| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume Three, Issue 25, File 7 of 11 |
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| ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ |
| ^*^ ^*^ |
| ^*^ The Blue Box And Ma Bell ^*^ |
| ^*^ ^*^ |
| ^*^ Brought To You by The Noid ^*^ |
| ^*^ ^*^ |
| ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ ^*^ |
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| "...The user placed the speaker over the telephone handset's |
| transmitter and simply pressed the buttons that corresponded |
| to the desired CCITT tones. It was just that simple." |
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| THE BLUE BOX AND MA BELL |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| Before the breakup of AT&T, Ma Bell was everyone's favorite enemy. So it was |
| not surprising that so many people worked so hard and so successfully at |
| perfecting various means of making free and untraceable telephone calls. |
| Whether it was a BLACK BOX used by Joe and Jane College to call home, or a BLUE |
| BOX used by organized crime to lay off untraceable bets, the technology that |
| provided the finest telephone system in the world contained the seeds of its |
| own destruction. |
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| The fact of the matter is that the Blue Box was so effective at making |
| untraceable calls that there is no estimate as to how many calls were made |
| or lost revenues of $100, $100-million, or $1-billion on the Blue Box. Blue |
| Boxes were so effective at making free, untraceable calls that Ma Bell didn't |
| want anyone to know about them, and for many years denied their existence. They |
| even went as far as strongarming a major consumer-science magazine into killing |
| an article that had already been prepared on the Blue and Black boxes. |
| Furthermore, the police records of a major city contain a report concerning a |
| break-in at the residence of the author of that article. The only item missing |
| following the break-in was the folder containing copies of one of the earliest |
| Blue-Box designs and a Bell-System booklet that described how subscriber |
| billing was done by the AMA machine -- a booklet that Ma Bell denied ever |
| existed. Since the AMA (Automatic Message Accounting) machine was the means |
| whereby Ma Bell eventually tracked down both the Blue and Black Boxes, I'll |
| take time out to explain it. Besides, knowing how the AMA machine works will |
| help you to better understand Blue and Black Box "phone phreaking." |
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| Who Made The Call? |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Back in the early days of the telephone, a customer's billing originated in a |
| mechanical counting device, which was usually called a "register" or a "meter." |
| Each subscriber's line was connected to a meter that was part of a wall of |
| meters. The meter clicked off the message units, and once a month someone |
| simply wrote down the meter's reading, which was later interpolated into |
| message-unit billing for those subscriber's who were charged by the message |
| unit. (Flat-rate subscriber's could make unlimited calls only within a |
| designated geographic area. The meter clicked off message units for calls |
| outside that area.) Because eventually there were too many meters to read |
| individually, and because more subscribers started questioning their monthly |
| bills, the local telephone companies turned to photography. A photograph of a |
| large number of meters served as an incontestable record of their reading at a |
| given date and time, and was much easier to convert to customer billing by the |
| accounting department. |
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| As you might imagine, even with photographs, billing was cumbersome and did not |
| reflect the latest technical developments. A meter didn't provide any |
| indication of what the subscriber was doing with the telephone, nor did it |
| indicate how the average subscriber made calls or the efficiency of the |
| information service (how fast the operators could handle requests). So the |
| meters were replaced by the AMA machine. One machine handled up to 20,000 |
| subscribers. It produced a punched tape for a 24-hour period that showed, |
| among other things, the time a phone was picked up (went off-hook), the number |
| dialed, the time the called party answered, and the time the originating phone |
| was hung up (placed on-hook). |
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| One other point, which will answer some questions that you're certain to think |
| of as we discuss the Black & Blue boxes: Ma Bell did not want persons outside |
| their system to know about the AMA machine. The reason: Almost everyone |
| had complaints -- usually unjustified -- about their billing. Had the public |
| been aware of the AMA machine they would have asked for a monthly list of their |
| telephone calls. It wasn't that Ma Bell feared errors in billing; rather, |
| they were fearful of being buried under any avalanche of paperwork and customer |
| complaints. Also, the public believed their telephone calls were personal and |
| untraceable, and Ma Bell didn't want to admit that they knew about the who, |
| when, and where of every call. And so Ma Bell always insisted that billing was |
| based on a meter that simply "clicked" for each message unit; that there was no |
| record, other than for long-distance as to who called whom. Long distance was |
| handled by, and the billing information was done by an operator, so there was a |
| written record Ma Bell could not deny. |
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| The secrecy surrounding the AMA machine was so pervasive that local, state, and |
| even federal police were told that local calls made by criminals were |
| untraceable, and that people who made obscene telephone calls could not be |
| tracked down unless the person receiving the call could keep the caller on the |
| line for some 30 to 50 minutes so the connections could be physically traced by |
| technicians. Imagine asking a woman or child to put up with almost an hour's |
| worth of the most horrendous obscenities in the hope someone could trace the |
| line. Yet in areas where the AMA machine had replaced the meters, it would |
| have been a simple, though perhaps time-consuming task, to track down the |
| numbers called by any telephone during a 24 hour period. But Ma Bell wanted |
| the AMA machine kept as secret as possible, and so many a criminal was not |
| caught, and many a woman was harassed by the obscene calls of a potential |
| rapist, because existence of the AMA machine was denied. |
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| As a sidelight as to the secrecy surrounding the AMA machine, someone at Ma |
| Bell or the local operating company decided to put the squeeze on the author of |
| the article on Blue Boxes, and reported to the Treasury Department that he was, |
| in fact, manufacturing them for organized crime -- the going rate in the mid |
| 1960's was supposedly $20,000 a box. (Perhaps Ma Bell figured the author would |
| get the obvious message: Forget about the Blue Box and the AMA machine or |
| you'll spend lots of time, and much money on lawyer's fees to get out of the |
| hassles it will cause.) The author was suddenly visited at his place of |
| employment by a Treasury agent. |
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| Fortunately, it took just a few minutes to convince the agent that the author |
| was really just that, and not a technical wizard working for the mob. But one |
| conversation led to another, and the Treasury agent was astounded to learn |
| about the AMA machine. (Wow! Can an author whose story is squelched spill his |
| guts.) According to the Treasury agent, his department had been told that it |
| was impossible to get a record of local calls made by gangsters: The Treasury |
| department had never been informed of the existence of automatic message |
| accounting. Needless to say, the agent left with his own copy of the Bell |
| System publication about the AMA machine, and the author had an appointment |
| with the local Treasury-Bureau director to fill him in on the AMA machine. |
| That information eventually ended up with Senator Dodd, who was conducting a |
| congressional investigation into, among other things, telephone company |
| surveillance of subscriber lines -- which was a common practice for which there |
| was detailed instructions, Ma Bell's own switching equipment ("crossbar") |
| manual. |
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| The Blue Box |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| The Blue Box permitted free telephone calls because it used Ma Bell's own |
| internal frequency-sensitive circuits. When direct long-distance dialing was |
| introduced, the crossbar equipment knew a long-distance call was being dialed |
| by the three-digit area code. The crossbar then converted the dial pulses to |
| the CCITT tone groups, shown in the attached table (at the end of this file), |
| that are used for international and trunkline signaling. (Note that those do |
| not correspond to Touch-Tone frequencies.) As you will see in that table, the |
| tone groups represent more than just numbers; among other things there are tone |
| groups identified as 2600 hertz, KP (prime), and ST (start) -- keep them in |
| mind. |
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| When a subscriber dialed an area code and a telephone number on a rotary-dial |
| telephone, the crossbar automatically connected the subscriber's telephone to a |
| long-distance trunk, converted the dial pulses to CCITT tones, set up |
| electronic cross-country signaling equipment, and recorded the originating |
| number and the called number on the AMA machine. The CCITT tones sent out on |
| the long-distance trunk lines activated special equipment that set up or |
| selected the routing and caused electro-mechanical equipment in the target city |
| to dial the called telephone. |
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| Operator-assisted long-distance calls worked the same way. The operator simply |
| logged into a long-distance trunk and pushed the appropriate buttons, which |
| generated the same tones as direct-dial equipment. The button sequence was |
| 2600 hertz, KP (which activated the long-distance equipment), then the complete |
| area code and telephone number. At the target city, the connection was made to |
| the called number but ringing did not occur until the operator there pressed |
| the ST button. |
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| The sequence of events of early Blue Boxes went like this: The caller dialed |
| information in a distant city, which caused his AMA machine to record a free |
| call to information. When the information operator answered, he pressed the |
| 2600 hertz key on the Blue Box, which disconnected the operator and gave him |
| access to a long-distance trunk. He then dialed KP and the desired number and |
| ended with an ST, which caused the target phone to ring. For as long as the |
| conversation took place, the AMA machine indicated a free call to an |
| information operator. The technique required a long-distance information |
| operator because the local operator, not being on a long distance trunk, was |
| accessed through local wire switching, not the CCITT tones. |
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| Call Anywhere |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Now imagine the possibilities. Assume the Blue Box user was in Philadelphia. |
| He would call Chicago information, disconnect from the operator with a KP tone, |
| and then dial anywhere that was on direct-dial service: Los Angeles, Dallas, |
| or anywhere in the world if the Blue Boxer could get the international codes. |
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| The legend is often told of one Blue Boxer who, in the 1960's, lived in New |
| York and had a girl friend at a college near Boston. Now back in the 1960's, |
| making a telephone call to a college town on the weekend was even more |
| difficult than it is today to make a call from New York to Florida on a |
| reduced-rate holiday using one of the cut-rate long-distance carriers. So our |
| Blue Boxer got on an international operator's circuit to Rome, Blue Boxed |
| through to a Hamburg operator, and asked Hamburg to patch through to Boston. |
| The Hamburg operator thought the call originated in Rome and inquired as to the |
| "operator's" good English, to which the Blue Boxer replied that he was an |
| expatriate hired to handle calls by American tourists back to their homeland. |
| Every weekend, while the Northeast was strangled by reduced-rate long-distance |
| calls, our Blue Boxer had no trouble sending his voice almost 7,000 miles for |
| free. |
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|
| ...The user placed the speaker over the telephone handset's transmitter and |
| simply pressed the buttons that corresponded to the desired CCITT tones. It |
| was just that simple. |
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| Actually, it was even easier than it reads because Blue Boxers discovered they |
| did not need the operator. If they dialed an active telephone located in |
| certain nearby, but different, area codes, they could Blue Box just as if they |
| had Blue Boxed through an information operator's circuit. The subscriber whose |
| line was Blue Boxed simply found his phone was dead when it was picked up. But |
| if the Blue Box conversation was short, the "dead" phone suddenly came to life |
| the next time it was picked up. Using a list of "distant" numbers, a Blue |
| Boxer would never hassle anyone enough times to make them complain to the |
| telephone company. |
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| The difference between Blue Boxing off of a subscriber rather than an |
| information operator was that the AMA tape indicated a real long-distance |
| telephone call perhaps costing 15 or 25 cents -- instead of a freebie. Of |
| course that is the reason why when Ma Bell finally decided to go public with |
| "assisted" newspaper articles about the Blue Box users they had apprehended, it |
| was usually about some college kid or "phone phreak." One never read of a |
| mobster being caught. Greed and stupidity were the reasons why the kid's were |
| caught. |
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| It was the transistor that led to Ma Bell going public with the Blue Box. By |
| using transistors and RC phase-shift networks for the oscillators, a portable |
| Blue Box could be made inexpensively, and small enough to be used unobtrusively |
| from a public telephone. The college crowd in many technical schools went |
| crazy with the portable Blue Box; they could call the folks back home, their |
| friends, or get a free network (the Alberta and Carolina connections -- which |
| could be a topic for a whole separate file) and never pay a dime to Ma Bell. |
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| Unlike the mobsters who were willing to pay a small long-distance charge when |
| Blue Boxing, the kids wanted it, wanted it all free, and so they used the |
| information operator routing, and would often talk "free-of-charge" for hours |
| on end. |
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| Ma Bell finally realized that Blue Boxing was costing them Big Bucks, and |
| decided a few articles on the criminal penalties might scare the Blue Boxers |
| enough to cease and desist. But who did Ma Bell catch? The college kids and |
| the greedies. When Ma Bell decided to catch the Blue Boxers she simply |
| examined the AMA tapes for calls to an information operator that were |
| excessively long. No one talked to an operator for 5, 10, 30 minutes, or |
| several hours. Once a long call to an operator appeared several times on an |
| AMA tape, Ma Bell simply monitored the line and the Blue Boxer was caught. |
| (Now you should understand why I opened with an explanation of the AMA |
| machine.) If the Blue Boxer worked from a telephone booth, Ma Bell simply |
| monitored the booth. Ma Bell might not have known who originated the call, but |
| she did know who got the call and getting that party to spill their guts was no |
| problem. |
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| The mob and a few Blue Box hobbyists (maybe even thousands) knew of the AMA |
| machine, and so they used a real telephone number for the KP skip. Their AMA |
| tapes looked perfectly legitimate. Even if Ma Bell had told the authorities |
| they could provide a list of direct-dialed calls made by local mobsters, the |
| AMA tapes would never show who was called through a Blue Box. For example, if |
| a bookmaker in New York wanted to lay off some action in Chicago, he could make |
| a legitimate call to a phone in New Jersey and then Blue Box to Chicago. His |
| AMA tape would show a call to New Jersey. Nowhere would there be a record of |
| the call to Chicago. Of course, automatic tone monitoring, computerized |
| billing, and ESS (Electronic Switching System) now makes that virtually |
| impossible, but that's the way it was. |
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| You might wonder how Ma Bell discovered the tricks of Blue Boxers. Simple, |
| they hired the perpetrators as consultants. While the initial newspaper |
| articles detailed a potential jail penalties for apprehended blue boxers, |
| except for Ma Bell employees who assisted a blue boxer, it is almost impossible |
| to find an article on the resolution of the cases because most hobbyist blue |
| boxers got suspended sentences and/or probation if they assisted Ma Bell in |
| developing anti-blue box techniques. It is asserted, although it can't be |
| easily proven, that cooperating ex-blue boxers were paid as consultants. (If |
| you can't beat them, hire them to work for you.) |
|
|
| Should you get any ideas about Blue Boxing, keep in mind that modern switching |
| equipment has the capacity to recognize unauthorized tones. It's the reason |
| why a local office can leave their subscriber Touch-Tone circuits active, |
| almost inviting you to use the Touch-Tone service. A few days after you use an |
| unauthorized Touch-Tone service, the business office will call and inquire |
| whether you'd like to pay for the service or have it disconnected. The very |
| same central-office equipment that knows you're using Touch-Tone frequencies |
| knows if your line is originating CCITT signals |
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|
| The Black Box |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| The Black Box was primarily used by the college crowd to avoid charges when |
| frequent calls were made between two particular locations, say the college and |
| a student's home. Unlike the somewhat complex circuitry of a Blue Box, a Black |
| Box was nothing more than a capacitor, a momentary switch, and a battery. |
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|
| As you recall from our discussion of the Blue Box, a telephone circuit is |
| really established before the target phone ever rings, and the circuit is |
| capable of carrying an AC signal in either direction. When the caller hears |
| the ringing in his or her handset, nothing is happening at the receiving end |
| because the ringing signal he hears is really a tone generator at his local |
| telephone office. The target (called) telephone actually gets its 20 |
| pulses-per-second ringing voltage when the person who dialed hears nothing in |
| the "dead" spaces between hearing the ringing tone. When the called phone is |
| answered and taken off hook, the telephone completes a local-office DC loop |
| that is the signal to stop the ringing voltage. About three seconds later the |
| DC loop results in a signal being sent all the way back to the caller's AMA |
| machine that the called telephone was answered. |
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| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
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| CCITT NUMERICAL CODE |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Digit Frequencies (Hz) |
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|
| 1 700+900 |
| 2 700+1100 |
| 3 900+1100 |
| 4 700+1300 |
| 5 900+1300 |
| 6 1100+1300 |
| 7 700+1500 |
| 8 900+1500 |
| 9 1100+1500 |
| 0 1300+1500 |
| Code 11 700+1700 for inward |
| Code 12 900+1700 operators |
| KP 1100+1700 Prime (Start of pulsing) |
| KP2 1300+1700 Transit traffic |
| ST 1500+1700 Start (End of pulsing) |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
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