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