Año de publicación: 1993
Librería: Max Rambod Inc, Woodland Hills, CA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 524,96
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carrito2600: The Hacker Quarterly archive of issues documenting the technical practice of hacking, ranging from phone phreaking, telephone and network investigation, encryption, and consumer hardware to the legal and political questions it raised, from the status of code as speech to state surveillance, as the magazine moved from the analog telephone network into the public Internet era. Eric Corley, publishing as Emmanuel Goldstein, began 2600 in 1984, and the magazine built a forum written by its readers around telephone switching systems, Internet protocols, underground computing culture, and disputes over civil liberties. This group preserves that transition through Autumn 1993 articles like "How to Hack Honesty" and a city by city "2600 Meetings" directory, then through 2000 and 2002 issues centered on Freedom Downtime, H2K, H2K2, DeCSS, URL filtering, biometrics, geospatial systems, and communications politics after 9/11. The DeCSS issues place the magazine inside Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Corley, named for publisher Eric Corley, where the Second Circuit upheld an injunction barring 2600 from posting or linking to DeCSS code under the DMCA. Eric Corley [Emmanuel Goldstein] (ed.). 2600: The Hacker Quarterly. Thirteen issues. Vol. 10, no. 3; Vol. 16, no. 3; Vol. 17, nos. 1-3; Vol. 18, no. 2; Vol. 19, nos. 1-4; Vol. 21, no. 3; Vol. 22, no. 1; Vol. 25, no. 1. Setauket and Middle Island, NY: 2600 Enterprises, 1993-2008. The Autumn 1993 issue lists Emmanuel Goldstein as editor-in-chief and reproduces a Secret Service statement quoted in response to a CPSR Freedom of Information Act request concerning the breakup of the November 1992 Washington DC 2600 meeting. Interior contents include "Hacking at the End of the Universe," "The Wheel Cipher," "Caller ID Technicalities," "How to Hack Honesty," and "The Last of the Acronym List," with the meeting page naming locations from Ann Arbor, Cambridge, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington DC to Granada and Munich. Later issues carry covers and contents tied to Freedom Downtime, "A Summer of Trials," "DeCSS in Words," "Kernel Modification Using LKMs," "Another Way to Defeat URL Filters," "Hacking the Three Holed Payphone," "The GeoSpatial Revolution," "How to Regain Privacy on the Net," and a review of Mitnick's The Art of Deception, with H2K at the Hotel Pennsylvania in July 2000 and H2K2 there in July 2002. The run records a subculture that documented infrastructure at street level while contesting the legal and corporate control of digital information. Its recurring payphone features gather subscriber-supplied images and captions from Russia, Estonia, Poland, Switzerland, Ukraine, Brazil, Cuba, Thailand, Japan, China, Taiwan, Finland, the Bahamas, South Korea, Turkey, Malta, the Netherlands Antilles, and Australia, turning telephone hardware into a geographic index of communications access and technological change. The HOPE material connects the periodical to the conference series 2600 has sponsored since 1994, a public gathering point for hackers, journalists, activists, and technologists. Covers and interiors show handling wear, rubbing, creasing, toning, corner wear, and some heavier cover stress to individual issues; text blocks remain usable and the issues are intact overall. Overall good condition. The group preserves the print record of hacker culture at the moment when payphones, DVDs, courtrooms, hotel conferences, and Internet filtering all became contested sites of technical knowledge and public speech.
Año de publicación: 2000
Librería: Max Rambod Inc, Woodland Hills, CA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 529,49
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carrito2600: The Hacker Quarterly which document the technical practice of hacking ranging from telephone and computer systems, networks, encryption, consumer hardware to the legal and political questions it raised, from the status of code as speech to state surveillance. Archive of 10 issues. This run of ten issues, spanning Fall 2000 to Autumn 2008, documents the longest running hacker periodical through the years in which the Internet became ordinary infrastructure and the legal treatment of code, privacy, and intrusion moved from specialist concern to open public dispute. Its readers ranged from computer scientists and telecom hobbyists to college students and a broader audience drawn to underground technical culture. The run documents the legal and cultural contestation surrounding a pivotal phase of technological change, as networked computing became ordinary infrastructure and the status of code, privacy, and security became matters of public dispute. Eric Corley [Emmanuel Goldstein] (ed.). 2600: The Hacker Quarterly. Middle Island, NY: 2000 to 2008. Archive of Ten issues: Vol. 17, No. 3, Fall 2000; Vol. 22, No. 2, Summer 2005; Vol. 22, No. 3, Autumn 2005; Vol. 22, No. 4, Winter 2005-2006; Vol. 24, No. 1, Spring 2007; Vol. 24, No. 2, Summer 2007; Vol. 24, No. 3, Autumn 2007; Vol. 25, No. 1, Spring 2008; Vol. 25, No. 2, Summer 2008; Vol. 25, No. 3, Autumn 2008. The articles' contents join technical method with legal and political pressure: man-in-the-middle attacks against online poker software, Skype-based building access, proxy circumvention, RFID tracking, botnet capture, VoIP loopholes, campus information flows through Wikipedia, custom caller ID, charge-number spoofing, and European data-retention policy. Regular departments include "Politics," "Telecom Informer," "Hacker Perspective," "Marketplace," letters, puzzles, reader submissions, calls for articles sent to the Middle Island editorial office, and meeting lists tying the quarterly magazine to local hacker gatherings. Founded in 1984 and named for the 2600 Hz signaling tone that phone phreaks had used to seize long-distance phone lines, 2600 entered the new decade as a named defendant in one of the first major tests of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. In late 1999 the magazine posted the DVD-decryption program DeCSS, along with links to other sites hosting it on 2600.com; eight motion picture studios sued, and the resulting case, Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Corley, named for publisher Eric Corley, turned on the question at the center of the magazine's politics: whether computer code is speech protected by the First Amendment. The Southern District of New York rejected that defense and permanently enjoined 2600 from both posting DeCSS and knowingly linking to it. The litigation ran directly alongside this run's earliest issue, and the later issues then register the widening stakes of security research amid the PATRIOT Act, NSA warrantless wiretapping, RFID adoption, campus network controls, and European data-retention rules, with first-Friday meeting listings in each issue preserving the magazine's double identity as publication and organizing network. Wrappers with light rubbing, handling wear; interiors generally clean, complete, and sound. Adhesive residue from price stickers remain on several covers. Overall in very good condition. This run preserves 2600 during the years when hacker periodical culture treated Internet filtering, telecom systems, surveillance law, and practical security research as parts of the same public argument.