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- MEGACOM ENTERPRIZES PRESENTS:
-
- The early days of Phreaking...
-
- In 1973 a couple of phone phreaks discovered the toll free 800 number at the
- White house. The nuber was 800-424-9337. White house staffers used it for what
- the Phreaks describes as "casual semi-official, chit chat." The phreaks used
- their expertise with the phone system to tap this line and listen for hours to
- buzz of converstaions going in and out of the White House. The Secret Service
- always answered the phone with "9337". If the caller didn't respond with a code
- word, the Secret Service agents would say, "i'm sorry, you must have dialed an
- incorrect number". The phreaks discovered that the code word "Olympus" stood
- for President Nixon, who was then embroiled in the water gate scandel.
- One day in the spring of 1974, at about three in the morning, the phone phreaks
- dialed the White House number, using an untraceble line. A secret Service man
- answered "9337"
- "Olympus, please, its urgent!" one phreak said.
- "One momment" came the reply
- Three minutes later they heard a fatigued voice say, "Yes?" It didn't sounds
- like Nixon, but they decided to go ahead.
- "Sir," the phreak exclaimed, "we have a crisis on our hands."
- "Yes, what's the nature of the crisis? As if I didn't know already." It
- _was_ Nixon! The phone phreak gulped.
- "Sir" he said, "we are out of toilet paper!"
- There was a long pause, then Nixon cursed and began yellin, "Who the hell are
- you? What is the meaning of this?"
- Another Voice came on the line. "Who are you? How did you get this number?"
- The phreak mumbled, "Sucker!"
- Then there was another pause, lasting about a minute or so, followed by a
- muffled boice in the bacground: "Getting a trace?" A few seconds later there
- was a ker-chunk sound and the line was dead.
- Later that year two southern Californian phreaks tied up every long-distance
- trunk line coming into Santa Barbara, telling all the callers that a mysterious
- explosion had wiped out the city. They'd managed to gain control of all in-
- coming long-distance calls by using two side-by-side phone booths on the
- beach and some very simple phone phreaking equiptment.
- The first call was from a mother to her son, a student at the University of
- California. Santa Barbara campus. The two phreaks told the woman that they
- were with the National Guard Emergency Communications Center and that there
- was no longer any University of California at Santa Barbara. In breathless
- tones they said the campus and, in fact, the entire city of Santa Barbara had
- been wiped out in a freakish nuclear accident-a "nuclear melt down," they
- told her. She was politely asked to hang up in order to clear the line for
- emergency phone calls.
- A few minutes later the horrified mother called back, this time with oper-
- ator assistance. The phreaks calmly repeated their story to the operator,
- asked her not to place calls to Santa Barbara and told her not to worry.
- jWithin minutes the phreaks ahd newspaper and television reporters, FBI
- agents and police officers calling from all over the country. Hundereds of
- anxious people who had heard about the "melt down" phoned to check on re-
- letive and friends. The phreaks told the callers that they had reached
- the National Guard base 50 miles away where the disaster site and that they
- were tied into emergency circuits. After about an hour the two became
- frightened by the chaos they were causing and restored the phone system to
- normal. They were never caught.
-
- Heavy stuff. And it's tempting to think of these phones phreadks as purveyers
- of electronic guerrilla warfare. It's tempting to think of them as McLuhanist
- anarchist infiltrating the all seeing, all knowing government-by-data-bank that
- rules our lives. Some phone phreaks even think of themselves that was. It's
- a teimpting point of view, but its probally all wrong. PHone phreaks are some-
- thing much more American than that. They're classic Yankee basement tinkerers,
- backyard ivestors, the Eli Whitneys, Orville Wrights and Hanry Fords of our
- age. Only instead of tinkering with mechanical or even electrical stuff,
- phone phreaks are tinkering with vast computerized networks of infromation.
- And the difference between them and their folk-hero predecessors is that you
- can't build a world-wide electronic data matrix out of buggy parts in the barn.
- The phone phreaks brand of tinkering requires equiptment so extensive that no
- one person or even one corporation could put it together singlehandedly. They
- need the cooperation of the entire industrialized world to do their puttering
- around. And since that kind of cooperation is rarely fourthcoming to pimply
- sixteen year olds on the upstairs extension, they go out and get cooperation
- wherther anyone wants to give it to them or not. Natrurally some mischief
- takes place along the way.
- Almost ten years ago strange electronic wizards began to emerge in various
- corners of the United States. They called themselves "phone phfreaks" and
- they had figured out how to re-create the sounds signals that trigger the
- phone companys switching equiptment, allowing them to place calls to any-
- where in the world for free. Eventually they were able to master all the
- circuit systems of AT&T and its affiliates. They learned how to tap
- phones internally through the phone company's own wires, how to retrive
- information from phone-relayed computer terminals, including the FBI's
- National Crime Information data bank and even how to penetrate AUTOVON
- (Automatic Voice Network), and the top-secret red-alert military phone
- network. But that's not _really_ what phone phreaking is all about. Wit-
- ness, for example, the life of John Draper, better known as Captain Crunch.
-
- Captain Crunch, an ex-Air force radar technician ,was, for years, they most
- famouse of the phone phreaks and their de facto spokesman. He was even pro-
- filed by Ron Rosenbaum in Esquire. He may also have a bettter working know-
- ledge of the world's phone systems than anyone else alive.
- In 1976 the Captain was entrapped by a phone phreak turned FBI infromer and
- was incarcerated, appropriately, in the Lompoc Federal Prison Camp--one of the
- first Americans to go to jail for phone phreaking. These days, though he's
- not yet 30, Crunch is retired. He's a sloppy-lookin guy who dresses in non-
- descript, unpressed clothing. And his stringy black hair and horned-rimmed
- glasses would make him look like a mad scientist, except that his hobby is
- weightlifting.
- The Captain's career as Kind of the Circuits began with a 16-year old blind
- friend. Denny and some fellow campers discovered they had a shared interest
- in the Bell System. For the first time information was passed from one phone
- phreak to the another. The blind kids started their own organization. Phone
- Phreaks Interantionsl, which today has members all over the country. Phone
- phreaking was a way out of their loneliness, a special way to make contact
- with another human voice. Even today nearly half of the top phone phreaks
- are blind.
- In February 1970, Denny discovered that the small plastic whistle then found
- in every box of Captain Crunch breakfast cereal had a miraculous quality--
- the whistle prduced, exactly, the 2.600 cycles-per-second tone that "tells"
- the phone company's long distance switching equiptment that a line is not in
- use, even though that line is being help open by the caller. Using the 2.600
- cycle signal could call long distance anywhere and not be charged. Denny
- told John Draper, who was skeptical. But after a quick trip to a pay phone
- Draper was conviced, and Captain Crunh was born.
- Denny and the Captain began using their whistles to call friends throughout
- the country. As the only sighted phone phreak, it was Crunch's task to make
- "whistle trips" with Denny and his blind friends. Every Satruday the Capt.
- would drop off Denny and two other 16-year-old blind kids at a pay phone
- booth, then go to a friend's house. A few hours later the kids would phone
- him and say, "You can come back now. We're cold and tired." and the Capt.
- would pick them up.
- Captain Crunch and his friends learned to do a lot with the whistles. They
- would call pay phones in London's Waterloo Station just to talk to strangers
- about the weather. Or call South Aftrica to hear the time. And they could
- "mute" incoming long-distance calls so that no one would be charged. But by
- 1972, when he was arrested for whistling calls to Australia, the Captian had
- graduated to more sophisticated toys.
- Next to a Captain Crunch whistle, the simplest phone phreak device is a Black
- Box, which provides an "on Hook" signal to the phone company while a call is
- being made, thereby stopping the operation of the billing equiptment. A 3,000
- -ohm resistor drops the level of the currnet going through the phone to below
- the level that activated the billing equiptment. But a Black Box can be easily
- detected, so Captain Crunch seldom used it.
- There are also Red Boxes, small handheld devices that simulate the sound of
- coins dropping into a pay phone. They are usually used for short calls and
- are also easily detected. The Captain says that most phone phreaks don't
- bother with Red Boxes because they arn't useful in obtaining information-
- and the pure joy of obtaining and trading information is the heart of phone
- phreaking.
- The most sophisticated way to gain entrance to the Bell system is with a
- Blue Box, which provides access to special operators and remote codes. Blue
- Boxes are electronic, multifrequency sound devices that resemble pocket
- calculators. They can reproduce the complete range of tones that the phone
- company uses, in various combination, to give instructions to its computer
- network. Blue Boxes "speak" directly into the mouthpiece of a phone. They
- have touch-tone buttons that substitute for the regular telephone dial, and
- they provide a phone phreak with the same dialing privileges that a long
- distance operator has. The phreak can then direct-dial special test-board,
- route and overseas operators.
- "A Blue Box allows the phone phreak to direct-dial into any foreign country
- that is set up to handle overseas calls", say Captain Crunch. "for the first
- time, it opens that country up to the prying and probing of the American phone
- hacks."
- The Captain says he's accomplished many elaborate feats with Blue Boxes and
- similar devices. He used to have a switch-board with computerized Blue Box
- equiptment in the back of his Volkswagen bus. He would drive into the country
- pull up beside a remote pay booth, hook into the phone and spend hours sending
- calls around the world clockwise several time, from San Fransisco to London
- to Sydney, Australia, and back to San Fransisco. Then he sent it around the
- world counterclockwise a few times. In all, the call covered the equivalent
- of half the distance to the moon. During on exceptionally busy week, he
- reportedly made thousands of long-distance calls.
- On another occasion he phoned hiself from completely around the world. Using
- two adjacent pay phones, he routed his call from the first phone through
- Tokyo, New Delhi, Athens, Pretoria, Sao Paulo, London, New York and finnaly
- to a california operator who rang the second phone. He yelled "Hello!" into
- the first phone and 20 seconds later he heard his own voice dimly through the
- worldwide electronic maze, a dozen tremulous echos of "Hello!" ringin in his
- ear. He recalls that the echo was "far out" but he could barely hear himself
- talking.
- The developement of the Blue Box fostered an underground network oh phone
- phreaks with names like Peter Perpendicualr Pimple, Al Bell and Tom Edison.
- In the rigid social stratification of the phone phreak community, the elite
- are referred to simply as "the top ten phone phreaks."
- "We can tell, just by dialing into an exchange, the kinds of equipment being
- used," says the Captain. "The top ten phone phreaks have techniques they've
- developed over a long period of time of obtaining information continuously."
- They are after _codes_, numbers that go into WATS lines when dialed and give
- toll-free access anywhere in the country, or numbers that plug the phreak into
- a computer system. One dialed code might produce a busy signal. But if
- several phone phreaks dial the same busy signal using this code, they can
- talk over it and, in effect, have a conference call.
- "It's a crude way of communicating." the Captain claims. "You hear the ob-
- noxious busy tones beeping every two seconds. But its a way of communicating,
- and that's what phone phreaks are tryin to do: develop techniques of com-
- municating by using circuits the phone company doesn't.
- "Nobody is bothered by this. The top ten phreaks have a strong moral code-
- they never hurt anybody. They constantly supply oodles and oodles of infor-
- mation down through the chain of command to the lower-echelon phone phreaks.
- Directly below the top ten in the phone phreaks pecking-order are the
- pseudo-phreaks. They know how to make Blue Boxes but lack the sophistication
- of the top ten. Below the Pseudo-phreaks is the proletriat of phone phreaks
- who use Blue Boxes _only_ to make free calls. The Captain becomes agitated
- when he talks about them: "These are teh lowest scum in the whole phone phreak
- community. These are people who build Blue Boxes to sell to the Mafia."
- The lumpen proletariat of phone phreaks the Captain calls "loophounds." A
- loop is a pair of numbers that connect two phreaks when one phreak calls the
- first number and another phreak (who may be thousands of miles away) dials
- the second number.
- Loophounds just sit on loops. "Captain Crunch says in a disgusted tone. "They
- are handicapped kids or high school kids, and they're either excessively fat
- or excessively skinny. They're social rejects who just sit on loops to meet
- people. I feel sorry for them. But I've met a lot of people through loops. I
- get on them just to find out who's on them. I was on a loop in the New York
- city area, and I ran across several mentally retarded people, including a
- guy who is 28 but has the mentality of a 6 year old kid".
- The phone phreak eleite uses three basic method to obtain the all-important
- code information. In the first method, called "Scanning" after a famous
- British phone phreak, the phreak painstakingly scans all the possible number
- combinations, determining which combinations are codes and what those codes
- do. Using this technique, Captain Crunch found out that the phone company's
- routing codes always began with 0 or 1 in combinations from 000 to 199. He
- also discovered the code route to the autoverify circuits that are used by
- operators to see if a line is busy and can be used by phone phreaks to tap a
- phone. "Scanning is a thorough technique," the Captain explains. "It leaves
- no stone unturned, and it's vertually undetectable. It's slow and cumbersome,
- but it reveals an incredible amount of information.
- Crunch refers to the second method of finding codes as "social engineering",
- which mean bullshitting: "Say you need a code to reach a central office. You
- phone a test board and say you're with a test board in another city and you
- need a certain code. The phone company guy thinks you're also with the phone
- company and he'll give you the code."
- The third way to get codes is through an inside soure, usually an operator.
- "An inside sourse," says the Captian, "Can determine whether or not our line
- is being tapped, inform you if the phone company is onto your game and supply
- you with _endless_ information. Of course the sourse could also be an infor-
- mer, paid to give you information to trip you up. "The Captain has gotten most
- of his information from scanning or social engineering, but much of the infor-
- mation passed around by the phone phreak network does come from inside sources.
- For instance, TAP, a phone phreak newletter put out by the New York phreak
- known as Al Bell, publishes the new credit card cardes at the beginning of each
- year--information that could only come from inside.
-
- Captain Crunch grew up in the bucolic settings of Petaluma, a small northen
- California town noted for its chicken farms. He's always been fascinated by
- electronics. His favorite childhood toy was a remote-control electric car;
- his favortie subject in school were science and mathematics.
- His father, who was in the Air Force, was very strict: "I never was allowed to
- do what most kids did, like have a BB gun or a slingshot," he says. When he was
- 12, his father was transfereed to England. The Captain hated the strict
- British schools. After he almost flunked out, his parents sent him to a
- school for Amercan nationals where he was encouraged to experiment with el-
- ectric motors and generators. He promptly modified his bicycle generator by
- stepping it up to 10.000 volts
- When his father was transferred to Travis Air Force Base in California, Crunch
- entered his freshman year of high school in nearby Vacaville, which he re-
- members as a farming town "that reeked of onions you could smell 5.000 feet
- above the town." During his first month of high school, he was constantly
- harrased by bullies, getting into half a dozen fights each day. He took up
- wightlifting to improve his skinny physique, and he remains a phsical culturist
- In 1963, his family moved to San Jose, where he spent his senior year in high
- school building a 20-watt priate radio transmitter. He was suspected of being
- the person who cut into the Santa Clara County sheriff's radio network to play
- rock songs, including one song called "Little Piggys." The transmitter was
- shut down after the Captain received a visit from a Federal Communications
- (FCC) agent.
- In 1964, the Captain followed in his father's footsteps and joined the Air
- Force. He was stationed in Alaska, where he worked on "radar systems and other
- classified stuff." In his free time, he built and operated a 200 watt radio
- station that broadcast over a 450 mile radius, including parts of Siberia.
- But "up there, nobody cares." he recalls. "I got a call from the FCC monitor-
- ing station saying they enjoyed my show and asking me not to use profanities."
- While in the Air Force, Captain Crunh learned about AUTOVON, which is run by
- RCA and is a supposedly secure military phone system separated form the com-
- mercial Bell network. An AT&T spokesman said, in 1973, that it was impossible
- for phone phreaks to penetrate AUTOVON, but the Captain has known how to gain
- access to the system since 1970.
- There are actually two AUTOVON networks. SAGE AUTOVON is the communications
- network for the Air Force tactical command. General Purpose AUTOVON is used
- for administrative calls. There are five level of prority usage within each
- AUTOVON network: Routine, Priority, Immediate, Flash and Flash Override. Each
- higher level bumps off calls on lower levels. The Flash Prority is used only
- for national emergencys. "Any calls that are this high cause many heads to
- roll fast," the Captain says. Flash Override is used only by the Air Force
- chief of Staff of the regianal commands, such as the North American Air De-
- fence (NORAD).
- Never, ever, use a high priority such as Flash," the Captain warns. "Since
- you are on a high level access, and the military doesn't know who you are, all
- kinds of alarms are set off. Never stay on more then a few minutes. Those
- fuckers don't fool around on a trace."
- After he left the Air Force in 1970, Captain Crunch moved to Mountain View,
- California, a sunny town between Palo Alto and San Jose. There are so many
- electronic factorys in the area that it's known locally as Sillicon Gulch.
- There are as many advanced-technology companies in Silicon Gulch as in all
- of Great Britain and West Germany. The Captain worked for a company that man-
- ufacters advanced radar systems.
- But the Captain's real love was phone phreaking. As his fame frew, it became
- more and more likely that he'd get caught. And in May 1972, the King of the
- Circuits was turned in by some pseudo-phreaks who snitched to the FBI. Bob
- Scott, a Los Angeles phreak, told the FBI that the Captain was using a Blue
- Box in his mountain view home. At about the same time, Don Erickson, a
- Riverside, California, phreak, supplied the FBI with three pages of info-
- mation on Crunch. Yet the only way the FBI could detect the Captain's Blue
- Box was by putting an audio tap on his line. They did, and then they record-
- ed his calls. One morning when the Captain was driving home from an engineering
- class, the FBI moved in, an event he remembers well.
- "Something went wrong with my car, so I pulled off to the side of the freeway
- Just then, two cars pulled in front and in back of me, and two cars screeched
- to a hold on the either side of my car. Ten or twelve FBI agents jumped out
- of the cars and said "You're under arrest." I was later charged with violation
- of Title 18, Section 1343, of the US Code, fraud by wire, a felony. The agents
- interrogatem me for three hours in the back seat of an FBI car.
- "At the same time, they had broken into my house and were taking photo of every
- thing in sight. They confiscated a cassette recorder with tapes of Blue Box
- tones, my address book, which i never got back, and a broken Blue Box. They
- asked me who I knew, and how long I had been a phone phreak. All I said was
- that I wanted to call an attorney. Eventually, they took me to the county
- jail, where I was finally released on my own recognizance. A few months later
- I copped a plea, pleaded nolocontendere and got five years probation and a
- $1.000 fine."
- In the summer of 1972 the Captain went to Miami, Florida, to raise money
- for his legal expenses. His Yippie phone phreak pal, the Al Bell wo publishes
- TAP, got the Yippies to fly Crunch to Miami to meet Abbie Hoffman, who was
- planning demonstrations for the upcoming Democratic National Convention. But
- the connection never worked out.
- "Abbie was too tied up with the convention, and he never got to help me.
- Miami was a hot hellhole. Things were hot in more ways then one--the FBI
- was tailing everyone. I thoguht I'd better not stay there. I headed back to
- California via New York city, where i saw a phone phreak friend. That's when
- the FBI found out I'd been in Miami. My attorney had told me it was OK to
- leave California, but it wasn't. A bench warrant for my arrest was issued, and
- they held me in jail for a week before they let me depart for California. I
- was charged with unlawful flight, but they dropped the charges after they
- found out it was a mix-up."
- On probation for five years, Crunch intended to stay out of trouble. But in 1975
- he discovered the autoverify circuits that can be used for phone tapping. He
- claims that phone phreaks have since used the autoverify circuits to tap the
- FBI office in San Francisco, the FCC the San Francisco police and the CIA.
- None of these agencies will comment on the allegations, but the FBI soon found
- out that the Captain knew how to use an autoverify circuit, and he was again
- arrested with the help of an informer. The infromer was Adam Bauman, a Los
- Angeles phone phreak who Crunch describes as having "a trickster personallity"
- In fact, it was Bauman who called Nixon about the toilet paper "crisis" in
- 1973.
- In mid-1975, Bauman began to "pull pranks on me," the Captain recalls. "He
- kept calling me up and enticing me into exchanging techniques with him by
- throwing out tasty bits of information. He was doing things that real phone
- phreaks consider to be uncool, like charging calls to other people's numbers
- and using corporation credit cards."
- The corporations being billed for Bauman's credit card calls notified the tele-
- phone company, which in turn contacted the FBI, which soon arrested Bauman and
- pressured him into telling every thing about Crunch. Bauman agreed to become
- an undercover phone provocateur. He bouth his way into the Captain's con-
- fidence by giving him technical "inside" infromation that had been fed to him
- by AT&T's security agents at the behest of the FBI. He unsuccessfully tried
- to get the Captain to build him a blue box.
- Finally, the Captain claims, the FBI provided Bauman with a small portable
- Blue Box with which to frame him. On Ferbuary 20, 1976Bauman visisted the
- Captain at his Mountain View apartment. The two went together to a nearby
- phone booth on a busy street, where Bauman allegedly placed a Blue Box call
- to a mutual friend in Pennsylvania. The captain says he didn't hear the Blue
- Box tones because of the heavy street noise, and so didn't know it was an
- illegal call. As Crunch tells it, Bauman told him thier mutual friend wanted
- to talk with him. "When I picked up the phone, it was still ringing. I talked
- to my friend when he answered. The FBI taped the Blue Box tones, then my
- voice and presto! instant probation revoke."
- The FBI was interested in busting Captain Crunch not only because he knew the
- secrets of autoverify and AUTOVON, but also because Bauman had told them the
- Captain was tapping their own lines and had a copy of the operating manual for
- the National Crime Information Center (NTIC) computer. The NCIC is the FBI's
- mational data bank containing computerized information on every individual
- who has ever been arrested or investigated by local, state or federal law
- enforcement agencies.
- Captain Crung denies having ever gained access the the NCIC computer. He ex-
- plains that he didn't have a reason to use it and that he assumed it was
- secure. That is, he figured out that any penetration of the NCIC system
- would leave traces, and the FBI would naturally assume that he had been the
- culprit. But the intense interrogation by anxious FBI agents after his ar-
- rest made him change his mind: "It wasn't until the FBI revealed their extreme
- paranoia while questioning me that i realized the system must have some serious
- hole in it which make it accessable to nonofficial intrusions." As for the
- charge that he was tapping the FBI, Captain Crunch claim it was actually
- Bauman who was doing it, and furthermore, "in the last six months, every phone
- phreak was doing it. It was a fad."
- Waht Captain Crunch knew, whenever he knew it, is pretty simple. As he ex-
- plains it, all you have to do is locate a terminal input to the FBI computer.
- If inside sources fail, then use a "dedicated data line," which is sort of
- giant extension cord that runs from one computer to another. If a phone phreak
- were to make a physical connection to the dedicated data line, he would be able
- to recieve the information transmitted over it. The information would be in
- form of electronic data, and he would have to decide what "format" it is in.
- This is done by recording the data and taking it to an electronics lab for
- analysis.
- But there is an even simpler way of gaining access to the NCIC computer, pride
- of the FBI. The phone phreak simply hooks int othe phone lines used by the
- computer of any small town's police department. Think of the famous cartoon
- of a large fish swallowing a medium sized fish, which, in turn, swallows a
- smaller fish and so on. The priciple is the same but in reverse order. The
- phone phreak "fish" hooks into the police department's computer, which goes
- into the NCIC computer, thereby allowing the "fish" to electronically "swim"
- undetected into the NCIC computer. _Not_ mind you that captain Crunch recom-
- mends that a law-abiding citizen do any such thing.
- Face with the prospect of a long prison sentance, Catain Crunch made a deal
- with the government. In return for telling the FBI how phreaks tapped into
- their private lines and how the military's AUTOVON network coule be pen-
- etrated, the government reduced his sentence to four months. His FBI inter-
- raogators were especially interested in any links Capatain Crunch might have
- had with Bay Area Underground guerrilla groups such as the New World Liberation
- Front. The Captain emphatically denied any knowledge of the revolutionary
- underground.
- In all, Crunch and his attorneys held six long meetings with the Justice De-
- partment officials, who he says were "freaked out" by revelations of his el-
- ectronic surveillance wizardry. FBI agents admitted to the Captain they had
- noticed strange clicking and beeping noises on their private lines, but they
- said they had been baffled as to who might have been listening.
- The Captain assumes the government used the information he provided to cor-
- rect the gaps in the FBI and military communications networks. He is es-
- pecially proud that his cooperation with the FBI was achieved without having
- to reveal a sigle name or point a finger at any of his fellow phone phreaks.
- The FBI was satisfied merely to learn his electronic techniques, "I sat on a
- lot of this information for years because it was highly explosive. I didn't
- want to be responsible for people getting in trouble because of it, but I've
- told the FBI everything, so now i want to spread my knowledge around as much
- as possible," he says.
- John Draper, Captain Crunch, served four months in federal prison in southern
- California in the winter of 1976. He spent his time weighttlifting, playing
- tennis and writing a book.
- No more diddling with the dials for the Captain. The government and the phone
- company can rest a little easier--on futre Alexander Graham Bell II has been
- safely squelched. However, we all know there are at least nine more still out
- there tinkering and puttering and trying to make....Make a what?
- Well, it's hard to say exactly what will come of the phone phreaks inventivness
- It's ever hard to envision, because the end product will be some wierd system
- of cybernetic interrelationships and not a cotton gin. But whatever they come
- up with will still be a product of that essential American high--that fever-
- ish burst of activity in the toolshed, banging some thing together for sheer
- love of doing and making.
- Americans have always been able to generate euphoria in themselve by rearrang-
- ing the bits and pieces of the material world--creating odd yoga postures in
- the entire webb of maya, if you will. What other country has 10.000 high
- school drop-outs who can turn an ordinary Chevorlet into a fire-breathing,
- nitromethane fueled juggernaut capable of 200 mile per hour in less than 10
- seconds? What other country would turn a change in the national speed limit
- into a redar detection/CB radio/VASCAR/Sonar war of electronic surveillance?
- What other country has 16-year old blind kids that know more than the pre-
- sidnet of AT&T?
- It's no accident that America is the richest country on earth. It's no accident
- that we have more cars than China has toilets. There are more sophisticated
- electronics technicians invovled in the live of recording a Pink Floyd concert
- than manning the secret military weapons systems of any of our allies or
- enemies. And remeber when our Apollo space station linked up with the Soviets
- Soyuz II? That told the story if anything ever did. Their spaceship was a
- lump, the work of conscript peasant labor. It seemed to be made of cast iron,
- with lumpy round bolt heads dotting the interior and a tangle of extension cord
- s all over the floor. Outside it looked like an old steam boat boiler. _our_
- ship, on the other hand was a paean to modern technology, a beautiful con-
- struct of miniaturized circuitry and brush finished chrome. It looked as good
- as a pimpmobile.
- We're still a nation of makers and doers. A nation of builders. And the phone
- phreaks are builders, too. They're building knowledge. Building the knowledge
- of how to use an enormous artificial nervous sstem the way a toddler builds
- knowledge of his organic nervous system so that he can make his body do things
- right. Right now the phone phreaks are just learning to talk, but when these
- electronic toddlers get to first grade, _watch out_! Captain Crunch is Capt.
- America.
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- M.E.P.
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