HellNite.bas

'This bas file was made by HellNite for aol4.o and AIM 2.0 and a bunch of other crap '3rd release 2-12-99 'if u wanna get ahold of me my address is Hell_Nite@hotmail.com 'my web page is http://www.angelfire.com/va/hellnitesvbheaven/ 'almost all the subs and functions were written by me if they werent 'then it should say where i got it from in them got lazy and left.....
MuRdEr32.bas

'Whats up person using this smooth new .bas file 'for AOL4.0? You might have found out that I stopped 'proggin for AOL. By the way this is RS. My e-mail 'at this time is souljaslim69@hotmail.com You can mail me 'wit questions for this bas. CrAsH and I are now 'programming with Visual C++. It is alot better 'VB but I still use VB some. This.....
Har02.bas

'Ok This is Har0 here.This is VERSION 2.0 'Of My AOL 4.0 BAS. My Last One Sucked Ass 'This one is AWESOME!. I love all the colors 'and how the bas werks!.I hope u got this from 'KNK or HIDER or Death Online. 'FOR QUESTIONS AND SHIT EMAILME AT:ItsHar0@JUNO.COM 'To get codes goto-httP://progworld.cjb.net. 'SOme shit about this bas is that 'It is used to make.....
Early Phishing

Koceilah Rekouche krekouche@pushstart.info

The history of phishing traces back in important ways to the mid-1990s when hacking
software facilitated the mass targeting of people in password stealing scams on America
Online (AOL). The first of these software programs was mine, called AOHell, and it was
where the word phishing was coined. The software provided an automated password
and credit card-stealing mechanism starting in January 1995. Though the practice of
tricking users in order to steal passwords or information possibly goes back to the
earliest days of computer networking, AOHell’s phishing system was the first automated
tool made publicly available for this purpose. 1 The program influenced the creation of
many other automated phishing systems that were made over a number of years. These
tools were available to amateurs who used them to engage in a countless number of
phishing attacks. By the later part of the decade, the activity moved from AOL to other
networks and eventually grew to involve professional criminals on the internet. What
began as a scheme by rebellious teenagers to steal passwords evolved into one of the
top computer security threats affecting people, corporations, and governments.