241 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
241 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B/ B/O/B
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B/O/B B/O/B
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B/O/B The Boys of Black Present B/O/B
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B/O/B B/O/B
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B/O/B How to Raid Your Local Bell Telephone Repair Station B/O/B
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B/O/B B/O/B
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B/O/B Written by ZeroPage November, 1989 B/O/B
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B/O/B B/O/B
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B/O/B Call the BOB UNIX at (214) 760-7380 B/O/B
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B/O/B B/O/B
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B/O/B To Login type: UUCP B/O/B
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B/O/B Then at the $ prompt type: cd ... B/O/B
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B/O/B Then type: BBS or CHAT B/O/B
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B/O/B B/O/B
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B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B B/O/B/ B/O/B
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Look for my next file; How to Raid Your Local Central Office.
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The first step in making a raid on any Bell office is finding its location.
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Generally, the bigger the metropolitan area, the more repair stations available
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for the picking. Repair stations are usually situated within or near
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residentia
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l areas. If you don't know where any are, here are two ways to find out.
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1st: Call your Bell service representative and tell them that you are late
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paying your bill, and you would like to know where to go to pay it
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in person. Take down the address.
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2nd: Drive around in neighborhoods until you find one.
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(Surprisingly, this works, I know of at least 5 I have found this way.)
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Once you have a location or address, you must determine if it is a CO or
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repair station. This is fairly simple. The following are the symptoms
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for each.
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Attributes for a CO (Central Office)
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1. Is usually 2 stories in heighth.
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2. Generally has a weird shape, resembling an inverted L atop another.
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3. If you peer within the windows you will see rows of switching equipment.
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4. Near the door entrance is a security keypad and doorbell.
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(If you feel you have found a CO you will just have to wait for my next
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file.)
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Attributes for a Repair Station
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1. Small one story building.
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2. Generally has a rectangular shape. (Longer than is wide.)
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3. Extended behind it is some form of fence enclosing a parking area.
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4. Often a large car port behind the building.
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5. 15-30 Bell Vans, Cars, and Trucks.
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Once you have found a suitable repair station you must prepare yourself.
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The following is a list of equipment I have found to be quite useful.
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Equipment:
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Pair of gloves. (This is a must.)
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Snug, dark clothing. (Be sure your clothes are well
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fitted, loose garments tend
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to get snagged on barbed-wire
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fences.)
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Book Bag.
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Small flashlight.
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Crowbar or tire tool.
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Walkie-Talkies (Optional, but nice to have.)
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Bolt Cutters (O (Optional)
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The gloves are obvious, you do not want your prints spread all over the nation.
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Be sure to wear well fitting clothes, blue jeans and a dark t-shirt. Most of
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the time you will be jumping a barbed wire fence, and it makes it a LOT easier.
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The book bag is useful to put things in. Once inside you will find all sorts
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of manuals and paper-stuff that can get quite awkward to carry. Put it in here.
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One nice thing to go for are roll-a-dex and other phone-pads, they usually
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just leave these on their desks and they contain lots of good info.
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A flashlight is useful for seeing in the dark. Be sure not to point it at
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any windows.
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Crowbar or tire tools. Sometimes the doors to the building are locked.
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That's real easy to defeat with a crowbar. Either jimmy the lock or smash
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the window. Use your discretion.
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Walkie-talkies are useful if you and your partner are going to be in seperate
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parts of the office, letting each know whats going on is quite important.
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Bolt cutters are good for cutting the lock on the gates, if you do this,
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you can walk or drive your car right in, then shut the gate and no one
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will know. Also, if you are going to be carrying heavy equipment out
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(such as FAX machines, or Computers) it is much easier to cut the lock
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on the gate than it is to drop the equipment over it.
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Wire cutters are good because a lot of the time the fence surrounding the
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place is chain link, just cut a hole near a bush. Sometimes however
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the fence is made of brick. So that won't work all the time.
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How to Get In:
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Wait until 1am some night, (by then all the employees have gone home and
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most of the neighbors have gone to sleep) and either walk or drive to
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the station. I suggest you drive. When you get there park the car down the
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street and walk the rest of the way. There are 4 ways you can actually get
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into the station, here they are.
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1. Throw the stuff over the fence and then climb it.
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2. Hide in a bush and cut a hole in the fence and then go through.
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3. Cut the lock on the gate, open it, go in, and close it.
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4. Throw the stuff over the fence and crawl in under the gate.
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(A lot of the time the clearence between the bottom of the fence and
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the ground is enough to let even the fattest of criminals get in this
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way.)
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Once you are inside the fenced area, here is what to do.
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What to do once inside:
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1st: If the primary purpose for your visit is to get into the trucks,
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do this. Obviously, check all the doors and windows. Be sure
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to make sure the vehicles do not have alarms, I have seen this
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rarely, but I have seen it. On the trucks all the doors are locked
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by a single lock, merely cut it off with the bolt cutters and turn
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the lever, and all the doors will unlock. The lock is located on
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the upper back, left or right side.
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Inside you can usually find handsets (beige boxes), phones, test sets.
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(And I mean the NICE kind) and other assorted odds and eds. The
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GOOD stuff is inside the building.
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2nd: If you are going for the o.
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You will be facing the back of the office, and will see anywhere
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from 3 to 5 doors. Most of these are unlocked, but I'm sure some
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stations do lock them.
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Each room in the station has an exiting door, so that is why there
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are so many. Check each door and if you find one unlocked open it and
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go in. Once you get in look at the door and decide if you think it
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had an alarm on it, if it does, get out. However, a have NEVER
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scene an alarm in a bell station. If the door happens to be locked
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try prying it with the crowbar, if that doesn't work you can either
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smash the glass (which you will have to do in most cases if you can't
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jimmy it, OR, if you are lucky, the room you want to get in to
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MIGHT be the one that is interconnected with another, which I will
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explain in a moment.) Here is what you might find behind the
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respective doors:
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1. Store Room
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In this room is contained extra equipment.
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I have found manuals, mini-tv's, radio's, first-aid kits,
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gloves, helmets, jumpsuits, phone lines, etc, just about
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any Bell odd and end, in the store rooms.
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2. Break Room
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This is the break room, they ALWAYS have a coke-machine
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and a coffee-machine in there. I usually have worked
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up a sewat by then, so what I do is this: They have a coffee
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can with change in it, they are supposed to put a dime in
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everytime they get coffee. I just take the change and put
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50 cents in the coke machine and take it easy for a few
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minutes. There is almost always nothing of interest
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in this room.
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3. TTY & Printer Room
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This is a small room that contains a TTY and Printer (a larger
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version of the TTY) these were both made in about the 1800's
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and are too outdated for any phreaker/hacker use, however
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sometimes the printer is connected to a damn-nice modem.
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4. Work Office
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This is where they come for assignment, there are desks
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in here, get the roll-a-dexes! There arew DOZENS of manuals
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explaining everythings from COSMOS to USOC. (Universal
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Service Order Code). They also have portable metal
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lockers here, they are easy to bust into and can contain
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anything.
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5. Bathroom
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You can usually get into here from the break room. However
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there is ANOTHER door at the other end, somY{times the put
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an easily movable locker in front of it. The other door
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goes to the MAIN office (the one that is usually ALWAYS
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locked)
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6. MAIN Office.
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This is the playroom. Here is what you can get from here.
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FAX Machines (If you can carr1.x it, TAKE IT, I did.)
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VCR's - TV's
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IBM Computers
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Printers (The normal kind)
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PASSWORDS!!!
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And, best of all, and what I am using to create this file;
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Zenith supersPORT Laptop computer.
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(Check this out)
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Fully portable, 640k. Backlit LCD, 2 3.5 drives, ram disk,
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CGA, internal HAYES 2400 baud modem, FULL size screen,
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I hate those piece of shit with 10 columns and 4 lines
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(Radio Shit, you SUCK)
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Anyway, they are damn nice, fully IBM compatible, and
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I *love* mine. They usually have 2 or 3 of these, too.
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So you and your friend dont have to fight over it.
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Take any of this stuff you want. A word about the passwords.
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The passwords are contained in A. manuals sitting next
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to the computers, B. on the system software.
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So, grab the manuals sitting near the computers, grab the
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computer (hope the software is in it), or just grab the
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software (check in the computer)
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If it is on disk, it is contained within a script file
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(sorry commodore, IBM) load it up on an IBM, (disconnect)
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the phone, (so it wont dial out), and copy down everything
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it dodes for later user. It will dial the particular
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computers access number, (COSMOS or LMOS) and then enter
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the passwords. Usually via MICROLINK II.
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Once you've got your goodies, how to get out.
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If you cut the lock on the gate, go out through the gate.
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If you cut a hole in the fence, go through it.
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If you jumped over, let a friend go over first, then hand it over.
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Well, I hope this has been an informative tutorial, those Zenith
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Laptops are the ULTIMATE hacking machines, believe me. These are
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tried and true methods here, I use them, I know they work.
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Raiding a station is merely common sense and the lack of Bell ingenuity.
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You would not believe how simple it is. One place was down the road
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from a Police Station, I was in it for 3 hours, did I get caught? Hell no.
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Look for my next file, Raiding your Local CO, and how you can gain
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new computers, phone lines, and other phun phone stuff for free.
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B/O/B - 1989
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