360 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
360 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
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>>===========================================================<<
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>> ANOTHER TELECOMMUNICATIONS PHILE FROM THE ARCHIVES OF THE <<
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>> PRIVATE SECTOR BBS (201) 366-4431, OFFICIAL BOARD OF 2600 <<
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>> FOR BEST RESULTS WHEN READING TRY 80 COLUMNS / LOWER CASE <<
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>>===========================================================<<
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>>===========================================================<<
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>> <<
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>> ALL YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT <<
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>> ALLIANCE TELECONFERENCING <<
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>> (but were afraid to ask) <<
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>> <<
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>> by Shadow 2600 <<
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>> <<
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>> <<
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>> as published in 2600 magazine May 1985 page 2-X <<
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>> <<
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>>===========================================================<<
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Information provided by Alliance Telconferencing, the Demon, Elric Bloodaxe,
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Forest Ranger, John Doe, Keymaster, Market Navagation Inc., the Serpent,
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Shooting Shark, Telcom.ARPA, Joe Turner and the members of the official BBS of
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2600 magazine: the Private Sector BBS.
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>>>WHAT IS ALLIANCE
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===================
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Alliance Teleconferencing Service is a bridging service offering
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teleconferencing to business's. A conference merely is several phone lines
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tied together allowing people to talk to many locations at once. Alliance is
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owned by AT&T Communications. Alliance uses #4 ESS's to control its
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conference. According to Alliance, conferences can by originated and
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controlled from most locations in the United States. The service started only
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available in 202, but now has been spreading throughout the country. One thing
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to remember is that even in the same area code some Central Offices will allow
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access, and others may not. Conferees can be from anywhere dialable by AT&T,
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including international. Alliance can be reached at 1-800-544-6363 for social
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engineering or for the setting up conferences in locations that cannot access
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0-700's. Using this the conference can be billed to a Calling Card or to a
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third number.
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Alliance themselves say the cost of a teleconference is 25 cents a line per
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minute, as well as the cost of a direct dialed call for each of the locations
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from the conference site. A monitoring Alliance operator costs an additional
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$3 an hour. Thus, rumors of $6,000 conference bills seem a little exaggerated.
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However, conferences can last for several days and can have several
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international participants, thus running the bill up.
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>>>CONFERENCE NUMBERS
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=====================
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Dialing 0-700-456-X00N will result in "This is Alliance Teleconferencing in
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[location]. You may dial during the announcement for faster setup." The main
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conference numbers are -100X and -200X. The locations indicated by the X (as
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given by Alliance and the logon recordings) are 1 being Los Angeles, 2 being
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Chicago, 3 being White Plains New York, and 4 being Dallas. 0 gets you the
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conference site closest to you. The -100X lines only accept up to 21
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conferees, and usuallly don't allow international dialing. The other
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conference numbers allow up to 59 lines when available as the lines have to be
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apportioned between the various conferences going at the site, and also allow
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international dialing. According to Alliance themselves -200X are graphic
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conferences, -100X allows up to 59 conferees, and both always allow
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international dialing. However, actual exploration doesn't bear these out.
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Alliance doesn't seem to admit that -300X conference (X=0 to 2, all located
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in Chicago, Illinois) numbers even exist. These conferences announce that they
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are graphic, and they seem to bear this out. They can also be handled as an
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audio conference. The only difference is that it asks when adding conferees
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whether the location is graphics (hit 4) or audio (hit 5). Choose audio.
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These tend most often to allow the passing of control, dialing of international
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calls, and also less used than the other lines.
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Dialng 0-700-456-150X or -250X results in an modem connect sounding tone,
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followed by "You have reached Bell System Teleconferencing Service's Special
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Set for testing and measurement. Please enter your service code [3 digits] or
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wait for instructions." Shooting Shark first found the -150N and -250N
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conferences. These cannot be reached from most area codes, resulting instead
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in a "The number you have dialed cannot be reached from yiour calling area"
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just as if it were an 800 number not reachable from your calling area. The
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onnly one I know that does get trough is 201 (Northern New Jersey. The X goes
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from 0 to 4, just like the normal -100X and -200X conferences. There is no
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-350X series. I haven't as of yet figured out the "service code." This can be
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used as a normal conference, except that it requires you to confirm your choice
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by voice, and each section is separated by those modem connect sonding tones.
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Rumors are that this is the upcoming new conference system, which is supposed
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to add features such as the deletion of conferees. However, any keypress I
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have tried other than 1, 6, or 9 (the normal controls) results in a dire
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warning telling me "Please wait for an Alliance operator to come to your
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assistance." I haven't yet stuck around long enough to find out what
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"assistance" means. Alliance won't admit these exist, and therefore the -150X
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and -250X warrent much further and deeper investigation.
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Alliance can be reached by other means. Blue boxing to 213-080-0123 and
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other direct routing to the Alliance machines no longer seems to work.
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However, box routing to 0-700-456-N00X does work. PBX's in conference country
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are often used to call conferences. Merely dial a PBX's inward access line,
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enter the access code, dial an outside line, and then either touch tone
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0-700-456-N00X yourself, or dial 0 and get the operator to do it for you.
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Sometimes they insist that the 0-700 SAC doesn't exist, but just remain firm
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and just tell them to try it. Social engineering also works, just call an
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operator and try to convince her to KP+0-700-456-1000+ST and position release,
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after getting her to believe you are maintainance/whatever. Getting a direct
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drop on an inward operator increases the chance of succeding, such as by
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dialing 0-959-1211 from a pay phone (BIOC Agent 003's Basic Telcom VI,
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descovered by Karl Marx) Another trick suggested by Shooting Shark is to use a
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white boxable phone (see 2600 page I-40, July 1984) or even an ATM help line or
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a hotel phone in an airport (as in the April 1985 2600, Page II-19) Since when
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arranging a conference you really dont need to speak, just set up a conference
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normally, and when done call another payphone nearby, pass control, and
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continue. The conference will still be charged to the first pay phone.
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Several techniques are available to both improve the quality of the call.
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Since the call may be going through up to several extenders to reach a non-800
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PBX, and from there to Alliance, the signal quality can get quite poor. A
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technique that helps to keep Alliance from knowing your number is to call
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Alliance via a PBX, add in the lower end of a loop, pass control to it, and
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then call the high end. A variation on this technique is to call your other
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line or a payphone next to you, or even, if you have call waiting, to call
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yourself again, pass control to yourself (it works), and then hang up the
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original call. All these techiques may not always work, as sometimes Alliance
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refuses to pass control, as mentioned above.
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>>>CONFERENCE CONTROLS
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======================
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Alliance is extremely user friendly, as it wa designed for businessmen. Help
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messages abound, and all you need to do is to follow their directions, but here
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is a brief going over of the commands. After the log on recording, choose the
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number of locations for your conference. Choose below 15 locations, as many
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people use Alliance, and using more locations than available results in "no
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conference facilities available now", as the 59 lines available per site must
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apportioned. To change your choice dial a *, or to go onward a hit #. To add
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a number while in control mode dial 1+ the phone number. To dial international
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dial 1 + 011 + the phone number. Passing control can be done by dialing 6 +
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plus the number of the person on the conference you wish to pass control. Then
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by hitting a # you rejoin the conference, or by just hanging up you leave.
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When in the conference dialing a # will return you to control mode.
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When conferees hang up, a "dee-doot" will be heard. The controller also
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hears the phone number of person who left. Hitting the # immediately calls the
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departed back. There is no way to drop people from conference other then
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getting a conference operator to do it or by blowing 2600 hrtz down the line.
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However, this will drop each and every person on a trunk using in-band
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signaling. Hitting a 0 in control mode summons a conference operator, however,
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she/he takes control before he/she answers, so only do this when you know what
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you are doing. Hitting a 9 in control mode requests a "silent attendant
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listener line." According to the Demon this option allows the controller to
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hear the tones and phone numbers of people hanging up while he is in control
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mode. Conference op's claim this function is for secretaries and such to
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listen to, but not participate in, conferences for note taking purposes.
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If these instrustions sound confusing, don't worry. Remember, the entire
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conference is accompianied by extremely user friendly messages. Recently, on
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weekends or late night, many telcom hobbiests have had problems with
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transfering control, instead getting instead a recording "Not available at this
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time". Also, similarly, international dialing is sometimes unavailable.
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Generally -300X does this less often, then -200X next.
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>>>DANGERS
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==========
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One must always be prepared for listeners whenever one conferences. If one
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is discussing "questionable" matters on a conference, last names and phone
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numbers should NEVER be given out. One of your fellow telcom hobbiests might
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be a FBI agent, or sometimes a conference operator listens in conferences which
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sound "suspicious." They do not do this usually, as Alliance usually carries
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business calls (you have to remember this folks!), and thus doesn't expect
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fraudulent calls. Sure ways to interest a op is to have either all the
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conferees but one or only just the controller hang up. When a controller hangs
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up the conference op takes control and attempts to let the the former
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controller "regain his conference" by calling him at home. Also, controllers
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who spend long amounts of time in control mode, resulting in everyone else
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hanging up, arouses the attention of the op. The number which orginally
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started the conference can hang up though, after passing control, but the
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conference will still be billed to it.
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On weekends Alliance ops tend to be more prying, and often on weekends or
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late nights one cannot pass control or call international. One op to
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particulary look out for is Jack Rae who works after 8 PM on weeknights at
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-1001 (LA). If you get a very sure person taking control and advising you to
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get off the conference NOW, do it. There has been many stories of him forcably
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disconnecting conferees and calling them later at home. My only run in with
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him ended up with me unable to hang up on the conference (every time I picked
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up the phone I got the conference) for about one hour. Remember, once Alliance
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op takes control, when you "bailout" by hanging up, your phone number comes
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through loud and clear. Only deal with conference operators when you know what
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you are doing. However, some of them have been known to talk with conferees
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about Alliance and telcom in general.
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Dangers of fraudulently started conferences seem to be slight. The only
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person I knew who got caught was forced to pay for a phone call from Dallas
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(where the conference was started) to his home in California. Stories of
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phreaks being forced to pay $6,000 seem a little exagerated, especially
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considering the cost of a conference. This is not to say it is safe, but it
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definitely is safer than using 950's fraudulently. Even phreaks whom set up
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serveral conferences a night for months, including the harassment of DA
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operators, haven't been caught. However, I nor 2600 suggests you attempt a
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fraudulent conference. Even merely permitting youself to be added to a
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fraudulent conference is enough for prosecution according to AT&T. One thing
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that prevents a lot of this investigation is that most fraudlent conferences
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are set up with PBX's, and thus the prosecution lies with the owners of the
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PBX, and AT&T isn't even involved. For this reason, PBX's often are traced.
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Another risk is that all numbers dialed are recorded by Alliance, even
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misdials. The numbers dialed are all printed out and sent to a vault at the
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Chicago Bell Test Labs for storage for their records. In addition,,
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conferences are randomly taped and monitored for fraud. It would seem safer to
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use Alliance to call an extender, and then dial out from there, as although
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Alliance records all numbers dialed, logically they probably only pay attention
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to numbers they intend to act on, i.e. add to the conference. The subsequent
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use of a extender is a matter of investigation by another comapany, and don't
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forget AT&T and the extender companies are competitors, and thus they wouldn't
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go out of their ways to cooporate.
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>>>STUNTS
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=========
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Often when a conference starts to slow down, people start suggesting various
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stunts to liven things up. One word of warning, most of these techniques would
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be construed as harassment, and thus are illegal. One of the most common used
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is adding a multitude of Directory Assistance operators. Listening to them ask
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each other "What city please?" and then argueing about who belongs on the line
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is extremely humorous. Confusion reigns when you attempt to get them to look
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up a number. Some DA's have had this done so many times that they realize that
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this is a conference and will either hang up immediately or will threaten you
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with taking over your conference. Remember, only the conference operator can
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take over a conference, so most of these threats are inneffectual. When any of
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them give a hard time, just ask to speak to thier supevisor, as this usually
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adds even more confusion. Similar things can be done with with business
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offices, repair service ("sir, I'm getting all this cross talk on my line" "no,
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its my line." ad infinitum) telex ops, and other phone company personel. Also,
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computer compaines or other corporate bureaucracies have similar chaos
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potential. One interesting thing to try is to pose as a phone company employee
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for social engineering purposes. However, most phreaks fail to realize that
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"TSPS maintainence" or "Bell Security" gets a little too repitious and
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suspicion arousing due to their over-heavy use.
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Generally, for courtesy's sake, one should call people who generally expect
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to get weird calls at odd hours, and are often bored at their jobs. Radio
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station DJ's often enjoy this, as do hotel operators and bell boys. Going
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international often increases the fascination with conferences. Several hotel
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ops around the world expect and look forward to conferences calling them during
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the dull early morning hours, and the conferences sometimes place calls for
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them in appreciation. Military bases are another good site, as are unattended
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payphones. Sometimes people at random are called up. It often is impossible
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to convince people that they ARE getting a conference call, as they twist up
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some impossible theory to explain 15 chotic people speaking at once. Even
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President Reagen (2600 I-23 April 1984) and other "celebraties" have been
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attempted to be reached by conferences. Often telling their secretaries that
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this is a conference call can arouse their curiosity enough to come on line. A
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common statement is "You damn computer hackers are so smart to have figured
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this out." Little do they know how simple it is, and it also shows how people
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and the mass media constantly misidentify anything mildly out of the ordinary
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as the fault of computer's influence on people. (sorry about the side
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digression)
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Remember that when adding recordings or extenders to a conference that they
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generally will not hang up. Similarly, people added can't be forcably
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disconnected with out the conference operator's help, and can stay on as long
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as they want, monitoring or taking notes. Only way to rid a conference of
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these is to blast 2600 down the line, with the results predicted above (I
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ALWAYS get dropped by 2600 blasts) When adding "dangerous" people such as FBI
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agents or informants the use of three way calling by one of the conferees is
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generally more intelligent, as it permits the caller to forcably drop them.
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Many of these stunts mentioned are plain childish, rude, and unthoughtful to
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others. Many of these definately would count as harassment. Frequent
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resortation to these often arouses the suspicious curosity of Alliance ops.
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Continual use of these may end up in a general tightening up of security in
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Alliance, not due to fraudulent calls, but from complaints. Use in extreme
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moderation.
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>>>OTHER CONFERENCES
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====================
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The old method of conferencing by calling the operator and asking for a
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conference still works. This however is controlled physically by the operator,
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as it uses a cordboard. Three way calling of course is another conferencing
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option. Multi-line loops are rare, but do exist. Sometimes businesses conect
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several phone lines together to form a conference. One of the most famous was
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the ULCA one at 213-206-2810 to -2817 as last known. One up as of the writing
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of this article is at 602-976-0770 to -0777. Another conferencing system is
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City Conference in Oakland and San Francisco. Similar to this is a system
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called Phone-a-Friend in Worcester, MA at (617) 550-5000 (only reachable from
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within Worcester). I have also heard of others operated by Pacific Bell in
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California and other telco's elsewhere. These services should soon spread soon
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to more cities as local telco's search for more revenues. (what? you thought
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it was free?)
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Every once and a while confences are set up in the old historical phreaking
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mold on PBX switchboards or on telephone switching equipment by renegade
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linemen and the like. One of the most historic of these was the "2111"
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conference" which was arranged through an unused unused telex test-board trunk
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in a 4A switching machine in Vancouver Canada. For several months phone
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phreaks could MF via a blue box 604 (Vancouver's area code) then 2111 (code for
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telex testing board) to reach phreaks and other telcom hobbiests around the
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world. Sometimes conferences set up by this method are accessable via normal
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phone lines. These conferences, by their very nature of actual adjustment of
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switching equipment, are rare.
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Several companies offer alternate bridging services, otherwise known as
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conferences. These all claim they have higher quality than Alliance. They
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control the conference themselves "so you can just get down to business without
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worrying about details." You can ask them to leave, but then there is no one in
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control of the conference. Generally they offer smaller conferences then
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Alliance's 59 (Market Navagation's limit is 19) They all charge considerably
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more than AT&T (Market Navagation Inc. quoted a rate as $195 per hour for a 12
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person conference plus the cost of the dialed phone calls) You genenerally have
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to set up conferences ahead of time. They all will send a bill to your
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company, and some will allow the use of a credit card instead. Generally you
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have to book ahead of time. Examples of these independent firms are Darome
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Connection (203-797-1300), Market Navagation Inc (914-365-0123) and
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Telesession. The numbers are for setting up conferences, although you can
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social engineer them as well.
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>>>CONCLUSION
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=============
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Basically, conferenceing, even fraudulently, is one of the safest ways to get
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in contact with other telcom hobbiests, by its track record of busts. They are
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very few and far between. Several times Alliance operators have dropped in on
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conferences and carried on conversations with the participants. Much of the
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information in this article was picked up from these sources. Often one hear's
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the common comment of many telcom corporations that "they are using us as a tax
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writeoff," however, how long can they keep taking losses in this
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post-divestiture age of of telco competition. Expect in the near future to see
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other telcom companies such as ITT, MCI, and GTE Sprint get into the act, as
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|
conferences are really pretty cheap to set up and aren't that technicaly
|
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|
exotic. Telcom hobbiests can get together to pick each others brains for info,
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|
and starters can learn the ropes in the presence of several more experienced
|
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|
phreaks. Also, just normal socializing with people all over the country is
|
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|
fun, especiallly when you realize you problbly never would have never meet them
|
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|
otherwise, and probably never see. In ored to join in a conference try calling
|
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|
someone on it who has call waiting or tow phone lines, as he can relay to the
|
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|
controller that you want to be added. Conferenceing is all in all an excellent
|
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|
way to communicate with the telcom community at large, when in moderation.
|
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|
Use, don't abuse.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>========================================================== =<<
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