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Parents of famous hacker force German Wikipedia website offline

 
Anonymous Coward
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01/20/2006 10:04 PM
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Parents of famous hacker force German Wikipedia website offline
[link to www.tgdaily.com]

Parents of famous hacker force German Wikipedia website offline

January 21, 2006

Humphrey Cheung and Wolfgang Gruener


Wikipedia, the free and openly editable online encyclopedia, had its German website shutdown for three days after parents of a dead hacker named "Tron" objected to an article. After seeing Tron's real name in an entry, the parents filed for a temporary injunction to remove the name or the link to the US Wikipedia website. The American site was not affected and the German site has since come back up.

Tron was a 26 year old German hacker who died under mysterious circumstances in October 1998. He was reported missing on October 17 and his body was found five days later. While police officials say he committed suicide, both his friends and parents believe he was murdered. Tron was a member of the famous Chaos Computer Club in Germany.

Tron's parents now considered their and their son's privacy rights violated by the Wikipedia listing, while the German Wikimedia foundation argued that Tron is a person of public interest and therefore could be listed with his full name. After a court had granted an injunction that had been filed by Tron's parents in the first week of January and aimed to either remove Tron's full name or to disable the forwarding of the URL www.wikipedia.de to de.wikipedia.org.

Wikimedia Deutschland was not able to change the listing, as all entries for the online encyclopedia are located on servers in the US. Not following the ruling of the court could have resulted in fines of up to 250,000 Euros for the organization. Wikipedia.de was taken offline for a total of three days as a result.

Today, Wikimedia was able to achieve a partial success in court by convincing a judge that the majority of Wikipedia visitors will not be affected by listing Tron's full name. The injunction was removed in exchange for a security deposit of 500 Euros.

This has not been the first time Wikipedia has been in the media spotlight. In May 2005, Brian Chase made a false Wikipedia entry about John Seigenthaler. Seigenthaler was a journalist and former administrative assistant to Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. The entry, which sat unnoticed for several months, stated that Seigenthaler might have been, "directly involved in the Kennedy assassinations of both John, and his brother, Bobby."

Seigenthaler found out about the entry and had Wikipedia immediately remove it. In the media storm that followed Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia's founder, instituted new rules that required users to register before being able to post articles. On November 29, 2005 in a USA Today editorial, Seigenthaler talked about the dangers of Wikipedia and being the subject of false accusations.
Anonymous Coward (OP)
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Re: Parents of famous hacker force German Wikipedia website offline
[link to en.wikipedia.org]

(go to original url for all external links)

Tron (hacker)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Tron (8 June 1972 – 17-22 October 1998) was the nickname of Boris Floricic, a German hacker and phreaker who used that pseudonym in reference to the character in the 1982 Disney film Tron. He became famous due to the unclear circumstances of his death which are surrounded by various conspiracy theories. Tron was interested in defeating computer security mechanisms and broke, amongst other things, the security of the German phonecard by producing working clones. He was later sentenced to 15 months in jail for the theft of a public phone (for reverse engineering purposes), but the sentence was suspended on probation.

Tron is also known for his diploma thesis, in which he created the Cryptophon, which was one of the first public implementations of a telephone with built-in voice encryption. At the end of 2005 and the beginning of 2006 Tron was again the subject of media attention when his parents and Andy Müller-Maguhn (a spokesperson for the German Chaos Computer Club but acting on his own behalf in this case) brought legal action against the Wikimedia Foundation and its German chapter Wikimedia Deutschland e.V. This action found its most current peak in a court interdiction against using the German domain wikipedia.de as a redirect to the German Wikipedia version.

It is worth noting that the domain wikipedia.de has never been used as a means of accessing the German language Wikipedia, which has always resided at [link to de.wikipedia.org] and that despite media reports to the contrary, German language Wikipedia was never closed or inaccessible in Germany. The court order only affected a domain owned by the German Verein.

Contents

* 1 Life
* 2 Interests
* 3 Cryptophon
* 4 Mysterious death
* 5 Current controversy
* 6 Sources
* 7 Further reading
* 8 External links

Life

Tron grew up in a suburb south of Berlin. His interests in school focused on technical subjects. He left school after 10 years and completed a three-year Vocational education (Berufsausbildung) offered by the Technical University of Berlin and graduated as a specialist in communication electronics with a major in information technology (Kommunikationselektroniker, Fachrichtung Informationstechnik). He subsequently earned the Abitur and began studies in Computer science at the Technical University of Applied Sciences of Berlin.

During his studies Tron attended an internship with a company developing electronic security systems. In the winter term 1997/1998 Tron successfully finished his studies and published his diploma thesis, in which he developed and described the Cryptophon, an ISDN telephone with built-in voice encryption. Since parts of this work, which were to be provided by another student, were missing, he could not finish his work on the Cryptophon. His thesis, however, was rated as exceptional by the evaluating university professor. After graduation, Tron applied for work, but was unsuccessful. In his spare time he continued, among other activities, his work on the Cryptophon.

Interests

Tron was highly interested in electronics and security systems of all kinds. He engaged in, amongst other things, attacks against the German phonecard and Pay TV systems. As part of his research he exchanged ideas and proposals with other hackers and scientists. On the mailing list "tv-crypt", operated by a closed group of Pay TV hackers, Tron reported about himself in 1995, that his interests are microprocessors, programming languages, electronics of all kinds, digital radio data transmission and especially breaking the security of systems perceived as secure. He alleged to have created working clones of a chipcard used for British Pay TV and would continue his work to defeat the security of the Nagravision/Syster scrambling system which was then used by the German Pay TV provider "PREMIERE", and presumably among others.

Later American scientists outlined a theoretical attack against SIM cards used for GSM mobile phones. Together with hackers from the Chaos Computer Club, Tron successfully created a working clone of such a SIM card, thus showing the practicability of the attack. He also engaged in cloning the German phonecard and succeeded. While Tron only wanted to demonstrate the insecurity of the system, the proven insecurity was also abused by criminals which led to the attention of law enforcement agencies and the German national phone operator Deutsche Telekom. After the Deutsche Telekom changed the system, Tron tried to remove a complete public card phone from a booth by force (using a sledgehammer) on 3 March 1995 in order to, as he told, adapt his phonecard simulators to the latest changes. He and a friend were, however, caught by the police upon this attempt. Tron was later sentenced to a prison term of 15 months which was suspended on probation.

Cryptophon

"Cryptophon" was the name Tron himself chose for his prototype of an ISDN telephone with built-in voice encryption. It was created in the winter term 1997/1998 as part of his diploma thesis titled "Realisierung einer Verschlüsselungstechnik für Daten im ISDN B-Kanal" (German, about: "Implementation of Cryptography for Data contained in the ISDN B channel"). Tron focused on making the Cryptophon cheap and easy to build for hobbyists. The phone encrypts telephone calls using the symmetric encryption algorithm IDEA. As IDEA is patented, the cipher was implemented on a replaceable daughter module which would have allowed the user to exchange IDEA for another (probably patent unencumbered) algorithm. In addition, the system was about to be supplemented with a key exchange protocol based on the asymmetric algorithm RSA in order to achieve security against compromised remote stations.

The Cryptophon is built on the foundation of a 8051 compatible microprocessor which controls the whole system and peripherals (e.g. ISDN controller, keypad and display). For the cryptography Tron used cheap DSPs from Texas Instruments which he scrapped out of old computer modems, but which could also be bought for affordable prices. As this type of DSP is not powerful enough for the cryptography algorithm chosen, Tron used two of them for the Cryptophon - one for sending and one for receiving. Tron devenopeh the operating software of the phone as well as the cryptography implementation in the DSPs. He found a new way to implement IDEA to save significant processing time.

Mysterious death

Tron went missing on October 17, 1998 and was found dead in a local park Neukoelln in Berlin on October 22 of the same year. [1] after being hanged from a waistbelt wrapped around his neck. The cause of death was officially recorded as suicide. Some of his peers in the Chaos Computer Club, as well as his family members and some outside critics, have been vocal in their assertions that Tron may have been murdered. [2] It is argued that his activities in the areas of Pay TV cracking and voice scrambling might have disturbed the affairs of an intelligence agency or organized crime enough to provide a motive.

A German journalist named Burkhard Schröder published a book about the death titled "Tron - Tod eines Hackers" ("Tron - Death of a hacker") in 1999 in which he presents the until then known facts about the case. Because he concludes that Tron has committed suicide, the author is harshly criticized by both members of the Chaos Computer Club as well as Tron's parents. A lot of myths and conspiracy theories are circulating about the death, and the case was also used as the basis for various works of fiction.

Current controversy

Tron's family does not wish his full name, "Boris Floricic", to be used; many German newspapers merely refer to him as "Boris F." On December 14, 2005 the parents obtained a temporary restraining order in a Berlin court against Wikimedia Foundation Inc. because its freely editable online encyclopedia, Wikipedia, mentioned the full name in its German language version. The order prohibits the Foundation from mentioning the full name on any website under the domain "wikipedia.org". It furthermore requires the Foundation to name a representative in Germany within two weeks following the decision.[3]

This was widely reported in the Dutch and German press [4]. German law requires that the order be delivered within four weeks. The initial order was however mistakenly addressed to Saint Petersburg, Russia rather than to Saint Petersburg, Florida, United States; this was corrected five days later. It is unclear how the German court intends to enforce the order in the United States.

On January 17, 2006, a second preliminary injunction from a court in Berlin prohibited the Wikimedia Deutschland e.V. [1] local chapter from linking to the German Wikipedia, resulting in the change of the wikipedia.de address from a link to German Wikipedia to a page explaining the situation, although the page does not mention Tron.[5] Wikimedia Deutschland e.V. confirmed to the internet news site golem.de that the new injunction is related to the prior case against the Wikimedia Foundation and was issued on behalf of the same plaintiffs. Wikimedia Deutschland e.V. was reported as intending to fight the injunction, arguing that no valid case was presented and the freedom of the press must be defended.[6]

Because Andy Müller-Maguhn, one of the spokespersons of the Chaos Computer Club, is deeply involved in the case on the side of the plaintiffs, some media reported this as a case of "Chaos Computer Club against Wikipedia". The Chaos Computer Club has however issued a public statement that this is a case between a few of its members and Wikipedia, and that the CCC itself does not take any position in the matter.[7]

The Austrian online magazine "futurezone" interviewed Andy Müller-Maguhn on January 19, 2006 about the case and its background. Maguhn admitted that the true reason behind the incident is a fictitious work recently published by a German author in which the main actor has the same (civil) name as Tron. The parents sent a protest to the publisher but were turned down with the argument that the German Wikipedia is using the name as well. Müller-Maguhn then asked the German Wikipedia to remove the name, but was turned down for a number of reasons, including failure to present proof that he is entitled to speak and act on behalf of the parents.[8][9]

Sources

Continued...





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