[Moderator: Take note of the comment in the last paragraph.]
Forwarded From: William Knowles <erehwon@kizmiaz.dis.org>
[San Francisco Examiner] (9.16.98) Looks like the New York Times is not
the only Web site fit to hack.
One day before the Times' home page was altered by hackers, the Whole
Earth 'Lectronic Link, a Sausalito-based on-line service, suffered its own
case of the hacks early Saturday morning, with 11 Well members suffering
the consequences.
The hackers apparently entered The Well through a compromised Unix program
and downloaded personal information on the way out.
"On Saturday morning, when the tech staff looked at our files, they
noticed that there was unusual activity early in the morning," said Gail
Williams, executive director of The Well. "(Hackers) managed to compromise
a piece of the system and looked for credit cards and also were interested
in 11 people's personal accounts."
"They (transferred) the contents of 11 people's private files," Williams
said.
There was no apparent link among the 11 victims. They were not of the same
profession or age group, and did not hail from the same part of the
country.
Following the attack, The Well was forced to take down its system Saturday
night for six hours.
Although there is no evidence of a connection between the two incidents,
The Well invasion came one day prior to the New York Times' hacking
incident Sunday, in which supporters of imprisoned hacker Kevin Mitnick
altered the paper's home page (www.nytimes.com), replacing the on-line
front page with a collage of pornographic pictures and threats.
The Times intruders, calling themselves "Hacking for Girlies," or HFG,
ridiculed several members of the Times staff, paying particular attention
to the paper's San Francisco-based technology correspondent, John Markoff.
"Do you have nightmares about helping imprison Kevin?" wrote the hackers.
"Knowing that your lies and deceit helped bring down this injustice?"
referring to Mitnick, who has been imprisoned since 1995 for
computer-related fraud charges.
The Times writer has been the target of hackers in the past, according to
Nancy Nielsen, spokeswoman for the Times.
Markoff wrote a book about the Mitnick saga, entitled "TakeDown," which is
being made into a movie.
The Well also has had a history with Mitnick, who used the on-line
service's servers to store crucial e-mail address while he was eluding law
enforcement officials in the early '90s.
Since then, Mitnick supporters have targeted The Well on occasion,
allegedly for cooperating with investigators during the pursuit, capture
and conviction of the famed hacker.
The movie based on Markoff's book, said The Well's Williams, may be linked
to the recent hacking.
"A lot of people are concerned that the various service providers or other
people that tried to cooperate (with the Mitnick investigation) may be
compromised by the upcoming film coming out," said Williams. "There's some
feeling that the movie might be driving the hacking attacks."
Among the victims whose files were transferred was The Examiner's Rebecca
Eisenberg, who contributes her Net Skink column to the Sunday business
page biweekly.
"I'm not too worried about it. I'm flattered that they'd be interested in
my personal accounts," said Eisenberg. "Some people get very nervous about
their personal mail being read, but I just don't think that I have
anything that's too incriminating or revealing."
"I do think it's linked to the Mitnick thing," said Eisenberg. "I was
reading the history of relationship between the Mitnick story and The
Well, and it sounds to me that there is some link there.
"There are some high-profile journalists on The Well," said Eisenberg.
"These people are targeted for good reason by the hackers. I like the
thought of them keeping us honest."
-o-
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Received on Fri Sep 18 09:14:49 1998