If any of you are interested in what it was like tracing a hacker back then, I HIGHLY recommend the book The Cuckoo's Egg by Clifford Stohl.
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Very interesting when I'd read it. Jangling keys across the modem connections.. Brilliant. I hope to be such a capable sysmin
Knowing nothing about the source, the one movie I know this isn't about is the Angelina Jolie starrer Hackers
What is wargames (1983)?
I'll take "Movies with poor portrayals of real things that changed the world anyway," for $500, Alex.
Wargames is the one that scared President Reagan and created the (still overreaching) CFAA.
That said, at 300 baud, hacking was s . . . . . l . . . . . o . . . . . . . . . . w.
Dude which film..?
Wargames
Thank you
You’re welcome
What film?
darude sandstorm
When I used to admin an anime shitposting page, I often told people asking about what anime certain characters were from that it's from Darude no Sandstorm, and people were falling for it. Left that page due to massive burnout, and some of the other admins turning fashy.
Earth Girls Are Easy
Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom
Oppenheimer
Barbie
Was really hoping to see Margot Robbie as the username for this comment
The Net?
That was one of those tiny goofy references I miss from Reddit. They put a Pi symbol at the end of every page (on old reddit at least) as a nod to that movie.
Hackers, probably.
It was Wargames
I’m guessing it was Wargames.
Would, you, like, to, play, a, game
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
Let's play Global Thermonuclear War.
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Being a hacker in the early days of computers must have been so fun and accessable
The door was basically left wide open. You could do whatever you wanted with ease.
literally ran a basic wardialer in my area code and had guest access to multiple government systems. I felt like matthew broderick would have been so proud.
I never got anywhere but it freaked my parents out they were not proud like i had been expecting at all.
Never actually messed around with anything besides figuring out the no password guest accounts so not really thrilling but it was super easy to get access.
Also when email was first a thing you could just telnet to port 25 on a server and write raw SMTP messages and most servers would just accept them. You would say yes this message is coming from [email protected] and it would say sure thing!
That's still true, I was explaining this at work to the sysadmin that they should be careful and they said our email addresses couldn't be spoofed, so I demonstrated it with his address. Spooked him a bit.
It was fun, indeed. People knew so little about the implications and possibilities of connecting two systems, that even if you didn’t hack anything worthwhile, it was easy to feel like a genius simply by war-dialing into another local nerd’s own Commodore 64.
Leader: "Alright, while he's working on breaking into their system, we'll--"
Hacker: "I'm in."
Leader: "That fast? Did you find some zero-day to exploit?"
Hacker who just tried username "admin", password "password": "Yyyyeeeeeees?"
To this day, database hacks (top 1000 most popular passwords) and reverse hacks (a few popular passwords on a few thousand accounts) still often result in successful penetrations.
The weakest security link is between chair and keyboard.
I mean, technically, that is a zero-day exploit
It would’ve been amazing to be part of the culture back in the days of phreaking.
Until your mom grounded you for hogging the phone line.