keeping his eyes focused on hers. “A great, great book.”
“I wouldn’t think 19th century Russian anarchists would have much
to offer hackers.” She fanned herself with the book, her tone challenging
but light. “Their economic models are all based on industrial and pre-
industrial systems and we’re moving into a post-industrial world.”
“And you and I are probably the only two people at this convention
who’ll realize or care about that, but I think that book will surprise you.
There are some great lessons in there we can still apply—especially if
you’re a free software kind of girl.”
36
Geek Mafia: Black Hat Blues
“As it happens I am. I like my software free as in freedom and my
beer free as in someone else is buying.”
He laughed. Hot and she could riff on Richard Stallman quotes. Very
nice. “Well, I’ll have to buy you that beer later.”
“Maybe you will.” She looked at his dolly. “Are you on staff here?”
“No, I’m just helping out. I don’t suppose you want to help me unload
a truck full of t-shirts and truck them up to the 18th floor.”
“I really don’t,” she said, smiling. “But thanks for the offer.”
“Well then, you’ll have to come to the Hacks of Rebellion talk on
Saturday night then.” He gestured towards the ceiling and, 18 stories
up, the speakers’ halls.
“I will?”
“It’s only fair. Either help with the boxes or come to the talk. That’s
my final offer. Plus it’s going to be awesome. We’ve got a major new
release the whole con will be talking about.”
“That does sound better than schlepping boxes. You’ve got yourself
a deal. And I’ll do you one better hotshot. If your release really is as
awesome as you say, I’ll let you buy me that beer.” She winked at him.
That was always a good sign.
“Then keep your calendar free, because it’s a done deal.”
“I hope so,” she said, putting the book back down on the table and
picking up another one as she turned away from him. “I’ll let you get
back to work.”
Damn he loved HOPE.
“You’re fucking kidding me!” Sacco shouted. He hated shouting, found
it almost always counterproductive, and generally liked to be the cool,
calm, collected cat in the room. “You. Are. FUCKING. KIDDING.
ME!!!”
“Sacco, calm down, man. Calm down.”
“And you guys just decided this without even talking to me.”
“You were busy and…”
“I was unloading boxes of goddamned t-shirts. I had my cell phone.
You could have called. I would’ve stopped.”
“We were pretty sure how you’d vote.”
“So you thought, ‘Hey, we know Sacco will hate this idea, so let’s just
not hear his arguments on it.’ Nice.”
“We’re listening now.”
Rick Dakan
37
Sacco looked around the hotel room. The wheezing air conditioner
was just paying lip service to the idea of cooling. The other main mem-
bers of Hacks of Rebellion were there, Bryan, fawks, ck, and Dex. But it
was Dex who was trying to calm him down. The other three just looked
like they wanted to be anywhere else but here. Right now Sacco felt the
same way—he wanted the rest of these cowardly fucks to be anywhere
but here. The five of them had started Hacks of Rebellion four years
ago. Inspired by famous and influential hacktivist groups like The Cult
of the Dead Cow, they’d wanted to find a way to put their hacking
abilities to a good cause while still maintaining the mischievous edge
that had drawn them all into hacking in the first place. Sacco, Dex, and
fawks had been over in Germany for a Chaos Computer Camp when
they came up with the idea. And yes, the mushrooms they’d eaten
probably helped, but in the sober light of morning it still seemed like a
good idea. When they got back home they roped in Bryan and ck and
started doing their thing. From the beginning most of the ideological
basis for their actions came from Sacco. The others were political in a
sort of nebulous, vaguely lefty, fight the man kind of way. They were
coders and hackers and tinkerers first, who cared about politics only
up until the moment when it came to do any serious reading or study-
ing about the issues. A devoted anarchist since high school, Sacco had
read his Bakunin and Kropotkin and Proudhon and Goldman cover to
cover. He eschewed the Sex Pistols- inspired anarchy equals punk equals
chaos aesthetic that most people associated with the word “anarchist.”
Instead he focused on the core, ultra-democratic foundations of anar-
chist theory along with its deep anti-capitalist, anti-plutocratic tenets.
He also knew better than to lay all that heavy poli-sci shit on the other
four, instead feeding them spoonfuls as needed.
For the others, it was enough that they felt they were acting with
some sort of moral justification to their actions. If they were going to
cut a few corners and break a few laws along the way, at least they could
do so in good conscience. They all worked for money and hacked for
good. Originally Sacco had argued against any kind of name or public
presence to the group—those kinds of things just attract attention. But
the others wanted to be able to brag a little about some of the things
they did (the legal ones of course), and earn some kudos from the com-
munity. So they’d settled on the name Hacks of Rebellion, and from the
beginning more than half of their time was spent on decidedly “white
hat” endeavors. Or at the very worst gray hat. They cracked some DRM
schemes; they revealed some exploits. They created some open source
crypto apps that people could use to communicate securely with one
38
Geek Mafia: Black Hat Blues
another. That was the public side of Hacks of Rebellion, the one that
went to cons and gave presentations and played (sometimes successfully,
sometimes not at all) at being rock stars. In truth they weren’t nearly
as rebellious or rowdy as their reputations suggested, but that was fine
with Sacco. Reputations were in and of themselves a kind of social
engineering—hacking the hacking community.
All the while though, Sacco had pushed his political agenda from the
inside, slipping in bits of ideology and education when he could, while
working on his own, non-public projects. Not that the others didn’t
help with the secret stuff—they totally did, and without their expertise
he probably wouldn’t have gotten much finished. One of his favorites
was a set of Quickbooks hacks that would allow employees to take a
peek into their employers’ books and see what everyone was getting
paid. Sacco considered the American stigma against employees know-
ing each others’ salaries to be one of the great scams perpetrated on
the workers by the ownership class—keeping information like income
inequality secret directly deflected one of the principal impetuses to
organizing and revolt. Most of his early stuff had been in this vein—
tools and attacks to help workers strike back against their oppressors.
The problem was, no one in his target audience was getting his hacks—
most of them never learned about them, and few of those who did had
the technical skills to use them properly.
So Sacco had turned his energy towards easier and easier ways to use
apps—stuff that any schmo could run on his home computer or even
cell phone without needing to be a hard core hacker. And more and
more, cell phones had become his target of choice. Saturday’s release
was the culmination of a year’s worth of testing and work by Hacks of
Rebellion—Listnin, an easy to run Bluetooth hack that would allow
anyone out there to eavesdrop in on Bluetooth cell phone conversations.
The hacking elements were well known and developed by others, and
Sacco wasn’t breaking any new ground there. His innovation was mak-
ing it so easy to use and deploy that every worker in the world would
be able to eavesdrop on their douche-bag bosses with their earpieces
attached to the sides of their head. They had two thousand CDs burned
with Listnin loaded on them, including versions for every major phone
OS, and they’d set up a dozen servers in seven different countries for
people to torrent the file from. By the time they’d finished their talk,
Listnin would be all over the goddamned place and no phone would be
safe if it wasn’t properly secured (and very, very few of them were).
That had been the plan anyway. Now Dex and the rest of them were
backing out. They were scared, afraid they’d gone too far and would
Rick Dakan
39
get arrested. Sacco railed against their cowardice but met a wall of
downcast, ashamed resilience to his pleas. The Hacks of Rebellion had
voted and decided not to release Listnin, at least not at this time and
not in this public way.
“Well, screw you guys. I fucking quit,” Sacco said, and it felt so good.
Scary, weird, but so good. He was tired of these guys, of their whining
and worrying.
“Come on, man, don’t be like that,” said Dex. “We can still put it
out there, but we’ll do it quietly, like the other things we’ve done for
you.”
“For me? You mean with me.”
“Yeah, of course. With you. We’ll do it like the others. That’s always
worked before.”
“By your inside baseball fucking standards maybe, but not by any
rational metric! It hasn’t worked at fucking all. No one uses them,
because no one but some ‘leet-ass’ motherfucking hackers even know
they exist. It’s fucking masturbation and nothing more, man.”
“This will be different.” The pleading tone in Dex’s voice disgusted
Sacco. “We designed it to be easy to use. It’ll catch on if it’s as good as
we think it is. But there’s no reason to attach our names to it. That’s
just asking for trouble!”
Sacco swallowed the rejoinder before it escaped his mouth. They’d
decided, and he wasn’t going to change their minds. But he did have
a window of opportunity to change the future if he acted right now.
“Maybe you’re right,” he said, voice filled with conciliation he didn’t
feel. “I’m probably just freaking out for no reason. But you know what,
maybe I’m right too. Let’s all just take a breather OK, let’s just calm
down and think this through for a couple hours. Then we’ll take one
final vote—I won’t even try to argue with you anymore. I’ll think about
what you’ve said, you think about what I’ve said. Meet back here in
two hours?”
Some of them probably suspected something, but they couldn’t deny
he was being reasonable and fair. They hemmed and hawed a few min-
utes, but as soon as they agreed, Sacco excused himself and headed
downstairs. He had to find two people and liberate a case of CDs.
He was glad they’d decided not to spend the time and money to get
custom labels put on the CDs, another argument he’d lost by the way,
and another decision that would come back to bite them in the ass. He
40
Geek Mafia: Black Hat Blues
was even more pleased that he’d copied Dex’s car keys last year and
never gotten around to telling him about it. For the rest of the day and
all of Friday he’d played the good and loyal comrade, going along with
the majority. He sulked and teased and taunted of course—if he hadn’t
they would definitely have suspected something—but not so much that
they became resentful of him. They were all still too relieved that he
hadn’t done anything stupid. Except of course he had.
They followed the Saturday keynote, which was once again former
Dead Kennedy’s front man Jello Biafra. He’d spoken at several HOPEs
in the past, usually on Sundays but he had a scheduling conflict this
year, and he always got the crowd going with his mix of political rants,
humor, and flat out visceral anger. He was even nice enough to give
Hacks of Rebellion a plug before he left the stage. They entered with
their usual fanfare (which was very unusual for HOPE): music blaring
(Won’t Be Fooled Again), and lots of yelling. They’d dressed up of
course. Variations on business suits hacked into almost unrecognizable
forms by the addition of LED screens, keyboards, speakers, and even a
pair of angel wings with old data tape for feathers. It was quite a show,
and for the first time Sacco was fully aware that this was really the only
reason these other guys did this shit anymore—the fame and attention,
the thousand yelling hackers chanting trite phrases in call and response
fashion. They did it for the bullshit.
Sacco’s original role in the presentation had been cut, but they’d
thrown him a bone and asked him to present the info on a stupid little
Microsoft Excel exploit that fawks had found. Fawks was the least adept
public speaker anyway, and so had been (as usual) put in charge of
the A/V stuff. Sacco smiled at him as he took the microphone up on
stage and looked out over the crowd of a thousand or more hackers. If
they’d drawn back the curtains, they’d have all been treated to a rather
impressive view of Midtown Manhattan. Sacco idly wondered for just
a moment how many of them had actually bothered to peak behind
those heavy drapes and enjoy the view. He knew he hadn’t. Without