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September 6th, 2003, 02:50 AM
#11
As I said they are MOSTLY obsolete. If you have a specific target you are looking for dial-up access to,thats one thing but the good old days of wardialing an entire exchange are over. And non-sequential war-dialing is not new, it still doesnt stop people from calling back as your modem plows through hundreds of numbers an hour this starts to become a real inconvienence to the would-be wardialer. One of cool ones was called Code Thief Deluxe people used to use that would not only log numbers with carriers but could be used to hack PBX's and calling cards using random #'s or templates and could be configured to do all sorts of stuff. If someone is really interested I might be able find a copy on floppy somewhere but its pretty dated stuff, still....its a neat little piece of hacking history.
-Maestr0
http://www.systemexperts.com/tutors/wardial-fiw1999.pdf
http://www.etext.org/CuD/NARC/narc-3
\"If computers are to become smart enough to design their own successors, initiating a process that will lead to God-like omniscience after a number of ever swifter passages from one generation of computers to the next, someone is going to have to write the software that gets the process going, and humans have given absolutely no evidence of being able to write such software.\" -Jaron Lanier
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September 6th, 2003, 04:18 AM
#12
As I said they are MOSTLY obsolete
I agree with you. For us they are mostly obsolete. But let me ask you this. As far as that goes let me ask you all this. How many of you have every answered the phone, but nobody was there? Somewhere out there there is a machine that "war dials" if you will. Except they aren't searching for modems, No they are now searching for active phone lines. When you say hello, your number gets added to a list of active numbers that is later sold. Then you get bothered by some clown that wants to sell you an umbrella you can use indoors, when all you wanna do is eat your tv dinner.
Yet we're the criminals.
Your heart was talking, not your mind.
-Tiger Shark
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September 6th, 2003, 04:29 AM
#13
Originally posted here by NeuTron
Cool...........sorry for the paranoia *used to smoke a lot*
excuses excuses excuses..
Nightfalls_Girl
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September 6th, 2003, 05:27 AM
#14
http://www.technofile.com/articles/a...and_phone.html
You've never heard of video phones? Of course you can talk to peaple and stuff over a broad band connection... of course this is nothing like picking up normal phones & calling... and the main problem here is the services that help make it all possable. As far as wardailing goes... you mean your actually that bored and have enought money to try stuff like this from your house?
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September 6th, 2003, 09:54 AM
#15
My Suggestion
The best solution for your dilemma. If you really want to War Dial!
Go to this link, it will teach you everything you need to know about War Dialing! The expert computer hacker David Lightman, will show you his secrets.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086567/
IPh@nY0Phy0Ub0THeR+o+ry4NdRe4d+H15Y0uWilLl4uGH4ttHEL1NZ3ZweEE333EEE!$0rRy+h@TTh3POpUP54RE$OB@d
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September 8th, 2003, 05:56 PM
#16
In almost every vulerability assesment I have done or been on the recieving end of; there is always a modem turned on someplace in the network. If you want to really lock up the system, check the phone lines. There are more ways in than on a TCP/IP connection connected to DSL, or Fame Relay, etc. How many of your fax machines are connected to PCs? How many people have brought in USB modems to bypass network security measures??? It's alarming.
To feed the paranoia, how many times in anyone's life do you pick up the phone and no one is there? Or you hear a couple of beeps and then click. Is there a glitch in the phone switch or did an ex-gf call and hang up???? Who knows....
West of House
You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door.
There is a small mailbox here.
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