317 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
317 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
|||
|
The Triad
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A 3-In-1 Text File Magazine
|
|||
|
..."Concepts to Educate the Educated"...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Volume 1, Issue 1
|
|||
|
November Issue, 1987
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Chapter 1: Introduction to The Triad (Its purpose and Goals)
|
|||
|
Chapter 2: Tips On Beating The Radio Call In Contests by Style
|
|||
|
Chapter 3: When Blue And Red Meant The Trashing Of Ma Bell Part I by Schmeg
|
|||
|
Chapter 4: Do it yourself Divertors by Style
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SysOps are encouraged to place this file in their Databases, provided
|
|||
|
they do not modify it. This File is up to date as of November 1st, however
|
|||
|
changes in the world do occur. The Authors, Editors, and distributors are not
|
|||
|
liable for any damages concured from use of information in this Text Magazine.
|
|||
|
It is for informational purposes only. If you wish to place your Bulletin
|
|||
|
Board Systems number in this file, please so it after the -End-.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-Chapter 1-
|
|||
|
An Introduction to The Triad
|
|||
|
By Style
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Triad is a text file magazine devoted to distributing knowledge
|
|||
|
available to the common Computer Phreak and Hacker. The Triad is mainly a group
|
|||
|
of text files put together for better distribution. Yes, it sounds like a copy
|
|||
|
of -Phrack, Inc.- Magazine, however, its much smaller than Phrack, Inc. Phrack,
|
|||
|
Inc. usually is 13+ files long and causes the editor, Taran King (and now The
|
|||
|
Disk Jockey), lots of Troubles trying to gather all the files before deadline.
|
|||
|
The Triad (Triad meaning Three) will usually be Three files long unless it
|
|||
|
becomes extremely popular and I have people begging me to put there articles in
|
|||
|
it. Also, I've seen several people attempt magazines only to run out of
|
|||
|
material after the first few issues - which isn't going to happen to The
|
|||
|
Triad.
|
|||
|
The Triad will be coming out on a monthly basis, and I will be the Head
|
|||
|
Editor. If you have a new unreleased text file that you have written that you
|
|||
|
would like to have included in The Triad, I can be reached at the following
|
|||
|
systems:
|
|||
|
The Soldier Of Phortune BBS (414) 367-4367 300/1200 Baud
|
|||
|
OSUNY BBS (914) 725-4060
|
|||
|
Phreak Klass, Room 2600 (806) 799-0016 System Pass: EDUCATE
|
|||
|
PhoneHenge BBS (516) 543-7995
|
|||
|
All are 24 Hour/7 Day a Week Systems
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-Chapter 2-
|
|||
|
Tips On Beating The Radio Call In Contests
|
|||
|
By Style
|
|||
|
October 15th, 1987
|
|||
|
-A Soldier Of Phortune presentation for The Triad-
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Most serious Telephone Phreaks that I've known have a good knowledge of
|
|||
|
the telephone system and its inner workings. However, even if they know how
|
|||
|
their call goes through the the switching system, they (Like most everyone
|
|||
|
else) have never won a radio call in Contest. This File will give you a few
|
|||
|
tips on how to better your odds of being the right number caller. For a
|
|||
|
realistic example, I'm going to use a actual radio stations information in this
|
|||
|
file. You can then apply this knowledge to your own local radio station.
|
|||
|
"Classic Hits" 96.5FM WKLH is a radio station here in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
|
|||
|
that has recently been giving away some major prizes in hopes of bringing there
|
|||
|
popularity up. WKLH is one of those fad "Classic Hits" radio stations that
|
|||
|
popped up along with a bunch of others across the country. Most of the others
|
|||
|
have folded under from ratings that took a "Hit" (swan dive) a few months after
|
|||
|
they established themselves. So, WKLH is giving away CD players (One every
|
|||
|
day), and Automobiles (One a week to the 96th caller when a particular song is
|
|||
|
heard).
|
|||
|
First off, your best bet is to have a modem that can dial DTMF tones as
|
|||
|
fast as your Switching System can handle, and has Line Detection capabilities
|
|||
|
like Busy, Ringing, Re-Order, and Voice Detection. It also helps if you have
|
|||
|
the custom calling feature "Speed Dialing". It also is EXTREMELY helpful if
|
|||
|
you happen to live close to the radio station, because your call will then be
|
|||
|
processed much faster than everyone elses, and the possibility of a Re-Order is
|
|||
|
less likely. This information is pretty basic, and is pretty much common
|
|||
|
knowledge, so I hope I don't insult any of you...Read on though.
|
|||
|
In able to be anything other than a speedy dialer, you'll need to apply a
|
|||
|
little calculations and social engineering. First off, you need to know how
|
|||
|
many phone lines a Radio Station actually has. They might say "Call 799-1194"
|
|||
|
(94.5fm WKTI), but that's not the only phone line they have. Its simply the
|
|||
|
number that a multi-line Hunt Series runs off of, i.e. if the 799-1194 number
|
|||
|
is busy, it routes the call to the next number in the series (799-1195), and if
|
|||
|
that one is busy, it routes to the next one (799-1196), etc. Most radio
|
|||
|
stations have about 5-10+ phone lines all in a row.
|
|||
|
You can usually find these numbers by dialing numbers higher than the
|
|||
|
number they give out. Or, the DJ's might let out how many lines they have,
|
|||
|
"Boy, we sure have a lot of callers for that sports trivia contest! All seven
|
|||
|
of our lines ae$vkVLE If all else fails, you can call the Radio Stations
|
|||
|
buisness line (Its in the phone book) and try to social engineer the answer out
|
|||
|
of the secretary. Other things that work are to keep calling after a contest
|
|||
|
is over and try to Social Engineer the DJ. He'll try to console you with a
|
|||
|
"Better luck next time...." answer to which you mutter about busy signals and
|
|||
|
how you never get through and then you ask him how many phone lines they have.
|
|||
|
Also, the late night shift DJ's are generally starved for two-way conversation.
|
|||
|
If all else fails, scan the whole prefix - Most radio stations are in the same
|
|||
|
prefix and you'll be able to kill two or three birds/stations with one
|
|||
|
stone/scan.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So, after you know how many lines they have in the station, all you need
|
|||
|
to know is how to count. Say for example, that you hear the DJ say "A pair of
|
|||
|
Pink Floyd tickets to the 10th caller!". All you have to know is that they
|
|||
|
have 7 lines going in at Pre-1111 through Pre-1117, so since they go down the
|
|||
|
line of buttons the 10th caller would actually be the 2nd caller on the 3rd
|
|||
|
fone line. So, you simply dial Pre-1113 and if you are the second caller on
|
|||
|
Pre-1113 you are the winner!
|
|||
|
=$
|
|||
|
-292 is another method of winning that a kid in New York is using very
|
|||
|
successfully on Z100fm (Z100 gives away more call in contest prizes than any
|
|||
|
other station in the country). He took a tour of the Z100 station and counted
|
|||
|
the number of lines they have; how long they take answering each call; and the
|
|||
|
amount of wire between his local loop, the CO (Central Office), and the Z100
|
|||
|
local loop. Then he devised a formula that tells him the exact second to hit
|
|||
|
the redial button at (He's also got three fone lines at his disposal which help
|
|||
|
a little bit.) The Kid has been featured on news shows like 20/20 & 60 Minutes
|
|||
|
and has been picked up by wire services like AP and UPI for cute litle articles
|
|||
|
to fill in between the comics in the funny pages.
|
|||
|
-Style_
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-Chapter 3-
|
|||
|
WHEN BLUE AND RED MEANT
|
|||
|
THE TRASHING OF MA BELL
|
|||
|
PART 1
|
|||
|
Typed in by Schmeg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The following article was written by Herb Friedman and appeared in the
|
|||
|
November 1987 issue of Radio Electronics. I, Schmeg, typed it in cuz I thought
|
|||
|
it might be of interest to somebody. I am not responsible for any illegal
|
|||
|
urges brought forth by this presentation (actually I don't really care what you
|
|||
|
do but sayin' that makes me feel important and usually keeps people readin')
|
|||
|
Onward...........
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Before the break-up of AT&T, Ma Bell was everyone's favorite enemy. So it
|
|||
|
was not surprising that so many people worked so hard and so successfully at
|
|||
|
perfecting various means of making free and untracable telephone. (SCHMEG'S
|
|||
|
NOTE: Hey is that a run-on sentence by a professional writer??) Whether it was
|
|||
|
a Red Box used by Joe and Jane College (Fake names...DUH) to call home, or a
|
|||
|
Blue Box used by organized crime (Ooooohhh) to lay off untraceable bets, the
|
|||
|
technology that provided the finest telephone system in the world contained the
|
|||
|
seeds of its own destruction.
|
|||
|
The fact of the matter is that the Blue Box was so effective at making
|
|||
|
untraceable calls that there is no estimate as to how many calls were made or
|
|||
|
who made them. No one knows for certain whether Ma Bell lost revenues of $100,
|
|||
|
$100-million, or $1-billion (mega-bux) on the Blue Box. Blue Boxes were so
|
|||
|
effective at making free, untraceable calls that Ma Bell didn't want anyone to
|
|||
|
know about them, and for many years denied their existence. They even went as
|
|||
|
far as strong-arming a major consumer-science magazine into killing an article
|
|||
|
that had already been prepared on the Blue and Red Boxes. Further, the Police
|
|||
|
(shiver) records of a major city contain a report concerning a break-in at the
|
|||
|
residence of the author of that article. The only item missing following the
|
|||
|
break-in was the folder containing copies of one of the earliest Blue Box
|
|||
|
designs and a Bell System booklet that described how subscriber billing was
|
|||
|
done by the AMA machine- a booklet that Ma Bell denied ever existed. (Radio
|
|||
|
Electr. has a picture of that book and proved that it existed) Since the AMA
|
|||
|
(automatic Message Accounting) machine was the means where by Ma Bell
|
|||
|
eventually tracked down both the Blue and Red Boxes, we'll take time out to
|
|||
|
explain it. Besides, knowing how the machine works will help you to better
|
|||
|
understand Blue and Red Box "phone phreaking"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WHO MADE THE CALL?
|
|||
|
Back in the early days of the telephone, a customer's billing originated
|
|||
|
in a mechanical counting device, which was usually called a register or meter.
|
|||
|
Each subscriber's line was connected to a meter that was part of a wall of
|
|||
|
meters. The meter clicked off the message units, and once a month somone simply
|
|||
|
wrote down the meter's reading, which was laterinterpolated (Huh?) into
|
|||
|
message-unit billing for those subscribers who were charged by the message
|
|||
|
unit. [Flat rate subscribers could make unlimited calls only within a
|
|||
|
outside that area] Because eventually there were too many meters to read
|
|||
|
individually and because more subscribers started questioning their monthly
|
|||
|
bills, the local telephone companies turned to photography. A photograph of a
|
|||
|
large number of meters served as an incontestable record of their reading at a
|
|||
|
given date and time, and was much easier to convert to customer billing by the
|
|||
|
accounting department.
|
|||
|
As you might imagine, even with photographs billing was cumbersome and did
|
|||
|
not reflect the latest technical developments. A meter didn't provide any
|
|||
|
indication of what the subscriber was doing with the telephone (Hmmm...) nor
|
|||
|
did it indicate how the average subscriber made calls or the efficiency of the
|
|||
|
information service [how fast the operators could handle requests]. So the
|
|||
|
meters were replaced by the AMA machine. One machine handled up to 20,000
|
|||
|
subscribers. It produced a punched tape for a 24-hour period that showed, among
|
|||
|
party answered, and the time the originating phone was hung up.
|
|||
|
One other point that will answer some questions that you're certain to
|
|||
|
think of a9xwe discuss the Blue and Red Boxes: Ma Bell did not want persons
|
|||
|
outside their system to know about the AMA machine. The reason?? Almost
|
|||
|
everyone had complaints- usually unjustified- about their billing. Had the
|
|||
|
public been aware of the AMA machine they would have asked for a monthly list
|
|||
|
of their telephone calls. It wasn't that Ma Bell feared errors in billing;
|
|||
|
rather, they were fearful of being buried under an avalanche of dAb+I]{I-KEVxcom
|
|||
|
plaints. Also, the public believed their telephone calls were personal and
|
|||
|
untraceable, and Ma Bell didn't want to admit that they knew about the Who,
|
|||
|
Where, and When of every call. And so Ma Bell always insisted that billing was
|
|||
|
based on a meter that simply clicked for each message unit; that there was no
|
|||
|
record, other than for long-distance calls, as to who called whom. Long
|
|||
|
distance was handled by, and the billing information was done by an operator,
|
|||
|
so there was a written record Ma Bell could not deny.
|
|||
|
The secrecy surrounding the AMA machine was so pervasive that local,
|
|||
|
state, and even federal authorities were told that local calls made by
|
|||
|
criminals were untraceable, and that people who made obscene telephone calls
|
|||
|
could not be tracked down unless the person receiving the call could keep the
|
|||
|
caller on the line for some 30 to 50 minutes so the connections could be
|
|||
|
physically traced by technicians. Imagine asking a woman or child to put up
|
|||
|
with almost an hour's worth of the most horrendous obscenities in the hope that
|
|||
|
someone could trace the line. Yet in areas where the AMA machine had replaced
|
|||
|
meters, it would have been a simple, though time-consuming task, to track down
|
|||
|
the numbers called by any telephone during the 24-hour period. But Ma Bell
|
|||
|
wanted the AMA machine kept as secret as possible, and so many a criminal was
|
|||
|
not caught, and many a woman was harried (like Harried Carried??) by the
|
|||
|
obscene calls of a potential rapist (a bit melo-dramatic) because existance of
|
|||
|
the AMA machine was denied.
|
|||
|
As a sidelight as to the secrecy surrounding the AMA machine, someone at
|
|||
|
Ma Bell or the local operating company decided to put the squeeze on the author
|
|||
|
of the article on Blue Boxes, and reported to the Treasury Department that he
|
|||
|
was, in fact, manufacturing them for organized crime- the going rate in the mid
|
|||
|
60s was supposedly $20,000 a box. [Perhaps Ma Bell figured the author would get
|
|||
|
the obvious message: Forget the Blue Box and the AMA machine or you'll spend
|
|||
|
lots of time, and much money on lawyer fees to get out of the hassles it will
|
|||
|
cause.] The author was suddenly visited at his place of employment by a
|
|||
|
Treasury agent.
|
|||
|
Fortunately, it took just a few minutes to convince the agent that the
|
|||
|
author was really just an author, and not a technical wizard working for the
|
|||
|
mob. But one conversation led to another, and the Treasury agent was astounded
|
|||
|
to learn about the AMA machine. [Wow! Can an author whose story is squelched
|
|||
|
spill his guts.] According to the Treasury agent, his department had been told
|
|||
|
that it was impossible to a record of local calls made by gangsters: the
|
|||
|
Treasury Department had never been informed of the existence of automatic
|
|||
|
message accounting. Needless to say, the agent left with his own copy of the
|
|||
|
Bell System publication about the AMA machine, and the author had an
|
|||
|
appointment with the local Treasury-Bureau director to fill him in on the AMA
|
|||
|
machine. This information eventually ended up with Senator Dodd, who was
|
|||
|
conducting a congressional investigation into, among other things, telephone
|
|||
|
company surveillance of subscriber lines- which was a common practice for which
|
|||
|
there was detailed instructions, Ma Bell's own switching equipment
|
|||
|
("crossbar") manual.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
That about does it for this part. Part 2 will tie the Red and Blue box into
|
|||
|
this whole educational experimentation. (I love big words)
|
|||
|
Welp, so long until the tips of my fingers grow back.......
|
|||
|
Schmeg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-Chapter 4-
|
|||
|
Do it yourself Divertors
|
|||
|
By Style
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Before I begin, I'll explain what a divertor is and does. A Divertor is
|
|||
|
an electronic box that is placed between two phone lines. When someone calls
|
|||
|
the first phone line, the divertor answers it, and dials a different number on
|
|||
|
the second phone and connects the two lines. This means that the person who
|
|||
|
answers the phone can actually be at a totally different location. A Bookmaker
|
|||
|
(Bookie, Bet Taker, etc.) can use a divertor to protect his identity and
|
|||
|
location. If you call a divertor, usually you will hear two different rings
|
|||
|
separated by either silence or DTMF tones. However, after the telephone answer
|
|||
|
hangs up on a divertor, you get the second phone's dial tone and can call
|
|||
|
wherever you want. All phone bills and phone traces will originate from the
|
|||
|
divertor's second phone, thus protecting you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This File will explain a simple method of finding Divertors that you can
|
|||
|
use for your purposes. If you can't find a PABX (Private Automatic Branch
|
|||
|
Exchange) that supports 976 #'s, 900 #'s, and Alliance Teleconferences and then
|
|||
|
you would have to hack a PABX code out, perhaps a Divertor is just what you
|
|||
|
need. Unfortunately, Divertors are hard to come by. If you try
|
|||
|
scanning/wardialing your Prefix or even NPA, its like finding a needle in a
|
|||
|
haystack. What you need is a Telephone answering service!
|
|||
|
The first step in this process is to get out the Yellow Pages telephone
|
|||
|
book, and open it up to "Telephone Answering Services". In most major size
|
|||
|
cities there will be 3 to 5 pages full of ads promising to answer your phone
|
|||
|
from a remote location via Call Forwarding. What you are looking for is a
|
|||
|
company that has Divertors. In my yellow pages, a couple of the ads even say
|
|||
|
"Divertors available". Look for an older, respectable company, as the small
|
|||
|
new companies are usually some old lady operating out of her home with call
|
|||
|
forwarding bringing your calls to her. Then, its simply a matter of calling
|
|||
|
them up and poising as a potential person interested in there services.
|
|||
|
Here's a few good examples:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
)> Poise as a small buisness person about to go on vacation, and rather than
|
|||
|
have your secretary work at the office for the next two weeks answering the
|
|||
|
fone and using all the electricity and heat (Good excuse for in the winter) you
|
|||
|
want to use a answering service. Then, while their guard is down, ask them how
|
|||
|
they operate and try to get a Diverted phone line number off of them - Say that
|
|||
|
you want to hear how good their girls answer the phone.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
)> Simply say you would like some references (of people who use there service),
|
|||
|
and try to get the spelling of their names right so you can call Directory
|
|||
|
Assistance and get the reference's number. This method usually ends up with
|
|||
|
you having a bunch of numbers that use Call Forwarding though.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
)> Poise as Joe Schmoe of the Better Buisness Bureau, and say that you, in
|
|||
|
cooperation with the District Attornies office, are investigating certain
|
|||
|
Telephone Answering Services as being A) Call Girl Services (Escort Service) or
|
|||
|
B) Bookmakers (Bookies).
|
|||
|
Then you have the choice of interrogating them over the phone for Divertor
|
|||
|
numbers, or saying that they are not under investigation - but you would like
|
|||
|
their cooperation in some facts about how Divertors operate... And a few
|
|||
|
numbers so you can hear how they sound...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
)> Find the answering services junction box, and eavesdrop in on who/what the
|
|||
|
callers are trying to reach. Then, call Directory Assistance and get the
|
|||
|
Who/What's number.
|
|||
|
-Style_
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the next issue of The Triad look for information on RSTS/e Hacking, Part II
|
|||
|
of When Blue And Red Meant The Trashing Of Ma Bell, and maybe even a file on
|
|||
|
Creating a New Identity...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-End-
|
|||
|
|