Phrack 71

217 points by ghostway 10 months ago | 24 comments
  • alecco 10 months ago
    It makes me happy how through the decades Phrack stays true to it's origins and didn't go off the rails.
    • cbanek 10 months ago
      I really enjoyed the "calling all hackers" article about how money moves around.

      http://phrack.org/issues/71/17.html#article

      • justmarc 10 months ago
        An awesome ezine that brings fond teenage memories, luckily still staying true to its origins, and keeping strong. Hopefully for many more years to come.
        • airspresso 10 months ago
          Agree! I remember printing each issue and reading it over and over. So inspiring, convinced me that it's possible to figure out how everything works in tech, down to the wire.
          • leptons 10 months ago
            Phrack made some naughty things possible when I was much, much younger. Especially issue #37http://phrack.org/issues/37/1.html

            It wasn't exactly easy to find Phrack in 1992, but I found my way there. I haven't seen an archive of it online in many years. Love seeing this online now, especially with a new issue published! I'm looking forward to reading the recent ones.

            • ackbar03 10 months ago
              Which article do you recommend from this issue?
        • Alifatisk 10 months ago
          The article about reversing Dart snapshots was entertaining to read, what a fascinating language.
          • nickdothutton 10 months ago
            A lot quicker to download today than the first time at 2400 baud (MNP5 if I could get the Rabbit modem to negotiate properly).
            • singularity2001 10 months ago
              does cts doxing himself endanger any of his friends and 'greets'?
            • yagyuu 10 months ago
              :)
              • M4v3R 10 months ago
                From the Introduction:

                > After the past several decades of humanity putting all of its collective knowledge online, we are seeing more ways to prevent us from accessing it.

                This hits so hard, especially for someone who saw the Internet becoming this awesome, huge open library that everyone can access and contribute and then witnessing it being paywalled, drowned with ads and slop, monetized to oblivion, sometimes straight up disappear. It's heartbreaking.

                • chedabob 10 months ago
                  Pretty fitting as I can't get on that site because it's marked as "Radicalization and Extremism" by SonicWall's content filter on our corporate firewall.
                • simula67 10 months ago
                  The worst part of it is that the "true Internet" is probably still out there, but we can't find it anymore. The search engines have gotten way worse over the years and we no longer have good enough filters to ignore all the nonsense.
                  • asmr 10 months ago
                    the last article "Calling All Hackers" touches on this. There are still plentiful communities and resources outside of the mainstream internet. A lot of what I personally refer to as the "real internet" are these smaller indie sites and communities.
                    • stackghost 10 months ago
                      Any idea what "pinkchan" is, as referenced by cts?
                  • BiteCode_dev 10 months ago
                    *by the very same companies that made bank from the web openness.
                    • ghostway 10 months ago
                      adding to that, I currently see the internet as a "noise-first" kind of library, transformed from one that had little signal but where noise was sparse too

                      at the same time, (some of) the awesome people are still here, and they're still doing amazing stuff :)

                      EDIT: :)'d

                      • keyle 10 months ago
                        Yes it's a very sad state of affairs. But like never before, the hacker spirit is more important than ever!

                        Can't fix a bug unless you understand the code... Can't change the world unless you understand it.

                        • smartmic 10 months ago
                          The whole introduction is great and hits the nail on the head. A hearty greeting also goes to all uncritical LLM apologists, whose sometimes brainless efforts and arguments do a disservice to freedom of information (and thus to humanity in the long term). Packaging free knowledge together with false information in an unsolicited and non-transparent manner and then selling it as the new saviour should bring all hackers to the barricades - thank you, Phrack, for speaking the truth!
                          • nujsii 10 months ago
                            [flagged]
                        • SirLordBoss 10 months ago
                          [flagged]