I guess it's been about a decade (crazy!) but there were quite a few legit and really knowledgeable phreaks doing interesting things on the binary revolution forums (looks like binrev.com's still around!). Back when I would lurk, there were a lot of novel things going on, e.g. with VOIP. spoofing caller ID and calling yourself to extract the telco's caller ID data was one I remember. War-dialing and collecting interesting numbers was also big.
Obviously there is a nostalgia for the blue-boxing days, which most of us have only ever read about. And of course that was never really about free calls (you can place a free call with a $2 headset and pair of bed-of-nails clips on any block in america), and I think the classic esquire piece communicates that pretty well.
My obsession with phone phreaking in the 90s was because it was the medium by which we accessed the world. There was a wire that ran into my house whereby I could speak to anyone or dial into anywhere. It was attached to a phone that itself could be taken apart and investigated.
Couple these facts with what was then the only resource for people wanting to know more for free: text files. The community surrounding 2600, Phrack, and countless other zines lost to the ages. It created a sense of ability to access all points along this route of communication.
I was young and stupid, and I wanted to know more about the technology behind what I was using. The presentation of text files help me consume that information easily, because they were in essence written by people like me for me.
When dial up faded out, and I grew older, technology was just a utility to make a paycheck. I shifted more focus on development, because phreaking/hacking didn't pay my bills. I think that generation just grew up and got cellphones. Then there was a cellphone phreaking period. It's still there but I feel the scene has gone far more underground, or concentrated its efforts on jail breaking.
I think we'll see a resurgence of hacking/phreaking soon, since devices are becoming cheaper and more accessible to children.
This is what kills most adventures in hacking. And I think you're right, we're already seeing a resurgence in that burner cellphones are already becoming commonplace, although a lot of that is in the blackmarket and sadly being used for criminal activity than just to satiate curiosity.
An old friend of mine got a visit by AT&T technicians when they detected funny activity on his dad's line and I think he had to pay a $100 fine or something. Today, if he was doing the same things, he likely would be in jail. The legal atmosphere has turned toward disproportionate punishment so much so that the only people exploring the wireless field, by and large, are those who are dodging jail time to begin with.
I think the Raspberry Pi and Arduino field may be more enticing for young people due to their hacker-friendly nature and I feel wireless mesh technology may be where the future of communications hacking will be.
> An old friend of mine got a visit by AT&T technicians when they detected funny activity on his dad's line and I think he had to pay a $100 fine or something.
Sounds familiar.
I got busted for phreaking in 1972. Pled no contest, paid a $450 lawyer's fee, $150 fine, and $25 restitution to AT&T.
Afterward, the AT&T investigators took me out to lunch at my favorite Chinese restaurant. No, they didn't try to get me to name other notorious phreaks so they could go after them. They seemed to have genuinely felt bad that the whole legal apparatus had to get involved.
They sound like a bunch of stand up guys. My, how times have changed.
In a sad way, all the TOS/EULA/Contracts and other legal mumbo jumbo we sign away our rights with are just more nails in the coffin of free expression and exploration. Now, I can understand companies get upset if you take more than a fair share of services without paying for it, but we don't really get a fair share in the first place. And if you break the TOS (provided it hasn't changed since you signed up), it's fair to lose the service, but not your freedom.
This is a big concern for me. I think we're really hitting kids/teens too hard for hacking. I'll be chatting a bit about this on Techendo this week. I'm not sure I know what's best, or how to deal with malicious vs. non-malicious hacking. B&E is B&E no matter if they broke in and left, or just broke in and stole things, right?
Define "breaking". That's the key here, how does copying something without doing damage to the system (I.E. deleting files, leaving backdoors etc...) be treated the same as, let's say you walk into an unlocked office, stick an open folder's worth of files into a copy machine (also located in the office, I.E. cp, mv) and leave without taking the original folder's contents.
At worse, it could be trespass since entering is not disputed, but then the website/portal/office or what have you, should clearly mark which areas are verboten to unauthorized personnel and what exactly "unauthorized" means.
Does "unauthorized" mean you don't have any permission to view or copy at all?
Does it mean, you have permission to view, but not copy?
Does it mean you have permission to copy, but not a whole lot at the same time?
Does it mean you can copy to your heart's desire, but not redistribute?
Does it mean you can redistribute, but not edit?
Breaking and entering isn't applicable as-is to the virtual world. Law makers need a completely different mindset to approach information security.
I remember in the 80's the only "phreaking" that I knew how to do with our local bell system was to go to a pay phone and dial 258 and the last 4 digits of the pay phones phone number, and hanging up 3 times would make the switch call you back. I remember being fascinated by this and wanting to learn more. The trick stopped working shortly after and I never did learn anything else.
The way pay phones used to work (and probably still work, when you can find one) was you dropped the coins in the slot, and they landed in what is known as the escrow hopper. Once you paid for the first three minutes, the call would go through. If the distant party answered, a pulse would be sent down the line emptying the escrow hopper into the lock box at the base of the phone. If not, you could hang up, and a pulse would come down the line dumping the escrow hopper into the coin return. It was a matter of the pulse's polarity.
If you could gain access to a pay phone's phone connection, you could splice in a simple circuit that would allow coin return signals to go through unmodified but would invert coin collect signals, thereby always returning your coins.
Of course, if you could tap into a pay phone line, you might notice that grounding one side of the line produced a dial tone, enabling you to make free local calls. Long distance was a less trivial problem, since the operator would come on and ask for more money, verified by listening to gong sounds (later beeps) that the phone would send when coins were inserted. An obvious solution was to play a tape loop of a quarter being inserted enough times to represent the required payment. Later, this came to be known as Red Boxing, the Red Box being an electronic circuit that replaced the tape loop, emitting the desired number of beeps to represent whatever sum was due.
They're in San Francisco building a phone company.
Seriously, we at 2600hz continue to be heavily influenced by the counterculture; the ever-inquisitive minds attracted to the largest network the world had ever seen.
To think that the first transatlantic cable was laid in 1957. We've come even further from "what hath god wrought", but it's only getting crazier each day.
The phone phreaks didn't go away, they're all over the world tinkering away.
You're both correct, but Josh2600 was obviously referring to phone cables, not telegraph cables.
"TAT-1 (Transatlantic No. 1) was the first submarine transatlantic telephone cable system. It was laid between Gallanach Bay, near Oban, Scotland and Clarenville, Newfoundland between 1955 and 1956."
"The first transatlantic telegraph cable had been laid in 1858. It only operated for a month, but was replaced with a successful connection in 1866. A radio-based transatlantic telephone service was started in 1927. Although a telephone cable was discussed at that time, it was not practical until a number of technological advances arrived in the 1940s."
I'm actually just finishing "How the world was One" by Arthur C. Clarke. It's an absolutely fascinating look at undersea cabling.
So in 1858, the wire that was laid across the Atlantic by Cyrus W. Field was essentially just that, not a cable at all. It was a few strands of copper coated in gutta-percha, and it was destroyed by an overzealous engineer jamming WAY too much voltage into the wire (he would later lose his job to Lord Kelvin of Degrees Kelvin fame).
In 1865 they attempted to lay the cable again, but the cable snapped during the trip. It would snap 3 more times before they would finally connect Europe to North America. The Times of London had an amazing quote from the 1858 endeavor:
"The Atlantic is dried up, and we become in reality as well as in wish one country.... The Atlantic Telegraph has half undone the Declaration of 1776, and has gone far to make us once again, in spite of ourselves, one people...."
On another really interesting point: there were no telephone cables crossing the atlantic until 1957. So how did folks make calls to Europe? The answer was the Heaviside layer of the atmosphere and radio transmissions. Yes up until 1957, all calls to Europe were made by bouncing waves off of the ionosphere.
I have a stack of "Tap" newsletters from the 80's. Tap was the forerunner of 2600... A combination of tidbits of information on blue boxing, bbses, DARPANET hacking, unix privilege escalation vulnerabilities... Along with information about recreational drugs, guns, surviving the upcoming nuclear war that was prophesied by Nostradamus, avoiding paying taxes... A crazy mix of topics. I loved reading them. They were transmissions of secret knowledge.
Wait, seriously!?!! You're Minor Threat!!?? Holy crap, if you had any idea how many hours I spent war-dialing with ToneLoc back in the day... oh, wait, you probably do have a pretty good idea. LOL.
Me and a few buddies got pretty deep into this stuff for a while in the mid to late 90's. So much that we would load my old 486 laptop in the car, take a 50' long phone extension cable and drive out to a COCOT in a rural area in the wee hours of the morning, and "beige box" off of the COCOT, sitting in the car 50' or so away. Our thinking was that a passing (police) car wouldn't notice the wire laying on the ground and that we'd be just a random car parked in the parking lot... probably kids making out, or somebody reading a map or something. Anyway, we'd sit there half the night scanning for dialups, then drive to a nearby telco exchange with a dumpster conveniently located outside and trash for passwords / modem numbers, etc.
For a while we had full control of a DMS-100 switch owned by the local telco. Unfortunately we made the mistake of calling it from my home one day, and as soon as we hung up the phone rang, and it was somebody from the phone company! That was the beginning of the end of my phreaking "career".
However, if you were to go to my parent's place and root around enough in the old storage shed, I would not be surprised if you found a box or two of old telco printouts and manuals, and maybe an old grey plastic Craftsman toolbox full of phone handsets, stolen telco tools, a 7/16" nutdriver (it opened a lot of the equipment cans our local telco used, as well as the demarc boxes on the sides of buildings and houses), and a bunch of RJ11 and RJ14 extension cables, RJ11 splitters, wire cutters, alligator clips, etc. Come to think of it, I should probably get rid of that shit in case the statute of limitations hasn't expired. :-)
I still have full scans of local exchanges done with ToneLoc. The US Courier HST Dual Standard would detect "voice" and hang up which would boost it to around 240 numbers per hour. Ah the good old days.
Oh, and for a while there was soundblaster support that said, "Yo we found a carrier" whenever it hit a modem. Good times.
Hey, if you could get in touch with me, I'd love to chat.
I'm the marketing guy at 2600hz, and we're setting up some really cool things later in this year to pay tribute to the counterculture. I'd love to talk more.
Up to somewhere in the mid 90's, you could play around with phreaking, fairly confident in the knowledge that even if you got caught, you would get a "slap on the wrist" at most. But somewhere around the time of the Steve Jackson Games raid, the Mitnick bust, and a few other notable news events, the mood shifted, and a lot of people started thinking "shit, this is for real and I could (go to jail | lose my job | get kicked out of college | etc) for this". By 1998 or so, I'd pretty much given up on phreaking (and any element of "black hat" hacking) for (mostly) those reasons. I got the impression it was the same for a lot of people.
Also, phreaking per-se became a lot more difficult as telcos replaced the older switches with 5ESS and other digital switches. At some point, a switch just became a specialized computer and "phreaking" and "hacking" started to collapse into one activity. And as the Internet became ubiquitous and the WWW spread, a lot of people probably drifted into exploring websites and shit, instead of messing around with the phone network.
Surely the Phone Losers of America should be mentioned. The guy behind that, RBCP, maintained a series of electronic 'zines in the '90s, that talked about red boxing, beige boxing, and all sorts of phone phreaking topics. The PLA is still around to some extent nowadays with an online radio station where episodes of their various shows are played (and they sometimes do live shows), although a lot of their material is them prank calling people and businesses.
Back in the seventies, the simplest phone hack was probably what we called the "click-it", but is more formally known as the Black Box.
Some curious person had connected a lineman's set to a ringing phone line and noticed that, between the extremely loud ring signals, he could hear the calling party talking to himself. Also, that if he briefly shorted the ringing line, the ringing would stop but the call would stay connected. And he could now clearly hear the distant party! Moreover, if the calling party was using a pay phone, he could hang up and get his dime back, even if he had read the Declaration of Independence into the phone in the meantime. IOW, there was a functioning talk path but no billing!
So, the only problem to be solved was to get audio into the formerly ringing line without drawing enough DC from the line to look like a real phone call was in progress (and thereby trigger billing). This was easily solved by placing a capacitor in the line to keep the phone from drawing DC and placing a six-volt battery across the line, in series with an audio frequency choke. The final piece was a momentary contact switch (the clicker) placed across the line ahead of the capacitor. If you got a long distance call, you clicked the switch to stop the ringing, then picked up the phone, and talked for hours. And the calling party never saw the call on their bill.
If you wanted to initiate a call, you could "code ring" the party, signaling them to call you by prearrangement.
If memory serves, the Black Box stopped working when they rolled out ESS in the late seventies.
That was a good one, but arguably the simplest "hack" was the Beige Box.
For the uninitiated, a "beige box" was just a piece of phone wire with a RJ11 jack on one end (the kind that plugs into the base of a phone) and alligator clips on the red and green wires at the other end. You used it by opening up the "demarc box" on the side of a building and clipping onto the corresponding terminals in the box, and using the line like normal.
What made this moderately useful was the emergence of COCOT (Customer Owned Coin Operated Telephones) phones. With a phone company payphone, the "magic" that made it a payphone was stored in the switch at the exchange, and so beige boxing one of those didn't do you any good. But the "magic" that made a COCOT a payphone was in the phone itself, so the line it was hanging off of was usually a plain jane phone line with full long-distance and everything available. So you'd find a COCOT at a strip mall or something, then drive around back to where the demarc boxes were, find the one for the payphone (usually by trial and error) and take it over. Now you could do all the war dialing or calling long distance you wanted. And hiding out behind a strip mall late at night, hidden behind a dumpster or whatever, you were fairly safe from being found by cops. In fact, of all the times we did this stuff back in the day, we never got caught by a cop in the act of using this setup.
Even better, some of the demarc boxes were rigged up internally to use an RJ11 connector, so you didn't even need the alligator clips. You could just open up the box, unplug the wire inside, and plug a regular phone in and have your way with it. :-)
I'd like to disagree that biege boxing COCOTs wasn't useful.
First off COCOTs were owned by customers, so the magic did not happen at the telephone switch. Quite the opposite.
When VoIP started emerging, a handful of COCOT companies and their operators figured out how to place long distance calls for a fraction of the usual price. Instead of placing LD calls over the telephone network, any LD call would be intercepted by the COCOT firmware. Instead, a local number would be called and rerouted over the Internet. This was a type of extender, and one could beige box these pay phones to pick up DTMF tones and figure out the number of the extender and its access codes. Sometimes an access code was even optional for a call to go through the extender. Like many extenders, these became abused like hell.
I was briefly on #phreak. Your handle sounds kind of familiar. Sad to say, I thought most of the regulars were elitest as hell and I never once saw an intelligent conversation go down on there.
So the phone lines became extremely hard to hack from an electrical perspective and everything merged with computer security as a whole as most of the calls became voip.
We could run articles with headlines such as "what happened to the BBSes?". They became obsolete and merged with other similar tech cultures.
In the early 1980s I used to call a BBS with a private section that had "950 codes". I didn't really associate with people doing this sort of thing until the late 1980s though...
I have to laugh at the article. The people I knew were not blowing 2600 tones into multi-frequency trunks, they were not even logging into their local TIRKS or SARTS or COSMOS or 5ESS/DMS-100 switch. They had the whole system "owned". The x.25 networks to - Tymnet, Telenet etc. As well as all the key Internet machines and networks. We're going back over 20 years though...Not that I think things are more secure, the opposite actually.
One of the guys I knew later went to work for the tiger team of one of the big four accounting firms. Their success rate? 100%. He complained it was not a real test though, as he could not hack into Verizon or AT&T and get in via those back channels...
As to what happened? Others I know set 1995 as the year it ended, and I agree. Between 1994 and 1996, everyone I know started working at ISPs, security companies, dot coms and so forth. Including myself. Some of the people who hung out on the IRC channels became CEO/CTO/CIO/CSO executives in companies which got millions in VC (back then and recently), or were bought out for millions, or their companies IPO'd. I would say how well some of the people who used to hang out on IRC and go to cons have done, but I don't think people would believe me. I'm not even counting stuff like the founding of Apple, which I think Jobs said would not have happened if him and Woz didn't build blue boxes. The way things really happen are covered up, or not brought up any how. "Every fortune of unknown origin began with a crime" - Balzac
One theory I forgot to mention...of why phreaking and hacking died out as it was in the mid-1990s...
From the late 1970s until the mid-1990s, communication via a computer and modem was done for a great deal of people via BBSs. Someone, often a young man, would set their phone line and computer to act as a BBS when they weren't using the line themselves. So you had a network of independent, autonomous bulletin boards, run by young men mostly, called by young men mostly. They created their own culture.
It is not the Verizon/AT&T high speed connection, with Usenet servers being pulled, torrents being throttled with MPAA/RIAA letter being passed back and forth system we have now. I mean we're talking here on a board owned by venture capitalists. Or Slashdot, owned by a public company. Or chatting on Facebook. All of this was not so corporatized then. I mean, things like Usenet, P2P, anything autonomous and independent and similar to how things were done back then are beset upon by the powers that be. There was freedom back then, now things are back to typical USA - corporate-run, unfree, policed, boring etc.
I remember when I discovered BBSes. Must have been sometime in the mid-eighties. I found a number in magazine, probably Byte.
And I called it, using a TI Silent 700 terminal, which was an acoustic coupler 300-baud modem married to a thermal printer. It was called Silent to differentiate it from noisier (and slower) impact-printer based competitors, such as the IBM 2741, which used the Selectric typewriter bouncing type ball. The 700 could print out text at 30 characters per second on a roll of thermal paper.
When it answered, I was presented by a set of menus leading to all sorts of interesting hacking-related text files. But the most interesting text file wasn't a hacking screed. Rather, it was a directory of other BBSes, their areas of interest, and their phone numbers. Think the internet over PSTN. Touring the BBS network of the time, I went thru quite a few rolls of paper and made a significant contribution to the company's phone bill!
It's funny how these days, those systems and variations of those systems (COSMOS for example) are STILL used. Talk about legacy systems. Not more than 10 years ago, people were still breaking into them.
The days of knowing the telephone company as intimately as we knew them are gone. So much has changed since our time. Although we never called ourselves phone masters. Thats the nickname the FBI felt they had to give us. I used to be Zibby. One of my coolest moments was getting to bluebox in the mid nineties. It was using the 1800 direct greece line. Ah those were the days.
57 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 139 ms ] threadObviously there is a nostalgia for the blue-boxing days, which most of us have only ever read about. And of course that was never really about free calls (you can place a free call with a $2 headset and pair of bed-of-nails clips on any block in america), and I think the classic esquire piece communicates that pretty well.
Couple these facts with what was then the only resource for people wanting to know more for free: text files. The community surrounding 2600, Phrack, and countless other zines lost to the ages. It created a sense of ability to access all points along this route of communication.
I was young and stupid, and I wanted to know more about the technology behind what I was using. The presentation of text files help me consume that information easily, because they were in essence written by people like me for me.
When dial up faded out, and I grew older, technology was just a utility to make a paycheck. I shifted more focus on development, because phreaking/hacking didn't pay my bills. I think that generation just grew up and got cellphones. Then there was a cellphone phreaking period. It's still there but I feel the scene has gone far more underground, or concentrated its efforts on jail breaking.
I think we'll see a resurgence of hacking/phreaking soon, since devices are becoming cheaper and more accessible to children.
An old friend of mine got a visit by AT&T technicians when they detected funny activity on his dad's line and I think he had to pay a $100 fine or something. Today, if he was doing the same things, he likely would be in jail. The legal atmosphere has turned toward disproportionate punishment so much so that the only people exploring the wireless field, by and large, are those who are dodging jail time to begin with.
I think the Raspberry Pi and Arduino field may be more enticing for young people due to their hacker-friendly nature and I feel wireless mesh technology may be where the future of communications hacking will be.
Sounds familiar.
I got busted for phreaking in 1972. Pled no contest, paid a $450 lawyer's fee, $150 fine, and $25 restitution to AT&T.
Afterward, the AT&T investigators took me out to lunch at my favorite Chinese restaurant. No, they didn't try to get me to name other notorious phreaks so they could go after them. They seemed to have genuinely felt bad that the whole legal apparatus had to get involved.
Yes, perhaps a little different from today.
In a sad way, all the TOS/EULA/Contracts and other legal mumbo jumbo we sign away our rights with are just more nails in the coffin of free expression and exploration. Now, I can understand companies get upset if you take more than a fair share of services without paying for it, but we don't really get a fair share in the first place. And if you break the TOS (provided it hasn't changed since you signed up), it's fair to lose the service, but not your freedom.
At worse, it could be trespass since entering is not disputed, but then the website/portal/office or what have you, should clearly mark which areas are verboten to unauthorized personnel and what exactly "unauthorized" means.
Does "unauthorized" mean you don't have any permission to view or copy at all? Does it mean, you have permission to view, but not copy? Does it mean you have permission to copy, but not a whole lot at the same time? Does it mean you can copy to your heart's desire, but not redistribute? Does it mean you can redistribute, but not edit?
Breaking and entering isn't applicable as-is to the virtual world. Law makers need a completely different mindset to approach information security.
If you could gain access to a pay phone's phone connection, you could splice in a simple circuit that would allow coin return signals to go through unmodified but would invert coin collect signals, thereby always returning your coins.
Of course, if you could tap into a pay phone line, you might notice that grounding one side of the line produced a dial tone, enabling you to make free local calls. Long distance was a less trivial problem, since the operator would come on and ask for more money, verified by listening to gong sounds (later beeps) that the phone would send when coins were inserted. An obvious solution was to play a tape loop of a quarter being inserted enough times to represent the required payment. Later, this came to be known as Red Boxing, the Red Box being an electronic circuit that replaced the tape loop, emitting the desired number of beeps to represent whatever sum was due.
http://www.phonelosers.org/redbox/tonedialer/
http://www.phworld.org/payphone/acts.htm
Seriously, we at 2600hz continue to be heavily influenced by the counterculture; the ever-inquisitive minds attracted to the largest network the world had ever seen.
To think that the first transatlantic cable was laid in 1957. We've come even further from "what hath god wrought", but it's only getting crazier each day.
The phone phreaks didn't go away, they're all over the world tinkering away.
1858, my friend, 1858.
https://www.google.com/search?q=first+transatlantic+cable
Additional reading...
Mother Earth Mother Board:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/4.12/ffglass_pr.html
The Victorian Internet (one of my favorite books ever, highly recommended):
https://www.google.com/search?q=the+victorian+internet
"TAT-1 (Transatlantic No. 1) was the first submarine transatlantic telephone cable system. It was laid between Gallanach Bay, near Oban, Scotland and Clarenville, Newfoundland between 1955 and 1956."
"The first transatlantic telegraph cable had been laid in 1858. It only operated for a month, but was replaced with a successful connection in 1866. A radio-based transatlantic telephone service was started in 1927. Although a telephone cable was discussed at that time, it was not practical until a number of technological advances arrived in the 1940s."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TAT-1
So in 1858, the wire that was laid across the Atlantic by Cyrus W. Field was essentially just that, not a cable at all. It was a few strands of copper coated in gutta-percha, and it was destroyed by an overzealous engineer jamming WAY too much voltage into the wire (he would later lose his job to Lord Kelvin of Degrees Kelvin fame).
In 1865 they attempted to lay the cable again, but the cable snapped during the trip. It would snap 3 more times before they would finally connect Europe to North America. The Times of London had an amazing quote from the 1858 endeavor:
"The Atlantic is dried up, and we become in reality as well as in wish one country.... The Atlantic Telegraph has half undone the Declaration of 1776, and has gone far to make us once again, in spite of ourselves, one people...."
On another really interesting point: there were no telephone cables crossing the atlantic until 1957. So how did folks make calls to Europe? The answer was the Heaviside layer of the atmosphere and radio transmissions. Yes up until 1957, all calls to Europe were made by bouncing waves off of the ionosphere.
I <3 Telecom.
..aaand the plans for them as a bonus http://www.textfiles.com/phreak/BOXES/
Seeing a full phonebooth (with a phone in it) makes me stop in my tracks these days.
Me and a few buddies got pretty deep into this stuff for a while in the mid to late 90's. So much that we would load my old 486 laptop in the car, take a 50' long phone extension cable and drive out to a COCOT in a rural area in the wee hours of the morning, and "beige box" off of the COCOT, sitting in the car 50' or so away. Our thinking was that a passing (police) car wouldn't notice the wire laying on the ground and that we'd be just a random car parked in the parking lot... probably kids making out, or somebody reading a map or something. Anyway, we'd sit there half the night scanning for dialups, then drive to a nearby telco exchange with a dumpster conveniently located outside and trash for passwords / modem numbers, etc.
For a while we had full control of a DMS-100 switch owned by the local telco. Unfortunately we made the mistake of calling it from my home one day, and as soon as we hung up the phone rang, and it was somebody from the phone company! That was the beginning of the end of my phreaking "career".
However, if you were to go to my parent's place and root around enough in the old storage shed, I would not be surprised if you found a box or two of old telco printouts and manuals, and maybe an old grey plastic Craftsman toolbox full of phone handsets, stolen telco tools, a 7/16" nutdriver (it opened a lot of the equipment cans our local telco used, as well as the demarc boxes on the sides of buildings and houses), and a bunch of RJ11 and RJ14 extension cables, RJ11 splitters, wire cutters, alligator clips, etc. Come to think of it, I should probably get rid of that shit in case the statute of limitations hasn't expired. :-)
That's some serious street, err hacker, cred. :)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Lamprecht
Edit: Looks like the ban was not permanent.
Oh, and for a while there was soundblaster support that said, "Yo we found a carrier" whenever it hit a modem. Good times.
I'm the marketing guy at 2600hz, and we're setting up some really cool things later in this year to pay tribute to the counterculture. I'd love to talk more.
Also, phreaking per-se became a lot more difficult as telcos replaced the older switches with 5ESS and other digital switches. At some point, a switch just became a specialized computer and "phreaking" and "hacking" started to collapse into one activity. And as the Internet became ubiquitous and the WWW spread, a lot of people probably drifted into exploring websites and shit, instead of messing around with the phone network.
Some curious person had connected a lineman's set to a ringing phone line and noticed that, between the extremely loud ring signals, he could hear the calling party talking to himself. Also, that if he briefly shorted the ringing line, the ringing would stop but the call would stay connected. And he could now clearly hear the distant party! Moreover, if the calling party was using a pay phone, he could hang up and get his dime back, even if he had read the Declaration of Independence into the phone in the meantime. IOW, there was a functioning talk path but no billing!
So, the only problem to be solved was to get audio into the formerly ringing line without drawing enough DC from the line to look like a real phone call was in progress (and thereby trigger billing). This was easily solved by placing a capacitor in the line to keep the phone from drawing DC and placing a six-volt battery across the line, in series with an audio frequency choke. The final piece was a momentary contact switch (the clicker) placed across the line ahead of the capacitor. If you got a long distance call, you clicked the switch to stop the ringing, then picked up the phone, and talked for hours. And the calling party never saw the call on their bill.
If you wanted to initiate a call, you could "code ring" the party, signaling them to call you by prearrangement.
If memory serves, the Black Box stopped working when they rolled out ESS in the late seventies.
For the uninitiated, a "beige box" was just a piece of phone wire with a RJ11 jack on one end (the kind that plugs into the base of a phone) and alligator clips on the red and green wires at the other end. You used it by opening up the "demarc box" on the side of a building and clipping onto the corresponding terminals in the box, and using the line like normal.
What made this moderately useful was the emergence of COCOT (Customer Owned Coin Operated Telephones) phones. With a phone company payphone, the "magic" that made it a payphone was stored in the switch at the exchange, and so beige boxing one of those didn't do you any good. But the "magic" that made a COCOT a payphone was in the phone itself, so the line it was hanging off of was usually a plain jane phone line with full long-distance and everything available. So you'd find a COCOT at a strip mall or something, then drive around back to where the demarc boxes were, find the one for the payphone (usually by trial and error) and take it over. Now you could do all the war dialing or calling long distance you wanted. And hiding out behind a strip mall late at night, hidden behind a dumpster or whatever, you were fairly safe from being found by cops. In fact, of all the times we did this stuff back in the day, we never got caught by a cop in the act of using this setup.
Even better, some of the demarc boxes were rigged up internally to use an RJ11 connector, so you didn't even need the alligator clips. You could just open up the box, unplug the wire inside, and plug a regular phone in and have your way with it. :-)
First off COCOTs were owned by customers, so the magic did not happen at the telephone switch. Quite the opposite.
When VoIP started emerging, a handful of COCOT companies and their operators figured out how to place long distance calls for a fraction of the usual price. Instead of placing LD calls over the telephone network, any LD call would be intercepted by the COCOT firmware. Instead, a local number would be called and rerouted over the Internet. This was a type of extender, and one could beige box these pay phones to pick up DTMF tones and figure out the number of the extender and its access codes. Sometimes an access code was even optional for a call to go through the extender. Like many extenders, these became abused like hell.
Umm, nobody said that.
First off COCOTs were owned by customers, so the magic did not happen at the telephone switch. Quite the opposite.
That's exactly what I said above.
We could run articles with headlines such as "what happened to the BBSes?". They became obsolete and merged with other similar tech cultures.
I have to laugh at the article. The people I knew were not blowing 2600 tones into multi-frequency trunks, they were not even logging into their local TIRKS or SARTS or COSMOS or 5ESS/DMS-100 switch. They had the whole system "owned". The x.25 networks to - Tymnet, Telenet etc. As well as all the key Internet machines and networks. We're going back over 20 years though...Not that I think things are more secure, the opposite actually.
One of the guys I knew later went to work for the tiger team of one of the big four accounting firms. Their success rate? 100%. He complained it was not a real test though, as he could not hack into Verizon or AT&T and get in via those back channels...
As to what happened? Others I know set 1995 as the year it ended, and I agree. Between 1994 and 1996, everyone I know started working at ISPs, security companies, dot coms and so forth. Including myself. Some of the people who hung out on the IRC channels became CEO/CTO/CIO/CSO executives in companies which got millions in VC (back then and recently), or were bought out for millions, or their companies IPO'd. I would say how well some of the people who used to hang out on IRC and go to cons have done, but I don't think people would believe me. I'm not even counting stuff like the founding of Apple, which I think Jobs said would not have happened if him and Woz didn't build blue boxes. The way things really happen are covered up, or not brought up any how. "Every fortune of unknown origin began with a crime" - Balzac
From the late 1970s until the mid-1990s, communication via a computer and modem was done for a great deal of people via BBSs. Someone, often a young man, would set their phone line and computer to act as a BBS when they weren't using the line themselves. So you had a network of independent, autonomous bulletin boards, run by young men mostly, called by young men mostly. They created their own culture.
It is not the Verizon/AT&T high speed connection, with Usenet servers being pulled, torrents being throttled with MPAA/RIAA letter being passed back and forth system we have now. I mean we're talking here on a board owned by venture capitalists. Or Slashdot, owned by a public company. Or chatting on Facebook. All of this was not so corporatized then. I mean, things like Usenet, P2P, anything autonomous and independent and similar to how things were done back then are beset upon by the powers that be. There was freedom back then, now things are back to typical USA - corporate-run, unfree, policed, boring etc.
And I called it, using a TI Silent 700 terminal, which was an acoustic coupler 300-baud modem married to a thermal printer. It was called Silent to differentiate it from noisier (and slower) impact-printer based competitors, such as the IBM 2741, which used the Selectric typewriter bouncing type ball. The 700 could print out text at 30 characters per second on a roll of thermal paper.
When it answered, I was presented by a set of menus leading to all sorts of interesting hacking-related text files. But the most interesting text file wasn't a hacking screed. Rather, it was a directory of other BBSes, their areas of interest, and their phone numbers. Think the internet over PSTN. Touring the BBS network of the time, I went thru quite a few rolls of paper and made a significant contribution to the company's phone bill!