Webring Fragments
- Ring of Fire
- The Associated Bitch
Looking back, it was hard to believe this even happened.
But, there it was in black and white in the archives, and
it certainly had happened. Our obscure little list had
become part of the Second Gulf War. Or had it?
What happened was that what appeared to be a group of Middle Eastern
extremists and Western activists, for reasons known only to themselves,
decided that our tiny little 18 person Midwestern carpooling list was the
perfect place to come and announce to the world their hatred of Jews,
America, etc. (We would later find out that, at the time, a number of
other Burning Man lists were
being hit, some not much larger than ours). By the time we logged in and
even knew about this, some of this garbage had been accumulating in the
archives for weeks. How embarassing!
And how upsetting for Paul Lewis, the original owner of the list. On
returning from an absence, and banning the (apparent) offending parties,
Paul found them determined to continue the fight for ... we weren't
exactly sure what they were fighting for. Did we mention that it was an
18 person list? Not exactly TV network coverage for those posting in it,
but some seemed to feel otherwise. The moment Paul announced that he had
banned the offending parties and instituted a restricted membership
policy, two more hacked their way in past Yahoo's security and posted more
of the same. Paul ended up wondering if his account's security had been
compromised, given that letter 7 appeared to have been sent from
bm-rides@yahoogroups.com (an address that only moderators should have
access to). He stepped down just to be safe.
The headers for the letters in question have been included in case you
are skeptical about this, and we hope you would be. Right now, you're
seeing them the way they'd look if you visited the archives for bm-rides without logging
in. Yahoo's privacy function trims the domain name. Originally, the former
list owner was going to download these letters while logged on in order to
circumvent this, but made the unpleasant discovery that he could then log
himself out from one of these copies. "Could somebody else do that while
I'm online?", he wondered. It seemed like too much of a security risk,
so these copies have been uploaded in their place, pending an answer
to Paul's question from somebody in a position to know.
The letters in question : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Who the authors of these letters claimed to be :
Ellen Stanwick (aka "Ellie")
a Yahoo e-mail address, no further information
available at the time of the incident
(ellen_stannwick@yahoo.com)
Joseph Massad
of Columbia University (jam25@columbia.edu)
Raja Mattar
rgmattar@cyberia.net.lb, which places him in
Lebabon, I believe.
Francis A. Boyle
whose address places him at the law school
of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
(fboyle@LAW.UIUC.EDU). In fact, this person claims
to be a professor there! (ie. somebody who ought
to know better).
We could only hope that Prof. Boyle's e-mail
address had been spoofed, assuming that there even
was a Prof. Francis A. Boyle at that school.
Sami Mashney (Sami@mashneylaw.com)
A lawyer from the West Bank territories of
Palestine, judging from the results of a
"whois" search of mashneylaw.com.
Christopher Leadbeater
Joachim Martillo
These last two are coming to us from AOL.
(CharlieChimp1@aol.com, ThorsProvoni@aol.com)
Don Schreiber
70402.2102@compuserve.com
These alleged offenders were then banned from the list, getting the usual unpleasant kiss off letter - one
which is no longer sent, for reasons which will soon be obvious.
"Alleged", you say? "Why the cop-out? Aren't the headers unambiguous?"
So one might think. But look at the headers in letter 8, allegedly from
Don Schreiber over at Compuserve, whose law offices are allegedly in the
San Francisco Bay Area. You'll find a .jp address. That would be in Japan.
Kind of a strange thing to be seeing in a letter that's supposed to be
from California to a North American location, don't you think? Kind of
looks like a hacker convering his tracks? Noticing this, the new list
owner decided not to send Mr. Schreiber a letter, and Paul decided that
the first seven people were owed apologies (which have been sent, along
with note to their providers about the confusion). With some interest, we
noted that one of these three addresses appeared in each of the eight
letters.
66.218.66.216
66.218.66.217
66.218.66.218
Interesting how similar those addresses look, isn't it. What does it
mean? We wish we had somebody to ask, but Yahoo wasn't obliging us,
leaving us in the dark as to how to proceed from here. One of the
victims of this, however, was able to shed a little light.
Mr. Sami Mashney, Esq., an attorney whose practice focuses on
the advocacy of Palestinian rights had been subjected to this before, and
pointed us in the direction of a troubling article :
http://www.mediamonitors.net/gillespie7.html
In short order, we felt sick.
Here's the story. The people named in that article had been advocates
for the Palestinian cause. One day, a group of Israel hackers started
spoofing the addresses of these people, sending material much like what
we've just seen to hundreds of very annoyed recipients, who then did as we
did and complained to their providers, sending copies of the offending
e-mail with headers attached. Much hate ended up in their mailboxes and
their lives were greatly disrupted. Raja Mattar, in a letter to the
outgoing owner, tells us this his Yahoo access has still not returned, and
the apology e-mailed to Ellen Stanwick bounced.
Using our best judgment, we would have to say that this would appear to
suck greatly. A message we've tried to get out to the Burning Man
community is this : "Please know that this is going on, so that you will
know not to become part of the problem. If your list has been hit, or you
have been bothered with these spams personally, we understand your desire
to get the problem taken care of, quickly. But I hope that we would agree
that to get an innocent person punished merely because somebody forged his
name to something would not be justice, and it isn't going to solve the
problem". A simple message that seems to fall on deaf ears, but one
has to try.
This already has become a recurring problem for our own and other
online communities, and will probably continue to be. Hackers, by their
very nature, tend to be persistent, because persistence is what makes them
good at what they do. The disciplinary system will reward their
persistence in a case like this, sad to say, because of the attitude that
if somebody is accused of something often enough, he must be guilty.
"Where there's smoke, there's fire", and similar nonsense. On these terms,
all the hacker has to do to win is do what comes naturally and persist in
his spoofing of his victims. What we need to do, as third parties, is
change the terms by thinking about our own illogical reactions and
changing them for the better. Even if that's not a very postmodern thing
to say.
How could we be this naive?
"And you guys are just taking an article on a website on faith? Kind
of naive, don't you think?", some might say. To which we say, perhaps so
- but what seems more likely? That somebody who turned out to be a
professor of law at the University of Illinois had time to spam an obscure
carpooling list, or that a group of hackers hit our list too, just for the
joy of doing something this bizarre? Which seems more in-character?
"But how do you know that this wasn't a group of Palestinia hackers
trying to create the impression that they were Israeli hackers in order to
make Israel look bad?" That is possible, I will admit, but I don't believe
that it is plausible. Consider who stands to gain here, and who stands to
lose. If we find, and can show beyond a reasonable shadow of a doubt that
our hackers were Israeli, and word gets around to the memberships of the
many other lists they hit, the likely public reaction will be "those dumb
kids!". If, on the other hand, they are found to be Palestinian, the
likely public reaction will not be one that should make us proud: "those
d**n Palestinians!". The only way that one can do political damage to a
faction in a conflict in this way, is if those one seeks to sway are ready
and eager to believe the very worst of the members of that faction.
In the wake of the September 11, 2001 destruction of the World Trade Center,
anti-Muslim sentiments in the United States have run high enough that
people of Middle Eastern descent have been held for years without trial,
without being charged, and without being allowed access to legal counsel -
all with little to no objection on the part of the general population. One
can easily see who far more Americans will be quick to believe the worst
of, and so the conclusion is inescapable. The most those favoring the
Palestinian side of the Israeli-Palestian conflict could hope for out of
this incident, under any plausible scenario, would be to break even in
terms of political gain. If they are seen as harassing people in this
country without reason, they are likely to suffer political losses. The
amount of hate mail gathering in Prof.Boyle's box bears testimony to the
amount of hostility that can thus be generated. With nothing to gain along
the way and everything to lose, why would the Palestian side make that
choice, knowing that alone the way that their own people will have their
lives made miserable in the process? Why would they hand such a gift
to their own opposition, at such a cost to themselves?
"But doesn't that article point to a provider on the West Bank, where
many Palestianians live?" Yes, and a fair number of Israeli settlers, who
while usually not very wealthy, are typically wealthier than their
Arab neighbors, likelier to have Internet access, and have a vested
political interest in the generation of hostility toward Palestinian
activism, as their settlements are likely to be uprooted if said activism
should succeed. Means, motive and opportunity - all three are possessed
by the other side in greater abundance, leaving the Palestinian side
in this incident looking fairly innocent. An observation which, as we
have said, won't be likely to win any ground for their cause, but we
hope, as some accept it, will be likely to end some of the harassment
of these individuals.
Not that we find ourselves without the need to postulate some real
stupidity on the part of the hackers, even should they be Israeli ones.
Consider the amount of work done, and the fleeting nature of any gains
they may have made. From their vantage point, with extensive contact with
people fresh in from the United States, they're in an excellent position
to realise that the above points would sooner or later occur to us, and
probably sooner. This isn't as dumb as would be the action of working hard
to do something that can only cost one political ground, can't possibly
gain any for one's side, and is guaranteed to get one's own people
harassed to the point of not being able to get work done - but it's still
not a ringing endorsement of the intellect of the hackers. If one wishes
to play at dirty tricks, the effort could far more effectively be invested
elsewhere.
As for our earlier confusion:
If it seems like the staff at BM-Rides was being completely naive and
didn't consider the possibility of address spoofing, I would point out
that when one looks at the "activity" section in group management one does
see the Yahoo IDs for the first seven of these people, who are recorded as
having signed up for this list. To think that they had actually been here
would be a reasonable mistake to make, if it even is a mistake. A
moderator is under a certain amount of time pressure to get a situation
under control if he is not to lose his subscribers and, in all fairness,
computer security is not an area of specialization for any of the members
of this list.
Yahoo hadn't even tried to help, so what could any of us do but take
his best guess? If the people whose names you see actually were innocent
victims of a spoofing by somebody who hacked into Yahoo's database, as
the preponderence of the evidence clearly suggests that they were at
this point, how could we not regret what must have been the very strange
experience of getting that letter about a list they probably never heard
of?
None of this had been stuff we'd be thrilled to see on any list - raw
hateful stuff about who was in league with "the Jews". (Really? All 14
million of them? Now, that's coordination!) Certainly, it was off-topic,
but what could we do? By the time we found out about this incident, these
people (or this person) had subscribed, spammed the list, and then
unsubscribed again. There was little we could do at that point, but what
little there was to do was done. Paul Lewis, just before he stepped down,
sent out this letter at a time when he was taking those addresses at face
value :
Message 30 of 30
From: "paul_lewis71"
Date: Fri Mar 21, 2003 1:00 pm
Subject: We've got SPAM! :(
Sigh. I log back and find this.
Guys, I'm sorry that you got that mail, and I thank you for staying
subscribed in spite of it. I've banned the offending parties,
forwarded copies of the e-mail to their providers with requests to
delete their accounts, and will be contacting Yahoo in a few hours to
advise them of what happened. I have changed the settings so that all
memberships have to be approved.
If it would be OK, here is what I'd like to do. Some of you, I
recognize. I'd like to make you moderators on this list so that when
you see something like this happening, you can boot the offending
party immediately. Likewise, you'd be able to approve people.
Anybody here definitely not want to be a moderator? If so, please
send me an e-mail and I'll respect your wishes. And, again, I am so
sorry about that. Of all the places one expects to see an attack from
the Middle East (The West Bank, in this case), one wouldn't think
that our humble little list would qualify.
Should we be flattered? 
Paul
(Clarity and apologies would come later).
Our initial reaction had been "what could these people, or more likely
this person, have possibly been thinking about? 'We have spammed an 18
person list in the Midwest. Now the Israelis must tremble!' Um, yeah.
Activists and extremists are an interesting bunch, and if I had to make a
guess, I'd guess that our intruder fell into the second category, and had
a strong bent toward hacking". We never guessed that they would fall into
both categories, but as Israelis they do, we suppose. But even before Mr.
Mashney wrote back, this looked weird to us. As we wrote a few days
ago,
It's interesting that s/he's hitting a few of the Burning Man
lists, the product of a subculture that few Middle Easterners
would have heard of, or really be especially interested in
hearing about. At first, we wondered if this was related to some
dispute we had been in with another group of burners.
Obviously, a low class group of burners, because sending this
often anti-semitic material to a list several of whose moderators
are widely known to be from a Jewish background is a low class
thing to do. If so, then whoever it is would seem to have
something against the Mindburners too, because we just heard that
they've been hit as well.
But as to who it is? How can we tell?
And now we seem to know, and if anything, that understanding
makes the whole incident seem even more bizarre : anti-semitic spamming
of a very small mostly Jewish-run (*) carpooling list
in the Midwestern US, by (presumably Jewish) Israeli wannabee political
conspirators hoping to undermine international sympathy for the
Palestinians. Political intrigue a la Beavis and Butthead, one might call
it. But what our hackers lacked in common sense, they more than made up
for in determination and hard work, as they did this to one small target
after another. Lives were disrupted at no apparent cost to the hackers
themselves, who remain anonymous to this day as near as we can tell. (All
that was found was the ISP they used as a base of attack).
As one of my brothers would say, the Internet is a coward's
paradise.
Where to, next?
1. Café Satan/The Lushes' Kitchen, a page about a possible camp,
African food, highly seasoned drinks, parallel universes and
whatever else fits in.
2. Return to the homepage for bm-rides.
a. Go to the top of that page (in case that's not
where you came from, and you'd like to read it
for some strange reason.
3. Go to the BM-Rides list itself, over at Yahoogroups.
4. Return to one of the other locations where this page has been
mentioned in the course of discussion :
a. The Psychotropic Brain Forest List
5. Go to a list of links of interest to burners in our region.
6. Return to your ring.
7. Read about some of the other strangeness on the site
subhosting the homepage for bm-rides.
Such as : the story of Fred Cherry, the man who sued
the mayor of New York and the attorney general of the United
States for their roles in furthering THE ORGANIZED
HOMOSEXUAL CONSPIRACY OF AMERICA. I'm sure you'll rest
more easily at night knowing that somebody is on top of that.
So to speak.
Note : If you'd like to set up a link to this page in order to help get
the word out, please feel free to bookmark this link here :
The Fake Palestinian Extremist Incident
We'll be leaving this page up indefinitely, as we don't want to see
this happen to these people, again. Please, do what you can to get the
word out, now more than ever. Anti-arab sentiment is likely to be at an
all-time high in light of 9-11 and the Second Gulf War, and the last thing
they need is more grief.

This member page in the Ring
of Fire is owned by: some Chicago
burners
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(*) Formerly Jewish, some would say, because we have generally
converted to other religions, but anti-semitism rarely concerns itself
with such distinctions. Besides which, there is the issue of family.
|