Generating OH/Invoice/Internal Certs
Generating OH/Invoice/Internal Certs

Date 1995-96Founded UnknownSubmitted By O0OSource AOL-Files.com/FDO-Files.com Archive Using any internal account it was possible to generate OH/Invoice/Internal certs as long as you had a valid promo code for those account types. There was also a separate tool which allowed a cert to be rearmed. This resulted in hundreds of unauthorized OH accounts and many invoice and internal accounts being created. AOL patched this sometime in 1996 and now you.....
Internet entrepreneur dies in Akron house fire
Internet entrepreneur dies in Akron house fire

Published: January 14, 2010 – 08:02 AM | Updated: June 18, 2011 – 08:01 AM

Updated at 2:59 p.m.

An Internet entrepreneur who made headlines in 2003 when he bought a million-dollar mansion two years after graduating from high school died in an Akron house fire early Thursday morning.

Ryan D. Johnson, 26, whose financial, medical and domestic troubles had been documented in media reports, was in a second-floor bathroom when the fire started in a house in the 1100 block of West Market Street.

Two other occupants in the home when the fire started made it out safely, Capt. Al Bragg of the Akron Fire Department said.

Firefighters were called to the house about 2:40 a.m., with reports that people were trapped inside, he said.

At the scene, they found heavy smoke and flames coming from the second story, he said.

‘‘When we arrived, we found one person was still inside the house, and firefighters made an aggressive interior attack and found him in a bathroom adjacent to a bedroom,’’ Bragg said.

Firefighters reported the fire under control at 3:06 a.m.

Johnson was transported to Akron General Medical Center, where he later died, Bragg said.

When reached at her Cuyahoga Falls home, Johnson’s mother, Claudia Johnson, did not want to discuss her son’s death.

Johnson was a 20-year-old graduate of Cuyahoga Falls High School with a reputation as a computer wizard when he paid $933,000 for a Granger Road home in bath Township that was listed at $1.1 million.

Two years after the purchase, police reports indicated Johnson had done $100,000 damage to the 4,200-square-foot house.

According to court documents, police responded to the address numerous times. In the spring of 2004, police reported he smashed a 2-month-old Volkswagen Touareg through the security gate of his house, plowed the car into a tree then beat it with golf clubs and boulders.

They also found a Mercedes SL500 parked in Yellow Creek under a bridge next to the house.

The next day, Johnson drove the Touareg into the creek because, ‘‘It’s my birthday,’’ he told police. The vehicles were worth more than $100,000, police said.

He was admitted to St. Thomas Hospital on physician’s orders following the incident, a township official said at the time.

Johnson, who was still smashing the SUV when police arrived, said he did it in an effort to prove to his ex-girlfriend that money meant nothing to him.

In April 2004, police found him breaking windows and beating his living room walls with a sledge hammer.

In May 2005, Johnson was declared incompetent to stand trial on a charge of contempt of court. In June, a judge ordered him to receive 60 days of inpatient care for mental illness.

2026s Post
2026s Post

It seems I’ve settled into a "few posts a year" rhythm, and this is my first check-in for 2026! However I’ve been busy creating a ton of content for AOLFOREVER lately— for example; below you can view the AOL prog videos I've been making. A little info about the prog videos; basically I run an actual copy of America Online/ 4.0/5.0 using the server provided.....
Lithium Node
Lithium Node

About Lithium NodeIt all started back in June of 1996. Some guy in a chat room gave me my first prefix, 4019-1, and I used that to sign on AOL for free. I soon got a list of invokes, which were the "in" thing at the time. One of the invokes at the bottom of the list (40-13 785) led to an area which contained.....
BearShare
BearShare

BearShare was a peer-to-peer-file-sharing-application originally created by Free Peers, Inc. for Microsoft Windows and also a rebranded version of iMesh by MusicLab, LLC, tightly integrated with their music subscription service. The principal operators of Free Peers, Inc. were Vincent Falco and Louis Tatta. Bearshare was launched on December 4, 2000, as a Gnutella-based peer-to-peer file sharing application with innovative features that eventually grew to include IRC, a free library of software and.....