💾 Archived View for spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › phreak › busyline.txt captured on 2023-11-14 at 11:16:39.
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-06-16)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
BUSY LINE VERIFICATION WRITTEN BY PHANTOM PHREAKER This file describes how a TSPS operator does a BLV (Busy Line Verification) and an EMER INT (Emergency Interrupt) upon a busy line that a customer has requested to be 'broken' into. I have written this file to hopefully clear up all the misconceptions about Busy Line Verification and Emergency Interrupts. BLV is 'Busy Line Verification'. That is, discovering if a line is busy/not busy. BLV is the telco term, but it has been called Verification, Autoverify, Emergency Interrupt, break into a line, REMOB, and others. BLV is the result of a TSPS that uses a Stored Program Control System (SPCS) called the Generic 9 program. Before the rise of TSPS in 1969, cordboard operators did the verification process. The introduction of BLV via TSPS brought about more operator security features. The Generic 9 SPCS and hardware was first installed in Tucson, Daytona, and Columbus, Ohio, in 1979. By now virtually every TSPS has the Generic 9 program. A TSPS operator does the actual verification. If caller A was in the 815 Area code, and caller B was in the 314 Area code, A would dial 0 to reach a TSPS in his area code, 815. Now, A, the customer, would tell the operator he wished an emergency interrupt on B's number, 314+555+1000. The 815 TSPS op who answered A's call cannot do the interrupt outside of her own area code, (her service area), so she would call an Inward Operator for B's area code, 314, with KP+314+TTC+121+ST, where the TTC is a Terminating Toll Center code that is needed in some areas. Now a TSPS operator in the 314 area code would be reached by the 815 TSPS, but a lamp on the particular operators console would tell her she was being reached with an Inward routing. The 815 operator then would say something along the lines of she needed an interrupt on 314+555+1000, and her customers name was J. Smith. Now, the 314 Inward (which is really a TSPS) would dial B's number, in a normal Operator Direct Distance Dialing (ODDD) fashion. If the line wasn't busy, then the 314 Inward would report this to the 815 TSPS, who would then report to the customer (caller A) that 314+555+1000 wasn't busy and he could call as normal. However if the given number (in this case, 314+555+1000) was busy, then several things would happen and the process of BLV and EMER INT would begin. The 314 Inward would seize a Verification trunk (or BLV trunk) to the toll office that served the local loop of the requested number (555+1000). Now another feature of TSPS checks the line asked to be verified against a list of lines that can't be verified, such as radio stations, police, etc. If the line number a customer gives is on the list then the verification cannot be done, and the operator tells the customer. Now the TSPS operator would press her VFY (VeriFY) key on the TSPS console, and the equipment would outpulse (onto the BLV trunk) KP+0XX+PRE+SUFF+ST. The KP being Key Pulse, the 0XX being a 'screening code' that protects against trunk mismatching, the PRE being the Prefix of the requested number (555), the SUFF being the Suffix of the requested number (1000), and the ST being STart, which tells the Verification trunk that no more MF digits follow. The screening code is there to keep a normal Toll Network (used in regular calls) trunk from accidentally connecting to a Verification trunk. If this screening code wasn't present, and a trunk mismatch did occur, someone calling a friend in the same area code might just happen to be connected to his friends line, and find himself in the middle of a conversation. But, the Verification trunk is waiting for an 0XX sequence, and a normal call on a Toll Network trunk does not outpulse an 0XX first. (Example: You live at 914+555+1000, and wish to call 914+666+0000. The routing for your call would be KP+666+0000+ST. The BLV trunk cannot accept a 666 in place of the proper 0XX routing, and thus would give the caller a re-order tone.) Also, note that the outpulsing sequence onto a BLV trunk can't contain an Area Code. This is the reason why if a customer requests an interrupt outside of his own NPA, the TSPS operator must call an Inward for the area code that can outpulse onto the proper trunk. If a TSPS in 815 tried to do an interrupt on a trunk in 314, it would not work. This proves that there is a BLV network for each NPA, and if you somehow gain access to a BLV trunk, you could only use it for interrupts within the NPA that the trunk was located in. BLV trunks 'hunt' to find the right trunks to the right Class 5 End Office that serves the given local loop. The same outpulsing sequence is passed along BLV trunks until the BLV trunk serving the Toll Office that serves the given End Office is found. There is usually one BLV trunk per 10,000 lines (exchange). So, if a Toll Office served ten End Offices, that Toll Office would have 100,000 local loops that it served, and have 10 BLV trunks running from TSPS to that Toll Office. Now, the operator (in using the VFY key) can hear what is going on on the line, (modem, voice, or a permanent signal, indicating a phone off-hook) and take appropriate action. She can't hear what's taking place on the line clearly, however. A speech scrambler circuit within the operator console generates a scramble on the line while the operator is doing a VFY. The scramble is there to keep operators from listening in on people, but it is not enough to keep an op from being able to tell if a conversation, modem signal, or a dial tone is present upon the line. If the operator hears a permanent signal, she can only report back to the customer that either the phone is off-hook, or there is a problem with the line, and she can't do anything about it. In the case of caller A and B, the 314 Inward would tell the 815 TSPS, and the 815 TSPS would tell the customer. If there is a conversation on line, the operator presses a key marked EMER INT (EMERgency INTerrupt) on her console. This causes the operator to be added into a three way port on the busy line. The EMER INT key also deactivates the speech scrambling circuit and activates an alerting tone that can be heard by the called customer. The alerting tone that is played every 10 seconds tells the customer that an operator is on the line. Some areas don't have the alerting tone, however. Now, the operator would say 'Is this XXX-XXXX?' where XXX-XXXX would be the Prefix and Suffix of the number that the original customer requesting the interrupt gave the original TSPS. The customer would confirm the operator had the correct line. Then the Op says 'You have a call waiting from (customers name). Will you accept?'. This gives the customer the chance to say 'Yes' and let the calling party be connected to him, while the previous party would be disconnected. If the customer says 'No', then the operator tells the person who requested the interrupt that the called customer would not accept. The operator can just inform the busy party that someone needed to contact him or her, and have the people hang up, and then notify the requesting customer that the line is free. Or, the operator can connect the calling party and the interrupted party without loss of connection. The charges for this service (in my area at least) run 1.00 for asking the operator to interrupt a phone call so you can get through. There is an .80 charge if you ask the operator to verify whether the phone you're trying to reach is busy because of a service problem or because of a conversation. If the line has no conversation on it, there will be no charge for the verification. When the customer who initiated the emergency interrupt gets his telephone bill, the charges for the interrupt call will look similar to this: 12-1 530P INTERRUPT CL 314 555 1000 OD 1 1.00 The 12-1 is December first of the current year; 530P is the time the call was made to the operator requesting an interrupt; INTERRUPT CL is what took place, that is, an interrupt call; 314 555 1000 is the number requested; OD stands for Operator Dialed; the 1 is the length of the call (in minutes); and the 1.00 is the charge for the interrupt. The format may be different, depending upon your area and telephone company. One thing I forgot to mention about TSPS operators. In places where a Remote Trunking Arrangement is being used, and even places where they aren't in use, you may be connected to a TSPS operator in a totally different area code. In such a case, the TSPS that you reach in a Foreign NPA will call up an inward operator for your Home NPA, if the line you requested an EMER INT on was in your HNPA. If the line you requested EMER INT on was in the same NPA of the TSPS that you had reached, then no inward operator would be needed and the answering operator could do the entire process. Verification trunks seem to be only accessible by a TSPS/Inward operator. However, there have been claims to people doing Emergency Interrupts with blue boxes. I don't know how to accomplish an EMER INT without the assistance of an operator, and I don't know if it can be done. If you really wish to participate in a BLV/EMER INT, call up an Inward Operator and play the part of a TSPS operator who needs an EMER INT upon a pre-designated busy line. Billing is handled at the local TSPS so you will not have to supply a billing number if you decide to do this. If you find any errors in this file, please try to let me know about it, and if you find out any other information that I haven't included, feel free to comment.