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Still, she thought as she headed down the dimly lit hall to the vending machine, it was an unpleasant coincidence after yesterday. She'd have to keep an eye on things over the next few days.
By the time Swan returned to her chair with a plastic cup of coffee, the intruder was back.
The Doctor was not what I'd been expecting. He was staying in a pricey hotel in downtown Washington, all freshly cleaned carpets and bright lighting. I tapped on the door of his room.
No answer. I double checked: this was the right place. I knocked again. Still nothing. It took me a minute with a credit card to persuade the door to open.
The room was pristine, as though it had just been made up.
For a moment I thought I'd been played for a sucker n.o.body had been staying here at all. But then I saw there were clothes hanging in the closet, and a computer sitting on the table next to the free stationery and the Gideon's.
The cupboard contained one ordinary-looking black suit and one extraordinary coat, a patchwork of colours that made me think of the Pied Piper "with a gipsy coat of red and yellow". It wasn't a clown's coat, all ragged patchwork, but a garment of substance, well-made and hefty, a gentleman's coat that just happened to be a kaleidoscope of hippie hues. It would have kept out the worst of the DC cold, but must have stood out like a stained-gla.s.s window in the snow. I dipped a hand into the nearest pocket of the coat, hoping for some ID, and instead fished out a dog-eared Roget's Thesaurus Roget's Thesaurus.
The computer was an Apple II Plus. It looked like a big, flattened plastic typewriter with a miniature television set sitting on top of it. Two chunky metal boxes were stacked next to it, one on top of the other: twin drives for five-and-a-half-inch floppy disks. A flat blue cord connected the internal modem through a fist-sized black box to the phone socket.
'You were expecting something more advanced.'
I jerked sideways, violently, at the unexpected voice, and fell over the bed. I found myself looking up at a tall, broad-shouldered man in his early forties, with an explosion of blonde curls like William Katt in The Greatest American The Greatest American Hero Hero. He loomed, scrutinising me with blue eyes that managed to convey suspicion, humour and weariness all at once.
'Mr Peters, I presume,' he said.
I hauled myself to my feet with some dignity still intact.
'Guilty as charged.'
I'd had a mental picture of a cross between an Oxford professor and Sherlock Holmes, delicately sipping tea while he lounged in a tweed jacket. This guy looked more like a boxer or a film noir film noir gangster in his tailored black snit. How the h.e.l.l had he got into the room without making any noise? He wore a rainbow-coloured tie printed with dozens of little cats, interlocked like figures in an Escher picture. gangster in his tailored black snit. How the h.e.l.l had he got into the room without making any noise? He wore a rainbow-coloured tie printed with dozens of little cats, interlocked like figures in an Escher picture.
The Doctor bent slightly so our eyes were almost level.
'Now, Mr Peters,' he said, looking down his long nose at me.
'It was your decision to involve yourself in our doings, rather than the other way around. I would rather not have my concentration disturbed by a scribbler asking a lot of questions.' He spoke in a crisp English accent, with relish, as though just p.r.o.nouncing words was a pleasure in itself.
'I think I've got enough computer know-how under my belt to follow what you're doing.'
He gave me a curt nod and sat down at the writing desk.
'Observe.' With a flourish, the Doctor typed 'Sphinx of Black Quartz, Judge my Vow'. The letters popped up on the screen, white on black. When I didn't seem impressed, he explained,
'You oughtn't to be able to do that. Strictly upper-case only on this model.' He flipped open the lid of the machine. 'But with a few jumper wires here, run to the 80-column card there, a replacement ROM chip courtesy of my friends at the Apple Pi users group... hey presto, eighty columns of mixed case!'
'So,' I said. 'Now it can do everything my typewriter can.'
'Unlike your typewriter, Mr Peters,' said the Doctor dryly, 'this is a thing of beauty and a joy forever. Just look at this: 64K total address s.p.a.ce for the processor chip. A mere sc.r.a.p by the standards of those new-fangled IBM machines. How could this overmatched museum piece ever hope to compete?
'But the makers knew. They set aside a few locations in the address s.p.a.ce, and constructed it so that accessing those memory locations directly affected the hardware. Read from this address here and zap! you swap your ROM s.p.a.ce for an extra 12K of RAM. Read from this one over here, and zap! swap in a different 4K block. Read here, and zap!
you've swapped in another bank and turned your 40-column display into an 80-column one. And fiddle with these locations, and you swap the whole blessed memory s.p.a.ce, all those banks and sub-banks, and double your available RAM.
One hundred twenty-eight kilobytes of memory for the taking.'
OK, this I was familiar with: the hacker's love songs for their machines. 'It sounds like a lot of trouble to go to.'
'Oh, it's hideously overcomplicated, compared to getting a 16-bit processor and just having vast acres of memory there at your command. But that's what makes it such a triumph.
Anyone can do incredible things if they've got incredible resources. It takes an artist to make poetry out of bits of string and paper clips. Now; if only this heap of junk could connect at faster than 1200 baud.'
'While we're waiting for it, can I ask you a few questions?'
'You can ask,' p.r.o.nounced the Doctor, without taking his eyes off the screen. I hesitated. 'That's a little joke.'
'How long have you known Miss Smith?'
'Peri and I stumbled into one another's company some time ago,' he said absently. 'Some months, at a guess. Though at times it definitely seems longer.'
The Doctor spread his hands on the beige plastic that flanked the keyboard, as though gathering his thoughts. Then he typed a short, sharp series of commands into the Apple, sat back, and hit 'return'.
I heard the modem swing into action. But instead of connecting to another machine, it hung up after maybe six rings, and immediately started dialling again. 'So exactly what are we up to here, Doc?' I said.
'What I I am attempting to do, he said, 'is to dial into the mainframe at the TLA building. My computer will continue to dial phone numbers until one of their computers answers' He paused for emphasis. 'Oh, and it's Doc. am attempting to do, he said, 'is to dial into the mainframe at the TLA building. My computer will continue to dial phone numbers until one of their computers answers' He paused for emphasis. 'Oh, and it's Doc. Tor Tor. The second syllable is as precious as the first'
We sat there for maybe a quarter of an hour, listening to the modem dial and dial again and again. The Doctor explained that his program was set up to call numbers that he knew were allocated to TLA's headquarters. Presumably he'd poked around in Ma Bell's computers for a few hints, although he might have guessed the range of numbers from their phone book listing.
At last the modem emitted a squeal of static, the sound of two computers shaking hands.
The Doctor's hands landed on the keyboard at a run. 'I'm going to try a series of account names,' he said, 'typically left behind by programmers as back doors into the system for testing.' He could type almost as fast as the modem could send data, so I was able to watch his attempts to break and enter as they piled up on the screen. Each time, he just hit 'enter'
instead of typing a pa.s.sword:
Login: guest Pa.s.sword:
Username or pa.s.sword incorrect; please try again
Login: public Pa.s.sword:
Username or pa.s.sword incorrect; please try again Login: sys Pa.s.sword:
Username or pa.s.sword incorrect; please try again
At last he sat back with a sharp sigh, and disconnected the modem. 'It looks as though Swan has nailed shut the back doors into her system.'
'So how are you going to get a real pa.s.sword?' I said.
'With a little luck, I still won't need one. A friend of mine has set up a legitimate account for me. I can try to break into Swan's computer again from there'
I watched as he logged in to the university's computer as doctor. 'Now,' he said. 'From here we use a program called telnet to jump to Swan's computer.'
telnet tla2 25 After a few moments, the TLA computer responded with a ready message.3 The Doctor's mouth lengthened into a smile.
'You see?' he said. 'The computer's not even asking us to log in. Port 25 is its email connection, and it has to be left open at all times: He was lecturing me, despite his earlier claim that he didn't want to have to explain things. 'Now, first we use the open port to send a message to ourselves.'
He typed rapidly, drumming his fingers on the pale plastic of the computer whenever he had to wait for the screen to catch up with him. Mail accepted, responded TLA's computer. And sure enough, a short while later the email arrived at the Doctor account. The Doctor explained, 'Now that the open port has seen us send a genuine email, it will 3 I have omitted the details of some of the Doctor's methods to avoid encouraging would-be hackers although this information is readily available if you know where to look.
a.s.sume anything else we do is also legitimate.' I nodded, not wanting to interrupt the flow of his genius. 'And that includes sending an email which will convince the TLA computer to open up a new account for us. One with all the privileges we need.'
He typed in a series of Unix commands, adding a special twist to the address of his 'message' so that the computer would be forced to execute those commands.
'Now then,' he said.
Login: jsmith Pa.s.sword:
Ready tla2#
We were in. The Doctor looked like the cat that had got the cream. 'Swan may be security-conscious,' he said, 'but even she hasn't patched every puncture in her mainframe.'
Before he did anything else, the Doctor located the files which kept a record of the ports and logins, and snipped out the lines showing our unauthorised arrival. Then he spent a leisurely half an hour poking around in the guts of the TLA mainframe. Normally each user is locked into their own section of the computer, like residents in an apartment building, each with the key to their own door alone. The Doctor had convinced the computer to hand him the master key to the building, an account with root privileges, just as powerful as Swan's own account. If he'd wanted to, he could have locked every user out of the computer, or have erased every file. A mistyped command could have catastrophic consequences for the system. Watching a hacker at work was always like watching a tightrope walker.
'You know, I'm rather enjoying myself,' the Doctor said.
'I haven't played with technology this simple for a very long time. It's rather like discovering your old toys at the back of the cupboard. I'm not having much luck with these files.' He tapped a fingernail against the gla.s.s of the display 'I think it might be easier to read through some of Swan's email.
Perhaps she's discussed what I need to know with some of her colleagues.'
Breaking and entering computers is still a grey area of the law But the law aside, there was something a little itchy about reading other people's mail. But before the Doctor could start purloining any letters, we were suddenly and decisively kicked off the TLA system.
'Someone's noticed us,' said the Doctor.
I had spent a few minutes in a half-panic, expecting the police to descend on the hotel room. When someone knocked at the door, I just about dived under the bed. But it was room service, with a three-course meal and a bottle of champagne.
The Doctor knew that whoever had slammed the door in our face had no way of telling which direction we'd come from. So we did it all again: another genuine email message followed by a, uh, Doctored one. The Doctor typed with one hand while he sampled his dinner with the other. I cracked open the champagne and had a badly needed half-gla.s.s. The system opened up to us again in less than five minutes. 'It will take them days to puzzle out how we're getting in' This time his user name was jeoffrey. 'For he can spraggle upon waggle at the word of command,' non-explained the Doctor.
He used the who command to see who else was online at TLA. 'Sarah Swan herself,' he said 'Undoubtedly it was she who invited us to leave.'
'How long before she notices we're back?'
'No time at all,' said the Doctor, already sitting forward in his seat and tapping intensely at the keys. 'So, turn about being fair play, I'm going to log her out before she can do the same to us, There.' A few more commands, and the Doctor's bit of magic was running in the background a time bomb quietly ticking. 'While she puzzles over that, I'm going to download a copy of all her email. Then we can read it at our leisure.'
I've sat and watched a lot of hackers at work. Whether driven by curiosity or greed or a little bit of each they all treat their 'hobby' as a game. Hackers match wits with systems and system operators, dumb and smart. They pit their skills and know-how and more often, their sheer b.l.o.o.d.y-minded determination against the people who want to keep them out of their chosen playground.
The Doctor treated his hacking mission just the same way.
He reminded me of the enthusiastic kids in my high-school chess club, taking a piece with a twist of the wrist, a clack of colliding wood, and a triumphant quip. The difference was that he gave me the overwhelming impression that this was was just a game. Nothing as sophisticated as chess: more like an adult stooping to sit in the dirt and flick marbles with a pre-schooler. More like a human being deigning to throw a tennis ball again and again for a dog. just a game. Nothing as sophisticated as chess: more like an adult stooping to sit in the dirt and flick marbles with a pre-schooler. More like a human being deigning to throw a tennis ball again and again for a dog.
My guess is that the Doctor spends most of his time with computers far superior to the humble Apple II presumably the multi-million-dollar mainframes that hackers itch to have illicit access to. And yet, I can't help but feel that if the Doctor were confronted with the latest Cray supercomputer, it would just be another half-chewed tennis ball to him.
When Swan saw that her intruder was back again, she slammed her coffee down on her desk and grabbed for the log files. She must have managed to back them up before the Doctor could erase our fingerprints, because her next step was to try to break into the university's computer. Swan was not the sort to waste time reporting burglars to system administrators who knew less about their machines than she did. Besides, to be fair, it was unlikely anyone would be in the office at that hour.
If there had had been anyone in the office, of course, it would have been Bob Salmon. It was Bob's account Swan wanted been anyone in the office, of course, it would have been Bob Salmon. It was Bob's account Swan wanted although she still had no idea he was the man who'd delivered her a Lisp Machine just the day before. She simply wanted the abilities of his root account so that she could find out who was sniffing around her mainframe.
Swan was halfway through a series of guesses at Bob's pa.s.sword when the system slowed to a crawl, and then abruptly and rudely tossed her out.