Subject: Re: chapter |
From: Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com> |
Date: 2/3/12, 00:14 |
To: Karen Lancaster <lancaster.karen@gmail.com> |
On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 11:11 PM, Barrett Brown
<barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
I'm setting a goal of getting Chapter Three draft in by Monday, so we'll have to make sure that happens.On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 8:38 PM, Karen Lancaster
<lancaster.karen@gmail.com> wrote:
Looks good! Let me know what Dan says :)On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 8:15 PM, Barrett Brown
<barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
The
CNN presenter, a British female, is otherwise indistinguishable from
the hundreds of other anchors who collectively and haphazardly preside
over something akin to news. Ten minutes before the segment began, shed
likely been reminded by the producer as to who I was and provided with a
brief summary of what might allegedly be happening that made this
interview desirable. The producer would have spoken to me that morning
via e-mail and paid attention to random sections of what Ive told him;
at best, he will have since conveyed some portion of this to the
presenter, likely along with a few things hes been told on the subject
by some other person who is entirely wrong about all of them. Were all
set for cable.
The
hacker group Anonymous obviously likes to stay undercover. But our next
guest says that hes been associated with them for years. He says he
speaks for the organization and shares their views. Gregg Housh is the
administrator of a website called Why We Protest. And he joins us now
live, from Boston. Prepare to show your face, Gregg!
she challenged, in the general direction of the in-studio feed in which
I stand unmasked as usual, having done television interviews under my
real name for over a year now.
You say you speak for Anonymous. We cant verify that, so talk me through it.
I
have... never said that I speak for Anonymous, I replied. That is a
very bad thing to say in the eyes of Anonymous. Simply by being here in
front of you, Im not Anonymous. Heres my name, heres my face. I had
explained this to the producer - and, before that, to dozens of
different journalists who had insisted on referring to me as the
official mouthpiece, spokesman, or even leader of Anonymous.
Okay,
forgive me for that, but I thought when youd spoke to my producer
earlier on that you said that you thought that you could speak for
Anonymous.
I
can speak for whats going on. Im in all the chat channels, Im in all
the websites, Ive been involved in past Anonymous actions such as the
Church of Scientology. But Im personally not taking part in any of the
illegal activities. Im just trusted by these people and Im around all
their inner circles.
Tell me in your own words what you think theyre trying to achieve.
You
know, everyone on there - so many people from so many different
countries - all have their own ideas. But they all revolve around the
idea that information is free. And one of the big goals is...
I
paused for a moment, deciding to change tacks. This wasnt the proper
venue in which to try to explain the bigger picture. Nor was it the
proper time; December 2010 marked the beginning of a shift that is best
recognized in hindsight. At the time, it wasnt yet evident that the
operation Anonymous had just conducted would lead to a war with the U.S.
government that continues to escalate at the time of this writing.
In
the hours before the interview, Anonymous participants had launched a
distributed denial of service attack, or DDOS, against the respective
websites of MasterCard, Visa, Paypal, and Amazon, taking several of
these down for hours. The first three had each, within a few days of
each other, announced that they would no longer process donations to
Wikileaks, which itself had just begun the release of some 250,000 U.S.
diplomatic cables. Amazon, meanwhile, had ceased to provide the use of
their servers to the organization. All, it seemed, had buckled under
pressure from the federal government - which itself had been carrying
out a secret war against Wikileaks and its principals for quite a while
now. Months later, we would learn more about how that war was being
conducted and how widespread the conspiracy had become; for now, I at
least knew enough to get the CNN barker off my back.
We
live in a certain society where journalists have certain freedoms, the
press has certain freedoms, I began. And from this side of the fence,
it looks like Wikileaks is working as a journalistic organization.
Theyre working with The Guardian
and all these other existing organizations. So we think they should get
those same protections. And we find it very interesting that these
financial organizations are cancelling their accounts or denying them
charges, like MasterCard, Visa, PayPal. And listing off very clearly-
How,
though, do the aims effectively justify the means? she asked me, and
likely no one else prior to me, the means being disrupting me and
millions of our viewers from using Visa, MasterCard - and Amazon, which,
lets be honest, lets face it, they werent able to bring down today.
And right before Christmas! How do the ends justify the means, you
think?
Theres
a very tough balance to keep here. And Im smiling because Ive been
asked this question several times today. We dont want to interrupt the
publics livelihood...
... but you are.
because in the end we want them on our side. Some people have been
affected, but in all honesty, even when Visas website is down
completely, you dont go to Visas website to use your credit card. The
payment process was working perfectly fine.
That
Anonymous operation had not actually inconvenienced the millions of
viewers she had said it had fazed the woman not a bit; nor did she seem
concerned about having just grossly misinformed those precious viewers
about an issue that was important enough to take air time away from
Tiger Woods marital difficulties. Suddenly, the issue was not that we
had inconvenienced everyone, but that we had failed to do so.
There
werent enough hackers today to bring down the Amazon site, she noted.
I get the sense that there are about 1,000, 1,500 participants around
the world - and were giving them the oxygen of publicity tonight, and
there might be more by the time this story is over. I hope were not
complicit in what theyre doing.
They were.
But
1,500 - she continued, citing the number someone had made up -
doesnt sound like a lot of people to me. And they certainly werent
able to hit the Amazon site. So what should we expect next?
As
it turns out, we should have expected that within a year, Amazon would
actually be buying my book about how great Anonymous is, the lesson here
being that the future is hard to predict, or maybe that corporations
are akin to certain women in that they secretly yearn to be treated
badly.
Well,
the Amazon site didnt go down, I conceded. Youre absolutely
correct. But your numbers - as I left for the studio, there were about
3,000 people in the chat channels doing this. so its still growing. And
the complicit line you used there - thats a bit tough, because the
reason that DDOS are effective is not necessarily because the sites go
down, but that whenever these DDOS happen, people like me and people
like you end up talking about it.
***
I
was born in a town that no longer exists, it having been swallowed up
by tje ever-expanding Dallas suburbs in the years since. My life began
normally enough that I was able to get used to normality and thereby
identify abnormality when it came along, which it promptly did when I
was about three.
At
that point, my dad owned a furniture store as well as a series of Dodge
Chargers, Corvettes, and similar cars. My older sister had cerebral
palsy, which is rare but not so rare as to be out of the ordinary. Mom
was a homemaker. My dad and his friends started a gang.
Thirty
years later, I still have no idea why that should have been so, or
whether drug use prompted the car theft and bank robberies or if drugs
just sort of seemed the natural thing to do under the circumstances.
What I know is that my dad, his brother, and a few friendly accomplices
either launched or lurched into a crime spree sufficient to draw the
attention of the Feds. By the end of it - to the extent that it ever
ended - my dad and my uncle were on the run, one of their friends was
dead, and mom had quite understandably filed for divorce.
Mom
and dad thereafter had a series of spirited arguments as to whether or
not dad had voided his right to help raise me. Dads position was that
he was indeed responsible enough to do so, and tried to prove it by
threatening to find us and kidnap me. Lest dad win the debate with a
fait accompli, mom moved the two of us around quite a bit until dad
finally gave up and left us alone.
No
longer at risk of having her son taken by a career criminal, mom was
free to move us in with our grandmother. This was a major plus since she
couldn't afford much in the way of housing; with no prior work
experience, she had been relegated largely to a series of waitressing
jobs even as she had to contend with the expenses involved in raising
not only me, but my special-needs sister. Already, there had been a
number of days on which we only had one meal.
Another
advantage to moving in with grandma was the presence of a potential
father figure in the person of John, an older man whose son had been the
one who died in the midst of the drug-fueled crime spree. John had
needed a place to stay, and grandma had needed someone else living
there. Beyond that, the two had an interesting sort of friendship that
seemed to fall short of love. Uncle John, as I called him, was drunk
every night that I knew him, which I suppose was understandable; a few
years after his sons death, his daughter died from a cocaine overdose.
Incidentally, he ended up killing himself in grandmas backyard a few
years ago.
The
next few years of my childhood were uneventful. After I turned nine,
dad suddenly showed up driving a Porsche. He explained to mom that hed
gotten a new job driving high-end vehicles from their original lot to
another where they might sell better. This was true in a way. At any
rate, I got to ride around in a couple of those cars before they were
chopped or sold out of state. Then dad disappeared once again.
Childhood
continued. At home, I was no help to mom. At school, I made a couple of
friends with whom I remain close today. But always in the back of my
mind, there was the threat - sometimes the anticipation - that dad would
change his mind again and come to kidnap me. A day didnt go by that I
didnt wonder what he was up to now.
But
there were other men, some of whom I liked, some of whom I only like in
retrospect, years after having given them a hard time. One of them,
Rick, was a professor. Another one, Craig, was especially patient with
me - which is just as well, since I gave that one more shit than Id
given to anyone previously, and still regret it to this day. But by that
time I considered myself man of the house. After all, I was already
making loads of money at the age of 13.
At
that time, there was an arcade in the area called Tilt. They had filled
up the entire basement of a mall with video games. And this was the
second heyday of arcade games, when Street Fighter 2 had just come out
and ones status was determined in large part by ones ability to excel
at it. I earned a lot of status in those days - which is good, because
when you beat someone else, you keep playing, and it was rare occasion
when I had more than a dollar to spend for the afternoon.
One
day, a new machine appeared. Lotto Fun was something akin to the little
wired machines that models operate on local news segments given over to
the state lottery. Little animated ping pong balls hopped around in a
see-through container, each with a number on it. The user picks six
numbers, which would appear on the screen on the left. Each time you
pushed a button, whichever ball is closest to the gap would fall in. The
more numbers you got correctly, and in order, the more you won. And it
was a sliding scale, like a slot machine; if you put in four tokens and
won, you got 16 in return.
On
around the fourth time I played the machine, I noticed something. Among
the various animations given off by the screen was one that seemed
somehow out of place - a sort of pixel that turned yellow at certain
moments. Soon Id figured out that if one happened to push the button
when the pixel was flashing yellow, the ball that fell in would be that
of the number youd selected - which is to say that if you simply put in
four tokens and then pressed the button only when that little yellow
light flashed, you would be assured of making a profit of 12 tokens.
Most likely, some programmer decided to set it up that way, unknown to
his employers, for the same reason that so many other programmers have
added similar back doors to other products - a reason that well have
plenty of occasion to discuss later. For now, I was just a 13-year-old
with lots and lots of arcade tokens.
Now,
the reason that games like Lotto Fun dont legally constitute gambling
is that the tokens entered and the tokens won have No Cash Value, as
is stamped on each token. One could just as well stamp This Does Not
Exist or Cure For Cancer on such tokens with equal results; cash
value is not determined by imprinted proclamations but rather by the
market. And in a video arcade such as this one, the market dictates that
tokens are worth a quarter each, that being how much they sell for in
the dispensers. Markets, though, can be undercut.
My pockets filled with tokens, I waited next to one of the token dispensers until someone came up to use it.
Hey, man. Ill give you six tokens for that dollar.
What? Do they work?
I stuck one of my tokens into a nearby arcade game, which promptly started up.
Okay. Heres two bucks, give me 12.
Sure thing.
It was, at that point, a week before class picture. A week later, I came to class wearing the nicest clothes I had ever owned.
There
was more than one Lotto Fun machine at Tilt. I taught a friend the
games secret tell, lectured him on the finer points of the scam -
learning the pattern that the security guards walked so as to avoid
having one come by when one was selling at the token dispensers, paying
attention to the ceiling cameras, etc - and took a 25 percent cut of his
daily take. At that point, I hadnt seen any of the mobster movies. I
didnt know anything about RICO or racketeering or anything else of the
sort. But the fundamentals of crime are universal. My friend wasnt
quite as proficient as I was but he could pull out $50 in a day. Soon I
was making about $400 a week - an extraordinary amount of cash for any
13-year-old, and almost unimaginable for a kid from a poor family.
Back
at home, I kept my increasing supply of cash in a tennis ball canister.
One night I came home to find my mom sitting at the kitchen table, the
canister open on the table. Concerned, she asked where I was getting
this kind of money. I told her, no drugs, no violence. She pressed me,
still not understanding how I could possibly pull off something like
this. I explained the situation with the arcade. She laughed and told me
that I probably couldnt even get in any real trouble for that. Looking
back, that was the moment when I realized that I could probably get
away with quite a bit more. I bought a moped.
One
day, I had just walked into Tilt when an employee stopped me. He was
about 25 years old, a big guy with a mustache and a beard.
We need to walk, he said.
Out of options, I followed alongside of him.
Am I in trouble?
No, no, no.
Are you calling security?
No, no.
He
took me to one end of the arcade where no one could overhear us. Hed
been watching me for a while, he explained. He knew what I was doing,
and he had a pretty good idea of how much money I was making. And he
wanted in.
Being
the dumb kid I was, I told him exactly how much I was making. As such,
he ended up with about 25 percent of the overall take from then on. But
he also made sure that I had a solid perimeter, free from security
guards. And of all the ceiling cameras, he informed me, about five
percent actually worked, and none of those were in our area - one less
limiting factor in the time my friend and I could spend selling at the
dispensers.
Things
proceeded like this until Tilt finally removed the Lotto Fun games,
likely on a scheduled rotation. In the six months or so that I had run
the operation, we probably took out something around $10,000. At any
rate, my growing suspicion that the law simply didnt apply to me had
been confirmed.
As
my adolescence continued and my savings dried up, I found myself in
need of a real job. The first of these was at Wendys, where I lasted
about two weeks before throwing a soda at my boss face. For some reason
I thought McDonalds might work out better. Instead, I ended up throwing
my manager onto the grill, burning his hands; this was in retaliation
for him stupidly burning me with the fry basket out of sheer negligence,
but apparently McDonalds policy does not take into account the
occasional necessity for revenge, because I was fired. Anyway, jobs
werent my thing.
School
wasnt my thing, either. I hassled my teachers with endless questions
in order to improve their job performance, but the administration failed
to appreciate my assistance. One day, when I found myself sent to his
office one too many time for his liking, the principal told me that if I
showed up there again, Id be suspended. On my way out, the coach
stopped me, pushed me against a wall, and made a similar threat, except
this one involved taking me out back and kicking my ass.
That
evening, I recruited two friends. One was actually a friend, while
another was simply a kid I didnt care for all that much but who had the
virtue of being the son of the county sheriff - and therefore a sort of
walking insurance policy against any police involvement were we to
somehow get caught doing what it was that we were about to do. And the
thing we were about to do involved crowbars.
The
next morning, everyone arrived at school to find it trashed - shattered
glass, broken desks, smashed lamps, and other synonyms followed by
nouns of the breakable sort. No one could prove anything, nor was I
necessarily even the key suspect. It seemed like we would get away with
it until a few days later, when my friend decided he would brag about it
to some other kid - not realizing that a teacher was standing right
behind him. He, the sheriffs son, and I were rounded up, brought into
the office, and with some great degree of satisfaction, the principal
announced to us that the sheriff was on his way. I tried not to smile.
At
the end of it, my friend was shipped off to another school district in
Illinois, where he was able to start school just in the nick of time,
before the paperwork to the effect that he was a hoodlum was made
available. The son of the sheriff was sent to military school. But
nothing really happened to me. My mom told me Id better get a new Moped
to replace the decrepit one Id bought a few years back with my crime
money, because she sure as well wasnt going to be driving me around all
day. I never went back to school.
Not
long after, when I turned 16, I got a computer, and within a few weeks I
was able to code. Unlike everything else, coding came naturally to me. I
started playing around on the dial-up bulletin board systems (BBSs)
that were popular at the time; I also managed to get a research account
that allowed me to access the internet before it was effectively
available to the public. This was 1992, and institutions like the
National Center for Supercomputing Applications were playing around with
some interesting browser ideas; Mosaic, then the top of the line,
couldnt even show images yet. Meanwhile, there werent many people who
had even heard of HTML, much less knew how to program in it; at the same
time, an increasing number of companies were deciding that they needed a
web presence.
A
neighbor of mine with whom Id discussed programming on occasion had a
friend at one of those companies - a Kansas City firm that needed a
database converted to a website. Having learned that I could code HTML,
my neighbor called up his friend and said that while I could do the job,
I was only 16. The company said they didnt give a shit if I was 12,
that they wanted me to interview for the job. I did, and was hired to
come out to Kansas City and do the specified work.
Moving
to Kansas City at my age would have been difficult were it not for a
happy coincidence - my dad happened to be living out there at the time,
working for my uncle. My moms good friend was also based in the area,
and could thus report back to my mom. So my dad and I got a townhouse
together. Finally, we got a chance to get to know each other; from the
age of four up until then, I had only spent a total of a few days with
him.
Meanwhile,
I began my career as a web developer and all-around programmer. I did a
good job at the firm - good enough to automate everything they needed
and thereby put myself out of work. At that early point in the history
of corporate web work, there wasnt yet a constant push for changes and
improvements in online setups; just setting up a website was considered
akin to pulling off a five-man theft of a high-security art museum or
some such thing, and when it was all over, everyone concerned was
satisfied.
But
I found other companies that needed similar work done, and was thereby
able to land a series of consultancies and full-time positions over the
next several years. I went to work for Ringside, the largest
manufacturer of boxing equipment in the US, where I ran their computer
network. The head, a guy named John Brown, was the guy you consulted
with if you were making a boxing movie and wanted everything to be nice
and accurate. That was an interesting job to have, as far as jobs go. I
worked at American Century - the third largest investment firm in the
world at that time - where I had originally been brought on to help run a
massive computer migration from OS2 to NT4, and was afterwards asked to
stay on for a while.
For
the entirety of my stay in Kansas City, I helped run the local
production of Rocky Horror Picture Show, playing Brad. This was where I
met my first wife, whom Id marry a few years later. But shortly after
moving to Chicago, we got divorced, and she took our daughter and went
back to Kansas City. Bummed out about the break-up of my first family, I
was thrilled when my dad suddenly showed up, broke and hoping to stay
on my couch. The two of us continued to live as roommates even after he
found a new job, and once again we had the opportunity to reconnect.
Things were looking up.
About
a year later, I found myself unable to withdraw money from my bank
account. It turned out that a lien had been filed against it, one that
had actually been intended for someone else. Today, this sort of thing
can be fixed in a few hours, but back then it took a week to rectify.
While I waited for the bank to sort everything out, bills came up. I
spent a long evening scrounging together about $1700 in cash, borrowed
from assorted friends, with the intention of paying rent, electric, gas,
and all that the next day. As it turned out, I wouldnt have the time
to drive around town paying off things in person, as I had a meeting the
next morning at work. Luckily, my dad had the day off, and he
volunteered to take care of it. I gave him the cash and my car and went
to work.
When
I got home, he wasnt there. Neither was my car. When the next day came
and he still hadnt showed up, I called around and discovered that none
of the bills had been paid. I never saw my dad again.
***
When
I was 16 and first living in Kansas City, I made some interesting
friends on the dial-up BBSs I frequented at the time. Among them was a
kid who told me that everything is on IRC - internet relay chat, a
system something akin to the chat rooms that would show up on AOL and
other services. These rooms, or channels, were hosted on various servers
to which you could connect if you happened to know the server address.
He told me that I should come over and hed show me the ropes, which he
did.
IRC
was a world unto itself, its user base drawn from the technical elite,
many of whom would become millionaires over the next decade. Early
adapters, software engineers, security experts, hackers of both the
criminal and legitimate sort, and the system administrators who
controlled the increasingly crucial technical infrastructure of the
worlds major companies all congregated together in what was essentially
a secret plane of existence, unknown to the world at large. It was an
environment that seemed especially designed for conspiracy.
Among
other things, this kid introduced me to the nascent warez subculture -
the informal network of individuals who pirated software for free
distribution, and motivated either by ideology or street cred or some
combination of the two. I had downloaded a few things off BBSs, but Id
never seen anything like this. From the moment I was introduced to it, I
was in.
My
mind has a very organizational side to it; I have the desire to fix
everything, to make everything run smoother. As the kid proceeded to
show me the structure that this illegal sub-industry had so far taken,
my mind was already attacking the problem of how to improve on it.
Within the next few years, I had reformed one of the worlds biggest
warez syndicates at the time, and many of our techniques were thereafter
adopted by others.
Such
improvements didnt hinge merely on programming, but also social
engineering - something that will come up quite a bit in this book and
which entails the manipulation of another person in order to prompt them
to act in a certain way. Of course, theres not necessarily any clear
line between social engineering and straightforward yet self-interested
persuasion. But the term has come to be used within the context of the
security field in particular as a means of describing hacking by other
means - the non-technical means of the sort that famed hacker Kevin
Mitnick often employed as a last resort when his objectives werent
otherwise attainable.
The
bulk of my plans for the re-invention of the warez community required
me to build up a series of sources within a number of major firms
dealing in both software and hardware. To those system administrators at
software companies who could leak us the programs before they were
released, I sent free hardware. To those sysadmins at hardware firms who
could manage to sneak out any hardware that for one reason or another
didnt have to be accounted for, I made available the entirety of our
pirated software. As our surplus hardware and library of software
increased, I was in a better and better position to make offers that
were sufficiently attractive to a higher and higher class of backroom
techie until such time that I was ready to take things to the next
level.
Sprints
headquarters were based in Kansas City - itself the backbone of the
growing internet at the time, with the majority of net traffic flowing
through the areas trunks and a wide range of research facilities having
sprung up in the area as a result. Several of these were Sprint labs
dedicated in part to developing faster internet technologies, and which
necessarily had a tremendous amount of bandwidth available - one had six
OC3s, each sporting 155 megabytes, an unbelievable amount in those
days. And it was all unmetered, which is to say that no one in a
position to care was keeping track of how much of it was used on a given
day in the course of the firms research.
In
the course of my perpetual online search for useful people, I happened
to meet a guy who was connected to one of these labs. It turned out that
we had a mutual friend in real life, beyond the world of IRC channels
and BBS forums. That friend facilitated a lunch meeting, and in the hour
and a half that I had with this fellow, I gave him the latest variation
on a spiel that Id been using to recruit new participants, one that
had improved with time as our resources increased - that, first of all,
what I was doing on the internet was a lot more fun than whatever is
what that he was doing; that by this time we had regimented things in
such a way that it was almost impossible that he or any of our other
supplies would get caught having this particular brand of fun; that, if
he were to agree to the plan, wed be storing all of our software -
games, apps, music, porn, anything that anyone could possibly want - on
servers located right behind his desk, from which he could help himself;
that the software in question would include new releases and that this
would begin uploading to those servers within seconds of its public
release - not a couple hours or a few minutes, but literally four or
five seconds after a given company had made it available for sale; that
in some cases software be on his servers not upon release, but months
prior, as we had employees who leaked us stuff the minute the software
was completed, all cracked and ready to go; and that, in addition to all
of this, we would feed him all the hardware his little heart desired -
hard drives, computer casing, CPUs, anything - as we already had deals
in place with people at firms so large that adding a dozen extra units
to the monthly orders wouldnt even show up on the paperwork. And all he
had to do in exchange for all of this was to give us access to those
OC3s.
He agreed. And just a few days later, our warez syndicate had more bandwidth capability than did most governments.
We
were now in a position to wreak havoc on the worlds corporate giants
using their own employees, their own resources, their own
infrastructure. I got us a source inside of Microsoft who was willing to
leak us the various beta builds of Windows long before each one was
available as a commercial product. We had Windows 95 and were shooting
it out around the globe almost a year before it hit store shelves. It
was a beta version, with its project designation Chicago 32 still
imprinted in large letters on the desktop background - buggy, but
working, and interesting to play with. Microsoft was pissed, but so long
as we had direct, internal, and hidden access to their beta build
server, we had whatever they had within ten minutes flat - no activation
necessary, no serial number needed. Theoretically, every program ever
devised could be made available to everyone in the world for free.
Someone was going to have to go to prison.
**
When
the knock on my door came, my roommate answers it. Hes pushed back
into the living room. The local cops come in first, guns drawn - the FBI
come in behind them so as to skip any initial shootout. I decline the
chance to engage in a firefight with several dozen law enforcement
agents and instead come out of my room to surrender, or whatever one
does.
They
let my friend go and sit me down in the living room. More FBI stream in
to secure the house. I ask if I can turn on the TV and watch the news
and they tell me to shut up. I ask a few more times before they finally
let me. The Feds are taking individual photographs of each and every
five-square-yard portion of everything, like Japanese tourists who just
did their first hit of crack at Disneyland.
When
all my hardware has been loaded up into federal vans, someone tells me
that Im not actually charged with anything just yet, that theyre
simply here to collect information. Id have to come downtown with them
but would be home by evening.
They
want me to cooperate. Most everyone Id be able to cooperate against
has already been swept up like me, so thats not going anywhere. But I
want a way out. I wont go after anyone involved in just warez, but if
they want me to infiltrate credit card thieves or child porn merchants,
Id be more than happy to do either. They tell me that this is possible.
Theyll get back to me.
They
take me to the lie detector. I tell them Ill lie anyway and that,
incidentally, I dont ascribe to the science behind lie detection
devices and neither does anyone else whos competent. I ask the
administrator if he really thinks hes doing anything useful. But I do
compliment him on his bright orange tie, one of the few things about the
day that still sticks out.
***
Before
getting to me and several other people like me, the FBI had snatched up
dozens of lesser participants, turned a few, and successfully conjured
more raids out of what little they started with. I had been on a short
list of people in whom they were particularly interested - rather, my
screenname wizy was on the list. But the Feds were obligated to make
thousands of arrests altogether if the industry and anyone else paying
attention were to be satisfied. There probably wasnt any one particular
grizzled old agent whod spent months contemplating and chasing this
enigmatic wizy character through the more dramatically-charged ends of
the cyber wasteland, sometimes scoring clues but mostly being
outwitted, although this may change when we start working on the
screenplay.
Three
days after Id first been detained, the FBI brought me back downtown,
and fuck me if they didnt put me right back on the goddamned lie
detector test again and ask me the very same questions theyd asked me
three days previously and getting back the same mostly false answers.
They put me back on the thing a couple more times over the next three
months, during which I had no clue what was going to happen; they
werent any more forthcoming to me than I was to them. Finally they made
me a proposal: I would start working on a child porn sting operation
which, like a lot of the more productive offers that are made by the
Feds to people in my position, eventually fell through after months of
preparation, and for no reason that can be ascertained by anyone at all.
They resumed alternating between putting me on the lie detector and
asking me to help bring in people that I simply wasnt going to bring
in.
Some
variant of all this went on for five years, during which I had no idea
if I were going to go to prison or become a crime fighter or what. This
is a common situation among those engaged in crime or activism or both
and who use computers to this end; its being faced at this writing by
dozens of Anonymous activists who face charges in nations around the
world, and many of them will go on to do interesting things in the years
to come, on different sides of different fights, and retaining old
enemies with whom theyll continue to do battle across a changing but
increasingly consequential, and thus increasingly dangerous, landscape.
Some will be swept up by society and placed into positions of limited
but effectively secret power - most societies accidentally take up such
people and equip them with positions in the state, unconsciously deeming
them to be a sort of useful weapon - and some of these will co-opt the
resources that become available to them to carry on their personal or
political conflicts by other means. Almost everything that occurs will
be invisible to the public except in the form of occasional news items
that will be false.
***
Five
years after I was first detained, prosecution began. A few months
later, I was convicted of conspiracy to commit copyright infringement
and sentenced to three months in federal prison. This would have been
reasonable had I not been sent to the worst federal prison in the
system, rather than the far less notorious one that was originally to be
me home. Very likely, this was done out of anger on the part of certain
people that Id managed to get off with such little time.
On
the day I was told to report in, my friend dropped me off at X prison,
walked me to the door, and said goodbye. Coming in, I saw that the
intake lobby was crowded as hell; I had to wait 45 minutes to actually
become a prisoner, which annoyed me for some reason. When my turn
finally came, I still had a great deal of processing ahead of me. They
fit you for your jumpsuit, take all your belongings, and compel you to
sign every manner of document. No surprises until an administrator
explained that I was going to be put in the special housing unit
because they didnt have any beds right now. I asked him what that
was, exactly. In return, I got a strange smile, and years later Ive
still yet to decide if it was malicious or sympathetic. What I knew then
was that I was being sent to solitary, and that this was the doing of
whoever still had it out for me.
Also, its going to be a few days until we have sheets for you. And were out of pillows.
My
bed turned out to be industrial shelving - it even had the OSHA logo
on it. On my fourth day there, they brought me sheets. This was nice, as
both the steel shelf and the concrete cell were extraordinarily cold. I
never got a pillow. And thats how my sentence started.
Now,
the solitary I did wasnt quite as harsh as what Malcolm X went
through. I got an hour of exercise each day. We got desserts, such as
pudding cups. They were six months expired and disgusting, but
nonetheless popular in the same way that the Democratic Party is
popular. We were allowed to receive mail, which the guards slide through
the slit under the door. And because of that slit, there really was a
we; although you couldnt see them, you could communicate with anyone
within ear shot - and, with the proper tools, anyone else on the block.
There was also a system of trade in place. All of this was thanks to
fishing, something I was taught my first day by one of the two prisoners
whose cells were closest to me - and whom I never laid eyes on until
the day I left.
The
cell doors werent placed across from each other, but rather in a
zig-zap pattern. The slits at the bottom have about an inch of
clearance. With this in mind, you would take a sheet and unwind it until
you had a few long strands of thread, which you would wind together so
that the end result would be sufficiently strong. Then you would take an
empty toothpaste tube and rip the end off, poke a hole through it, and
fill it with whatever you had that possessed some weight (well-behaved
prisoners could earn tiny little AM/FM radios; the dead batteries from
these worked best). The thread goes through the hole you poked in the
tube end. Now, you take a letter you got that was a pretty good read, or
part of a newspaper youd been receiving if you were special (if you
had USA Today, you were a god, hilariously enough), and fold it up
with the line in such a way that its firmly attached enough to go where
that line goes. Then you slide the whole thing around a little on the
floor, make sure that the paper is slick, with no crumples to disrupt
its flow. Youre not quite ready to throw yet; first you have to lie
down next to the slit and tap the concrete floor right outside of it in
order to determine by echo if one of the guards were standing in the
hall. Upon determining that none are around, you take your fish line -
now youre lying down flat on your chest - and, using the weight, you
slide it under the slit in the direction of one of the two doors located
six feet diagonal to yours, hoping to get your little fish under
their door slit. He grabs it and then pulls as fast as he can, takes off
the reading material, and then, yelling Fish, slides the contraption
back to your own slit, where you likewise pull it in as fast as possible
lest a guard see you do it and come and confiscate the fish you made
with eminently valuable materials, some of which, like toothpaste tubes,
youll never receive again if caught. The process could be repeated in
order to get something to other cells down the block, though this of
course entailed extra time and risk. This was our internet.
It
was a lucky thing that the guards considered fishing a game worthy of
participation, rather than strictly as a rule to be enforced. If a guard
at the end of the hallway saw a fish sliding across the floor, hed run
as fast as possible down the corridor and even jump towards it with
hands outstretched in order to nab it. But if it made it under
nonetheless, the guard wouldnt come in and take it, but rather say,
Aha, next time, punk, or something of the sort, and walk back to his
post.
Fishing
is among the many clever, desperate techniques developed by prisoners
who work under the threat of hunger, madness, further punishment, and
other pressures of the sort that hone ones creativity into a laser
beam. Without access to the many, one does wondrous things with what one
has - not just in terms of making inventions, but also developing
mental skills and pursuing specialized avenues of study. In The Count of Monte Cristo,
the imprisoned Edmond Dantes asks the Abbe, whose ingenuity in the face
of solitary confinement was enough to produce books written in blood
ink, what wonders he might have accomplished had he been a free man. The
Abbe replies that, being free, he would have been distracted by the
whole, thus never having to focus on a few segments of it in the way
that yields such results as he had produced while imprisoned.
***
The
guy across the hall seemed like a really nice fellow. He gave me a fish
- the contraption itself - on my first night there, after having
determined I wasnt yet ready to build my own. He held it on another
line and passed it to me several times so that I could get the hang of
it. Eventually, he sent it back again with a magazine.
Heres something for you to read. Enjoy.
It was a copy of Maxim - a major item due to it being the most pornographic thing one is allowed to have in federal prisons.
(Other
prison systems have implemented similar restrictions against anything
that includes nudity, and not always simply to protect the innocence of
prisoners. A few years ago the Texas Board of Corrections passed a
two-pronged revision that restricted pornographic magazines and quickly
became known in the media as the Playboy Ban. The other part of the
provision, which placed new restrictions on communication between
inmates and the media, was largely ignored by the media itself.)
My
new neighbor showed a friendly interest in my background, asking me
where I was from and all that. In return I asked him what hed done to
get solitary in the systems worst prison.
There was a riot in Leavenworth and I killed a couple guards, so they sent me here.
You must be a pretty big guy, I replied, diplomatically. He confirmed this with some modesty.
For
a month, he was the only person I could talk to with any regularity.
The usual presence of guards in the corridor prevented most any form of
human interaction except for a few times a day. Talking to those in
other cells was prohibited, and this rule was enforced to the letter
despite the sporting chance we were given on the fish thing; those
caught talking could lose their dinner, among other things. Of the 23
hours one spent in the cell - the other hour being given over to
exercise outside - almost all of it had to be spent by ones self,
incommunicado.
Only
when I was released from solitary did I happen to catch a glimpse of my
friend across the hall, as he was being led to exercise; a huge, bald
white guy with a motorcycle beard and a giant swastika tattoo.
This
wasnt an uncommon look in general population, where I was to spend the
next month and a half. But no one was rioting or killing guards; one
can generally avoid violence and other forms of prison drama if one
knows what to do, which I instinctively did. The racial animosity that
varies from system to system wasnt a serious problem here. This was for
the best, as the blacks controlled the chess boards, one of the few
amenities I sought. Otherwise, I kept to myself, spending most of my
time scribbling on a pad.
Finally,
my sentence ended. As I went through processing, one of the guards who
knew what I was in for took the occasion to mock me one last time. I had
been a hotshot computer guy, he noted, who would never get another
job in computers again. Through the transitive property or something
like it, he concluded that, in fact, I wasnt such a hotshot after
all, and that Id better get used to working a real job. Id be lucky to
find one doing anything now, he added; the economy was about out of
gas, and there were plenty of people looking for work who didnt have a
federal conviction to their name. I took my clothes and left.
A
few days later I reported to my new probation officer, with whom Id
have to check in every week for quite a while. She was more sympathetic
than the guard, and right off the bat started telling me about the
various federal programs that were in place. There were some ride share
programs I could sign up for; until then, there were a couple of good
bus routes to the probation office that would save me some trouble.
I thanked her for everything, but pointed outside, where my company car sat.
I
hadnt lost my job went I went in for my sentence; to the contrary, my
employer at the time expected me to complete a piece of software. The
language it was to be written in was so new that the first book
describing it had yet to come out at the time I went to prison; I had to
have my mom send it to me upon its release, about two days after I got
out of solitary, where books were forbidden (another counter-productive
policy that helps to perpetuate criminality among prisoners). Now having
access to whole pads of paper and pens, I read the book from cover to
cover and wrote out a draft of the program, followed by an improved
version, followed in turn by the final product, 30 handwritten pages of
commands that needed only to be fed into an actual computer, where the
two or three errors could be fixed, after which it would be ready to go.
More importantly, the language itself, Ruby on Rails, would soon come
into heavy demand; I had gotten into the Ruby market on the ground
floor, already able to boast of having written a program in it.
Prison was okay, I guess.
--
Regards,
Barrett Brown
512-560-2302
--
Regards,
Barrett Brown
512-560-2302