| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume Three, Issue 29, File #8 of 12 |
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| ........................................... |
| ||||||!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!|||||| |
| |||!!! !!!||| |
| ||| The Myth and Reality About ||| |
| ||| Eavesdropping ||| |
| ||| ||| |
| ||| by Phone Phanatic ||| |
| ||| ||| |
| |||... October 8, 1989 ...||| |
| ||||||...............................|||||| |
| !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! |
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| Most Central Office (CO) eavesdropping intercepts in a Bell Operating Company |
| (BOC) CO are today performed using a modified Metallic Facility Termination |
| (MFT) circuit pack which places about a 100,000 ohm isolated bridging impedance |
| across the subscriber line. Supervisory signaling is detected on the |
| subscriber loop using a high-impedance electronic circuit, and the signaling is |
| repeated in an isolated fashion using the A and B leads of the repeating coil |
| in the MFT to "reconstruct" a CO line for the benefit of monitoring apparatus. |
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| The entire purpose of the above effort is to prevent any trouble or noise on |
| the intercept line or monitoring apparatus from causing any trouble, noise or |
| transmission impairment on the subject line. |
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|
| Some BOCs may elect to use service observing apparatus to provide the necessary |
| isolation and repeated loop supervisory signaling. Less common are locally |
| engineered variations which merely use an isolation amplifier from an MFT or |
| other 4-wire repeater, and which provide no repeated supervisory signaling |
| (which is not all that necessary, since voice-activated recorders and DTMF |
| signaling detectors can be used, and since dial pulses can be counted by |
| playing a tape at slow speed). |
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|
| Today, the use of a "bridge lifter" retardation coil for the purpose of |
| connecting an eavesdropping intercept line is virtually non-existent since they |
| do not provide sufficient isolation and since they provide a fair amount of |
| insertion loss without loop current on the "observing" side. Bridge lifter |
| coils are primarily intended for answering service intercept lines, and consist |
| of a dual-winding inductor which passes 20 Hz ringing and whose windings easily |
| saturate when DC current flows. Bridge lifter coils are used to minimize the |
| loading effect (and consequent transmission impairment) of two subscriber loops |
| on one CO line. Bridge lifter coils provide a significant insertion loss at |
| voice frequencies toward the idle loop; i.e., the loop in use will have DC |
| current flow, saturating the inductor, and reducing its insertion loss to |
| 1.0 dB or less. |
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|
| Despite gadget advertised in magazines like The Sharper Image, the simple truth |
| of the matter is that there is NO WAY for any person using ANY type of |
| apparatus at the telephone set location to ascertain whether there is a |
| properly installed eavesdropping device connected across their line in the CO. |
| The only way such a determination can be made is through the cooperation of the |
| telephone company. |
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| For that matter, there is virtually no way for any person using any type of |
| apparatus in their premises to ascertain if there is ANY type of eavesdropping |
| apparatus installed ANYWHERE on their telephone line outside their premises, |
| unless the eavesdropping apparatus was designed or installed in an |
| exceptionally crude manner (not likely today). Some types of eavesdropping |
| apparatus may be located, but only with the full cooperation of the telephone |
| company. |
|
|
| The sole capability of these nonsense gadgets is to ascertain if an extension |
| telephone is picked up during a telephone call, which is hardly a likely |
| scenario for serious eavesdropping! |
|
|
| These screw-in-the-handset gadgets work by sensing the voltage across the |
| carbon transmitter circuit, and using a control to null this voltage using a |
| comparator circuit. When a person makes a telephone call, the control is |
| adjusted until the light just goes out. If an extension telephone at the |
| user's end is picked up during the call, the increased current drain of a |
| second telephone set will decrease the voltage across the carbon transmitter |
| circuit, unbalancing the voltage comparator circuit, and thereby causing the |
| LED to light. |
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| These voltage comparator "tap detectors" cannot even be left with their |
| setpoint control in the same position, because the effective voltage across a |
| subscriber loop will vary depending upon the nature of the call (except in the |
| case of an all digital CO), and upon other conditions in the CO. |
| Electromechanical and analog ESS CO's may present different characteristics to |
| the telephone line, depending upon whether it is used at the time of: An |
| originated intraoffice call (calling side of intraoffice trunk), an answered |
| intraoffice call (called side of intraoffice trunk), an originated tandem call |
| (interoffice tandem trunk), an originated toll call (toll trunk), or an |
| answered tandem/toll call (incoming tandem or toll trunk). There is usually |
| enough variation in battery feed resistance due to design and component |
| tolerance changes on these different trunks to cause a variation of up to |
| several volts measured at the subscriber end for a given loop and given |
| telephone instrument. |
|
|
| Even more significant are variations in CO battery voltage, which can vary |
| (within "normal limits") from 48 volts to slightly over 52 volts, depending |
| upon CO load conditions. 50 to 51 volts in most CO's is a typical daily |
| variation. If anyone is curious, connect an isolated voltage recorder or data |
| logger to a CO loop and watch the on-hook voltage variations; in many CO's the |
| resultant voltage vs 24-hour time curve will look just like the inverse of a |
| busy-hour graph from a telephone traffic engineering text! |
|
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| In some all-digital CO apparatus, the subscriber loop signaling is performed by |
| a solid-state circuit which functions as a constant-current (or |
| current-limiting) device. With such a solid-state circuit controlling loop |
| current, there is no longer ANY meaningful reference to CO battery voltage; |
| i.e., one cannot even use short-circuit loop current at the subscriber location |
| to even estimate outside cable plant resistance. |
|
|
| To explode this myth even further, let's do a little Ohm's Law: |
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| 1. Assume a CO loop with battery fed from a dual-winding A-relay (or |
| line relay, ESS ferrod line scanner element, or whatever) having 200 |
| ohms to CO battery and 200 ohms to ground. |
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|
| 2. Assume a CO loop of 500 ohms (a pretty typical loop). |
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|
| 3. Assume an eavesdropping device with a DC resistance of 100,000 ohms |
| (this is still pretty crude, but I'm being generous with my example). |
|
|
| 4. Using some simple Ohm's law, the presence or absence of this |
| hypothetical eavesdropping device at the SUBSCRIBER PREMISES will |
| result in a voltage change of less than 0.5 volt when measured in the |
| on-hook state. This voltage change is much less than normal |
| variations of CO battery voltage. |
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| 5. Using some simple Ohm's law, the presence or absence of this |
| hypothetical eavesdropping device at the CENTRAL OFFICE LOCATION will |
| result in a voltage change of less than 0.2 volt when measured in the |
| on-hook state. This voltage change is an order of magnitude less than |
| the expected normal variation of CO battery voltage! |
|
|
| Measuring voltage variations on a subscriber loop in an effort to detect a |
| state-of-the-art eavesdropping device is meaningless, regardless of resolution |
| of a voltage measuring device, since the "signal" is in effect buried in the |
| "noise". |
|
|
| Moving on to the subject of subscriber line impedance... |
|
|
| There is simply no way for any device located on the subscriber's premises to |
| obtain any MEANINGFUL information concerning the impedance characteristics of |
| the subscriber loop and whether or not anything "unusual" is connected at the |
| CO (or for that matter, anywhere else on the subscriber loop). There are a |
| number of reasons why this is the case, which include but are not limited to: |
|
|
| 1. The impedance of a typical telephone cable pair results from |
| distributed impedance elements, and not lumped elements. Non-loaded |
| exchange area cable (22 to 26 AWG @ 0.083 uF/mile capacitance) is |
| generally considered to have a characteristic impedance of 600 ohms |
| (it actually varies, but this is a good compromise figure). Loaded |
| exchange area cable, such as H88 loading which are 88 mH coils spaced |
| at 6 kft intervals, is generally considered to have a a characteristic |
| impedance of 900 ohms (it actually varies between 800 and 1,200 ohms, |
| but 900 ohms is generally regarded as a good compromise figure for the |
| voice frequency range of 300 to 3,000 Hz). What this means is that a |
| bridged impedance of 100,000 ohms located in the CO on a typical |
| subscriber loop will result in an impedance change measured at the |
| SUBSCRIBER LOCATION of 0.1% or less. That's IF you could measure the |
| impedance change at the subscriber location. |
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| 2. As a general rule of thumb, the impedance of an exchange area |
| telephone cable pair changes ONE PERCENT for every TEN DEGREES |
| Fahrenheit temperature change. Actual impedance changes are a |
| function of the frequency at which the impedance is measured, but the |
| above rule is pretty close for the purposes of this discussion. |
|
|
| 3. Moisture in the telephone cable causes dramatic changes in its |
| impedance characteristics. While this may appear obvious in the case |
| of pulp (i.e., paper) insulated conductors, it is also characteristic |
| of polyethylene (PIC) insulated conductors. Only gel-filled cable |
| (icky-PIC), which still represents only a small percentage of |
| installed cable plant, is relatively immune from the effects of |
| moisture. |
|
|
| 4. From a practical standpoint, it is extremely difficult to measure |
| impedance in the presence of the DC potential which is ALWAYS found on |
| a telephone line. The subscriber has no means to remove the telephone |
| pair from the switching apparatus in the CO to eliminate this |
| potential. |
|
|
| Therefore, any attempt at impedance measurement will be subject to DC |
| current saturation error of any inductive elements found in an |
| impedance bridge. The telephone company can, of course, isolate the |
| subscriber cable pair from the switching apparatus for the purpose of |
| taking a measurement -- but the subscriber cannot. In addition to the |
| DC current problem, there is also the problem of impulse and other |
| types of noise pickup on a connected loop which will impress errors in |
| the impedance bridge detector circuit. Such noise primarily results |
| from the on-hook battery feed, and is present even in ESS offices, |
| with ferrod scanner pulses being a good source of such noise. While |
| one could possibly dial a telephone company "balance termination" test |
| line to get a quieter battery feed, this still leaves something to be |
| desired for any actual impedance measurements. |
|
|
| 5. Devices which connect to a telephone pair and use a 2-wire/4-wire |
| hybrid with either a white noise source or a swept oscillator on one |
| side and a frequency-selective voltmeter on the other side to make a |
| frequency vs return loss plot provide impressive, but meaningless |
| data. Such a plot may be alleged to show "changes" in telephone line |
| impedance characteristics. There is actual test equipment used by |
| telephone companies which functions in this manner to measure 2-wire |
| Echo Return Loss (ERL), but the ERL measurement is meaningless for |
| localization of eavesdropping devices. |
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| 6. It is not uncommon for the routing of a subscriber line cable pair to |
| change one or more times during its lifetime due to construction and |
| modification of outside cable plant. Outside cable plant bridge taps |
| (not of the eavesdropping variety) can come and go, along with back |
| taps in the CO to provide uninterrupted service during new cable plant |
| additions. Not only can the "active" length of an existing cable pair |
| change by several percent due to construction, but lumped elements of |
| impedance can come and go due to temporary or permanent bridge taps. |
|
|
| The bottom line of the above is that one cannot accurately measure the |
| impedance of a telephone pair while it is connected to the CO switching |
| apparatus, and even if one could, the impedance changes caused by the |
| installation of an eavesdropping device will be dwarfed by changes in cable |
| pair impedance caused by temperature, moisture, and cable plant construction |
| unknown to the subscriber. |
|
|
| About a year ago on a bulletin board I remember some discussions in which there |
| was mention of the use of a time domain reflectometer (TDR) for localization of |
| bridge taps and other anomalies. While a TDR will provide a rather detailed |
| "signature" of a cable pair, it has serious limitations which include, but are |
| not limited to: |
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| 1. A TDR, in general, cannot be operated on a cable pair upon which there |
| is a foreign potential; i.e., a TDR cannot be used on a subscriber |
| cable pair which is connected to the CO switching apparatus. |
|
|
| 2. A TDR contains some rather sensitive circuitry used to detect the |
| reflected pulse energy, and such circuitry is extremely susceptible to |
| noise found in twisted pair telephone cable. A TDR is works well with |
| coaxial cable and waveguide, which are in effect shielded transmission |
| lines. The use of a TDR with a twisted cable pair is a reasonable |
| compromise provided it is a _single_ cable pair within one shield. |
| The use of a TDR with a twisted cable pair sharing a common shield |
| with working cable pairs is an invitation to interference by virtue of |
| inductive and capacitive coupling of noise from the working pairs. |
|
|
| 3. Noise susceptibility issues notwithstanding, most TDR's cannot be used |
| beyond the first loading coil on a subscriber loop since the loading |
| coil inductance presents far too much reactance to the short pulses |
| transmitted by the TDR. There are one or two TDR's on the market |
| which claim to function to beyond ONE loading coil, but their |
| sensitivity is poor. |
|
|
| There is simply no device available to a telephone subscriber that without the |
| cooperation of the telephone company which can confirm or deny the presence of |
| any eavesdropping device at any point beyond the immediate premises of the |
| subscriber. I say "immediate premises of the subscriber" because one presumes |
| that the subscriber has the ability to isolate the premises wiring from the |
| outside cable plant, and therefore has complete inspection control over the |
| premises wiring. |
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| I have used the phrase "without the cooperation of the telephone company" |
| several times in this article. No voltage, impedance or TDR data is meaningful |
| without knowing the actual circuit layout of the subscriber loop in question. |
| Circuit layout information includes such data as exact length and guages of |
| loop sections, detailed description of loading (if present), presence and |
| location of multiples and bridge taps, calculated and measured resistance of |
| the loop, loop transmission loss, etc. There is NO way that a telephone |
| company is going to furnish that information to a subscriber! Sometimes it's |
| even difficult for a government agency to get this information without judicial |
| intervention. |
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|
| Despite what I have stated in this article, you will see claims made by third |
| parties as to the existence of devices which will detect the presence of |
| telephone line eavesdropping beyond the subscriber's immediate premises. With |
| the exception of the trivial cases of serious DC current draw by an extension |
| telephone or the detection of RF energy emitted by a transmitter, this just |
| ain't so. Companies like Communication Control Corporation (which advertises |
| in various "executive" business publications) get rich by selling devices which |
| claim to measure minute voltage and impedance changes on a telephone line -- |
| but consider those claims in view of the voltage changes due to CO battery |
| variations and due to temperature changes in outside cable plant -- and you |
| should get the true picture. |
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| >--------=====END=====--------< |
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