| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume Two, Issue 20, File 7 of 12 |
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| Metal Shop Private's -- Phreak/Hack Sub |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| This subboard contained all technical questions and conversations about |
| phreaking and hacking. If something was illegal on it (occasionally some idiot |
| would post codes and then soon after be deleted), it was removed as soon as I |
| saw it. |
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| 1/70: Red Box...... |
| Name: The Disk Jockey 13 |
| Date: 4:24 am Sun Apr 26, 1987 |
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| Back at the private school I went to, everyone lived pretty much out of state, |
| and would always be calling their girlfriends back at home, thus making a |
| pretty big investment into the local payphones. After reading the files on |
| how a red box worked, took my little dictation recorder and went to a payphone |
| and found that I could record the tones that were made when you dropped |
| quarters in. I recorded about $4 worth of quarters, and it worked great. |
| Every time the computerized voice would say "Please deposit $1.70 for the past |
| 5 minutes" you could just play the tape via a pair of sony walkman headphones |
| into the mouthpiece, and the phone would think that you deposited money in it. |
| It was pretty neat back then (several years ago.....) but every now and then |
| you would get the regular operator on instead of that synthasized voice. |
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| -The Disk Jockey |
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| Yes, not really important, but I saw "red box" in that last message and it |
| reminded me of that. Those were the days when there were lots of extenders |
| with 3 and 4 digit codes, and PBX's with NO codes..... |
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| 2/70: Since |
| Name: The Leftist 71 |
| Date: 5:26 am Mon Apr 27, 1987 |
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| Since non-sup seems to be popular these days |
| 404-289-0000-0009 test recordings, non-supd.. I beleive 0004 is deposit coin.. |
| anyway, these are fun to forward to when you dont want people to be able to |
| reach you.. |
| Ltist |
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| 3/70: Teleco numbers |
| Name: Mad Hatter 51 |
| Date: 5:36 pm Mon Apr 27, 1987 |
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| Would most(all) of the Teleco numbers(i.e. 99xx series) be non-suped? That |
| would seem at semi-logical atleast, eh? |
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|
| -Hatter |
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| 4/70: Tuning Fork |
| Name: Knight Lightning 2 |
| Date: 7:34 pm Mon Apr 27, 1987 |
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| How succesful would you be if you tried to use a tuning fork to simulate 2600 |
| Hertz? And if so, what would be good to use for MF? Fun, no? Heh! |
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| Also, what does anyone know about the 508 NPA. |
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| :Knight Lightning |
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| 5/70: Supvision Xlation |
| Name: Doom Prophet 21 |
| Date: 10:13 pm Mon Apr 27, 1987 |
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| The best way to box is to pull a cat's tail after making a call, then get a |
| rubber band and twang it in your teeth like Snoopy for MF. |
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| Since we were talking about supervision a little bit, I went through some |
| stuff I had on translations. What I think makes a number unsupervised (besies |
| the fact that there is no return of supervision, or reverse battery |
| signalling) is the charging translation in the terminating office. The |
| screening code of a chart class (charges and route are determined by the chart |
| class I believe) that denotes the call charge type would register to not make |
| either a detailed or bulk AMA entry at the toll office (if the number is 1+ |
| for someone), since it as if the number never answered. A 'detailed' AMA entry |
| shows the calling and called numbers, whereas a bulk AMA entry shows only the |
| calling number. |
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| Something else about translations, it doesn't mean an 800 to POTS or special |
| BTN when people talk about ESS translations, but the information on particular |
| Directory Numbers that finds and identifies the line equipment of the called |
| number (calling also I believe) that would provide any special info that is |
| needed by the switch to process the call, for example, whether a call is |
| coming from one or two party lines, or whether it is a four party line with |
| full selective ringing (which can't be tested by MLT equipment which is why I |
| remember it). If no translation influenced the way the call is processed, then |
| how would the switch know to route tthe calling party to an operator for ONI |
| if the calling line was more than two party (with the specifications talkd |
| about earlier about the R and T leads status determining the billing also |
| taken into consideration). |
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| Anyway, this post is basically correct but if anyone finds any errors then |
| please correct me. |
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| Doom |
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| 6/70: Things |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 10:41 pm Mon Apr 27, 1987 |
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|
| Well, RC's on an ESS are called translations too, at least when done by an |
| RC-MAC clerk. RC data involving a line that is changed can be called |
| translations. Don't ask me why this is so, but it's what I've heard. |
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| Does anyone here know what an ANIF-7 is? As far as I can tell, it is an ANI |
| failure to TSPS, but that's all I know about it...it can probably happen |
| anytime, but I do know that it was a specific problem with an early 5ESS |
| generic. |
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| Oh yeah, another unsuped signusoid is at (618)235+0090..this was found by |
| Syntax Error a long time ago. A neat thing about these 'tone sweeps' is that |
| if you call through an OCC that uses an OUTWATS line that is set up on an |
| inband signalling trunk, the OUTWATS linne will be trunked from the other end. |
| This happens as the tone gets near 2600Hz, but it is more sensitive on an OCC |
| switch, as something like 2710 and 2500 will also reset or trunk their |
| equipment, or at least that's what I've found. |
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| Phantom |
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| 7/70: FALFALAFL |
| Name: Taran King 1 |
| Date: 11:01 pm Mon Apr 27, 1987 |
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| I'd like to congradulate Doom Prophet on his extremely witty response to KL's |
| absolutely out-of-place post. REFRAIN |
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| Question...Most test numbers are unsuped, but I have at least one tone sweep |
| that I can think of off-hand that is suped. What would be the purpose either |
| way? Later |
| -TK |
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| 8/70: repair number |
| Name: The Scanner 20 |
| Date: 2:34 pm Tue Apr 28, 1987 |
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| Would the repair number used for a payphone be the same as a residence repair |
| number? Also, Doesnt the place that houses the phone (say a gas station) don't |
| they get a cut of the profits from the phone? If they do, |
| wouldnt they have the repair number? |
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| _-The Scanner |
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| 9/70: 2 Q's |
| Name: Circuit Breaker 5 |
| Date: 12:11 pm Wed Apr 29, 1987 |
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| Why are there PBXs that give a loud tone before the code. And does anyone |
| know what the difference is between the ANI-D jack and regular ANI is? |
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| 10/70: Red-boxing |
| Name: Icarus 15 |
| Date: 11:32 am Thu Apr 30, 1987 |
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|
| I saw before that someone mentioned that the amount of money entered into a |
| payphone of some kind is not kept track of. If this is true then it would |
| seem impossible for MA DUMBELL to ever catch on to red-boxing. That is if |
| AT&T phones don't have a money counter in them. TK-When the money was |
| collected from the payphone, did you notice whether he had the amount of money |
| that was "supposed" to be in there? Or whether he even checked it? |
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| If the money is counted then it is possible that the person who collects the |
| coins would get in trouble for not reporting all the money that was |
| registered. The money not being there because of redboxing. |
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| It is also possible to red box off of blue AT&T payphones (without a money |
| slot). I am curious whether that can EVER be found out, since there is no |
| money counter (obviously) to check. |
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| Icarus |
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| 11/70: Well... |
| Name: Taran King 1 |
| Date: 2:41 pm Thu Apr 30, 1987 |
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| Next time I see the guy there, I'll ask him, but I did see him write a few |
| things down. None that I could decipher meant anything related to money so |
| I'm not sure if there was a counter in it. I'll have to check it out though |
| -TK |
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| 12/70: Payfone Mutin |
| Name: Jester Sluggo 31 |
| Date: 6:49 pm Thu Apr 30, 1987 |
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| That was supposed to be "Payfone Muting". |
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| In anycase, on most new payfones, they have what is called "Muting" |
| which "mutes"-out any red box tones from entering through the Mouthpiece. |
| Those new non-coin-slot payfones should have those, but I've never tried. |
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| / |
| \ |
| / luggo !! |
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| 13/70: DNR/Pen Registers |
| Name: Knight Lightning 2 |
| Date: 7:04 pm Thu Apr 30, 1987 |
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|
| Are there any noticable effects from having one of these on your line? Static, |
| a low hum in the background, or line noise where there shouldn't be? |
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| :Knight Lightning |
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| 14/70: well... |
| Name: Lucifer 666 43 |
| Date: 7:40 pm Thu Apr 30, 1987 |
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| about the tuning fork...it does work.. i've used a harmonica.. |
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| also, how exactly do the bandwiths switch in multiplexing... |
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| L666 |
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| 15/70: From what I've heard |
| Name: The Scanner 20 |
| Date: 8:30 am Fri May 01, 1987 |
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| That there isnt any way to detect a Pen register. No humm, buzz, or any thing |
| else. But hey, what do I know? |
| Dont answer that. |
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| Anyway, 2 more questions, |
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| Im sure momma bell knows all about red box tones and stuff like that. But, |
| what about those independent co's that make pay telephones and just kinda hook |
| them up to normal lines in stores and stuff. Wouldnt they be easy to box off |
| of or do they work in a different way altogether? Well, that was only one but |
| an answer is appreciated. |
| _-The Scanner |
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| 16/70: 'Round here... |
| Name: Taran King 1 |
| Date: 2:41 pm Fri May 01, 1987 |
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| In this region, you can't just play the tones into the mouthpiece and get cred |
| (credit) for whatever you've played into the phone...you CAN, though, dial a |
| long distance number, it will then say, "Please deposit $x.xx". You put in |
| (play the tones for) the money and it says something like, "Thank you for |
| using AT&T." Ta da |
| -TK |
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| 17/70: Muxing, Etc |
| Name: Doom Prophet 21 |
| Date: 4:56 pm Fri May 01, 1987 |
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|
| Lucifer, I think what you mean about the bandwidths changing in Multiplexing, |
| you are referring to voice frequency bandwidths. Multiplexing is just a method |
| of sending more than one converstation down the same transmission path. In |
| analog and older switches the method is called Frequency Division |
| Multiplexing, or FDM, when the signals are seperated on basis of frequency, as |
| opposed to newer switches which do it on a Time division basis (TDM). There's |
| also something called Space DM but I don't think it has a whole lot to do with |
| telephones (maybe stuff like digital Xmission). But anyway, a normal VF voice |
| bandwidth goes from 300 to 3000 Hz which is SF in band, although the VF |
| channel goes from 0 to 4000 Hz. Anything above 3000 is out of band signalling |
| (like 3700 Hz). CCIS uses a seperate nettwork composed of STP's and varioius |
| links and channels for independent signalling methods. |
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| About the red boxing, the circuits that keep track of the coins that have been |
| entered are called Coin Detection & Announcement circuits (if the fortress is |
| in an ACTS serving area), which are a part of the Station Signalling |
| Announcement Subsystem which work out of local offices and in conjunction with |
| TSPS (not TOPS as far as I have seenn, a flash of the switchook anytime |
| during the initial charge announcements and an operator is connected. Playing |
| the tones to a live operator wouldn't be a good idea as they can obviously |
| tell the difference. |
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|
| Something else, there was a little discussion about AMA and all (isn't there |
| everywhere?) a while back. The way a local office (LAMA) would keep track of |
| the billing data is to use a few AMA circuits (there are always two, AMA0 and |
| AMA1 but can be more for big offices) that reverse positions (from an active |
| to standby mode at midnight when the datta in the buffer is recorded onto the |
| actual tapes). So the AMARC computers can format the data to where it is |
| recognnized by the RAO, the tapes have to be specially customized for that |
| particular officere. A header label on the tape (put on at the beginning of |
| each new tape entry (12)) tells the originating NPA, the office number, date |
| and tape transport dates. A tape trailer is added on at the end of the tape |
| entry for that day, which has the info about how many total calls were AMA |
| recorded. The tape mark is some digit (?) that tells the RAO that the useful |
| info (that they need to look at) is ended. The billing data itself is in a |
| binary coded decimal form (0's and 1's) along with check and dummy codes. A |
| noncheck dummy code fills the spaces on the tape to signigy that there wasn't |
| a problem, but the space is supposed tobe there. A check dummy code is because |
| the info wasn't received or sent from the Peripheral Adress bus or from the |
| originating register into the charge buffer. If you ever come across AMA |
| records (like in the call store section of SCCS) it won't look like anything |
| that can determine billing (AMARC and RAO do that). They aren't too hard to |
| read though, just takes a while. |
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| Doom |
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| Read:(1-70,^17),T,R,Q,P,A,? : |
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| 18/70: Correction |
| Name: Doom Prophet 21 |
| Date: 5:52 pm Fri May 01, 1987 |
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|
| Damn, what I got that I thought was some type of AMA records are not AMA |
| records (I think), so that means that I haven't been reading AMA records. |
| Shit, that's something that I want to do. Have to get some. |
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| Doom |
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| 19/70: well... |
| Name: Sir Francis Drake 56 |
| Date: 8:15 pm Fri May 01, 1987 |
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|
| You mentioned the third time of multiplexing as Stad DM or something, I |
| believe what you mean is Stattistcal Time Division (STDM). A STDM is just |
| a normal TDM improved so that empty bandwiths (which occur on TDM) are used |
| by busy ones. This allows a hell of alot more efficient use of the line then |
| TDM's. STDM is mainly used when you have alot of terminals/whatever that |
| wont always be being used. |
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| Hmm, I have some good stuff on pay phone accounting somewhere.... |
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| sfd |
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| 20/70: Payf0nez |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 10:57 pm Sat May 02, 1987 |
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|
| There are some types of payphones that are attached to a normal cable pair, |
| a normal line, and in this case the payphone like usage would be determined in |
| the phone and not in an office. I can't remember the exact type, or even where |
| I read it but if I should find it by any chance then I'll put it p. |
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| Phantom |
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| 21/70: P-Phones |
| Name: Jester Sluggo 31 |
| Date: 12:19 pm Sun May 03, 1987 |
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|
| Well, there are several manufacturers of payfones that make several different |
| type of payfones. If someone could call up the factory, or a salesman, or |
| dealer of these products, and pose as a perspective buyer, then that'd solve |
| these questions.. (shit..) |
| It perhaps might make a good file for Phrack. But I don't have the time do |
| to do those things.) |
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| / |
| \ |
| / luggo !! |
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| 22/70: AMA |
| Name: Circuit Breaker 5 |
| Date: 10:43 pm Sun May 03, 1987 |
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| There is some AMA info on LMOS. The audit file is under /dev/smlog /smlog. |
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| I got a list for two different streams ST1 and ST2. You should see, |
| office id |
| days until expiration |
| process start time |
| stop time |
| the ama default |
| ama teleprocessing |
| its also will have some stuff such as HOC password and a backup HOC password, |
| Also look under /dev/unixabf /unixa/users, this will give you the termination |
| codes after the stream code like: |
| S# (#)=termination code + date + time |
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| Circuit Breaker |
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| 23/70: audit file |
| Name: Circuit Breaker 5 |
| Date: 10:49 pm Sun May 03, 1987 |
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| One more thing to check on the audit file dump /no5text/rcv/aimrc. |
| I would think the audit file is like audit on a VAX it just checks your access |
| level if your insuficient you can't read that file. |
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| 24/70: Circuit Breaker |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 1:11 am Mon May 04, 1987 |
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|
| (Trying hard to leave an intelligble post) |
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|
| Circuit Breaker, what LMOS system do you have access to? Do you (it looks |
| like it to me) have access to only the unix Front End system, or do you have |
| the IBM VM370 host processor? Anyway, not all front ends are the same, try |
| accessing the Cross Front End (XFE) via the Network Manager program |
| (/usr/lbin, I think) nmx or the NMstatus program and checking for those |
| specific files you posted about. I'll have to check the LMOS I have access to |
| and see if those particular files you posted about exist. You also might want |
| to look at the CRSAB RSA's help files for asyncronous terminal connections in |
| the help directories. You are probably already good at unix, but try this to |
| locate those help dirs: |
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| $ cd / |
| $ du *>/dev/du.txt& |
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| Then in a few minutes, do |
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| $ cd /dev |
| $ cat du.txt |
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| That will give you a listing of all the directories on that system, and if |
| you see any that resemble help files then go there and cat everything... |
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| Phantom |
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| 25/70: Payphones (again) |
| Name: Icarus 15 |
| Date: 3:08 am Mon May 04, 1987 |
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| If the wires are exposed leading up to the payphone, and you hooked up handset |
| to the appropriate wires, can you make direct calls? If the case is that you |
| can, there are many phones I know of that do not have the metal encasing |
| around the wires. I have to try it. I am pretty sure that bypassing the |
| simple hardware of the payphone console itself does not grant open access to |
| all outside lines. Or does it? |
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| 26/70: LMOS/Unix |
| Name: Evil Jay 26 |
| Date: 4:18 am Mon May 04, 1987 |
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| Could someone print out some commands to do on LMOS? What exactly can |
| be done on the system. Please explain. Also, how do you turn off the log |
| when logging into a Unix, and if possible, could someone leave me a C prg |
| to give my account root priveledges. Terminus was playing around, and |
| letting me check out one of these prgs but I never got a chance to save/copy |
| it. Thanks/... |
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| -Jay |
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| 27/70: Payphone Wires..... |
| Name: The Disk Jockey 13 |
| Date: 7:33 am Mon May 04, 1987 |
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|
| At the school in Indiana that I went to, there were tunnels that connected |
| every building in the school together and dated back to the early 1900's, so |
| we would get drunk and cruise down there and check out old crap that you find |
| laying around in the basements that some of these tunnels went to. |
|
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| ANYWAYS, in one of these tunnels there was a HUGE phone block with hundreds |
| of cable pair. I brought the dandy test-set one night and started trying |
| different connectors to get a dialtone. When I did get a dialtone, I tried to |
| dial a local number, only to get a "please deposit 20 cents" recording, so my |
| guess from that experiance would be that the phone doesn't make much of a |
| difference, and that you would NOT be able to dial direct calls on it. |
|
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| I have a driver's license that says I'm like 24, and I look it, so I too can |
| buy for any who need it. Michigan licenses are the easiest to change, just as |
| (ask) any Michigan person who was born in 1967. |
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| -The Disk Jockey |
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| 28/70: Fortresses/LMOS commands |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 7:22 pm Mon May 04, 1987 |
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|
| Come to think of it, it is the actual line and not the phone in most cases, |
| take a look at the Class of Service or Universal Service Order Code in an ISVH |
| (ISH) or an INQ from COSMOS or get it via an Basic Output Report (BOR). Now, |
| if you really wanted to go out of your way to 'fix' a payphone to where you |
| could dial out normally, you might be able to accomplish this via RC-MAC, or |
| maybe an SCC. But if you did do this it would almost certainly die when the |
| bill came. |
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| Phantom |
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| PS-I will post up pertinent data from an ISH upon various payphones next time |
| I log on, if anyone would like to see it. |
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| 29/70: Payphone ISH |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 7:43 pm Mon May 04, 1987 |
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|
| Ok, I ISHed a few payphones and here's the results: |
|
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| The STatus was (of course) WK (Working), the TYPE was C (Coin), the Class of |
| Service (CS) is CN (CoiN), the Universal Service Order Code (US) is 1PC, which |
| means single party something.. can't remember. The Line Class Code (LCC) field |
| contained CDF, I don't know what CDF means though. |
|
|
| On older post-pay telephones (the kind where it either gives you a loud |
| annoying 'buzz' when the calling party answers, or the kind that allows you to |
| hear them but them not hear you until you put your coins in) probably have a |
| US of 1PP (Single party, Post Pay), and Coin First phones (the kind that you |
| must put money in to get a dialtone) have a US of 1CF (Single party, Coin |
| First). |
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| Hope that helped, |
| Phantom |
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| 30/70: Question |
| Name: Cap'N Crax 10 |
| Date: 3:43 am Tue May 05, 1987 |
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|
| Does anyone know why, and how, it |
| is allowable to place collect calls |
| to loop lines. I know that this |
| does work, as I have done it. I |
| was wondering how it (loop) is |
| classified, why it passes the billing |
| verify, and to whom is the billing |
| allocated? It is obviously recorded |
| on AMA, and it apparently pissed |
| off Bell. No more loop... |
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| C^2 |
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| 31/70: -------- |
| Name: Circuit Breaker 5 |
| Date: 10:25 pm Tue May 05, 1987 |
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|
| Phantom what do you mean 'trying for an inteligible post'? I was telling Doom |
| how to get some AMA data from LMOS. I am sure the LMOS you have access to has |
| an AMA audit file, its just a security feature. |
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| 32/70: Call Blocking.... |
| Name: The Mad Hacker 47 |
| Date: 7:06 pm Wed May 06, 1987 |
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| What Is Call Blocking? It has something to do with a condition in ANI/ONI. I |
| read it in My Cama Manual and It was vague. Any Help? |
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| -TMH |
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| 33/70: A few LMOS commands |
| Name: Control C 8 |
| Date: 8:46 pm Wed May 06, 1987 |
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| Here's some /FOR commands |
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| TV - Trouble Verification |
| RJR and DMLR are jepordary reports.. |
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| Shit I had some more, but I can't rember.. |
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| Control |
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| 34/70: datakits... |
| Name: Slave Driver 58 |
| Date: 11:56 am Thu May 07, 1987 |
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| Does anyone have any experience |
| hacking datakits? |
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| NODE dkeasta blah blah |
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| NETWORK ACCESS PASSWORD: |
|
|
| any ideas on the password? Anyone have -any- idea of the format, length etc? |
|
|
| any help appreciated.. |
|
|
| Steve Driver |
|
|
| ps. I know what they do, I just need to get on famous last words| |
|
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|
|
| 35/70: More LMOS |
| Name: Doom Prophet 21 |
| Date: 8:28 pm Thu May 07, 1987 |
|
|
| Ok, I hadn't seen that in LMOS yet, CB, thanks for the info. There are other |
| ways to access the info in an intermediate call store section/buffer of sorts |
| from SCCS, and of course the AMARC systems. On another board, Phantom asked |
| what AMASE was, I would think that it could be an abbreviated form of 'AMA |
| Sensor', you know, BDT's, CDA's, and ESS software format sensors, or special |
| VSS sensors maybe. |
|
|
| On LMOS..some of the things are common knowledge (in BSTJ's and all) but I |
| will post a few and what they do. |
|
|
| Let's see, to screen status troubles, ttry /FOR MSCR. You may have to know |
| employee codes of the screener and the MC code, it's been a while since I've |
| been on. |
| |
| The different actions in the Mechanized Screener transactions are run an MLT |
| test, get job and work info, run RST transaction, read mail, clear the mask |
| (indicating no action), review desk items, return to original status, put item |
| on the Local Test Desk (used to test lines that the MLT/LTS equipment can't |
| for some reason, such as selective ringing multiparty lines), put screener in |
| the off duty status (returning work items into the pool I believe). Others are |
| /Te (Trouble Entry), DISP, etc. |
|
|
| Something somewhat interesting, in the /tmp direcoty for an FE, look at the |
| Console/log0 file, which contains countters and info on how many certain |
| transactions have been done for a certain time period (RBOR is in there but |
| I'm not sure about the rest). Other commands do things like add changes to |
| LMOS tables, look at work summaries, check all jobs related to a certain CTTN |
| (cable trouble ticket number) or TTN, and review all work items for specific |
| FE's. If anyone wants anything specific about some of these commands leave ma |
| (me) a letter or post since it seems the discussion is going good. I'm sure |
| Marauder or others could proably correct me on a few points, but oh well. |
|
|
| Doom |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 36/70: Call Blocking/Loops/etc. |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 11:09 pm Thu May 07, 1987 |
|
|
| Circuit Breaker, what I meant was that I was fucked up, and having a hard |
| time typing legibly. That's all. |
|
|
| Call blocking is a vague term, can you tell us what it relates to, CAMA, |
| ANI, PBX's, or what? A basic description is that it is what happens when the |
| network is operating at peak, and all trunks are busy, and thus the caller |
| gets a re-order or is left sitting there. |
|
|
| Be more specific if you can, because there is also a thing called 'blocking' |
| on PBX's which is similar but on a smaller scale. |
|
|
| To whoever asked about the collect call to the loop, well loop-around |
| numbers are probably either an Official or a Test line, at least the ones I |
| have seen. So unless they set some type of screening to it so it can't accept |
| collect calls then you could collect call a loop, but hope that you didn't |
| dial direct from your home because your number would be on their phone bill. |
|
|
| Control C, since you seem to have a manual or something on ESS, could you |
| tell me what a RC15 report is, I am very confused about them. Thanks... |
|
|
| Phantom |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 37/70: Coin Tests... |
| Name: The Mad Hacker 47 |
| Date: 12:07 am Fri May 08, 1987 |
|
|
| SFD posted in the previous sub abour coin tests. I ask you this. The CO, upon |
| completion of a call, removes -48 volts from the ring, ground from the tip and |
| either a -130 volts(Refund) or +130 Volts(Collect) is applied to the tip to |
| operate the cion relay in the phone. If Someone were to have acces to the |
| exposed wires outside of the phone, wouldn't they be able to simulate the |
| voltage necessary to refund their own money(Theoretically speaking if they |
| could simulate the voltage in a Phone Booth of course)? Would that Be |
| Possible? I also broke out my testboard, Station, and network Manuals and |
| Found that their is some significance in turning the handset of the payphone |
| upside down. I can't find out exactly why yet, but it is all over the "Coin |
| Maintenance Check Booklet" that bell uses as reference for Coin Stations. I |
| will search more through the book and see what I can find. |
|
|
| The Mad Hacker |
|
|
|
|
| 38/70: Collect call |
| Name: Icarus 15 |
| Date: 12:52 am Fri May 08, 1987 |
|
|
| If you hack a mailphone system of some kind that only requires the number to |
| be called and the initia message will be played, then you can have the message |
| say, "Hello?........Sure. hangup|" This will enable you to make a third party |
| billing call to anyone and use the mailphone system as the party paying for |
| the call. The operator will cal up the mailphone, the msg will play and |
| she'll hear the person being billed say, "Sure." when asked if they accept the |
| charge. |
|
|
| In any case if you want to make a call bill it to 312-410-7132, and it will go |
| straight through. |
|
|
| Icarus |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 39/70: Call blocking |
| Name: Lotus 38 |
| Date: 3:44 am Fri May 08, 1987 |
|
|
| I know that in parts of Florida that a new system uses the term "call |
| blocking" simply to stop someone in your co's area from calling you. You would |
| do something like "*80+number to block" and when that number calls you , a |
| "You can not dial XXX-XXXX at this time. Try again later" |
|
|
| Other features include immediate call back. This allows you to hit a few |
| keys on the phone and call back whomever just called you (again, only if |
| they are in your local co). |
|
|
| Anyone else have info on this? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 40/70: Collect Calls..... |
| Name: The Disk Jockey 13 |
| Date: 6:55 am Fri May 08, 1987 |
|
|
| A few years ago, in school (out of state) everyone had their ways making free |
| calls, someone had a number to a recording, something like that VMS, and it |
| said "This number accepts all collect and 3rd party billing calls" and it |
| worked all the time. |
|
|
| Another way is to make a collect call to an out-of-state extender. Let me say |
| it this way.... |
|
|
| I'm calling from 219 (Indiana) and I call the local MCI node in Chicago |
| collect. The operator asks "your name" and you say in a fem voice |
| "Brenda"....the call will go through, and you will here the usual MCI tone. |
| RIGHT AWAY, you press a number on t touch tone pad, this will silent the MCI |
| tone. Then you say in your own voice "Hello?" for all the operator knows, |
| you are the one that answered! The only problem is that you have to work |
| fast, else you get a re-order in about 15 seconds. |
|
|
| -The Disk Jockey |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 41/70: Call Blocking... |
| Name: The Mad Hacker 47 |
| Date: 9:19 am Fri May 08, 1987 |
|
|
| I will get more specific on the Call Blocking I am refering to. It isn't what |
| Lotus suggested. That Sounds more like DMS-100 Options(Sounds Exactly like |
| them, in fact). I thought that the FCC wouldn't allow AT&T to use those |
| options, though. Maybe I was mistaken. I think that the call blocking I was |
| refering to is more towards the overload on any paticular circuit as was |
| mentioned before. |
|
|
| The Mad Hacker |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 42/70: toll phone |
| Name: Circuit Breaker 5 |
| Date: 10:46 pm Fri May 08, 1987 |
|
|
| In most areas in Europe, the wire to payphones hang out below the phone if you |
| splice those wires to you handset, you can dial direct without any imitation |
| tones. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 43/70: Call Blocking |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 2:23 am Sat May 09, 1987 |
|
|
| Call Blocking is indeed a feature of (C)LASS....but that CLASS feature is |
| LATA based around LCCIS, not upon a CO and intraoffice calls. For more info |
| read any CLASS file, or check out LOD/H TJ 1, file 1, CLASS, by Videosmith. |
| It explains it pretty clearly. There was a PBX test number in 305 (the testing |
| grounds of CLASS) that I had gotten somewhere that had a demo of CLASS |
| features on it, such as Call trace, selective call forwarding, call blocking, |
| etc. It was called Touch-Star, I think, or maybe Touch-Tel, one of the two. |
| Anyway, LASS is used in the 717 (Harrisburg, PA) NPA. |
|
|
| Phantom |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 44/70: Addition. |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 2:32 am Sat May 09, 1987 |
|
|
| (I forgot something) |
|
|
| DMS-100 does have something like it's own call blocking. It can be used to |
| restrict certain types of lines from calling other types. The destination |
| switch checks the information sent in from the (intraoffice) DN, (I think the |
| Screening Code, probably) or from an INC (incoming trunk). This can be done to |
| restrict access to official lines and such. |
|
|
| Phantom |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 45/70: i thought |
| Name: Lucifer 666 43 |
| Date: 2:26 am Sun May 10, 1987 |
|
|
| none of the DMS features blocking other people from calling you, etc| were |
| not implemented.... I thought that the user-choice stuff was never put in... |
|
|
| was I wrong? |
|
|
| L666 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 46/70: RC15? |
| Name: Control C 8 |
| Date: 11:17 am Sun May 10, 1987 |
|
|
| Phantom, |
|
|
| Are you sure the RC15 exists? RC's start at 16 and end at 29.. |
| Maby I'm just screwed... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 47/70: FACS |
| Name: Mad Hatter 51 |
| Date: 5:57 pm Tue May 12, 1987 |
|
|
| Can anyone fill me in on FACS? I got the file by Sharp Razor and Doom Prophet |
| has told me about it somewhat, but can anyone explain detailed info on it? |
| Thanks (d00d)... |
|
|
| -Hatter |
| .s |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 48/70: TC15 |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 7:21 pm Tue May 12, 1987 |
|
|
| Actually, it's a TC15 report on a 1AESS... not RC15. Sorry about that. A TC15 |
| is very long and has a few acronyms in it that I don't recognize. About the |
| only one I can remember right now was PUC, Peripheral Unit Controller. |
|
|
| For those of you who have problems with the acronyms posted here, you might |
| want to check the N)eed acronyms option from the main menu on this board. This |
| is an acronym list that I made a while back and gave to TK, and he put a few |
| in himself. It's basically correct as far as I know, so please let's not add |
| one unless you are sure. |
|
|
| Phantom |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 49/70: Carot, etc. |
| Name: Doom Prophet 21 |
| Date: 4:41 pm Fri May 15, 1987 |
|
|
| Well, I don't know that much about FACS, although I don't believe that it |
| really acts as a replacement for COSMOS, more like an integration/mini datakit |
| sort of thing for the different systems related to cosmos. |
|
|
| Mad Hatter was asking about CAROT in mail, and I looked through some stuff and |
| here is some info about the system. It consists of the two processors for the |
| CAROT (database section), the data and the test processor. The TP controls and |
| directs the ROTL's and the Circuit Maintenance System (I've seen CMS-1B and |
| also CMS-3A, don't know what the current version is). CMS 3A is used with |
| TIRKS also. Anyway, the CAROT controller (which is supported by the two |
| processors) can do something like 14 tests at the same time (at night when |
| their is less traffic on the trunks). The CC also analyzes and sends out the |
| test results to the appropriate departments or offices (the CO, an SCC or a |
| CTTU station). The ROTL is accessed just by the technician dialing it, which |
| is why anyone can dial them. The ROTL is controlled by MF input of the trunk |
| group and network numbers. I have seen TNN's as being three digits, but I |
| guess it depends upon the office size. The ROTL seizes the trunk to be tested. |
| The ATMS responder (Automated Trunk Measurement System) is connected to the |
| ends of the tested trunk to receive tthe test measurements. The ROTL somehow |
| attaches test equipment to the origiinating end of the trunk. Other test lins |
| are used for the terminating end (going into another CO or switch)...I'm sure |
| everyone knows there are dialups to CAROT, these are from the Remote User |
| Multiplex, the ports for remote terminals to call in through (unless the |
| dialup serves for some type of diagnostics testing upon the test equimpment |
| itself). 16 people can be on the same RUM....I don't know if that means 16 |
| people can dial the same dialup and somehow still connect (highly improbable). |
| Lex would probably know more about it. |
|
|
| Doom |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 50/70: Advanced 800 |
| Name: Taran King 1 |
| Date: 5:00 pm Fri May 15, 1987 |
|
|
| Well, I know that many people have been told that to get translations for 800 |
| numbers, they should call an office that has access to the NCP database. I |
| just read a bit about it in CO which I thought was sort of interesting. It's |
| part of DSDC (Direct Services Dialing Capabilities). The subscriber dials the |
| 800 number which is then routed to a 4E. From there, it goes to the ACP |
| (Action Control Point or is it ACtion Point?|) which is software that |
| determines the special type of call (toll free/976/etc.). The ACP gets it's |
| (its) information from the NCP which is the Network Control Point. The NCP |
| database receives the call information through CCS and checks on the customer |
| service information that the call information goes with, thereby determining |
| how to route the call and sends the info back to the ACP. The SMS (Service |
| Management System) is used to update information and for definition of that |
| information. The NCP database can contain various information such as where |
| the translation routes determined by origin of call or time of day too. |
|
|
| I have a question about CCS. What is signifigant about the number version? I |
| mean, is the information transmitted done differently (different protocol or |
| manner of sending) or is it just updates to the way it's wired up? McBlah |
| -TK |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 51/70: CCS |
| Name: Mad Hatter 51 |
| Date: 6:02 pm Fri May 15, 1987 |
|
|
| Randy- I can't seem to find that ancronym or any mention of it. I've followed |
| your post all they way up to that. The Advanced 800 Service you read had to |
| do with the SPC Network? The paragraph you typed was the same(not word for |
| word) as the one here in the Tech on SPC Net. ACP stands for ACtion Point. |
|
|
| -Hatter |
|
|
| Excuse the time/date of this call.. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 52/70: CCS |
| Name: Taran King 1 |
| Date: 11:05 pm Fri May 15, 1987 |
|
|
| The CCS that I mentioned (CCS7 presently) is like the modern term for CCIS. |
| I'm not sure why they changed it, but that's the accepted acronym now. The |
| information that I got from CO magazine was discussing the BOCs' involvement |
| in 800 services now. It's highly possible (and probable) that they use the |
| same method of signaling for this. Hmm...Oh well, still, I want to know about |
| the different versions of CCS. Later |
| -TK |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 53/70: CCS |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 12:52 pm Sat May 16, 1987 |
|
|
| Ok, the international version of CCS is known as as CCITT6, (or 'the CCITT |
| signalling system No. 6) which are centered around an International Switching |
| Center (ISC). CCITT No. 6 can identify 2048 trunks (CCS can ID 8192 trunks). |
|
|
|
|
| I have some pages from an old BSTJ on CCIS in front of me, they have a good |
| amount of information about CCITT6 in here. One interesting table inn here is |
| Calling parties categries, which are in bits 13-16 of a CCITT No. 6 'message', |
| there are provisions for operators in French, English, German, Russian, and |
| Spanish, and other user selectable languages, data call, test call, spare, |
| etc. I'll have to read more about this, it would be interesting to find out |
| how you could make an int'l call over CCITT No. 6 (or maybe 7 now as someone |
| said) as a test call. |
|
|
| Phantom |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 54/70: Badgers... |
| Name: Taran King 1 |
| Date: 7:38 pm Sat May 16, 1987 |
|
|
| A long, long time ago, Jester Sluggo found some stuff about Badgers while |
| trashing. Just today, in conversation, I found out a bit about what these |
| are. It is a piece of machinery (Badger is the brand name) which is located |
| in the SCC (supposedly). It is used for remote trunk testing and it grabs the |
| circuit to be tested and runs whatever on it. I have a feeling this is more |
| for the independant telcos but I couldn't say for sure. Later |
| -TK |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 55/70: Here's...... |
| Name: The Disk Jockey 13 |
| Date: 12:40 am Mon May 18, 1987 |
|
|
| ..an employee numthat I guess is sort of a Sprint Newsline. |
|
|
| It was LEECHED off of another board, so it remains ted: 8-332-0111 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
| 56/70: Anyone know? |
| Name: Cap'N Crax 10 |
| Date: 2:22 am Mon May 18, 1987 |
|
|
| Does anyone know if either/both 900's and 976's terminate in POTS number? |
| (Ever?) Something tells me that they probably do.. |
|
|
| C^2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 57/70: 976/900s |
| Name: Taran King 1 |
| Date: 6:35 am Mon May 18, 1987 |
|
|
| I believe that I asked someone that already and neither of them did. They |
| both were arranged really strangely and didn't have POTS numbers (or at least |
| not standard POTS numbers). If you could log onto the switch for the 900 or |
| 976 number, you could probably find out, anyway, if it's got a POTS |
| translation, but then again, that's a whole different baby. I'll ask again |
| and repost when I find out unless Phantom and DP beat me to it (likely). Later |
| -TK |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 58/70: 900 and 976 |
| Name: Kerrang Khan 34 |
| Date: 4:37 pm Mon May 18, 1987 |
|
|
| Do not terminate in POTS numbers. |
| k |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 59/70: I think.. |
| Name: Slave Driver 58 |
| Date: 10:21 am Tue May 19, 1987 |
|
|
|
|
| that 900s as in the kind you see on TV, like voting things| terminate in a |
| 4e office. There is some special device that totals the calls if needed| and |
| then the people who are using it just call and ask about the numbers... |
|
|
| Steve |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 60/70: 900 numbers explained |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 9:35 pm Tue May 19, 1987 |
|
|
| I was really interested in how 900 numbers worked, it is not common phreak |
| knowledge, so I researched via a BSTJ and a little bit of engineering. |
| Actually, I wrote a file on the Mass Announcement System (MAS) that is about |
| 80 sectors, but I never released it because I thought no one gave a fuck. If |
| anyone here wants this file, mail me and I'll get it to you somehow, or upload |
| it here. |
|
|
| 900 numbers do terminate in a Number 4 ESS, the 4E that has been allocated |
| as your MAS node. As of 1980 (old info, I know) there were 7 No. 4 ESS |
| switches that were MAS nodes. That number might be more now, butt the nodes |
| were in Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, LA, Newar, and Philly. Each one of |
| these covers a particular part of the country. (oops, that 'Newar' up there is |
| supposed to be 'Newark'). For instance, if Randy dialed 1-900-555-1212 (the |
| Dial it 900 service information line) his call would be sent to the Atlanta |
| No. 4 ESS MAS node. If Mad Hatter dialed the same number, his call would be |
| sent to the Philly MAS node. (Oh, Alaska and Hawaii are also included in |
| this). |
|
|
| Back to the original question by Crax, 900 numbers can terminate in a POTS |
| number, but I have never seen it done, so I would guess that it's not a common |
| occurance. This is called cut through calling, or technically, Media |
| Stimulated Calling (MSC). MSC basically sends one call per some unit of time |
| to a DDD number. |
|
|
| The place that handles the maintenance and administration of all No. 4 ESS |
| MAS offices is called ONAC, Operations Network Administration Center. I think |
| the ODAC are centralized in Kansas City, Mo, which seems kind of strange |
| because there isn't a MAS node there (that I know of). |
|
|
| One interesting thing about MAS services is the way Recent Changes are done, |
| through an RCRRT2 (Remote Recent Change, don't ask me why the acronym doesn't |
| match) channel, which is hardwired to ONAC. If one ever trashed ONAC or a 4E |
| MAS node, you could probably find some actual switch output messages. Those |
| would be interesting to see. So if anyone ever does any trashing like this |
| then let me know. |
|
|
| Phantom |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 61/70: UNIX logs... |
| Name: Ax Murderer 7 |
| Date: 5:33 pm Wed May 20, 1987 |
|
|
| I haven't been on for awhile, but anyways, whoever was questioning UNIX's, |
| which log are you talking about, the one of Berkley (HIST?). There's quite |
| a few logs. To get superuser privs on some systems, first go into the /dev/ |
| section and scan through the files. Almost always there will be a program |
| in there which will be UNPROTECTED and allow even the lowest scum to use |
| it. The main point is, in case for some emergency reason, he must log on |
| from a remote location, and has difficulties, he may process another account. |
|
|
| Ax Murderer |
|
|
| Also, I got TONS of "C" programs. I also am pretty fluent in this. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 62/70: Unix |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 9:02 pm Fri May 22, 1987 |
|
|
| Does anyone know a way to implement something similar to some common unix |
| commands on a cosnix OS? For instance, the grep command, the find comma the |
| file command, and a few others. What I wanted to do was list the ascii files |
| in a cosnix directory (assume the /usr/cosmos directory, where COSMOS three |
| letter command source is kept, but there couldcii or English Text in it). I |
| would do it like this on unix: |
|
|
| $ ls -a</tmp/asciick& |
|
|
| Then when that process was done: |
|
|
| $ grep ascii /tmp/asciic/tmp/final& |
|
|
| Then check that file when it was done and it would have a listing of the |
| ascii files. Since you cuse the type command, and can't use file, I'd rather |
| not look through a long directory listing, and even then it's ot always ascii. |
| So does anyone have any shell scripts that might help me out? |
|
|
| Phantom |
|
|
|
|
| PS-Sorry for the line noise. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 63/70: RA1 Channel 6 |
| Name: Icarus 15 |
| Date: 3:54 am Sun May 24, 1987 |
|
|
| I dialed 1074654 and I heard "RA1 channel 6" repeated 8 times. Then I found |
| out that I could dial 107xxxx and get the recording. Does anyone know what |
| that means? |
|
|
| This only worked on some phones. Others, after I dialed 10, I would get the |
| operator. |
|
|
| Icarus |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 64/70: PHREE CALLZ D00DZ |
| Name: The Leftist 71 |
| Date: 10:57 pm Sun May 24, 1987 |
|
|
| heh, about the easiest way to bill 3rd party or collect is to call spri nt |
| operator.. they are dumb, and have no info on you whatsoever.. but you knew |
| that didnt you?? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 65/70: centrex |
| Name: The Leftist 71 |
| Date: 4:52 pm Mon May 25, 1987 |
|
|
| Is there anyone that has any good info, <bell manuals etc..> on Centrex, or |
| maybe someone out there knows a few things about it that could post?? Centrex |
| in the home is pretty nice thing to have..only costs about 10 bucks to have it |
| installed, but its well worth it... more info later.. |
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| 66/70: WELL... |
| Name: Sir Francis Drake 56 |
| Date: 7:05 pm Mon May 25, 1987 |
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| I HAVE SOME NON TECH CENTREX MANUALS SOMEWHERE... |
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| I dont think its all that great right now but when the RBOC's are allowed to |
| do all their software stuff it will be pretty cool. There are allread some |
| keen centrex packages for voice mail and stuff. |
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| Ill go look for them. |
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| sfd |
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| 67/70: Centrex |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 5:59 pm Sat May 30, 1987 |
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| Leftist, what do you want to know about centrex? I know a bit about the |
| workings of them, the general description, how they are set up in a CO, etc. |
| Be more specific in your question... |
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| Phantom |
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| 68/70: Blue boxing |
| Name: Icarus 15 |
| Date: 3:28 am Sun May 31, 1987 |
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| I have found that kp and st are not necessary when dialing off of a trunk. |
| After seizing the trunk, ac+ is all that is needed to call out. This seems |
| strange. Any comments? |
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| Icarus |
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| 69/70: Reply^ |
| Name: The Executioner 19 |
| Date: 4:15 pm Sun May 31, 1987 |
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| You are not seizing an interoffice trunk. |
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| What you are doing is kind of pseudo-boxing, which is what we used to do |
| here in New Jersey. What would happen is that we would use MCI, get a |
| destination and then blow 2600. Since there were no restrictions on the |
| band width, and no filters, we would blow back a dial tone that was possible |
| to make international as well as alliance calls with crystal clarity. |
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| I don't know the exact name of this but just that we weren't |
| seizing a trunk. |
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| Ex y |
| ^ nice space |
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| 70/70: DP Boxing |
| Name: Phantom Phreaker 46 |
| Date: 8:41 am Mon Jun 01, 1987 |
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| Icarus, what you are talking about sounds like boxing using a DP (Dial |
| Pulse) trunk. DP 'boxing' doesn't use KP and ST, they use a time-out feature. |
| DP is made up of short bursts of 2600Hz tone. It isn't all that common as far |
| as I know, but some older SxS offices supposedly use it for outpulsing on |
| interoffice calls and to CAMA for billing. This means that either the homing |
| CAMA office can record dial pulse trunk signalling, or there is some sort of |
| sensor to translate it to MF before reception by the CAMA MF digit recievers. |
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| Phantom |
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| Post on Phreak/Hack Sub? No |
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| ^*^ |
| ========================================================================= |
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