Path: utzoo!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!news.cs.indiana.edu!uceng!pmartin From: pmartin@uceng.UC.EDU (Paul Martin) Newsgroups: comp.unix.admin Subject: IRC and Security Keywords: IRC SECURITY Message-ID: <7748@uceng.UC.EDU> Date: 13 Mar 91 14:04:17 GMT Organization: Univ. of Cincinnati, College of Engg. Lines: 106 I am sure that the following post will bring out religious fervor by a few fanatics, however I am prepared to don my asbestos suit. Disclaimer: I am not the net police, just a system manager who has been burned. I am a Unix system administrator here at the University of Cincinnati. I have just recently discovered a band of computer hackers/pirates that have been using the Internet to pirate commercial software. There were more than twenty individuals involved. In talking to many of those involved, there seems to be a common thread, IRC or Inter Relay Chat. These people told me that they were passing the passwords through IRC as well as meeting other hackers. I believe that IRC has potential to do some good, however I believe that it attracts those with little to do with their time and those immature people who use IRC as a big teenage party line. We have removed IRC because of the problems that I described above. I urge all administrators who are interested in preventing unauthorized use of their system and who have IRC installed, to re-evauluate their desision to keep IRC. To illustrate the point of IRC being used by those with nothing better to do with their time I have enclosed a copy of a message posted to alt.irc which describes a plan to use the internet for fantasy role playing games: Xref: ucunx1.san.uc.edu alt.irc:126 rec.games.frp:1361 rec.games.mud:576 Path: ucunx1.san.uc.edu!ucunix.san.uc.edu!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!decwrl!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!jarthur!nntp-server.caltech.edu!kimf From: kimf@nntp-server.caltech.edu (K. Dorian Flowers) Newsgroups: alt.irc,rec.games.frp,rec.games.mud Subject: IRC role-playing games network Message-ID: <1991Mar9.023832.28600@nntp-server.caltech.edu> Date: 9 Mar 91 02:38:32 GMT Organization: California Institute of Technology, Pasadena Lines: 66 Introducing ........ ****** IFN ***** Internet relay chat (irc) Fantasy role-playing (frp)game Network! (Yes, the ultimate acronym nightmare has finally arrived.) >From some obscure desire to combine our love of role-playing games and our wish to be in charge of something, Jason Gabler (jygabler@ucdavis.edu) and I are attempting to create an network of IRC servers devoted more-or-less to role-playing games. On this network, you will be able to play role-playing games of any genre consistent with the format of Internet Relay Chat, give and receive hints or suggestions on playing in or running a campaign, trade stories, etc. We're hoping to get busy enough so that we'll have people on all the time, so that anyone hankering to drop out of reality for a while can find some willing partners. To get more people using our network at any given time, we are trying to accomplish two things: 1) get more servers connected to our network, and 2) convince a few suck...er, I mean game masters to run campaigns with regularly-scheduled sessions on our network. By attaching more servers to our network, we make our network available to a greater number of net.people who, having nothing better to do with their time, will inevitably find their way to our network and start playing role-playing games. We only have a few servers up right now, two of which are in California so ANY extension to our network is going to be a BIG improvement. If you have the urge to become one of those big-headed IRC server operators, your machine runs Unix and you have the resources, then contact Jason Gabler (jygabler@ucdavis.edu) to see where to get the IRC server source, how to get it running and then which machines you should have it connect to in order to become part of our little network. Jason Gabler has taken it upon itself to maintain the network and to deal with all matters having to do with Internet Relay Chat, so if you have questions involving IRC, such as how to get your hands on the IRC client and make it run, how you use the IRC client, what's the nearest server in our network that you can access using your client, etc., bug him. :) I get the fun part: coordinating all the role-playing games that we want to have running on our network. I am hereby putting out a call to all potential game masters who have nothing better to do to come run a campaign on our network! Just send mail to me, at kimf@tybalt.caltech.edu, telling me who you are, how people can reach you, a confirmation that you have at least one complete adventure ready to run and a description of it, and what times you can play. I'll work all the responses that I get into a list and post it for you. SO!!! If you're interested in becoming a server operator, a game master, or you just are a potential player who wants to receive updates on the status of our network, contact us! jygabler@ucdavis.edu (Jason Gabler, Network Coordinator & UCDavis IFN Operator) kimf@tybalt.caltech.edu (Kim Flowers, Gaming Coordinator & Caltech IFN Operator) We can send you additional information, help you set up a campaign, etc. Don't miss out...contact us now! -- +-----------------[Paul Martin @ Engineering College OCC, UC]-----------------+ | Internet: pmartin@uceng.uc.edu | "Yes I am serious, | | Dumb: ...uceng!pmartin | and don't call me Shirley" | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+