Phreaking began in the 1960s when it was discovered that certain
whistles could replicate the
2600 Hz pitch used in phone signalling systems in the United States. Phone phreaks experimented with dialing around the telephone network to understand how the phone system worked, engaging in activities such as listening to the pattern of tones to figure out how calls were routed, reading obscure telephone company technical journals (often obtained through
dumpster diving), To report that a phone call was long-distance meant an elevated importance because the calling party is paying by the minute to speak to the called party. Some phreaking consists of techniques to evade long-distance charges, which is criminalized as "
toll fraud". In 1990, the pager cloning technique arose and was used by
law enforcement. In the UK the situation was rather different due to the difference in technology between the American and British systems, the main difference being the absence of
tone dialing and signaling, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s. Still, US and UK phreaking often reflected a shared culture. The tone system in the United States has been almost entirely replaced, but in some countries, in addition to new systems, the tone system is still available, for example in Italy.
Switch hook and tone dialer Possibly one of the first phreaking methods was switch-hooking, which allows placing calls from a phone where the rotary dial or keypad has been disabled by a key lock or other means to prevent unauthorized calls from that phone. It is done by rapidly pressing and releasing the switch hook to open and close the subscriber circuit, simulating the pulses generated by the rotary dial. Even most current telephone exchanges support this method, as they need to be
backward compatible with old subscriber hardware. By rapidly clicking the hook for a variable number of times at roughly 5 to 10 clicks per second, separated by intervals of roughly one second, the caller can dial numbers as if they were using the rotary dial. The pulse counter in the exchange counts the pulses or clicks and interprets them in two possible ways. Depending on continent and country, one click with a following interval can be either "one" or "zero" and subsequent clicks before the interval are additively counted. This renders ten consecutive clicks being either "zero" or "nine", respectively. Some exchanges allow using additional clicks for special controls, but numbers 0-9 now fall in one of these two standards. One special code, "flash", is a very short single click, possible but hard to simulate. Back in the day of rotary dial, technically identical phone sets were marketed in multiple areas of the world, only with plugs matched by country and the dials being bezeled with the local standard numbers. Such key-locked telephones, if wired to a modern
DTMF capable exchange, can also be exploited by a tone dialer that generates the DTMF tones used by modern keypad units. These signals are now very uniformly standardized worldwide. It is notable that the two methods can be combined: Even if the exchange does not support DTMF, the key lock can be circumvented by switch-hooking, and the tone dialer can be then used to operate automated DTMF controlled services that can not be used with rotary dial.
2600 hertz breakfast cereal toy produced a 2600 hertz tone. The origins of phone phreaking trace back at least to
AT&T's implementation of fully automatic
switches. These switches used
tone dialing, a form of
in-band signaling, and included some tones which were for internal telephone company use. One internal-use tone is a tone of
2600 Hz which causes a telephone switch to think the call had ended, leaving an open carrier line, which can be exploited to provide free long-distance, and international calls. At that time, long-distance calls were more expensive than local calls. by
Joe Engressia, a blind seven-year-old boy. Engressia had
perfect pitch, and discovered that whistling the
fourth E above middle C (a frequency of 2637.02 Hz) would stop a dialed phone recording. Unaware of what he had done, Engressia called the phone company and asked why the recordings had stopped. Other early phreaks, such as "Bill from New York" (William "Bill" Acker 1953-2015), began to develop a rudimentary understanding of how phone networks worked. Bill discovered that a
recorder he owned could also play the tone at 2600 Hz with the same effect.
John Draper discovered through his friendship with Engressia that the free whistles given out in
Cap'n Crunch cereal boxes also produced a 2600 Hz tone when blown (providing his nickname, "Captain Crunch"). This allows control of phone systems that work on
single frequency (SF) controls. One can sound a long whistle to reset the line, followed by groups of whistles (a short tone for a "1", two for a "2", etc.) to dial numbers.
Multi frequency While single-frequency worked on certain phone routes, the most common signaling on the then long-distance network was
multi-frequency (MF) controls. The slang term for these tones and their use was "Marty Freeman". The specific frequencies required were unknown to the general public until 1954, when the
Bell System published the information in the
Bell System Technical Journal in an article describing the methods and frequencies used for inter-office signalling. The journal was intended for the company's engineers; however, it found its way to various college campuses across the United States. With this one article, the Bell System accidentally gave away the "keys to the kingdom", and the intricacies of the phone system were at the disposal of people with a knowledge of electronics. The second generation of phreaks arose at this time, including New Yorkers "Evan Doorbell", "Ben Decibel" and Neil R. Bell and Californians Mark Bernay, Chris Bernay, and "Alan from Canada". Each conducted their own independent exploration and experimentation of the telephone network, initially on an individual basis, and later within groups as they discovered each other in their travels. "Evan Doorbell", "Ben" and "Neil" formed a group of phreaks, known as "Group Bell". Bernay initiated a similar group named the "Mark Bernay Society". Both Bernay and Evan received fame amongst today's phone phreakers for internet publications of their collection of telephone exploration recordings. These recordings, conducted in the 1960s, 1970s, and early 1980s are available at Mark's website
Phone Trips.
Blue boxes In October 1971, phreaking was introduced to the masses when
Esquire magazine published a story called "Secrets of the Little Blue Box" by
Ron Rosenbaum. This article featured Engressia and John Draper prominently, synonymising their names with phreaking. The article also attracted the interest of other soon-to-be phreaks, such as
Steve Wozniak and
Steve Jobs, who went on to found
Apple Computer. 1971 also saw the beginnings of
YIPL (
Youth International Party Line), a publication started by
Abbie Hoffman and Al Bell to provide information to
Yippies on how to "beat
the man", mostly involving telephones. In the first issue of
YIPL, writers included a "shout-out" to all of the phreakers who provided technological information for the newsletter: "We at YIPL would like to offer thanks to all you phreaks out there." In the last issue, YIPL stated: YIPL believes that education alone cannot affect the System, but education can be an invaluable tool for those willing to use it. Specifically, YIPL will show you why something must be done immediately in regard, of course, to the improper control of the communication in this country by none other than bell telephone company. Al Bell was denied opening a bank account under the name of
Technological American Party, since he was not a
political party, so he changed the name to
Technological Assistance Program to get a bank account. TAP developed into a major source for subversive technical information among phreaks and hackers all over the world. Members such as Cheshire Catalyst met with journalists at the 1982
West Coast Computer Faire, where the group provided an address to subscribe to its newsletter ("TAP doesn't have a telephone", Cheshire said). TAP ran from 1973 to 1984, with Al Bell handing over the magazine to "Tom Edison" in the late 1970s. TAP ended publication in 1984 due mostly to a break-in and arson at Tom Edison's residence in 1983. Cheshire Catalyst then took over running the magazine for its final (1984) year. A controversially suppressed article "Regulating the Phone Company In Your Home" in
Ramparts magazine (June 1972) increased interest in phreaking. This article published simple schematic plans of a "
black box" used to make free long-distance phone calls, and included a very short parts list that could be used to construct one. AT&T forced
Ramparts to pull all copies from shelves, but not before numerous copies were sold and many regular subscribers received them. ==Phone hacking==