Warez Group Envy

Warez Group Envy

Huge thanks to Nugem for submitting all these images and documents on the Warez Group Envy. EnvyISO Members Nugem . HaCkZ . PhEaRu . Keegin Butt . BUSTED . Mazin . DrangonZ . Blo0Ba11z . Nut GameZ . Wolfbane . 007 . PCMike . Next . DC . Scooby plantholt . aehbon . Nihilist Envy Greets DeFt0nEz . Eins . GameZ . WoW . Surge…
PPN – Concepts of Echelon by Phonetap – November 07, 1999

PPN – Concepts of Echelon by Phonetap – November 07, 1999

The Phone Punx Network Presents
–Phone Punx Magazine–
—-Issue three—-
“We are the phony in telephony”
November 07, 1999
Last Updated: November 07, 1999
http://fly.to/ppn
(Mirror: http://worship.to/ppn)
phonepunx@yahoo.com

Contents

~Intro by Mohawk

~Beginners Guide to the DACS, Part One by BitError

~CallerID: Up close and Personal by hatredonalog

~DATUs – The Tool of the New Age Phreak: Part II by MMX

~Frequency Counters by Black Axe

~An Overview of Trunked Radio Systems by Black Axe

~A different newbie guide by Mohawk

~Notes on ANI by Suess

~Voice Over IP Surveillance with the TTC Fireberd 500 DNA.323 by Seuss

~Concepts of Echelon by Phonetap

~Cyberpunk culture by Mohawk

~Letters

Fox News – FBI Narrows Hunt in Website Attacks – February 14, 2000

Fox News – FBI Narrows Hunt in Website Attacks – February 14, 2000

NEW YORK — U.S. investigators are focusing on a handful of potential suspects in last week's attacks on major Web sites, Internet security experts and hacker sources familiar with the investigation said on Monday. As experts traced the Web site blitzkrieg to a virulent new software program, Tribal Flood Network, used to break into computer networks, Internet security firms raced to offer updated programs to fend…
Updated Invoke Token List

Updated Invoke Token List

There are a TON of duplicates in this….. if you have a shitload of tokens and invokes that arent mixed up and no duplicates then send em to cystic@wirm.net

invokes


32-324       – Brings you to Programmers University

32-301       – Adds another mailbox to your toolz

32-987       – Software upgrade for master aol. (OH)

32-5046     –  chat room stuff

32-2327     – An Easter Egg.  Only 1 of many on AOL

32-2342     – NEA on-line

32-2405     – Test Internet Style Mail

32-2411     – Set your version of AOL

32-25         – DL manager window

32-252       – Create a screen name

32-253       – Create alternate screen name

32-254       – Delete a screen name

TCP\IP: A Mammoth Description

_________________________________________________________________________

TCP\IP: A Mammoth Description By Ankit Fadia ankit@bol.net.in
_________________________________________________________________________

TCP\IP or Transmission Control Protocol \ Internet Protocol is a stack or collection of various protocols. A
protocol is basically the commands or instructions using which two computers within a local network or the
Internet can exchange data or information and resources.

Transmission Control Protocol \ Internet Protocol or the TCP\IP was developed around the time of the
ARPAnet. It is also known as the Protocol Suite. It consists of various protocols but as the TCP
(Transmission Control Protocol) and the IP (Internet Protocol) are the most, well known of the suite of
protocols, the entire family or suite is called the TCP\IP suite.

The TCP\ IP Suite is a stacked suite with various layers stacked on each other, each layer looking after one
aspect of the data transfer. Data is transferred from one layer to the other. The Entire TCP\ IP suite can be
broken down into the below layers-:

Early Phishing

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.

Exploring Historical & Emerging Phishing Techniques

Exploring Historical & Emerging Phishing Techniques

International Journal of Network Security & Its Applications (IJNSA), Vol.5, No.4, July 2013
DOI : 10.5121/ijnsa.2013.5402 23

Marc A. Rader1 and Syed (Shawon) M. Rahman2, *
1CapellaUniversity, Minneapolis, MN, USA and Associate Faculty, Cochise CollegeAZ, USA
Mrader3@CapellaUniversity.edu
Associate Professor of Computer Science at the University of Hawaii-Hilo, Hawaii,
USA and Part-time Faculty at Capella University, Minneapolis, USA
*SRahman@hawaii.edu
ABSTRACT
Organizations invest heavily in technical controls for their Information Assurance (IA) infrastructure.
These technical controls mitigate and reduce the risk of damage caused by outsider attacks. Most
organizations rely on training to mitigate and reduce risk of non-technical attacks such as social
engineering. Organizations lump IA training into small modules that personnel typically rush through
because the training programs lack enough depth and creativity to keep a trainee engaged. The key to
retaining knowledge is making the information memorable. This paper describes common and emerging
attack vectors and how to lower and mitigate the associated risks.
KEY WORDS
Security Risks, Phishing, Social Engineering, Cross Site Scripting, Emerging Attack Vectors, DNS poising.
1. INTRODUCTION
Phishing is a social engineering technique that is used to bypass technical controls implemented
to mitigate security risks in information systems. People are the weakest link in any security
program. Phishing capitalizes on this weakness and exploits human nature in order to gain access
to a system or to defraud a person of their assets.

Adrian Lamo

Adrian Lamo

img-article-shenon-adrian-lamo_075825934724-300x199

Inverview taken on: 1/12/01

What are your current AIM screen names? Line Trace
What is your e-mail address? adrian@adrian.org
Do you have a web site? inside-aol.com, terrorists.net, securid.org
What is your real name? Adrian Lamo. . if you want to be technical, its the Doctor Reverend Adrian A. Lamo, Ph.D . . Doctor of Divinity and minister through the Universal Life Church, the grandma of all diploma mills everywhere. . .i don’t take those seriously, and don’t expect anyone else to, but i put them on my resume and my business cards to make a point of my disdain for the certification and educational process.
Where do you live? i move around alot .. i like to travel, and have lived on both coasts, and spent a couple years in south america. . i’m in transit right now. . but am based out of San Francisco.
How old are you? 19
What are your hobbies? i like to break and explore. breaking things is integral to the progression of technology. . people accuse me of being directionless, but i think its important to drop dynamite into the pond sometimes, to see what floats up. in my copious free time, i like to explore abandoned buildings and sewer systems, as well as exploring occupied buildings – its amazing how many security guards will escort you up to the roof of a skyscraper if you only ask, or won’t even stop you if you look like you know where you’re going. . urban exploration is definitely a big passtime. one of the reasons i like to travel, too., i used to be involved in local activism and whatnot. . worked with the city government, stuff like that. . i’m massively disinterested in politics now though.
How would you describe your physical appearance? scrawny geek ; )
What do you hope to do as a profession? same as i do now. . short term, interesting contracts for worthwhile places. i’ve been working since i was 16, and have run through a pretty big variety of jobs and contracts. . most of them designed to be short term .. i did a 3 month security audit for a fortune 500 company once, that was probably the most interesting. . but i’ve worked for everything from nonprofits to law firms to private investigation firms. . i set up a Netzero account for one of kevin mitnick’s former attorneys at one of them, of all the ironic things. . thats the sort of thing i want to keep doing. i don’t want to be stuck behind the same desk all my life, working at the same place until i have too much invested in what i’m doing to be able to do anything to risk it.
How long have you been on AOL? used the service briefly when i was younger, when it was known as Quantum Link, and i was playing around with my commodore 64. . but i didn’t start to really use it til the mid-90’s. . i used AOL 1.6 for DOS/GeoWorks for the longest time, and actively resisted going over to the Windows version until they started disabling features one by one. .they eventually sunsetted it altogether in June of 1999. So. .something like 7 or 8 years now.
How much time do you think you spend online each day? it varies. . .depending on where i am and what i’m doing. sometimes, if i’m interested in something, i’ll spend days online nonstop. . sometimes i’ll spend days without touching a computer. on a really average day, anywhere between 4 and 12 hours ;x
What programming languages are you familiar with? i don’t really program. the only languages i’ve worked with are x86 assembler and OPL for the EPOC16 palmtop OS.
What do you spend most of your time online doing? breaking and exploring -=)
Who are your good friends online? They know who they are.

Glue³.bas

Glue³.bas

— ——• Glue³.bas by méèh •—— — 'This is My Seventh Module 'The biggest bas ever made....1306 Subs and Functions '--If you make any programs with this please 'email them to me i would like to see them-- '--AND, If You Have Any Ideas For My Next Bas 'Or Suggestions, and Comments, or Errors Email Me-- '!-#* If you have a web site please post…