💾 Archived View for gemini.spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › phreak › silvrspy.phk captured on 2023-01-29 at 10:46:40.
⬅️ Previous capture (2020-10-31)
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Here is an article on one of P-80's members who managed to dig up a little publicity. Silver Spy. From the U.S. News and World Report (June 3 85) World of Silver Spy, 17 Yr Old Tinkerer Silver Spy has everything going for him - comfortable surroundings, a father who is an engineer. He ranks in the top 3 percent of his high-school class. His SAT scores for college admission totaled 1,400 of a possible 1,600. He wants to attend Stanford or the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. But in the eyes of the phone companies he is a thief, and in the eyes of the law he's a criminal. Such is the portrait of this 17-year-old computer "hacker" and "phone phreaker" who lives about 20 miles outside Boston. He spoke with U.S. News & World report on the condition that neither his real name nor home town be revealed. Catch 22. Silver spy runs one of the most exclusive bullentin boards in the nation. Called Catch 22, it will have no more than 20 users, whose credentials will be carefully checked. Silver spy, who owns two personal computers, wants to keep the user list small so that his board is not infiltrated by authorities. He terminated spy master, an earlier system, because of messages he received that threatened him with arrest. He believes they came from FBI agents. The youth says he has hacked, or tinkered, in a number of university and commercial computers, including some belonging to banks. But he maintains that he has never damaged a computer or compromised private information. "I'm out to learn as much as i can about a system and not do any damage," he says. "I know people who delete [destroy] files when they get into a commercial computer. There are little 12-year-olds who are so ecstatic about getting into a computer that they fill all its memory with the words, "Hacker was here." Phone phreaking-making toll calls that are billed to other users-is another story: "since most of the people and boards I talk to are out ot state, I generally don't pay for the phone calls. Some people could say it's immoral. I know it's illegal." Then how does he justify calls for which others are asked to pay? "I don't," replies Silver Spy. Downloaded from p-80 systems....