Stuff You Should Know - Phone Phreaking: The Advent of Hacking
Episode Date: July 23, 2024Years ago the telephone network was like the internet is to us today: a vast, interconnected means of communicating and sharing information. And, like the internet today, it attracted people who were ...interested in learning how it worked by hacking it. Â See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too.
And this is Stuff You Should Know.
That's right.
Can you do your little trumpet sound?
Announcement trumpet.
Yeah, are you ready?
Uh-huh.
Beep-beep.
Sorry, I'm out.
No.
Beep-beep-beep.
No?
No.
Hold on.
Beep-beep-beep.
There we go.
Yeah, we want to announce a new writer
that we have working with us.
And welcome aboard, Kyle Hoekstra. Uh-huh. We have announced a new writer that we have working with us.
Welcome aboard, Kyle Hoekstra.
And everybody, we have just classed up this joint.
Yeah, we have.
Because Kyle is British and he lives there.
He's not like some dumb British dude living in Waco, Texas.
Or some American living in Great Britain.
This guy is like legit Brit.
That's right.
He lives in Brighton and we gave him a test article and this was it.
He did such a good job.
We were like, hey, this thing's great and welcome aboard.
And he was interested.
And so it seems like the beginning of a new great relationship.
Yeah, agreed.
So welcome aboard, Kyle.
And thanks for this one.
I'm excited about this.
And this, Chuck, if you'll remember,
came up from the Whistling episode.
Do you remember that?
Did you mention this?
No, one thing that Anna had turned up
and kind of included as a sidebar
was how Captain Crunch Whistle had been used to
basically hack the phone system. And I've been wanting to do an episode on
phone freaking forever and it just so happened that reminded me and here we
are now. We asked Kyle to do it and this is our episode on phone freaking.
That you've been waiting for freaking ever to do.
Yeah. Yeah.
For real.
With a PH?
Both ways, actually.
Yeah.
I mean, I guess we should introduce what we're talking about here because this is something
that if you're, oh, maybe of a certain age, you might not know what this is.
And I'm of that certain age that should know, but I didn't really know much about it, to be honest.
But we're talking about the fact that in the 1950s,
well, before that, let's say.
You're not of that certain age.
In our lifetime, pre-computers,
we were all still connected
via something called the telephone system.
And in the United States, the telephone system was, it's how humans connected before the internet.
And it was a big interconnected system that was manually operated by switchboards,
which we should totally do a switchboard episode at some point.
Yeah, it was very, really interesting.
But they started to get rid of the switchboard operators in the 1950s for automatic switches.
And the one thing they didn't think about was the fact that they had a bit of a design flaw
or a weakness in this system, whereas the tones they used to let the automatic system know like
what to do with a telephone call could be mimicked and replicated with
sometimes a human voice, sometimes a toy whistle, like you said,
or something that somebody made to essentially hack into
the phone system by replicating those tones, and AT&T
was like, oh, we never thought that anyone would be interested in doing that.
Yeah. That was an outstanding oh, we never thought that anyone would be interested in doing that. Yeah.
That was an outstanding introduction, man.
And it's called phone-freaking, PHPH.
Yeah.
And so phone-freakers were pretty much the earliest examples of hackers.
They were pre-computer hacker culture.
As a matter of fact, hacking just grew essentially right out of phone-freaking.
And a lot of the phone freaks who were kind of on the whole jam in the early 80s just
made the leap to computers through phones.
It's pretty interesting as we'll see.
But there's one thing we should say about them.
As a community, phone-freakers were curious individuals, like they
were technical minded types.
They were, they wanted to see how this vast, huge
connected network worked.
And they knew very well that there were whole,
huge parts of it that were shielded from public view.
You weren't meant to know about this.
You didn't need to know about it.
Just go in and punch the phone number and we'll
connect it for you. That wasn't enough. They wanted to know everything there meant to know about this, you didn't need to know about it. Just go in and punch the phone number and we'll connect it for you.
That wasn't enough.
They wanted to know everything there was to know about it.
And one way that you can find out how something works is to try to break it.
And that was kind of what they were doing.
They weren't doing it maliciously for almost exclusively they weren't doing it maliciously.
They were doing it out of curiosity.
Yeah. they were doing it out of curiosity. Yeah, and it sort of reminded me a little bit of like ham radio operators where like the victory of a
like a win for a phone freaker was like, oh my god, I
connected with someone through the back door in another country and was able to talk to them and
yeah, maybe some people like took advantage of of free long distance and stuff like that.
But like you said, I think as a whole, the community was just like, those were the wins.
Like, oh my God, I was able to do this thing.
How cool.
Right.
So, let's kind of start at the beginning, shall we?
Because freaking did not exist prior to the 50s or 60s when they introduced automatic switches. Which is a little
aside about the switches. The guy who invented them actually invented them in the 19th century.
He was a mortician who his competition, the across town mortician, his rival, that guy's wife was the
town operator. So when somebody called to ask for a mortician,
she automatically connected them to her husband's business,
not this guy's business.
So he actually went out of his way to invent
an automatic switch to replace human operators.
And decades later, they finally came into play.
But you couldn't have done this before
when somebody was connecting the call for you,
because if you just started whistling in
their ear something like that they'd be like what are you doing this isn't this
is really bizarre I'm not gonna connect this call it was once it became
automated that it became possible yeah I mean did they even have dial tones with
switchboard operators I don't believe so I don't see why you would I think I
think when they converted to automatic switches, they adopted something called multi-frequency tones and it was all where you had a tone, um, like you
pressed a one and it made a certain tone, actually a combination of tones, hence
the multi-frequency thing.
And it told this, this network turn this gear or this dial and everyone knows, I
don't know what I'm talking about with gears, but there were gears involved and
things like actually would move somewhere in space because a tone told it to.
That's kind of what they brought online in the 50s and 60s.
So if someone whistled at a switchboard operator, they would be from the future.
I guess so, yeah. Kind of. Or else they'd be fresh.
Yeah, they'd be fresh. Because they'd be like a wolf whistle or something.
So let's talk about phones for a second, because when we talk about these tones, we largely think of
like a push button telephone, which is what we use starting, geez, I'm not even really sure,
but they replaced the rotary phones. Not replace, they worked alongside for many years.
Uh, we had both for a long time in my house.
Yeah.
Uh, but the, the button on the phone isn't exactly a key to the system operating.
The only thing the phone would do was create that tone.
The tone was what mattered.
Uh, it did get me wondering like, well, how the heck does a rotary phone even work?
Um, and this is just a slight aside, but I never knew how that operated.
And the way a rotary phone would work was you would
dial the number around and that part didn't really matter.
It was the return back into position that sent this,
that would engage basically these electrical contacts
to interrupt the electrical continuity.
So a nine would go, bop, bop, bop, bop, bop, bop, bop, bop, bop,
and it would interrupt it nine different times
and sending a signal saying, hey, this is a nine, dumb, dumb.
And I never knew how that worked,
so I thought that was pretty fascinating.
But as far as the push button phone,
you would just press a button,
it would have a tone assigned to it,
and it's those tones that freaks were able to replicate to essentially fool the phone company into thinking that somebody
was pressing a button.
And in some cases they were, which we'll talk about.
And just knowing that you could trick the system into dialing something for you just
by whistles or making tones not using your phone. That's fun in and of itself.
What fun?
But there's a really good example
of how this could be put to use in a way that was like,
oh, okay, this is no longer legal.
You're actually hijacking the phone system for your own ends.
And this was the basis of Freaking.
There was a tone that was instrumental
to this whole multi-frequency tone system.
And it was, I think, the minor E that resonates at 2600 Hz.
Okay?
So whatever sound cycles at 2600 cycles per second,
that tone would tell the phone company that your phone was on the
hook.
When your phone stopped making that sound, when your line stopped making that 2600 hertz
sound, all of a sudden the phone system was like, oh, okay, this guy wants a connection
somewhere, let's go pay attention to what's going on here.
So let's say you started to dial a number and you dial the 800 number. Your phone stopped making that 2600 Hertz sound and the phone company's
attention was grabbed by that and you dial this 800 number and it would start
to connect to you. And because it was an 800 number the system would be like,
okay we're connecting this but we're not going to charge this person for this
call because this is a toll-free number.
And then before the other person on the other line could pick up, you would blow that, you
would make a 2600 hertz tone, and that told the phone system you had hung up, but you
hadn't actually hung up.
And now the line was open for you to dial any number you wanted to, anywhere in the
world, toll-free, because as far as the system was concerned, you were still calling a toll free number, even though you were calling any number you wanted.
And now you can make long distance phone calls for free at a time when they were really, really expensive.
That's right. And these were enabled by what were called trunk lines.
So if you think about whatever city you live in, depending on the size of your city,
you would have, I guess if you lived in a smaller town live in, depending on the size of your city,
you would have, I guess if you lived in a smaller town,
you probably just had one office,
but if your city was large enough,
you had multiple offices
where these calls were connected basically.
So if you lived in like one neighborhood in Dallas, Texas,
and you were calling a neighborhood, you know,
10, 15 miles away in Dallas, Texas, there would were calling a neighborhood, you know, 10, 15 miles away in Dallas, Texas,
there would be another office there in that neighborhood or that area or region or whatever.
And they were all connected by trunk lines, like hundreds to thousands of these things,
depending on how big your town was, because each one of these could only handle one call
at a time.
Right. because each one of these could only handle one call at a time. So the trunk line was basically just a medium to carry your voice locally from one place to the other.
And like we both said, there was only one that could be going at once.
That's why there were thousands of these things.
And if you're able to replicate that tone, then you could have some good clean fun.
Yeah, and trunk lines were also the way that you dialed long distance,
because they could connect different parts of a town.
They could also connect one city to another, and so on and so forth.
And so the people who figured this out, that you could hijack the phone system
by trying out different tones and doing different things,
were just socked in immediately and just began experimenting, started meeting one another, sometimes by happenstance on a phone line
that they just happened to try out and there was some other freak hanging out on it.
It just was immediately infectious to their curiosity.
They just wanted to figure out how this could work and what all you could make this phone
system do
by replicating these tones.
I think that's a pretty good setup, my friend.
I agree, you wanna take a break then?
Yeah, let's take a break and we'll come back
and talk about who some of these first Freakers were
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All right, so we promised to talk about some early freakers.
One was a guy in the 1950s.
So this started pretty early on.
If you think about early hacking and what led to
hacking starting in the 1950s, it's pretty mind
blowing.
But one guy was Joe Ingricia, and he was a blind man who did not use a cap and crunch whistle,
because that was before they had cap and crunch whistles.
He whistled with his mouth and was able to, he had perfect pitch and was able to emit somehow,
because it's not the easiest tone to hit, if you've ever heard it.
That 2600 hertz signal.
And he would whistle into the phone to do this.
Other people use, usually not their own human voice,
but different things like,
I believe the Cap'n Crunch serial was in the 1960s.
You can go on YouTube and see people that have
these little whistles demonstrating how it works and everything.
But this was sort of the idea early in the 1950s
and 60s with these people.
Right, so I think the guy who came up with,
the guy who's credited with figuring out
the Captain Crunch serial whistle,
it's like a boat swings whistle,
like that, you know, that,
that whistle.
You know in Star Trek when they blow the whistle to get everybody's attention?
I've never seen Star Trek.
Well anybody who's seen Star Trek, the original one, knows what I'm talking about.
That's a boat swing's whistle.
And so like the Captain Crunch whistle would, if you covered up one hole, it would make
a perfect 2600 hertz tone.
And apparently the guy who came up with that, who figured that out, took the handle Captain
Crunch.
That was his Freaker handle, but his real name was Draper, right?
I believe Cap'n Crunch, not Captain.
I saw it both ways.
Really?
Yeah, I saw it more often than not,
Captain, like, fully spelled out.
I guess he wanted to differentiate himself, yeah.
Oh, okay, yeah.
I thought you just were saying it as a serial,
and that's a nice thing.
No, no, no, that was his handle. No, no, no. I know, but were saying it as a serial. No, no, no. That was his handle.
No, no, no. I know, but he took it from the serial.
Sure, sure. Yeah, I didn't think it was a coincidence.
What was his first name? Draper?
Uh, Dave?
Yeah, David Draper.
No, no, no, John.
John.
I think it was John because I watch videos of him,
and every time it sounded like he was saying Don Draper
for Mad Men, so it was very confusing.
Okay, so John, he was the one who was credited with
figuring that out.
He was a legendary early phone freak.
Yeah, and he still has videos, and we'll talk about
a little bit more about him later on.
But like I said, most people did not use their voice.
They would use like that whistle or they started building devices.
They were called blue boxes and they all look different because they were all homemade.
But if you look at blue box online, there are all kinds of, it basically looks like
a phone without the talking ends.
It's just like a box usually with punch button numbers like you would see on a phone.
Yes. Or if you were a Bond villain in maybe a 60s Bond movie,
and you wanted to remotely blow something up,
it looks like the kind of thing you pull an antenna out of and press a series of numbers on it and something would
explode. And then you'd very calmly put the antenna back in and walk away.
Yeah, except scratch the antenna. Right, not in the blue box, just in this bond
idea. Yeah. There's also a red box. There are a ton of different boxes. By the end of all this, people had figured out all sorts of different devices to make
phones do all sorts of things, and they all had different colors.
But the other two big ones were the red box, which was a blue box but had the added capacity
of creating the tones that told the phone system that this payphone had just accepted a quarter
or a dime at the time,
and now you can go ahead and connect the call,
even though no one had put a dime in,
it had just mimicked that tone.
Then the black box made it,
it interrupted the DC signal to your phone
to make it seem like you had never picked up a call,
so the person calling you long distance
would never be charged for it
even though you're sitting there talking.
Those are the three big ones, blue, red, and black.
Yeah, the red one is actually super cool
because if you came along after payphones were around,
you didn't have to put in,
like if you had other coins that would equal a dime,
let's say, oh, I don't know, two nickels.
Sure.
You could put two nickels in
and a nickel created a specific tone,
a dime created a specific tone, and a quarter created one.
So the red box was able to mimic each of these coins
to recreate the tone it made when you,
cause those little pay phones were smart.
They knew what you were dropping in there.
They were so smart.
And they would sing that song thusly.
So the whole thing that all these were based on,
again, was this multi-frequency tone system.
And it turns out that there were six master tones
to the whole thing, that if you knew these tones,
you could basically make the phone system do anything you wanted.
And they were made up of 12 individual tones.
And so, for example, if you wanted to mimic the number one,
you had to make the sound of 700 hertz and 900 hertz
at the same time.
And that would be as far as the phone system is concerned.
If it heard that, it would say, oh, okay, one,
let me, I'm pressing one for this guy.
And the whole thing is predicated on a mistake
that somebody made at Bell, which we haven't said this,
but this is kind of important too.
At the time, AT&T was known as Ma Bell.
It had essentially a monopoly on the phone system
in the United States.
Not essentially.
Exactly.
Like, it was the phone company for the entire country.
And because it was so this one big monstrous thing, if you figured out how to mess with
AT&T, you figured out how to hijack the entire phone system.
That was one thing.
But the point of that is that some AT&T engineer wrote an article in a technical journal in the 50s,
and they included what those master tones were made of in the article.
That gave way to the basis of all those blue boxes and black boxes and red boxes that were made later.
Had that article never been published, Freaking might have never really taken off. It would have probably been a pastime for people with,
who had a Cap'n Crunch whistle or perfect pitch
and could whistle things themselves.
I don't know. I bet you nerds prevail.
For sure, but I mean, it would have taken those,
like, hardcore people like Joe and Gracia,
who figured it out on their own,
just to trial and error
over years, this was, here's a blue box,
and here's how you use it, and that's how a lot of people
got into freaking who wouldn't have otherwise
been pulled into it, because it would have been too hard.
I think it sped up the timeline, for sure.
For sure.
And like we said, people were,
the wind was making a call, working around the
phone company for a long distance call.
Sometimes they would get into pranking a little bit, like they could figure out how to hack
into the loudspeakers at a mall and make announcements.
There was one pretty famous prank call in Santa Barbara in 1974, when they basically took advantage of a bug called
Simultaneous Seizure, where two calls at the same time
would jam up the switching equipment in the office,
and you could hijack calls coming into like a city.
So people, two guys got, you know, from LA got,
I guess they got arrested for doing this.
It says they, I'm not sure if they serve jail time or not, but they essentially
were able to, any call coming in in Santa Barbara, they would route it to a voice
saying that Santa Barbara had been destroyed by a nuclear bomb. And it kind
of got out of a hand, like people called emergency services and, you know, they found out what was going on, obviously.
But just, you know, sort of, that was about as harmful
as it got, unless you count stealing long distance.
Yeah, and stealing long distance was a favorite
of the mafia.
They were big time into phone freaking.
And they weren't the kind who would just sit there
and, you know, try out whistling different tones for years on end.
They got into it through blue and black and red boxes.
And the reason why is because their bookies would be taking calls from all over the country.
And I think I said earlier that long distance was expensive at the time.
Chuck.
It was.
It was so expensive.
Click Americana, which is a great, great website,
they found an old Bell ad from 1965
that boasts the low price of $12
for your first three minutes for long distance.
In 1965 dollars, that's like $118 today
for three minutes of long distance.
It's insane.
And it very quickly, after they introduced the automatic switches, their
costs dropped very quickly.
So by 1970, it was down to probably 20 bucks for three minutes, but
still that's a lot of money.
And if you're a bookie taking long distance calls all night long, all day long,
that adds up.
So of course you want to start using blue boxes.
So the mafia got heavy into it too.
Wait, how much did you say it was at first for three minutes?
$12 for three minutes.
And according to West Egg, that'd be $118 today.
Oh, okay. So you went on the, cause you said it went down to $20.
That was conversion wise?
No, from 1965 to about 1970.
And just that five years, it dropped that dramatically.
From 12 to 20? No, no, no, that five years, it dropped that dramatically.
From 12 to 20?
No, no, no, sorry, yes, you're right.
From, in 2023 dollars.
Oh, okay, yeah, yeah.
I wanted to make that as confusing as possible,
so that's why I chose that way of explaining.
Well, I mean, I remember even in the 1980s
when I would meet a girl at church camp
that lived in another place and come home and want
to communicate with my little church camp crush.
My parents would be like, yeah, forget about it.
Like, you're not dialing along.
You're not calling this girl up long distance.
Meet a local girl.
What's wrong with you?
Pete It was a big, big deal.
Like, I remember early cell phones used to charge you long distance and then when all
of a sudden it was like, that just went away, it was, it
was like a different world almost.
Yeah, totally. So, um, computers came around,
obviously everything changed after computers came
around the 1980s because, uh, you could all of a
sudden design a program that could generate tones,
uh, like specifically for what you needed.
If anyone saw the movie War Games,
which we've talked about quite a few times on the show
because it's one of the show favorites.
But that had a couple of examples of phone freaking.
When Matthew Broderick dialed into the school system,
beginning to change Ali Shidi's grades,
he used a technique called war dialing.
That's when you're just like use a computer to auto dial
just like hundreds and thousands of numbers
scanning for a vulnerability, or in this case,
he was scanning for his own school line to hack into.
Right.
And then, I know we did talk about this in another episode, but the little payphone hack
that he tried apparently is not a real thing and was just made up for the movie, isn't
that right?
Yeah, but it does, it definitely gets across the concept of a red box.
Like, you could do that, you just couldn't do it the way he did it, but it also kind
of got across a little bit the concept of the black box, which would kind of short the
circuit, which is what he was doing.
So it was a little confused, but it certainly got like a lot of people interested in hacking.
And it also scared the pants off of Ronald Reagan, which you might say, who cares?
The problem was at the time, Ronald Reagan was the president of the United States.
And there's a guy named Fred Kaplan who wrote a book about the history of cyber
war called Dark Territory.
And apparently Reagan saw this film, was so freaked out by it that he got the Joint Chiefs
together and was like, can this happen?
Somebody go find out.
And the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, a guy named General John Vesey went and investigated
and came back and he said, quote, Mr. President, the problem is much worse than you think.
And so three years after War Games came out, Congress passed
basically an anti-War Games scary movie law.
That's right.
They did.
It was called the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.
And it seemingly came out of watching the movie war games.
Isn't that nuts?
Pretty crazy.
So, um, let's, let's go back a little bit and talk about some of the freaks.
We've kind of covered some of them like Joe and Grecia, his handle was joy bubbles.
Um, there was also Captain Crunch, John Draper, like you said.
These guys were like freaking at the time when it was like a, I guess a golden age,
Chuck.
There's only one way to put it.
I was trying to avoid it, but it was a golden age of freaking.
We love our golden ages.
Yeah, and you know, as far as who these people were, they were who the hackers ended up being.
They were kind of early techies.
They were kind of nerds usually.
They were into, you know,
some of them may have been into kind of disruption.
I think, like we said, most of the time,
it was just sort of good nature.
But there were definitely those that were like,
hey, fight the man.
We have this monopoly that's controlling the phone system.
Let's see if we can poke the bear a little bit.
So they were in there doing a little bit of that as well.
But like we said, generally good natured stuff.
I think we should mention that Draper later on had allegations of sexual assault that emerged and
he was banned from different conferences
starting in like the 2010s.
So he's a pretty divisive guy.
So it's not like we're seeing his praises or anything,
but he was definitely like one of
the first kind of famous freakers
largely because of this Esquire magazine article He was definitely like one of the first kind of famous freakers,
largely because of this Esquire magazine article in 1971 called Secrets of the Little Blue Box,
where a guy named Ron Rosenbaum wrote this really long-form detailed, pretty great article about phone freaking,
which not only put a spotlight on people like Captain Crunch,
but put a spotlight and created more phone freakers
because people read it and were like,
I gotta get out of this thing.
Yeah, it's usually in the top 10, 20 at most
of like greatest magazine articles of all times list.
It's a really good article.
But one of the things when people write about it
that they like to point out is,
it's the definitive history of phone freaking up to that point.
But then it also serves as a pivotal point because it helped make history because it introduced
phone freaking to like a whole bunch of other people who were totally interested in that but
just hadn't heard of it before. And one of the reasons why that happened is because he gave just enough technical information
for how to do it, but left out some of the more gory details.
But it was tantalizing enough that if you were interested and motivated, you could go
fill in the blanks and figure out how to do it.
And it turned out, in fact, that the guys who who founded Apple Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs
Were two people who read this thing and went and figured it out themselves
Yeah, they get into phone freaking
They built boxes they built and sold digital blue boxes. Mm-hmm
and Steve Wozniak out of all the
Circuitry he built as the wizard behind Apple,
he said that that digital blue box circuit
was the one that he was most proud of.
They actually met the Captain Crunch guy,
met Mr. Draper, and they were part of that community
for a little while.
They sold them for about 172 bucks in the early 1970s,
which is a lot of money in today dollars.
So it was a lot of money back then.
They were never busted.
Apparently they were, some cops came around
when Steve Jobs' car broke down one time
and they were caught with a blue box,
but Woz was able to convince them
that it was a synthesizer to play music on
and the cop would, okay, sounds good to me.
So Wozniak's handle,
Freaker handle was Berkeley Blue and Steve Jobs' handle was Oph Tobar,
which I think prefigured Dungeons and Dragons.
That's a pretty good, I guess, fighter's name.
Oh, is that a D&D riff?
Yeah, Dungeons and dragons.
No, but is that off Tobar from D and D?
I think it's a good name for a D and D characters.
What I'm saying.
Oh, I got you.
And there's minutes late somehow.
I didn't know.
No, no, but it just screams D and D to me.
Yeah.
I didn't play D and D so I'm just lost here.
I loved it.
There's one other quote too from, I guess Steve Jobs,
who said that without blue boxes, the blue boxes
that he and Wozniak came together to make,
there would be no Apple.
That was like their first venture together
that showed them that they could work well together
and they went on to found Apple
after they did this little blue box stint.
That's pretty crazy.
Very crazy. Another thing that emerged around this time
was something called a beep line,
which I had never heard of these,
and this is something that I probably should have known
about, but when you would call somebody back in the day,
and that person was on the phone,
and let's say they didn't have call waiting,
or call waiting wasn't invented at the time maybe,
or they couldn't afford it like we
couldn't, you would get a busy signal.
But here's the thing, that busy signal that you
were dealt didn't mean that your voice path was
shut off.
Like you were still, if you sat there on that
busy signal line and didn't hang up and maybe
this is how people found out about it,
eventually if you sat around long enough, you would get someone else on that same busy signal line
that had been, you know, denied a phone call in some other town.
And if those people were teenagers,
they realized it was sort of the beginnings of a
of like a party line where you could be like, hey,
and you're talking over this busy signal, mind you. So,
while this thing is going beep, beep, I'm going, hey, this is Chuck. I live in Stone Mountain,
Georgia. Like, where are you? And, oh, I'm Angela. I live in Dallas, Texas. And then you strike up a
conversation and you're having some good, clean teenage fun making connections, talking to people
you ordinarily would never meet. And beep lines were very popular in the 1960s and 70s.
Yeah, there's a Time article from, I think, 1961 that interviews the guy who ran,
I think, the Fall River, Massachusetts, or somewhere in Massachusetts,
their telephone company or station, and that there was a radio station
whose beep line was like the place to call into.
And when this teen column in like a regional magazine
published something on it, calls jumped from 1,500
to 27, 28,000 in a week.
So they were very popular.
And apparently, once you could shout your number
to somebody you were trying to talk to
over the busy signal.
But when you actually could talk like normal people on the phone, it was just never as fun.
Well, it's funny, I mentioned like maybe that's how people found out as they just stayed on that line. But it seems like radio stations is where they actually found out about these things,
because you would call in to win, to be the fifth caller or whatever, to win concert tickets.
And almost always you would get that busy signal.
And so many people are calling in that they would find each other on these busy signal lines
and figure it out, hey, wait a minute, this is a thing.
Yeah, because usually when you got a busy signal, you just, you wouldn't make a sound,
you wouldn't try to talk, and you'd just hang up immediately.
But if apparently that's just how the phone lines worked,
if you talked, you could hear somebody else talking back at you.
It was just, like you said, you had to shout over the busy signal.
I talked to him, I don't know why I never found this out,
because every time I got a busy signal, I'd be like,
hello? What is this? Is someone there?
Really? Really?
No.
Okay.
Look, we switch, uh, switching up rules here.
What was your favorite, uh, phone of all time that you ever had?
You know, the first one that jumps to mind, and I, I never had, I think later on I got,
I was able to have a phone in my bedroom when I was like 16 or 17, but previous to that,
I very much remember
our very first cordless phone that had the antenna
that you pull out and the cradle that it sat on.
Like, I just remember that being a very big deal
because I thought like, wow, we're literally living
in the age of the Jetsons because we're unbound by a cord.
Yeah.
What about you?
I would have guessed, I would have put a lot of money
on you saying the Sports Illustrated football phone
that you got with the subscription back in the 80s.
You remember that?
Yeah, I mean, I would subscribe forever,
but you know what happens?
And this used to bother me as like a 13 year old,
is you subscribe and you get that first thing,
and my mom got me a subscription when I was like 10,
and you never got any gifts after that.
And I used to get so mad that like, why do only new subscribers get the gift?
Like you should get one every year for being a loyal subscriber.
That's a great, great point.
Did you email the editors or write, sorry, did you write a letter to the editors of Sports Illustrated?
I don't think so.
Did your mom hang out by the mailbox and the month the swimsuit issue came out
to intercept it?
No, I did.
Oh yeah, that was a very big deal.
You disguised yourself as the mailbox?
Yeah, that was especially for young Baptist boy
who thought that like, you know,
Playboys were for boating and stuff like that.
That magazine was everything to me.
Sure.
Yeah.
All right, Chuck.
I think that that's a good place for a break, don't you?
Yeah.
I'm going to go think about Christie Brinkley and Carol Ault and Kathy Ireland and we'll
be right back in a few minutes.
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All right, so we were talking about the golden age of freaking. That was really kind of the 60s, mid to late 60s to the mid 70s probably.
Yeah.
About a 10 year period where people were figuring out how to game the international phone network, but before AT&T could really do anything about
it because I don't think we said the flaws in these systems, that's what the systems
depended on.
It's not like they could go in and reconfigure something here or there and shut down Freakers.
Freakers were exploiting-
Right.
We won't use tones anymore.
Exactly.
Like, it would have taken billions and billions of dollars.
And eventually they did do that.
Eventually they did upgrade from electro-mechanical to straight-up electrical
and then eventually digital switches that aren't fooled by those.
Apparently the way that they first really made freaking obsolete was they separated the lines.
So you could make whistling sounds
into the line all you wanted.
That line wasn't accepting that tone.
The one you talked into wasn't the one that
accepted the tones anymore.
So that kind of shut freaking down.
But for that 10 year period, this amazing
community developed, there was a guy who we have
to shout out, his handle was Mark Burnet, which
is based on a hilarious early proto meme
that came out of the freaking community
that's worth looking up.
But he went around all up and down the West Coast
with stickers that he made that said like,
want an interesting phone call?
Call this number.
And then he would hang out on this line
and talk to people when they called
and try to introduce him to Freaking.
He was like a Freaking evangelist.
Yeah.
And it became a thing among some blind teenagers because there was a guy in Seattle who called
this sticker, the number on the sticker, talked to Mark Bernays, got into it, and then I guess
met a blind teenager that he became friends with, introduced him to Freaking.
That teenager went to a summer camp, introduced his blind friends to
freaking. One of them moved east, went to another summer camp, introduced those
kids, and it spread among like blind teenagers. It was like a big deal. And
there's a session, a hangout session, that Ron Rosenbaum chronicled in the blue,
the little blue box, Secrets of the Blue Box article,
and like of eight kids hanging out
in this one kid's kitchen,
I think five of them were blind.
So it was like a really big cool thing
among blind teenagers too.
So there's this huge thing that's developing this,
the beginning of hacker cultures developing
over this 10 year period,
then AT&T steps in and is like,
we're shutting this down, we're losing way too much money.
Yeah, and you know what was great about
our new friend Kyle's article that he put together for us?
Was that Carl got right off the bat,
like there's a story element to these episodes,
and he nailed it with this third act reveal,
which was this thing was around
for a while, it went away, but the legacy of it wasn't just these people had fun talking
to each other on Peoplines and hacking some free long distance calls and stuff like that.
The legacy of this thing was what we're going to get to now, which was
the legal aspects of it and legal justifications for
recording phone calls and surveilling phone calls in the United States, which all came out of
AT&T going after initially those bookies in Miami and Los Angeles that you talked about in 1966
when the FBI raided these bookies, they
prosecuted one guy, this guy named Kenneth Hanna.
And all of a sudden there was precedent, there
was legal ground that AT&T had that said, we can
go after these hackers, we can charge them with a
crime, in this case, fraud by wire.
And where do we find these people? Well, we're going to wiretap them. can charge them with a crime, in this case, fraud by wire.
And where do we find these people?
Well, we're gonna wiretap them.
And that's what they did.
It was an operation called Green Star between 64 and 1970.
They tapped about 33 million phone calls,
recorded about half of those.
And the United States later on would say,
this is great and just fine.
Yeah, it really kind of goes to underscore
just how incredibly powerful AT&T was at the time.
Like imagine one company having complete control
over the internet in the United States.
Yeah.
Like that gives you an idea of like how powerful AT&T was.
So when they decided they were gonna set up
their own internal surveillance program
and then take it to the feds, they were fully aware
that the feds would totally play ball
and wouldn't be like, what did you just do?
Instead they'd be like, oh yeah, we better go get
these laws passed to make sure that what you did
was legal retroactively.
And then at the same time, let's go get those phone
freakers because they really were costing AT&T money. What you did was legal retroactively. And then at the same time, let's go get those phone
freakers because they really were costing AT&T money.
I saw an estimate in the mid seventies, they were losing
30 million a year, which is like 175 million today.
Just the phone freaking again, that's how expensive
long distance was.
It wasn't just your parents, Chuck, any sane person
with a job and a phone would know you don't call long distance
on your phone.
No, you're not allowed.
You just didn't do it.
No, it'd have to be, you remember the calls like your parents would have to
make to like the in-laws or their parents or something and they're like how short
they would keep stuff.
Hey, how you doing?
We're fine.
Okay.
Bye.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Everything's good.
Everything's good. We'll, we'll be there keep stuff. Hey, how you doing? We're fine, okay, bye. Yeah, yeah, everything's good, everything's good.
We'll be there next week.
Tuesday, Tuesday.
The maybe most shocking fact of this whole episode to me
is the fact that the last circuit that could be blue boxed
in the United States was disconnected in 2006.
Yeah.
In rural Minnesota, they still had one circuit that was, that you could blue box your way
in, but they had been, you know, largely eliminated in the 1970s and then into the eight, or I
guess into the eighties really.
And, you know, kind of with that phone freaking, there was no incentive anymore now that, you
know, when the internet certainly came along and you could just talk to
Anyone anywhere at any time?
There was no incentive to do any sort of long-distance hacking and and it was just a moment in time
Basically where this thing was allowed to exist and it existed because of particular equipment
That then went the way of the dodo
But like you said it went it went they handed the baton right off to internet hacking
and it was a pretty seamless transition.
Yeah, absolutely.
Like they would literally, just like Matthew Broderick did,
take their phone and connect it to their computer
through what's called an acoustic coupler,
which basically was like whatever tone your phone made,
it did it into the computer through that coupler.
And again, they were like dialing numbers to find interesting numbers or to find
other people's modems so they could hack into it.
So it was, yeah, it's perfect word.
It was a seamless transition to computer hacking, but it's not like that's all
that people did from that point on was everything, everything to do with the
internet and computers of freaking as far as like phone, interest in phones and phone networks still continues,
still around today, and it's gotten,
if it was illegal before, it's eye-poppingly illegal,
the kind of phone freaking that people are doing today.
Yeah, like cell phone hacking and stuff like that.
Yeah, spoofing a cell tower to intercept phone calls
and then decoding them so you can eavesdrop in
on people's cell conversations.
Like there was a, I think,
do you remember was it a Wired article I sent you
from I think 2010 that chronicles some like a conference
where a group was like, hey, get this.
For $1,500 and parts you can get from the internet,
you can make a spoof cell tower and intercept calls.
And this was 2010.
So you could probably make one for 10 bucks
in five minutes now, or buy it for 10 bucks on the internet.
Like, it's just amazing what they're doing now.
It's interesting that it still has to do with the phone.
It's not just computer-based.
There's still interest in messing with phone networks.
Oh yeah, I believe we even talked about it on the show,
that thing where you'll get a call on your cell phone
that says like American Express incoming call.
And it's not, it's someone has,
I can't remember what they called it
because we ended up, it happened to us
and we ended up talking to American Express
and it said no, that's called whatever, not masking.
Or maybe it was masking when they can just basically create,
you know, originate a call saying it's from you
and all of a sudden you're talking about your account details
and stuff like that.
Oh, man.
Yes, social engineering?
No, I just mean like, you know, a phone call coming in
that's saying it's from American
Express, but it's not.
It's from a thief.
Right.
And they're trying to get your credit info, right?
So they can go off and make their own card and charge it to you?
I guess so.
I mean, some people try so hard at such bad things.
I know.
We've talked about it before.
Put that energy toward just good, upstanding legal hard, hard work, and you could probably make money.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
Old man here.
You got anything else?
I got nothing else.
Big thanks to Kyle.
Welcome aboard.
Great job.
Yeah.
Way to go, Kyle.
And we both said congratulations to Kyle and thanks,
which means obviously we've just triggered listener mail.
Yeah. This is just short and sweet when I couldn't think of that word Congratulations to Kyle and thanks, which means obviously we've just triggered listener mail.
Yeah, this is just short and sweet when I couldn't think of that word in the Widow episode.
I think we have the word. Hey guys, was listening to Widowhood. Chuck couldn't bring to mind a word for when you come to a conclusion based on your own experience.
And I started freaking out with an F, not a pH. Because I can never bring that same word to mind either. It's so bad that I actually ask my wife quite often, hey, what's that word I can never remember?
And she just says, anecdotally.
Oh yeah.
So that was the word.
I'm guessing that's the word you were looking for, Chuck.
I've tried different ways to get the word to stick in my mind, but nothing has worked.
I bet somewhere out there someone has studied this and there's a podcast episode because I think I think everyone
has weird words they either can never spell correctly or remember it's kind of
a weird phenomenon. Yeah I have a breed of warm season grass right now at my
house and I cannot for the life of me remember the kind it is. Zoysia? It's not Zoysia, it's something else.
Crabgrass?
I, it's crabgrass.
Fescue?
I looked it up, no that's cool season.
I looked up all different kinds of southern turf grass,
it's warm season.
It's not listed, I don't know what's going on.
It forms like a thick carpet of grass, it's so pretty.
I bet someone will let you know.
Yeah, I guess so. I would love it if they did.
Well, as long as you got an inch of standing water, it doesn't matter. It's gonna grow.
It's a quarter inch. Let's not be preposterous.
Alright, that was from Joel Dawson.
Thanks a lot, Joel. And again, thanks a lot, Kyle.
And if you want to be like Joel, you can send us an email too.
Send it off to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com.
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