Episode: 710 Title: HPR0710: spics on tech Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0710/hpr0710.mp3 Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:19:57 --- Mmmm! Ha ha ha! Yeah, well, yeah, yeah, well, okay in English, huh, I mean, I think Okay, see it doesn't see it. See I said escuch all this time on a hacker public radio. No, never Okay, so let me let me let me start out by describing you what what's What this is all about so Okay, so there's this like There's this podcast called hacker public radio and it's it's it's kind of weird it kind of works like an aggregator Okay, so people people like produce it it it works in two ways so and Like so mode a so so you can't choose between the modes you get you got them both at the same time, okay, but But anyhow, so mode a is like syndication so they kind of subscribe to certain podcasts and then like you get them through their feed You know what I mean? Yeah, yeah, it's something like audio. Have you seen audio? No, I haven't I haven't used it. Didn't Twitter Come from audio or something like that. Oh, no, I don't think so it's it's something like you describe a web page when Where you add your podcast and through that page you can subscribe through different feeds something like that, but Okay, okay, I understand Okay, so so there's that so that there's that part and the other part is that like So so people produce special or not special, but just like shows that are only for hacker hacker public radio So you know what Twitter did Came from audio. I just remember. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Sorry. I was opening a Wikipedia Enter, you know like doing a Wikipedia Sorry, sorry, okay. Yeah, I'm turning off my I'm turning off my My torrent feed torrent the application now just just in case because you know, I don't want that messing up the bandwidth Yeah, okay get a nice clear crystal Sound and everything else. So so that's so so the One so I've been listening so people like These like this the special show like the syndicated shows sometimes we get Python a little bit of Python. Have you have you listened to that podcast before? No, never No, no, it's pretty cool like I'm kind of interested in Python sort of you know like once I once I you know Was it got a really good hang of Lisb and Haskell and all these like supposedly uber Really cool a programming languages, then I'm gonna move forward in to see and and Python and and I'll and small talk and Everything else, but it's it's it's cool to listen to the you know, just to to the developments and help you know all the different compilers and You know stuff like that. So, you know, I mean, it's interesting even if you don't know Python like it's it's really cool from yeah from like a developer perspective a system administrator You know from all these kinds of perspectives that that that you know kind of orbit around The development of a language. Yeah, I know because I have heard some podcasts that are very Technically advanced and I don't have the skills to to do what they can do, but it's really interesting to to hear how they do this stuff how they Recommendations and everything I hear for example You know a security security now Podcast and I think it's the tech technically. It's really advanced of course It's not meant only for experts, but I don't really use most of the technology discussed But it's really interesting to to hear opinions and everything Yeah, yeah, yeah, and right so so so the so one of them is So a little bit of Python is one of the syndicated shows There's others other syndicated shows, which I don't I don't remember right now But like lately like not the not syndicated like the special shows that people make only for for hacker public radio They even include people just talking about the history of computers or their own history with computers You know with like before the before the PC And even way before that then like like the the micro computers from the 60s and the You know the main frames and terminals and and that that kind of stuff So anyway, so the guy who's like organizing this stuff, which I I can't remember than his name You know off the top of my head or anything like that But he's saying like well if people don't produce special content for hacker public radio, then it's it's gonna go off the air Really or just gonna right is just gonna see is has a Oh my god, okay, that's that's that's that's like That's a whole are we taking time here because I only want to make this like 20 minutes long or so We can always edit this stuff, but it's like five minutes already five minutes already all right Yeah, so right so let's see so so I was so this is the proposal I have for you like we just we just make like Every few weeks like just one show to So so this hacker public radio thing keeps it doesn't dry up and we can just talk about just just Just general stuff. That's right. Like Picking our interest or whatever. Okay. I think it would be a great idea and I think that I Well, we have first Let me We have to do first, you know, like introduce ourselves. Why are we taking this this show? I think I think we I think we already have that covered since We talked but I think whoa that's the whole reason why I just said all that all that boring shit already Well, I don't think so Yeah, I think we should say more what oh go ahead then Well, okay I don't remember the first time I use a computer, but It was a really old one for my standards, you know MS-DOS and And I fell in love with computers at a really early age But I think I was involved in the hacker community when I was a teenager from 15 to I don't know 20 maybe 19 and I was I made an e-sign and Hacking e-sign is Spanish and I was really really Getting into programming and and all the hacker stuff really But I don't know what happened that I changed directions and Ended up right now. I'm doing research about hackers and I live in the Mexico, US border I think that's about it Let's so what what state are you in I mean, let's like geographically so people know You can look it up on Google maps, you know, if you're a little I'm in Baja, you know, it's in the border with California and Mexico Lee border town about border city that it's In Imperial County with the border is it with Imperial County a very unknown city worldwide But it is like two and a half hours from Tijuana So you know Okay, all right Let's see. Well So how can I So a little bit about me then What well we're gonna use tags. I mean Handles or we're gonna use our real names. Well, I we can use handles. I mean Yeah, you say handle that will be cooler. I guess I'm just gonna make one up on the spot then but I've always wanted to you well on IRC. I'm verbose on on free free node Oh, no, no, no, wait. Hold on. I'm not verbose. I'm sick you sick. Il paque what which is a it's a Mayan sort of Sort of like a finger not a finger food. What do you call it when it like a dip? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, so Yeah, so that's me. So anyway, so so yeah, so I was born in Tijuana Although I I tell everybody I tell everybody that I'm from Ensenada because if I tell if I tell people I'm from Tijuana then they Look at me. Well, they're like really suspicious eyes. Oh, yeah, I know what you mean I mean, I have to tell people that I leave one block away from the border and still they don't trust they they feel like I mean, I mean, you know There's some times I'm afraid of Mexico, right? And even one block away from the border You're still in the most dangerous place placing the world, right? Yeah like you know, like Yeah, well, I mean like Iraq and Afghanistan Exactly, those are like really far away so they don't kind of count too much. Yeah So yeah, so I was born in Tijuana and I'm 31 years old And I remember going to pick and save for those people who Can remember what does it's like It's like before Walmart and all these these other stores that are like offer really cheap crap They were these these stores that were called pick and save. They're called the big lots, right? Yeah, yeah, right now they are big lots. Okay, so it's so it's got a big lots from from the 80s And there was these really interesting books about basic Really weirder. Yeah, yeah, yeah, and if you saw that you know, we can save oh check this out Pick and save but they were in Spanish, okay, really? Wow So imagine that so I'm like, okay, so there's these Spanish books on on basic and They were like my life would have been totally different if I saw a basic book in Spanish in a pick and save really Definitely changed mine, so I picked it up. So I think I So they were really cheap. So I bought like three and They were like for kids they were like like with for kids and like really like illustrated, you know And all that kind of thing and so I was you know So so back then, you know before then before then I was like, oh, you know these computers They're like really magnificent machines. They're like totally mysterious and opaque and you can't you know I'll never find I mean I'll be like really old until like I really find out how they kind of work on the inside Which is which is true because I still don't really understand how they really work and I guess nobody really does Well, not Okay, well, I mean, I have a ways to go still so anyway, so so this these books They kind of really got me curious like oh, basically, okay, so So then a few years later my dad got a you know find out found out about the really cool and Library system that you guys in the US have and he found out that you could get a library card even if you weren't A resident you could just get like a like a special sort of I mean you had to pay a little bit more You could get a library card and you could take out books. So so I just went and and My dad's a he's my dad's like a dentist and he's also like a musician and a Radio DJ and all these kinds of other music Related things so anyway, so so he one of his patients one of his dental patients Like he kind of like oh, I don't have all this money to to pay you But I'll give you a computer and my dad was like oh sweet cool. All right sure So he one one night he's like he knocked on my doors. I was already asleep and he said oh look look what I brought about you Brought you and and it was like C64 which I knew back then even it was like 1991 or so so I already I had already taken IBM PC classes like DOS and all that. This is night. I had I took them in 1989 or 1990 so there was no windows still it was all MS DOS and I remember the big thing that happened Over there was people like when the teacher left This was in the Casa de la Cultura Okay, do Like a government run sort of cultural thing For kids and like and one of their one of their programs. I mean one of their like like classes They they had was computer. So I'm like, oh, okay cool. I'll take I'll take that. I took tap dancing Singing I'm a geek. Okay, so yeah, so tap dancing a fuel to me until the first class and I'm saying no way am I doing that? No way that's like totally Yeah, yeah, it looks cool like when other people do yeah So I'm like no So anyway, but the the I mean I got I got a really good kick out of the Computering computing classes and I mean they were kind of I'm guessing your classmate's got a good kick out of you in tap dance Yeah, well, they didn't they didn't really find out. I think I canceled that class like after a week or so Like I'm not yeah anyway your classmates when they saw you well, okay, forget it. Okay. It's okay I Mean they would have I mean imagine me tap dancing into the into the class, right like Good afternoon tap any tap any tap I could tap I could like tap with my with my uh with my feet while I while I typed on the on the On the keyboard, right? I could Anyway, so uh yeah So I'm making this too long. So anyway, so I learned all the commands Dell and you know Der and all those commands And then so when when my dad bought brought me the c64 I already knew that it was obsolete But I didn't get I didn't care because it because I could I turned it on I connected everything I saw the manual and it and it used basic oh really Yeah, so like right from the start like from like you could use basic on the like on their on its command line quote unquote So you can program it directly just by starting it up So that was that was really appealing and then like I don't know like that was 1991. So right now or to so 20 years later Uh, I got uh, so I got two you boon two desktops three actually Uh, a free bsd server which which for for now is only a a crappy file server And I'm interested in open bsd and just in uh programming languages And linguistics, which is which is what I'm gonna study. I'm 31 and I'm I haven't had a What do you call that in English when you have a license? Yeah, I'm like a bachelor's a bachelor's degree, right? So I don't I don't need I'm 31. I don't even have a bachelor's degree, but I'm working on it And that's that's those are pretty much my interest linguistics and computing Well, that was there with all kinds of things. So yeah, okay. I you brought to me a lot of memories, but um Maybe we can save that for later, but I can tell you that uh In Calexico the border town. I'm next to and there's it, you know that swap me or flea market. I don't know the exact term Tangus. Yeah for you you mean on you mean on the uh on the US side of the border, right? Yeah, I mean And there it's called Santa Tomas and you know there's a lot of stuff to buy clouds, you know furniture You know everything you can buy there and second hand And from time to time there there were boxes with computer stuff, you know electronics And I always looked there to see what I could find. You know they they gave you everything practically for free because They didn't know what what it was and frankly it was really old. It was obsolete. It was you know old hardware useless mostly but There were some manuals there So I bought everything I could so when I arrived home I looked at every Every piece of hardware and I said well, what what is this and I tried to figure out what What what is for because um there was an internet really and so I couldn't look it up And but I learned a lot even There were discounts or cities and I bought them and I I looked at them There was a lot of interesting information in those discs and information that shouldn't be there. I mean They should have for you raised the information before they threw it out, but they didn't and I found out a lot of stuff and and I I still go there, but there there's not the same because people now know The value of computers, so they they're more They know what what it's useless and what's useful so they They I don't know it's not the same Uh-huh, okay, so do you have any news? Uh, no, no actually it's it's well the only I don't know like One thing that I have to have to kind of uh, you know get off my chest or just just mention or whatever. Yeah, is that uh like I've been I've been um It's kind of strange because uh I just got to work. I'm just I'm just starting uh like a it's been a month since I've been working at this uh government program like educational program for indigenous uh kids Uh So um, I'm I'm in like like I'm I'm like out in the Like in the rear really rural parts of Mexico and I don't have a uh Uh, 3G modem or anything Like that. I mean, I don't have I don't have any I don't have any way of connecting Like so Monday to Friday. I'm like totally without internet really and it's yeah, and it's and it's kind of really It's I mean, I'm gonna get you know, I'm gonna solve that eventually But you know these these past weeks. It's been it's been kind of it's been kind of a torture also like It's really hot. It's really hot. It's really dusty and uh, you know, there's kids I mean, I don't have a lot of privacy so kids come kind of come come up to me or I mean I'm just I'm just in this like kind of like a shack working and then the kids I mean there's no door There's like two doors, but they don't have like it's there's two passageways. They don't have they I can't close the doors There's no there's there's doors without doors. I don't know the English language is kind of weird But I mean they don't they don't they don't close they don't have the stop thing Whatever. Yeah, so uh, so they just come in and I think they can like Interrupt me so it's kind of The only time I can I can work is like late at night when there's when the wind blows from the jungle to the to the sweet or whatever So there's no dust in the wind and it's like cool enough so that it's so that the machine doesn't like Melt while I'm using it and all the kids are asleep. So I can I can kind of like, you know, just just do stuff But uh, you know by that by by then I'm really like really tired. I can't concentrate as well So yeah, I mean, I mean you're talking like Something from another century. I mean Wow Yeah, so it's so I'm kind of a little bit out of touch and I kind of want of it's kind of like a challenge to find the the adequate Discipline and sort of like kind of hack In a certain way like hack time or hack space and space and time, you know kind of find the correct configuration of how to like get be able to still work Because you know, I mean, I do work. I mean, I teach these kids and all the you know preschool and primary school But I mean do it, you know, do my personal projects Computer related personal projects while I'm while I'm in this small town It's three families, so it's really it's more like a hamlet than a small town Okay, so yeah, so that's that's that's my big excuse for not being uh, you know, in touch with what's what's going on So it'll be my kids like it's already 20 minutes, but um I I want to do 10 more minutes and okay, but I have to go really so I only wanted to say this what um Right now I was work last week. I was working on what is defining what is hacker practice what makes hacking Unique because hackers have access to the same technology that every user has access to There there has to be something different that that makes hacking Unique it's not only using you know technology. It's not And so I finally came to Satisfactory definition of what hacking is and I did that through several You know authors that have approached The subject, but none of them has given a real definition of what hacking is Everybody talks about hacking, but nobody knows knows what it is of course if you ask a hacker and you you ask him What is hacking? He's he's gonna answer you without much trouble. I mean he's gonna say hacking is you know Creativity or maybe making technology do something unexpected or something, but right, but if I'm on the academic field I have to really make a good definition so people that are not hackers Know what hacking is even if they have never seen hacking before and I think that hacking has to do with technology but it's mostly about Your attitude towards technology. I mean hacker does not only use this technology He questions technology. I mean if Steve Jobs says that you can't use You know apps for the iPhone that Apple computers have not has not approved Most users they don't make a fuss about it. They just accepted, you know That's the way it is that's the rules That's it, but a hacker knows that that's only a restriction Oh For business purposes not really because the iPhones can't handle it mostly because Apple computers doesn't want you to Use your iPhone freely so that's that's one of the Things that hacker do and That's one important component of hacking the other component. I believe it's that It's not it's made for fun you know It's mostly made Because of the challenge and you're kind of um enjoying Solving a problem. It's not because your boss told you to or it's not because it's an a school assignment It's more for in your own motivation and exploration Right There are several things I have Identify maybe you believe that I'm not Making a big breakthrough because it this sounds obvious for something inside of Uh the hacker community, but it's not obvious for authors about the subject You know a lot of people that um Right about hackers. They write about Criminal aspects or maybe about fraud or maybe about other stuff that It's it's there. I can say it's not but Mm-hmm. It's not central to hacking. It's more like the view of some Somebody from the outside Well and viewing viewing the consequence some sort of consequence instead of the the practice itself somehow exactly and I think that Also a lot of emphasis has been put on hackers themselves and I think that hackers That's not for me at least that's not the important stuff because Hacker practice is what makes a hacker and Right there are you you are what you do and not who you think you are Exactly exactly and also um if Maybe you do hacker practices maybe you hack But maybe you're not a hacker. I mean there are a lot of people that do Stuff that could be consider hacking, but they are not hackers and they don't feel They don't think Um Yeah, they don't they don't identify identify themselves as such Exactly anybody else and I don't think that's important to To know to feel I'm a hacker you're not a hacker. I'm a hacker again. That's not important. I mean the important stuff is what you do and I think that's Note many Authors have at least in the academic field have Approach the subjects this way, so I'm what what was what was your handle My handle Bad yeah, well at least for the show. Bad bit I never I never said what okay bad bit that's my handle and I have to go No, wait, wait, hold on, okay We are at least I think it leads you should uh Sort of explain because I mean it's this is really real interesting stuff But I already know what kind of work you're doing But I think all the listeners probably don't really go and look hard up to that So why don't you describe your you know this this academic project you're doing and what can what feel this anthropology or something? It's sociology or what close to anthropology it's uh field Relatively new field called cultural studies And cultural studies began in the 1950s so for Social sciences. It's quite new and Cultural studies I don't know where to begin but The approach they can they can they can work they can work you pity that but yeah, but okay That's how long how long have you been working on this hacker cultural studies and and what focus does it have specifically What well this is This is a project for my masters my masters in cultural studies. I began in last summer and I my I want to know If Or why hacker practice Or how hacker practice is used for Political means That sounds really crazy for a hacker but because they most of them they they don't relate to politics or or they are politicized But they don't see hacking as something political But I think Sometimes it is not always because Let me put you an example I mean okay This guy Phil Simmerman PGP Do you know him Do you have you have you used PGP you know pretty good privacy The creeps Yeah, yeah, I mean, I'm familiar with it, but I haven't used it for a while. Okay. Okay. I'm not I'm not really interested in it too much Okay, okay Phil Simmerman he saw that there was going to be a legislation Prohibiting Citizens to use encryption. So he's he didn't think that was fair So he said okay, I'm gonna develop a good software that you know Normal people could use to protect their information and he released it before You know that legislation was to place yeah, yeah to um Make it difficult for it to be approved because he didn't think about air and he said that Every citizen should be should have the right to protect his own information for From everybody. I mean not even the government has The right to To look at your private information So it was a long A long process in the legal process Finally PGP prevailed and still here. It still works and You know, I think it that's a big achievement and you know He programmed he created that model of encryption or that system and You know that hacking for a political means, you know political ends so That's you know only one of many examples So that's why why I'm doing this research. I'm focusing on South California. No North Baja California. So I'm trying to see differences and similarities between Mexico and the United States. So if you you think you can help You're welcome They can write to you or what? Yeah, of course my email I'm always have a lot of trouble with my email spelling it in even in Spanish So can you put a link in the show notes or something? Yeah, yeah, let's let's do that So how how what are we gonna call this show then? We can do it like every two weeks because I'm going to what the mile for about a week or so So we could probably record when I get back Yeah, I actually could are we gonna call I was thinking about something like spics on tech or something like that something cheeky and Baby, I don't know. I don't know. I'm not very good at Well naming stuff. Well, you're you're handled pretty cool. So I thank you, but I chose it when I was 14 Well, it's still a cool. It's stuck and Mm-hmm. I don't know hacker something Silicon border. Yeah, all right. Okay, cool. So So you recorded this so you'll send it you'll send it back, right? Yeah Okay, cool. All right, so You got to go right? Yeah, I have to kind of okay, I have to yeah, if by the way By the way, I haven't told you this I found one or maybe I did I found a hacker spacing and it's another Really? Yeah, I mean Haven't I told you this now you haven't we haven't talked for for for a while. We've been I'm going tomorrow Yes, and there's um, you know kind of a workshop Called electronics for artists. So I'm going to go the first two classes. So Let's see what what it is and I was really excited because I never believed their Packer space could be could exist here. So And now that's a pretty cool city. Yeah, that's true that the It has the biggest number of um, scientists Um in Mexico, you know There's a research institute there, right? How does scientist ratio in the in Mexico? Hmm, wasn't there like a research there's a research institute there right for nuclear physics or oceanography and several several You know, I really you know physics Several stuff. Yeah, there are a lot of people a lot of scientists there Yeah, I should buy a house there. Yeah I don't know what money, but you know what? I don't know with what money, but uh, yeah Okay, so that I like this so I think that Next episode we should plan a little yeah, we should plan. Yeah, yeah Okay, I'm John for who is going to listen to this but okay Probably nobody, but all right Well, okay, all right, it's true. Take care man Same to you All right, okay, see you Thank you for listening to Haftar Public Radio HPR is sponsored by caro.net. So head on over to C-A-R-O-D-E-T for all of us