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Underground (Dreyfus book)

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Underground
File:Underground Cover.jpeg
AuthorSuelette Dreyfus
LanguageEnglish
GenreNon-Fiction
PublisherReed Books Australia
Publication date
1997
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePaperback
Pages321 (Online version)
ISBN1-86330-595-5
OCLC37877053
LC ClassHV6773.3.A8 D74 1997

Underground: Tales of Hacking, Madness and Obsession on the Electronic Frontier is a 1997 book by Suelette Dreyfus, researched by Julian Assange. It describes the exploits of a group of Australian, American, and British black hat hackers during the late 1980s and early 1990s.

  • Craig Bowen (nickname), administrator of two important Australian BBS (Pacific Island and Zen)
  • The Parmaster, an American hacker who avoided capture by the United States Secret Service from July 1989 to November 1991
  • Phoenix, Electron and Nom, who were convicted in the first major Australian trial for computer crimes
  • Pad and Gandalf, the British founders of the notorious 8lgm group
  • the Australian Mendax and Prime Suspect, who managed to penetrate the DDN, NIC and the Nortel internal network, and the phreaker Trax
  • Anthrax, another Australian hacker and phreaker

The book also mentions other hackers who had contacts with the protagonists, among them Erik Bloodaxe of the Legion of Doom and Corrupt of the Masters of Deception.

The first chapter of Underground relates the diffusion and reactions of the computer security community to the WANK worm that attacked DEC VMS computers over the DECnet in 1989 and was purportedly coded by a Melbourne hacker.

The author made the electronic edition of the book freely available in 2001 at www.underground-book.com. However this site was taken over in 2008 and now offers a link to Amazon where copies of the book may still be available. The site www.underground-book.net has the book freely available in electronic form.

The 2002 documentary In the Realm of the Hackers, directed by Kevin Anderson and centered around Phoenix and Electron, was inspired by this book.