Re: Need Help With Phone Pranksters
Article: 7412 of alt.hackers From: chandler@fiat.gslis.utexas.edu (chandler howell) Newsgroups: alt.hackers Subject: Re: Need Help With Phone Pranksters Date: 18 Feb 1995 13:56:50 GMT Organization: The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas Lines: 56 Approved: You Know it Message-ID: 3i4ub2$st7@geraldo.cc.utexas.edu NNTP-Posting-Host: naftalab.bus.utexas.edu X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2] Status: RO
Frank Cusack Jr. (fcusack@psu.edu) wrote: > In article <3i36p0$nj5@geraldo.cc.utexas.edu>, > chandler@fiat.gslis.utexas.edu (chandler howell) wrote: > > > > ObAnti-HackerHack: > > The OWNER of a machine that I adminstrate has the nasty habit of hacking > > around in people's accounts as superuser, and since I can't just deny him > > access (it's his machine, after all), I wrote SHELL SCRIPTS (rofl) > > for who, w, and ps, so they wouldn't show me logged in, then changed > > system time so the date/time stamp would match the rest of the system > > files and copied them, then reset the time so I could watch him and see > > what sort of scummy stuff he was doing--reading people's mail and stuff > > like that. > That is a pretty shitty thing for someone to do. I have 2 questions: > 1) what did you do with the information you got? Informed all of the users who kept (definite past tense here) their mail on the machine what was going on. > 2) why didn't you just 'touch' the shell scripts to set the date/time stamp? I didn't know about 'touch' at the time, and was in a hurry. The whole system time gig took maybe thirty seconds, less time than finding out how to touch the right way. After all, it was a hack <gr>. ObGottaHaveAHackToExplainMyLastAdmittedlyBadHack: In a previous job (life?) the office I worked for was pretty technologically backwards--only three computers and one print server were networked, and those went to a wide-carriage dot matrix, a credit card printer, and a ticket printer. They also had a laser printer, but it was attached to a non-network computer. They told me I couldn't network that computer, so I took a bunch of old printer cabling and an A-B box and rigged it up one night so that I could control if the input came from my computer or the one the laser was attached to, then set up my workstation as an rprinter, so whenever I needed to print, as soon as the laser printer finished, I'd just throw the switch and voila!, the queue would dump whenever I threw the switch. The only problem was that I kept forgetting to switch it back, but I quit before I got annoyed enough to solved that problem. laterman, chandlerman -- --- -I speak solely for myself, because no one else would let me speak for them- Chandler W. Howell * "Sleep is for the Weak!" work: chandler.howell@sematech.org * ----------------------------- home: chandler@naftalab.bus.utexas.edu * "I have a life, but I zipped it to chowell@fiat.gslis.utexas.edu * make room on my hard drive!"--ME ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://naftalab.bus.utexas.edu/~chandler