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tools:finger [2026/03/31 19:13] – [Finger] Humphrey Boa-Garttools:finger [2026/04/01 07:53] (current) – [More Reading] Humphrey Boa-Gart
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 Openly sharing email addresses and live session data was considered fine in the early years of the internet. But by the early 90's, hackers & corporate spies were abusing the utility to exfiltrate sensitive internal data from corporate, government & military networks. When the daemon itself was found to be hackable - enabling full remote hijacking - it was the final straw and Finger daemons were gradually abandoned. By the turn of the millennium it had mostly vanished, surviving mostly on older systems until gradually most of them were tracked down and exploited as well. Openly sharing email addresses and live session data was considered fine in the early years of the internet. But by the early 90's, hackers & corporate spies were abusing the utility to exfiltrate sensitive internal data from corporate, government & military networks. When the daemon itself was found to be hackable - enabling full remote hijacking - it was the final straw and Finger daemons were gradually abandoned. By the turn of the millennium it had mostly vanished, surviving mostly on older systems until gradually most of them were tracked down and exploited as well.
  
-Despite this, the beleaguered protocol still has a small yet avid fanbase that overlaps with the remnants of the once-legendary [[tools:gopher|Gopherspace]]. This owes to the fact that, when you strip away the software, Finger as a //protocol// is just a simple plaintext request/response handshake. Normally you ask the server about ''USER'', and the server responds with a plaintext response containing what it knows about ''USER''. However, the protocol specifications do not dictate //where// this data has to come from or how it is phrased. So hobbyists in the 21st century have developed custom finger daemons that just treat ''USER'' like a generic search key, and run it against a dynamic application. Blogs, support portals, social networks, and even weather beacons, are just some examples of what is now being deployed over Port 79. Finger is even suitable for vibe-coding experiments, as the protocol is so simple that it barely makes a dent in your Agent's context window.+Despite all this, the beleaguered protocol still has a small yet avid fanbase that overlaps with the remnants of the once-legendary [[tools:gopher|Gopherspace]]. This owes to the fact that, when you strip away the software, Finger as a //protocol// is just a simple plaintext request/response handshake. You just ask the server about ''USER'', and the server responds with a plaintext response containing what it knows about ''USER''. However, the protocol specifications do not dictate //where// this data has to come from or how it is phrased. So hobbyists in the 21st century have developed custom finger daemons that just treat ''USER'' like a generic slug or search key, and run it against a dynamic application. Blogs, support portals, social networks, and even weather beacons, are just some examples of what is now being deployed over Port 79. Finger is even suitable for vibe-coding experiments, as the protocol is so simple that it barely makes a dent in your Agent's context window.
  
  
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 == Web Links == == Web Links ==
  
 +  * [[https://blog.alexellis.io/the-90s-unix-command-fell-out-of-favour/|The 90s UNIX Utility That Fell Out of Favour]] - Alex Ellis Blog
   * [[rfc>742|RFC 742]] - The original Finger specification (1977)   * [[rfc>742|RFC 742]] - The original Finger specification (1977)
   * [[rfc>1288|RFC 1288]] - Last official revision of the Finger specification (1991)   * [[rfc>1288|RFC 1288]] - Last official revision of the Finger specification (1991)
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