• @tourist
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    6110 months ago

    I assume most of those students weren’t “officially” given admin priveleges, which makes it extra funny

    • @[email protected]
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      7610 months ago

      They may have been, things were far more trusting back then.

      X servers, for example, would accept any connections. So we would often “export DISPLAY=friendscomputer:0.0” in the computer lab and then open windows of embarrassing content. Which at the time would likely be ASCII art…

      • @tankplanker
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        2910 months ago

        One of my favourite wars was to open audio files on other people’s SPARCs, somebody had the loudest bag pipe music that usually ended things.

        Access to the SPARCs was normally restricted to third year but if you knew the right person you could get an account created pretty easily. Had the fastest access to the internet at the time within the uni as well.

        • @guleblanc
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          1310 months ago

          I used to work at a company that did distributed QA. Other people’s tests would run on your desktop. It worked surprisingly well. But occasionally a test of some audio resource would play on your speakers “The discrete cosine is a real, discrete version of the fast Fourier transform.”

          • @tankplanker
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            110 months ago

            Ha, love the audio tell of the resource stealing

      • @wmassingham
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        910 months ago

        Still can. Only a few years ago, I would cat random things to classmates’ tty devices.

  • wvstolzing
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    5610 months ago

    Little known fact: A Stanford mainframe kept logs of the activities of the ‘wheels’ in a journal – the ‘journal of the wheels’. Young George Lucas, who briefly attended the university, found that journal, and became fascinated with the ‘Wheel Wars’. He later drafted a document that he called ‘Journal of the Whills’, based largely on what he read on those logs; this is the draft that later became ‘Whill Wars’, and ultimately, of course, ‘Star Wars’.

  • billwashere
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    4410 months ago

    In my freshman year of computer science our main computer lab was filled with Sage IV machines. Basically a Motorola 68k series with 4 or 5 serial terminals. Most people were writing Pascal code or using a simple word processor. But god forbid you were on there with someone taking assembly language. Because they could write really stupid code with super tight loops that never allowed any other code to run, and the only thing you could do was reboot. So if you hadn’t saved your code you were fucked.

    So I never purposely wrote really bad code that would overwrite unprotected shared memory with random quotes from Marvin from HHGTG to mess with other people. I would never do that. That would have been unethical and shit… 🤔

    I did learn a lot of basic hardware and operating systems though so there’s that.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sage_Computer_Technology

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    The best part of working in a meat grinder startup were the Linux masters teaching you stuff like

    cat /dev/random > /dev/pty23
    

    or

    su _otheruser_
    chsh -s /bin/false
    
  • @KISSmyOS
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    9 months ago

    deleted by creator

    • qaz
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      1610 months ago

      We had similar issues and they disabled kicking participants. However, they didn’t disable muting teachers for another week.

  • @[email protected]
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    3010 months ago

    I remember back in college we would abuse the wall command on our shared Linux server so much that IT had to disable it

  • @agent_flounder
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    3010 months ago

    I’ve always wondered why the admin group is called wheel

  • @[email protected]
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    2910 months ago

    Reminds me of the “Op” wars on IRC. All users would be given @ status and the point was to kick everyone before you got kicked. Writing scripts for this was my first “taste” at programming.

  • palordrolap
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    2210 months ago

    Reminds me of the test server shenanigans I had at an old job versus a colleague. All in fun. Nothing in production.

    One was the faux Bash shell that kind of worked OK until you pushed it or tried to do anything fancy. It was the default shell for the user called “root”, but that wasn’t the UID 0 user. It had been, but I renamed it. Then created a new “root” with a different UID. Of course, the faux shell would tell “root” that it was UID 0.

    The other was the simple background loop that would detect any rival admin sessions and SIGHUP their shell process. First user on the box to run that pretty much had free reign, and everyone else was logged off instantly.

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    Why declare a war over it? Just sudo sed -i 's/%wheel/$(whoami)/' /etc/sudoers or smth like that

  • @[email protected]
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    710 months ago

    got a similar situation in MUDs, someone finds a way to frob everyone else up to wizard level and the whole round of the game just becomes a mess of shouts