Playboy Channel religious message (lost footage of television hijack; 1987): Difference between revisions

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The hijack occurred during the softcore pornography on the Playboy Channel. On the screen here was a message "Thus sayeth the Lord thy God: Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy. Repent, the kingdom of Heaven is at hand" (from the Bible verses Exodus 20:8 and Matthew 4:17).
The hijack occurred during the softcore pornography on the Playboy Channel. On the screen here was a message "Thus sayeth the Lord thy God: Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy. Repent, the kingdom of Heaven is at hand" (from the Bible verses Exodus 20:8 and Matthew 4:17).


Thomas Haynie, an employee of the Christian Broadcasting Network, was convicted of satellite piracy in connection with the incident. Haynie, who pleaded his innocence, was the first person convicted under a new federal law which had made satellite hacking a felony following the Captain Midnight and Max Headroom incidents.  
Thomas Haynie, an employee of the Christian Broadcasting Network, was convicted of satellite piracy in connection with the incident. Haynie, who pleaded his innocence, was the first person convicted under a new federal law that had made satellite hacking a felony following the Captain Midnight and Max Headroom incidents.  


According to investigators, it was the religious content of the transmission and the type of equipment used that drew them to CBN. The jamming signal left behind subtle technical clues that were captured on a VHS recording made at the Playboy Channel's uplink at the time of the event – like finding "fingerprints" in the video. After investigators were confident that they identified the brand of transmitter and character generator from the video, they concluded that CBN was the culprit. Haynie, of Virginia Beach, Virginia, was on duty at his job as an uplink engineer at the time of the jamming.
According to investigators, it was the religious content of the transmission and the type of equipment used that drew them to CBN. The jamming signal left behind subtle technical clues that were captured on a VHS recording made at the Playboy Channel's uplink at the time of the event – like finding "fingerprints" in the video. After investigators were confident that they identified the brand of transmitter and character generator from the video, they concluded that CBN was the culprit. Haynie, of Virginia Beach, Virginia, was on duty at his job as an uplink engineer at the time of the jamming.


CBN maintained that the FCC's case was entirely circumstantial since there were no witnesses and the signal could not be traced to a point of origin. During the investigation, experts on both sides attempted to recreate the incident with CBN's equipment. According to CBN spokesman Dino McCann they were unsuccessful. Furthermore, CBN asserted that there was not enough power for Haynie to jam Playboy's signal but during the trial, government witnesses said the CBN station was capable of interfering with satellite transmissions.<ref>[https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-09-25-mn-1001-story.html Porn-Film Message Suspect Is Convicted - ''Los Angeles Times''] Retrieved 27 Oct '21</ref><ref>[https://www.dailypress.com/news/dp-xpm-19900524-1990-05-24-9005240158-story.html Trial Set in Jamming of Playboy Channel - ''Daily Press''] Retrieved 27 Oct '21</ref>
CBN maintained that the FCC's case was entirely circumstantial since there were no witnesses and the signal could not be traced to a point of origin. During the investigation, experts on both sides attempted to recreate the incident with CBN's equipment. According to CBN spokesman Dino McCann, they were unsuccessful. Furthermore, CBN asserted that there was not enough power for Haynie to jam Playboy's signal but during the trial, government witnesses said the CBN station was capable of interfering with satellite transmissions.<ref>[https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-09-25-mn-1001-story.html Porn-Film Message Suspect Is Convicted - ''Los Angeles Times''] Retrieved 27 Oct '21</ref><ref>[https://www.dailypress.com/news/dp-xpm-19900524-1990-05-24-9005240158-story.html Trial Set in Jamming of Playboy Channel - ''Daily Press''] Retrieved 27 Oct '21</ref>


After initially being deadlocked, the jury eventually sided with the prosecution and convicted Haynie on two of six counts. (Haynie was acquitted of similar charges of interfering with the American Exxxtasy channel; a recording of the event was of such poor quality that it was unusable.) Haynie received three years of probation, a $1,000 fine, and 150 hours of community service.
After initially being deadlocked, the jury eventually sided with the prosecution and convicted Haynie on two of six counts. (Haynie was acquitted of similar charges of interfering with the American Exxxtasy channel; a recording of the event was of such poor quality that it was unusable.) Haynie received three years of probation, a $1,000 fine, and 150 hours of community service.


==Availability==
==Availability==
This broadcast intrusion was the third after Max Headroom Television Hijacking pirate incident that was happened in 1987. It was mentioned in the books "Computer Ethics: Cautionary Tales and Ethical Dilemmas in Computing" by Tom Forester and Perry Morrison and "Who Owns Information?: From Privacy To Public Access" by Anne Branscomb. Also, broadcast intrusion was told in some news and newspaper. However, he did not make a splash after the sensational Max Headroom incident. Also, here's no tapes with this broadcast intrusion.
This broadcast intrusion was the third after the Max Headroom Television Hijacking pirate incident that was happened in 1987. It was mentioned in the books "Computer Ethics: Cautionary Tales and Ethical Dilemmas in Computing" by Tom Forester and Perry Morrison and "Who Owns Information?: From Privacy To Public Access" by Anne Branscomb. Also, the broadcast intrusion was told in some news and newspaper. However, he did not make a splash after the sensational Max Headroom incident. Also, there are no tapes with this broadcast intrusion.


==See Also==
==See Also==

Revision as of 18:58, 5 November 2021

Nsfw.png


This article has been tagged as NSFW due to its porn mention.



PlayboyChannelIdent.jpg

A logo of Playboy Channel.

Status: Lost

The Playboy Channel religious message was a television intrusion incident that occurred on September 6th, 1987.

Details

The hijack occurred during the softcore pornography on the Playboy Channel. On the screen here was a message "Thus sayeth the Lord thy God: Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy. Repent, the kingdom of Heaven is at hand" (from the Bible verses Exodus 20:8 and Matthew 4:17).

Thomas Haynie, an employee of the Christian Broadcasting Network, was convicted of satellite piracy in connection with the incident. Haynie, who pleaded his innocence, was the first person convicted under a new federal law that had made satellite hacking a felony following the Captain Midnight and Max Headroom incidents.

According to investigators, it was the religious content of the transmission and the type of equipment used that drew them to CBN. The jamming signal left behind subtle technical clues that were captured on a VHS recording made at the Playboy Channel's uplink at the time of the event – like finding "fingerprints" in the video. After investigators were confident that they identified the brand of transmitter and character generator from the video, they concluded that CBN was the culprit. Haynie, of Virginia Beach, Virginia, was on duty at his job as an uplink engineer at the time of the jamming.

CBN maintained that the FCC's case was entirely circumstantial since there were no witnesses and the signal could not be traced to a point of origin. During the investigation, experts on both sides attempted to recreate the incident with CBN's equipment. According to CBN spokesman Dino McCann, they were unsuccessful. Furthermore, CBN asserted that there was not enough power for Haynie to jam Playboy's signal but during the trial, government witnesses said the CBN station was capable of interfering with satellite transmissions.[1][2]

After initially being deadlocked, the jury eventually sided with the prosecution and convicted Haynie on two of six counts. (Haynie was acquitted of similar charges of interfering with the American Exxxtasy channel; a recording of the event was of such poor quality that it was unusable.) Haynie received three years of probation, a $1,000 fine, and 150 hours of community service.

Availability

This broadcast intrusion was the third after the Max Headroom Television Hijacking pirate incident that was happened in 1987. It was mentioned in the books "Computer Ethics: Cautionary Tales and Ethical Dilemmas in Computing" by Tom Forester and Perry Morrison and "Who Owns Information?: From Privacy To Public Access" by Anne Branscomb. Also, the broadcast intrusion was told in some news and newspaper. However, he did not make a splash after the sensational Max Headroom incident. Also, there are no tapes with this broadcast intrusion.

See Also

References