[ISN] Dot-dash-diss: The gentleman hacker's 1903 lulz

From: InfoSec News <alerts_at_private>
Date: Tue, 27 Dec 2011 05:42:35 -0600 (CST)
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21228440.700-dotdashdiss-the-gentleman-hackers-1903-lulz.html

By Paul Marks
NewScientist
27 December 2011

A century ago, one of the world˘s first hackers used Morse code insults 
to disrupt a public demo of Marconi's wireless telegraph

LATE one June afternoon in 1903 a hush fell across an expectant audience 
in the Royal Institution's celebrated lecture theatre in London. Before 
the crowd, the physicist John Ambrose Fleming was adjusting arcane 
apparatus as he prepared to demonstrate an emerging technological 
wonder: a long-range wireless communication system developed by his 
boss, the Italian radio pioneer Guglielmo Marconi. The aim was to 
showcase publicly for the first time that Morse code messages could be 
sent wirelessly over long distances. Around 300 miles away, Marconi was 
preparing to send a signal to London from a clifftop station in Poldhu, 
Cornwall, UK.

Yet before the demonstration could begin, the apparatus in the lecture 
theatre began to tap out a message. At first, it spelled out just one 
word repeated over and over. Then it changed into a facetious poem 
accusing Marconi of "diddling the public". Their demonstration had been 
hacked - and this was more than 100 years before the mischief playing 
out on the internet today. Who was the Royal Institution hacker? How did 
the cheeky messages get there? And why?

It had all started in 1887 when Heinrich Hertz proved the existence of 
the electromagnetic waves predicted by James Clerk Maxwell in 1865. 
Discharging a capacitor into two separated electrodes, Hertz ionised the 
air in the gap between them, creating a spark. Miraculously, another 
spark zipped between two electrodes a few metres away: an 
electromagnetic wave from the first spark had induced a current between 
the second electrode pair. It meant long and short bursts of energy - 
"Hertzian waves" - could be broadcast to represent the dots and dashes 
of Morse code. Wireless telegraphy was born, and Marconi and his company 
were at the vanguard. Marconi claimed that his wireless messages could 
be sent privately over great distances. "I can tune my instruments so 
that no other instrument that is not similarly tuned can tap my 
messages," Marconi boasted to London's St James Gazette in February 
1903.

[...]


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Received on Tue Dec 27 2011 - 03:42:35 PST

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