127 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
127 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
|
||
|
||
ESS: ORWELL'S PROPHECY
|
||
[2600 -- February 1984]
|
||
|
||
There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any
|
||
given moment. How often, or on what system, the Thought Police plugged in on
|
||
any individual wire was guesswork. It was even conceivable that they watched
|
||
everybody all the time. But at any rate they could plug in your wire whenever
|
||
they wanted to. You had to live--did live, from habit that became instict--in
|
||
the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in
|
||
darkness, every movement scrutinized.
|
||
From Nineteen Eighty-Four
|
||
|
||
ESS is the big brother of the Bell family. Its very name strikes fear and
|
||
apprehension into the hearts of most phreakers, and for a very good reason.
|
||
ESS (Electronic Switching System) knows the full story on every telephone
|
||
hooked into it. While it may be paranoid to say that all phreaking will come
|
||
to a screeching halt under ESS, it's certainly realistic to admit that any
|
||
phreak whose central office turns to ESS will have to ba a lot more careful.
|
||
Here's why.
|
||
|
||
With electronic switching, every single digit dialed is recorded. This is
|
||
useful not only for nailing phreaks but for settling billing disputes. In the
|
||
past, there has been no easy way for the phone company to show you what numbers
|
||
you dialed locally. If you protested long enough and loud enough, they might
|
||
have put a pen register on your line to record everything and prove it to you.
|
||
Under ESS, the actual printout (which will be dug out of a vault somewhere if
|
||
needed) shows every last digit dialed. Every 800 call, every call to directory
|
||
assistance, repair service, the operator, every rendition of the 1812 Overture,
|
||
everything! Here is an example of a typical printout, which shows time of
|
||
connect, length of connect, and number called.
|
||
|
||
DATE TIME LENGTH UNITS NUMBER
|
||
|
||
0603 1518 3 1 456-7890
|
||
0603 1525 5 3 345-6789
|
||
0603 1602 1 0 0000-411
|
||
0603 1603 1 0 800-555-1212
|
||
0603 1603 10 2.35* 212-345-6789
|
||
0603 1624 1 0 0000-000 (TSPS)
|
||
|
||
A Thousand calls to "800" will show up as just that--a thousand calls to
|
||
"800"! Every touch tone or pulse is kept track of and for most phreaks, this
|
||
in itself won't be very pretty.
|
||
|
||
Somewhere in the hallowed halls of 195 Broadway, a Traffic Engineer did an
|
||
exhaustive study of all 800 calls over the past few years, and reached the
|
||
following conclusions: (1) Legitimate calls to 800 numbers last an average of
|
||
3 minutes or less. Of the illegal (i.e phreakers) calls made via 800 lines,
|
||
more than 80% lasted 5 minutes or longer; (2) The average residential telephone
|
||
subscriber makes five such calls to an 800 number per month. Whenever
|
||
phreakers are being watched, that number was significantly higher. As a result
|
||
of this study, one feature of ESS is a daily log called the "800 Exceptional
|
||
Calling Report."
|
||
|
||
Under ESS, one simply does not place a 2600 hertz tone on the line, unless of
|
||
course, they want a telco security representative and a policeman at their door
|
||
within an hour! The new generics of ESS (the #5) now in production, with an
|
||
operating prototype in Geneva, Illinois, allow the system to silently detect
|
||
all "foreign" tones not available on the customer's phone. You have exactly
|
||
twelve buttons on your touch-tone (R) phone. ESS knows what they are, and you
|
||
had best not sound any other tones on the line, since the new #5 is programmed
|
||
to silently notify a human being in the central office, while continuing with
|
||
your call as though nothing were wrong! Someone will just punch a few keys on
|
||
their terminal, and the whole sordid story will be right in front of them, and
|
||
printed out for action by the security representatives as needed.
|
||
|
||
Tracing of calls for whatever reason (abusive calls, fraud calls, etc.) is
|
||
done by merely asking the computer right from a terminal in the security
|
||
department. With ESS, everqthing is right up front, nothing hidden or
|
||
concealed in electromechanical frames, etc. It's merely a software program!
|
||
And a program designed for ease in operation by the phone company. Call
|
||
tracing has become very sophisticated and immediate. There's no more running
|
||
in the frames and looking for long periods of time. ROM chips in computers
|
||
work fast, and that is what ESS is all about.
|
||
|
||
Phone phreaks are not the only reason for ESS, but it was one very important
|
||
one. The first and foremost reason for ESS is to provide the phone company
|
||
with better control on billing and equipment records, faster handling of calls
|
||
(i.e. less equipment tied up in the office at any one time), and to help
|
||
agencies such as the FBI keep better account of who was calling who from where,
|
||
etc. When the FBI finds out that someone whose calls they want to trace is on
|
||
a ESS exchange, they are thrilled because it's so much easier for them then.
|
||
|
||
The United States won't be 100% ESS until sometime in the mid 1990's. But in
|
||
real practice, all phone offices in almost every city are getting some of the
|
||
most basic modifications brought about by ESS. "911" service is an ESS
|
||
function. So is ANI (Automatic Number Identification) on long distance calls.
|
||
"Dial tone first" pay phones are also an ESS function. None of these things
|
||
were available prior to ESS. The amount of pure fraud calling via bogus credit
|
||
card, third number billing, etc. on Bell's lines led to the decision to rapidly
|
||
install the ANI, for example, even if the rest of the ESS was several years
|
||
away in some cases.
|
||
|
||
Depending on how you choose to look at the whole concept of ESS, it can be
|
||
either one of the most advantageous innovations of all time or one of the
|
||
scariest. The system is good for consumers in that it can take a lot of
|
||
activity and do lots of things that older systems could never do. Features
|
||
such as direct dialing overseas, call forwarding (both of which open up new
|
||
worlds of phreaking which we'll explore in later issues), and call holding are
|
||
steps forward, without question. But at the same time, what do all of the
|
||
nasty implications mentioned further back mean to the average person on the
|
||
sidewalk? The system is perfectly capable of monitoring anyone, not just phone
|
||
phreaks! What would happen if the nice friendly government we have somehow got
|
||
overthrown and a mean nasty one took its place? With ESS, they wouldn't have
|
||
to do too much work, just come up with some new software. Imagine a phone
|
||
system that could tell authorities how many calls you placed to certain types
|
||
of people, i.e. blacks, communists, laundromat service employees... ESS could
|
||
do it, if so programmed.
|
||
|
||
[Courtesy of BIOC Agent 003 & Sherwood Forest ][ -- (914) 359-1517]
|
||
f
|
||
|
||
|
||
-= Courtesy of The Celestial Woodlands =-
|
||
|
||
|
||
-= Courtesy of The Celestial Woodlands =-
|
||
|
||
[G-File]:[4]:[Private G-Files]:[?/Help]: P
|
||
|
||
[0;1m
|
||
Leeched off of The Alliance (612) 490/0025
|
||
Press any key to continue.
|
||
|