112 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
112 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
"Loops I've Known and Loved"
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No self-respecting Phone Phreak can go through life without knowing what a
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loop is, how to use one, and the types that are available. The loop is a great
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alternate communication medium that has many potential uses that haven't even
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been tapped yet. In order to explain what a loop is, it would be helpful if you
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would visualize two phone numbers (lines) just floating around in the Telco
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central office. Now, if you (and a friend perhaps) were to call these two
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numbers at the same time, POOOOFFFF!!!, you are now connected together. I hear
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what you're saying out there ..., "Big deal" or "Why should mother bell collect
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two MSU's (message units) for one lousy phone call!?" Well ... think again.
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Haven't you ever wanted someone to call you back, but were reluctant to give out
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your home phone number (like the last time you tried to get your friends'
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unlisted number from the business office)? Or how about a collect call to your
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friend waiting on a loop, who will gladly accept the charges? Or better yet,
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stumbling a loop that you discover has multi-user capability (for those
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late-night conference). Best of all is finding a non- supervised loop that
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doesn't charge any MSU's or tolls to one or both parties. Example: many moons
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ago, a loop affectionately known as 'The 332 Loop' was non-sup on one 'side'. I
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had my friend in California dial the free (non-sup) side, (212) 332 - 9906 and I
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dialed the side that charged, 332-9900. As you can see, I was charged one MSU,
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and my friend was charged zilch, for as long as we wished to talk!!!
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Ahhhh .... have I perked your intrest yet?If so, here is how to find a
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loop of your very own.First, do all of your loop searching at NIGHT!This is
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because the loops serve a genuine test function which Telco uses during the day.
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(We don't want to run into an irate lineman now, do we?) To find a loop, having
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two phone numbers is a definite plus. If not, get a friend to dial numbers at
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his location. Last resort, try dialing from two adjacent pay phones. Now, get
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your trusty white pages, and turn to the page where it lists Metro NY exchanges
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and the number of MSU's from your exchange. The idea is to get a loop that is
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only one MSU from your calling area so you don't go bankrupt trying to find a
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working one. So write down in a list all of these exchanges. The following are
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common loop endings (EXC stands for the exchange):
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Manhatten and The Bronx ---------- EXC - 9977 & EXC - 9979
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Brooklyn and Queens -------------- EXC - 9900 & EXC - 9906
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Armed with the preceding info, dial the tone side of a loop. This would be
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the 9906 or 9979 side.The best thing that could happen now is that you will be
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able to hear yourself, or friend through the loop connection. Eureka, you've
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found a loop!!! Unfortunately, this doesn't happen too often. Here are the
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more common possibilites:
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1. You can hear through the loop (not muted) but there is a 1/2 second click
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every 10 seconds that interrupts the audio. Good for backup use, but the
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%&%$%%! click is super annoying.
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2. One side of the loop is busy; try it again later.
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3. The tone disappears, but you cannot hear through it (the loop is muted,
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try again in a month or so).
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4. You get "The number you have reached" recording. No more loop in that
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exchange, go on to next.
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Most loops fall into catagory #3, but they do become unmuted from time to
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time. O&c% y%0<>[0;34;1m<31>[0;33;1m<31><1C>$!<21><><08>[0;34;1m<08><1C><><08>@<40><><EFBFBD> '6!:[0;33;1m<31><6D>8 8?>H#? things about step
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[0;32;1mswitching, you can, on a touch tone(R) phone, dial up a number and listen in
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the background for the switch level. Let's say you're dialing 941-0226. You
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won't hear it rotary dial those numbers, but you will hear another number or
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series of numbers in rotary step pulses. That's the selector we mentioned
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earlier. Let's say that after you dialed 941-0226, you heard a 5 being pulsed
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out. What does that mean? The selector is the decision-making part of the
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phone call. Different prefixes are stored in different levels in each central
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office. In this particular case, 941 happens to be stored in level 5 in
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whatever office you're calling from. There's no rhyme or reason to it; the
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selector level could be anything up to three digits in length.(If it was
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three digits, you'd hear each individual digit get pulsed out.) The toll
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center is usually level 1 and the operator is usually level 0.So what can be
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done with this information? If, after dialing 941-0226, you enter your own
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rotary five, you'll once again hear the click-click which is your cue for MF
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tones.
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While step offices have no special phone phreak trapping capabilities, they
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a just as dangerous as any other office as far as being traced. They have
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what's known as trap and trace. If a certain person (or computer) is begin
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harrassed, they'll put a trap plug on a particular line. If you happen to call
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into that number, you won't be able to hang up until the other party does.
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Some More Tricks
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In some step areas, local calls are limited to certain exchanges that have
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th same first digits as yours.For example, the 222 exchange can dial 235 and
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263 as local calls. But in order to call the 637 exchange, you must first dial
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a 1 which makes the call non-local. If you dial a 6, you'll get an immediate
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reorder. But somewhere between you and the 637 exchange, is the 231, 233, 235,
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and 239 exchanges. There's no 237. So you dial 2. Clunk-clunk. You dial 3.
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Click. And then you dial 7. Ching-clunk. It goes to the 637 exchange!
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Similarly, a 281 from he 287 exchange could wind up in 471. Why? Because
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these numbers are all coming from the same switching center. That just happens
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to be the way step works (and in some cases crossbar).If you could seize the
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222 trunk, you'd enter KP+25500+ST to reach 222-5500. To reach 637-5500, you'd
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enter KP+755000+ST.
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Then there's "step crashing"--if the number you're calling is 675-2888, and
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it's busy, you can dial 675-2887, and in between the last pulse of your rotary
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dial and the time it would start to ring, you can flash you switchhook
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extremely fast. If you time it right, you'll hear an enormous loud click at
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your end. Then, all of the sudden, you'll cut into your party's conversation.
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(This works bacause of step's realy system. One relay has determined that the
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line you dialed is open. Then, before a second relay sends along the ring
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pulse, you throw in a 1, which jumps the number you dialed up by one, and fools
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the system into conn FOR DARK PRIEST. THANKING YOU IN
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ADVANCE, AND ENJOY YOUR LOOPS.
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*******DARK PRIEST********
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*******DARK FOREST*********
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********DARK DAY***********
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******END*********
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