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- ·""'""'"'"'""''""'"""''"'"'"''""""""""": :"""""": """"""":::::||llSS$$
- | yyyyyssssyyyy yyyyssssyyyy """" yyyy `"""''" yyyy " "" """| .:::::||llSS$
- l |lS$$ yy $$$$ """" yy lS$$ S$$$ S$$$$$ $$$$$ S$$$ssssyyyy : ..:::::||llSS
- | :|lS$ ""yyyyy yyyyssss|lS$ lS$$ lS$$ yy$$$$$ lS$$ yy lS$$ | . .... ... ..
- : :||lS$$ $$$$$ :|lS yy :|lS |lS$ |lS$ $$ yyyy |lS$ $$ |lS$ .
- : :::|l ,$$$$$ ::|l $$ ::|l :|lS :|lS $$ :|lS :|lS $$ :|lS | ISSUE [1]
- | ::::| $$$$$$ :::| $$ :::| ::|l ::|l $$ ::|l ::|l $$ ::|l . December 98
- l .:::: ....... .:::....:::: .::| ..:|....:::| .::| .. .::| l
- :. ... .: :... ... .... .... .... ... ... .. .::. .. .: . ... .. ..
- : Magazine (c) D4rkCYDE 98 | : yyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
- ... ...... ... ... ... . .. | :::::::||llSS$$
- ········. : ::::::::||llSS$
- yyyyyyy : D4RKCYDE are proud to present the best thing : .::::::::||llSS
- llS$$$$ : to travel through your serial ports in ages.. | ..::::::::||lll
- |llS$$$ l FAiTH MagAzinE! Special bonus Xmas Issue, by : ...::::::::|||l
- ||llS$$ : all the D4RKCYDE krew. You've heard the rumours,
- :||llS$ : now pheer the facts, D4RKCYDE is now a hP Zine, bringing you the
- ::||llS latest info whenever we can be bothered! The UK hP Scene lives!
- :::||ll | (We think) - Remember, you are always welcome in #darkcyde Efnet!
- ::::||l . ... .... .. .. ... ... . . . . ... ... . . .
- :::::|| : 'Have faith | yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
- .:::::| . my son' : .::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: | : ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
- ..::::: | D4RKCYDE 1998 : ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
- ..::::: |-----> Disclaimer:
-
-
- D4RKCYDE or any authors in this magazine will not be held responcerble for
- your use of the contained data in this publication. We are providing this
- magazine as a source of entertainment and for informaional purposes only. We
- will do not encourage the un-autharised use of any system, whether it be
- someones telephone or a kray super computer. All members of D4RKCYDE are idle
- people, and do not take part in the misuse of computer systems or
- telecommunication networks. As a reminder, it is ILLEGAL to gain unauthrised
- access to any network, this magazine is for educational / entainment purposes
- only.
-
-
- ..::::: |-----> Editorial: ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> By Hybrid ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> th0rn@coldmail.com ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
- Welcome to the very 1st issue of FAiTH!... Why the hell have we called the
- zine FAiTH?, well, we don't know. FAiTH is based on HP (Hacking & Phreaking)
- Wether you are in the US or UK, or Russia, we hope you enjoy this zine, it's
- taken us ages to compile *@CoTh*! , by the way, we cannot spell because we
- retarded digital deleqents, but we don't care. So what are you going to find
- in this new zine? erm, good question, shit I'm talkiing to myself... You will
- find Everything and Anything to do with HP, it will be a mixture of UK & US
- relevency. The 1st issue (what you are l00king at n0w, has been primarily
- composed by D4RKCYDE (old & new members), but 1st lets get one thing
- straight.... D4RKCYDE, (previously DarkCYDE), (the 4 looks good), is NOT an
- active HP group, we just write cool things like this zine now. If you are
- looking for all the old DarkCYDE realeses just take a look at the website,
- you can download a load of them there. We have decided to make this zine
- cuse we have nothing better to do, and it was an excuse to sit around for
- ages making asKi art. If you think this zine is lame, then hit ALT-ENTER-
- EXIT, and stop reading.. I have heard some shit on the net lately that some
- people (well, most of the UK scene), hate D4RKCYDE. Heh, I only have one
- thing to say to you.. G0 p0sT s0m3 m0rE, d0eS blu3b0x1ng w3rK 1n d4 uK p0sts
- 1n 4lT.pH.uK. Sorry about my shite editorial, but I was the only person who
- could be assed to do it. So OK people, heres what we have been promising for
- a while now, we hope you enjoy it, FAiTH M4g4Z1nE:
-
-
-
- ..::::: |-----> ContEnts .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
- (In no particular order)
-
- ..::::: |-----> D4RKCYDE Members, and shouts
-
- ..::::: |-----> uK Carrier Scan of o8oo 919 xxx [by j00rmum]
- (Important: please read warning notice, this applies
- to *all* scans published in FAiTH)
-
- ..::::: |-----> UK Toll-Free Hand Scan of o8oo 899 xxx [by Force]
- pHEER his AskI art...
-
- ..::::: |-----> US Government Wiretaping [Copied from an article]
-
- ..::::: |-----> System X test codes and other goodies [by: Onion & Barakis]
-
- ..::::: |-----> Basic Common Channel Signalling [by: Hybrid]
-
- ..::::: |-----> Xmas bonus scan [by: Chimmy]
-
- ..::::: |-----> Country Directs [by: Force]
-
- ..::::: |-----> BT Changes [by: Force]
-
- ..::::: |-----> Special report on W0Dnet [By: Dialt0ne]
- Yeah W0dnet.. pronaounced: 'wEEEEErdNeTTTTTT'
- Dialt0ne's FTP network project. Do not be alarmed
- by the anti-government manifesto of Dialt0ne, he
- just thinks alot, thats all. :=|
-
- ..::::: |-----> Introduction to Cellular Phreaking [by :::The=Doh=Boy:::]
- UK specific information on various cellular stuff, including
- PAYT.
-
-
-
-
- sH0UTS .......::::::::::::|||lllSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- .......::::::::::::|||lllSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
- [SinTax] [Nitrous 0xCyde] [uV] [Red_LED] [Loco] [Bodie] [Vlad the Impaler]
- [Phriend] [gr1p] [netw0rk] [ZerOnine] [Dialt0ne] [iCBM] [jsbach]
- [Phrozen_Ghost] [FireStart] [Extreem] [Se7en] [Siezer] [Defiant] [dougal]
- [Sil] [Violator] [Photek] [Nomo] [chimmy] [Auqa] [Imapler] [TurboMan] [Jay]
- [Gamma] [P-Tek] [Digital_Fokus] [Sim] [DeadKirt] [Vile] [Alpha] [sneeka]
- [Cooltone] [Curioct] [Triton] [ch1kie] [Becky] [Lisa] [Jenna] [W0D] [9X]
- [B4B0] [Legions] [T-Phreaks] [SWAT] [ETG] [pF] [14k4] [SaTaN] [BrainPhreak]
- [FonePhreak] [RizZe] [keental] [nothingg] [Wing] [Kraise] [Cap'n Crunch]
- [Bellsouth] [British Telcom] [ATH0] [Binary Zer0] [Crawl-X] [D-Node]
- [AlienPhreak] [Lineside] [Darksheer] [Rasputin] [GrinnDaddy] [Sparky] [vis0r]
-
- Shouts to everyone listed on the D4RKCYDE web site.. Special shouts to:
-
- [AC-3] [Ch1ckie] [Jennicide] [Substance] [Dialt0ne] [ZerOnine] [Seven's]
-
- Shouts to the D4RKCYDE krew:
-
- [Hybrid] [Elf] [Downtime] [Microwire] [Tonekilla] [Force] [PublicNuisance]
- [AbsolutZero] [DohBoy] [Mistress] [Barakis] [Onion] [Alpha] [Zomba]
-
-
-
- UK scan of o8oo 919 xxx (25 Carriers) .......::::::::::::|||lllSSS$$$$$$$$$$$
- By Your Mum .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- 10-November 1998 .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- j00rmum@mothers.net .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
- =============================================================================
- WARNING: D4RKCYDE or the author of this scan do not condone the hacking or
- illegal use of the systems listed in the scan. The list is mearly provided
- because the numbers are there. UNAUTHORISED ACCESS IS A CRIMINAL OFFENCE.
- =============================================================================
-
- Scanned with THC-SCAN *Final*
-
-
- 08-11-98 17:06:42 (0800-919-885)....CONNECT 14400 No Responce
- 09-11-98 10:53:01 (0800-919-286)....CONNECT 19200 No Responce
- 10-11-98 04:15:50 (0800-919-114)....CONNECT 19200 @ Userid:
- 10-11-98 04:29:02 (0800-919-378)....CONNECT 19200
-
- Call has been intercepted by the Defender Security Server.
- Unauthorized use of this system is PROHIBITED!
-
- Enter ID: r00t
- Enter Password: r00t
- Access Denied.
-
- 10-11-98 04:55:20 (0800-919-884)....CONNECT 19200 No responce
- 10-11-98 05:12:22 (0800-919-204)....CONNECT 2400
- 10-11-98 05:26:11 (0800-919-392)....CONNECT 19200 +++
- 10-11-98 05:28:35 (0800-919-705)....CONNECT 2400 Garbage
- 10-11-98 05:37:14 (0800-919-361)....CONNECT 1200 Garbage
- 10-11-98 05:38:44 (0800-919-285)....CONNECT 19200 No Responce
- 10-11-98 05:43:50 (0800-919-787)....CONNECT 19200 +++
- 10-11-98 05:49:48 (0800-919-924)....CONNECT 19200
- 10-11-98 06:04:46 (0800-919-225)....CONNECT 19200 +++
- 10-11-98 06:06:13 (0800-919-614)....CONNECT 19200 No Responce
- 10-11-98 06:13:32 (0800-919-287)....CONNECT 19200 No Responce
- 10-11-98 06:26:36 (0800-919-083)....CONNECT 19200 No Responce
- 10-11-98 06:31:37 (0800-919-993)....CONNECT 19200 No Responce
- 10-11-98 06:44:13 (0800-919-642)....CONNECT 2400 No Responce
- 10-11-98 06:48:13 (0800-919-099)....CONNECT 2400
- 10-11-98 06:57:26 (0800-919-575)....CONNECT 19200
-
- Annex Command Line Interpreter * Copyright (C) 1988, 1995 Xylogics, Inc.
- Checking authorization, Please wait...
- Annex username:
- Username/Password Incorrect
- Permission Denied.
-
-
- 10-11-98 15:19:51 (0800-919-337)....CONNECT 19200
-
- UNAUTHORISED ACCESS IS A CRIMINAL OFFENCE
-
- An upgrade during Wed 08/10/97 may cause some temporary problems
- We will do our best to keep disruption to a minimum
-
- Please enter your username:
- Invalid Identification.
- Access denied
-
-
- 10-11-98 15:32:48 (0800-919-548)....CONNECT 19200 ╪τα╧µk≡ƒ Garbage Chars
- 10-11-98 15:49:38 (0800-919-291)....CONNECT 19200 @ Userid:
- 10-11-98 16:00:44 (0800-919-360)....CONNECT 1200 çÅΦ Garbage Chars
-
-
-
-
- Introduction To Cellular Phreaking.......::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- By =The-Doh-Boy= .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- 10-December 1998 .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- jdoe31337@a0L.cUM .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
-
- Hi there DC readers, I'm =3DThe-Doh-Boy=3D and you can check out my earlier,
- lamer articles at the SWATeam webpage, swateam.base.org. But for now I'm
- writing for DC and my chosen specialised subject is cellular phreaking. I'd
- like to think I am pretty well experienced with the standard forms of cell-
- phreaking, i.e. cloning, modifying SIMMS, programmable backdoors on fones. I
- also think I know A LOT about pre-pay fraud. So I am going to concentrate on
- this as I know a lot about it, I could be wrong however, and I always enjoy
- being told I'm wrong :>
-
- I'm going to give you a brief outline of the older methods of phreaking
- cellular fones and why they were introduced (a more in-depth account to come
- soon), I'm then going to move on and give a brief summary of the relatively
- new field of pre-pay fraud.
-
- GOLDEN OLDIES :>
-
- First principle of cellular fones is the principle of knowing the basics of
- how they work. A cellular fone is more or less a HAM Radio with a small
- computer attached (no it can't run MSWorks!!!!) The computer handles the
- signalling to the local cell tower (like an exchange) and performs the
- "negotiations" necessary to complete a call. It will also handle signal
- conversion in the case of digital fones. The most important two numbers that
- are ever signalled to the tower are the ESN and MIN numbers. These are the
- numbers which uniquely identify the fone within the network. They are the DNA
- of fones. We have all seen the two stranded DNA molecule, well thats a good
- way to think of ESN/MIN. They must come together and fit precisely before the
- tower will let you go anywhere with the fone. The ESN is the Electronic
- Serial Number, this tells the tower what fone is logged into the network. The
- MIN is the Mobile Identification Number and this tells the tower the
- customers number. The network you are with has the ESN/MIN in pairs logged in
- a database for every fone they will provide service to. If a fone logs in
- with a pair which is not on the database, it will either kick you or let ONE
- call go through (I will come back to this). We have all used Dial Up
- Networking or a Keycard or anything with a passcode. You could see the
- ESN/MIN as login/passcode. If these are not valid, then NO ACCESS CHUMP. So
- naturally (as with other forms of hacking) you are going to need ways of
- using someone elses account. Obviously you must get your fone to give the
- cell tower a different ESN/MIN pair from yours.. This is the principle behind
- cellular cloning. The de-facto standard for doing this involves replacing the
- ESN chip with a PROM which can then be loaded with the ESN/MIN pair of
- another subscriber. Other methods are commonly used on Motorolas (THE PHREAK
- FONE!!!) which can often be re-programmed at the keypad!!! or often using a
- ready made cable connection from computer-fone.
-
- So now you have got your fone ready to take new pairs, WHERE DO YOU GET THEM
- FROM. Well there are many different options as far as this is concerned!!!
- ranging from the HI-TECH 31337 scheme to the low-tech lamo scheme. A popular
- way, for people who can't stop spending cash, is a scanner. As mentioned
- before, the fone contains a computer which signals to the tower.. It just so
- happens that if you find carrier signals in the mobile range (can't remember
- exactly, will have everything down previsely next article) tune down 20MHz
- and hook the scanner to your modem. With some decoding you can recieve ESN/
- MIN pairs aplenty! (this is not my favourite method $$$!!!)
-
- Another, more deviant scheme is to go trashing at your local cell shop. They
- always write down the ESN/MIN and other customer info. before entering it
- into the computer to get the fone hooked up. They then throw this paper into
- the bin after. So its the usual trashing drill, rummage around and see what
- you can get. (a good method for the low budget, but not for the over-vain!!)
- My favourite method is to stand around at airports e.t.c. and wait for
- business guys to leave their fone to go to the mens room, have a coffee
- e.t..c. and just read the pairs from the fone. The MIN can be calculated from
- the Mobile number (always available in an in-built menu) and the ESN is at
- the back of the fone inside the battery case. Once you have your number pairs,
- load them up and start making free calls.. Good point to note: this only
- works on analouges so everything you say can be heard BE CAREFUL Make sure
- not to use the same one repeatedly, change them every now and then to be
- safe.
-
- Mentioned earlier was a now defunct method of cell phreaking. This involved
- churning out random ESN/MIN pairs which the tower thought to be outwith its
- domain, while it was validating this pair the call can still go through!!!
- Doesn't work anymore(?) so just a passing mention here. Another use for
- Motorolas made before 1995 (get one from before this year for all your
- cloning related fun) is as an eavsdropper. Certain keypresses in test mode
- (ground pin 5 and power up, enter security code twice to enter test mode)
- which I will have for you next article, allow you to listen to the channel of
- your choice. This means you can listen in to any analouge fone conversation
- in the same cell as you. There is also a channel left for "handing off" to
- other cells called the FOrwardVoiceCell, this can be obtained from the text
- shown on your fone during handoff to listen to the call which was handed to
- another cell. If your signal strength is great enough then you can talk to
- those you are eavsdropping on!!! This covers the basics of the old time
- fraud, now to move on to something which is just emerging, PRE-PAY FRAUD...
-
- PRE-PAY FRAUD FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
-
- To meet demand for a more flexible service, one of the two largest cell
- providers in the UK, Vodafone, launched its "Pay As You Talk" package. The
- instant I saw the advert on TV I knew that people would scam it eventually. I
- was right. Every one this christmas wants a pre-pay fone. You couldn't sell
- one to your own mother they are in such demand. This is obviously a money
- spinner, and good news for fraudsters like us.
-
- There are now so many pre-pay packages that its hard to keep up. As I write
- this every single cell provider has such a package. For this inaugiral
- article I will concentrate on the Vodafone package as I have LOADS of
- experience with this package. One such benefit is the anonymity the fone
- provides. You do not have to sign legal contracts or such with your true
- identity. Most registration is done by fone or even by post to the provider.
- So you can register your fone to "Michael Mouse, 10 Sesame Street, Botswana"
- if you wanted. I know that on analouge PAYT you call 191 and there is an
- automated registration sevice. Do not ask for stuff to get sent out to you
- (its not your address) but once you register the fone under a false name,
- there is just about no way of tracing the owner. I believe that this is the
- same for most packages, although roumors have been floating round ph.uk that
- some require a postal registration (easily defeated). Most services allow
- topping up by pre-payed card or credit/debit card. This is where the fun
- begins. Topping up can be done automatically over the fone by calling 191 on
- Vodafone and asking to top up by credit/debit card. I assume you have your
- own method of getting these numbers (docs are required too). Just give the
- details and off you go. It also helps to re-register the fone with the docs
- on the card. This works on analouge particularly well because there is no
- postal registration required. On digital PAYT you must register two cards by
- post if you wish to top up. This does not make it impossible to fraud, just
- more difficult. Because of this, if you were choosing PAYT go for the
- analouge option (I know the quality is bad but, hey, its free aint it?)
- Other roumors going round is that new PAYT cards can be generated from old
- using a simple checksum formula. I'll definetly get back with more news on
- this as/when it comes.
-
- Also doable is to social engineer the reference code of your local shop for
- your provider (go for the big superstores who know less about fones). This
- means you can fone up, say your local store were out of cards and they said
- to give you the reference number and you'd sort out a top up. A pretty lame
- way which would wear thin eventually. So heres the basics of PAYT fraud, I'll
- get the news updated next ish and will certainly check out other packages OK?
-
- c'ya
-
-
-
- UK Hand Scan of o8oo 899 xxx .......::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- By Force .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- November 1998 .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- force007@hotmail.com .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
-
- Key :
-
- NNR = "The number you have dialled has not been recognised"
- CAD = "Your call could not be completed as dialled"
- X = Boooo
- NA = No answer
- B = Busy/engaged
- M = Modem/carrier
- VMS = Voice Mail System
- V = Voice/Picked up
- PBX = Private Branch eXchange
-
-
- 000 - PBX Healthcare Everywhere
- 001 - CAD
- 002 - X
- 003 - X
- 004 - M
- 005 - VMS
- 006 - Voicecom VMS
- 007 - V
- 008 - CAD
- 009 - MCI Prority Call System
- 010 - CAD
- 011 - CAD
- 012 - CAD
- 013 - CAD
- 014 - M
- 015 - VMS
- 016 - Mexico Tourism Automated System
- 017 - NA
- 018 - NA
- 019 - Randomisation Service? ID requested
- 020 - CAD
- 021 - NA
- 022 - CAD
- 023 - NA
- 024 - M
- 025 - X
- 026 - V Hello?
- 027 - X
- 028 - M
- 029 - X
- 030 - VMS PeopleSoft Global Support Centre
- 031 - CAD
- 032 - CAD
- 033 - Asks for Card Number, then transfers to a very faint foreign op
- 034 - NA
- 035 - NA
- 036 - Welcome to BTT! Card number?
- 037 - Technical department of Active Voice, transfers to voice mail
- 038 - NA
- 039 - "The number you have dialled has been disconnected"
- 040 - X
- 041 - Global Military Relocation VMB
- 042 - CAD
- 043 - CAD
- 044 - X
- 045 - "The number you have dialed can not be reached from your area"
- 046 - CAD
- 047 - CAD
- 048 - X
- 049 - NA
- 050 - Meridian Mail direct
- 051 - CAD
- 052 - Some blokes personal VMB
- 053 - CAD
- 054 - CAD
- 055 - CAD
- 056 - CAD
- 057 - CAD
- 058 - CAD
- 059 - NA
- 060 - CAD
- 061 - CAD
- 062 - TransCard Pin Number?
- 063 - Industrial Light & Magic vmb
- 064 - Phonemail VMS
- 065 - NA
- 066 - X
- 067 - Sport? International VMB
- 068 - V Communications section
- 069 - NA
- 070 - X
- 071 - CAD
- 072 - CAD but the first time i called i got some funny beeps?
- 073 - M
- 074 - CAD
- 075 - NA
- 076 - CAD
- 077 - X
- 078 - BTI Americas Travel Agents?
- 079 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 080 - X
- 081 - Funny beeps
- 082 - X
- 083 - CAD
- 084 - X
- 085 - CAD
- 086 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 087 - V asks for sercurity code
- 088 - Medical Travel desk VMB
- 089 - B
- 090 - X
- 091 - Foreign shit, press 1 for an op?
- 092 - X
- 093 - X
- 094 - X
- 095 - X
- 096 - X
- 097 - Century 21 Wimco Royalty VMB - 2nd call odd!?! Mobile phone?
- 098 - CAD
- 099 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 100 - CAD
- 101 - CAD
- 102 - CAD
- 103 - Foreign crap then hangs up
- 104 - "The number you have dialled can not be reached from your area"
- 105 - Faint ring, a Sprint employee's personal VMB, small VMS
- 106 - CAD
- 107 - CAD
- 108 - X
- 109 - X
- 110 - M
- 112 - X
- 113 - TRM pbx
- 114 - X
- 115 - American Wankers (I mean Bankers) Insurance Group
- 116 - KKD pin#
- 117 - CAD
- 118 - CAD
- 119 - "We're sorry, the # you have dialled is not in service"
- 120 - X
- 121 - Not in service
- 122 - NA
- 123 - CAD
- 124 - X
- 125 - M
- 126 - CAD
- 127 - X
- 128 - KDD pin#
- 129 - KDD pin#
- 130 - KDD pin#
- 131 - CAD
- 132 - KDD pin#
- 133 - X
- 134 - X
- 135 - Sales Support VMS Meridian Mail
- 136 - Welcome To CAPS
- 137 - X
- 138 - KDD pin#
- 139 - KDD pin#
- 140 - KDD pin#
- 141 - KDD pin#
- 142 - CAD
- 143 - CAD
- 144 - NA
- 145 - CAD
- 146 - "Number is not in service or is disconnected"
- 147 - NA
- 148 - CAD
- 149 - It's a great day to vata?!?
- 150 - MCI
- 151 - V Dal Services
- 152 - Non-working toll-free number at Universal Studios
- 153 - M
- 154 - NA
- 155 - CAD
- 156 - V Dodgem?
- 157 - M
- 158 - CAD
- 159 - CAD
- 160 - CAD
- 161 - CAD
- 162 - CAD
- 163 - CAD
- 164 - PBX VMB Walkie Talk?
- 165 - CAD
- 166 - M
- 167 - X
- 168 - CAD
- 169 - PBX DataPro Accounting Software
- 170 - VMB Some blokes vmb Mardis IBT Helpdesk - i pressed some buttons
- and it kinda turned into sarcastic patronising mode!
- 171 - V Hole Grain Hotel?
- 172 - VMS
- 173 - NA
- 174 - V Carlton Byronly Travel
- 175 - V Hello? Would not tell me where i had reached
- 176 - M
- 177 - CAD
- 178 - CAD
- 179 - CAD
- 180 - NA
- 181 - X
- 182 - CAD
- 183 - M
- 184 - M
- 185 - CAD
- 186 - V Helan Star Shipping Company
- 187 - "We're sorry, the # you have dialled is not in service"
- 188 - VMB Prestiege International, Robins International
- 189 - VMS Meridian Mail InfoFax System
- 190 - "That number is not a working number"
- 191 - CAD
- 192 - "The # you have dialled can't be reached from your area"
- 193 - CAD
- 194 - "The # you have dialled has been changed"
- 195 - V Emergancy Line, please state your emergancy ;)
- 196 - The Gulf War illnesses Task Force at the desk of Mike Hunt! ;)
- 197 - DataReach International plain old answerphone
- 198 - M
- 199 - CAD
- 200 - CAD
- 201 - Funny tone
- 202 - V Foreign shit German?
- 203 - V Hellson International
- 204 - CAD
- 205 - CAD
- 206 - CAD
- 207 - VMS Systemics Meridian Mail
- 208 - CAD
- 209 - X
- 210 - VMS US Filters
- 211 - CAD
- 212 - VMB Gladingwood Bean?
- 213 - CAD
- 214 - CAD
- 215 - CAD
- 216 - NA
- 217 - M
- 218 - PBX Worldwide Emergancy Assistance
- 219 - CAD
- 220 - CAD
- 221 - CAD
- 222 - X
- 223 - CAD
- 224 - CAD
- 225 - X
- 226 - VMB Accurist Hotline
- 227 - CAD
- 228 - VMS Phonemail
- 229 - VMB NavPref
- 230 - CAD
- 231 - X
- 232 - PBX ThermoQuest
- 233 - X
- 234 - CAD
- 235 - X
- 236 - VMB Faint something Accomodation
- 237 - X
- 238 - X
- 239 - X
- 240 - CAD
- 241 - CAD
- 242 - KDD pin#
- 243 - KDD pin#
- 244 - M
- 245 - KDD CAD
- 246 - KDD pin#
- 247 - X
- 248 - KDD CAD
- 249 - NA
- 250 - CAD
- 251 - CAD
- 252 - CAD
- 253 - CAD
- 254 - CAD
- 255 - X
- 256 - X
- 257 - CAD
- 258 - KDD pin#
- 259 - International toll-free number associates overseas?
- 260 - CAD
- 261 - CAD
- 262 - CAD
- 263 - X
- 265 - CAD
- 266 - NA
- 267 - CAD
- 268 - KDD pin#
- 269 - NA
- 270 - X
- 271 - CAD
- 272 - KDD CAD
- 273 - PBX N-Con International
- 274 - Gallop Automated Interviewing Centre is not in service
- 275 - CAD
- 276 - Funny tone
- 277 - VMB DataRam Systems
- 278 - KDD CAD
- 279 - M
- 280 - M
- 281 - M
- 282 - X
- 283 - VMS Cadilac Plastic
- 284 - X
- 285 - VMB Bryant Developement Group
- 286 - KKD CAD
- 287 - CAD
- 288 - NA
- 289 - M
- 290 - KDD CAD
- 291 - CAD
- 292 - Some kids answerphone?!?!
- 293 - KDD CAD
- 294 - Funny tone
- 295 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 296 - NA
- 297 - X
- 298 - X
- 299 - Foreign shite
- 300 - CAD
- 301 - Weird beeps
- 302 - CAD
- 303 - X
- 304 - CAD
- 305 - NA
- 306 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 307 - X
- 308 - 24 Hour Claims Collection Line
- 309 - "The # you have dialled cannot be reached from your area"
- 310 - CAD
- 311 - CAD
- 312 - V Police Station?!
- 313 - CAD
- 314 - Styros Corporation - authorisation code
- 315 - CAD
- 316 - CAD
- 317 - CAD
- 318 - CAD
- 319 - CAD
- 320 - CAD
- 321 - CAD
- 322 - CAD
- 323 - VMB Safari Ltd
- 324 - CAD
- 325 - X
- 326 - NA
- 327 - CAD
- 328 - M
- 329 - CAD
- 330 - CAD
- 331 - NA
- 332 - CAD
- 333 - V Conference America, security code please
- 334 - M
- 335 - PBX Sage Publications
- 336 - CAD
- 337 - CAD
- 338 - VMS MCI Empolyee's vmb Meridian Mail
- 339 - CAD
- 340 - VMB Dole Packaged Foods?
- 341 - PBX PeopleSoft HQ
- 342 - CAD
- 343 - CAD
- 344 - CAD
- 345 - CAD
- 346 - VMB MedaGroup
- 347 - CAD
- 348 - CAD
- 349 - CAD
- 350 - X
- 351 - NNR
- 352 - Foreign Bird
- 353 - CAD
- 354 - Confrence Centre? Call reservations? which call would you like to
- join?
- 355 - CAD
- 356 - X
- 357 - VMS Universal Processing
- 358 - CAD
- 359 - CAD
- 360 - X
- 361 - CAD
- 362 - X
- 363 - CAD
- 364 - CAD
- 365 - CAD
- 366 - "You have reached a non-working toll-free number"
- 367 - The SwitchBoard Conference Centre - interesting?
- 368 - CAD
- 369 - CAD
- 370 - X
- 371 - CAD
- 372 - CAD
- 373 - CAD
- 374 - CAD
- 375 - CAD
- 376 - CAD
- 377 - "Your call did not go through"
- 378 - CAD
- 379 - AlphaNet Telecom recording "The fax # is not currently working"
- 380 - CAD
- 381 - CAD
- 382 - CAD
- 383 - M
- 384 - X
- 385 - CAD
- 386 - CAD
- 387 - CAD
- 388 - X
- 389 - B
- 390 - X
- 391 - VMB Prunus Group
- 392 - VMB Dislexcon Corporated
- 393 - X
- 394 - VMB Tech Industries
- 395 - X
- 396 - InfoFax Fax Back service?
- 397 - CAD
- 398 - X
- 399 - X
- 400 - B
- 401 - V Foreign d00d, sounded a bit confused
- 402 - X
- 403 - NA
- 404 - MCI
- 405 - "# not in service"
- 406 - CAD
- 407 - B
- 408 - CAD
- 409 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 410 - CAD
- 411 - CAD
- 412 - CAD
- 413 - CAD
- 414 - CAD
- 415 - CAD
- 416 - X
- 417 - CAD
- 418 - CAD
- 419 - CAD
- 420 - NA
- 421 - VMB Sisco Systems, 5 digit ext code
- 422 - CAD
- 423 - VMS German
- 424 - V Something Gemstar Limo service
- 425 - PBX Music Express
- 426 - X
- 427 - B
- 428 - NA odd forwarded to a vms then sorry the user has not subscribed
- 429 - CAD
- 430 - CAD
- 431 - CAD
- 432 - X
- 433 - TRM Copy Centre plain old answering machine
- 434 - CAD
- 435 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 436 - CAD
- 437 - X
- 438 - CAD
- 439 - X
- 440 - Odd beeps & tones?
- 441 - NA
- 442 - PBX MCI Messaging Trouble Reporting
- 443 - VMB Globe Pequat Press
- 444 - KKD intro then operator 3643?
- 445 - "The # you have dialled can't be reached from your area"
- 446 - KKD intro then international op 3643 hong kong? weird
- 447 - M
- 448 - CAD
- 449 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 450 - M/FAX
- 451 - CAD
- 452 - V - Tim?
- 453 - "The number you have reached blah blah blah..."
- 454 - X
- 455 - M
- 456 - X
- 457 - X
- 458 - CAD
- 459 - X
- 460 - M
- 461 - V - May I have your code please?
- 462 - X
- 463 - V - Costal Alliance?
- 464 - CAD
- 465 - CAD
- 466 - CAD
- 467 - X
- 468 - VMB Alphatronics
- 469 - X
- 470 - X
- 471 - CAD
- 472 - CAD
- 473 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 474 - X
- 475 - X
- 476 - M
- 477 - CAD
- 478 - CAD
- 479 - X
- 480 - X
- 481 - Express Messaging to? Press 81 to get Meridian Mail
- 482 - V - Lawfords
- 483 - X
- 484 - X
- 485 - X
- 486 - X
- 487 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 488 - Telstra International Freecall
- 489 - Meridian Mail Direct
- 490 - CAD
- 491 - M
- 492 - Global Network Telephone card number & pin
- 493 - X
- 494 - Odd beeps, about a million per minute
- 495 - X
- 496 - X
- 497 - M
- 498 - Card # & pin
- 499 - V
- 500 - X
- 501 - International SOS news service??
- 502 - X
- 503 - Call-Plan Service card no and pin
- 504 - V
- 505 - NA
- 506 - V - BBL Singapore
- 507 - NA
- 508 - NA
- 509 - NA
- 510 - X
- 511 - "Invalid service number"
- 512 - V - JD Morgen
- 513 - NA
- 514 - M
- 515 - NA
- 516 - M
- 517 - "The service cannot be connected"
- 518 - CAD
- 519 - X
- 520 - NA
- 521 - NA
- 522 - "Invalid service number"
- 523 - NA
- 524 - International Freecall Service Please enter your service access
- number
- 525 - Same as above
- 526 - V BT Customer Service
- 527 - X
- 528 - "Invalid service number "
- 529 - X
- 530 - V Foreign bloke
- 531 - V Foreign bloke?
- 532 - NA
- 533 - Funny beeps
- 534 - V Foreign woman
- 535 - International Freecall Service, Access #?
- 536 - Some company in Austrailia!?
- 537 - X
- 538 - X
- 539 - V Some foreign bird says Hello??? 2nd call i didn't say anything
- and she said "Damn you" :) If you are bored give this bird some
- abuse :)
- 540 - V some bank in Sydney
- 541 - NA
- 542 - X
- 543 - M
- 544 - International Freecall service, access #?
- 545 - V Some woman in Paris
- 546 - Weird beeps then nothing
- 547 - Telstra's card number service
- 548 - M
- 549 - X
- 550 - V Some woman in Sweden
- 551 - X
- 552 - V Some bank in Australia
- 553 - "Invalid service number"
- 554 - International Freecall service, access #?
- 555 - "Invalid service number"
- 556 - M
- 557 - "Invalid service number"
- 558 - V Something Reynolds, Kevin speaking
- 559 - M
- 560 - CAD
- 561 - CAD
- 562 - X
- 563 - M
- 564 - X
- 565 - M
- 567 - X
- 568 - V Women International?
- 569 - M
- 570 - X
- 571 - V Medical Priority how may i direct your call?
- 572 - "Invalid service number"
- 573 - Same as above
- 574 - CAD
- 575 - CAD
- 576 - X
- 577 - "Invalid service number"
- 578 - NA
- 579 - X
- 580 - CAD
- 581 - CAD
- 582 - "711 the 800 number you have dialled is not in service"
- 583 - "Sorry there is a fault"
- 584 - "Invalid service number"
- 585 - PABX Nations Bank Military Banking
- 586 - M
- 587 - X
- 588 - "Sorry there is a fault"
- 589 - V Gilbert Engineering International
- 590 - V American something gardens?
- 591 - X
- 592 - V something in Sydney
- 593 - NA
- 594 - "Invalid service number"
- 595 - X
- 596 - X
- 597 - "Invalid service number"
- 598 - Same as above
- 599 - V Foriegn Bloke, i couldn't understand him
- 600 - "Please enter your pin"
- 601 - NA
- 602 - X
- 603 - Resolutions Helpdesk, groovy hold music!
- 604 - X
- 605 - VMB - # to stop recording french system
- 606 - X
- 607 - X
- 608 - M
- 609 - NNR
- 610 - CAD
- 611 - NA
- 612 - M
- 613 - X
- 614 - X
- 615 - X
- 616 - "Please enter your pin"
- 617 - NA
- 618 - NA
- 619 - X
- 620 - "Invalid service number"
- 621 - CAD
- 622 - CAD
- 623 - CAD
- 624 - X
- 625 - X
- 626 - NA
- 627 - Strange beeps
- 628 - X
- 629 - X
- 630 - "We apologise, calls to this number are restricted" - Telstra NZ
- 631 - Strange beeps
- 632 - Rings for ages, picks up then nowt
- 633 - X
- 634 - V Spainish bloke?
- 635 - X
- 636 - X
- 637 - M
- 638 - M
- 639 - Press 1 for english, then it asks for site number and access code
- 640 - "Please enter you pin"
- 641 - X
- 642 - X
- 643 - NA
- 644 - Faint voice
- 645 - NA
- 646 - X
- 647 - X
- 648 - X
- 649 - X
- 650 - X
- 651 - X
- 652 - VMB
- 653 - CAD
- 654 - X
- 655 - KKD enter your pin
- 656 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 657 - X
- 658 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 659 - International Freecall Service please enter service access #
- 660 - X
- 661 - X
- 662 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 663 - X
- 664 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 665 - X
- 666 - M
- 667 - X
- 668 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 669 - VMS AET Packaging
- 670 - VMS Hunter Group
- 671 - "Please enter your pin"
- 672 - "You have reached a non-working toll-free number"
- 673 - X
- 674 - Motarola answering machine
- 675 - Access Line smart number for....edwin
- 676 - CAD
- 677 - X
- 678 - NA
- 679 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 680 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 681 - V hello?
- 682 - Answering machine sounds like Phonemail
- 683 - X
- 684 - X
- 685 - X
- 686 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 687 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 688 - "Sprint, please enter your Calling Card number"
- 689 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 690 - "Invalid Service Number"
- 691 - CAD
- 692 - M
- 693 - CAD
- 694 - B
- 695 - M
- 696 - Answering machine Mygan Pharmasuticals
- 697 - X
- 698 - M
- 699 - NA
- 700 - X
- 701 - X
- 702 - V Hi!
- 703 - CAD
- 704 - NA
- 705 - French VMS
- 706 - NA
- 707 - M
- 708 - KDD CAD
- 709 - CAD
- 710 - CAD
- 711 - M
- 712 - X
- 713 - X
- 714 - CAD
- 715 - "The freefone number you have dialed is not allowed in your area"
- 716 - NA
- 717 - NA
- 718 - X
- 719 - M
- 720 - CAD
- 721 - CAD
- 722 - NA
- 723 - CAD
- 724 - NA
- 725 - VMS
- 726 - "You have reached a non-working toll-free number"
- 727 - X
- 728 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 729 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 730 - Oden Software VMS
- 731 - X
- 732 - Some companys recorded message
- 733 - Shitty VMS, you get into a loop so you don't get kicked off the
- system
- 734 - NA
- 735 - X
- 736 - X
- 737 - X
- 738 - V Weird some foreign bird but you can hear an echo of yourself
- 739 - NA
- 740 - X
- 741 - X
- 742 - KDD enter your pin
- 743 - M
- 744 - NA
- 745 - X
- 746 - X
- 747 - KDD enter your pin
- 748 - KDD CAD
- 749 - NA
- 750 - "Please enter your pin"
- 751 - Weird!?! Starts off as an answering machine then a modem comes on
- 752 - X
- 753 - X
- 754 - M
- 755 - X
- 756 - X
- 757 - CAD
- 758 - X
- 759 - CAD
- 780 - X
- 781 - M
- 782 - VMS
- 783 - X
- 784 - Crap VMS "Your party is not available"
- 785 - X
- 786 - X
- 787 - X
- 788 - X
- 789 - CAD
- 790 - X
- 791 - Crappy shit PABX Infonet Global Customer Assistance
- 792 - X
- 793 - NA
- 794 - X
- 795 - X
- 796 - X
- 797 - X
- 798 - X
- 799 - X
- 800 - NA
- 801 - X
- 802 - KDD enter your pin
- 803 - "Invalid service number"
- 804 - KDD enter your pin
- 805 - Odd beeps
- 806 - X
- 807 - KDD please enter your pin
- 808 - KDD please enter your pin
- 809 - KDD please enter your pin
- 810 - V Global Careline?
- 811 - KDD please enter your pin
- 812 - M
- 813 - V "Something assistance how may i help you?"
- 814 - V Bank in Sydney
- 815 - V HBS Assistance
- 816 - X
- 817 - NA
- 818 - X
- 819 - X
- 820 - X
- 821 - M
- 822 - NA
- 823 - Bono Esente! Telecom Italia recording
- 824 - X
- 825 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 826 - X
- 827 - X
- 828 - X
- 829 - X
- 830 - X
- 831 - Bono Esente! Telcom Italia recording
- 832 - X
- 833 - "Booboobeep! We're sorry you have reached a number that has been
- disconnected"
- 834 - "You have reached a non-working toll-free number"
- 835 - Flying Dutchman Helpdesk recording
- 836 - KDD enter your pin
- 837 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 838 - X
- 839 - KDD enter your pin
- 840 - KDD enter your pin
- 841 - Muffled foreign voice then modem!?!
- 842 - Canedel Europe answering machine
- 843 - M
- 844 - V ABC News
- 845 - "You have reached an 800 number that is no longer working"
- 846 - "You have reached an 800 number that is no longer working"
- 847 - VMS ABT Films
- 848 - CAD
- 849 - V Copper Royalty
- 850 - M
- 851 - X
- 852 - X
- 853 - X
- 854 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 855 - X
- 856 - Beeps
- 857 - Beeps
- 858 - X
- 859 - Beeps
- 860 - X
- 861 - Beeps
- 862 - X
- 863 - VMS Press # then 81 Meridian Mail
- 864 - VMS Press # then 81 Meridian Mail
- 865 - VMS Printrack
- 866 - Automated DF Customer Helpline
- 867 - X
- 868 - NA
- 869 - X
- 870 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 871 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 872 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 873 - CAD
- 874 - VMS Meridian Mail
- 875 - "Bonjourno! Beamo Italia" cool Chariots of Fire hold music =)
- 876 - B
- 877 - B
- 878 - X
- 879 - X
- 880 - PBX VMS faint radio station for hold music?
- 881 - V Some grumpy bloke
- 882 - V Faint foreign woman
- 883 - VMS press # then 81, Meridian Mail, infinate attempts!! You don't
- get kicked off the system after 3 incorrect attempts!
- 884 - X
- 885 - X
- 886 - Recording, some bloke reporting to New Zealand and Australia from
- New York about shares
- 887 - X
- 888 - Beeps
- 889 - X
- 890 - "Please enter your pin"
- 891 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 892 - CAD
- 893 - V something secureline?
- 894 - NA
- 895 - V faint something international
- 896 - NA
- 897 - M
- 898 - "Booboobeep! You have dialed a number that is not available from
- your calling area...zero zero seventeen"
- 899 - X
- 900 - X
- 901 - Beeps
- 902 - X
- 903 - VMS "the makers of the theraputic matress" =)
- 904 - VMS Press # then 81 Meridian Mail
- 905 - CAD
- 906 - X
- 907 - M
- 908 - MCI Worldcom faint weird!?! i heard about 3 operators and a
- recording at the same time!?!
- 909 - Crap VMS
- 910 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 911 - KDD enter your pin
- 912 - Answering machine
- 913 - NA
- 914 - Servicemasters PABX
- 915 - Servicemasters VMS eg 2630
- 916 - X
- 917 - X
- 918 - VMS Corporate Human Resources Office 3 digit boxes eg 215
- 919 - VMS 3 digit boxes eg 420
- 920 - Automated crap press 5, # then *7 for an Audix VMS
- 921 - M
- 922 - NA
- 923 - "Sorry, there is a fault"
- 924 - CAD
- 925 - CAD
- 926 - X
- 927 - M
- 928 - M
- 929 - CAD
- 930 - CAD
- 931 - X
- 932 - CAD
- 933 - CAD
- 934 - CAD
- 935 - M
- 936 - Nothing!? Weird, doesn't even ring
- 937 - "The phone system is being updated"
- 938 - M
- 939 - X
- 940 - "Invalid number timeout"
- 941 - CAD
- 942 - "The number you have dialed cannot be reached from your area 2BM"
- 943 - PBX VMS
- 944 - "Please enter your account number and pin"
- 945 - X
- 946 - "Please enter your authorisation code"
- 947 - "Please enter your authorisation code"
- 948 - CAD
- 949 - X
- 950 - CAD
- 951 - Weird beeps, responds to key presses?
- 952 - NA
- 953 - CAD
- 954 - "We're sorry, your call cannot be completed as dialed"
- 955 - Recording Fred Friars Seminars fax 0800 892 696
- 956 - VMS Fred Friars Phonemail
- 957 - VMS Meridian Mail - nice system, get your mail and express
- messaging options
- 958 - X
- 959 - CAD
- 960 - CAD
- 961 - CAD
- 962 - CAD
- 963 - CAD
- 964 - CAD
- 965 - X
- 966 - CAD
- 967 - X
- 968 - NA
- 969 - CAD
- 970 - CAD
- 971 - M
- 972 - B
- 973 - CAD
- 974 - B
- 975 - CAD
- 976 - B
- 977 - B
- 978 - B
- 979 - B
- 980 - B
- 981 - B
- 982 - CAD
- 983 - CAD
- 984 - CAD
- 985 - CAD
- 986 - X
- 987 - X
- 988 - X
- 989 - M
- 990 - X
- 991 - X
- 992 - Company recording
- 993 - "711, the 800 number you have dialed is not in service"
- 994 - X
- 995 - Fucking weird beeps!
- 996 - M
- 997 - X
- 998 - V Cellphone customer services
- 999 - X
-
- Thats all folks! This hand scan took me about a month and was hard
- work, there is some cool stuff in here so be grateful!
-
- =)
-
- Peace out.
-
- Contact Me
- +==========+
- E-Mail : Force007@hotmail.com
- VMB UK : 0800 962481, press 6, box 4328
-
- Shoutz & Greetz
- +===============+
-
- "We will always have the upper hand"
- ____
- / \ ---
- Hybrid / \ \ __ Chimmy
- / /\ \ \ \
- _/______|_/ / / / \
- | | / / / /
- | ---\( |/ / / /
- | \|\(/\(/ \(/
- Bodie | | Zomba
- / /
- / \ /
- / \ _____/
- /
- /
- /
-
- All of D4RKCYDE
- + TechnoPhreaks
- + Digital Uprising
- + ETG
- + SWATeam.
- _____________________________________
- / ___________________________________ \
- \/ \/
- /\ _________ /\
- \/ / / \/
- /\ /________/ /\
- \/ ______________________________ \/
- /\ / ___/ // _// _/ / _ / /\
- \/ / // / // / / /_ / ___/ \/
- /\ /_____//_____//__/ /____//____/ /\
- \/ \/
- /\___________________________________/\
- \_____________________________________/
-
- "s0, i've decided to take my w0rk back undergr0und,
- t0 st0p it falling int0 the wr0ng hands...."
-
-
-
- W0rm 0f Destruction .......::::::::::::|||lllSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- By Dialt0ne .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- 10-November 1998 .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- www.wod.8m.com .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
-
- WWWWWW WWWWWW OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
- WWWWWW WWWWWW OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO DDDDD DDDDDD
- WWWWWW WWWWWW WWWWWW OOOOO OOOOO DDDDD DDDDDD
- WWWWWW WWWWWW WWWWWW OOOOO OOOOO DDDDD DDDDDD
- WWWWWW WWWWWW WWWWWW OOOOO OOOOO DDDDD DDDDDD
- WWWWWW WWWWWW WWWWWW OOOOO OOOOO DDDDD DDDDDD
- WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW OOOOO OOOOO DDDDD DDDDDD
- WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO DDDDD DDDDDD
- WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
-
-
-
- WoD
-
- Worm 0f Destruction
-
-
- Presents: WoDNet
-
-
-
- Founded by Dialt0ne
- Date file created 11/21/98
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- What's up all of my hackers and phreakers this is Dialt0ne coming from the
- Hacker Head Quarters where the WoD Servers are stored. WoDNet was made
- becuase I personally got sick of are government and ever other government
- out there. WoDNet consists of files that you couldn't find even if you
- wanted to in your local search engine. This server uses encryption used
- by the russian government and military and to this day is unbreakable.
- The server is just a home base for the hackers/phreakers of WoD can
- upload,download,chat, post messages on the message board etc.... This
- file will give you a over all view of how the WoD System works, people who
- run it and also some of it's members.
-
-
- SECURITY
-
- The security of WoDNet is very strict. There are atleast 2 SysOp
- (Sys-Admins) on at all times. WoDNet follows B2 standards of DoD
- (department of defense : Orange book) System Evaluation Criteria which
- states that it must have labeled security protection, label integrity,
- exportation of labeled information, and the list goes on. When a program
- of any type is uploaded to the server it is automatically encrypted with
- one of the many unbreakable encryption algorithms that WoD has. After the
- file is uploaded it is placed in a certain directory which I check ever
- night, if they file is a txt of some sort then I will briefly read over it
- and see if it's worth being put onto the server, and also if it's a
- program of some sort it is mandatory that the uploader include a txt on
- how this program works etc.... Security is the #1 piorty on this server if
- an unauthorized user is found in the server, action will be taken, and we
- will persecute to the highest degree. At the Hacker Head Quaters where the
- WoD server is found with various other computers that work along with it
- there is a series of steps you have to go threw to get in. I will not
- explain in detail ever aspect on the system specs but I will give a brief
- over view. To get past the main server, firewall, screening router, you
- will have to have 1 login, 4 passwords. In which the user is only allowed
- two chances of trying to log in after that the account will be disabled
- for approx 2hrs or more. And as this is happening several system monitor
- tools will be sending messages to me, and the other SysOp on the system to
- tell them what is going on at the moment. I am not going to get into what
- are on the internal servers after you get past the main one but the
- security on those are the same or even more severe then the main server.
- I keep saying main server but only thing it really is, is a gateway to the
- internal network but if you want to have a crack at it first you have to
- find it, but if you do try to hack it all you want, but I will warn you
- now your hacking days will be soon over once you try.
-
-
- ACCESS
-
- Access to the WoDNet will be far and few between. I do not go out looking
- for members to join this army. They come to me, and once they, do they
- will go threw a 3-6 week screening process which will consists of: I will
- give you a certain thing to do and if you can complete it in the time
- period I give you : we will have one of the guys in WoD to perform a
- back ground check (and yes we will get your real docs) :
-
- This is all I will say about the screening process at this point.
-
- The screening process will be tough and if you can get threw all the task
- that me and another WoD member ask you to do then you might be considered
- (notice that considered) to be a part of this up rising computer army.
-
-
- PURPOSE
-
- The purpose of WoD is to let the world know about some of the illegal
- things that the government is doing. Also projects they plan on doing
- wiht out the notification of the citizens of the free world at all. But
- the government doesn't care, they could care less, but WoD will change
- that for ever. WoD will also shut down and humilate some of those so
- called "leet" hacking groups out there at the moment such as HcV, Tk, HBK
- and the list goes on. These groups that I've listed alone hack webpages
- just to brag. Saying to there other so called "leet" friends look what I
- did I'm powerful and I know all etc... In which the only thing most of
- these groups do is go to www.rootshell.com and download ever expoit in
- there archive then find a system so they can use it on. THAT IS NOT
- HACKING that is running a program that does it for you. It's not the
- point of having a program that can assist you such as after you gain root
- you would write up a little program that will allow you to log into the
- system undetected under various accounts such as login: a password: a.
- Now that takes some skills in varies areas such as programming. But what
- these groups are doing now a days is just totally annoying and childish.
- But soon these groups and the world will see what WoD has in store for
- them we will have control over most of the computer communications on the
- net and also tele-communications all over the world. There are members
- from WoD from the United States, Germany, China, New Mexico and many other
- countries around the globe. The petty Computer Crime Division will not be
- able to stop us even with there best prayers. We will attack on certain
- dates and they will be very planned out to limit the mistakes
- tremendously. There will be destruction and chaos from now on and there
- will be certain reasons listed for each attack in detail.
-
- This is all that will be said for now, when we strike you will learn more.
-
-
- NETWORKS
-
- WoDNet does not just consist of the computers in side the Hackers Head
- Quarters but it also consists of a wan that strechs all across the world.
- In which certain parts of it are very slow, but others are extermely fast.
- These servers are placed to insure that if one server of WoD is taken down
- for one reason or another, the network will still be up so that we do not
- lose contact from each other and the destruction can continue.
-
- No more will be said on this topic!
-
-
- CONTACT
-
- You will not be able to contact me or any other WoD member directly, no
- one will even know what the server address is so they may try to connect.
- If you are thinking in your mind at the moment that you would like to be a
- part of this group just remember we only accept the best (or close enough
- to it) out there. NO SCRIPT KIDDIES And even if you do know who I am or
- you know me personally the server address will never be given out until
- you are verified and are accepted and voted in by most of the members.
- But some times you may find me on IRC server efnet or some times on
- Tele-Conferences.
-
- So if you need me you should know how to find me.
-
-
-
- Shoutouts to Downtime, OverDose, Interrupt and all the rest of the Dark
- Cyde Communications clique.
-
-
- Date file finished 11/29/98
-
-
- Fear what you do not believe
-
- -Dialt0ne
-
-
- BT Test Codes .......::::::::::::|||lllSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- By Onion & Barakis .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- 02-December 1998 .....::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$&$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
- We Socially Engineered this info out of some guy who went to B.T. for work
- experience. He just wandered around lifting interesting bits of paper and
- stuff. We also got a lot of other crap, codes for the local exchange etc. but
- these should work from any B.T. line. 175: Works on; old payfones (the ones
- with the metal casing, there's still loads of them about.)
-
- What it does; when the fone starts going "beepbeepbeepbeepbeep" you can enter
- various codes.
-
- CODES: 01 gives a strange tone.
- 02 powers the fone down for 3 minutes. It should say "no cash calls".
-
- this is great phun when some little kid keeps pestering you to get
- out of the fonebox. I think is also wipes out your caller I.D. and
- you cannot be traced while it is powered down, but don't hold me to
- that. 06 is supposed to power down the exchange, but doesn't seem to
- work. You can hit 02 after 06 to power the fone down, though. 175/176
- rings the fone back. There are others which I can't remember, most
- just send tones down the line.
-
- 176: Works on; new, plastic cased fones.
-
- What it does; same as 175. On some fones, you may have to enter it
- several times to get it to work. You will know it's working when you
- get that "beepbeepbeep".
-
- 17070: Works on; B.T. fones. If in a payfone, you have to put 10p in
- (you get it back)
-
- What it does; the only thing this doesn't do is make your tea for
- you. It's the B.T. line test facility. It starts out by reading out
- the number of the fone you are calling from (use a payfone), then
- gives you some options. You can run ringback tests, send dodgy (and
- bloody loud!) tones down people's lines, and probably lots of other
- stuff too. It even makes french fries in 6 different ways!
- Experiment with this one, as I have been far too busy to find out
- all the capabilities of this thing. Have phun!
-
- 3viL <>n!oN.
-
-
- ** 0:System passwords packet sent (19 bytes) val1: '' val2: ''
- ---------- Packet received from host 127.0.0.1 port 31337 ---------
- Password cached by system:
- index:06(19) len:66(36/222)
- Resource: 'a2.iii.co.uk/standard life extranet' Password: 'slextranet:
- slextranet'
- index:08(04) len:60(36/162)
- Resource: '┴6é0▄~╤₧Σ' Password: 'ddddddddddddddd'
- index:09(04) len:46(36/12)
- Resource: '┴6é0▄~╤₧Σ' Password: ''
- index:255(128) len:66(41/162)
- Resource: 'DiskCacheDPAMSAPListZoneMSAPEntrySTUPOT_0' Password:
- '■,▀ε▓Θ┐j¬╙┤5╡ε'
- index:255(128) len:66(41/162)
- Resource: 'DiskCacheRPAMSAPListZoneMSAPEntrySTUPOT_0' Password:
- '¢á4ßLjÅÆ╠C▌.'
- index:01(19) len:40(19/122)
- Resource: 'www.timetrend.com/' Password: 'dazy:jenine'
- index:02(19) len:60(36/152)
- Resource: 'www.chron.com/hci registration wall' Password: 'dsipares:twirl'
- index:04(19) len:50(24/182)
- Resource: 'www.sandbox.net/sandbox' Password: 'LENNOXTOWN:avprqp'
- index:03(19) len:58(38/122)
- Resource: 'www.rangers.co.uk/rangers fc web site' Password: 'cafe4:cafe4'
- index:07(19) len:50(31/112)
- Resource: 'www.celticfc.co.uk/unspecified' Password: 'guest:none'
- index:05(19) len:52(23/212)
- Resource: 'www.ft.com/ft services' Password: 'Ecartwright:motivate'
- index:10(19) len:54(31/142)
- Resource: 'homepager.tripod.com/homepager' Password: 'mads13:mads13'
- index:11(19) len:50(28/142)
- Resource: 'homepager.tripod.com/tripod' Password: 'mads13:MADS13'
- index:00(04) len:18(05/52)
- Resource: 'MAPI' Password: 'MAPI'
- End of cached passwords.
- Unable to read value 'ScreenSave_Data'
- ------------------------- End of Data -------------------
-
- These are passwords we Backorificed from a Netcafe. This was the most
- convienient place to save 'em at the time...
-
-
- ..::::: |-----> Country Direct Numbers : ..::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> By Force ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> Force007@bigfoot.com ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
- werd. in this article i will explain a bit about country direct numbers and
- also list all of the country direct numbers from the UK and the US.
- Country direct numbers are toll free numbers that go direct to an operator
- in the desired country. They have been set up so foreign visitors, tourists
- and business men can call the country direct number of their country and
- either use a charge card or bill the call to their home phone bill making it
- a lot easier to call abroad. These numbers have all been put in the
- 0800 89X-XXX section.
- These numbers are useful to phreaks because you can abuse charge cards using
- most of these numbers and some are c5 lines, which obviously means that you
- can blue box over them.
-
- The following is a table of the assigned country direct numbers from the UK
- and the US.
-
- +=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=+
- ! Country ! UK Number ! US Number !
- !=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=!=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=!=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=!
- ! Australia Direct ! 0800 890-061 ! 1-800-682-2878 !
- ! Austria Direct ! 0800 890-043 ! 1-800-624-0043 !
- ! Bahamas Direct ! 0800 890-135 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Bahrain Direct ! 0800 890-973 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Belgium Direct ! 0800 890-032 ! 1-800-472-0032 !
- ! Belize Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-235-1154 !
- ! Bermuda Direct ! 0800 890-123 ! 1-800-232-2067 !
- ! Bolivia Direct ! 0800 890-059 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Brazil Direct ! 0800 890-055 ! 1-800-344-1055 !
- ! British VI Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-248-6585 !
- ! Brunei Direct ! 0800 890-673 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Canada Direct ! 0800 890-016 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Cayman Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-852-3653 !
- ! Chile Direct ! 0800 890-056 ! 1-800-552-0056 !
- ! China Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-532-4462 !
- ! Colombia Direct ! 0800 890-057 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Costa Rica Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-252-5114 !
- ! Denmark Direct ! 0800 890-045 ! 1-800-762-0045 !
- ! El Salvador Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-422-2425 !
- ! Finland Direct ! 0800 890-358 ! 1-800-232-0358 !
- ! France Direct ! 0800 890-033 ! 1-800-537-2623 !
- ! Gabon Direct ! 0800 890-241 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Germany Direct ! 0800 890-049 ! 1-800-292-0049 !
- ! Greece Direct ! 0800 890-030 ! 1-800-443-5527 !
- ! Guam Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-367-4826 !
- ! Hawaii Direct ! 0800 890-808 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Hong Kong Direct ! 0800 890-852 ! 1-800-992-2323 !
- ! Hungary Direct ! 0800 890-036 ! 1-800-352-9469 !
- ! Iceland Direct ! 0800 890-354 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Indonesia Direct ! 0800 890-062 ! 1-800-242-4757 !
- ! Ireland Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-562-6262 !
- ! Rep Ireland Direct ! 0800 890-353 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Israel Direct ! 0800 890-972 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Italy Direct ! 0800 890-039 ! 1-800-543-7662 !
- ! Japan Direct (KDD) ! 0800 890-081 ! 1-800-543-0051 !
- ! Japan Direct (IDC) ! 0800 890-080 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Korea Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-822-8256 !
- ! Luxembourg Direct ! 0800 890-352 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Macau Direct ! 0800 890-853 ! 1-800-622-2821 !
- ! Malaysia Direct ! 0800 890-060 ! 1-800-772-7369 !
- ! Netherlands Direct ! 0800 890-031 ! 1-800-432-0031 !
- ! New Zealand Direct ! 0800 890-064 ! 1-800-248-0064 !
- ! New Zealand (COMMS) ! 0800 890-640 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Norway Direct ! 0800 890-047 ! 1-800-292-0047 !
- ! Panama Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-872-6106 !
- ! Paraguay Direct ! 0800 890-595 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Phillippines Direct ! 0800 890-063 ! 1-800-336-7445 !
- ! Phillippines (Philcom)! 0800 890-633 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Portugal Direct ! 0800 890-351 ! 1-800-822-2776 !
- ! Singapore Direct ! 0800 890-065 ! 1-800-822-6588 !
- ! South Africa Direct ! 0800 890-027 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! South Korea Direct ! 0800 890-082 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! South Korea (DACOM) ! 0800 890-820 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Spain Direct ! 0800 890-034 ! 1-800-247-7246 !
- ! Sweden Direct ! 0800 890-046 ! 1-800-345-0046 !
- ! Switzerland Direct ! 0800 890-041 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Taiwan Direct ! 0800 890-886 ! 1-800-626-0979 !
- ! Thailand Direct ! 0800 890-066 ! 1-800-342-0066 !
- ! Turkey Direct ! 0800 890-090 ! 1-800-828-2646 !
- ! UAE Direct ! 0800 890-971 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! UK Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-445-5667 !
- ! Uruguay Direct ! 0800 890-598 ! 1-800-245-8411 !
- ! USA Direct (AT&T) ! 0800 890-011 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! USA Direct (MCI) ! 0800 890-222 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! USA Direct (Sprint) ! 0800 890-877 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! USA Direct (Worldcom) ! 0800 890-456 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Venezuala Direct ! 0800 890-058 ! ---- N/A ---- !
- ! Yugoslavia Direct ! --- N/A --- ! 1-800-367-9841 !
- +=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=+
-
- There are loads of numbers in the 0800 89X-XXX section that terminate in
- foreign countries that are not country direct numbers. I would say that
- every part of 0800 89X-XXX has already been scanned and the scans are all
- over the net so do a search. But for the terminally lazy here is a small
- list of blue boxable c5 lines.
-
- 0800 890135 0800 890059 0800 890354 0800 890062 0800 890595
- 0800 890598 0800 890058 0800 965060 0800 965061 0800 965063
- 0800 965075 0800 965077 0800 965078 0800 965079 0800 895222
- 0800 967796 0500 892200 0500 890051 0500 890082 0800 890505
-
-
-
- ..::::: |-----> BT Changes : ....:::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> By Force ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> Force007@bigfoot.com ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
- This is a very small but interesting article. Because the phone system needs
- to expand, changes are going be made to the BT system, there will be a much
- bigger range of freephone numbers than there are at the moment, all of
- 080X-XXX-XXX will be filled which can only be good news for us phreaks...
-
- +=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-+
- ! code begins with ! type of call ! existing codes to be replaced !
- !=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-!-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=!=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-!
- ! 070 ! to personal number ! 09567 !
- ! 076 ! to pager ! 01399, 01426, 01893 !
- ! 077, 078, 079 ! to mobile ! 0370, 0378,0402,0585, 0589, 0802 !
- ! 080 ! free of charge ! 0321, 0500, 0800 !
- ! 084 ! local call rate ! 0345, 0645 !
- ! 087 ! national call rate ! 0541, 0990 !
- ! 090 ! premium rate ! 0331, 0891, 0894, 0897, 0898, 0991 !
- +=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-+
-
-
-
-
- ..::::: |-----> Basic CCS : ....:::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> By Hybrid ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> th0rn@coldmail.com ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
-
- CCS stands for Common Channel Signalling and forms the basis of our SS7 phone
- networks. SS7 is different from previous switching systems because it has a
- unique feature. The data used to control the system is seperate from the
- voice circuit, so boxing an SS7 system is not possible. Modems are employed
- to transmit and recieve the serial binary data over *analogue* transmission
- channels, effectivly seperating the switching from the speech, so it would be
- imposible to do a captain crunch down the phone with your whistle.
-
- CCS has it's advantages for the phone companys. For example:
-
- *Faster signalling rates
- *CCS can accomodate a larger volume of signals
- *The system can handle siganals during the speech period.
- *Signalling patterns, reates etc, can be cahnged at anytime.
- *It's cost effiective for large networking hierarchys.
-
- CCS, however, gives rise to requirements which do not arise with signalling
- on speech-path systems such as:
-
- *High order error rate performance
- *Signalling link security backup
- *Assurance of speech-path continuity as, unlike speech-path signalling, CCS.
- does not establish speech path integrity.
-
- General features of CCS:
-
- *Information may be transferred as signal messages of varying bit length, or
- by defined signal units.
-
- *Each signalling channel operates in the synchronous mode with its continuous
- bit stream divided into contiguous signal units which all contain the same
- number of bits for the same application or service. The two signalling
- channels of a link need not necessarily be synchronised to each other, and if
- not, drift may arise between the signal units in the respective directions,
- which, in certain implementations of CCS (e.g. CCITT 6 system) may require
- compensation arrangements.
-
- *Synchronisation (idle) units are transmitted when message signals are not
- being transmitted, to maintain signal unit synchronism on the signalling
- channel.
-
- *The signal unit is divided into a number of constituent bit fields each
- having its own function in the system, typically, heading, signal
- information, circuit label, parity check, etc.
-
- *As the CCS link is time-shared, each message signal requires identification
- of the speech circuit (and thus the call) to which it belongs. This is by
- means of a circuit label bit-field of size depending on the number of speech
- circuits to be identified.
-
- *As CCS signals do not prove the continuity of the speech path selected,
- other arrangements (e.g. per-call continuity check, routine testing of idle
- paths) must be made.
-
- *Errors are liable to occur in the signal-transfer process and some form of
- error control is required as the uncorrected error-rate of transmission plant
- is usually unacceptable for c.c s. Error detection is based on redundant
- coding, the parity check bits being, typically, part of each signal unit.
- Error correction can be, and usually is in telephony CCS, by retransmission.
- Despite the incorporation of error control, undetected errors may arise. Even
- with a high degree of error correction a signalling link could be unusable
- for varying periods, which requires signalling security backup.
-
- *For signalling 'security', signals may be directed, by automatic procedures,
- from a regular signalling link to an alternative signalling facility when an
- excessive error rate, or complete failure, of the regular link is detected.
-
- *On multilink connections, signalling information is transmitted on a link-by
- -link basis, the signals being transferred from one link to the next only
- after processing. This is a majour feature of CCS.
-
- *Since the circuit label may require a substantial proportion of the bits
- available in a signal unit, comparatively few bits may remain for coding the
- information a message has to convey. It follows that when the information is
- even moderately extensive, and particularly when it has a data content which
- can vary from one message to another, it cannot be transmitted efficiently by
- a succession of single signal unit messages. Instead, the initial circuit
- label carrying signal unit may be augmented by one or more subsequent signal
- units in which all the available bits can be used for carrying the
- information, thus producing an efficient multiunit message. Thus lone signal
- units (LSU) and multi-unit messages (MUM) may apply with CCS, and in the
- latter case the initial signal unit (ISU) carries the circuit label bit-field
- for the whole MUM. Each SU in a MUM carries its own check bit-field.
-
-
-
- ..::::: |-----> Government Wiretaping : ....:::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> Copied from an article ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> Cleaned up by Hybrid ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
- Wiretap Laws and Procedures.
- What happens when the US government taps a line.
-
-
- Donald P. Delaney, Senior Investigator New York State Police Dorothy E.
- Denning, Professor and Chair Computer Science Department, Georgetown
- University John Kaye, County Prosecutor & pimp. Monmouth County, New Jersey
- Alan R. McDonald, Special Assistant to the Assistant Director Technical
- Services Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation Federal Bureau of Darkcyde
- Darkcyde tactical bolistics division.
-
- September 23, 1993
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- Although wiretaps are generally illegal in the United States, the federal
- government and the governments of thirty seven states have been authorized
- through federal and state legislation to intercept wire and electronic
- communications under certain stringent rules which include obtaining a court
- order. These rules have been designed to ensure the protection of individual
- privacy and Fourth Amendment rights, while permitting the use of wiretaps for
- investigations of serious criminal activity and for foreign intelligence.
-
- This article describes the legal requirements for government interceptions of
- wire and electronic communications and some of the additional procedures and
- practices followed by federal and state agencies. The legal requirements are
- rooted in two pieces of federal legislation: the Omnibus Crime Control and
- Safe Streets Act (Title III of the Act (hereafter "Title III")), passed in
- 1968, and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), passed in 1978.
- Title III established the basic law for federal and state law enforcement
- interceptions performed for the purpose of criminal investigations, while
- FISA established the law for federal-level interceptions performed for
- intelligence and counterintelligence operations. We will first describe
- Title III interceptions and then describe FISA interceptions.
-
- 2. Title III Interceptions
-
- Title III, as amended (particularly by the Electronic Communications Privacy
- Act of 1986), is codified at Title 18 USC, Sections 2510-2521. These statutes
- provide privacy protection for and govern the interception of oral, wire, and
- electronic communications. Title III covers all telephone communications
- regardless of the medium, except that it does not cover the radio portion of
- a cordless telephone communication that is transmitted between the handset
- and base unit. The law authorizes the interception of oral, wire, and
- electronic communications by investigative and law enforcement officers
- conducting criminal investigations pertaining to serious criminal offenses,
- i.e., felonies, following the issuance of a court order by a judge. The Title
- III law authorizes the interception of particular criminal communications
- related to particular criminal offenses. In short, it authorizes the
- acquisition of evidence of crime. It does not authorize noncriminal
- intelligence gathering, nor does it authorize interceptions related to social
- or political views.
-
- Thirty seven states have statutes permitting interceptions by state and local
- law enforcement officers for certain types of criminal investigations. All
- of the state statutes are based upon Title III from which they are derivative
- These statutes must be at least as restrictive as Title III, and in fact most
- are more restrictive in their requirements. In describing the legal
- requirements, we will focus on those of Title III since they define the
- baseline for all wiretaps performed by federal, state, and local law
- enforcement agencies.
-
- In recent years, state statutes have been modified to keep pace with rapid
- technological advances in telecommunications. For example, New Jersey
- amended its electronic surveillance statute in 1993 to include cellular
- telephones, cordless telephones, digital display beepers, fax transmissions,
- computer-to-computer communications, and traces obtained through "caller-ID".
-
- Wiretaps are limited to the crimes specified in Title III and state statutes.
- In New Jersey, the list includes murder, kidnapping, gambling, robbery,
- bribery, aggravated assault, wrongful credit practices, terrorist threats,
- arson, burglary, felony thefts, escape, forgery, narcotics trafficking *LOL*
- firearms trafficking, racketeering, and organized crime.
-
- Most wiretaps are large undertakings, requiring a substantial use of
- resources. In 1992, the average cost of installing intercept devices and
- monitoring communications was $46,492. Despite budget constraints and
- personnel shortages, law enforcement conducts wiretaps as necessary, but
- obviously, because of staffing and costs, judiciously.
-
- 2.1 Application for a Court Order
-
- All government wiretaps require a court order based upon a detailed showing
- of probable cause. To obtain a court order, a three-step process is involved
- First, the law enforcement officer responsible for the investigation must
- draw up a detailed affidavit showing that there is probable cause to believe
- that the target telephone is being used to facilitate a specific, serious,
- indictable crime.
-
- Second, an attorney for the federal, state, or local government must work
- with the law enforcement officer to prepare an application for a court order,
- based upon the officer's affidavit. At the federal level, the application
- must be approved by the Attorney General, Deputy Attorney General, Associate
- Attorney General, any Assistant Attorney General, any acting Assistant
- Attorney General, or any Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Criminal
- Division designated by the Attorney General. At the state and local level,
- the application must be made and approved by the principal prosecuting
- attorney of the state (State Attorney General) or political subdivision
- thereof (District Attorney or County Prosecutor). The attorney must be
- authorized by a statute of that state to make such applications.
-
- Third, the attorney must present the approved application ex parte (without
- an adversary hearing) to a federal or state judge who is authorized to issue
- a court order for electronic surveillance. A state or local police officer
- or federal law enforcement agent cannot make an application for a court order
- directly to a judge.
-
- Typically, a court order is requested after a lengthy investigation and the
- use of a "Dialed Number Recorder" (DNR). The DNR is used to track the
- outgoing calls from the suspect's phone in order to demonstrate that the
- suspect is communicating with known criminals.
-
- Title III requires that an application for a court order specify:
-
- (a) the investigative or law enforcement officer making the
- application and the high-level government attorney authorizing
- the application;
-
- (b) the facts and circumstances of the case justifying the
- application, including details of the particular offense under
- investigation, the identity of the person committing it, the
- type of communications sought, and the nature and location of
- the communication facilities;
-
- (c) whether or not other investigative procedures have been tried
- and failed or why they would likely fail or be too dangerous;
-
- (d) the period of time for the interception (at most 30 days -
- extensions may be permitted upon reapplication);
-
- (e) the facts concerning all previous applications involving any of
- the same persons or facilities;
-
- (f) where the application is for the extension of an order, the
- results thus far obtained from the interception.
-
- The process of making an application for a court order is further restricted
- by internal procedures adopted by law enforcement agencies to ensure that
- wiretaps conform to the laws and are used only when justified. The following
- describes the process for the FBI and the New York State Police.
-
- 2.1.1 FBI Applications . Call the FBI from the UK: 0800-961-238
-
- In order for an FBI agent to conduct an interception, the agent must follow
- procedures that go well beyond the legal requirements imposed by Title III
- and which involve extensive internal review. In preparing the affidavit,
- the FBI agent in the field works with the field office principal legal
- advisor and also with an attorney in the local U.S. Attorney's Office,
- revising the documentation to take into account their comments and
- suggestions. After the documents are approved by field office management,
- they are submitted to the Department of Justice's Office of Enforcement
- Operations (OEO) in the Criminal Division and to the FBI Headquarters (HQ).
- At FBI HQ, the documents go to the Legal Counsel Division (LCD) and the
- Criminal Investigative Division (CID). Within the CID, they are sent to the
- program manager of the criminal program unit relating to the type of
- violation under investigation, e.g., organized crime. The program manager
- determines whether the subjects of the proposed interception are worthy
- targets of investigation and whether the interception is worth doing.
- Attorneys in the FBI's LCD and the DOJ's OEO further refine the documents.
-
- After the documents are approved by the DOJ's OEO and by FBI HQ, they are
- referred to the Deputy Assistant Attorney General (or above), who reviews the
- documents and signs off on them. At this point, the DOJ authorizes the local
- U.S. Attorney's Office to file the final version of the documents
- (application, affidavit, court order, and service provider order) in court.
- The U.S. Attorney's Office then submits the documents and the DOJ
- authorization to a federal judge. The entire process can take as long as a
- month.
-
- The following summarizes the people and organizations involved in the
- preparation or approval of the application and the issuance of a court order:
-
- 1. FBI agent
- 2. FBI field office attorney (principal legal advisor)
- 3. FBI field office management
- 4. Attorney in local U.S. Attorney's office
- 5. DOJ Office of Enforcement Operations (OEO)
- 6. FBI HQ Legal Counsel Division (LCD)
- 7. FBI HQ Criminal Investigative Division (CID)
- 8. DOJ Deputy Assistant Attorney General (or higher)
- 9. Federal District Court judge
-
-
- 2.1.2 New York State Police Applications
-
- Within the New York State Police, electronic surveillance is conducted by
- Senior Investigators in the Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI). In
- preparing an affidavit, the investigator works with the District Attorney's
- Office (or, in the case of a federal investigation, the U.S. Attorney's
- office) and with the BCI Captain of the investigator's troop. (Wiretap
- applications can be made and approved by the State Attorney General, but this
- is unusual.) The Captain assesses whether review by Division Headquarters is
- necessary and confers with the Assistant Deputy Superintendent (ADS) or
- Headquarters Captain for final determination. If Headquarters review is
- deemed necessary, then all documentation is sent to the ADS along with a
- memorandum, endorsed by the Troop Unit Supervisor and the Troop or Detail
- Commander, requesting approval. If Headquarters review is deemed
- unnecessary, then the memo is sent without the documentation. Once the ADS
- and District Attorney (DA) approve the application, the DA submits the
- application to a judge who grants or denies the court order.
-
- 2.2 Issuance of a Court Order
-
- Not all judges have the authority to grant court orders for wiretaps. In New
- Jersey, for example, only eight judges are designated as "wiretap judges" for
- the entire state. These judges are given special training to be sensitive to
- personal rights of privacy and to recognize the importance of telephone
- intercepts for law enforcement.
-
- Before a judge can approve an application for electronic surveillance and
- issue a court order, the judge must determine that:
-
- (a) there is probable cause for belief that an individual is
- committing, has committed, or is about to commit an offense
- covered by the law;
-
- (b) there is probable cause for belief that particular
- communications concerning that offense will be obtained through
- such interception;
-
- (c) normal investigative procedures have been tried and have failed
- or reasonably appear unlikely to succeed or to be too dangerous;
-
- (d) there is probable cause for belief that the facilities from
- which, or the place where the communications are to be
- intercepted are being used, or are about to be used, in
- connection with the commission of such offense, or are leased
- to, listed in the name of, or commonly used by such person.
-
- In addition to showing probable cause, one of the main criterion for
- determining whether a court order should be issued is whether normal
- investigative techniques have been or are likely to be unsuccessful
- (criterion (c) above). Electronic surveillance is a tool of last resort and
- cannot be used if other methods of investigation could reasonably be used
- instead. Such normal investigative methods usually include visual
- surveillance, interviewing subjects, the use of informers, telephone record
- analysis, and DNRs. However, these techniques often have limited impact on
- an investigation. Continuous surveillance by police can create suspicion and
- therefore be hazardous; further, it cannot disclose the contents of telephone
- conversations. Questioning identified suspects or executing search warrants
- at their residence can substantially jeopardize an investigation before the
- full scope of the operation is revealed, and information can be lost through
- interpretation. Informants are useful and sought out by police, but the
- information they provide does not always reveal all of the players or the
- extent of an operation, and great care must be taken to ensure that the
- informants are protected. Moreover, because informants are often criminals
- themselves, they may not be believed in court. Telephone record analysis and
- DNRs are helpful, but do not reveal the contents of conversations or the
- identities of parties. Other methods of investigation that may be tried
- include undercover operations and stings. But while effective in some cases,
- undercover operations are difficult and dangerous, and stings do not always
- work.
-
- If the judge approves the application, then a court order is issued
- specifying the relevant information given in the application, namely, the
- identity of the person (if known) whose communications are to be intercepted,
- the nature and location of the communication facilities, the type of
- communication to be intercepted and the offense to which it relates, the
- agency authorized to perform the interception and the person authorizing the
- application, and the period of time during which such interception is
- authorized. A court order may also require that interim status reports be
- made to the issuing judge while the wiretap is in progress.
-
- 2.3 Emergencies
-
- In an emergency situation where there is immediate danger of death or serious
- physical injury to any person, or conspiratorial activities threatening
- national security or characteristic of organized crime, Title III permits any
- investigative or law enforcement officer specially designated by the Attorney
- General, the Deputy Attorney General, or the Associate Attorney General, or
- by the principal prosecuting attorney of any state or subdivision thereof, to
- intercept communications provided an application for a court order is made
- within 48 hours. In the event a court order is not issued, the contents of
- any intercepted communication is treated as having been obtained in violation
- of Title III.
-
- In New York State, even an emergency situation requires a court order from a
- judge. However, the judge may grant a temporary court order based on an oral
- application from the District Attorney. The oral communication must be
- recorded and transcribed, and must be followed by a written application
- within 24 hours. The duration of a temporary warrant cannot exceed 24 hours
- and cannot be renewed except through a written application.
-
- 2.4 Execution of a Court Order
-
- 2.4.1 Installation of a Wiretap
-
- To execute a court order for a wiretap, the investigative or law enforcement
- officer takes the court order or emergency provision to the communications
- service provider. Normally, the service provider is the local exchange
- carrier. When served with a court order, the service provider (or landlord,
- custodian, or other person named) is mandated under Title III to assist in
- the execution of the interception by providing all necessary information,
- facilities, and technical assistance. The service provider is compensated
- for reasonable expenses incurred. In light of rapid technological
- developments including cellular telephones and integrated computer networks,
- the New Jersey statute also requires the service provider to give technical
- assistance and equipment to fulfill the court order. This requirement has
- not yet been tested in court.
-
- Normally, the government leases a line from the service provider and the
- intercepted communications are transmitted to a remote government monitoring
- facility over that line. In many cases, the bridging connection is made
- within the service provider's central office facility. Alternatively, a law
- enforcement agency may request the service provider to give the "pairs and
- appearances" (a place to connect to the suspect's line) in the "local loop"
- for the suspect's phone. A law enforcement technician then makes the
- connection.
-
- When a suspect's telephone is subject to change (e.g., because the person is
- attempting to evade or thwart interception), then a "roving" wiretap, which
- suspends the specification of the telephone, may be used. In this case,
- prior to intercepting communications, the officer must use some other method
- of surveillance in order to determine the exact location and/or telephone
- number of the facility being used. Once determined, the location or telephone
- number is given to the service provider for coordination and prompt
- assistance. The officer may not intercept communications randomly in order
- to track a person (random or mass surveillance is not permitted under any
- circumstances).
-
- 2.4.2 Minimization
-
- Once any electronic surveillance begins, the law enforcement officer must
- "minimize" -- that is, attempt to limit the interception of communications to
- the specified offenses in the court order. Prior to the surveillance, a
- federal or state attorney holds a "minimization meeting" with the
- investigators who will be participating in the case to ensure that the rules
- are followed.
-
- Minimization is normally accomplished by turning off the intercept and then
- performing a spot check every few minutes to determine if the conversation
- has turned to the subject of the court order. This avoids picking up family
- gossip. Special problems may arise where criminals communicate in codes that
- are designed to conceal criminal activity in what sounds like mundane
- household discussion. If an intercepted communication is in a code or
- foreign language, and if someone is not reasonably available to interpret the
- code or foreign language, then the conversation can be recorded and
- minimization deferred until an expert in that code or language is available
- to interpret the communication. Should a wiretap fail to meet the
- minimization parameters, all of the evidence obtained from the wiretap could
- be inadmissible.
-
- 2.4.3 Recording
-
- All intercepted communications are to be recorded when possible. As a
- practical mater, law enforcement officers make working copies of the original
- tapes. In many instances at the state and local level, the originals are
- delivered to the prosecutor's office and maintained in the prosecutor's
- custody. The copies are screened by the case officer for pertinent
- conversations (e.g., "I'll deliver the dope at 8:00 pm."). A compilation of
- the relevant conversations, together with the corroboratory surveillances
- often provides the probable cause for search warrants and/or arrest warrants.
-
- 2.4.4 Termination of Electronic Surveillance
-
- Electronic surveillance must terminate upon attainment of the objectives, or
- in any event within 30 days. To continue an interception beyond 30 days, the
- officer, through a government attorney, must apply for and be granted an
- extension based upon a new application and court order.
-
- When the period of a court order, or extension thereof, expires, the original
- tapes must be made available to the issuing judge and sealed under court
- supervision. The tapes must be maintained in such fashion for 10 years.
-
- 2.5 Notification and Use of Intercepted Communications as Evidence
-
- Upon termination of an interception, the judge who issued the court order
- must notify the persons named in the order that the interception took place.
- Normally, this must be done within 90 days, but it may be postponed upon
- showing of good cause. If the judge determines that it would be in the
- interest of justice to make portions of the intercepted communications
- available to the subjects, the judge may do so.
-
- The contents of the communications may not be used as evidence in any trial
- or hearing unless each party has received a copy of the application and court
- order at least 10 days in advance of the trial, and has been given the
- opportunity to move to suppress the evidence. A motion to suppress the
- evidence may be made on the grounds that it was not obtained in complete
- conformance with the laws.
-
- 2.6 Reports
-
- Within 30 days after the expiration or denial of a court order, Title III
- requires that the judge provide information about the order to the
- Administrative Office of the United States Courts (AO). Each year the
- Attorney General (or a designated Assistant Attorney General) must report, on
- behalf of the federal government, to the AO a summary of all orders and
- interceptions for the year; reports for state and local jurisdictions are
- made by the principal prosecuting attorney of the jurisdiction. The AO then
- integrates these summaries into an annual report: "Report on Applications for
- Orders Authorizing or Approving the Interception of Wire, Oral, or Electronic
- Communications (Wiretap Report)" covering all federal and state electronic
- surveillance, including wiretaps. The 1992 report is about 200 pages and
- includes information about each interception authorized in 1992, update
- information for interceptions authorized in 1982-1991, and summary statistics
- The summary statistics include the following data (numbers in parenthesis are
- the 1992 figures):
-
- (1) number of interceptions authorized (919), denied (0), and
- installed (846)
-
- (2) average duration (in days) of original authorization (28) and
- extensions (30)
-
- (3) the place/facility where authorized (303 single family dwelling,
- 135 apartment, 3 multi-dwelling, 119 business, 4 roving, 66
- combination, 289 other)
-
- (4) major offenses involved (634 narcotics, 90 racketeering, 66
- gambling, 35 homicide/ assault, 16 larceny/theft, 9 kidnapping,
- 8 bribery, 7 loansharking/usury/extortion, 54 other)
-
- (5) average number of (a) persons intercepted (117), (b)
- interceptions (1,861), and (c) incriminating intercepts (347)
- per order where interception devices were installed
-
- (6) average cost of interception ($46,492)
-
- (7) type of surveillance used for the 846 interceptions installed
- (632 telephone, 38 microphone, 113 electronic, 63 combination)
-
- (8) number of persons arrested (2,685) and convicted (607) as the
- result of 1992 intercepts
-
- (9) activity taking place during 1992 as the result of intercepts
- terminated in years 1982-1991, including number of arrests
- (1211), trials (280), motions to suppress that are granted (14),
- denied (141), and pending (37), and convictions (1450) (there is
- a lag between interceptions, arrests, and convictions, with many
- arrests and most convictions associated with a wiretap that
- terminated in one year taking place in subsequent years)
-
- Most of the above data is broken down by jurisdiction. Of the 919 authorized
- intercepts, 340 (37%) were federal. New York State had 197, New Jersey 111,
- Florida 80, and Pennsylvania 77. The remaining 114 intercepts were divided
- among 18 states, none of which had more than 17 intercepts. During the past
- decade, the average number of authorized intercepts per year has been about
- 780.
-
- Individual law enforcement agencies also require internal reports. For
- example, the New York Sate Police requires that each week, the Troop or
- Detail Captain prepare a report summarizing the status of all eavesdropping
- activity within the unit, including the productivity and plans for each
- electronic surveillance installation and a brief synopsis of pertinent
- activity. This is sent to the New York State Police Division Headquarters
- Captain who prepares a report summarizing the status of all eavesdropping i
- nstallations.
-
- One of the reasons for the significant amount of post wiretap reporting is to
- provide a substantial record for legislatures when considering whether or not
- to reenact or modify wiretap statutes.
-
- 3. FISA Interceptions
-
- Title 50 USC, Sections 1801-1811, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
- Act (FISA) of 1978, covers electronic surveillance for foreign intelligence
- purposes (including counterintelligence and counterterrorism). It governs
- wire and electronic communications sent by or intended to be received by
- United States persons (citizens, aliens lawfully admitted for permanent
- residence, corporations, and associations of U.S. persons) who are in the
- U.S. when there is a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be
- required for law enforcement purposes; nonconsensual wire intercepts that are
- implemented within the U.S.; and radio intercepts when the sender and all
- receivers are in the U.S. and a warrant would be required for law enforcement
- purposes. It does not cover intercepts of U.S. persons who are overseas
- (unless the communications are with a U.S. person who is inside the U.S.).
- Electronic surveillance conducted under FISA is classified.
-
- FISA authorizes electronic surveillance of foreign powers and agents of
- foreign powers for foreign intelligence purposes. Normally, a court order is
- required to implement a wiretap under FISA. There are, however, two
- exceptions. The first is when the communications are exclusively between or
- among foreign powers or involve technical intelligence other than spoken
- communications from a location under the open and exclusive control of a
- foreign power; there is no substantial risk that the surveillance will
- acquire the communications to or from a U.S.person; and proposed minimization
- procedures meet the requirements set forth by the law. Under those
- conditions, authorization can be granted by the President through the
- Attorney General for a period up to one year. The second is following a
- declaration of war by Congress. Then the President, though the Attorney
- General, can authorize electronic surveillance for foreign intelligence
- purposes without a court order for up to 15 days.
-
- Orders for wiretaps are granted by a special court established by FISA. The
- court consists of seven district court judges appointed by the Chief Justice
- of the United States. Judges serve seven-year terms.
-
- 3.1 Application for a Court Order
-
- Applications for a court order are made by Federal officers and require
- approval by the Attorney General. Each application must include:
-
- (1) the Federal officer making the application;
-
- (2) the Attorney General's approval;
-
- (3) the target of the electronic surveillance;
-
- (4) justification that the target is a foreign power or agent of a
- foreign power (except no U.S person can be considered a foreign power
- or agent thereof solely based on activities protected by the First
- Amendment) and that the facilities or places where the surveillance
- is be directed will be used by the same;
-
- (5) the proposed minimization procedures, which must meet certain
- requirements to protect the privacy of U.S. persons;
-
- (6) the nature of the information sought and type of communications
- subjected to surveillance;
-
- (7) certification(s) by the Assistant to the President for National
- Security Affairs or other high-level official in the area of
- national security or defense (Presidential appointee subject to
- Senate confirmation) that the information sought is foreign
- intelligence information and that such information cannot
- reasonably be obtained by normal investigative methods;
-
- (8) the means by which the surveillance will be effected;
-
- (9) the facts concerning all previous applications involving the same
- persons, facilities, or places;
-
- (10) the period of time for the interception (maximum 90 days or,
- when the target is a foreign power, one year);
-
- (11) coverage of all surveillance devices to be employed and the
- minimization procedures applying to each.
-
- Some of the above information can be omitted when the target is a
- foreign power.
-
- Within the FBI, the process of applying for a court order under FISA is
- as exacting and subject to review as under Title III. The main
- differences are that under FISA, the FBI Intelligence Division is
- involved rather than the Criminal Investigative Division, the DOJ
- Office of Intelligence Policy and Review (OIPR) is involved rather than
- either the U.S. Attorney's Office or the DOJ Criminal Division, and the
- application is approved by the Attorney General (or Acting Attorney
- General) rather than by a lower DOJ official.
-
- 3.2 Issuance of a Court Order
-
- Before a judge can approve an application, the judge must determine
- that the authorizations are valid; that there is probable cause to
- believe that the target of the electronic surveillance is a foreign
- power or agent of a foreign power and that the facilities or places
- where the surveillance is be directed will be used by the same; and
- that the proposed minimization procedures meet the requirements set
- forth in the law. If the judge approves the application, an order is
- issued specifying the relevant information from the application and
- directing the communication carrier, landlord, custodian, or other
- specified person to furnish all necessary information, facilities, and
- technical assistance and to properly maintain under security procedures
- any records relating to the surveillance.
-
- 3.3 Emergencies
-
- In an emergency situation, the Attorney General or designee can
- authorize the use of electronic surveillance provided the judge is
- notified at the time and an application is made to the judge within 24
- hours. If such application is not obtained, then the judge notifies
- any U.S. persons named in the application or subject to the
- surveillance, though such notification can be postponed or forgone upon
- showing of good cause.
-
- 3.4 Use of Intercepted Communications as Evidence
-
- Like Title III, FISA places strict controls on what information can be
- acquired through electronic surveillance and how such information can
- be used. No information can be disclosed for law enforcement purposes
- except with the proviso that it may only be used in a criminal
- proceedings under advance authorization from the Attorney General. If
- the government intends to use such information in court, then the
- aggrieved person must be notified in advance. The person may move to
- suppress the evidence.
-
- 3.5 Reports
-
- Each year, the Attorney General must give the Administrative Office of
- the United States Courts (AO) a report of the number of FISA
- applications and the number of orders and extensions granted, modified,
- or denied. In 1992, there were 484 orders. Since 1979, there has been
- an average of a little over 500 FISA orders per year.
-
- Because intercepts conducted under FISA are classified, detailed
- information analogous to that required under Title III is not reported
- to the AO, nor made available to the public. However, records of
- Attorney General certifications, applications, and orders granted must
- be held for at least 10 years, and the Attorney General must inform two
- Congressional oversight committees of all surveillance activity on a
- semiannual basis. These committees are the House Permanent Select
- Committee on Intelligence and the Senate Select Committee on
- Intelligence.
-
-
- Acknowledgements
-
- We are grateful to Geoffrey Greiveldinger for many helpful suggestions
- on an earlier draft of this report, and the ereet darkcyde crew.
-
-
-
-
- ..::::: |-----> Another UK Scan : ....:::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> By Chimmy ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> chimmy@inocent.com ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
-
- 22:06:58 12-11-1998: 0800 163-000: Number unobtainable
- 22:07:29 12-11-1998: 0800 163-001: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:07:50 12-11-1998: 0800 163-002: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:08:07 12-11-1998: 0800 163-003: Number unobtainable
- 22:10:22 12-11-1998: 0800 163-004: Ringing constantly
- 22:10:39 12-11-1998: 0800 163-005: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:10:54 12-11-1998: 0800 163-006: Number unobtainable
- 22:12:53 12-11-1998: 0800 163-007: Answering machine - possibly VMB/PBX
- 22:14:02 12-11-1998: 0800 163-008: Answering machine - PBX/VMB - Secure
- 22:14:20 12-11-1998: 0800 163-009: Number unobtainable
- 22:19:00 12-11-1998: 0800 163-010: Number unobtainable
- 22:19:53 12-11-1998: 0800 163-011: Answering machine - Solicitor - Nothing
- 22:20:08 12-11-1998: 0800 163-012: Number unobtainable
- 22:20:24 12-11-1998: 0800 163-013: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:20:38 12-11-1998: 0800 163-014: Number unobtainable
- 22:21:28 12-11-1998: 0800 163-015: Constantly Ringing
- 22:23:41 12-11-1998: 0800 163-016: PBX System, maybe a meridian somewhere?
- 22:24:40 12-11-1998: 0800 163-017: Answering Machine, nothing
- 22:25:40 12-11-1998: 0800 163-018: Constantly Ringing
- 22:26:34 12-11-1998: 0800 163-019: Constantly Ringing
- 22:26:55 12-11-1998: 0800 163-020: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:27:11 12-11-1998: 0800 163-021: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:27:27 12-11-1998: 0800 163-022: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:27:44 12-11-1998: 0800 163-023: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:28:00 12-11-1998: 0800 163-024: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:28:17 12-11-1998: 0800 163-025: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:29:22 12-11-1998: 0800 163-026: Answering machine - BT Relate whatever
- 22:29:53 12-11-1998: 0800 163-027: Constantly Ringing
- 22:30:04 12-11-1998: 0800 163-028: Number unobtainable
- 22:30:17 12-11-1998: 0800 163-029: Number unobtainable
- 22:30:44 12-11-1998: 0800 163-030: Constantly Ringing
- 22:31:27 12-11-1998: 0800 163-031: Constantly Ringing
- 22:31:48 12-11-1998: 0800 163-032: Carrier (Fax machine)
- 22:32:03 12-11-1998: 0800 163-033: Number unobtainable
- 22:32:18 12-11-1998: 0800 163-034: Number unobtainable
- 22:32:33 12-11-1998: 0800 163-035: Number unobtainable
- 22:32:47 12-11-1998: 0800 163-036: Number unobtainable
- 22:33:30 12-11-1998: 0800 163-037: Helpline - Call queue :(
- 22:34:17 12-11-1998: 0800 163-038: Answerphone - 9 to 5 number, secure
- 22:34:51 12-11-1998: 0800 163-039: Call queue - secure
- 22:35:39 12-11-1998: 0800 163-040: Answering machine - Nothing
- 22:36:17 12-11-1998: 0800 163-041: Answering Machine - nothing
- 22:37:12 12-11-1998: 0800 163-042: Answering machine, asks for sec code
- 22:37:59 12-11-1998: 0800 163-043: Answering machine with annoying music
- 22:38:19 12-11-1998: 0800 163-044: Number unobtainable
- 22:38:34 12-11-1998: 0800 163-045: Number unobtainable
- 22:39:33 12-11-1998: 0800 163-046: Constantly Ringing
- 22:40:00 12-11-1998: 0800 163-047: BT - Number not available
- 22:40:18 12-11-1998: 0800 163-048: Carrier (Modem)
- 22:40:55 12-11-1998: 0800 163-049: Constantly Ringing
- 22:41:39 12-11-1998: 0800 163-050: Answering machine - Asks for Sec Code
- 22:41:52 12-11-1998: 0800 163-051: Number unobtainable
- 22:42:33 12-11-1998: 0800 163-052: Constantly Ringing
- 22:43:12 12-11-1998: 0800 163-053: Answering machine - Asks for sec code
- 22:43:55 12-11-1998: 0800 163-054: Answering machine - Doesn't allow msg
- 22:44:43 12-11-1998: 0800 163-055: Constantly Ringing
- 22:45:17 12-11-1998: 0800 163-056: Constantly Ringing
- 22:46:07 12-11-1998: 0800 163-057: Answering machine - looks secure
- 22:46:21 12-11-1998: 0800 163-058: Number unobtainable
- 22:47:07 12-11-1998: 0800 163-059: Answering machine - asks for sec code
- 22:47:58 12-11-1998: 0800 163-060: Answering machine - secure
- 22:48:16 12-11-1998: 0800 163-061: Speech (Human answered)
- 22:48:29 12-11-1998: 0800 163-062: Number unobtainable
- 22:48:44 12-11-1998: 0800 163-063: Number unobtainable
- 22:48:59 12-11-1998: 0800 163-064: Number unobtainable
- 22:49:14 12-11-1998: 0800 163-065: Number unobtainable
- 22:49:33 12-11-1998: 0800 163-066: Number unobtainable
- 22:49:44 12-11-1998: 0800 163-067: Number unobtainable
- 22:50:00 12-11-1998: 0800 163-068: Number unobtainable
- 22:50:46 12-11-1998: 0800 163-069: Answering machine - secure
- 22:50:59 12-11-1998: 0800 163-070: Number unobtainable
- 22:51:46 12-11-1998: 0800 163-071: Company - Voice - Payfone Cuckoo tone!
- 22:52:09 12-11-1998: 0800 163-072: Number unobtainable
- 22:59:50 12-11-1998: 0800 163-073: Meridian - 81 login, outdial disabled
- 23:00:01 12-11-1998: 0800 163-074: Number unobtainable
- 23:00:30 12-11-1998: 0800 163-075: Constantly Ringing
- 23:00:45 12-11-1998: 0800 163-076: Number unobtainable
- 23:01:15 12-11-1998: 0800 163-077: Constantly Ringing
- 23:01:48 12-11-1998: 0800 163-078: Constantly Ringing
- 23:02:02 12-11-1998: 0800 163-079: Number unobtainable
- 23:02:16 12-11-1998: 0800 163-080: Number unobtainable
- 23:02:47 12-11-1998: 0800 163-081: Constantly Ringing
- 23:03:24 12-11-1998: 0800 163-082: Constantly Ringing
- 23:03:42 12-11-1998: 0800 163-083: Speech (Human answered)
- 23:03:54 12-11-1998: 0800 163-084: Number unobtainable
- 23:04:22 12-11-1998: 0800 163-085: Constantly Ringing
- 23:04:49 12-11-1998: 0800 163-086: Routes to a Vodafone! Eek <G>
- 23:05:14 12-11-1998: 0800 163-087: Constantly Ringing
- 23:05:31 12-11-1998: 0800 163-088: Number unobtainable
- 23:05:46 12-11-1998: 0800 163-089: Number unobtainable
- 23:06:39 12-11-1998: 0800 163-090: Constantly Ringing
- 23:07:59 12-11-1998: 0800 163-091: Constantly Ringing
- 23:08:17 12-11-1998: 0800 163-092: Number unobtainable
- 23:08:32 12-11-1998: 0800 163-093: Number unobtainable
- 23:08:46 12-11-1998: 0800 163-095: Number unobtainable
- 23:09:37 12-11-1998: 0800 163-096: Constantly Ringing
- 23:10:19 12-11-1998: 0800 163-097: Constantly Ringing
- 23:10:30 12-11-1998: 0800 163-098: Number unobtainable
- 23:10:39 12-11-1998: 0800 163-099: Number unobtainable
- 23:11:25 12-11-1998: 0800 163-100: Repeating message with music
- 23:11:35 12-11-1998: 0800 163-101: Number unobtainable
- 23:11:48 12-11-1998: 0800 163-102: Number unobtainable
- 23:12:15 12-11-1998: 0800 163-103: Number unobtainable
- 23:12:24 12-11-1998: 0800 163-104: Number unobtainable
- 23:12:56 12-11-1998: 0800 163-105: Constantly Ringing
- 23:13:45 12-11-1998: 0800 163-106: Speech (Human answered)
- 23:14:00 12-11-1998: 0800 163-107: Number unobtainable
- 23:15:16 12-11-1998: 0800 163-108: Halifax - VMB
- 23:15:32 12-11-1998: 0800 163-109: Number unobtainable
- 23:16:35 12-11-1998: 0800 163-110: Answering machien, asks for password
- 23:16:47 12-11-1998: 0800 163-111: Number unobtainable
- 23:17:05 12-11-1998: 0800 163-112: Carrier (Fax machine)
- 23:18:04 12-11-1998: 0800 163-113: 0370 788 824 - Vodafone redirect
- 23:18:37 12-11-1998: 0800 163-114: Constantly Ringing
- 23:18:54 12-11-1998: 0800 163-115: Carrier (Modem)
- 23:19:19 12-11-1998: 0800 163-116: Constantly Ringing
- 23:20:20 12-11-1998: 0800 163-117: Answering machine - Secure :(
- 23:20:59 12-11-1998: 0800 163-118: Answering machine - Secure
- 23:21:42 12-11-1998: 0800 163-119: Constantly Ringing
- 23:21:55 12-11-1998: 0800 163-120: Number unobtainable
- 23:22:25 12-11-1998: 0800 163-121: Constantly Ringing
- 23:23:26 12-11-1998: 0800 163-122: Answering machine - secure
- 23:23:41 12-11-1998: 0800 163-123: Number unobtainable
- 23:23:55 12-11-1998: 0800 163-124: Number unobtainable
- 23:24:10 12-11-1998: 0800 163-125: Number unobtainable
- 23:24:25 12-11-1998: 0800 163-126: Number unobtainable
- 23:24:41 12-11-1998: 0800 163-127: Number unobtainable
- 23:25:01 12-11-1998: 0800 163-128: Speech (Human answered)
- 23:25:37 12-11-1998: 0800 163-129: Constantly Ringing
- 23:26:02 12-11-1998: 0800 163-130: Speech (Human answered)
- 23:26:22 12-11-1998: 0800 163-131: Speech (Human answered)
- 23:26:42 12-11-1998: 0800 163-132: Speech (Human answered)
- 23:27:10 12-11-1998: 0800 163-133: Constantly Ringing
- 23:28:05 12-11-1998: 0800 163-134: Answering machine / VMB / Sec code rqd
- 23:28:42 12-11-1998: 0800 163-135: Answering message
- 23:28:51 12-11-1998: 0800 163-136: Number unobtainable
- 23:29:06 12-11-1998: 0800 163-137: Number unobtainable
- 23:35:21 12-11-1998: 0800 163-138: Voice - Some security person :/
- 23:35:39 12-11-1998: 0800 163-139: Carrier (Modem)
- 23:35:53 12-11-1998: 0800 163-140: Number unobtainable
- 23:36:27 12-11-1998: 0800 163-141: Answering machine - Secure
- 23:36:57 12-11-1998: 0800 163-142: Answering machine - Secure
- 23:37:35 12-11-1998: 0800 163-143: Answering machine with free beeps :P
- 23:38:18 12-11-1998: 0800 163-144: Answering machine
- 23:39:50 12-11-1998: 0800 163-145: Something, password 0000 (No #)
- 23:39:59 12-11-1998: 0800 163-146: Number unobtainable
- 23:40:24 12-11-1998: 0800 163-147: Constantly Ringing
- 23:41:12 12-11-1998: 0800 163-148: Hmmm, Ringing out <Grumble> <Mutter>
- 23:41:38 12-11-1998: 0800 163-149: Constantly Ringing
- 12:27:19 12-12-1998: 0800 163-150: Number unobtainable
- 12:27:39 12-12-1998: 0800 163-151: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:28:11 12-12-1998: 0800 163-152: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:28:23 12-12-1998: 0800 163-153: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:29:01 12-12-1998: 0800 163-154: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:29:43 12-12-1998: 0800 163-155: Constantly Ringing
- 12:30:22 12-12-1998: 0800 163-156: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:30:32 12-12-1998: 0800 163-157: Number unobtainable
- 12:31:14 12-12-1998: 0800 163-158: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:31:24 12-12-1998: 0800 163-159: Number unobtainable
- 12:32:22 12-12-1998: 0800 163-160: Answering machine - Secure
- 12:32:31 12-12-1998: 0800 163-161: Number unobtainable
- 12:32:46 12-12-1998: 0800 163-162: Number unobtainable
- 12:33:19 12-12-1998: 0800 163-163: Energis message - Number changed!
- 12:33:47 12-12-1998: 0800 163-164: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:34:03 12-12-1998: 0800 163-165: Number unobtainable
- 12:34:25 12-12-1998: 0800 163-166: d
- 12:35:06 12-12-1998: 0800 163-167: Answering machine, BT Relate whatever
- 12:35:51 12-12-1998: 0800 163-168: Answering machine - Secure
- 12:36:13 12-12-1998: 0800 163-169: BT - Number called not available
- 12:36:38 12-12-1998: 0800 163-170: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:36:47 12-12-1998: 0800 163-171: Number unobtainable
- 12:37:12 12-12-1998: 0800 163-172: Answering machine - secure
- 12:37:27 12-12-1998: 0800 163-173: Carrier (Modem)
- 12:37:41 12-12-1998: 0800 163-174: Number unobtainable
- 12:38:17 12-12-1998: 0800 163-175: Routes to Cellnet analogue phone
- 12:39:14 12-12-1998: 0800 163-176: Network Busy
- 12:39:36 12-12-1998: 0800 163-177: BT - Number not available
- 12:40:26 12-12-1998: 0800 163-178: Forwards to one2one voicemail system
- 12:41:25 12-12-1998: 0800 163-179: Call Gate - Secure :(
- 12:41:48 12-12-1998: 0800 163-180: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:42:16 12-12-1998: 0800 163-181: Constantly Ringing
- 12:42:45 12-12-1998: 0800 163-182: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:43:12 12-12-1998: 0800 163-183: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:45:23 12-12-1998: 0800 163-184: Bank :) Automated system
- 12:45:47 12-12-1998: 0800 163-185: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:46:01 12-12-1998: 0800 163-186: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:46:44 12-12-1998: 0800 163-187: Answering machine - secure
- 12:46:57 12-12-1998: 0800 163-188: Number unobtainable
- 12:47:12 12-12-1998: 0800 163-189: Number unobtainable
- 12:47:35 12-12-1998: 0800 163-190: Network Busy
- 12:47:53 12-12-1998: 0800 163-191: Speech (Human answered)
- 12:48:29 12-12-1998: 0800 163-192: Constantly Ringing
- 12:50:50 12-12-1998: 0800 163-193: VMB system of some sort - 000=Admin
- 12:51:07 12-12-1998: 0800 163-194: Carrier (Modem)
- 12:51:21 12-12-1998: 0800 163-195: Number unobtainable
- 12:51:35 12-12-1998: 0800 163-196: Network Busy
- 12:52:21 12-12-1998: 0800 163-197: Double Glazing <G> Answering machine
- 12:52:36 12-12-1998: 0800 163-198: Number unobtainable
- 12:53:25 12-12-1998: 0800 163-199: Answering machine - Someone picked up!
- 21:19:22 12-16-1998: 0800 163-200: University Answering Machine
- 21:19:34 12-16-1998: 0800 163-201: Number unobtainable
- 21:21:52 12-16-1998: 0800 163-202: Meridian, 1*, seems to be locked tight
- 21:24:04 12-16-1998: 0800 163-203: Constantly Ringing
- 21:24:51 12-16-1998: 0800 163-204: Constantly Ringing
- 21:25:02 12-16-1998: 0800 163-205: Number engaged (Busy)
- 21:25:42 12-16-1998: 0800 163-206: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:26:25 12-16-1998: 0800 163-207: Number unobtainable
- 21:26:35 12-16-1998: 0800 163-208: Number unobtainable
- 21:27:02 12-16-1998: 0800 163-209: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:27:29 12-16-1998: 0800 163-210: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:27:41 12-16-1998: 0800 163-211: Number unobtainable
- 21:28:10 12-16-1998: 0800 163-212: Constantly Ringing
- 21:28:34 12-16-1998: 0800 163-213: Constantly Ringing
- 21:31:11 12-16-1998: 0800 163-214: Number unobtainable
- 21:32:57 12-16-1998: 0800 163-215: Meridian, seems locked up tight :(((
- 21:33:30 12-16-1998: 0800 163-216: Answering machine
- 21:33:52 12-16-1998: 0800 163-217: Constantly Ringing
- 21:34:26 12-16-1998: 0800 163-218: r]
- 21:34:42 12-16-1998: 0800 163-219: Number unobtainable
- 21:35:19 12-16-1998: 0800 163-220: Recorded message, number changed
- 21:35:52 12-16-1998: 0800 163-221: Constantly Ringing
- 21:36:05 12-16-1998: 0800 163-222: Number unobtainable
- 21:36:20 12-16-1998: 0800 163-223: Number unobtainable
- 21:36:44 12-16-1998: 0800 163-224: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:37:05 12-16-1998: 0800 163-225: Constantly Ringing
- 21:37:29 12-16-1998: 0800 163-226: Constantly Ringing
- 21:38:11 12-16-1998: 0800 163-227: Constantly Ringing
- 21:38:20 12-16-1998: 0800 163-228: Number unobtainable
- 21:38:36 12-16-1998: 0800 163-229: Not available
- 21:39:38 12-16-1998: 0800 163-230: Apple computers, disconnects on DTMF
- 21:40:09 12-16-1998: 0800 163-231: Constantly Ringing
- 21:40:30 12-16-1998: 0800 163-232: Constantly Ringing
- 21:40:58 12-16-1998: 0800 163-233: Answering Machine
- 21:41:29 12-16-1998: 0800 163-235: Number unobtainable
- 21:41:45 12-16-1998: 0800 163-236: Number unobtainable
- 21:42:10 12-16-1998: 0800 163-237: Constantly Ringing
- 21:42:32 12-16-1998: 0800 163-238: Constantly Ringing
- 21:42:46 12-16-1998: 0800 163-239: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:43:09 12-16-1998: 0800 163-240: Answering machine
- 21:43:31 12-16-1998: 0800 163-241: Constantly Ringing
- 21:43:49 12-16-1998: 0800 163-242: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:44:10 12-16-1998: 0800 163-243: Constantly Ringing
- 21:44:50 12-16-1998: 0800 163-244: Constantly Ringing
- 21:45:15 12-16-1998: 0800 163-245: Constantly Ringing
- 21:45:26 12-16-1998: 0800 163-246: Number unobtainable
- 21:45:44 12-16-1998: 0800 163-247: Constantly Ringing
- 21:45:59 12-16-1998: 0800 163-248: Unavailable
- 21:48:17 12-16-1998: 0800 163-249: Orange - Automated system.
- 21:48:41 12-16-1998: 0800 163-250: Answering machine
- 21:48:59 12-16-1998: 0800 163-251: Number unobtainable
- 21:49:11 12-16-1998: 0800 163-252: Number unobtainable
- 21:50:05 12-16-1998: 0800 163-253: Answering machine, some info pack
- 21:50:28 12-16-1998: 0800 163-254: Constantly Ringing
- 21:50:46 12-16-1998: 0800 163-255: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:51:08 12-16-1998: 0800 163-256: Constantly Ringing
- 21:51:19 12-16-1998: 0800 163-257: Number unobtainable
- 21:51:45 12-16-1998: 0800 163-258: Constantly Ringing
- 21:51:57 12-16-1998: 0800 163-259: Number unobtainable
- 21:52:41 12-16-1998: 0800 163-260: answering machine
- 21:52:49 12-16-1998: 0800 163-261: Number unobtainable
- 21:53:09 12-16-1998: 0800 163-262: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:53:52 12-16-1998: 0800 163-263: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:55:22 12-16-1998: 0800 163-264: Meridian - 0* (9* locked out)
- 21:55:35 12-16-1998: 0800 163-265: Number unobtainable
- 21:55:50 12-16-1998: 0800 163-266: Number unobtainable
- 21:56:36 12-16-1998: 0800 163-267: Hackable answering machine
- 21:56:54 12-16-1998: 0800 163-268: Speech (Human answered)
- 21:57:41 12-16-1998: 0800 163-270: Number unobtainable
- 21:58:04 12-16-1998: 0800 163-271: Constantly Ringing
- 21:58:38 12-16-1998: 0800 163-272: Constantly Ringing
- 21:59:18 12-16-1998: 0800 163-273: Constantly Ringing
- 21:59:44 12-16-1998: 0800 163-274: Number unobtainable
- 22:00:10 12-16-1998: 0800 163-275: Mobile redirection
- 22:00:39 12-16-1998: 0800 163-276: Constantly Ringing
- 22:01:00 12-16-1998: 0800 163-277: Constantly Ringing
- 22:01:35 12-16-1998: 0800 163-278: Number changed 01992 622 799 (Charges?)
- 22:01:58 12-16-1998: 0800 163-279: Number unobtainable
- 22:02:12 12-16-1998: 0800 163-280: Unavailable
- 22:02:31 12-16-1998: 0800 163-281: Number unobtainable
- 22:03:11 12-16-1998: 0800 163-282: Please enter pin, 4 digits, 2 tries
- 22:03:25 12-16-1998: 0800 163-283: Number unobtainable
- 22:03:46 12-16-1998: 0800 163-284: Constantly Ringing
- 22:04:29 12-16-1998: 0800 163-285: Answering machine
- 22:04:55 12-16-1998: 0800 163-286: Constantly Ringing
- 22:05:19 12-16-1998: 0800 163-287: Constantly Ringing
- 22:05:53 12-16-1998: 0800 163-288: Answering macxhine
- 22:06:18 12-16-1998: 0800 163-289: Constantly Ringing
- 22:06:34 12-16-1998: 0800 163-290: Number unobtainable
- 22:06:55 12-16-1998: 0800 163-291: Constantly Ringing
- 22:07:41 12-16-1998: 0800 163-292: SECURE VMB
- 22:07:56 12-16-1998: 0800 163-293: Number unobtainable
- 22:09:05 12-16-1998: 0800 163-294: Odd system, odd ringing tone
- 22:10:00 12-16-1998: 0800 163-295: VMB system and stuff
- 22:10:23 12-16-1998: 0800 163-296: Number unobtainable
- 22:10:52 12-16-1998: 0800 163-297: Constantly Ringing
-
-
- ..::::: |-----> Peace out : ....:::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
- ..::::: |-----> By Santa Claus ...::::::::::::|||lllSSSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
-
-
- Well thats it for this issue. We hope you enjoyed it. Remember you can obtain
- FAiTH from MercyGround Systems BBS on o11 +44 [o]19o4 33 22 79. 24 hours a
- day. Also from www.darkcyde.8m.com. In the next issue expect to see *much*
- more computer related stuff, and more detailed telephony infoz. If anyone
- would like to submit an article to FAiTH, please email to
- d4rkcyde@coldmail.com, or goto #darkcyde on EfNet and DCC to any of the DC
- members. Thanks for reading FAiTH,
-
- M4rRy Xm4S h0h0h0h0 h0h0h 0h0h0h0h0......
- R3m3mB3R t0 l34v£ s4nTaz ra1nd34r 4 ps10n 0rg4n1z3r, 4nD s4nta kl4uZ s0m3
- LsD f0r h1s tr4ns3ndenT4L j0urn13z.
-
-
-
- D4RKCYDE Communications 1998-1999 - Space OddySey.
-
- darkcyde.8m.com
- #darkcyde EfNet
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