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k-26-(12)-02
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i                                             ....                           i
i                                                                            i
i  - K-1ine - 26 --  April 2002 -----        Operation: Mass Destruction --  i
i                                                                            i
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     `''''''''"'''''''''''""'''''''''''''""""'"''"'''''''''''''''''"'''"'
_____________________________________________________________________________

 � .- Words from the Editor -. �                                              |

 *: [-] Introduction .......................................... The Clone    :*
 *: (-) Contact Information ................................... The Clone    :*
 *: (-) Advertisment .......................................... HackerSalvage:*
 *: (-) Link of the Month ..................................... The Clone    :*
 *: (-) K-1ine Mirrors ........................................ The Clone    :*
 ____________________________________________________________________________

 � .- Documents -. �                                                          |


 _____________________________________________________________________________

 � .- Conclusion -. �                                                         |

 *: [-] Credits ............................................... The Clone    :*
 *: [-] Shouts ................................................ The Clone    :*
 _____________________________________________________________________________ 


   Introduction -

  Welcome to the latest issue of K-1ine zine... Operation: Mass Destruction!
  Thanks to everyone who submitted articles, after I harrassed them on the
  K-1ine mailing list (200 subscribers). I knew that my pain in the ass tactics
  would pay off someday. Enjoy this issue of K-1ine zine, and don't forget to send
  me more articles or I'll.. [insert indictable statement]. 
  
 -->

 Contact Information;
 
 Comments/Questions/Submissions: theclone@hackcanada.com

 Check out my site: (Nettwerked) http://www.nettwerked.net

 -->

                           -- Advertisment --

          +++              WWW.HACKERSALVAGE.COM               +++

           HackerSalvage.com is a non-profit website dedicated to
            keeping old hardware in circulation. Many of us have
           piles of it sitting around but can't just toss it out.
             Here you can post computer items for sale or post a
           want ad for items you are looking for. A perfect place
           to get rid of perfectly good junk.... and get some new
                         stuff to rebuild the pile.
          +++                                                  +++ 

 --

  --=[ LINK OF THE MONTH ]=--

 Every month I post one really great "link of the month" on every issue
 of K-1ine magazine. The link can be anything in the technology industry,
 music scene, rave scene, punk scene, or even a good article you read on a
 news site. I'll be taking submissions via e-mail or IRC right away; so get
 your links in and maybe you'll see it in the next issue of K-1ine!

  For the month of April, the link of the month is:

	http://www.artbell.com/mediafiles/CellPhoneVideo.mpg

  		 It's a cellphone gun in action, super sweet!

  [submitted by: Me]

 --

	  K-1ine Mirrors:


 http://www.mirrors.wiretapped.net/security/info/textfiles/k1ine/

  (Now mirrored in two places, one in Belgium and another in Sydney)

 "Wiretapped.net is an archive of open source software, informational
 textfiles and radio/conference broadcasts covering the areas of network
 and information security, network operations, host integrity, cryptography
 and privacy, among others. We believe we are now the largest archive of
 this type of software & information, hosting in excess of 20 gigabytes of
 information mirrored from around the world."


 http://jdm.hostingextreme.com/files/k1ine/

 Tekk250's mirroring of the K-1ine issues

 -->

  04/11/02
 
  By: RT
 
[*]--- Checking host: 209.84.XXX.XXX
[*]--- Obtaining list of remote NetBIOS names
[*]--- Remote systems name tables:

     ECTLWEB
     ECTLWEB
     WORKGROUP
     ECTLWEB
     WORKGROUP
     INet~Services
     IS~ECTLWEB

[*]--- Attempting to connect with name: *
[*]--- Unable to connect

[*]--- Attempting to connect with name: ECTLWEB
[*]--- CONNECTED with name: ECTLWEB
[*]--- Attempting to connect with protocol: MICROSOFT NETWORKS 1.03
[*]--- Server time is Fri Mar 29 12:21:16 2002
[*]--- Timezone is UTC-5.0
[*]--- Remote server wants us to encrypt, telling it not to

[*]--- Attempting to connect with name: ECTLWEB
[*]--- CONNECTED with name: ECTLWEB
[*]--- Attempting to establish session
[*]--- Was not able to establish session with no password
[*]--- Attempting to connect with Username: `' Password: `ADMINISTRATOR'
[*]--- CONNECTED: Username: `' Password: `ADMINISTRATOR'

[*]--- Obtained server information:

Server=[ECTLWEB] User=[] Workgroup=[WORKGROUP] Domain=[]

[*]--- Obtained listing of shares:

	Sharename      Type      Comment
	---------      ----      -------
	ADMIN$         Disk:     Remote Admin
	C$             Disk:     Default share
	d$             Disk:     
	IPC$           IPC:      Remote IPC

[*]--- This machine has a browse list:

	Server               Comment
	---------            -------
	ECTLWEB              
	ELCOTEL              


[*]--- Attempting to access share: \\ECTLWEB\
[*]--- Unable to access

[*]--- Attempting to access share: \\ECTLWEB\ADMIN$
[*]--- WARNING: Able to access share: \\ECTLWEB\ADMIN$
[*]--- Checking write access in: \\ECTLWEB\ADMIN$
[*]--- WARNING: Directory is writeable: \\ECTLWEB\ADMIN$
[*]--- Attempting to exercise .. bug on: \\ECTLWEB\ADMIN$

[*]--- Attempting to access share: \\ECTLWEB\C$
[*]--- WARNING: Able to access share: \\ECTLWEB\C$
[*]--- Checking write access in: \\ECTLWEB\C$
[*]--- WARNING: Directory is writeable: \\ECTLWEB\C$
[*]--- Attempting to exercise .. bug on: \\ECTLWEB\C$

[*]--- Attempting to access share: \\ECTLWEB\d$
[*]--- WARNING: Able to access share: \\ECTLWEB\d$
[*]--- Checking write access in: \\ECTLWEB\d$
[*]--- Attempting to exercise .. bug on: \\ECTLWEB\d$

[*]--- Attempting to access share: \\ECTLWEB\D$
[*]--- WARNING: Able to access share: \\ECTLWEB\D$
[*]--- Checking write access in: \\ECTLWEB\D$
[*]--- Attempting to exercise .. bug on: \\ECTLWEB\D$

[*]--- Attempting to access share: \\ECTLWEB\ROOT
[*]--- Unable to access

[*]--- Attempting to access share: \\ECTLWEB\WINNT$
[*]--- Unable to access

 --


/*
	The Lawnmower Man Effect
	           moontug, 2002


public class Student {

private int school, hospital, homework, suffering, legalizedNarcotics;

	public Student() {
	/*
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I was a poor student, afraid to death of the teachers and the coffee
on their breath.  Homework was torture - I got it done, but it never
felt good.  I never read ahead, I didn't feel any of it was applicable
or worthwhile... school felt like a hospital without the legalized
narcotics.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
	*/

		hospital = 1;

		suffering = hospital;
		legalizedNarcotics = hospital;

		school = hospital - legalizedNarcotics;

		homework = school + 1;

		study();
	}

	public void study() {

		while (homework == suffering)
			escape("mathematics");
	}

	private void selfEsteem() {
	/*
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I started strong each year with that glow you get when you begin
something new.  But my marks inevitably plummeted, and I began to
wonder what was wrong.  Was I too stupid, lazy, unmotivated?  What
started as my strongest subject ended up as my worst.  With 38% before
the final exam in junior high math, I doomed myself to two consecutive
summers of schooling.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
	*/

		System.out.println("what's wrong with me?");
	}

	private void escape(String lesson) {
	/*
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I took up an art - a dedication - that ultimately pulled me out of the
abyss.  It did push me deeper at one point, like that huff of breath
you need to take before you can blow someone's house down, but its
long-term effects were such that I won't be going back.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
	*/

		selfEsteem();

		System.out.println(translate(lesson));
	}

	private String translate(String lesson) {
	/*
----------------------------------------------------------------------
It was the synchrony of electronics, the element of You that persists
in an environment that's all your own; it was code, a creative outlet
for every lesson they threw at me, however bland.

I made my slow recovery over the course of high school.  I would
translate physics or math lessons into the environment I was
comfortable in, and every once in a while I would be better than
everyone else.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
	*/

		homework -= 1;
		return lesson.substring(2,6);
	}

/*
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I've fallen in love with the scientific method, broken away from a
fear of theorizing; I'm no longer afraid to be wrong because no-one's
defiling my mind with bold red ink.

I believe I was the victim of a severe problem with formal education:
lessons are presented in such a way that neglects creativity.  You are
thrown a recipe and told to follow through again and again.  Moreover,
if you are wrong, you are punished; the lesson and the experience you
gain is forgotten for the greater sorrow.

No doubt there are people out there in the position I was.  My advice
to you is to keep strong and embrace your creativity.  It will pay off
in the long run.
----------------------------------------------------------------------


}

 --


The History of the Internet
===========================

By: Trigger

04/12/02

Intro
-----

What we now know as the Internet started out as a means for the US Military 
to communicate in the event of war. The military needed a network that was 
versatile so that if links were broken information could be rerouted and 
still make it to its original destination. For the first 10 years, the 
Internet was only used by scientists and the military. It was only in the 
1980's that corporations got involved. In the 1990's ordinary people began 
to use the Internet for everything from information purposes to buying a new 
boat. By the year 2000 almost everyone in US and Canada had access to it and 
so did most other countries.


The Conceiving
--------------

In 1957, the USSR launched Sputnik, the first artificial satellite. In 
response to this, the US Department of Defense issued directive 5105.15 [1] 
thus creating the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) [5]. In 1959, Dr. 
Leonard Kleinrock (MIT) submitted a PhD proposal to study data networks. On 
May 31, 1961, Kleinrock finished his paper, AInformation Flow in Large 
Communication Nets.@[5] This was the first paper published on packet 
switching (PS). Packet switching is a process in which packets (small 
segments of data) do not have a static path in a network. A packet can be 
routed and redirected as needed. This means that if a route was severed, a 
new route could be chosen by the software. In 1968, the packet switching 
process was presented to ARPA. That same year, ARPA gave a Cambridge-based 
company, Bolt, Beranek, and Newman (BBN) the job to implement and establish 
the ARPANET. This first switch was named an Interface Message Processor 
(IMP), and was based upon a newly developed Honeywell minicomputer [5].


In the Beginning
----------------

On labor day weekend, 1969, the IMP switch was delivered to UCLA. Everyone 
who had any reason to be there was there. The team of forty was responsible 
for linking the network. This was quite the challenge, seeing as this had 
never been done. On Monday the team was able to transmit the first bits (a 
piece datum that is either 1 or 0) to the ARPANET. The team worked around 
the clock. By the following day they were able to send massages. At that 
moment the Internet was born.


Youth
-----

Shortly following the advent of the Internet, in 1970, a new node was being 
added each month. Bob Metcalf built a high speed (100Kbps) network interface 
that connected the MIT IMP and a PDP-6 to the ARPANET. This device ran for 
thirteen years without human intervention [3]. Network Working Group 
finished the Telnet Protocol and the File Transfer Protocol (FTP). Using 
Telnet a user can login to a remote system and run commands present on the 
remote computer. Using FTP a user can connect to a remote computer and 
transfer files over the Internet. That year the first host-to-host protocol 
(NCP) was implemented into ARPANET. Also the first packet radio (ALOHAnet) 
was created in Hawaii. Packet radio is sending data over a wide area network 
(WAN) using RF (radio frequency) diation. The RF signals are transmitted 
though the air and are reflected off of the ionosphere back down to earth, 
thus allowing packet radio to cover vast distances.

In 1973 the Unix-to-Unix Protocol (UUCP) was created, allowing dial-up 
connections to be possible. With all this new development there was an 
emerging problem. ARPANET, PRNet (packet radio networks), and SATNET 
(network over a satellite) all had different sizes of packets, transmission 
rates, labels, and conventions which caused obvious communication problems. 
[5] In response to this dilemma, in September 1973, INWS published the first 
paper on TCP (Transmission Control Protocol). On March 23, 1977, ARPA's name 
was changed to DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency).

In 1978, TCP split into TCP and IP (Internet Protocol) [5]. The original IMP 
was only capable of communicating with 64 nodes. IP can route up to a very 
large number of nodes. Since IP addresses are 32 bit, ideally there should 
be a capability of having 232 nodes, but because of other reasons beyond the 
scope of this text, this is not the case. IP also restricts packets to a 
maximum number of hops (network jumps). This prevents packets from getting 
into indefinite loops. Fragmenting allows packets to be broken up into 
smaller pieces if their size is too large for a particular network. TCP 
allows packets to choose a specific service running on the remote computer 
(port) and allows a sliding window to keep track of packets. TCP uses a 
3-way hand shake method in order to prevent IP spoofing (faking one=s IP 
address). The 1st of January, 1983, was the day of transition on the ARPANET 
from NCP to TCP/IP. In the same year ARPANET split into the ARPANET and the 
MILNET.

There was one problem with IP. It was too difficult to remember the 32 bit 
addresses, especially when there were thousands of them. To solve this 
problem, in 1984, DNS (domain name sever) was introduced. DNS had a list of 
domain names, and when queried would return the appropriate IP address. DNS 
allowed .gov, .mill, .edu, .org, .net, .com, and .int to be used.

In 1985 Dan Lunch in cooperation with IAB realized there was a lack of 
information about the Internet and arranged a 3-day workshop for all of the 
vendors to learn TCP/IP. The majority of the speakers were from the DARPA 
community. [6]. This allowed for the commercialization of the Internet. From 
1986 to 1988, the amount of networks connected jumped from 2,000 to 30,000 
[3].


Loss of Innocence
-----------------

On November 2, 1988, the first worm was created by a man named Morris and it 
infected ~10% of the 60000 hosts. To fight this new threat DARPA created 
CERT (computer emergency response Team)[5]. (CERT regularly publishes 
advisories about holes in network programs.)

In 1989 Berner-Lee proposed "hypertext" which consequently created the World 
Wide Web. In 1990, the ARPANET was formally shutdown. The first search 
engines were created (ARCHIE, Gopher, and WAIS) [4]. By this point there 
were 300,000 hosts throughout Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, 
Chile, Greece, India, Ireland, South Korea, Spain, US, And Switzerland [3].

In 1995 Microsoft unveiled Windows 95. Although they were not the first to 
release an object oriented operating system with network capabilities, they 
were the first to make it easy for people to understand. People no longer 
needed to be knowledgeable about computers in order to operate them. This 
was exactly what was needed for people to be attracted to the computer and 
Internet world, something easy and manageable. With this new craze of people 
on the Internet, the corporate sector began to pay attention, and quickly 
learned how to capitalize on it. With all these people and businesses 
connected, the were once again running out of Internet addresses. To correct 
this, IPv4 (the one currently used) had been revised to IPv6, which supports 
128 bit addresses. With IPv6 there is the possibility to have trillions of 
networks each having trillions of nodes.


In the End
----------

Way back in 700 BC, homing pigeons carried messages in ancient Greece. 
People of this time could unlikely even fathom the conncept of such 
exchanges of information that the Internet transfers every day. The Internet 
was once a means of communication for the us military and has developed into 
a world of its own. As this world grows, fueled by the imagination and hard 
work of many people, it is becoming part of our lives. As these two worlds 
merge, we must ask ourselves, is the Internet a part of us, or are we 
becoming a part of it?


References
----------

[1] Anderberg, A. (2002). The History of the Internet and Web. [HTML page]. 
URL: http://www.anderbergfamily.net/ant/history

[2] Keinrock, L., Ph.D. (1996). Leonard Keinrock=s Personal 
History/Biography: The birth of the Internet. [HTML page]. URL: 
http://www.lk.cs.ucla.edu/LK/Inet/birth.html

[3] The Computer Museum History Center. Internet History. [JavaScript page]. 
URL: http://www.computerhistory.org/exhibits/internet_history/

[4] Geek News (2002) World goverments to take over ICANN?. [HTML page]. URL: 
http://www.geek.com/news/geeknews/2002feb/gee20020227010452.htm

[5] Zakon R. (2002). Hobbes= Internet Timeline v5.5. [JavaScript page]. URL: 
http://www.zakon.org/robert/internet/timeline/

[6] Internet Society. (2000). A Brief History of the Internet, version 3.31. 
[SHTML page]. URL: http://www.isoc.org/internet/history/brief.shtml

 --

 <dwrr> i have this obsession with wearing diapers

 --

		'Unfair Business Practices by Radio Station K106.3'
 
 Bill Duke

 bse5150@hotmail.com

 Wed Apr 3 2002

 I need your help... This is going to sound crazy but I assure you it is absolutely true.

 Some of you may remember me from September of last year (2001), I posted a message to this
 discussion board about a webpage that I had created to expose the practices of a radio station
 in Sarnia, Ontario Canada. The radio Station was 106.3fm or K106.3. I don't know if anybody remembers
 it or not or if anybody here had checked it out or not... There were copies of emails I had received
 from the program director and other miscellaneous articles.

 Anyway, none of what was posted on that webpage was illegal or false and they couldn't really do anything
 to me for having it available... Charter of Rights and things like that.

 A little bit of background information... In Sarnia, Ontario there are three radio stations, 106.3fm, 99.9fm
 and 1070 CHOK am. All three radio stations are operated out of the same building and all three are owned and
 operated by Blackburn Radio Inc. based in London, Ontario. All three radio stations are programmed by Ron Dann
 (I posted some of the emails I received from him on my website.)

 On September 24, 2001 Ron Dann called me at my home to speak to me about removing my website. I reluctantly agreed
 to allow him to remove the site (The URL was http://www.geocities.com/k106slam/) as I had just begun a new job and
 did not have a whole lot of time available to maintain it. In exchange for the userid and password for the website
 I required that Ron Dann or Radio Sarnia/Lambton (as the three radio stations are collectively known) to place a
 link to the CBSC (Canadian Broadcast Standards Council) on their own website and asked that they do nothing to
 intentionally antagonize me.
 
 Pretty good tradeoff if you ask me...

 Well, Ron Dann removed the website on September 26, 2001 and as agreed, he did place a link to the CBSC on the
 K106.3 website. This did not last long and it was removed and Ron Dann and his cronies began doing everything in
 their power to antagonize me and bring me into public ridicule.

 Here's where it starts to get interesting...

 On July 27, 2000 an engineer working for Fluor-Daniel out of Calgary, Alberta called the police and accused me of
 stalking  her. Her name is Josee Plante. I have a file floating around elsewhere on the internet with regard to this
 matter, as well as a website I am setting up...

 The fact of the matter is that the allegations filed against me were false and no police action was ever taken other
 than having an officer come to speak with me. Regardless, the complaint does to this day remain on my record even
 though nothing ever happened with it...

 Fast forward just over a year and your getting to the time when the K106slam page was set up... Around this time all
 of the  stuff from the stalking allegations resurfaces along with a whole pile of other gossip and falsehoods.

 I'm stuck as for direction... I've already established a lot of the facts but there are a bunch of things that continue
 to allude me...

 For example:

 I've established that both Josee Plante as well as Ron Dann and others at Radio Sarnia/Lambton are involved.

 I've established that photos and/or video of me exists and is circulating throughout the internet.

 I've established that another person, Philip Leval (Laval?) is also involved. It is believed that this person is
 also an employee of Fluor-Daniel or somehow involved with the Muskeg River Project in Alberta although I haven't
 yet confirmed this as it is new information.

 I've also established a definitive link between the above mentioned people and Radio Sarnia/Lambton.

 If anybody would be interested in helping me crack this case... I would very much appreciate it. Thanks.

 --

  \/ERIZON |ELECONFERENCING ||

 BY: k00p$ta Phr34k and ic0n

 Before we begin this file I (ic0n&k00p$ta) are not going to give you any info on setting up the conference.
 For a few reasons but it's not hard at all the setup once since everyone @ verizon is crazy or just dumb minus
 a selected few (they know who they are). Now on with the file. Verizon now offers a new service, Conference
 Connections.These Conferences's are reservation-less, which means around the clock availability. The Conference
 is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and 365 days out of the year. This makes conferencing very easy.

 Thanks Verizon!

 There's 2 ways to dial into a verizon conference.

 1. Toll Free dial in number (866-441-2942)

 2. Direct (972-717-2043) Npa 972 is in Texas

 There are no setup fees, no cancellation fees, and no monthly charges.
 Which mean you can setup a teleconference and your victim will not even
 know he's got a teleconference being billed to him. The minutes your
 participants used are logged separately logged by differnt ports.
 There are 20 of these ports but I'm sure there is a way to get more.

 Anyways the minutes are added together to simplify the subscribers bill,
 in addition are required taxes. There is a separate bill for toll free
 service as well. States that need to use the direct number to the conference:

 1. Alaska

 2. Delaware

 3. Maryland

 4. New Jersey

 5. New Hampshire

 6. Virginia

 7. Vermont

 8. Washinton D.C.

 9. West Virginia

 * Once again the direct number is 972-717-2043 *

 The reasoning behind the direct numbers is that Verizon provides long distance
 services for calls originating in most states outside the mid-Atlantic and new
 England states. Until government approval is obtained, Verizon cannot carry long
 distance in the states listed above. Verizon is in the works on getting the necess-
 ary states and federal permissions to offer long distance in every state.


 Rates Cents per minute per port Until 3/30/02

 Normal    Toll Free
 $0.22     $0.31

 Direct
 $0.09 - $0.18

 Feature Descriptions

 Announcements for Entry and Exit

 At your option, the reservation-less Conference Connections system can
 sound a tone or have silence when participants enter or exit a conference.

 Attendant Request

 The Subscriber or Participants can request attendant assistance for private or
 group consultation. The person requesting assistance remains in the conference
 until the attendant handles the request.

 Conference Continuation

 This feature allows the subscriber to exit a conference after it begins without
 disconnection the participants and must be activated for each conference call.
 Note: The systems automatically defaults to end the conference call when the
 subscriber disconnects.

 Conference Lock/Unlock

 This feature lets subscriber lock a conference once all parties are present to keep
 the conference private. Attendants cannot enter locked conferences, but can ring the
 conference requesting that the subscriber unlock for attend entry.

 Help Menu

 Help with using conference commands is available to every conference Subcriber and
 Participant. The system plays a private help message to the requester that list the
 available features and their associated touch-tone (dtmf) commands.

 Mute/Un-mute

 The Subscriber can collectively mute or un-mute all lines in the conference except for
 the subscriber's line. The participants can mute and un-mute there own lines to help
 control distractions and interruptions.

 Participant Count

 The system automatically tracks the number of participants on a conference. Any Subscriber
 or Participant can check the number of people in conference at any time. The system announces
 the count privately to the requester.

 Quick Start

 As a rule, conferences do not begin until the subscriber the conference. However your account
 can be configured to allow the subscriber to use this feature so that begins as soon as the
 first participant arrives. In this scenario, Participants who arrive before the subscriber may
 talk to one another before the conference actually begins. Though the quick start features offers
 less security, it allows unplanned meetings to occur whenever needed or permits conferencing when
 the subscriber is unavailable to start the conference.

 Features Subscriber Conference Commands

 This is how you Begin a conference:

 1. Dial into conference system

 2. Enter Pass code, then the # (pound) key

 3. Then Press the * (star) key

 4. Enter Subscriber Pin (4 digits)

 5. Press 1 to start the conference or press 2 to change account options.

 To Change Account Options:

 Press 1 to chance subscriber pin
 Press 2 to configure roll call options
 Press 3 to change quickly start options
 Press 4 to change auto continuation options

 Conference Control options (while in conference)

 Press *0 to speak privately with an operator
 Press 00 to request an operator to join the conference
 Press *4 to lock conference
 Press *5 to unlock the conference
 Press *6 to mute your line
 Press *7 to un-mute your line
 Press *8 to allow the conference to continue after you disconnect
 Press *9 to privately play a list of participants on conference
 Press *# to hear the number of participants in the conference
 Press ## to mute all lines except the subscriber
 Press 99 to un-mute all lines
 Press ** to play this list of commands

 How to end a Conference 

 Say whatever then hang up the phone a short message will be played for them and then disconnects them.
 
 -
 We also need to thank verizon for be so dumb and giving us all this information to write this article.
 Shout Outs.... Lucky225, Dark_Fairytale, The Borish One,Xenocide, Cuebiz, MaddjimBeam, Whit3rav3n, Reaver,
 Captain_B, Mr. Poop, RBCP, Everyone Who was on $kytel back in 96-97...well okay only some people from skytel
 and everyone else we know. 

 ----!@>

        		    -- Credits

    Without the following contributions, this zine issue would be
  fairly delayed or not released. So thank you to the following people:

		    Bill Duke, ic0n, k00p$ta, Me,
                    moontug, Phr34k, RT, Trigger

  -- Shouts:

    Hack Canada (#HackCanada / #hacktel [key required]), HackTel Corporation,
  The Grasshopper Unit, Flippersmack, *Mandy*, soapie, `enjoy, Kybo_ren, Flopik,
    and lastly to everyone and anyone who contributes to the Canadian H/P scene.


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                      .;..;. .;..;  .;.;...; ;..;..
                         .;.         A         .;. .;.
                       ;..   N E T T W E R K E D  ;..
                        ;..;.. P R O D U C T   ;..;..
                          .;..;               ;..;..
                     ;  .;..;.;..   .; .  .;. ..;..
                    .;..   . .;  ..;..;..;.. .;
                ;..;.   .;.. . .;.. .;.;.
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                ;.;;..;..      ;.;.; .; .
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                     ,;....;.
               .;.;. .;.;
              .;.;.;
            .;.;
            ;..;.
           .;.;;.; .;. ..; ;. > > > > > > ... <Exodus> I you are attending DeFCoN X.
						       Ill see you there LAMERZ.