PACT- 6A Hackers snatched world economic forum attendees' credit-card numbers by William Drozdiak The Washington Post February 5, 2001 BRUSSELS, Belgium - A week after its annual conclave of glo bal political and economic lumi naries at the Alpine resort of Davos, the World Economic Fo rum announced Monday that un precedented security precautions failed to prevent computer hack ers from tapping into a database and stealing credit-card numbers of about 1,400 prominent people. The computer break-in came to light when the Swiss weekly Sonntags Zeitung revealed its re porters had been shown data on a CD-ROM containing 80,000 pages of information, including credit-card numbers, passport in formation and personal cell-phone contacts of some of the forum’s participants, who are among the world’s most famous, rich and powerful people. The victims in cluded former president Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, South Afri can President Thabo Mbeki, Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates and other prominent corpo rate executives, the weekly said. “We are treating this matter as a serious crime and not as a prank,” said Charles McLean, the WEF’s director of communica tions. “We have filed a legal com plaint and asked the Swiss au thorities to launch a full investi gation that we hope will lead to the prosecution of the perpetra- McLean said the cyber-attack was carried out by unknown hack ers who broke into a “remnant da tabase” that contained information about participants who attended some of the forum’s regional meetings held last year. He said the stolen material appeared to consist mainly of biographical data readily available to the pub lic, but for about 1,400 people there was the loss of more private information. During this year’s conference, which focused mainly on the frag ile nature of the American economy and the global impact of the digital revolution, some of the most heated debate among par ticipants involved questions of personal privacy in the Internet age. This cyber-attack on the Davos database seems likely to elevate that theme on the forum's “We have notified all of the par- agenda. SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Signs of Antarctica melting The Washington Post February 5, 2001 There’s new evidence that an im portant part of the Antarctic might be melting. Andrew Shepherd of the British Antarctic Survey and colleagues studied satellite data collected from 1992 to 1999 about the Pine Island Glacier, a 20-mile-wide river of ice that is thought to be especially vul nerable to changes in climate. The glacier is thinning faster than had been thought, the data showed. If the current rate continues, the gla cier will be floating within 600 years, which would sharply increase sea levels around the world, the re searchers report in the Feb. 2 issue of Science. It remains unclear whether global warming is playing a role in the glacier's thinning, the researchers said. ticipants affected by this security breach and advised them to reach their credit-card companies to en sure the security of their ac counts,” McLean said. “The fo rum has also initiated legal pro ceedings to block any use or dis semination of the illegally ob tained information and created a telephone hot line for participants who have specific queries about this incident.” During the recent conference, thousands of Swiss police set up an elaborate array of roadblocks and barbed-wire barricades that transformed the Davos confer ence center into an impregnable fortress. The security measures were taken to thwart any mayhem by anti-globalization protesters, who had threatened to disrupt what they call an elitist con spiracy to promote the interests of big business to the detriment of the world’s poor. Although McLean insists the identity of the hackers and their political affiliation has not been established, the Swiss newspaper said the material had been col lected by anti-globalization pro testers. Swiss authorities said they would pursue a preliminary in quiry to determine whether the government should prosecute the hackers on grounds of invasion of privacy. McLean said none of those par ticipants whose credit-card num bers had been exposed reported any bogus charges on their ac counts. He said the forum was confident the hackers did not pen etrate the primary Davos data base. A spacecraft gamble in a quest for knowledge by Kathy Sawyer The Washington Post February 5, 2001 WASHINGTON - Imagine an old shoe thrown into the air, tumbling end over end. A spunky little dragonfly is flying rings around it, circling closer and closer and finally trying to settle on a certain spot without getting smashed flat. Next Monday, as a grand finale to its year-long mission, NASA’s Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous Shoe maker spacecraft (NEAR; will at tempt a feat not unlike the hypotheti cal shoe-fly act: the first landing ever on the surface of an asteroid. It’s worth the effort, mission man agers have decided, because these space rocks harbor specimens of the primordial rubble out of which Earth and the other inner planets formed more than 4.5 billion years ago If that isn’t enough, some of the larger chunks have helped shape the evolu tion of Earth and its life-forms by slamming into it - and one of those still out there just may have to be de flected someday in order to save civi lization. Since last Valentine’s Day, NEAR has been dancing gingerly around the 21-mile-long asteroid Eros 433 as it spins at a rate of one revolution every 5 hours and 17 minutes. Named for the Greek god of sexual love, Eros is one of the largest and most accessible space rocks known to travel near Earth. Evidence suggests that the im pact of a smaller object wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago and, scientists say, there is a slight possi bility that Eros will collide with Earth - in perhaps 1.5 million years. Launched in 1996 on a 2 billion-mile chase and currently 196 million miles from Earth, the NEAR spacecraft is already in the record books as the first WORLD & NATION Police use new tool to find fake IDs by Petula Dvorak The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Bouncers in the nation’s capital, who have only their experience and keen eyes to fight the increasingly sophisticated fake IDs that college towns seem to spawn, at last have technology on their side. The Washington D.C. police de partment is the first in the nation to introduce an army of small scanners to weed out bogus IDs. “There are over 500 Internet sites that sell fake IDs, and they all look amazing,” said Lt. Pat Burke, the department’s traffic coordinator. “They are getting so good that the naked eye can’t tell if they’re fake. Now we have something that can.” Undercover officers began working the city’s bars Friday night, posing as bouncers using the new machines. Rush-hour bombing nine on subway platform by Maura Reynolds Los Angeles Times February 5, 2001 MOSCOW - A small bomb exploded on a subway platform during rush hour here Monday, injuring nine people and reviving fears that terror ists are targeting the Russian capi tal. Prosecutors said they were inves tigating the bombing at the Belorusskaya metro station in cen tral Moscow as a terrorist act. “ The most important thing is that everyone is alive,” said Vasily Kuptsov, a spokesman for the city police force. No one immediately claimed re sponsibility for the blast, and police did not identify any suspects. Kirill Kumakov, 14, had just got ten on the escalator to exit the sta tion when he heard a bang. “ It wasn’t too loud,” he said. “ I turned around and saw a little black smoke coming from under a bench. A woman and a boy were lying on the ground. There was a smell like burning rubber. “ Then everything was a panic, with people running up the escala tor,” he added. “They pushed me up and out.” The explosion damaged marble ever to go into orbit around any small solar system body (asteroid or comet), the first to operate on solar power so far from the sun, and the first ever to conduct an in-depth study of an aster oid. Circling the rock at distances typi cally ranging from 22 to 124 miles, by mission’s end NEAR will have transmitted more than 160,000 images and taken millions of measurements. It has answered many questions, re searchers say, and raised new ones. But in recent days, spacecraft han dlers have focused on the final “first.” The 1,100-pound spacecraft was not designed to land, and the decision to try it has been mildly controversial within the team. “It's turned out to be more compli cated than we thought,” said mission director Robert Farquhar, of the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory i'APL; in Howard County, Md. APL built the spacecraft and is managing the mission for NASA. The antenna has to point toward Earth with the so lar wings oriented toward the sun, while the camera aims at the asteroid. “This means the thrusters aren’t lined up,” he said, “and that will take some fancy footwork that uses 25 percent more fuel.” Oh, and the spacecraft is running out of gas. “The mission has been such a suc cess, a lot of people are asking why risk failure now,” said Farquhar, who conceived the landing idea. “But it’s all bonus science. To me, the only real risk is in not taking one.” Around him, the NEAR team in APL’s spacecraft operations center was executing a thruster firing to lower the craft’s orbit. They watched for a change in the NEAR telemetry num bers on a big wall screen as they teleconferenced with spacecraft navi gators at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. (Instructions sent between Earth and the spacecraft Police say the high-tech approach is effective and more genteel than the usual raids, which were often impre cise, time-consuming and decried by the business community. “Some of the bars thought that we were overly pernicious in targeting them rather than targeting the individu als who use the fake IDs,” Burke said. This weekend is the start of the department's new effort to curb under age drinking after a string of alcohol related injuries and deaths near Wash ington college campuses in the last two years. Seven machines were used by un dercover officers at bars from Thurs day through Saturday in the neighbor hoods of Georgetown, Adams-Morgan and 14th and U streets, and near Catho lic, Howard, American and George Washington universities. injures tile and lighting fixtures on the ornate subway platform, but the damage was minor enough that the station re opened less than three hours after the bombing. Among the nine people hospitalized were two children. The incident recalled last summer’s bombing in an underground passage at Moscow's Pushkin Square, which killed 13 people. Many officials ini tially blamed Chechen terrorists for that blast, as they had for a series of apartment house bombs in 1999 that killed about 300 people. But while investigators claimed to have circumstantial evidence linking Chechen warlords to the apartment blasts, the cases have not been solved. And investigators eventually ac knowledged that the Pushkin Square blast was unconnected to the apart ment bombings; instead, it was the result of a dispute between kiosk op erators. But 27-year-old Dmitri Ivanov, who was higher up on the escalator when the Belorusskaya bomb went off, said he doesn't believe those explanations and has no doubts about who was to blame. “ Of course (all the bombs) are con nected to each other and to the Chechens," he said. “ We’re not chil- dren.” across 196 million miles take 17.5 min utes one way, at the speed of light.) “We’re seeing a response,” someone said. Maneuvering around an asteroid is much trickier than circling a nice round planet. The asteroid’s shape has been compared to a peanut and a potato, but Farquhar personally favors a shoe. “It’s almost like a Dutch clog,” he said. The force of gravity on Eros’ surface averages about one-thousandth that on Earth. A person who weighs 150 pounds on Earth would vary from 0.56 to 1.3 ounces on a tour of Eros. Its irregular shape similarly gives NEAR a “rough ride” on close passes, mission managers said. NEAR’s orbital direction (opposite that of the rock's spin) was designed to minimize the gravitational kicks. (The gravity that holds NEAR in orbit is related to the asteroid's mass - the quantity and dis tribution of its matter - as well as to the distance between them.) On Jan. 28, NEAR brushed over Eros’ “toe” at a record close distance of less than two miles. On Feb. 12, beginning at about 10:30 a.m. EST, the controllers will begin a final series of engine bums designed to move the craft out of orbit, brake its velocity and - just after 3 p.m. - settle it on the rock’s sunlit southern side at a survivable speed of two to seven mph. “I’d say there’s about an 85 percent chance that everything will go right,” Farquhar said. “But if one of these bums doesn’t go off, it could get ugly.” The craft could smack down at up to 20 mph and end up looking like a card board model of NEAR that sits taunt ingly on the desk of mission operations manager Bob Nelson - crumpled flat. If all goes well, Farquhar said, the descending craft will snap dozens of images 10 times as detailed as any ever before taken of an asteroid, its camera staying in focus to within about 1,650 Bush-wackin’ the taxes President George W. Bush announces his proposal for a tax cut at an event in the Diplomatic Room of the White House, Monday. Behind him are members of three families that participated in the event. Phil on job shadowing Punxsutawney Phil checks out the crowd after being pulled from his tree stump by Bill Deeley, the president of the Groundhog Club and Phil's handler, during Groundhog Day festivities in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, in the winter of 1998. The National Oceanic and At mospheric Administration charges that Punxsutawney Phil is a quack. On Friday Phil appeared once again and saw his shadow. The Quagga question PHOTO BY JOHN MURPHY THE BALTIMORE SUN feet above the surface and capturing objects as small as 4 inches across. Its destination is on the verge of an in triguing six-mile-wide, saddle-shaped depression peppered with boulders. After touchdown, Farquhar said, “the most we can hope for is a beacon from NEAR Shoemaker that says it’s still operating.” Or the craft could tip into what he called “ostrich mode” - head down, its antenna in the dirt. NEAR’s lead scientist, Andrew Cheng of APL, said NEAR’s wealth of data has already confirmed, among other things, that Eros is a sample of material largely unchanged since the birth of the solar system (and a rela tive of the most common type of me teorite - the space debris that falls to Earth). The pristine primordial stuff is impossible to study on our own planet or others where geological activity and heat have cooked and pounded it into something else. NEAR has also shown that Eros is a solid whole rather than a “rubble pile” of loosely bound pieces like, for example, the asteroid Mathilde, which the craft visited earlier. “This is the first time we’ve gotten up close and personal... with one of these objects that could be like the one that eliminated the dinosaurs,” said Ed Weiler, NASA’s head of space science, pronouncing the relatively low-cost ($223 million) mission “a total suc cess story.” NEAR has also posed new riddles. “On the tiny fraction of the surface we've seen at high resolution, we no ticed strange processes we haven’t seen on the moon or anywhere else,” including unexplained landslides of surface material, said Joseph Veverka of Cornell University, NEAR imaging team leader. “We need to get a better look.” Next Monday is their one chance. I HI:: BUSKIN, > SBN\( > 'N FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9,2001 ixidermist Reinhold ,au explains his ex ibit on the quagga (breeding project at le South Africa Mu ium in Cape Town, subspecies of the ains zebra, the lagga was hunted extinction in the 'th century.