💾 Archived View for spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › phreak › basic.of.phreak captured on 2023-06-16 at 19:39:32.

View Raw

More Information

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

               
               :=+---------------------------------+=:
               I     Basics of Phone Phreaking I     I
               I        by Long John Silicone        I
               I             Oct. 1983               I
               :=+---------------------------------+=:


A  rather  broad  subject  to attack, I must say. The debate over just
what to discuss has occupied my thoughts for many an hour. Perhaps  if
I  approach this subject legally, in an informative manner that is, my
problems might be solved. Nonetheless, here it goes. 



Ma Bell can rattle on for hours on methods for saving  money  on  your
long- distance calls. Unfortunately, most people still think that AT&T
is the only game in town for long-distance service. 

What  Ma Bell won't tell you is that there comes a time in a telephone
user's life to leave  Mom.  There  are  now  several  companies  which
compete with AT&T in the long-distance market: MCI, Southern Pacific's
"SPRINT"  (which is currently being purchased by General Telephone and
Electronics Company), U.S. Transmission System'S "Longer Distance"  (a
susidiary of ITT), Western Union's "MetroFone", and Satellite Business
System's  "Skyline." They all boast of opportunities for large savings
on the long-distance portion of your monthly phone bill. 

Someone unaquainted with  these  new  competitors,  which  are  called
"specialized  common  carriers"  (or  SCCs),  might  ask,  "Isn't it a
duplication of effort for a lot of different companies to  be  running
long- distance lines all over the country?  And how can a company that
is just a fraction of the size of AT&T provide a similar service for a
lower  price?"  The  answer  is  that these new competitors have built
their base by concentrating on routes where long- distance traffic  is
heavy,  so the cost of carrying each call is relatively low. Also, the
competitors transmission  equipment  consists  almost  exclusively  of
computers  and  microwave  links,  which they have built themselves or
which they lease from other carriers. Thus, these networks can be less
expensive to construct and maintain then the cable-based systems  that
Bell  has  used  for  years. There's also another class of competitors
called "resellers",  who  lease  and  resell  both  AT&T's  and  other
carriers' lines. More about resellers in a moment. 

Initially,  most  of  the  SCC  competitors could reach only a limited
number of cities. But as they've grown, the number of cities served by
their microwave networks has steadily in- creased, and today  most  of
the  SCC's  reach  70  percent or more of all area codes in the United
States and continue to increase the  number  of  cities  served  every
month.  Sattelite  Business  System's  "Skyline" is the first to offer
service to the entire U.S. over its own network. The other  SCC's  are
phasing  in  uninversal service by using Bell's WATS system. But while
users of these services will soon be able to call 'to' anywhere in the
U.S., they will still be able to call 'from' only a limited number  of
places, usually the major metropolitan areas. 

To use any of these SCC services, you currently must have a Touch-Tone
service  or  the  equivalent  Tone gener- ator. (This is changing as a
conse- quence of the AT&T/Department of Justice divestiture agreement,
which will require the newly  independent  local  phone  companies  to
grant  all  carriers  "equal  access"  at  equal  rates.)  There is an
additional monthly charge by the phone company for Touch- Tone service
(check the "Customer Guide" in your local White Pages,  or  call  your
Bell  business office for details); however, you don't have to rent or
buy a Bell telephone to get Touch-Tone service. (Hurrah for K-mart)

If your local phone lines already are equipped to handle  both  rotary
and Touch-Tone calls, you may be able to avoid the need for Touch-Tone
service  in  this way: using a regular rotaray phone, you place a call
to the SCC's computer; then, to 'converse' with  the  computer  simply
use  a  touch  pad  conver-  ter  or  a tone generator, held up to the
mouthpiece of your rotary phone. 

It's reasonably easy to use the SCC systems. You  must  first  dial  a
seven  digit  local  phone number (an 'access' number), which connects
you to the SCC's computer. When you hear a tone on the other end,  you
then  dial  a  five-or six-digit number (an 'authorization code') that
tells the computer you're an authorized user and to bill your  account
for  the  call.  Immediately after dialing the authori- zation number,
you dial the area code and number you wish to call. The SCC's computer
in your area then sends your  call  out  over  its  own  long-distance
network  to  a  computer  in  the area you called; the computer on the
other end then hooks your call into the local phone network  to  reach
whomever  you've  called.  Each month you recieve a bill from your SCC
(seperate from your reg- ular phone bill)  detailing  your  calls  and
billing you for the service charges plus your calls. 

Note:    This   varies   on  occasion,  prime  example  being  "Longer
Distance".  Instead of the standard code- number format, they  elected
the number-code input. 

"SPRINT" uses a six-digit code followed by a two digit travel code. 



A moment of speculation is due.. 

What  would  happen  if  you entered someone elses 'access code', then
dialed the destination number? The answer is  usually  Grand  Larceny;
however,  it  is quite possible since only the general place of origin
is possible to detect on a call placed without notice. 



For information on the competitive long-distance services: 



MCI: 
Write MCI, MCI Building, 17th and Streets, NW Washington, D.C.  20036.
Call toll free (800)  521-  8620  or  in  Michigan  (800)  482-  1740.
"Execunet"

SBS: 
Write  SBS,  John  Marshall Building 8283 Greensboro Drive, McLean, VA
22102. Call toll free (800) 698- 6900.  "Skyline"

ITT: 
Write ITT, U.S. Transmission Systems,  INC.,  P.O.  Box  732,  Bowling
Green  Station, New York NY. 10004 Call toll free (800) 438-9428 or in
New York (212) 797-2511.  "Longer Distance"

SPC: 
Write SPC, One Adrian Court, Burilingame, CA.  94010,  or  call  (800)
521-4949 or in Michigan, (800) 645-6020.  "SPRINT"

WU: 
Write  WU,  1  Lake  Street, Upper Saddle River, NJ. 07458. Call (800)
325-6000 for the number of your local service office.  "MetroFone"


A final note, don't do anything I wouldn't. And above all, if you do: 

            DON'T GET CAUGHT. 


                    Yours in trade,

                    Long John Silicone