| ==Phrack Inc.== | |
| Volume Two, Issue Eleven, Phile #10 of 12 | |
| BUSY LINE VERIFICATION | |
| WRITTEN BY PHANTOM PHREAKER | |
| This file describes how a TSPS operator does a BLV (Busy Line | |
| Verification) and an EMER INT (Emergency Interrupt) upon a busy line that a | |
| customer has requested to be 'broken' into. I have written this file to | |
| hopefully clear up all the misconceptions about Busy Line Verification and | |
| Emergency Interrupts. | |
| BLV is 'Busy Line Verification'. That is, discovering if a line is | |
| busy/not busy. BLV is the telco term, but it has been called Verification, | |
| Autoverify, Emergency Interrupt, break into a line, REMOB, and others. BLV is | |
| the result of a TSPS that uses a Stored Program Control System (SPCS) called | |
| the Generic 9 program. Before the rise of TSPS in 1969, cordboard operators | |
| did the verification process. The introduction of BLV via TSPS brought about | |
| more operator security features. The Generic 9 SPCS and hardware was first | |
| installed in Tucson, Daytona, and Columbus, Ohio, in 1979. By now virtually | |
| every TSPS has the Generic 9 program. | |
| A TSPS operator does the actual verification. If caller A was in the 815 | |
| Area code, and caller B was in the 314 Area code, A would dial 0 to reach a | |
| TSPS in his area code, 815. Now, A, the customer, would tell the operator he | |
| wished an emergency interrupt on B's number, 314+555+1000. The 815 TSPS op who | |
| answered A's call cannot do the interrupt outside of her own area code, (her | |
| service area), so she would call an Inward Operator for B's area code, 314, | |
| with KP+314+TTC+121+ST, where the TTC is a Terminating Toll Center code that | |
| is needed in some areas. Now a TSPS operator in the 314 area code would be | |
| reached by the 815 TSPS, but a lamp on the particular operators console would | |
| tell her she was being reached with an Inward routing. The 815 operator then | |
| would say something along the lines of she needed an interrupt on | |
| 314+555+1000, and her customers name was J. Smith. Now, the 314 Inward (which | |
| is really a TSPS) would dial B's number, in a normal Operator Direct Distance | |
| Dialing (ODDD) fashion. If the line wasn't busy, then the 314 Inward would | |
| report this to the 815 TSPS, who would then report to the customer (caller A) | |
| that 314+555+1000 wasn't busy and he could call as normal. However if the | |
| given number (in this case, 314+555+1000) was busy, then several things would | |
| happen and the process of BLV and EMER INT would begin. The 314 Inward would | |
| seize a Verification trunk (or BLV trunk) to the toll office that served the | |
| local loop of the requested number (555+1000). Now another feature of TSPS | |
| checks the line asked to be verified against a list of lines that can't be | |
| verified, such as radio stations, police, etc. If the line number a customer | |
| gives is on the list then the verification cannot be done, and the operator | |
| tells the customer. | |
| Now the TSPS operator would press her VFY (VeriFY) key on the TSPS | |
| console, and the equipment would outpulse (onto the BLV trunk) | |
| KP+0XX+PRE+SUFF+ST. The KP being Key Pulse, the 0XX being a 'screening code' | |
| that protects against trunk mismatching, the PRE being the Prefix of the | |
| requested number (555), the SUFF being the Suffix of the requested number | |
| (1000), and the ST being STart, which tells the Verification trunk that no | |
| more MF digits follow. The screening code is there to keep a normal Toll | |
| Network (used in regular calls) trunk from accidentally connecting to a | |
| Verification trunk. If this screening code wasn't present, and a trunk | |
| mismatch did occur, someone calling a friend in the same area code might just | |
| happen to be connected to his friends line, and find himself in the middle of | |
| a conversation. But, the Verification trunk is waiting for an 0XX sequence, | |
| and a normal call on a Toll Network trunk does not outpulse an 0XX first. | |
| (Example: You live at 914+555+1000, and wish to call 914+666+0000. The routing | |
| for your call would be KP+666+0000+ST. The BLV trunk cannot accept a 666 in | |
| place of the proper 0XX routing, and thus would give the caller a re-order | |
| tone.) Also, note that the outpulsing sequence onto a BLV trunk can't contain | |
| an Area Code. This is the reason why if a customer requests an interrupt | |
| outside of his own NPA, the TSPS operator must call an Inward for the area | |
| code that can outpulse onto the proper trunk. If a TSPS in 815 tried to do an | |
| interrupt on a trunk in 314, it would not work. This proves that there is a | |
| BLV network for each NPA, and if you somehow gain access to a BLV trunk, you | |
| could only use it for interrupts within the NPA that the trunk was located in. | |
| BLV trunks 'hunt' to find the right trunks to the right Class 5 End Office | |
| that serves the given local loop. The same outpulsing sequence is passed along | |
| BLV trunks until the BLV trunk serving the Toll Office that serves the given | |
| End Office is found. | |
| There is usually one BLV trunk per 10,000 lines (exchange). So, if a Toll | |
| Office served ten End Offices, that Toll Office would have 100,000 local loops | |
| that it served, and have 10 BLV trunks running from TSPS to that Toll Office. | |
| Now, the operator (in using the VFY key) can hear what is going on on the | |
| line, (modem, voice, or a permanent signal, indicating a phone off-hook) and | |
| take appropriate action. She can't hear what's taking place on the line | |
| clearly, however. A speech scrambler circuit within the operator console | |
| generates a scramble on the line while the operator is doing a VFY. The | |
| scramble is there to keep operators from listening in on people, but it is not | |
| enough to keep an op from being able to tell if a conversation, modem signal, | |
| or a dial tone is present upon the line. If the operator hears a permanent | |
| signal, she can only report back to the customer that either the phone is | |
| off-hook, or there is a problem with the line, and she can't do anything about | |
| it. In the case of caller A and B, the 314 Inward would tell the 815 TSPS, and | |
| the 815 TSPS would tell the customer. If there is a conversation on line, the | |
| operator presses a key marked EMER INT (EMERgency INTerrupt) on her console. | |
| This causes the operator to be added into a three way port on the busy line. | |
| The EMER INT key also deactivates the speech scrambling circuit and activates | |
| an alerting tone that can be heard by the called customer. The alerting tone | |
| that is played every 10 seconds tells the customer that an operator is on the | |
| line. Some areas don't have the alerting tone, however. Now, the operator | |
| would say 'Is this XXX-XXXX?' where XXX-XXXX would be the Prefix and Suffix of | |
| the number that the original customer requesting the interrupt gave the | |
| original TSPS. The customer would confirm the operator had the correct line. | |
| Then the Op says 'You have a call waiting from (customers name). Will you | |
| accept?'. This gives the customer the chance to say 'Yes' and let the calling | |
| party be connected to him, while the previous party would be disconnected. If | |
| the customer says 'No', then the operator tells the person who requested the | |
| interrupt that the called customer would not accept. The operator can just | |
| inform the busy party that someone needed to contact him or her, and have the | |
| people hang up, and then notify the requesting customer that the line is free. | |
| Or, the operator can connect the calling party and the interrupted party | |
| without loss of connection. | |
| The charges for this service (in my area at least) run 1.00 for asking the | |
| operator to interrupt a phone call so you can get through. There is an .80 | |
| charge if you ask the operator to verify whether the phone you're trying to | |
| reach is busy because of a service problem or because of a conversation. If | |
| the line has no conversation on it, there will be no charge for the | |
| verification. | |
| When the customer who initiated the emergency interrupt gets his telephone | |
| bill, the charges for the interrupt call will look similar to this: | |
| 12-1 530P INTERRUPT CL 314 555 1000 OD 1 1.00 | |
| The 12-1 is December first of the current year; 530P is the time the call | |
| was made to the operator requesting an interrupt; INTERRUPT CL is what took | |
| place, that is, an interrupt call; 314 555 1000 is the number requested; OD | |
| stands for Operator Dialed; the 1 is the length of the call (in minutes); and | |
| the 1.00 is the charge for the interrupt. The format may be different, | |
| depending upon your area and telephone company. | |
| One thing I forgot to mention about TSPS operators. In places where a | |
| Remote Trunking Arrangement is being used, and even places where they aren't | |
| in use, you may be connected to a TSPS operator in a totally different area | |
| code. In such a case, the TSPS that you reach in a Foreign NPA will call up an | |
| inward operator for your Home NPA, if the line you requested an EMER INT on | |
| was in your HNPA. If the line you requested EMER INT on was in the same NPA of | |
| the TSPS that you had reached, then no inward operator would be needed and the | |
| answering operator could do the entire process. | |
| Verification trunks seem to be only accessible by a TSPS/Inward operator. | |
| However, there have been claims to people doing Emergency Interrupts with blue | |
| boxes. I don't know how to accomplish an EMER INT without the assistance of an | |
| operator, and I don't know if it can be done. If you really wish to | |
| participate in a BLV/EMER INT, call up an Inward Operator and play the part of | |
| a TSPS operator who needs an EMER INT upon a pre-designated busy line. Billing | |
| is handled at the local TSPS so you will not have to supply a billing number | |
| if you decide to do this. | |
| If you find any errors in this file, please try to let me know about it, | |
| and if you find out any other information that I haven't included, feel free | |
| to comment. | |
| -End of file- | |