[ale] PhreakNIC Talk Abstracts
Tom Cross
decius at whack.org
Thu Sep 26 15:12:24 EDT 2002
------------ PhreakNIC 6.0 Talk Abstracts
PhreakNIC is http://www.phreaknic.info
The South East's oldest hacker con. Nashville, TN - Nov 1-3
Reminder: Please reserve your room soon as pressure from a football
game will likely cause the hotel to fill up in early October.
------------
The Talks ::: In order of appearance
History of Phreaking :: Jason Scott
Jason Scott of TEXTFILES.COM offers to help PHREAKNIC live up to its
name with a hundred-year history of Phone Phreaking. Rise above your
friends who think that "To Phreak" just means "To Steal" and hear some
interesting stories, trivia, and examples of this long-beloved art.
Starting a rural ISP :: Presented by NotLarry / The Angry Lemming
This panel will include a presentation and open discussion on starting
and maintaining a rural ISP for fun and money using the skillz
available to most any PhreakNIC participant (no, drinking and smoking
are not quite what we are talking about:). We will cover choosing an
area, startup and operating costs, Quake, Quake3 and IRC as network
monitoring tools, customer support, community relations, pr0n, viral
infections, and any other related topics that come up.
Rebel with a Pringles Can :: Presented by HugMe
Have you been wondering what this wireless technology everyone has
been talking about is? how it works? What hardware you need? what
hardware is out there? how to hack it once you get it. What kind of
software is there and what kind do you need? How can you use in
conjunction with your plans to take over the world? What does a hacker
in a dress look like? All of these questions will be answered and
more!!
Wireless Networking Protocols :: Presented by Joseph Hamm
The presentation will take the wireless protocol class from Interop
and tailor it to the home enthusiast. It will also cover how to choose
a solution based on your needs as an individual or company. We'll even
get into why WEP is "bad", attempts to fix it, and possible other
solutions.
HAM Radio Panel :: Panel Hosted by RIMboy
This panel will be an open discussion of the latest technologies in
HAM radio, as well as an opportunity for those interested in becoming
involved in HAM to ask questions of experts. Packet radio will also be
discussed.
Demise of Internet Radio Panel :: Hosted by JonnyX and Laughing Boy
This panel will be an open discussion around the recent legislative
actions that have forced many radio stations, both traditional
broadcast and internet only, to cease streaming.
Asterisk Open Source PBX :: Presented by Mark Spencer
Asterisk is a hybrid TDM and VoIP Open Source PBX and IVR system. It
allows someone both to build a PBX out of totally Free software and
also build their own telephony apps (something akin to Apache for
telephones). It provides all standard call features (Caller*ID, Call
Waiting, Three-way calling, conferencing, etc etc) and can talk both
to regular analog phones and VoIP phones.
Uberfish, or Rendering Equal Probability Via Deterministic Output
Presented by Justin Troutman
An overview of two proposed classes of encryption methodology, known
as BEvUC and VSBXF, comprising the central algorithm, known as
uberfish.
BEvUC, or Bisymmetrical Encryption Via Unary Complementation, is of
the stream cipher design. It consists of two keys, one being
pseudo-randomly generated and applied to the plaintext, with modular
addition or XOR, to render an output which is then carbon copied (this
carbon copy, being the second key) and subtracted from itself to
render the final unary output. All variables and constants in this
method are equal in size. Speed is of the essence in this method.
VSBXF, or Variable Size Block XOR Folding, is of the block cipher
design. It consists of a set of subkeys, which total the size of the
plaintext. The default block size is 128-bit. During encryption, the
block is divided, or "folded", in half, with the latter half becoming
a subkey, which is applied with XOR against the first half, rendering
an output of 64 bits. This same folding technique is used throughout
the system until the block is broken down to one bit. This final bit
is then carbon copied and subtracted from itself, just as in the
BEvUC, rendering a single unary output of O. The total subkey space
will equal that of the block. After all blocks are encrypted, the
strings of unary output are then folded likewise, thus rendering a
single bit of unary output for the entire plaintext.
The true, theoretical goal of uberfish is to further prove equally
probabilistic measures via deterministically processed output. This is
a countermeasure to true entropy, with aims of obtainable
practicality, practical applications, and low-cost.
Cryptography by Elonka
(no abstract yet)
MemeStreams :: Presented by Decius
There is a popular myth that a small garage band may one day become
famous without the need for a recording contract by distributing their
music directly to their fans over the Internet. Thus far, this has not
come to pass. While personal computers give the garage musician
unprecidented production and distribution capabilites, there is one
element which remains missing from the puzzle: marketing. You still
need the resources of a large record company to have your voice heard
above the rabble.
For the past year or so I've been working on a solution to this
problem. The heart of the solution can be seen in the War Chalking
phenomenon, which came out of nowhere into the mainstream through the
weblog network. Weblogs allow each of us to voice our opinion about
whats interesting, even if its obscure, and without approval from an
editor. Whats needed is technology that greases the wheels of the
weblog network, and allows us to sift the information we really want
out of millions of weblogs without having to read them all. We need
knowledge management technology for weblogs. MemeStreams is that
technology.
DashPC Project aka The Linux Car :: Presented by Christopher Bergeron
The dashPC is an integrated computer console built on the Linux
operating system, and integrated into the dashboard of my car. The
computer is interfaced via a 6.5" Touchscreen VGA LCD display mounted
in the center console. In addition, a wireless keyboard / mouse
combination is used for text entry. The dashPC has Global Positioning
and Navigation (GPS), Digital Versatile Discs (DVDs), Games
(Wolfenstein 3d, SoF, UT), Address book database, etc. I can run any
programs that will run on an Intel/AMD i686 class computer.
Clustering 101 :: Presented by Jeff Tillotson
"Clustering 101" is a discussion/HOWTO on running a
parallel-processing cluster, striving for supercomputer performance on
a minimal budget. A basic understanding of networks and UNIX is
assumed. Topics of dicussion will include: a history of cluster
computers, hardware selection, initial setup, software tools, concepts
of parallel programming and some interesting uses for a cluster. A
Linux cluster is assembled using the OSCAR tools for demonstration
purposes and will be available for attendee use, prior to and after
the presentation.
Why You Suck :: Presented by Neoteric (aka Timball) and Abaddon
The typical userbase of a ``scene'' is filled with many well meaning
people who superficially believe that computers are "cool". This talk
is aimed at identifying those users and explaining in concrete terms
why they suck. The underlying goal of the talk is to help reintegrate
(l)users into normal productive society.
Specific members of the audience will be polled and asked to defend
themselves.
------------ PhreakNIC is http://www.phreaknic.info
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