Tfreak
TFreak was the author of smurf.c and fraggle.c both are amplified denial of service (DoS) tools.
His interests were system administration, programming and he even got a commit bit at the FreeBSD Project near the year 2000. He had respect for OpenBSD and implemented random pids (not functional today) in FreeBSD that could be activated per sysctl.
TFreak died in May of 2010, (likely) alone in his residence in Burlington, Ontario, Canada. He was struggling with epileptic seizures later in his life and was committed to hospital on one occasion for three weeks.
Smurf
smurf came out in 1997 or so and was an amplified ICMP denial of service attack. TFreak wrote this and sent out some greetings to his friends. He was also mad at the time that a co-sysadmin where he worked stole his girlfriend at that time. At that time TFreak was 16 years old or so, and still attended highschool. Everyone thought he was a real brain, but the tools he wrote showed also a wild side in him. Smurf cost some IRC servers their place as they were "smurfed off" the 'net. TFreak realized how bad the tool really was later when he told me he wanted to get a shirt that said "no ip directed-broadcast" on the back. The statement is a command used on cisco routers to turn off broadcasting outside of a LAN.
In retrospect smurf came out at a good time. It was the beginning of the dot-com days and the Internet was relatively small in comparison to today. With smurf today and DDoS bots I'm sure smurf would have been able to take down the entire Internet. Anyhow thanks TFreak for making us understand.
Fraggle
Fraggle came after smurf and was basically the same thing only with UDP instead of ICMP. TFreak still gave out some greetings to his friends and workplace then and mentioned he could not believe that noone made the fraggle exploit before him.
FreeBSD
In October 1999 TFreak and I travelled to Berkeley California to be part of the FreeBSDCon then. We got to know a lot of people who were like gods to me that could do such great things with the BSD system. Shortly thereafter (or before, memory lapses me) TFreak got a commit bit at FreeBSD. I think this was a great moment in his life, but work took hold of him and he was unable to travel to the subsequent BSDCon 2000 even though he wanted to attend it. TFreak ran the Canadian FreeBSD mirror from work called "november.jaded.net" or cvsup.ca.freebsd.org. We served it all off a T1 in 99-2000 and had plans to move it to a 100 Mbit link but times changed and the company went under.
irc.globalserve.net
TFreak was an enabler for sure. He enabled others knowledge and tools. He also tried to get an IRC server at globalserve.net to link to EFnet. We were linked through elk.istar.ca I believe before word got out that "TFreak" was admin of the server. There was a big brawl among IRC operators and people took sides. It almost came to be that "if globalserve.net does not unlink from efnet, all of Canada would be unlinked". So we unlinked, it was unfortunate, but it shows the hate that the smurf.c program caused.
#unix
TFreak hung out in #unix on Efnet a bit in 1997-1998. He came along to the #unix Toronto meets at Movenpicks in the Toronto downtown core.
GTABUG
TFreak also came along to the GTABUG BSD user group early meetings at 76 Olympic Pizza in Toronto.