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Captain Midnight broadcast signal intrusion

On April 27, 1986, American electrical engineer and business owner John R. MacDougall (using the pseudonym "Captain Midnight") jammed the Home Box Office (HBO) satellite signal on Galaxy 1 during a showing of the film The Falcon and the Snowman. The message, broadcast for four and a half minutes, was seen by the eastern half of the United States (accounting for more than half of HBO's 14.6 million subscribers at the time) protesting HBO's rates for satellite dish owners, which he considered too expensive. MacDougall was working at his second job as an operations engineer at the Central Florida Teleport uplink station in Ocala, Florida, and vied with a technician at HBO's communications center in Hauppauge, New York, for control of the transmission. The technician attempted to increase uplink power but gave up because of the risk of damaging the satellite. MacDougall eventually abandoned his control of the satellite.

Captain Midnight
Message seen in 1986, as superimposed on the SMPTE color bars
DateApril 27, 1986; 37 years ago (1986-04-27)
Time00:32 EST (05:32 UTC)
DurationFour and a half minutes
LocationOcala, Florida, U.S.
TypeBroadcast signal intrusion
MotiveTo protest against charges for access to scrambled satellite channels
TargetHome Box Office (HBO)
ParticipantsJohn R. MacDougall
OutcomeFine and probation
Resulted in the development of the Automatic Transmitter Identification System

Although the intrusion was a minor annoyance to viewers, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), with assistance from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), investigated the jamming. After the FCC identified the transmitters and stations equipped with the specific character generator evidently used during the broadcast signal intrusion, MacDougall surrendered to the authorities, after which he was served with a subpoena due to a tourist having overheard him discussing the incident on a payphone off Interstate 75. Under an agreement with the prosecutor, he plea bargained and was sanctioned with a $5,000 fine, one-year unsupervised probation, and a one-year suspension of his amateur radio license. The jamming received much attention in the U.S., with one executive dubbing the intrusion an act of "video terrorism". As a consequence of the incident, the United States Congress passed the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 (18 U.S.C. § 1367), making satellite hijacking a felony. The Automatic Transmitter Identification System was also developed in response to this incident.

Background Edit

Scrambling of satellite transmissions Edit

Beginning in the late 1920s, when the first experimental transmissions began, broadcast television was delivered for free over local frequencies in the United States. When the industry began charging viewers for access to premium services via cable, free broadcasts continued. Starting in the 1970s, a small community of satellite television enthusiasts (mostly engineers) shared the technology and knowledge of how to construct satellite dishes, as well as how to access pay television from the airwaves for free.[1] This was not illegal at the time, and restaurant and hotel chains made use of this technology to distribute programming to guests and patrons without charge.[2]

In the mid-1980s, controversy erupted in the cable programming world as American media companies that owned pay television channels began scrambling their programming and charging fees to home satellite dish owners who accessed the same satellite signals that cable operators received. Many satellite dish owners faced the prospect of having to purchase descrambling equipment at a cost of hundreds of dollars, as well as having to pay monthly or annual subscription fees to cable programming providers. Fees for home dish owners were often higher than fees paid by cable subscribers, despite dish owners being responsible for acquiring and servicing their own equipment.[2]

When Home Box Office (HBO) began scrambling its signal on a 24-hour basis on January 15, 1986, it offered subscriptions to home dish owners for $12.95 per month ($30.61 in 2020 dollars), which was either equal to or slightly higher than what cable subscribers paid. HBO also advised viewers that purchasing a descrambler for $395 ($933.80 in 2020 dollars) would (along with the monthly fee) allow them to continue watching HBO.[3] Several satellite dish dealers across the U.S. closed their stores as a result of a reduction in dish sales, caused by the rise in signal scrambling.[4] Dish owners began protests over keeping free access to broadcasts.[5] One such protest was by members of the Satellite Television Industry Association, who converged on Washington, D.C., in March 1986 to urge the United States Congress to protect access to satellite transmissions.[6]

Perpetrator Edit

John R. MacDougall
Born
NationalityAmerican
Other namesCaptain Midnight
EducationAmerican Heritage School
Alma materWorcester Polytechnic Institute (did not graduate)
Occupation(s)Electrical engineer, business owner
Criminal chargesIllegally operating a satellite uplink transmitter
Criminal penalty
$5,000 fine
  • 1 year of unsupervised probation
  • Amateur radio license suspended for 1 year
Call signKA4WJA[7]
Websitemacdougallelect.com

John R. MacDougall was born in Elmhurst, Illinois, a western suburb of Chicago. He is the youngest of five children to building contractor Robert MacDougall and his wife Thelma, a homemaker. Shortly after his father's retirement in 1970, the family moved to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where MacDougall was educated at American Heritage School. Having spent his childhood years tinkering with cars and CB radios, MacDougall spent two years of studying in a management engineering program at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. He eventually abandoned his studies and found employment installing satellite dishes in Ocala.[8][9]

In 1983, MacDougall opened the satellite dealership MacDougall Electronics in Ocala.[2] The company initially turned a healthy profit, but following the scrambling of HBO's signal on January 15, 1986, its turnover declined. Consequently, MacDougall reduced his expenses where possible and in the same month was offered a part-time job at the Central Florida Teleport uplink station (which uplinked services to satellites) as an operations engineer to help him pay his bills.[10] As he was not receiving any customers, MacDougall pulled all company advertising and saved money by switching off his air conditioning. He became increasingly reclusive during this period, watching television and reading magazines.[8] MacDougall later said of the experience: "I have been watching the great American dream slip from my grasp."[11]

MacDougall wrote protest letters to legislators, and spent a large amount of money to raise awareness about wanting to keep the market free from excessive charging of its services.[12] At 12:49 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST) on April 20,[13] one week before the jamming, MacDougall transmitted a color bar test pattern that was superimposed on HBO's signal for a brief period. HBO did not investigate this incident, as it had occurred during the overnight hours, and as a result, very few people had been watching at the time.[n 1][14]

Jamming Edit

The full recording of the broadcast signal intrusion, as it happened live on television in 1986

On April 26, 1986, MacDougall worked at his shop as normal, and closed at 4:00 p.m. EST. After eating dinner, he reported to Central Florida Teleport with one other engineer on duty. The second engineer left at 6:00 p.m., leaving MacDougall to operate the building on his own. MacDougall oversaw the uplink of the movie Pee-wee's Big Adventure as part of the evening's programming for the pay-per-view network People's Choice, which used Central Florida Teleport's facilities.[10] After the film ended, he went through his regular routine.[15] Before logging off, MacDougall set up SMPTE color bars and used a Quanta Corporation Microgen MG-100 character generator that placed letters on the television screen.[13][15] He spent a couple of minutes composing his message. MacDougall began his message with a polite greeting as he did not wish to be insulting. He selected the name "Captain Midnight" from a film he had recently seen, On the Air Live with Captain Midnight (unrelated to the popular Captain Midnight radio show of the 1940s).[8]

Described by The A.V. Club as "a Reagan-era Robin Hood",[16] MacDougall swung the 30-foot (9.1 m) transmission dish back into its storage position, which aimed it at the location of Galaxy 1, the satellite that carried HBO.[15][17] Locating the satellite coordinates was not of great difficulty for MacDougall as frequencies were widely published in manuals and enthusiast magazines.[5] As a protest against the introduction of high fees and scrambling equipment, MacDougall transmitted a signal onto the satellite that for four and a half minutes overrode HBO's telecast of the 1985 film The Falcon and the Snowman, which had begun two minutes earlier.[8] The five-line text message printed in white capital letters that appeared on the screens of HBO subscribers across the eastern half of the U.S. (accounting for more than half of HBO's 14.6 million subscribers at the time), starting at 12:32 a.m. EST (05:32 UTC[n 2]) on April 27, appeared as follows:[3][5][17]


GOODEVENING HBO
FROM CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
$12.95/MONTH  ?
NO WAY !
 [SHOWTIME/MOVIE CHANNEL BEWARE!] 
 

Hughes Communications, owner of the Galaxy 1 satellite, immediately noticed the jamming and threatened to shut down HBO's satellite signal or alter the satellite's course, with executives believing the hacker was a domestic terrorist.[3][19] HBO's technician, working at the company's communication center in Hauppauge, Long Island, New York,[3] telephoned Hughes Communications, but officials there could not offer an explanation to the jamming. The HBO technician attempted to regain control by increasing the uplink transmission power from 125 watts to 2,000 watts.[20] This was unsuccessful, as MacDougall increased his power in a control battle that lasted about 90 seconds,[8] during which it was feared that a further power increase would damage the satellite.[20] MacDougall became scared, abandoned his control of the satellite, and went home.[2][15] He felt guilty about his actions the following day, but hoped the jamming would not be noticed by anyone not working for HBO.[8] MacDougall was later surprised to see his actions being reported on network television.[10] Thus, when he returned to work that night he pretended to have no knowledge about the intrusion, and asked questions about what had happened.[8] MacDougall only told close friends, and had visions of federal agents visiting his home.[9]

Investigation Edit

Galaxy 1 carried HBO on transponder 23 at a rate of 125 watts, with relay signals sent out at 6,385 MHz. Mother Jones magazine determined that MacDougall could have potentially taken over the signals of three additional satellites. He could have taken control of the network feed of CBS had he positioned his satellite dish at the Telstar 301 satellite, operated by AT&T, tuned at 6,065 MHz. He also could have taken over the foreign language feed of the Voice of America network by aiming his satellite dish at 72 degrees west longitude. The final theorized hijacking would have been aiming his satellite dish at 100 degrees west longitude, above the Galápagos Islands, with a frequency setting of 293.375 MHz, thereby jamming the signal of United States Navy satellite Fleetsatcom 1. The magazine also posited that an amateur hobbyist could hijack the satellites that alerted U.S. military forces to Soviet actions, creating confusion for world leaders and placing the world at risk of nuclear destruction.[20]

Although the intrusion caused minor annoyance to viewers,[11] HBO contacted the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and announced that the hijacker would face prosecution.[4] The commission's chief, Richard Smith, assembled staff in his office for an emergency meeting at the FCC headquarters eight hours after the intrusion to discuss how the culprit should be caught.[9] On April 28, the chairman of HBO, Michael J. Fuchs, wrote to the FCC saying the company had received calls threatening to place Galaxy 1 into a different orbit,[8] but the company was unable to determine whether these were credible threats or not.[21] Fuchs's letter additionally urged the commission to use all of its resources to capture the culprit.[8] In the days after the jamming, more than 200 people called the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to "confess" that they were Captain Midnight.[1]

The Department of Justice made indications of its desire to get involved,[10] and the FBI was called in to assist the investigation.[21][22] One hundred FCC field offices and monitoring stations across the U.S. were actively involved in the investigation, with no fewer than six FCC employees working on the case.[23] Oliver Long, the head engineer of the FCC's Texas field office, oversaw the investigation,[24] and the commission assigned agent George Dillon to the case.[10] The case first led investigators from the FCC to focus on the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex,[22] after an anonymous tip accused an amateur radio operator residing in Lewisville, Texas, of being the culprit.[23]

Later, the FCC determined which teleport uplink sites out of the 2,000 licensed transmitters in the U.S. had the capability to override the HBO signal.[9] That narrowed it down to 580 uplink sites that had sufficiently large antennas that had the capability of broadcasting the signal. The manufacturer that produced the character generator graphics model used to generate the typeface on the television screen was also identified after studying footage of the jamming.[25] Investigators from the commission obtained copies from an FCC engineer and HBO viewers, as tape machines were not running during the jamming.[26] The FCC removed stations from the list of 500 that were inoperative on April 27 or transmitting other material. This method brought the number of potential stations down to twelve.[9] After FCC investigators visited these stations, there were now three prime suspects which included MacDougall.[25] The commission later learned an accountant from Wisconsin had overheard MacDougall bragging about the jamming at a payphone in a rest area off Interstate 75 in Gainesville, Florida, and obtained a license plate number of a car owned by MacDougall.[8]

Arrest and prosecution Edit

Prior to the jamming, the FCC warned that anyone interfering with television signals would be harshly dealt with, and MacDougall was charged after surrendering to the authorities following media and industry pressure.[n 3][6][17][25] Investigators from the commission spoke to MacDougall in July (he lost his job at Central Florida Teleport beforehand due to the closure of People's Choice), asking him questions that led him to believe that the commission was aware of the incident.[8] Two FCC agents visited MacDougall's house two weeks later along with U.S. Attorney Lawrence Gentile III, who served MacDougall with a subpoena to appear in Jacksonville's U.S. District Court.[9] In their meeting, MacDougall claimed not to have committed any crime. According to MacDougall, Gentile tried to make an agreement that if MacDougall discussed the incident, Gentile would be willing to recommend a small fine and probation to the judge. At that time, MacDougall stated that he started to feel that there was not enough evidence to convict him, and despite continuing to protest his innocence, MacDougall told Gentile he would attend court.[8]

MacDougall contacted attorney John Green Jr., who advised him the chances of him winning the case were 70 percent and that a trial would be risky and costly.[8] He faced being fined up to $100,000 and being sentenced to one year in prison if he was convicted. Furthermore, MacDougall was worried about going before the jury and lying to get himself acquitted. He thus changed his mind and agreed to cooperate fully with the FCC.[9] At his first hearing on the afternoon of July 22,[13] he pleaded guilty to the charge of "illegally operating a satellite uplink transmitter",[25][27] a violation of 47 U.S.C. § 301.[13] Under an agreement with Gentile, MacDougall plea bargained and received a $5,000 fine, was put on unsupervised probation for one year, and had his amateur radio license suspended for one year.[17][25][28] Later, he was arraigned and freed on a $5,000 bond.[28] MacDougall's plea bargain was confirmed at his sentencing by Judge Howard T. Snyder on August 26.[11] Lawyers for Hughes Communications subsequently reviewed the option of taking MacDougall to civil court,[9] but chose not to take any further action.[29]

MacDougall was approached for interviews by major U.S. news stations after his arraignment, but Gentile advised him to not appear on television until his sentencing.[9] MacDougall held a news conference in which he stated he did not contest the rights of cable companies to scramble their programs, but asked the government to allow the marketplace and not corporations to set prices. He revealed he was aware of a year-old magazine that spoke about the type of signal interference he caused, but affirmed the article was not influential on his actions.[30]

Reaction Edit

MacDougall's jamming of HBO's satellite signal generated much publicity, and attracted attention from several sectors of society.[10] The jamming was described by various press publications as either the first instance of high-technology terrorism, or the most widely watched instance of electronic graffiti in the world.[31] The House Communications Subcommittee planned to hold meetings concerning the issue of satellite jamming. Members of Congress showed interest, with those coming from states with extensive rural areas showing more sympathy to owners of satellite dishes.[10] The hijacking raised concerns over satellite-borne communications: that data transmitted by business and military users would become potential targets.[4]

MacDougall's action led to him being immediately regarded as coming close to being a folk hero amongst disgruntled satellite dish owners who felt unfairly treated.[1][32][33] The Satellite Television Industry Association released a statement denouncing intentional interference, and a spokesperson for the organization called for the offender to be imprisoned.[33] Showtime vice president Stephen Schultz dubbed the intrusion as an act of "video terrorism".[34] A correspondent for Television/Radio Age wrote the jamming was similar to the plot of the 1976 film Network, in which a disenchanted news anchor broadcasts his frustrations with the negative aspects of commercial television.[12]

Aftermath Edit

As a consequence of MacDougall's jamming, and ambiguity about the federal misdemeanor charge made against him under 47 U.S.C. § 301,[35] the U.S. Congress passed the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 (18 U.S.C. § 1367) which made satellite hijacking a felony.[36][n 4] The FCC subsequently implemented strict requirements that all radio and television transmitters must have an electronic name tag for tracking purposes.[37] The Automatic Transmitter Identification System (ATIS) was developed in response to MacDougall's actions, allowing satellite operators to quickly identify unauthorized uplink transmissions.[38] In 2009, HBO and Elmer Musser were awarded a Technology & Engineering Emmy Award for ATIS.[39] Although HBO has not been targeted since the channel's signal power was increased to make it more difficult for hijackers to intrude,[2][26] there have been multiple instances of uplink video piracy across the United States.[31] One such incident happened in November 1987, when Chicago stations WGN and WTTW had their transmissions briefly interrupted by a man in a Max Headroom mask.[40] The jamming did not appear to affect HBO's pricing policies in the long-term.[16]

Richard Acello, the editor of the home satellite dish magazine Satellite TV Week, stated MacDougall had not been able to achieve folk hero status as had been widely reported in the press:

"He didn't have any No. 1 records written about him or anything like that, and that's always an indication. The whole event was misunderstood. People took Captain Midnight to be a symbol of frustration people were feeling about scrambling. It made him seem a representative of dish owners, but he was not. There was no way a dish owner could do what he did."[28]

The jamming was parodied in the cartoon strip Bloom County.[41] [42] [43] A group called the Captain Midnight Grassroots Cause was formed and sold merchandise to help raise money for MacDougall to pay his legal fees.[10] MacDougall found the constant media attention difficult to deal with, and was regularly bothered at home. He shut his office because no work could be undertaken without him being asked about Captain Midnight.[15] As of 2011, he still resides in Ocala and undertakes consulting work under the MacDougall Electronics name.[2][15] In a retrospective interview with Network World in 2011, MacDougall said he did not regret his actions but wished his motivations were more clearly understood:

I do not regret trying to get the message out to corporate America about unfair pricing and restrictive trade practices. That was the impetus for doing what I did; that's the reason I jammed HBO; that's the reason I sent them a polite message. What I do regret is that I was young and fairly naïve in the ways of the media. I didn't grasp the fact that no one understood my motives and that everyone would make assumptions. Had I known that up front I would have been much more fervent in explaining my motivations. I had no animus and I had no malice in my heart.[15]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The April 20 intrusion went unreported to the FCC until after the following week's jamming.[13]
  2. ^ In 1986, the switch from Eastern Standard Time (EST) to Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) occurred on the night of April 26–27, at 2:00 a.m. local time, so the Captain Midnight prank occurred a little less than 1.5 hours before the beginning of EDT.[18][19]
  3. ^ The FCC is responsible for ensuring nobody interferes with the licensed airwaves transmitted in the United States.[13]
  4. ^ The penalty was raised to a fine of $250,000 and/or ten years imprisonment.[37]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Ewalt, David M. (March 18, 2013). "The Tale of Captain Midnight, TV Hacker And Folk Hero". Forbes. from the original on September 20, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Rossen, Jake (February 25, 2016). "When "Captain Midnight" Hacked HBO". Mental Floss. from the original on September 20, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d "Video pirate interrupts HBO". The New York Times. Associated Press. April 28, 1986. from the original on May 22, 2014. Retrieved May 20, 2014.
  4. ^ a b c Byers, Jim; Cramer, Jerome; Zoglin, Richard (May 12, 1986). "Captain Midnight's Sneak Attack: A daring video intruder airs the beefs of dish owners". Time. Vol. 127, no. 19. p. 100. from the original on September 21, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017 – via EBSCO Information Services.
  5. ^ a b c Lyman, Rick; Borowski, Neill (April 29, 1986). . The Philadelphia Inquirer. Archived from the original on May 21, 2014. Retrieved May 20, 2014.
  6. ^ a b Snyder, Joan; Spencer, Susan (December 24, 2014). "Flashback: Hacker interrupts HBO's film in 1986". CBS News. New York City, New York. from the original on December 6, 2016. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  7. ^ "Winter 1983 Radio Amateur Callbook". Callbooks, p. 449. Internet Archive.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m . Signal to Noise. Archived from the original on January 28, 2007. Retrieved August 3, 2007.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i Stiteler, Rowland (November 30, 1986). "Capt. Midnight Recalls His One-night Stand (Will He Ever Top The Experience Of A Lifetime? Or Recover From It, For That Matter?)". Orlando Sentinel. p. 10 & 155–160. from the original on September 21, 2017. Retrieved September 21, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Wright 2012, p. 130–139.
  11. ^ a b c "Confessed video pirate 'Captain Midnight' given probation, fine". Frederick News-Post. Vol. 76, no. 219. Associated Press. August 27, 1986. p. D11. Retrieved September 21, 2017 – via Newspaperarchives.com.
  12. ^ a b "Cable Report: 'Captain Midnight' talks" (PDF). Television/Radio Age: 46. August 4, 1986. Retrieved November 25, 2019.
  13. ^ a b c d e f "'Captain Midnight' unmasked" (PDF). Broadcasting. 111 (4): 90–91. July 28, 1986. ISSN 0007-2028. OCLC 6318655. Retrieved September 29, 2017.
  14. ^ Jean, Charlie; Reidy, Chris (July 23, 1986). "Ocala Man Dished Up That Warning For HBO". Orlando Sentinel. from the original on May 21, 2014. Retrieved May 20, 2014.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g McNamara, Paul (April 26, 2011). "Captain Midnight: 'No regrets' about jamming HBO back in '86". Network World. from the original on August 8, 2015. Retrieved July 20, 2015.
  16. ^ a b Blevins, Joe (April 27, 2016). "30 years ago today, a disgruntled Floridian interrupted HBO's signal". The A.V. Club. from the original on September 30, 2017. Retrieved September 30, 2017.
  17. ^ a b c d Leverette et al. 2009, p. 4.
  18. ^ "Time Change 1986 in the United States". timeanddate.com. from the original on September 22, 2017. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  19. ^ a b DeFino 2014, p. 58.
  20. ^ a b c Goldberg, Donald (October 1986). "Captain Midnight, HBO, And World War III". Mother Jones. XI (VII): 26–29. ISSN 0362-8841. OCLC 614361146. from the original on September 20, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017 – via Google Books.
  21. ^ a b Williams 2010, p. 552–553.
  22. ^ a b Clark, Kenneth R. (May 4, 1986). "Capt. Midnight Dishes Up Cable Tv Dilemma". Chicago Tribune. from the original on September 21, 2017. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  23. ^ a b "Airwaves pirate eludes investigators in U.S." Montreal Gazette. May 2, 1986. p. D4. Retrieved September 30, 2017.
  24. ^ Paikoff, Mark (Autumn 1987). "Engineer Profile: Oliver Long of the FCC". Hispanic Engineer & IT. 3 (4): 14. ISSN 1058-269X. OCLC 962740750. from the original on September 21, 2017 – via Google Books.
  25. ^ a b c d e Pagano, Penny (July 23, 1986). "'Captain Midnight' Enters Plea of Guilty to Video Piracy Count". Los Angeles Times. from the original on February 29, 2016. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  26. ^ a b . Discover. July 1986. ISSN 0274-7529. OCLC 705641511. Archived from the original on March 29, 2005. Retrieved September 24, 2017.
  27. ^ McCloskey, Bill (July 22, 1986). "Captain Midnight Arrested, FCC says". Associated Press News. from the original on September 21, 2017. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  28. ^ a b c Shales, Tom (July 23, 1986). "Cable's 'Captain Midnight' Apprehended". The Washington Post. from the original on September 24, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  29. ^ "A video pirate struck two Chicago television stations, briefly...". United Press International. November 23, 1987. Retrieved September 29, 2017.
  30. ^ Runnels, Jim (July 24, 1986). "Cable Scrambled Captain Midnight's Dream". Orlando Sentinel. from the original on September 24, 2017. Retrieved September 24, 2017.
  31. ^ a b Forester & Morrison 2007, pp. 3–4.
  32. ^ Scott, Karyl (July 28, 1986). "Capt. Midnight surrenders". Network World. Washington, D.C. 3: 2. ISSN 0887-7661. OCLC 123532599. from the original on September 20, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017 – via Google Books.
  33. ^ a b "Captain Midnight' strikes; preempts HBO with message decrying scrambling". Broadcasting. 110: 71. May 5, 1986. ISSN 0007-2028. OCLC 6318655. from the original on September 20, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  34. ^ Anderson, Jack (June 7, 1986). "Video terrorism". The Free Lance-Star. Vol. 102, no. 134. p. 10. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  35. ^ Knittel, Chris; Pasternack, Alex (November 25, 2013). "The Mystery of the Creepiest Television Hack". Vice. from the original on September 21, 2017. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  36. ^ Bloombecker, J. J. B. (July 1988). "Captain Midnight and the Space Hackers". Security Management. 32 (7): 77–79, 82. from the original on September 24, 2017. Retrieved September 24, 2017.
  37. ^ a b Gregg 2013, p. 345.
  38. ^ United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research 2006, p. 36.
  39. ^ . National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. January 7, 2010. Archived from the original on May 15, 2010. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  40. ^ Reich, J. E. (November 21, 2015). "The Curious Case Of The Max Headroom Broadcast, The Biggest TV Hack In History". Tech Times. from the original on September 21, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  41. ^ "July 18,1986 -Bloom County". gocomics.com.
  42. ^ "July 27,1986 -Bloom County". gocomics.com.
  43. ^ Davis, Bob (July 23, 1986). "Captain Midnight Unmasked by FCC, Enters Guilty Plea — Retailer of Satellite Dishes Flashed Message on TV During HBO Broadcast". The Wall Street Journal. p. 1. ProQuest 397964018.

Bibliography Edit

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Captain Midnight broadcast signal intrusion at Wikimedia Commons
  •   The full text of Captain Midnight broadcast signal intrusion at Wikisource
  • Official website
  • Captain Midnight broadcast signal intrusion at IMDb

captain, midnight, broadcast, signal, intrusion, this, article, contain, improper, references, user, generated, content, please, help, improve, removing, references, unreliable, sources, where, they, used, inappropriately, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, temp. This article may contain improper references to user generated content Please help improve it by removing references to unreliable sources where they are used inappropriately May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message On April 27 1986 American electrical engineer and business owner John R MacDougall using the pseudonym Captain Midnight jammed the Home Box Office HBO satellite signal on Galaxy 1 during a showing of the film The Falcon and the Snowman The message broadcast for four and a half minutes was seen by the eastern half of the United States accounting for more than half of HBO s 14 6 million subscribers at the time protesting HBO s rates for satellite dish owners which he considered too expensive MacDougall was working at his second job as an operations engineer at the Central Florida Teleport uplink station in Ocala Florida and vied with a technician at HBO s communications center in Hauppauge New York for control of the transmission The technician attempted to increase uplink power but gave up because of the risk of damaging the satellite MacDougall eventually abandoned his control of the satellite Captain MidnightMessage seen in 1986 as superimposed on the SMPTE color barsDateApril 27 1986 37 years ago 1986 04 27 Time00 32 EST 05 32 UTC DurationFour and a half minutesLocationOcala Florida U S TypeBroadcast signal intrusionMotiveTo protest against charges for access to scrambled satellite channelsTargetHome Box Office HBO ParticipantsJohn R MacDougallOutcomeFine and probationResulted in the development of the Automatic Transmitter Identification SystemAlthough the intrusion was a minor annoyance to viewers the Federal Communications Commission FCC with assistance from the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI investigated the jamming After the FCC identified the transmitters and stations equipped with the specific character generator evidently used during the broadcast signal intrusion MacDougall surrendered to the authorities after which he was served with a subpoena due to a tourist having overheard him discussing the incident on a payphone off Interstate 75 Under an agreement with the prosecutor he plea bargained and was sanctioned with a 5 000 fine one year unsupervised probation and a one year suspension of his amateur radio license The jamming received much attention in the U S with one executive dubbing the intrusion an act of video terrorism As a consequence of the incident the United States Congress passed the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 18 U S C 1367 making satellite hijacking a felony The Automatic Transmitter Identification System was also developed in response to this incident Contents 1 Background 1 1 Scrambling of satellite transmissions 1 2 Perpetrator 2 Jamming 3 Investigation 4 Arrest and prosecution 5 Reaction 6 Aftermath 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksBackground EditScrambling of satellite transmissions Edit Beginning in the late 1920s when the first experimental transmissions began broadcast television was delivered for free over local frequencies in the United States When the industry began charging viewers for access to premium services via cable free broadcasts continued Starting in the 1970s a small community of satellite television enthusiasts mostly engineers shared the technology and knowledge of how to construct satellite dishes as well as how to access pay television from the airwaves for free 1 This was not illegal at the time and restaurant and hotel chains made use of this technology to distribute programming to guests and patrons without charge 2 In the mid 1980s controversy erupted in the cable programming world as American media companies that owned pay television channels began scrambling their programming and charging fees to home satellite dish owners who accessed the same satellite signals that cable operators received Many satellite dish owners faced the prospect of having to purchase descrambling equipment at a cost of hundreds of dollars as well as having to pay monthly or annual subscription fees to cable programming providers Fees for home dish owners were often higher than fees paid by cable subscribers despite dish owners being responsible for acquiring and servicing their own equipment 2 When Home Box Office HBO began scrambling its signal on a 24 hour basis on January 15 1986 it offered subscriptions to home dish owners for 12 95 per month 30 61 in 2020 dollars which was either equal to or slightly higher than what cable subscribers paid HBO also advised viewers that purchasing a descrambler for 395 933 80 in 2020 dollars would along with the monthly fee allow them to continue watching HBO 3 Several satellite dish dealers across the U S closed their stores as a result of a reduction in dish sales caused by the rise in signal scrambling 4 Dish owners began protests over keeping free access to broadcasts 5 One such protest was by members of the Satellite Television Industry Association who converged on Washington D C in March 1986 to urge the United States Congress to protect access to satellite transmissions 6 Perpetrator Edit John R MacDougallBornElmhurst Illinois U S NationalityAmericanOther namesCaptain MidnightEducationAmerican Heritage SchoolAlma materWorcester Polytechnic Institute did not graduate Occupation s Electrical engineer business ownerCriminal chargesIllegally operating a satellite uplink transmitterCriminal penalty 5 000 fine 1 year of unsupervised probation Amateur radio license suspended for 1 yearCall signKA4WJA 7 Websitemacdougallelect wbr comJohn R MacDougall was born in Elmhurst Illinois a western suburb of Chicago He is the youngest of five children to building contractor Robert MacDougall and his wife Thelma a homemaker Shortly after his father s retirement in 1970 the family moved to Fort Lauderdale Florida where MacDougall was educated at American Heritage School Having spent his childhood years tinkering with cars and CB radios MacDougall spent two years of studying in a management engineering program at Worcester Polytechnic Institute He eventually abandoned his studies and found employment installing satellite dishes in Ocala 8 9 In 1983 MacDougall opened the satellite dealership MacDougall Electronics in Ocala 2 The company initially turned a healthy profit but following the scrambling of HBO s signal on January 15 1986 its turnover declined Consequently MacDougall reduced his expenses where possible and in the same month was offered a part time job at the Central Florida Teleport uplink station which uplinked services to satellites as an operations engineer to help him pay his bills 10 As he was not receiving any customers MacDougall pulled all company advertising and saved money by switching off his air conditioning He became increasingly reclusive during this period watching television and reading magazines 8 MacDougall later said of the experience I have been watching the great American dream slip from my grasp 11 MacDougall wrote protest letters to legislators and spent a large amount of money to raise awareness about wanting to keep the market free from excessive charging of its services 12 At 12 49 a m Eastern Standard Time EST on April 20 13 one week before the jamming MacDougall transmitted a color bar test pattern that was superimposed on HBO s signal for a brief period HBO did not investigate this incident as it had occurred during the overnight hours and as a result very few people had been watching at the time n 1 14 Jamming Edit source source source source source source source source source source The full recording of the broadcast signal intrusion as it happened live on television in 1986On April 26 1986 MacDougall worked at his shop as normal and closed at 4 00 p m EST After eating dinner he reported to Central Florida Teleport with one other engineer on duty The second engineer left at 6 00 p m leaving MacDougall to operate the building on his own MacDougall oversaw the uplink of the movie Pee wee s Big Adventure as part of the evening s programming for the pay per view network People s Choice which used Central Florida Teleport s facilities 10 After the film ended he went through his regular routine 15 Before logging off MacDougall set up SMPTE color bars and used a Quanta Corporation Microgen MG 100 character generator that placed letters on the television screen 13 15 He spent a couple of minutes composing his message MacDougall began his message with a polite greeting as he did not wish to be insulting He selected the name Captain Midnight from a film he had recently seen On the Air Live with Captain Midnight unrelated to the popular Captain Midnight radio show of the 1940s 8 Described by The A V Club as a Reagan era Robin Hood 16 MacDougall swung the 30 foot 9 1 m transmission dish back into its storage position which aimed it at the location of Galaxy 1 the satellite that carried HBO 15 17 Locating the satellite coordinates was not of great difficulty for MacDougall as frequencies were widely published in manuals and enthusiast magazines 5 As a protest against the introduction of high fees and scrambling equipment MacDougall transmitted a signal onto the satellite that for four and a half minutes overrode HBO s telecast of the 1985 film The Falcon and the Snowman which had begun two minutes earlier 8 The five line text message printed in white capital letters that appeared on the screens of HBO subscribers across the eastern half of the U S accounting for more than half of HBO s 14 6 million subscribers at the time starting at 12 32 a m EST 05 32 UTC n 2 on April 27 appeared as follows 3 5 17 GOODEVENING HBOFROM CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT 12 95 MONTH NO WAY SHOWTIME MOVIE CHANNEL BEWARE Hughes Communications owner of the Galaxy 1 satellite immediately noticed the jamming and threatened to shut down HBO s satellite signal or alter the satellite s course with executives believing the hacker was a domestic terrorist 3 19 HBO s technician working at the company s communication center in Hauppauge Long Island New York 3 telephoned Hughes Communications but officials there could not offer an explanation to the jamming The HBO technician attempted to regain control by increasing the uplink transmission power from 125 watts to 2 000 watts 20 This was unsuccessful as MacDougall increased his power in a control battle that lasted about 90 seconds 8 during which it was feared that a further power increase would damage the satellite 20 MacDougall became scared abandoned his control of the satellite and went home 2 15 He felt guilty about his actions the following day but hoped the jamming would not be noticed by anyone not working for HBO 8 MacDougall was later surprised to see his actions being reported on network television 10 Thus when he returned to work that night he pretended to have no knowledge about the intrusion and asked questions about what had happened 8 MacDougall only told close friends and had visions of federal agents visiting his home 9 Investigation EditGalaxy 1 carried HBO on transponder 23 at a rate of 125 watts with relay signals sent out at 6 385 MHz Mother Jones magazine determined that MacDougall could have potentially taken over the signals of three additional satellites He could have taken control of the network feed of CBS had he positioned his satellite dish at the Telstar 301 satellite operated by AT amp T tuned at 6 065 MHz He also could have taken over the foreign language feed of the Voice of America network by aiming his satellite dish at 72 degrees west longitude The final theorized hijacking would have been aiming his satellite dish at 100 degrees west longitude above the Galapagos Islands with a frequency setting of 293 375 MHz thereby jamming the signal of United States Navy satellite Fleetsatcom 1 The magazine also posited that an amateur hobbyist could hijack the satellites that alerted U S military forces to Soviet actions creating confusion for world leaders and placing the world at risk of nuclear destruction 20 Although the intrusion caused minor annoyance to viewers 11 HBO contacted the Federal Communications Commission FCC and announced that the hijacker would face prosecution 4 The commission s chief Richard Smith assembled staff in his office for an emergency meeting at the FCC headquarters eight hours after the intrusion to discuss how the culprit should be caught 9 On April 28 the chairman of HBO Michael J Fuchs wrote to the FCC saying the company had received calls threatening to place Galaxy 1 into a different orbit 8 but the company was unable to determine whether these were credible threats or not 21 Fuchs s letter additionally urged the commission to use all of its resources to capture the culprit 8 In the days after the jamming more than 200 people called the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI to confess that they were Captain Midnight 1 The Department of Justice made indications of its desire to get involved 10 and the FBI was called in to assist the investigation 21 22 One hundred FCC field offices and monitoring stations across the U S were actively involved in the investigation with no fewer than six FCC employees working on the case 23 Oliver Long the head engineer of the FCC s Texas field office oversaw the investigation 24 and the commission assigned agent George Dillon to the case 10 The case first led investigators from the FCC to focus on the Dallas Fort Worth metroplex 22 after an anonymous tip accused an amateur radio operator residing in Lewisville Texas of being the culprit 23 Later the FCC determined which teleport uplink sites out of the 2 000 licensed transmitters in the U S had the capability to override the HBO signal 9 That narrowed it down to 580 uplink sites that had sufficiently large antennas that had the capability of broadcasting the signal The manufacturer that produced the character generator graphics model used to generate the typeface on the television screen was also identified after studying footage of the jamming 25 Investigators from the commission obtained copies from an FCC engineer and HBO viewers as tape machines were not running during the jamming 26 The FCC removed stations from the list of 500 that were inoperative on April 27 or transmitting other material This method brought the number of potential stations down to twelve 9 After FCC investigators visited these stations there were now three prime suspects which included MacDougall 25 The commission later learned an accountant from Wisconsin had overheard MacDougall bragging about the jamming at a payphone in a rest area off Interstate 75 in Gainesville Florida and obtained a license plate number of a car owned by MacDougall 8 Arrest and prosecution EditPrior to the jamming the FCC warned that anyone interfering with television signals would be harshly dealt with and MacDougall was charged after surrendering to the authorities following media and industry pressure n 3 6 17 25 Investigators from the commission spoke to MacDougall in July he lost his job at Central Florida Teleport beforehand due to the closure of People s Choice asking him questions that led him to believe that the commission was aware of the incident 8 Two FCC agents visited MacDougall s house two weeks later along with U S Attorney Lawrence Gentile III who served MacDougall with a subpoena to appear in Jacksonville s U S District Court 9 In their meeting MacDougall claimed not to have committed any crime According to MacDougall Gentile tried to make an agreement that if MacDougall discussed the incident Gentile would be willing to recommend a small fine and probation to the judge At that time MacDougall stated that he started to feel that there was not enough evidence to convict him and despite continuing to protest his innocence MacDougall told Gentile he would attend court 8 MacDougall contacted attorney John Green Jr who advised him the chances of him winning the case were 70 percent and that a trial would be risky and costly 8 He faced being fined up to 100 000 and being sentenced to one year in prison if he was convicted Furthermore MacDougall was worried about going before the jury and lying to get himself acquitted He thus changed his mind and agreed to cooperate fully with the FCC 9 At his first hearing on the afternoon of July 22 13 he pleaded guilty to the charge of illegally operating a satellite uplink transmitter 25 27 a violation of 47 U S C 301 13 Under an agreement with Gentile MacDougall plea bargained and received a 5 000 fine was put on unsupervised probation for one year and had his amateur radio license suspended for one year 17 25 28 Later he was arraigned and freed on a 5 000 bond 28 MacDougall s plea bargain was confirmed at his sentencing by Judge Howard T Snyder on August 26 11 Lawyers for Hughes Communications subsequently reviewed the option of taking MacDougall to civil court 9 but chose not to take any further action 29 MacDougall was approached for interviews by major U S news stations after his arraignment but Gentile advised him to not appear on television until his sentencing 9 MacDougall held a news conference in which he stated he did not contest the rights of cable companies to scramble their programs but asked the government to allow the marketplace and not corporations to set prices He revealed he was aware of a year old magazine that spoke about the type of signal interference he caused but affirmed the article was not influential on his actions 30 Reaction EditMacDougall s jamming of HBO s satellite signal generated much publicity and attracted attention from several sectors of society 10 The jamming was described by various press publications as either the first instance of high technology terrorism or the most widely watched instance of electronic graffiti in the world 31 The House Communications Subcommittee planned to hold meetings concerning the issue of satellite jamming Members of Congress showed interest with those coming from states with extensive rural areas showing more sympathy to owners of satellite dishes 10 The hijacking raised concerns over satellite borne communications that data transmitted by business and military users would become potential targets 4 MacDougall s action led to him being immediately regarded as coming close to being a folk hero amongst disgruntled satellite dish owners who felt unfairly treated 1 32 33 The Satellite Television Industry Association released a statement denouncing intentional interference and a spokesperson for the organization called for the offender to be imprisoned 33 Showtime vice president Stephen Schultz dubbed the intrusion as an act of video terrorism 34 A correspondent for Television Radio Age wrote the jamming was similar to the plot of the 1976 film Network in which a disenchanted news anchor broadcasts his frustrations with the negative aspects of commercial television 12 Aftermath EditAs a consequence of MacDougall s jamming and ambiguity about the federal misdemeanor charge made against him under 47 U S C 301 35 the U S Congress passed the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 18 U S C 1367 which made satellite hijacking a felony 36 n 4 The FCC subsequently implemented strict requirements that all radio and television transmitters must have an electronic name tag for tracking purposes 37 The Automatic Transmitter Identification System ATIS was developed in response to MacDougall s actions allowing satellite operators to quickly identify unauthorized uplink transmissions 38 In 2009 HBO and Elmer Musser were awarded a Technology amp Engineering Emmy Award for ATIS 39 Although HBO has not been targeted since the channel s signal power was increased to make it more difficult for hijackers to intrude 2 26 there have been multiple instances of uplink video piracy across the United States 31 One such incident happened in November 1987 when Chicago stations WGN and WTTW had their transmissions briefly interrupted by a man in a Max Headroom mask 40 The jamming did not appear to affect HBO s pricing policies in the long term 16 Richard Acello the editor of the home satellite dish magazine Satellite TV Week stated MacDougall had not been able to achieve folk hero status as had been widely reported in the press He didn t have any No 1 records written about him or anything like that and that s always an indication The whole event was misunderstood People took Captain Midnight to be a symbol of frustration people were feeling about scrambling It made him seem a representative of dish owners but he was not There was no way a dish owner could do what he did 28 The jamming was parodied in the cartoon strip Bloom County 41 42 43 A group called the Captain Midnight Grassroots Cause was formed and sold merchandise to help raise money for MacDougall to pay his legal fees 10 MacDougall found the constant media attention difficult to deal with and was regularly bothered at home He shut his office because no work could be undertaken without him being asked about Captain Midnight 15 As of 2011 update he still resides in Ocala and undertakes consulting work under the MacDougall Electronics name 2 15 In a retrospective interview with Network World in 2011 MacDougall said he did not regret his actions but wished his motivations were more clearly understood I do not regret trying to get the message out to corporate America about unfair pricing and restrictive trade practices That was the impetus for doing what I did that s the reason I jammed HBO that s the reason I sent them a polite message What I do regret is that I was young and fairly naive in the ways of the media I didn t grasp the fact that no one understood my motives and that everyone would make assumptions Had I known that up front I would have been much more fervent in explaining my motivations I had no animus and I had no malice in my heart 15 See also EditSouthern Television broadcast interruption Max Headroom signal hijacking Broadcast signal intrusion Other incidentsNotes Edit The April 20 intrusion went unreported to the FCC until after the following week s jamming 13 In 1986 the switch from Eastern Standard Time EST to Eastern Daylight Time EDT occurred on the night of April 26 27 at 2 00 a m local time so the Captain Midnight prank occurred a little less than 1 5 hours before the beginning of EDT 18 19 The FCC is responsible for ensuring nobody interferes with the licensed airwaves transmitted in the United States 13 The penalty was raised to a fine of 250 000 and or ten years imprisonment 37 References Edit a b c Ewalt David M March 18 2013 The Tale of Captain Midnight TV Hacker And Folk Hero Forbes Archived from the original on September 20 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 a b c d e f Rossen Jake February 25 2016 When Captain Midnight Hacked HBO Mental Floss Archived from the original on September 20 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 a b c d Video pirate interrupts HBO The New York Times Associated Press April 28 1986 Archived from the original on May 22 2014 Retrieved May 20 2014 a b c Byers Jim Cramer Jerome Zoglin Richard May 12 1986 Captain Midnight s Sneak Attack A daring video intruder airs the beefs of dish owners Time Vol 127 no 19 p 100 Archived from the original on September 21 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 via EBSCO Information Services a b c Lyman Rick Borowski Neill April 29 1986 On The Trail Of Captain Midnight The Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on May 21 2014 Retrieved May 20 2014 a b Snyder Joan Spencer Susan December 24 2014 Flashback Hacker interrupts HBO s film in 1986 CBS News New York City New York Archived from the original on December 6 2016 Retrieved September 20 2017 Winter 1983 Radio Amateur Callbook Callbooks p 449 Internet Archive a b c d e f g h i j k l m The Story of Captain Midnight Signal to Noise Archived from the original on January 28 2007 Retrieved August 3 2007 a b c d e f g h i Stiteler Rowland November 30 1986 Capt Midnight Recalls His One night Stand Will He Ever Top The Experience Of A Lifetime Or Recover From It For That Matter Orlando Sentinel p 10 amp 155 160 Archived from the original on September 21 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 via Newspapers com a b c d e f g h Wright 2012 p 130 139 a b c Confessed video pirate Captain Midnight given probation fine Frederick News Post Vol 76 no 219 Associated Press August 27 1986 p D11 Retrieved September 21 2017 via Newspaperarchives com a b Cable Report Captain Midnight talks PDF Television Radio Age 46 August 4 1986 Retrieved November 25 2019 a b c d e f Captain Midnight unmasked PDF Broadcasting 111 4 90 91 July 28 1986 ISSN 0007 2028 OCLC 6318655 Retrieved September 29 2017 Jean Charlie Reidy Chris July 23 1986 Ocala Man Dished Up That Warning For HBO Orlando Sentinel Archived from the original on May 21 2014 Retrieved May 20 2014 a b c d e f g McNamara Paul April 26 2011 Captain Midnight No regrets about jamming HBO back in 86 Network World Archived from the original on August 8 2015 Retrieved July 20 2015 a b Blevins Joe April 27 2016 30 years ago today a disgruntled Floridian interrupted HBO s signal The A V Club Archived from the original on September 30 2017 Retrieved September 30 2017 a b c d Leverette et al 2009 p 4 Time Change 1986 in the United States timeanddate com Archived from the original on September 22 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 a b DeFino 2014 p 58 a b c Goldberg Donald October 1986 Captain Midnight HBO And World War III Mother Jones XI VII 26 29 ISSN 0362 8841 OCLC 614361146 Archived from the original on September 20 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 via Google Books a b Williams 2010 p 552 553 a b Clark Kenneth R May 4 1986 Capt Midnight Dishes Up Cable Tv Dilemma Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on September 21 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 a b Airwaves pirate eludes investigators in U S Montreal Gazette May 2 1986 p D4 Retrieved September 30 2017 Paikoff Mark Autumn 1987 Engineer Profile Oliver Long of the FCC Hispanic Engineer amp IT 3 4 14 ISSN 1058 269X OCLC 962740750 Archived from the original on September 21 2017 via Google Books a b c d e Pagano Penny July 23 1986 Captain Midnight Enters Plea of Guilty to Video Piracy Count Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on February 29 2016 Retrieved September 21 2017 a b A signal event on the track of Capt Midnight Home Box Office s transmission interrupted Discover July 1986 ISSN 0274 7529 OCLC 705641511 Archived from the original on March 29 2005 Retrieved September 24 2017 McCloskey Bill July 22 1986 Captain Midnight Arrested FCC says Associated Press News Archived from the original on September 21 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 a b c Shales Tom July 23 1986 Cable s Captain Midnight Apprehended The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 24 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 A video pirate struck two Chicago television stations briefly United Press International November 23 1987 Retrieved September 29 2017 Runnels Jim July 24 1986 Cable Scrambled Captain Midnight s Dream Orlando Sentinel Archived from the original on September 24 2017 Retrieved September 24 2017 a b Forester amp Morrison 2007 pp 3 4 Scott Karyl July 28 1986 Capt Midnight surrenders Network World Washington D C 3 2 ISSN 0887 7661 OCLC 123532599 Archived from the original on September 20 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 via Google Books a b Captain Midnight strikes preempts HBO with message decrying scrambling Broadcasting 110 71 May 5 1986 ISSN 0007 2028 OCLC 6318655 Archived from the original on September 20 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 Anderson Jack June 7 1986 Video terrorism The Free Lance Star Vol 102 no 134 p 10 Retrieved September 20 2017 Knittel Chris Pasternack Alex November 25 2013 The Mystery of the Creepiest Television Hack Vice Archived from the original on September 21 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 Bloombecker J J B July 1988 Captain Midnight and the Space Hackers Security Management 32 7 77 79 82 Archived from the original on September 24 2017 Retrieved September 24 2017 a b Gregg 2013 p 345 United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research 2006 p 36 61st Annual Technology amp Engineering Emmy Awards Presented at the Mandalay Bay Resort amp Casino at the International Consumer Electronics Show at Las Vegas National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences January 7 2010 Archived from the original on May 15 2010 Retrieved September 20 2017 Reich J E November 21 2015 The Curious Case Of The Max Headroom Broadcast The Biggest TV Hack In History Tech Times Archived from the original on September 21 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 July 18 1986 Bloom County gocomics com July 27 1986 Bloom County gocomics com Davis Bob July 23 1986 Captain Midnight Unmasked by FCC Enters Guilty Plea Retailer of Satellite Dishes Flashed Message on TV During HBO Broadcast The Wall Street Journal p 1 ProQuest 397964018 Bibliography EditDeFino Dean J 2014 The HBO Effect New York City New York Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 4411 8043 8 Gregg Michael 2013 Certified Ethical Hacker CEH Cert Guide London England Pearson IT Certification ISBN 978 0 13 341302 1 Forester Tom Morrison Perry 2007 Hacking and Viruses In Himma Kenneth Einar ed Internet Security Hacking Counterhacking and Society Sudbury Mass Jones amp Bartlett Publishers ISBN 978 0 7637 3536 4 Leverette Marc Ott Brian L Buckley Cara Louise 2009 It s Not TV Watching HBO in the Post Television Era Abingdon on Thames England Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 90274 2 United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research 2006 Building the Architecture for Sustainable Space Security Conference Report 30 31 March 2006 Geneva Switzerland United Nations Publications Williams Colin P 2010 Explorations in Quantum Computing Pasadena California Springer Science Business Media ISBN 978 1 84628 887 6 Wright E Lynne 2012 Myths and Mysteries of Florida True Stories of the Unsolved and Unexplained Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7627 9104 0 External links Edit Media related to Captain Midnight broadcast signal intrusion at Wikimedia Commons The full text of Captain Midnight broadcast signal intrusion at Wikisource Official website Captain Midnight broadcast signal intrusion at IMDbPortals 1980s Television United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Captain Midnight broadcast signal intrusion amp oldid 1163215323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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