455 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
455 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
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Path: rz.uni-karlsruhe.de!xlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!uknet!EU.net!sun4nl!hacktic!consolat.hacktic.nl!desert.hacktic.nl!kafka
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From: kafka@desert.hacktic.nl (Patrick Oonk)
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Newsgroups: alt.2600,alt.security,alt.cyberpunk
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Subject: Re: OMNIBOX.EXE
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Message-ID: <021594232038HNR.1.36b@desert.hacktic.nl>
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Date: Tue, 15 Feb 94 23:20:38 MET
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References: <1994Feb15.045429.9689@ultb.isc.rit.edu>
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Organization: Society for the Propagation of Good and the Prevention of Evil
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X-Newsreader: HNR 1.36b by Kafka & The Dude
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Lines: 442
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Xref: rz.uni-karlsruhe.de alt.2600:2511 alt.security:14438 alt.cyberpunk:28496
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css0958@ultb.isc.rit.edu (C.S. Swanson) once said:
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CS> Hi, I'm not exactly sure who posted OMNIBOX.EXE, but cool idea.
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CS> Only thing is, I tried it and it didn't work. I taped it on
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CS> my micro recorder, a pretty hi quality one. Then I tried all methods
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CS> previously listed h er for RED BOXES. I called information, dialed long
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CS> distance direct, etc. I had only quarters taped and once one did
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CS> produced the message a nickel has been deposited, but only the nickel
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CS> when I had 4 quarters taped in a row.
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CS>
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CS> My question is this. TRhe person who posted OMNIBOX.EXE, good job on the
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CS> programming, I'm sure it works great. Obviously you know what your
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CS> doing. I was wondering if you could post some sample sessions on how to
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CS> use especially the red box, but even the others. Or any one else for
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CS> that matter. Also, has anyone gotten OMNIBOX.EXE to work?
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CS>
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CS> In addition, sources of ftp sites that have this info would be
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CS> outstanding. Thank you much for any info you can provide, this all
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CS> sounds like a lot of fun to try out.
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Hitchhikers guide to the phone system.. Phreaking in the nineties
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(By Billsf)
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Introduction
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------------
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In this article I will try to introduce you to the most complex machine on
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earth: the phone system. It's a guide to having fun with the technology, and
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I hope it will help you on your travels through the network. It is by no
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means a definitive manual: If you really want to get into this, there are lots
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of additional things you must learn and read.
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This article assumes you know a little bit about the history of phreaking.
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It is meant as an update for the sometimes very outdated documents that can
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be downloaded from BBS's. In here I'll tell you which of the old tricks might
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still work today, and what new tricks you may discover as you become a phone
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phreak.
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As you learn to phreak you will (hopefully) find ways to make calls that
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you could not make in any other way. Calls to test numbers that you cannot
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reach from normal network, calls to ships (unaffordable otherwise), and much
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more. As you tell others about the hidden world you have discovered, you will
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run into people who have been brainwashed into thinking that all exploration
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into the inner workings of the phone system is theft or fraud. Convincing
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these people of your right to explore is probably a waste of time, and does
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not advance your technical knowledge.
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Phreaking is like magic in more than one way. Those people who are really
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good share their tricks with each other, but usually don't give out these
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tricks to anyone walking by. This will be somewhat annoying at first, but
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once you're really good you'll understand that it's very unpleasant if the
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trick you just discovered is wasted the very next day. I could tell you at
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least twenty new tricks in this article but I prefer to teach you how to find
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your own.
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Having said this, the best way to get into phreaking is to hook up with
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other phreaks. Unlike any other sub-culture, phreaks are not bound by any
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geographical restrictions. You can find other phreaks by looking for
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hacker/phreak BBS's in your region. Having made contact there you may en-
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counter these same people in teleconferences that are regularly set up. These
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conferences usually have people from all over the planet. Most phreaks from
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other contries outside the United States speak Englisch, so language is not
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as much of a barrier as you might think.
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If you live in a currently repressed area, such as the United States, you
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should beware that even the things that you consider "harmless exploring"
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could get you into lots of trouble (confiscation of computer, fines, probation
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jail, loss of job, etc.). Use your own judgement and find your protection.
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Getting Started
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---------------
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The human voice contains components as low as 70Hz, and as high as 8000Hz.
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Most energy however is between 700 and 900Hz. If you cut off the part under
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200 and above 3000, all useful information is still there. This is exactly
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what phone companies do on long distance circuits.
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If you think all you have to do is blow 2600Hz and use a set of twelve MF
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combinations, you have a lot of catching up to do. One of the first multi-
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frequency systems was R1 with 2600Hz as the line signalling frequency, but for
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obvious reasons it is rarely used anymore, except for some very small remote
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communities. In this case its use is restricted, meaning it will not give you
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access to all the world in most cases.
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To begin with, all experimenting starts at home. As you use your phone,
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take careful note as what it does on a variety of calls. Do you hear "dialing"
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in the background of certain calls as they are set up? Do you hear any high
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pitched beeps while a call is setting up, as it's answered or at hangup of
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the called party?
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Can you make your CO fial to complete a call either by playing with the
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switchhook or dialing strange numbers? If you are in the United States, did
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you ever do something that will produce a recording:"We're sorry, your call
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did not go through..." after about 15 seconds of nothing?
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If you can do the last item, you are "in" for sure! Any beeps on answer or
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hang-up of the called party also means a sure way in. Hearing the actual MF
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tones produced by the telco may also be your way in. While it would be nice
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to find this behavior on a toll-free circuit, you may consider using a
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national toll circuit to get an overseas call or even a local circuit for a
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bigger discount. Every phone in the world has a way in. All you have to do
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is find one!
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An overview of Systems
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----------------------
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First we must start with numbering plans. The world is divided up into
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eight separate zones. Zone 1 is the United States, Canada and some Caribbean
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nations having NPA 809. Zone 2 is Africa. Greenland (299) and Faroe Islands
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(298) do not like their Zone 2 assignment, but Zones 3 and 4 (Europe) are
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all taken up. Since the DDR is now unified with BRD (Germany) the code 37 is
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up for grabs and will probably be subdivided into ten new country codes to
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allow the new nations of Europe, including the Baltics, to have their own
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codes. Greenland and the Faroe Islands should each get a 37x country code.
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Zone 5 is Latin America, including Mexico (52) and Cuba (53). Zone 6 is the
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south Pacific and includes Australia (61), New Zealand (64) and Malaysia (60).
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Zone 7 is now called CIS (formerly the Soviet Union), but may become a third
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European Code. Zone 8 is Asia and includes Japan (81), Korea (82), Vietnam
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(84), China (86), and many others. Zone 9 is the sub-continent of India (91)
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and surrounding regions. A special sub-zone is 87, which is the maritime
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satellite service (Inmarsat). Country code 99 is reserved as a test code for
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international and national purposes and may contain many interesting numbers.
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In zone 1, a ten digit number follows with a fixed format, severely limiting
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the total number of phones. NPA's like 310 and 510 attest to that. The new
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plan (beginning in 1995) will allow the middle digit to be other than 1 or 0,
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allowing up to five times more phones. This is predicted to last into the
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21st century. After that Zone 1 must move to the fully extensible system used
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in the rest of the world.
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The "rest of the world" uses a system where "0" precedes the area code for
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numbers dialed within the country code. France and Denmark are notable ex-
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ceptions, where there are no area codes or just one as in France (1 for Paris
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and just eight digits for the rest). This system has proven to be a total
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mess - worse than the Zone 1 plan!
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In the usual numbering system, the area code can be of any length, but at
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this time between one and five digits are used. The phone number can be any
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length too, the only requirement being that the whole number, including the
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country code but not the zero before the area code, must not exceed fourteen
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digits. Second dialtones are used in some systems to tell customers they are
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connected to the area they are calling and are to proceed with the number.
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With step-by-step, you would literally connect to the distant city and then
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actually signal it with your pulses. Today, if second dialtones are used it's
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only because they were used in the past. They have no meaning today, much
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like the second dialtones in the custom calling features common in the United
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States. The advantages of the above "linked" system is that it allows ex-
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pansion where needed without affecting other numbers. Very small villages may
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only have a three digit number while big cities may have eight digit numbers.
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Variations of this basic theme are common. In Germany, a large company in
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Hamburg may have a basic five digit number for the reception and eight digit
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numbers for the employee extensions. In another case in this same town,
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analog lines have seven digits and ISDN lines have eight digits. In many
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places it common to have different length numbers coming to the same place.
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As confusing as it sounds, it really is easier to deal with than the fixed
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number plan!
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International Signalling Systems
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--------------------------------
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CCITT number four (C4) is an early system that linked Europe together and
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connected to other systems for overseas calls. C4 uses two tones: 2040 and
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2400. Both are played together for 150mS (P) to get the attention of the
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distant end, followed by a "long" (XX or YY = 350mS) or a "short" (X or Y =
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100mS) of either 2040 (x or X) or 2400 (y or Y) to indicate status of the
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call buildup. Address data (x=1 or y=0, 35 ms) is sent in bursts of four bits
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as hex digits, allowing 16 different codes. One hundred milliseconds of
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silence was placed between each digit in automatic working. Each digit there-
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fore took 240mS to send. This silence interval was non-critical and often had
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no timeout, allowing for manual working. C4 is no longer in wide use, but it
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was, due to its extreme simplicity a phreak favorite.
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CCITT number five (C5) is still the world's number one overseas signalling
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method; over 80 percent of all overseas trunks use it. The "plieks" and tones
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on Pink Floyd's "The Wall" are C5, but the producer edited it, revealing an
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incomplete number with the old code for Londen. He also botched the cadance
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of the address signalling very badly, yet it really sounds OK to the ear as
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perhaps the only example most Americans have of what an overseas call sounds
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like!
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In actual overseas working, one-half second of 2400 and 2600Hz, compound,
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is sent (clear forward) followed by just the 2400Hz (seize), which readies
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the trunk for the address signalling. All address signals are preceded with
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KP1 (code 13) for terminal traffic, plus a discriminating digit for the class
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of call and the number. The last digit is ST (code 15) to tell the system
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signalling is over. For international transit working, KP2 (code 14) is used
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to tell the system a country code follows, after which the procedure is
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identical to the terminal procedure.
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CCITT six and seven (C6 and C7) are not directly accessible from the
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customer's line, yet many "inband" systems interface to both of thes. C6 is
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also called Common Channel Interoffice Signalling (CCIS) and as its name
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implies, a dedicated line carries all the setup information for a group of
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trunks. Modems (usually 1200 Bps) are used at each end of the circuit. CCIS
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is cheaper, and as an added benefit, killed all the child's play blue boxing
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that was common in the states in the 60's and early 70's. In the early 80's
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fiber and other digital transmission became commonplace, and a new signalling
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standard was required. C7 places all line, address, and result (backward)
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signalling on a Time Division Multiplexed Circuit (TDM and TDMC) along with
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everything else like data and voice. All ISDN systems require the use of SS7
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to communicate on all levels from local to worldwide.
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The ITU/CCITT has developed a signalling system for very wide and general
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use. One called "The European System", R2 has become a very widespread inter-
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national system used on all continents. R2 is the most versatile end-to-end
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system ever developed. It is a two-way system like C7 and comes in two forms,
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analog and digital, both fully compatible with each other. R2 has completely
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replaced C4, with the possible exception of a few very remote areas where it
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works into R2 using using registers. Two groups of fifteen, two of six MF
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tones are used for each direction, the high frequency group forward and the
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low group backward. Line signalling can be digital with two channels or out-
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of-band at 3825Hz, DC, or in cases of limited bandwidth on trunks, can use the
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C4 line signals, just the 2040 + 2400Hz or 3000Hz or even backward signals
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sent in a forward direction. The signals can be digitally quantised using the
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A-law or u-law codec standards, resulting in compatible signals for analog
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lines. In international working, only a small part of the standard is man-
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datory with a massive number of options available. For national working, an
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ample number of MF combinations are "reserved for national use", providing
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an expandable system with virtually limitless capabilities. R2 is the "system
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of the nineties" and mastering this, for the first time, allows the phone
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phreak "to hold the whole world in his hands" in a manner that the person who
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coined this phrase could have only dreamed of in the early seventies!
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With the exception of bilateral agreements between neighboring countries to
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make each other's national systems compatible, especially in border regions,
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all international systems in use are: C5, C6, C7, and R2. R2 is limited to a
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single numbering region by policy and must use one of the three remaining
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systems for overseas working. There are few technical limitations to prevent
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R2 from working with satellites, TASI, or other analog/digital underseas
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cables. The spec is flexible enough to allow overseas working, but is not
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done at the present time. R2 is likely to displace C5 on the remaining analog
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trunks in the near future.
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DTMF is on a 4x4 matrix, one tone from a row and one from a column.
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1=697+1209, etc.
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1209 1336 1477 1633
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697 1 2 3 A
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770 4 5 6 B
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852 7 8 9 C
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941 * 0 # D
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MF signalling, often used to signal between pionts, uses a 2 of 6 matrix.
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Each tone has a weighting which adds up to an unique number. The three
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standard sets of tones use this system.
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Digit Weighting
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1 0+1
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2 0+2
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3 1+2
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4 0+4
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5 1+4
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6 2+4
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7 0+7
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8 1+7
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9 2+7
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0 (Code 10) 4+7
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11 (Code 11) 0+12
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12 (Code 12) 1+12
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KP1 (Code 13) 2+12
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KP2 (Code 14) 3+12
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ST (Code 15) 7+12
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For C5, either KP is 100mS and each digit lasts 50mS. A 50mS off time is used
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between each digit. For older R1 systems, the KP is 100mS and each digit is
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68mS on and 68mS off. Modern systems are C5 compatible and use the C5 timing.
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In North America, an additional 50 or 68mS pause is inserted before the last
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digit.
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Example: KP18(pause)2ST.....KP03120600148(pause)0ST. This pattern was added
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about 15 years ago and appears to be unnecessary, except to give an audible
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indication of false (blue box) signalling. Its is is HIGHLY recommended for
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phreaks where it is normally used by the telco! R2 is a COMPELLED system
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where reception of the forward signal produces a backward signal, which at
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its reception, stops the forward signal. The stopping of the forward signal
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stops the backward signal, and when the stopping of the backward signal is
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detected, a new forward signal is generated. This goes back and forth until
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all the information is transmitted. The backward signal (usually "1", send
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next digit) tells the sendig end what to send next. See the CCITT Red Book
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or Welch for complete information on both systems.
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Weight MFC R2 forward R2 Backward
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0 700 1380 1140
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1 900 1500 1020
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2 1100 1620 900
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4 1300 1740 780
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7 1500 1860 660
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12 1700 1980 540
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C4 is the old European signalling system. The address signals have 35mS pause
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between each beep and 100mS pause (minimum) between each digit. Minimum time
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to send a digit (including pause) is 345mS. This system is limited use today,
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if at all.
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x: 2040 35mS (binary "1")
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y: 2400 35mS (binary "0")
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X: 2040 100mS
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Y: 2400 100mS
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XX: 2040 350mS
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YY: 2400 350mS
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P: 2040+2400 150mS
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Clear Forward: PXX
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Transit Seizure: PX
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Forward Transfer: PYY
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Terminal Seizure: PY
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1: yyyx
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2: yyxy
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3: yyxx
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...
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14: xxxy
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15: xxxx
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16: yyyy
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Place Event Freq Cadance
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=========================================================================
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N. America dialtone 350+440 Continuous
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ring 440+480 2s on 4s off
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busy 480+620 0.5s on 0.5s off
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fast busy 480+620 0.25 on 0.25 off
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England ring 450+500 0.25 on 0.5 off
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(Australia,New Zealand, 0.25 on 2.0 off
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etc.)
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Japan ring 450+500 1.0 on 2.0 off
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Holland dialtone 150+450 Continuous
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(450 at -8dB)
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most of world all 400 or 440 (See text)
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SIT 950, 1400, 1800 (See text)
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|
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|
Most of the world's phone systems use only one low pitched tone to represent
|
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|
all calling status. The most common tones in use are 400Hz, 440Hz and 450Hz.
|
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|
In some cases the tones are modulated, usually AM, at 25 or 50Hz at variable
|
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|
depths. In some old switches, the ring modulates the tone, or it is just the
|
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|
harmonics of the ring frequency, which is usually 25Hz, but can be other
|
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|
frequencies, producing the "fart ring". Cadances for the busy are either the
|
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|
fast at 0.25 on and 0.25 off, or the slow at 0.5 on and 0.5 off. Ring signals
|
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|
are usually on one second and off for two, but can vary. In Iraq, the ring is
|
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|
continuous! The SIT (Subscriber Information Tone) is 950 then 1400 and then
|
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|
1800Hz. The total length is about one second. The lengths of the individual
|
|||
|
tones are sometimes variable to impart different meanings for automatic
|
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|
detection.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
National Signalling Systems
|
|||
|
---------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CCITT 1, 2 and 3 are early international standards for signalling the
|
|||
|
distant end. C1 is just a 500Hz line signalling tone, and was used to alert
|
|||
|
the operator at a distant switchboard that there was traffic and no DC path,
|
|||
|
due to amplifiers or repeaters on a relatively long circuit. C1 has only one
|
|||
|
line signalling function (forward transfer) and no address signalling. It is
|
|||
|
probably used nowhere.
|
|||
|
CCITT 2 was the first international standard that used address signalling,
|
|||
|
allowing automatic completion of calls. Two frequencies, 600Hz and 750Hz,
|
|||
|
were used for line signalling and by pulsing between the two frequencies,
|
|||
|
representing make and break, of the loop current at the distant end during
|
|||
|
signalling, calls were automatically pulse dialable. You may actually find
|
|||
|
this system in limited use in very remote parts of Australia or South Africa.
|
|||
|
Fairly high signalling levels are required and may very well make customer
|
|||
|
signalling impossible, unless you are right there. Travel to both the above
|
|||
|
countries should be fascinating however for both phone play and cultural
|
|||
|
experience!
|
|||
|
CCITT 3 is an improved pulse system. Onhook is represented by the presence
|
|||
|
of 2280Hz and offhook by the absence of 2280Hz. This exact system is still
|
|||
|
used in a surprising number of places. Pulse-dial PBX's often use C3 to signal
|
|||
|
distant branches of a company over leased lines. Signalling for this system
|
|||
|
is generally at a much lower level than C2: The tones will propagate over any
|
|||
|
phone line.
|
|||
|
A system from the early 50's is called R1. Many people remember R1 as the
|
|||
|
Blue boxes of the 60's and 70's . R1 is still in wide use in the United
|
|||
|
States, Canada and Japan. The use of 2600Hz for line signalling is quite rare
|
|||
|
in the 90's, but can be found in all of the above countries. Address signal-
|
|||
|
ling uses the MFC standard which is a combination of two of six tones
|
|||
|
between 700Hz and 1700Hz as in CCITT 5. Alsmost all R1 used either "out of
|
|||
|
band" signalling at 3825Hz or 3350Hz or some form of digital or DC line
|
|||
|
signalling. To use this system from home one must find an indirect method of
|
|||
|
using the "out of band" signalling. In North America, most signalling from
|
|||
|
your central office to your long distance carrier is R1, as is most OSPS/
|
|||
|
TSPS/TOPS operator traffic.
|
|||
|
Pulse systems like CCITT 2 and 3 are still used in national systems. In
|
|||
|
North America, the C3 standard using 2600Hz in place of 2280 for national
|
|||
|
working was commonplace through the 70's and still has limited end-to-end use
|
|||
|
today. "End-to-end" use refers to sending just the last few digits (usually
|
|||
|
five) to complete the call at the distant end. The only use this may have to
|
|||
|
the phreak would be to make several calls to a single locality on one quarter.
|
|||
|
It may be possible that a certain code would drop you into an R1, but you
|
|||
|
just have to experiment! This type of system is referred to as 1VF, meaning
|
|||
|
"one Voice Frequency". The other standard frequency, for use outside North
|
|||
|
America, is 2400Hz. A national system using two voice frequencies (2VF) may
|
|||
|
still be used in remote areas of Sweden and Norway. The two frequencies are
|
|||
|
2400Hz and 2600Hz. Playing these two systems in Europe predates the cracking
|
|||
|
of the R1 and C5 systems in the late 50's and early 60's respectively. The
|
|||
|
first phone phreak was probably in Sweden.
|
|||
|
Common Channel Interoffice Signalling (CCIS) is CCITT 6 developed for
|
|||
|
national use and employing features that are of interest to national admini-
|
|||
|
strations. R1 often plays into a gateway being converted to CCIS and CCIS
|
|||
|
will play into a gateway that converts to C5, C6 or C7 for international
|
|||
|
working. The bulk of the ATT net is CCIS in North America, while R1 is often
|
|||
|
used by your CO talk to it and the lessel networks. CCITT 7 is the digital
|
|||
|
system and is the same nationally as internationally. C7 allows the greatest
|
|||
|
efficiency of all systems and will in time be the world system. C7 has much
|
|||
|
more speed and versatility than R2, but is a digital only system. All fiber
|
|||
|
optic systems employ SS7 (C7).
|
|||
|
No discussion of systems is complete without mentioning Socotel. Socotel is
|
|||
|
a general system developed by the French. It is a hodgepodge of many systems,
|
|||
|
using MFC, pulse tone, pulse AC and pulse DC system. Most (all?) line
|
|||
|
signalling tones can be used. An inband system can use 2500Hz as a clear
|
|||
|
forward and 1700 or 1900Hz for seize or, in Socotel terms, "confirm". Most
|
|||
|
line signalling today is "out of band", but unlike normal outband signalling,
|
|||
|
it is below band: DC, 50Hz or 100Hz. It is a "brute force" system using 100V
|
|||
|
levels, insuring no customer has a chance of getting it directly! Call setup
|
|||
|
on the AC systems often has a very characteristic sound of of short bursts of
|
|||
|
50Hz or 100Hz buzz, followed by the characteristic French series of 500 Hz
|
|||
|
beeps to alert the customer that the call has been received from the Socotel
|
|||
|
by the end office and is now being (pulse) dialed. Calls often don't make it
|
|||
|
through all the gateways of a Socotel system, sometimes giving the French
|
|||
|
phreak a surprise access where it stuck!
|
|||
|
On a national level there are even more systems and some are very bizarre.
|
|||
|
Some use backward R2 tones in the forward direction for line signalling,
|
|||
|
giving analog lines the versatility of digital line signalling. There have
|
|||
|
been some interlocal trunks that actually used DTMF in place of MF! The
|
|||
|
"Silicon Valley" was once served by DTMF trunks for instance. When I visited
|
|||
|
my local toll office and was told this and pressed for an answer as to why,
|
|||
|
I was told "We had extra (expensive then) DTMF receivers and used them!" As
|
|||
|
a phreak, be ready for anything as you travel the world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Stuff to read
|
|||
|
-------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Signalling in Telecommunications Networks, S. Welch, 1979
|
|||
|
ISBN 0 906048 044
|
|||
|
The Institution of Electrical Engineers, Londen & New York
|
|||
|
CCITT Red Book, Blue Book, Green Book and whatever other colors of books
|
|||
|
they have, Concentrate on the Q norms.
|
|||
|
Telecommunications Engineering, Roger L. Freeman
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- EOF -
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
---
|
|||
|
Patrick Oonk | _____
|
|||
|
KAFKA@DESERT.HACKTIC.NL | Use the source, Luke ! |\ /|
|
|||
|
Finger kafka@hacktic.nl | | O |
|
|||
|
for PGP public key | |/_\|
|
|||
|
PAGER: 06-58358511/2/3/4 |
|
|||
|
======== Join the Digital City, telnet dds.hacktic.nl, login 'gast' ==========
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>
|