#phonephreaking

In the 70s and 80s, party lines weren’t just for chatting, they became underground meeting places for phreakers. By exploiting quirks in telephone switching systems or abusing conference call features, hackers created their own backchannel communications networks. These lines operated in the shadows of the phone system, often bridging cities and time zones, and served as the social backbone of the phreaking scene. Handles were exchanged, techniques shared, and alliances formed — all in real time. Some lines had gatekeepers or required specific access tricks. It was raw, chaotic, and often illegal, but for many it was their first taste of networked rebellion.

#PartyLineCulture #PhonePhreaking #HackerOrigins #TelecomSubculture #OldNet

TraceyThekla 🎨 Rolandellirolandelli@sfba.social
2025-04-11

I've taken today to be a day of enjoyment. With everything going on in our country, and the world, I gotta take a break and recharge. So I'm finishing this book I started a couple of years ago, will be going for a nice walk, then creating art. #phonephreaking

EXPLODING THE PHONE by Phil Lapsley, foreword by Steve Wozniak. The book cover has a graphic of all old rotary dial phone face. "The untold story of the teenagers and outlaws who hacked Ma Bell".
2024-12-27

Via Istari Lasterfahrer:

For those who are around #38c3 in hamburg: we as institut für telenautik did a installation called: CALL FROM 1985.

Have a seat and listen.

#phonephreaking
#hacking
#hackingphilosophie
#freetheinformation

In Erinnerung an Mathias Lehnhardt (RIP), einer der beiden Gesprächspartner* am Telefon und Gründer der Telenautik Workgroup an der Hfbk Hamburg

Übersetzung anzeigen

Ein grüner Tisch, auf ihm ein rotes Wahlscheibentelefon auf einer Rüschendecke und daneben eine Bedienungsanleitung
2024-11-15

Still unpacking boxes from my move. Always fun finding this in my tech junk drawer. A redbox I built when I was about 12. Still works! (not on pay phones sadly…)

#phreak #phonephreaking

2024-11-15

SDF prodigal son, on again/off again Fediverse participant, I like #UNIX, #unix_surrealism, #phonephreaking, and #Gopher. I make visual art, street art, digital art, video art, audio art, take photos, you name it. I write code, #poetry and started my own spiritual framework of sorts called #embrionics.

you can find me in Gopher space at gopher://baud.baby and you can find me on IRC in #comfy on tilde.chat.

pleased to re-meet you. 💕

#introduction #introductions #fediverse

2024-11-10

My teenage hobby doesn’t even exist anymore in the same capacity.

#ImAtTheAgeWhere #HashTagGames #PhonePhreaking

Joe 🏔️ King of NYNEX :donor: :fedora: :haiku:luzkenin@infosec.exchange
2024-10-25
Robert W. Gehlrwg@aoir.social
2024-02-21

The fan of #phonePhreaking in me wants my follower count to remain at the exact number it is now (2600 -- IYKYK)

2024-02-08

By the time he was 17, in 1981, Mitnick was happily spending his time on things like persuading a Pacific Telephone employee to give him Lucille Ball’s home number and burrowing into different corporate computer systems. It was also at the age of 17 that he had his first run-in with the authorities for his activities. Thus began a nearly 20-year cat-and-mouse game with law enforcement that makes up much of “Ghost in the Wires”.

nytimes.com/2011/08/14/books/r

#kevinMitnick #hacker #phonePhreaking

telephone booth mounted on a brick wall. "bell" branding on the top and sides
sys-vsysv
2023-11-18
sys-vsysv
2023-11-18

MA BELL IS A CHEAP MOTHER shirts now available from sys-v.net

#2600

sys-vsysv
2023-11-18

SYS-V issue one now available!

Grab your own copy of this limited first-edition release while they're still here.

sys-v.net/product/sys-v-issue-

2022-11-12

Connecting is a radio feature (originally broadcast in 2004) exploring the world of the Phone Phreaker, precursors to todays computer hackers. Using little more than Social Engineering and in the case of Captain Crunch, a toy whistle found in cereal boxes, the Phreakers built their own world within the system - a world of clicks, bleeps, whistles and a safe place to be different. Written and pres by Ken Hollings. simonsound.co.uk/between-the-e #phonephreaking #radio

2021-09-05

Hackaday Links: September 5, 2021

Good news from Jezero crater as the Mars rover Perseverance manages to accomplish for the first time what it was sent to do: collect and cache core samples from rocks. Space buffs will no doubt recall that Perseverance's first attempt at core sampling didn't go as planned -- the rock that planetary scientists selected ended up being too soft, and the percussive coring bit just turned the core sample into powder. The latest attempt went exactly as planned: the cylindrical coring bit made a perfect cut, the core slipped into the sample tube nested inside the coring bit, and the core broke off cleanly inside the sample tube when it was cammed off-axis. Operators were able to provide visible proof that the core sample was retained this time using the Mastcam-Z instrument, which clearly shows the core in the sample tube. What's neat is that they then performed a "percuss to ingest" maneuver, where the coring bit and sample tube are vibrated briefly, so that the core sample and any dust grains left around the sealing rim slide down into the sample tube. The next step is to transfer the sample tube to the belly of the rover where it'll be hermetically sealed after some basic analysis.

Did any Android users perhaps oversleep this week? If you did, you're not alone -- lots of users of the Google Clock app reported that their preset alarms didn't go off. Whether it was an actual issue caused by an update or some kind of glitch is unclear, but it clearly didn't affect everyone; my phone mercilessly reminded me when 6:00 AM came around every day last week. But it apparently tripped up some users, to the point where one reported losing his job because of being late for work. Not to be judgmental, but it seems to me that if your job is so sensitive to you being late, it might make sense to have a backup alarm clock of some sort. We all seem to be a little too trusting that our phones are going to "just work," and when they don't, we're surprised and appalled.

There seem to be two kinds of people in the world -- those who hate roller coasters, and those who love them. I'm firmly in the latter camp, and will gladly give any coaster, no matter how extreme, a try. There have been a few that I later regretted, of course, but by and large, the feeling of being right on the edge of bodily harm is pretty cool. Crossing over the edge, though, is far less enjoyable, as the owners of an extreme coaster in Japan are learning. The Dodon-pa coaster at the Fuji-Q Highland amusement park is capable of hitting 112 miles (180 km) per hour and has racked up a sizable collection of injuries over the last ten months, including cervical and thoracic spine fractures. The ride is currently closed for a safety overhaul; one has to wonder what they're doing to assess what the problem areas of the ride are. Perhaps they're sending crash test dummies on endless rides to gather data, a sight we'd like to see.

And finally, you may have thought that phone phreaking was a thing of the past; in a lot of ways, you'd be right. But there's still a lot to be learned about how POTS networks were put together, and this phone switch identification guide should be a big help to any phone geeks out there. Be ready to roll old school here -- nothing but a plain text file that describes how to probe the switch that a phone is connected just by listening to things like dial tones and ring sounds. What's nice is that it describes why the switches sound the way they do, so you get a lot of juicy technical insights into how switches work.

#hackadaycolumns #hackadaylinks #slider #alarmclock #coring #fracture #injuries #mars #perseverance #phonephreaking #pots #rollercoaster #rover #samplereturn

image
2021-07-07

Evan Doorbell’s Telephone World

Ah, phone phreaking. Some of us are just old enough to remember the ubiquity of land lines, but just young enough to have missed out on the golden years of phreaking. There's something nostalgic about the analog sounds of the telephone, and doubly so when you understand what each click and chunk sound means. If this wistful feeling sounds familiar, then you too will appreciate [Evan Doorbell] and his recordings of 1970s telephone sounds. He's been slowly working through his old recordings, and compiling them into a series of narrated tours of the phreak subculture.

[Evan]'s introduction to exploring the phone system started from a misdialed number, and an odd message. He describes that recorded "wrong number" message as being very different from the normal Ma Bell messages -- this one was almost sultry. What number did he have to dial to hear that unique recording again? What follows is a youth spent in pursuit of playing with the phone system, though it would be more accurate to say the "phone systems", as discovering the differences between the various local phone exchanges is a big part of the collection. Check out the first tape in the series after the break.

What's really unique is the way the narration is woven together with his recordings from the time. A "party line" is the nickname for a number that can host an unintentional conference call, where multiple callers can talk to each other. Party lines feature heavily in this series, and it's the first time I've heard actual recordings of one from the era. Head to the website for the audio downloads, or check the Youtube playlist above to stream them. Either way, enjoy the trip down the Phone Phreak rabbit hole.

#classichacks #mabell #phonephreaking #phreak

image
Fritzing all overFr1t2@cybre.space
2017-06-26

working to stop these frustrating auto dialers from calling me all day. Multiple recordings with non-personal messages about my mortgage or vehicle warranty.

I found this tone to be most beneficial to my needs.

Vacant Connection via Wikipedia -

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:V

recorded as voicemail, no more auto calls.

can this be concidered #phonePhreaking ?

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