David Cassel (destiny@wco.com)
Thu, 6 Feb 1997 01:15:49 -0800 (PST)
V a l e n t i n e ' s D a y M a s s a c r e ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~ "There will at least be 150 hackers rioting," the e-mail message read. Warning of a February 14 wilding on AOL at 9:00, it promised hacker hordes descending on chat rooms and using special tools to cancel user accounts en masse. "They will totally clear out all of the lobbies," the message cautioned. "So beware and don't sign on. And don't spread the word because it is the only way to be able to sign on again with no busy signals. Only tell your friends..." By last Friday at least 800 users had received the message. A February 2 e-mail expanded its scope. "Among plans of revolters are mail bombs, viruses, and attempts to sign off other members," it projected. Two days later the message had been forwarded to at least 114 users. "Do not make yourself a victim on the day of love!" That e-mail contained the text of a new warning--which broadened the length of the attack. "THERE IS GOING TO BE A RIOT FEB 14 OF HACKERS SO I WOULD NOT GET ON THAT WHOLE DAY," its latest incarnation read. "I AM TELLING YOU THIS BECAUSE YOU ARE MY FRIENDS AND I DON'T WANT YOUR COM TO GET EVICTED FROM A HACKERS IDEA OF A FUN TIME." It re-iterated the forwarder's warnings of mailbombings, viruses, and forced sign-offs. "SO IF I WERE YOU I WOULD TELL ALL OF YOUR FRIENDS AND FORWARD THIS TO AS MANY PEOPLE AS POSABAL," the message continued, "AND CLEER OUT YOUR MAIL BOXES THE DAY BEFORE AND DONT READ ANYTHING THE DAY AFTER JUST DELET IT ALL. THIS IS NOT A JOKE PLESES SEND IT TO AS MANY PEOPLE AS SOON AS YOU CAN!" "I am amazed at HOW stupid AOL users are," one recipient commented. While mailbombs are always possible, viruses or account terminations probably wouldn't reach the users. "They should know unless they download what is sent to them, they are NOT going to get a virus." "We have never had an occurrence of a virus being spread through simply reading email," AOL said in a statement in 1994. That December the comp.risks digest had discussed the possibility of executable e-mail messages. Within 24 hours, one reader complained they'd been "inundated" with bogus alerts about a virus sent in an e-mail message with the subject "Good Times" which erased hard drives if it was read. "There are idiots in the world who think it's awfully funny to cry 'Wolf' as soon as someone else notices that it's theoretically possible that wolves exist," another reader commented. (http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/16.61.html#subj6) But folklore reveals a culture's secret fears. Steve Case's pronouncements must be building a pool of skepticism. ("Frustrated with hearing busy signals? AOL is solving the problem. Here's how--from CEO Steve Case," read last Thursday's Welcome Screen.) AOL's users give credence to a dangerous world terrorized by the technologically powerful, with the company leaving them unprotected. Their fears aren't unfounded. Last month at least 25 users received a very real hacker file attached to e-mail messages, with instructions to download and execute the program--though once executed, the program would mail their password to the hacker's internet address. AOL silently intercepted e-mail messages bound for the hacker's addresses--but they didn't warn members. "From a Corporate Communications perspective, the access issue is predominant," reads one internal memo. "That message must be focused, and material about virus safety will likely draw negative media attention... For now, the best PR approach seems to be low key." It didn't work. Tonight AOL suffered another catastrophe--a service outage. AOL's spokesperson told C|Net it was "a hiccup in the new software"--which ironically occurred just ten hours before a scheduled maintainence shutdown of three hours. Members were locked out of AOL for over an hour. "AOL may be on the brink of disaster," C|Net's Janet Kornblum wrote, citing comments from an industry analyst pointing to AOL's "overall bad-service package" as a turn-off for consumers. (http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,7691,4000.html) Content-provider defections loom, too. One week before the hacker riot, AOL faces a threatened strike from their Company Connection content partners. (http://www.sb.net/kevin/aolstrike.txt) "Your forum and mine are in grave danger of being eliminated," reads the message distributed to all its company representatives. AOL's Kevin Schoeler had announced plans to "enhance" their AOL status for a "modest fee" of $55,000 a year. "This policy change comes disguised as an 'exciting opportunity' with the Company Connection being 'redesigned and enhanced'," the letter notes sarcastically--pointing out the only new feature would be duplicative monthly reports and demographics on forum participants. "If you refuse to pay this $55,000 annual ransom, your forum will be dismantled and you will be evicted from America Online!!!" They're the latest casualty of AOL's flat-rate pricing. "Not long ago, we were a valuable asset to AOL's income. Now we are a financial burden," the letter continues. "They expect us to pay up or get out, while popular 'magnet' forums like MTV continue to RECEIVE substantial residual payments." Indicating that many forum managers were striking Friday, the letter calls for others to join them. "Together, we can send a message to the AOL brain-donors who came up with this scam," it predicts, "that we will not succumb to this ridiculous idea. That we will not pay ransom money to keep THEIR PAYING customers happy. That we will not go quietly into the night!" The strike is scheduled to begin Friday, February 7, "and will only end when AOL rescinds this policy." Content providers will conceal files and replace message forums with a statement that "This forum is participating in the Company Connection Strike." It takes their case to AOL's users. "America Online has introduced a new policy that will make it impossible for us to continue to support you, our valued customers, on America Online. If you value our having a forum here on AOL, please send a note in support of our strike to: CompanyCon@aol.com. Sorry for this inconvenience and thank you for your support." And the strikers will not pay "the $55,000 ransom". Instead, they forwarded their message to the press. "I'm sure they'll be happy to report this strike along with America Online's other 'good' press." The letter's author told Interactive Week that several forum leaders had already decided to abandon AOL. But the threatened strike still looms. "We have nothing to lose and everything to gain." THE LAST LAUGH AOL's refund line greets callers with pitches for their service. "Thank you for calling America Online. We value your membership--and we're working around the clock to prove it!" Late-night callers are then told to call back during business hours. David Cassel More Information - http://www.wco.com/~destiny/time.htm ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~ Please forward with subscription information and headers in-tact. To subscribe to this moderated list, send a message to MAJORDOMO@CLOUD9.NET containing the phrase SUBSCRIBE AOL-LIST in the message body. To unsubscribe send a message saying UNSUBSCRIBE AOL-LIST to MAJORDOMO@CLOUD9.NET ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~