Read The Anarchist Cookbook Online

Authors: William Powell

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BOOK: The Anarchist Cookbook
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NOTE: The Ultrix mail system is extremely flexible; it is almost completely configurable

by the customer. While this is valuable to customers, it makes it very difficult to write

global instructions for the use of Ultrix mailers, because it is possible that the local

changes have produced something quite unlike the vendor-delivered mailer. One of the

popular changes is to tinker with the meaning of quote characters (") in Ultrix addresses.

Some systems consider that these two addresses are the same:

[email protected]

and

"site1!site2!user"@host.dec.com

while others are configured so that one form will work and the other will not. All of these

examples use the quotes. If you have trouble getting the examples to work, please try

them again without the quotes. Perhaps your Ultrix system is interpreting the quotes

differently.

If your Ultrix system has an IP link to Palo Alto (type "/etc/ping decwrl.dec.com" to find

out if it does), then you can route your mail to the gateway via IP. This has the advantage

that your Ultrix mail headers will reach the gateway directly, instead of being translated

into DECNET mail headers and then back into Ultrix at the other end. Do this as follows:

To: "alien!address"@decwrl.dec.com

The quotes are necessary only if the alien address contains a ! character, but they don't

hurt if you use them unnecessarily. If the alien address contains an "@" character, you will

need to change it into a "%" character. For example, to send via IP to [email protected], you

should address the mail.

To: "joe%widget.org"@decwrl.dec.com

If your Ultrix system has only a DECNET link to Palo Alto, then you should address mail in

much the same way that VMS users do, save that you should not put the nm% in front of

the address:

To: DECWRL::"strange!foreign!address"

Here are some typical outgoing mail addresses as used from an Ultrix system that has IP

access. Ultrix systems without IP access should use the same syntax as VMS users,

except that the nm% at the front of the address should not be used.

To: "lll-winken!netsys!phrack"@decwrl.dec.com

To: "postmaster%msp.pnet.sc.edu"@decwrl.dec.com

To: "phrackserv%CUNYVM.bitnet"@decwrl.dec.com

To: "netsys!phrack%uunet.uu.net"@decwrl.dec.com

To: "[email protected]"@decwrl.dec.com

DETAILS OF USING OTHER NETWORKS

All of the world's computer networks are connected together, more or less, so it is hard to

draw exact boundaries between them. Precisely where the internet ends and UUCP begins

is a matter of interpretation.

For purposes of sending mail, though, it is convenient to divide the network universe into

these categories:

Easynet:

Digital's internal DECNET network. Characterized by addresses of the form

NODE::USER. Easynet can be used for commercial purposes.

Internet:

A collection of networks including the old ARPAnet, the NSFnet, the CSnet, and

others. Most international research, development, and educational organizations

are connected in some fashion to the Internet. Characterized by addresses of the

form [email protected]. The internet itself cannot be used for

commercial purposes.

UUCP:

A very primitive network with no management, built with auto-dialers phoning one

computer from another. Characterized by addresses of the form place1!place2!

user. The UUCP network can be used for commercial purposes provided that none

of the sites through which the message is routed objects to that.

USENET:

Not a network at all, but a layer of software built on top of UUCP and Internet.

BITNET:

An IBM-based network linking primarily educational sites. Digital users can send to

BITNET as if it were part of internet, but BITNET users need special instructions

for reversing the process. BITNET cannot be used for commercial purposes.

Fidonet:

A network of personal computers. I am unsure of the status of using Fidonet for

commercial purposes, nor am I sure of its efficacy.

DOMAINS AND DOMAIN ADDRESSING

There is a particular network called "the Internet;" it is somewhat related to what used to

be "the ARPAnet." The Internet style of addressing is flexible enough that people use it

for addressing other networks as well, with the result that it is quite difficult to look at

an address and tell just what network it is likely to traverse. But the phrase "Internet

address" does not mean "mail address of some computer on the Internet" but rather "mail

address in the style used by the Internet." Terminology is even further confused because

the word "address" means one thing to people who build networks and something entirely

different to people who use them. In this file an "address" is something like

"[email protected]" and not "192.1.24.177" (which is what network engineers would call

an "internet address").

The Internet naming scheme uses hierarchical domains, which despite their title are just a

bookkeeping trick. It doesn't really matter whether you say NODE: :USER or

USER@NODE, but what happens when you connect two companies' networks together and

they both have a node ANCHOR?? You must, somehow, specify which ANCHOR you mean.

You could say ANCHOR.DEC::USER or DEC.ANCHOR::USER or [email protected] or

[email protected]. The Internet convention is to say [email protected], with the

owner (DEC) after the name (ANCHOR).

But there could be several different organizations named DEC. You could have Digital

Equipment Corporation or Down East College or Disabled Education Committee. The

technique that the Internet scheme uses to resolve conflicts like this is to have

hierarchical domains. A normal domain isn't DEC or STANFORD, but DEC.COM

(commercial) and STANFORD.EDU (educational). These domains can be further divided

into ZK3.DEC.COM or CS.STANFORD.EDU. This doesn't resolve conflicts completely,

though: both Central Michigan University and Carnegie-Mellon University could claim to be

CMU.EDU. The rule is that the owner of the EDU domain gets to decide, just as the owner

of the CMU.EDU gets to decide whether the Electrical Engineering department or the

Elementary Education department gets subdomain EE.CMU.EDU.

The domain scheme, while not perfect, is completely extensible. If you have two addresses

that can potentially conflict, you can suffix some domain to the end of them, thereby

making, say, decwrl.UUCP be somehow different from DECWRL.ENET.

DECWRL's entire mail system is organized according to Internet domains, and in fact we

handle all mail internally as if it were Internet mail. Incoming mail is converted into

Internet mail, and then routed to the appropriate domain; if that domain requires some

conversion, then the mail is converted to the requirements of the outbound domain as it

passes through the gateway. For example, they put Easynet mail into the domain ENE.

On a side note, the recent book The Cuckoo's Egg provides some interesting information

(in the form of a story, however) on a Tymnet hacker. Remember that he was into BIG

things, and hence he was cracked down upon. If you keep a low profile, networks should

provide a good access method.

If you can find a system that is connected to the Internet that you can get on from

Tymnet, you are doing well.

Username@f.n.z.ifna.org

In other words, if I wanted to mail to Silicon Swindler at 1:135/5, the address would be

[email protected] and, provided that your mailer knows the .ifna.org

domain, it should get through alright. Apparently, as of the writing of this article, they

have implemented a new gateway name called fidonet.org which should work in place of

ifna.org in all routings. If your mailer does not know either of these domains, use the above

routing but replace the first "@" with a "%" and then afterwards, use either of the

following mailers after the "@": CS.ORST.EDU or K9.CS.ORST.EDU (i.e. username%f

#>.n.z[email protected] [or replace CS.ORST.EDU with

K9.CS.ORST.EDU]).

The following is a list compiled by Bill Fenner ([email protected]) that was posted on

INFONETS DIGEST which lists a number of FIDONET gateways:

NetNodeNode

Name
10456milehi.ifna.org10555casper.ifna.org107320rubbs.ifna.org109661blkcat.ifna.org1

25406fidogate.ifna.org12819hipshk.ifna.org12965insight.ifna.org143N/Afidogate.ifna.org1

52200castle.ifna.org161N/Afidogate.ifna.org36917megasys.ifna.org

NOTE: The UUCP equivalent node name is the first part of the node name. In other

words, the UUCP node milehi is listed as milehi.ifna.org but can be mailed directly over the

UUCP network.

Another way to mail to FIDONET, specifically for Internet people, is in this format:

ihnp4!necntc!ncoast!ohiont!![email protected]

And for those UUCP mailing people out there, just use the path described and ignore the

@husc5.harvard.edu portion. There is a FIDONET NODELIST available on most any

FIDONET bulletin board, but it is quite large.

ONTYME

Previously known as Tymnet, OnTyme is the McDonnell Douglas revision. After they bought

out Tymnet, they renamed the company and opened an experimental Internet gateway at

ONTYME.TYMNET.COM but this is supposedly only good for certain corporate addresses

within McDonnell Douglas and Tymnet, not their customers. The userid format is xx.yyy or

xx.y/yy where xx is a net name and yyy (or y/yy) is a true username. If you cannot directly

nail this, try:

xx.yyy%ONTYME.TYM

130.Sodium Chlorate by the Jolly Roger

Sodium Chlorate is a strong oxidizer used in the manufacture of explosives. It can be used

in place of Potassium Chlorate.

Material Required:


2 carbon or lead rods (1 in. diameter by 5 in. long)


Salt, or ocean water


Sulfuric acid, diluted


Motor Vehicle


Water


2 wires, 16 gauge (3/64 in. diameter approx.), 6 ft. long, insulated.


Gasoline


1 gallon glass jar, wide mouth (5 in. diameter by 6 in. high approx.)


Sticks


String


Teaspoon


Trays


Cup


Heavy cloth


Knife


Large flat pan or tray

Sources of Carbon or Lead rods:


Dry Cell Batteries (2-« in. diameter by 7" long) or plumbing supply store.

Sources of Salt Water:


Grocery store or ocean

Sources of Sulfuric Acid:


Motor Vehicle Batteries.

Procedure:

Mix « cup of salt into the one gallon glass jar with 3 liters (3 quarts) of water.

Add 2 teaspoons of battery acid to the solution and stir vigorously for 5 minutes.

Strip about 4 inches of insulation from both ends of the two wires.

With knife and sticks, shape 2 strips of wood 1 by 1/8 by 1-«. Tie the wood strips to the

lead or carbon rods so that they are 1-« inches apart.

Connect the rods to the battery in a motor vehicle with the insulated wire.

Submerge 4-« inches of the rods in the salt water solution.

With gear in neutral position, start the vehicle engine. Depress the accelerator approx. 1/5

of its full travel.

Run the engine with the accelerator in this position for 2 hours, then shut it down for 2

hours.

Repeat this cycle for a total of 64 hours while maintaining the level of the acid-salt water

solution in the glass jar.

CAUTION: This arrangement employs voltages which can be quite dangerous!

Do not touch bare wire leads while engine is running!!

Shut off the engine. Remove the rods from the glass jar and disconnect wire leads from

the battery.

Filter the solution through the heavy cloth into a flat pan or tray, leaving the sediment at

the bottom of the glass jar.

Allow the water in the filtered solution to evaporate at room temperature (approx. 16

hours). The residue is approximately 60% or more sodium chlorate which is pure enough

to be used as an explosive ingredient.

131.Mercury Fulminate by the Jolly Roger

Mercury Fulminate is used as a primary explosive in the fabrication of detonators. It is to

be used with a booster explosive such as picric acid or RDX (which are elsewhere in this

Cookbook).

Material Required:


Nitric Acid, 90% conc. (1.48 sp. gr)


Mercury


Ethyl (grain) alcohol (90%)


Filtering material [Paper Towels]


Teaspoon measure (¬, «, and 1 tsp. capacity)-aluminum, stainless steel or wax coated


Heat Source


Clean wooden stick


Clean water


Glass containers


Tape

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