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- File: HACKING MCI MAIL
- Read 25 times
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- - MCI MAIL: The Adventure Continues -
- = [2600 -- July 1984] =
- - -
- = Word Processed by BIOC Agent 003 for Sherwood Forest ][ =
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- You really have to hand it to those folks over at MCI. First they tackle Ma
- Bell and now they're going after the U.S. Postal Service! MCI Mail's slogan,
- "The Nation's New Postal System," is printed on every bright orange envelope
- that they send through, you guessed it, U.S. Mail.
-
- On this system a user is assigned a "mailbox" that he can use to send and
- receive mail. Sending is done either electroncially, that is, to other people
- with MCI mailboxes or through the post office, which covers eveybody else in
- the world. The first type of letter will cost you $1 for the first three pages
- while the second type is double the cost. It's also possible to send an
- overnight letter ($6) or a four-hour letter ($25) to some places.
-
- The purpose of MCI Mail is to stimulate the use of electronic mail by making
- it more accessible to the average person. For that we must give them credit --
- anybody can get an account on the system! There is no start-up fee and no
- monthly fee of any kind. To get an account, all you have to do is call them --
- either by voice or data. If you call by data [800-323-7751/0905], you'll have
- to enter REGISTER as the username and REGISTER as the password. The rest is
- self-explanatory. After a couple of weeks, you'll get in the mail (regular
- mail, that is) one big orange envelope that has, among other things, your
- password. With this info, you're now free to log onto the system, look for
- people you know, send and retrieve messages, reall all of their help files, or
- even hop onto the Dow Jones News Service (watch it though -- that can get
- pretty expensive!)
-
- The system is set up on a network of Vaxes throughout the country. They've
- been operating since September 1983 and claim to have over 100,000 subscribers.
- Many of these are actually subscribers to the Dow Jones service, who are
- automatically given MCI accounts whether they want them or not.
-
- While the rates aren't overly expensive, they're certainly not cheap.
- Mailing regular letters is much cheaper an often just as fast since not every
- MCI Mail user checks their mailbox every day. Apart from that, though, there
- are many problems with the system as it stands now. For one thing, it can take
- forever getting on it, particularly through the 800 numbers. When you finally
- do get a carrier, you should get a message like this after hitting two returns:
-
- Port 20.
- Please enter your user name:
-
- Enter the username you selected and the password they assigned you. It
- should say, "Connection initiated....Opened." From that point, you're in.
-
- But the system will often appear to be bogged down. Often you have to hit
- twenty returns instead of two. Sometimes the system won't let you in because
- all the connections are "busy". Other times it will just drop the carrier.
- Real mail boxes don't do that.
-
- Another thing that will drive you crazy are the menus. Every time you enter
- a command, you get a whole new menu to choose from. If you're at 300 baud,
- this can get pretty annoying, especially it you know what all the options are.
- There are two ways around this: get the advanced version, which allows you to
- enter multi-word commands and even store some files, at a cost of $10 per
- month, or simply hit a control O.
-
- One part of the system that works fast and is very convenient is the user
- info. As soon as you type the command CREATE to begin writing a letter, you'll
- be asked who you want to send it to. Enter either the person's last name,
- first initial and last name, or username (which is usually one of the first
- two, but which can be almost anything the user desires). Immediately, you'll
- get a list of everyone with that name, as well as their city and state, which
- often don't fit properly on the line. There are no reports of any wildcards
- that allow you to see everybody at once. (The closest thing is *R, which will
- show all of the user names that you're sending to.) It's also impossible for a
- user not to be seen if you get his name or alias right. It's a good free
- information retrival system. But there's more.
-
- MCI Mail can also be used as a free word processor of sorts. The sytem will
- allow you to enter a letter, or for that matter, a manuscript. You can then
- hang up and do other things, come back within 24 hours, and your words will
- still be there. You can conceivably list them out using your own printer on a
- fresh sheet of paper and send it through the mail all by yourself, thus sparing
- MCI Mail's la6er printer the trouble. You could also share your account with
- somebody else and constantly leave unsent drafts for each other. Again, they
- have to be retrieved within 24 hours.
-
- Yet another way of getting "free" service from these people is to obtain
- many different accounts. There doesn't seem to be any kind of a limit on this
- and since each account comes with $2 of free messages, a few accounts can get
- you quite a bit of free service. And, of course, there's no charge for
- receiving messages on any of these accounts.
-
- 2600 has learned of several penetrations onto MCI Mail by hackers. This
- isn't really surprising considering: (a) there are multiple usernames, i.e.
- John Smith's username would always default to JSMITH, which means that several
- passwords can work for one username; (b) all passwords seem to follow a similar
- pattern -- 8 characters with the odd-numbered characters always being
- consonants or vowels -- any true hacker would obtain several accounts and look
- for any correspondence betwwen the random password and the account number
- everyone is assigned; (c) MCI Mail doesn't hand up after repeated tries -- the
- only thing that will make it disconnect intentionally is inactivity on your
- part.
-
- But by far, the biggest blunder that MCI Mail has made is not found on the
- system. It lies in their bills. There is no carry-over from month to month!
- If you get billed $8 one month and you don't pay it, then proceed to use the
- system for $3 more the next month, your next bill will only show the $3! The
- $8 has vanished! (This is by far the dumbest mistake we have ever reported in
- these pages.)
-
- You'll find quite a few unanswered quesitons in your travels through MCI
- Mail, which you can try to solve by reading the HELP files or sending a free
- message to MCIHELP. It usually takes them a couple of days to respond to you
- instantly, however.
-
- There are some software lapses as well. The system seems to be patterned
- largely after GTE Telemail, but it never really reaches that level of clarity.
- A small example can be seen in the scan tables, which have a heading of From,
- Subject, Size, etc. On outbound messages, the name of the person you're
- sending to appears under the From heading! Pretty silly.
-
- MCI Mail shows every indication of overspending with a passion. Free
- messages, free accounts, sloppy programming, toll-free dialups, single sheets
- of paper (like their bills) sent in huge envelopes, etc. Either they're very
- optimistic out there or they're very naive.
-
- (MCI Mail can be reached at 8004246677.) <>
-
- SF][G9:ba003.010585
-
- [Courtesy of Sherwood Forest ][ -- (914) 359-1517]
-
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