1997-05-13 - Re: Printers are munitions?

Header Data

From: Michael Stutz <stutz@dsl.org>
To: “Sidney R. Phillips” <srp3651@hsct22.ca.boeing.com>
Message Hash: 10c0746ef4611f61d0866c6fdccf1c5e0c3d29f7f6eaec4b2fc38c3afd384b49
Message ID: <Pine.LNX.3.94.970513171109.17967P-100000@seka.nacs.net>
Reply To: <3378A3E5.41C6@hsct22.ca.boeing.com>
UTC Datetime: 1997-05-13 21:26:03 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 14 May 1997 05:26:03 +0800

Raw message

From: Michael Stutz <stutz@dsl.org>
Date: Wed, 14 May 1997 05:26:03 +0800
To: "Sidney R. Phillips" <srp3651@hsct22.ca.boeing.com>
Subject: Re: Printers are munitions?
In-Reply-To: <3378A3E5.41C6@hsct22.ca.boeing.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.94.970513171109.17967P-100000@seka.nacs.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


On Tue, 13 May 1997, Sidney R. Phillips wrote:

> One thing which caught my attention however, was a claim by
> Win Schwartau (of inforwar fame) that NSA had placed narrow band
> transmitters in printers which wound up in air defense sites in Iraq.
> Subsequently the transmissions were used for targeting durring the gulf
> war.  Has anyone heard of a separate source for this?

_2600 Magazine_ had an article about this a few years back, called "Gulf War
Printer Virus," I believe. I think in that version of the story, it wasn't a
narrow band xmitter but a virus that affected a computer connected to the
printer's parallel port, infecting itself via the sole pin ("out of paper" i
think it said) on the port that xmitted from printer to computer rather than
the normal other way around. As to whether or not this virus was of the
computer or media variety, however, remains to be seen.

m






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