324 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
324 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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% Some ways to fuck up %
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% Ma Bell %
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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Well, my first attempt at writing a phreak file here. It might be pretty lame,
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but I'll list some 950 extendors for those that dare to use them (hehe.) Well,
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while you're at it, call these BBS's.
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Brainstorm (612)345-2815 Little America (507)289-8211 Ok, here we go:
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Phreaking (free-king). n. The art of using limited supplies of codes,
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systems, accounts, and boxes to insure the fact that you will not have to pay a
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dime of an expensive long distance call. There are many ways of doing this and
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some are listed here.
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1)Boxes. Boxing is the method of using electronical impulses or non- impulses
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to fool the phone company into thinking that the call had never been made or
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that there was no answer. Here are a few boxes and their function to you.
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Red Box: Simulates the noise of a quarter dropping into a payphone. Blue
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Box: Simulates the operator tone and gives you control of operator. Beige
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Box: Allows you to control your neighborhood. Purple Box: Reduces all long
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distance calls to local. Cheese Box: Destroys traces. Black
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Box:(famous)Makes the operator think the phone wasn't answered.
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All right, I can probably get you the plans for any of those boxes, contact
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me about it and I'll look.
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2)LDX Codes: The most popular type of phreaking. You simply get an extendor
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that can be local or an 800 number (watch out for LATA), and use it to access a
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code base. You will get a tone, and at that tone you use a touchtone phone, or
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even a modem, to enter the code. Then, after the code, you simply dial '1' and
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the number. Some lines, however, like 1-800-437-3478 will have you dial a '9'
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before the number. This is also an easy way to check for errors, and you can
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read why later on.
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Hear are some companies to be familiar with.
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1)Sprint- The same people who spent a billion dollars making your
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connections clearer spent another half billion on security... then switched to a
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950 (read about this later) and installed ANI. ANI, or Automatic Number
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Identification, will immediately "trace" the number to it's source. Therefor,
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with systems employing ANI, the person owning the account will see the number of
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the caller and callee, and the length of the call next to the amount charged for
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the call.
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2)MCI- MCI is the leading company for long distance today. Their numbers are
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everywhere. I'll list one or two of them later. It is incredibly easy to hack
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their codes, since there are many of them, but most numbers are under constant
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monitoring. You could go out and hack plenty of codes some night and have that
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be the only night that they work.
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3)Us Telecom- My personal favorite. They do have a 950, but as far as I know
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the codes are universal. ANI is NOT employed by Us Telecom, despite the popular
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rumor, so fear not. I am still seeking an 800 number for them, and I'm sure I'll
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find one soon.
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4)Metro- Incredibly common company. An absolute phreak out. They have shit
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for security and I don't know a singl person that has ever been busted for using
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one of them. They, also, I might list later.
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Well, those are the four major companies that this G-File will discuss a bit;
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phone phreaking with codes is the bulk of this G-File, so lets explore some more
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things you should know before we continue...
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1)ESS- Electronic Switching System. It is definately the most used system
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for phones used today. Most people wonder exactly what it does do, so here's a
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breif history/description: ESS has only recently been added to most areas of the
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country. If you live in places like Wyoming, Montana, and some other states in
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that area, you should know that ESS is not in service yet, you have Step by Step
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switching. It is far less sofisticated than ESS; ESS is the only system now that
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can support ANI. So if you live in areas controlled by Step by Step Switching,
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then phreak without fear for now... 800's are fairly safe for you. 800's are not
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safe with ESS, because ANI can immediately trace so you are busted. With 950
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extendors, however, ESS is employed with only a few, such as Skylines
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(950-1088).
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2)ANI- Automatic Number Identification. Phreakers bane. See the above
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section for some places where ANI and ESS are employed. Places using ANI are
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clearly spending alot of money on their lines. ANI is the one and only system
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that not only lists the callee, but also the caller. So if you are using Skyline
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or something, it will clearly show up that you used someone else code to call a
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number. Both numbers will be on file. Fortunatley, that evidence CANNOT show up
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in court, they would have to set up a trap for you, checking to see who's code
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was used and then setting up a trace to prove that you in fact used the code.
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3)PBX- Private Branch Exchange. Better known as a teleconference. And I can
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tell you that they are a trip! Although they aren't very easy to use, and most
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have 20 digit codes, they are worth it. Unfortunately, a normal type PBX cannot
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be used with a carrier to make a conference on modem, special PBX's are
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available that will let you do so, however. I don't have any yet but when I do I
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will have FUN!
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4)LATA- Local Access and Transport Area. LATA is employed for when you call
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an area in your area code and then find that you are billed not full but about
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3/4ths of the long distance rate. That way, even though you could assume that a
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"local" extendor would cost you nothing to call, it could cost you alot of
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money.
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5)CN/A- A hackers complete tool. It allows you, with a persons name and the
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general area that he lives in, identify his phone number. Example: Lets just say
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you met someone at a wild party and didn't get their phone number. A normal
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person would be left in the dark, but someone with knowledge of CN/A would just
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call (local prefix)-555-1212 and ask for any listings on (insert name.) This is
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useful to hackers because they could see a company like "Protovision" (this is a
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thing out of WarGames), call 555-1212, ask to be connected to that area codes
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information, ask for any listings for that number. If none come up, he simply
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asks for all of the prefixes and sets an auto carrier hunter (like WarGames
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Dialer ][) out on all the prefixes. When he checks in it will tell him all of
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the numbers with carriers attached and he can seek them out until he finds what
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he's looking for.
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All right, memorize those terms, they are important in the life of a
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"telecommunications hobbiest." Now that you know those, let us examine some
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other things called extendors...
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1)LDX- Long Distance Extendor. They are phone numbers rented out by Us
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Telecom, Sprint or whoever, that will let you make phone calls for a cheaper
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rate than AT&T. When you call these numbers, you will get some sort of tone that
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indicates that you should enter your code now. After that, you must dial in the
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number. These companies will use their switching systems to "switch" you from
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the extendor to the number you are calling. Then they will meter the length of
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the call and bill you for along their own rates rather than AT&T's. This way you
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won't have to go through the trouble of direct billing and that sort of stuff.
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Be warned! Even if you are extremely desperate, don't use one code for more than
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three weeks! By the time someone gets the bill they might set up a trap for that
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number and bill you directly. In other words, every time anyone makes a call
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from that number using that code they will switch them over to AT&T to pay their
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full rates. If that happens, consider yourself lucky that the person who's
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account you were using isn't pressing charges, though sometimes they will even
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after that. Now, LDX's come in a few forms...
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1)800's. Most 800's employ ANI, so it is dangerous unless you live in a
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part of the country listed above or are in a town with no local extendors. At
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that point you can probably tell that they aren't employing ESS yet so you need
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not worry about using it.
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2)True Locals- Most true locals include your area code and your prefix.
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They could be anywhere... for instance, I found an MCI extendor at the number
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(215)563-9818 the other day while scanning the area of my favorite BBS. The best
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way to discover a local extenor surely is one of two things: ask around till you
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find it, or, the best and seemingly most dangerous way, get an account with the
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company. If you never use it and/or destroy the number, you could find out the
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extendor and hack away.
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3)950's. Most people wince or blemish at the thought of using a 950
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extendor. Actually, a few are not as dangerous as they might seem. You can
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safely use some 950's, but usually check them out with one of your friends
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first, because you never know what could be running them. A few 950's will be
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listed later, and many of them go by the same pattern, so are easy to find out.
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After all this, you must have something to be able to tell all of your f
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friends about. This isn't much, but here are a few extendors to start you off
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with. With these in mind, you should have a successful start to using codes as a
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phreak.
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950-1033 950-1044 950-1088 1-800-437-3478 1-800-345-0008 1-800-547-6754
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565424 (none)
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473464 571-091 565426
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444670 -106 565489
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444737 -123 (that's it)
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392056 -127
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-------- -------- -------- -------------- -------------- --------------
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That should give you a small start to LDX Codes.
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Well, that should give you an idea for the beginning phreaker... this sort of
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guide should be distributed to anyone who needs it, feel free to leech... it's
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worth it. In the mean time, call these BBS's with a couple of those nice little
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phreaks you have their...
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Brainstorm (612)345-2815
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Little America (507)289-8211
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Missing Link (806)799-0016 (phreak BBS)
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Phreak Klass (215)673-6763 (phreak BBS)
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Private Sector (412)379-8630
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Later,
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The Traveler
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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% Some Way to fuck up Ma Bell: %
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% The Advanced Course %
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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Yes, it has returned quickly basically because I had nothing else to do. Be
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sure, before you start reading this that you have read the original Some Ways to
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Ftck up Ma Bell, or that you are very aquanted to terms such as ESS, LATA, PBX,
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SXS, XBAR, ANI, and CN/A. Also you must be familiar with the different ways that
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companies present their code sequences.
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All right, no breif review here... just hopping right in.
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1)Boxes, cont. According to the first G-File in this series, boxes are devices
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that make strange electrical impulses that can be used to confuse operators.
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Now, when you listen to your phone, it can make three nice basic tones. These
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tones are available to all, and were designed so they could be used by anyone.
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In army security, however, there is a fourth tone that a phone cannot make
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unless it is a designed military phone. In other words, you could call a high
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security computer, and it would require a different tone to even make te
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connection. Now, of course, this is where probably the most crucial box, known
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as the silver box, would come in.
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Another tone you must know at this time is Autovon. That is the basic system
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that allows the silver box to manipulate the army tones. This special service is
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the "trigger" (no pun intended) for the army's military computers. In order to
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use it, however, you must be standing by a touchtone phone, with your computer
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nearby. You dial the number (if your not phreaking it, stop reading this now)
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and wait. When you get the tone, you should have some sort of external button
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(different box makers have different ways of designing the outside of the boxes)
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to press. If the tones are matching, then you will pass through the security and
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will probably recieve a carrier or maybe another tone or code sequence. True
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hackers will keep going despite everything though... however, if you want to be
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a hacker, you are reading the wrong G-File.
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2)Codes, cont. Now, you can now be the basic code leecher. If you are taking
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this advanced section here seriously (i.e. not someone who looks down on me
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reading it to see how much old Trav knows) then from this point on thou shalt
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not leech codes off of BBS's. Code leechers are the lowest form of phreaker. The
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only instance you should code leech is when a friend of yours just hacked out an
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entire thousand codes on some service. Phreakers shouldn't ask for the codes,
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they should wait and see if they are granted to them or not. Phreakers don't say
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please. The say "hey, sure, I'll take some codes!" Otherwise, you have to
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realize this much: few dedicated phreakers are kind enough to post their codes
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for all to take as soon as they hack them. Most phreakers will wear them out,
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waiting until the person they are billing calls to gets his first phone bill...
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and then they post them. By that time, there could be a trap up for phreakers
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and you could get snagged. So you'll have to get your own codes. There are a
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couple of ways to do that...
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1)A phreak hacker: These useful programs are easily obtained. Usually a
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separate program is needed for every modem type, but what they do is all the
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same. The program will dial the number, and then start with the number you want
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it to start with, and end with another number you select. Along the way, it will
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pick up all the working codes by dialing some nonsense number like 111-111-1111.
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Then it will see if it gets a basic "incorrect code" or an "the number is not is
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service." If it is the former, then it won't record it; if it is the latter then
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it will save it on disk or print it out on printer.
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2)By Hand- Although many people will call me insane, I believe that this is
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the better way of hacking phreaks. The dialer could alert the computer or
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operator of someone hacking codes. If you remain fairly random with manual
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hacking you will probably get the same amount as before.
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All right, next on the hit list is another basic function of phreaking that
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wasn't mentioned in the last G-File... the real and proper use of a red box
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pitted against the huge guidence system called...
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1)ACTS- Automatic Coin Toll Service. ACTS is the main reason why we can't make
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free calls from payphones. You think of the payphone. It has a single slot the
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goes down the a small container for coins inside it that can be opened only with
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a special key. We all know this much: it isn't the weight of the coin inside the
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coin container the determines whether a coin has been deposited, it listens to
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the clinks inside. The next time you make a call from a pay phone, listen
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carefully to the sound of the coin being deposited. If you are inserting a
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quarter, you will hear three clicks before the coin lands in the coin container.
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With a dime, you will hear two. With a nickel, only one. There is a good reason
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for that, and it is this: The coins are going through a special weighted device
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that listens for clicks along the way. So if there is a series of clicks then,
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the phone will assume that you deposited that much money into it. Therefor, if
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you called someone who has a program like the classic "Cat's Meow", they could
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give you some change from their own side. But that isn't the point of this. The
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red box is. The red box can emulate the sound of a quarter inserting into a
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payphone. It is not as difficult as it might seem. It is merely hooked into the
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machine, and then, when a small catch is pulled, it makes that noise. Believe it
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or not, at an electronics- computer summer camp I went to, someone rigged a
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payphone there with a red box from the back of it; so if you knew about the
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lever there you could pull it and make free calls anywhere (and you should have
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seen the rest of the camp! Whew!). If you want the plans for a red box or the
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silver box noted above, I know I have my silver box plans right on hand here,
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and I'm sure I could dig up red box plans when they are asked for.
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The whole purpose of this was to give you an understanding of the way the
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payphone works every time you insert a quarter. May you never have to do it
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again!
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Now, this is a section about operatiing systems for the DECs.
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1)DEC- Digital Equiptment Corporation.
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These are a few operating system for the Digital Equiptmenre run on. If you
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easier to use.
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1)DCL-Digital Command Language. These are usually found on most VAX and VMS
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systems. The command language is basically made up of code sequences as an
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operating system.
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2)VMS- A DEC operating system run on a Vax Minicomputer.
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3)EDT- An editor found on many DEC systems that, to put it mildly, is far
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less than ideal.
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To find out more about DEC and it's operating systems, be prepared for the
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next one in this series! I only briefly mentioned it here because it is not an
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easy thing to learn about. So if your curiosity is really bugging you, then
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leave me mail and I'll write faster.
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Now, away from the DEC's. Lets take a nice look at another factor that in the
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near future might become another base for telecommunicatios...
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1)CCIS- Common Channel Interoffice Signaling. Some people might call it an
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intercom. But the basis of this is much more important than calling in a person
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from the next room. It can already be employed onto a sort of tele- conference
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type conversation. Because of the open channel, any number of people can be on
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the same line as long as they are on the same portal type. In the near future
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CCIS could grow into a major factor in telecommunications just for the clear
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teleconference channels it could open.
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Right now, CCIS is just that, a common chanel INTEROFFICE signaling system.
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Except for certain area where it can be employed across a couple houses in
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length, it seems to be staying there for now. Because you have to remember this
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much: you can dial into it, but not easily. They could have some sort of base
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number to call that anyone else could call into. That way anyone could be on
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conference. Then again, a PBX is a PRIVATE Branch Exchange, so it is far more
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versitile at the tioe being.
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On to bigger and better things for now... I think I covered just about
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everything I was supposed to cover in today, so I guess I'll shove off. Until ne
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Later,
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The Traveler
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Call The Works BBS - 1600+ Textfiles! - [914]/238-8195 - 300/1200 - Always Open
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