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July 17, 2008 7:46 PM PDT

HOPE conference highlights everyday hacking

by Elinor Mills

Updated July 18, 7:52 AM PDT with more details about live radio broadcast

(Credit: Last HOPE)

NEW YORK--From sessions on how-to create fluorescent mice and crack safes to discussions on losing your privacy in a taxi and complaints about Wikipedia, the Last HOPE conference starting here Friday has something for just about everyone.

The conference is the brainchild of Emmanuel Goldstein, aka Eric Corley, who publishes the notorious 2600 magazine. Corley has seen the community grow from its early days in the1980s with kids going to jail for breaking into the AT&T network, to millions of regular citizens skirting the law with their digital entertainment consumption and iPhone hacking.

Last HOPE organizer, Emmanuel Goldstein, AKA Eric Corley.

(Credit: Elinor Mills)

"Basically what the hackers and phone phreakers of the past were doing, everybody is doing today," he said in an interview on Thursday. "This is the price of success; we have these fads of everybody jumping into technologies and playing with things, (but) it's also gotten more commercial."

Back in the day, the phone system was a "giant toy that people wanted to figure out. That's what hacking is all about," he said. "The interest is still there. People want to know how things work, but there's no practical reason for (phone phreaking) beyond curiosity" because of the advent of the Internet.

Meanwhile, the widespread distribution of technology has turned millions into would-be criminals. "It's a free-for-all as far as legal precedent goes," Corley said. "Something you think is completely above-board, like running a program on your own computer, can be a violation of the DMCA (Digital Millennium Copyright Act)."

The conference program makes for entertaining reading. If you've ever wondered exactly how your luggage gets so banged up after check-in then you might be interested in the session on the Bagcam, a small suitcase containing a mini-digital video recorder and pinhole camera that has documented cases of mishandling in airports around the country.

Another speaker will discuss why transporting firearms may be the best way to safeguard your valuables during flights because federal law requires passengers to lock firearm-bearing luggage.

There's a session on "biohacking"--modifying and engineering biological systems for "novel purposes," such as making fluorescent mice, therapeutic viruses, or bacteria that eat explosives or smell like bananas.

Other sessions cover how to escape high-security handcuffs and topics like cybersexuality, food hacking, postal hacking, social engineering, culture jamming, and hacking the price of food by forming urban communities. Several sessions deal with building hacker collectives, including one by a group whose space is tricked out with drink-serving robots.

One talk is titled "From Black Hat to a Black Suit--How to Climb the Corporate Security Ladder Without Losing your Soul," and another speaker will talk about using the Death Star as a model for assessing security threats. Another session will cover technologies used in modern New York taxis, including GPS tracking, SMS messaging, and touch-screen kiosks, and explore the privacy and security concerns of those.

Keynote speeches are being given by the likes of convicted hacker Kevin Mitnick, former Dead Kennedys singer and songwriter Jello Biafra, and author Steven Levy.

The Last HOPE conference badges come with an RFID chip for tracking participants, if they choose.

(Credit: Last HOPE)
There also will be live radio broadcasting from the event. The programming, accessible here, is expected to include houseplants hooked up to live computer visuals and music, a "mutant trumpet" that is half analog and half digital, an animated Wii controlled digital art sketchpad, a robotic drummer and digital gloves for gestural DJing.

The badges also have RFID chips that will be tracking attendees' movements for interactive games.

The event, the seventh since 1994, is being held in the 90-year-old Hotel Pennsylvania across from Penn Station. A move to demolish the slightly rundown hotel (the halls seriously remind me of the hotel in The Shining) appears to be in limbo, but the prospect inspired the name change this year to "Last HOPE."

Corley has placed symbolic black coffins in the registration area and suggested people donate flowers instead of monetary contributions to the event. The cover of the program features artwork of a boy holding the hand of a scythe-carrying Death and walking toward the Hotel Pennsylvania.

"When all is said and done...is it not all too clear that we are all in fact The Last HOPE for the future?" the intro to the program says, before dismissing that as a "pretentious notion."

Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service, and the Associated Press. E-mail Elinor.
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by jamalystic July 18, 2008 7:02 AM PDT
Is the conference meant to tout the latest techniques use by hackers or celebrating the damage they have caused to society? I hope the FBI take notice of those who would be in attendance: Where the FBI Needs to Put Its Efforts(http://www.internetevolution.com/author.asp?section_id=515&doc_id=153642&F_src=flftwo)
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by Dalkorian July 18, 2008 3:30 PM PDT
A mindless ignorant comment is not improved by posting it 4 times within 2 minutes. Go tell your mommy to unplug your computer for you, you're apparently not ready for the grown up world yet.
by jamalystic July 18, 2008 7:02 AM PDT
Is the conference meant to tout the latest techniques use by hackers or celebrating the damage they have caused to society? I hope the FBI take notice of those who would be in attendance: Where the FBI Needs to Put Its Efforts(http://www.internetevolution.com/author.asp?section_id=515&doc_id=153642&F_src=flftwo)
Reply to this comment
by jamalystic July 18, 2008 7:03 AM PDT
Is the conference meant to tout the latest techniques use by hackers or celebrating the damage they have caused to society? I hope the FBI take notice of those who would be in attendance: Where the FBI Needs to Put Its Efforts(http://www.internetevolution.com/author.asp?section_id=515&doc_id=153642&F_src=flftwo)
Reply to this comment
by jamalystic July 18, 2008 7:03 AM PDT
Is the conference meant to tout the latest techniques use by hackers or celebrating the damage they have caused to society? I hope the FBI take notice of those who would be in attendance: Where the FBI Needs to Put Its Efforts(http://www.internetevolution.com/author.asp?section_id=515&doc_id=153642&F_src=flftwo)
Reply to this comment
by cohaver July 18, 2008 6:08 PM PDT
Are you stupid anytime something comes out of the shadows and everyone knows the problems They can address the problem Sending in the FBI is stupid. If kids or people can over take something out of their house than those products have problems . I say this the OSI STACK and other international standards is where companies need to fix things .
If stupid people run society and products they should be replaced with intelligent design people . Building a better mouse trap Beta testing your products Think about this Radio shack took down Hollywood you blame Radio shack . But Hollywood should buy Radio shack and learn something. Traveling the world that what the world thinks of Americans were to stupid to see when we help fix our own problems and correct mistakes We call the Big stick guys to fix the people not the problem
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by kenright60660 July 18, 2008 8:49 PM PDT
There is a very large difference between what the idiots did to the Epilepsy Foundation's website and what this conference is about. Just because there are morons who do things just to seem "cool" or "elite" does not mean that everyone who associates themselves with hacking is a moron. Few groups of hackers have caused damage to society, at least, not anything approaching serious or irreversible. The Weather Underground should have been shut-down for its attacks on the Pentagon, cutting off air-support for the troops in Vietnam, but for the most part, most hackers hack to show the security flaws of most systems. Without domestic hackers, there would be no efficient security system, there would be no useful counter-hackers, the database of every military and government institution would be open to attack from other governments and terrorist organizations, who, like the morons who hacked the Epilepsy Foundation's website, have nothing but malicious intentions.
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by whitehofner July 21, 2008 5:11 PM PDT
I think it's important to define the term "hacker." Certainly a large number of what are generally termed "ethical hackers" are consultants who are hired to find and address security vulnerabilities. But the term is more often used to describe those with malicious or criminal intent, and I don't agree that "few groups of hackers have caused damage to society." Most non-ethical hackers are motivated by profit or political extremism, and many damaging incidents have occurred recently, from the theft of personal information fromTJ Maxx and others to the crippling of Estonia's internet by Russian servers last year.

This conference appears to address the "lighter side" of hacking, and there's nothing wrong with that, but to think that criminal hacking for monetary or political gain is not a serious issue is woefully underestimating the problem.
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