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Thread: Phreaker Help Needed

  1. #1

    Exclamation Phreaker Help Needed

    How secure is call-blocking? I am up against a fiend who has insider information and can make my phone ring even when it is disconnected - at all hours of the day or night. The attack comes in the form of a single ring, which usually can disturb my sleep. The calls are untracable on my end. The phone company says there may be a bug in my apartment and wants a princely sum to find it. Somehow I doubt the fiend has gained unlawful access to my digs. So what kind of equipment am I up against? Is it worth giving call-blocking a try? The only thing that absolutely shuts down the phone so far is being on the Net - I have single line dial-up. Obviously I can't be on the Net all night; at least, I don't think I can manage that. Your assistance, please.

  2. #2
    Senior Member faust's Avatar
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    Oct 2001
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    So let me get this straight. Your phone rings EVEN if it's disconnected?

    MOVE! Sounds like its a poltergeist and no phreaker can help you. Wait, call ghost busters!

  3. #3
    Fastest Thing Alive s0nIc's Avatar
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    ahaha hmm.. well it could be a simple prank caller.. or serial prank caller.. but call blocking is somefin i havent tried.. what does it do basically? block incommin calls? what if its an emergency and someone is ringin ya but cant get to u..?

    or.. open ur phone and instead of the wire attatched to the ringer.. cut it and connect it to another wire leading to a RED lightbulb on your wall so that if someone calls it lights up and wont disturb u that much..

  4. #4
    Senior Member
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    Jan 2002
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    132
    You know what I'd do? As you can get the phone to ring by shorting the tip to ring at the block, I'd have the phone company run an MLT. If they don't know what that is, patiently hold them by the hand and explain that it's short for "Mechanical Loop Test". If they still don't know what that is, have them refer the ticket to the CO (Central Office - the building where all the frames, blocks, etc. are located). If you're in the USA, you *may* be under Qwest. If this is the case, I know for a fact that you can call up repair and have them do this for you.

    Now ... depending on what you mean by "disconnected", it may well be possible to make your phone ring ... for instance, someone could go to the SNI (phone box outside your house/apartment), and put power across the tip and ring wires - and then your phone would ring the once ... and possibly fry your modem in the process. And if the disconnect has just occured by removing the jumper tie, then the above could happen - e.g. a phone tech could patch into your line and ring it.

    Oh, yeah - when you tell them to do an MLT, *disconnect your modem* from the line (that'll add about 5 miles to the loop length that they'll see). What *I* would do is, when they get the distance number (in feet) back from the MLT, I'd have them check Loop Qual Logs and see the total loop distance (in feet) from the CO to you. *IF* these two differ by any more than 1K', I'd ask them to investigate for bridge taps - again, refer them to the Loop Logs if they're stupid. If no BT's are found, then I'd start checking your internal wiring - disconnect your inside line from the SNI (if it's yours - e.g. if you are in a house), call them up from a buddy's house, and have them run the MLT again - if the discrepency in distance between the MLT and Loop Logs goes away with that setup, then your indoor wiring is hosed.

    Hopefully this'll help - while I can't vouch for terminology being the same througout all carriers, I *can* tell you that this is Qwest terminology ... and phone companies can't really have all that different terminology for these things... Let me know how it goes!

    ~N~

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