Forget which AIM program did this but it would use special CHR’s like chr10, chr15, so that when the user would request the password response it would be like : ” pa
ss” And they would not be able to copy and paste.
Last Modified 9/17/2002
f0r:10,10,10,10,13,13,13,10,s,s,10
biG bOss: 10,10,10,10,13,13,13,10,s,s,10
showcasing: blue22
nvE: 10,10,10,10,13,13,13,10,f,x,10
tgg: 10,10,10,10,13,13,13,10,f,x,10
evy:10,10,13,13,10,s,10,10,13,10,10
odos7: ad1am03
h4k:10,13,13,10,10,13,10,10,p„13,10
leq:10,13,13,10,10,13,10,10,p„13,10
dimebag:10,13,13,13,10,x,10,13,10,13,10
beretta:13,13,13,13,10,d,10,13,10,10,13
moses:10,10,10,13,13,10,o+p,10,10
I’m pretty sure this prog was made possible by dude named Chris who went by as CHR15. He made aimLock, aimClone and aimCrack. I remember him making those and testing with few of us. you’d be able to lock the password with special characters. You could even give out the screen name and password to someone. They won’t be able to change password unless they had the program and knew what special CHR’s were. I think those didn’t last that long till AOL fixed it. I don’t remember. I think I might still have those programs somewhere on old hard drive.