of Milwaukee. hoth 21, broke into larg.comput." in the U.S. and Canada last June, ,iroply 10 prove thalth.y could do it. The two agreed 10 plead guilty to Iwo counts each of making hara"ing lelephone calls. which is the most they can be charged Wilh, 'ince the government has no law against corop"ter crim... Each counl carri.. a maximum penalty of six month' in jail and a SSOO fine. The comput.r-, involved were located at: Seccrity Pacific National Bank in loi Angeles. Memorial Sloan-Kettering cancer center in New York. canada cement LaFarg. Inc, in Vancouver, BC, and Citadel Industries, a New Jersey corporatioo.
Teller Machine Crime Coming T1
The Jcstice Department say. that automated teller machin.s and oth.r mean' of electronic financial tran,action, are ''p-otentially f.nile for criminal abu,•." T.chniqu•• for robbing Ihe ,y.tem, already have cropped up and are expected 10 increa ... They ranll" from Ih. ilynamitiog of an a"tomatic teller device to the withdrawal of funds hy a cardholder who then claims nO knowledge of the tran'action. Becau,. of an ab.ence of sophi.ticated verificalion procedures in loday·. automated teUer .ystems, such as fingerprint. or voiceprints. the door i. wide open to unscrupulou, cardholders committing fraud from their very own aecount., (Some machines. though. take a picture of the person a, .non as he lak.. the ca,h.) Even though bank officials roay be skepticai of a cardholder'. di,clairoing any knowledge of a wilhdrawal lhal had been made from his or her account. f.derallaw mak.s it dimcult for Ihe officials 10 reject .coh a claim. If a bogu, los' is r.port.d wilhin IwO businen day•• the law make. the cardholder responsible for only the first SSG.
Free Information in Trouble
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According to companyspoke,man Pic Wagn.r. AT&T i, probably going to propose a S[).cent fee for long di.tance information call' instead of the 7S-eent fee it propo.ed I." fall. Con.ume" eurrenlly don't pay anything for long distance '>r oversea. directory a"istance.
A Word on Wiretapping
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A recenl articl. hy Lenny Si.g.l, director of ,he PacifLc Studies Cenler in Mountain View. CA. dealt with the ,ubject,of wiretapping. In thi' article. Siegel 'ays. "Present law outlaws ·.urai· (voice) wiretapping. th. monitoring of telephone conver· ..tions. wilhout jcdiciai approval, but 'nnnaural' .urvcil_ lance is legal. Law 'nforcement and intelligence agencies can and do r.cord telephone dialing infonnation ---who's calling whom-and digital data tran.mis.ion,----me>.age. between compulers and Olher el.ctronic dooices. In fact, the General Accounling Office. an inv.stigative arm of Congr.... warn, that existing legi,lalion maY.permit listening in 00 the growing percentage of voice tran,missions Ihat ha.e been con ..ned to di~ital pul,,,,, within the telephune network."
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2600 Fallawin~
are MCI Mall .. n ene nu,"bers:
Mel ACCESS NUMBERS
(Courtesy of Plovernet-51(9352481) AARON,
(216 ) ,4(4) (512 ) (301 ) (61 J)
OHIO
4TLANTA. GA. AUSTIN, TEXAS BAL T! MORE. MD. BOSTON, MASS. CHICAGO, ILL.
CLEVELAND, OHIO COLUMBUS, OHIO DALLAS, TEXAS
DAYTON, OHIO
DENVER, COLORADO MICH.
FT. LAUDERDALE,
~L.
FT. lojQRTH, TEXAS HOUSTON, TEXAS INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA KANSAS ClTY, MO.
LOS ANGELES. CALF. LUBBOCK,
TEXAS
MIDLAND/ODE5S. TEXAS MIL~AUKEE. wISCONSIN MINNEAPOLIS. MINN. NEWARK. NJ. NEW ORLEANS. NEW YORK,
i_A.
NY.
OKLAHOMA CITY. OK. '#1) OMAHA,
1\IEElRASK A
PHIL.ADELPHIA, PHOENI}(, AZ.
Pt:.
PITTSBURG. PA. sr '_OUIS, M';:;. S!~1\l ANTONIl', TE:X"'S
SAN DIEGO, CALF. SAN FRANCISCO. CALF. SOUTH BEND, IND. STAMFORD,
TOLEDO.
CT.
OHIO
TUCSON. ARIZONA TULSA. OKLAHOMA ~A5HINGTON.
n.n.
321-8833
482-2888 '312) 321-6581 (513) 2 4 1 - 12 16 ': 2 16) 621-2371 (514) :'2"-('870
CINCINNATI, OHIO
DETROIT,
253-1';80 523-0003 473-2716
(214)
742~6888
.: 513) (303) (313) ,305 ) (817) ,713 )
228-0241
837-8638 962-6806 "52-1818
338-9004
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Atlanta. GA •••••... (4041 Bal t I Mar.. MD •....• (301) Bosten, MA ••• , ...•• (S17f Buffalo. NY •••••... (716) cm eeee , iL (312) Cinolnnati. OH ••••• (S13) ,CleveL.ond. OH •••••• (216J CaluMous. OH ...•••• (614) Dallas, TX •••....•• (214) Denver. CO •....•••• (303) Detroit, MI •..••... (313) Ft. Worth, rx .•.... (817J Hartford, CT .••.... (203) Houston, TX . • . . . . . . i7131 lndiana .. c t r s , IN ••• (317) Kansas CUy. ,.,0 •••• (816) Lang 1s1~nd (Garden City • . . . . . . . • • • . • • • • . . . (516) Los Anse1es. CA •.•• (213) Me," .. ~is, TN .•..•••• (801) MilwauKee, 1011 •••••• (414) Minnea .. olis. MN •••. (612) Newark. NJ . . • • • . . . . (201) New York City. NY •• (212) Oakland. CA .•••..•. (415l PhIladelF>hia, P~ ..• (2151 Phoeni~, AZ ...••••. (602) PiUsbursh. PA •••.. (412) Roohester. NY ....•• (716) Saor~Menta, CA . . . . . (BI6) San Diego, CA •••.•• (6191 San Franoisoo. CA •• (415) San Jose, CA ..••••• (40B) B~nta Ana. CA .••••• (714) Sta,"fard, CT .•••••• (203) St. Louis. MO (314) Washinston, DC . . . • . (703)
aooes!
577-7363 583-68:l"0 262-6468 847-6050 856-9000 651-1204 771-7177 221-3451 7~4M0461
831-8139 962-5980 338-4158 728-1909 850-1005 634-2208 474-3169 Ar •• J, NY. 596-0404 620-1449 523-9314 347-1768 893-8462 623-0295 245-0355 540-1114 836-8060 266-1148 261-9818 955-8850 442-6986 268-1709 543-1560 885-6711 550-7128 325-8133 881-1881 525-6500
224-6088 (317) 532-873S (816 ) 836-1810 .: 213) 488- 1871 r 8('61 744-8878 (8151 561-5130 ,. 414 I 833-7351 ,512 ) 341-2835 12')1) 645-9040 ': 5')4) 566-8970 ( 21Zl 387-1')20 _ Natianal Tall-Free Aooess NUMber (405) 525-8883 -----------(800} 323-0905---------': 4')2 1 "22-')306 iSO"1 3:'3-7751 ': 2l5' 5Gl-:-'!9~; \ 602 ) 248-('716 ("12' 281- 4 8 ') 5 3 4 2 - ':' 2 8 ,:' (31'" :2';-85':,5 56')-i465 ,. " ! " i "85-25':":' 232-8035 (2('3) 3"8-('828 .. 41 9) 243-2')48 m')2 i i'::ot8) 583-9082 • 2('2) '''''2 -, 8"7
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