236 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
236 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Anarchist Phone Pranks: Vol III.
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"Special Operator #337, may I help you please?"
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Written by: The 0mega & Electronic Rebel 04/06/86
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Introduction:
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Volume III at last! Well, this one will be the most fun to write, and
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will probably prove most useful to you. Fun is fun, and revenge is sweet, but
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there's more to pranking than you may realize. If you're an experienced
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cranker, then by the end of this article, you should realize that you can do
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alot with that gift you have of Bullshitting people!
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Before I go any further, I have to acknowledge Electronic Rebel's uncanny
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skill. He's given birth to most of these scams, and is more resourceful,
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verbally adept, and knowledgable than anyone I have ever met...a true Master.
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Now, down to business. . .
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To quote the Metallian: "There are MANY, MANY absolutely stupid people in
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this world...that will believe anything if you sound professional, which is
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always the key..." I cannot emphasize that enough. Feel free to experiment
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with scams; what people don't know, they won't expect, especially if you catch
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them off guard. People are so unaware, you can get away with anything (as
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you'll soon see). If you sound like you know what you are talking about, and
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that you have the situation under control, everything will work smoothly.
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The Birth of an Idea:
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One particular trick Rebel came up with for screwing with people's minds
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was the 'Operator' trick. For some reason, people have deep-seated phobia's
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towards operators. Perhaps because they have 'unseen' powers, and because
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they
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are apart of something as mysterious and generally misunderstood as 'The Phone
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Company'. Whatever the reason, ignorance and that fear play a part of the
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'Operator' scam, when people are abruptly confronted.
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Basically, in it's unperfected form, the scam went like this - Rebel
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would call someone at random, and when they answered, he would say:
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"Special Operator #337, may I help you please?" as if they had called him!
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People immediately fell in the trap. Dazed, they would respond with,
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"Huh? I didn't call the operator...You called me." Confusion!
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"I didn't call you. Are you sure you didn't call the operator, or that your
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line wasn't forwarded to me?" he would ask.
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"No, I'm sure."
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"Hmmm, well, we have been having problems with the lines. It's possible a
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line was crossed..." Many times, people would agree with you, saying how the
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had noticed bad connections and 'wierd things'. You know the phone co.
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They're
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always having probs!
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Usually, it ended here. He would tell the person that he would arrange
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for GTE to come over and check the lines and repair them if necessary, "We'll
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send over Chris So-and-so tomorrow between 1:00 and 4:00 PM" (I believe by law
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phone co. personell have to identify themselves to you), and they would thank
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him. Of course, no one ever came. And that was the end of the gag.
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Then, it started taking shape. One time, we told a guy GTE would gladly
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check and repair the lines. He was a little hesitant, until we told him there
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would be no charge. So then, we called up GTE, and told them we were him, and
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we wanted a second phone line put in ($120 installation, $35 monthly!) and to
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send a van over. Well, they wouldn't quite do anything without a driver's
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license for verification. So, we called the dude back, and told him we needed
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his driver's license for the records. A bit of a lame excuse, but it worked,
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so we called GTE back and got someone different than who we had last talked
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to,
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and got 'em to send over the repairman! I can just imagine them putting in
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the
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line, and the dude thinking they're repairing it! "That'll be $120 please!"
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Yup!
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The Plot Thickens:
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About that time, we were looking for some modem lines. "The school
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district's computer number would be nice to have around the end of the
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quarter," we thought, and it was a number no one had yet. The passwords and
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account names were easy enough to get, and we already had them. What better
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way to get the school's number (or any number, really!) than to bullshit the
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idiots who answer the phone at school with this scam, and see how far we could
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get! Their IQ's weren't much higher than common household plants.
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We formulated the perfect scam. Then, we set up Ascii Express on
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Vision's
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][+, and enabled key-clicks on (this really makes it more realistic!) and
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turned on one of those big old fans (like the kind they have in big, stuffy,
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GTE offices). We even had an old filing cabinet handy where we could
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occaisionally pull drawers in and out to make it sound more office-like. It
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would sound just like an operator. Then, we called a local school and
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started.
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<RING>...<RING>...<RING>
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[someone picked up the phone...]
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Rebel: Special Operator #337, may I help you please?
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Woman: Huh? I didn't call the operator.
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Rebel: Are you sure? I just received your call.
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Woman: No, really, I didn't call you.
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Rebel: Hmmm...it could be line problems. They've been getting
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crossed recently. Lemme check something here...
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[He types a few things on the keyboard, click, click, click...]
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Rebel: Ok, it's coming up on the screen. Your number is 805-xxx-xxxx?
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And, you're such-and-such High School, is this right?
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Woman: Yah. That's right.
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Rebel: Ok, hold on a sec...
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[He types a little bit more...]
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Rebel: Hmmm...Ok, I see we've been getting some complaints in your area of
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line quality problems, and complaints of crossed lines. Mostly,
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the problem has been associated with corporations and companies,
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especially ones with computer lines. Apparently, those data lines
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are really causing trouble for the voice lines and our equiptment.
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Do you have any computer lines going in or out of your school?
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Woman: Uh, yes we do. For attendance and grades, you know. Yah, I've
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noticed the lines getting bad, too.
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Rebel: I see... [pauses a little bit]
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Well, is it possible you could give us the numbers to those lines
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so we can do line quality checks, and determine whether or not
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we should send someone over?
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[Unfortunately, she didn't know any, really. She gave the phone
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numbers of the school lines that were receiving and sending data
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to and from the main co. that actually did the processing. But,
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she was completely ignorant; if she had known the number we
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were looking for, she would have given it to us immediately.]
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Rebel: Ok, also, could you give us the numbers to any other outside
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computers or businesses you deal with?
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[She was more than glad to. She gave us the numbers to the other
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schools in the area which exchanged info back and forth,
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as well as the voice number to Central Coast Computing - the firm
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that actually processed and stored data for the school district
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- 3 high schools, 1 city college, 3 or 4 junior highs...Central Coast
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was a definite lead.]
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Rebel: Ok, thankyou. <CLICK>.
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Then, we called Central Coast up, told 'em Rebel was the operator, and
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the
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whole spiel of what happened at the High School, and that we were given their
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number in an effort to track down the line problems...So, we asked the woman
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there for the computer lines. She was completely clueless, and so, she
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transferred us to a Technician (they actually have a technician on duty 24
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hrs!). We gave him the story, and he didn't quite buy it. Instead of giving
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us the phone number, he gave us the circuit number! What a bastard! He said
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he wanted to get back to Rebel later, so Rebel told him to call 611 - phone
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repair - and ask for Operator #337. That, was of course, totally bogus, but
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it
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got us off the hook.
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We didn't get what we were looking for exactly, but we got pretty damn
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close. At least it proved we could get almost anything with that scam alone.
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Infact, you could really do alot with it! I plan to expand on it a little
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later.
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Another Use for the Operator Scam:
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One day, I got a call from the head guy at the local GTE central office.
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I
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pretty much freaked out at first, because I thought he was a Bell Security
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Goon. The last person I expected to get a call from was someone at GTE,
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especially an official. He told me his name and who he was and that when they
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printed the GTE directory (of employees and the central offices) they had
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transposed a digit in his office phone number, and instead, ended up using my
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voice phone! I was pretty relieved to find that this was the reason he had
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called. He told me they were sending out inter-office memo's with the correct
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phone number, and that he was sorry for the inconvenience if people were
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calling me by mistake trying to get GTE. This would continue a while until
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everyone had gotten the correction. No prob, I said. I'll just give 'em your
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number.
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I got a few calls a day from people all over the country wanting to talk
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to this guy, and after a while it got kinda upsetting. Especially when they
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woke me up at 9:00 in the morning.
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It wasn't until a little later I realized how lucky I was that my number
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should be almost exactly the same as his, and that this whole unfortunate
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incident should befall me.
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This was my chance to become a 'real' operator and have some fun with
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GTE.
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These guys usually called at around the same time each day, and I was almost
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psychic at figuring out if it was GTE or someone else. "Oh, it's 4:00,
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that'll
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be GTE calling."
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So, one day, I just answered "Special operator #337, may I help you
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please?" The guy was completely stunned, and didn't say anything for a few
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seconds. I repeated it.
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"Uh, yes, I'm calling the GTE Central Office at 805-xxx-xxxx."
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I quickly moved over to my keyboard and started pounding away.
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"Ok, you're trying to reach so-and-so (the guy's name)?"
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"Yes."
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"Ok, sir, his number has been changed to 805-xxx-xxxx. His line
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is busy right now, though."
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"Ok, thanks, I'll try again later." <CLICK>.
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Heh, Heh! To think that I could manipulate GTE employees so easily was
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pretty great. I considered getting acoustic couplers (like at Radio Shack or
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something), so when some other GTE guy called, I could give him the new
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number,
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dial it with my modem line (my second phone line is usually dedicated to
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data),
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tell 'em I was the operator connecting a call, and acoustically couple both my
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phones together, making it appear as though I had actually connected the two!
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Then, I could listen to their conversations, record 'em with my handy phone
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taps, and even interrupt them or disconnect them at will! Infact, I may just
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do that.
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It might be interesting to impersonate a Lineman next...I know a guy
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who's
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had some success at getting Phone Co. info as a Lineman...
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Yah, if you put your mind to it, you can do just about anything by phone.
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Give it a try. And, if you have any success, let us know at Infinity's
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Edge...805/683-2725.
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This has been a Krackartists' Presentation.
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