report that he had located a group of defective long-distance trunks, and to complain again
about the New Hampshire/Missouri WATS problem. Joe always liked Ma Bell's lines to be
clean and responsive. A suspicious switchman reported Joe to the security agents who
discovered that Joe had never had a long-distance call charged to his name.
Then the security agents learned that Joe was planning one of his phone trips to a local
switching office. The security people planted one of their agents in the switching office.
He posed as a student switchman and followed Joe around on a tour. He was extremely
friendly and helpful to Joe, leading him around the office by the arm. When the tour was
over he offered Joe a ride back to his apartment house. On the way he asked Joe -- one
tech man to another -- about "those blue boxers" he'd heard about. Joe talked about them
freely, talked about his blue box freely, and about all the other things he could do with
the phones.
The next day the phone-company security agents slapped a monitoring tape on Joe's line,
which eventually picked up an illegal call. Then they applied for the search warrant and
broke in.
In court Joe pleaded not guilty to possession of a blue box and theft of service. A
sympathetic judge reduced the charges to malicious mischief and found him guilty on that
count, sentenced him to two thirty-day sentences to be served concurrently and then
suspended the sentence on condition that Joe promise never to play with phones again. Joe
promised, but the phone company refused to restore his service. For two weeks after the
trial Joe could not be reached except through the pay phone at his apartment house, and
the landlord screened all calls for him.
Phone-phreak Carl managed to get through to Joe after the trial, and reported that Joe
sounded crushed by the whole affair.
"What I'm worried about," Carl told me, "is that Joe means it this time. The promise. That
he'll never phone-phreak again. That's what he told me, that he's given up phone-phreaking
for good. I mean his entire life. He says he knows they're going to be watching him so
closely for the rest of his life he'll never be able to make a move without going straight to
jail. He sounded very broken up by the whole experience of being in jail. It was awful to
hear him talk that way. I don't know. I hope maybe he had to sound that way. Over the
phone, you know."
He reports that the entire phone-phreak underground is up in arms over the phone
company's treatment of Joe. "All the while Joe had his hopes pinned on his application for
a phone-company job, they were stringing him along getting ready to bust him. That gets
me mad. Joe spent most of his time helping them out. The bastards. They think they can
use him as an example. All of sudden they're harassing us on the coast. Agents are jumping
up on our lines. They just busted ------'s mute yesterday and ripped out his lines. But no
matter what Joe does, I don't think we're going to take this lying down."
Two weeks later my phone rings and about eight phone phreaks in succession say hello from
about eight different places in the country, among them Carl, Ed, and Captain Crunch. A
nationwide phone-phreak conference line has been reestablished through a switching
machine in --------, with the cooperation of a disgruntled switchman.
"We have a special guest with us today," Carl tells me.
The next voice I hear is Joe's. He reports happily that he has just moved to a place called
Millington, Tennessee, fifteen miles outside of Memphis, where he has been hired as a
telephone-set repairman by a small independent phone company. Someday he hopes to be an
equipment troubleshooter.
"It's the kind of job I dreamed about. They found out about me from the publicity
surrounding the trial. Maybe Ma Bell did me a favor busting me. I'll have telephones in my
hands all day long."
"You know the expression, 'Don't get mad, get even'?" phone-phreak Carl asked me. "Well,
I think they're going to be very sorry about what they did to Joe and what they're trying
to do to us."
151.The History of British Phreaking by Lex Luthor
Note: The British post office, is the US equivalent of Ma Bell. In Britain, phreaking goes
back to the early fifties, when the technique of 'toll a drop back' was discovered. Toll a
was an exchange near St.Pauls which routed calls between London and nearby non-London
exchanges. The trick was to dial an unallocated number, and then depress the receiver-
rest for « second. This flashing initiated the 'clear forward' signal, leaving the caller with
an open line into the toll a exchange. They could then dial 018, which forwarded him to the
trunk exchange at that time, the first long distance exchange in Britain and follow it with
the code for the distant exchange to which he would be connected at no extra charge.
The signals needed to control the UK network today were published in the "Institution of
Post Office Engineers Journal" and reprinted in the Sunday times (15 Oct. 1972).
The signaling system they use: Signaling system No.3 uses pairs of frequencies selected
from 6 tones separated by 120hz. With that info, the phreaks made "bleepers" or as they
are called here in the US "blue box", but they do utilize different MF tones then the US,
thus, your US blue box that you smuggled into the UK will not work, unless you change the
frequencies.
In the early seventies, a simpler system based on different numbers of pulses with the
same frequency (2280hz) was used. For more info on that, try to get a hold of: Atkinson's
"Telephony and Systems Technology".
In the early days of British phreaking, the Cambridge university Titan computer was used
to record and circulate numbers found by the exhaustive dialing of local networks. These
numbers were used to create a chain of links from local exchange to local exchange across
the country, bypassing the trunk circuits. Because the internal routing codes in the UK
network are not the same as those dialed by the caller, the phreaks had to discover them
by 'probe and listen' techniques or more commonly known in the US -- scanning. What they
did was put in likely signals and listened to find out if they succeeded. The results of
scanning were circulated to other phreaks. Discovering each other took time at first, but
eventually the phreaks became organized. The "tap" of Britain was called "undercurrents"
which enabled British phreaks to share the info on new numbers, equipment etc.
To understand what the British phreaks did, think of the phone network in three layers of
lines: Local, trunk, and international. In the UK, subscriber trunk dialing (std), is the
mechanism which takes a call from the local lines and (legitimately) elevates it to a trunk
or international level. The UK phreaks figured that a call at trunk level can be routed
through any number of exchanges, provided that the right routing codes were found and
used correctly. They also had to discover how to get from local to trunk level either
without being charged (which they did with a bleeper box) or without using (std). Chaining
has already been mentioned but it requires long strings of digits and speech gets more and
more faint as the chain grows, just like it does when you stack trunks back and forth
across the US. The way the security reps snagged the phreaks was to put a simple
'printermeter' or as we call it: A pen register on the suspects line, which shows every digit
dialed from the subscribers line.
The British prefer to get onto the trunks rather than chaining. One way was to discover
where local calls use the trunks between neighboring exchanges, start a call and stay on
the trunk instead of returning to the local level on reaching the distant switch. This again
required exhaustive dialing and made more work for titan; it also revealed 'fiddles', which
were inserted by post office engineers.
What fiddling means is that the engineers rewired the exchanges for their own benefit.
The equipment is modified to give access to a trunk without being charged, an operation
which is pretty easy in step by step (SxS) electro-mechanical exchanges, which were
installed in Britain even in the 1970's (Note: I know of a back door into the Canadian
system on a 4A Co., so if you are on SxS or a 4A, try scanning 3 digit exchanges, i.e.: dial
999,998,997 etc. And listen for the beep-kerchink, if there are no 3 digit codes which
allow direct access to a tandem in your local exchange and bypasses the AMA so you won't
be billed, not have to blast 2600 every time you wish to box a call.
A famous British 'fiddler' revealed in the early 1970's worked by dialing 173. The caller
then added the trunk code of 1 and the subscribers local number. At that time, most
engineering test services began with 17X, so the engineers could hide their fiddles in the
nest of service wires. When security reps started searching, the fiddles were concealed by
tones signaling: 'Number unobtainable' or 'Equipment engaged' which switched off after a
delay. The necessary relays are small and easily hidden.
There was another side to phreaking in the UK in the sixties. Before STD was widespread,
many 'ordinary' people were driven to.
Occasional phreaking from sheer frustration at the inefficient operator controlled trunk
system. This came to a head during a strike about 1961 when operators could not be
reached. Nothing complicated was needed. Many operators had been in the habit of
repeating the codes as they dialed the requested numbers so people soon learnt the
numbers they called frequently. The only 'trick' was to know which exchanges could be
dialed through to pass on the trunk number. Callers also needed a pretty quiet place to do
it, since timing relative to clicks was important. The most famous trial of British phreaks
was called the old Baily trial. Which started on Oct. 3rd, 1973. What the phreaks did was
dial a spare number at a local call rate, but involving a trunk to another exchange then
they sent a 'clear forward' to their local exchange, indicating to it that the call was
finished; but the distant exchange doesn't realize because the caller's phone is still off
the hook. They now have an open line into the distant trunk exchange and sent to it a
'seize' signal: '1' which puts him onto its outgoing lines now, if they know the codes, the
world is open to them. All other exchanges trust his local exchange to handle the billing;
they just interpret the tones they hear. Meanwhile, the local exchange collects only for a
local call. The investigators discovered the phreaks holding a conference somewhere in
England surrounded by various phone equipment and bleeper boxes, also printouts listing
'secret' post office codes. (They probably got them from trashing?) The judge said:
"Some take to heroin, some take to telephones." for them phone phreaking was not a crime,
but a hobby to be shared with phellow enthusiasts and discussed with the post office
openly over dinner and by mail. Their approach and attitude to the worlds largest
computer, the global telephone system, was that of scientists conducting experiments or
programmers and engineers testing programs and systems. The judge appeared to agree,
and even asked them for phreaking codes to use from his local exchange! !
152.Bad as Shit by The Jolly Roger
Recently, a telephone fanatic in the northwest made an interesting discovery. He was
exploring the 804 area code (Virginia) and found out that the 840 exchange did something
strange.
In the vast majority of cases, in fact in all of the cases except one, he would get a
recording as if the exchange didn't exist. However, if he dialed 804-840 and four rather
predictable numbers, he got a ring!
After one or two rings, somebody picked up. Being experienced at this kind of thing, he
could tell that the call didn't "supe", that is, no charges were being incurred for calling
this number.
(Calls that get you to an error message, or a special operator, generally don't supervise.) A
female voice, with a hint of a Southern accent said, "Operator, can I help you?"
"Yes," he said, "What number have I reached?"
"What number did you dial, sir?"
He made up a number that was similar.
"I'm sorry that is not the number you reached." Click.
He was fascinated. What in the world was this? He knew he was going to call back, but
before he did, he tried some more experiments. He tried the 840 exchange in several
other area codes. In some, it came up as a valid exchange. In others, exactly the same
thing happened -- the same last four digits, the same Southern belle. Oddly enough, he
later noticed, the areas worked in seemed to travel in a beeline from Washington DC to
Pittsburgh, PA.
He called back from a payphone. "Operator, can I help you?"
"Yes, this is the phone company. I'm testing this line and we don't seem to have an