| ==Phrack Magazine== | |
| Volume Five, Issue Forty-Five, File 18 of 28 | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| [** NOTE: The following file is presented for informational and | |
| entertainment purposes only. Phrack Magazine takes NO | |
| responsibility for anyone who attempts the actions | |
| described within. **] | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| **************************************************************** | |
| * * | |
| * FRAUDULENT APPLICATION OF '900' SERVICES * | |
| * * | |
| * by CO/der DEC/oder, of Dark Side Research * | |
| * * | |
| * Greetings to Minor Threat, The Conflict and Tristan * | |
| * and dedicated to the English Prankster, Phiber Optik, * | |
| * Louis Cypher and other hackers who have proved an honor * | |
| * to themselves and to our community in not cooperating * | |
| * with "law enforcement." * | |
| * * | |
| **************************************************************** | |
| The information presented forthwith is the result of knowledge gained through | |
| actual first-hand experience. There is no theoretical aspect to any part of | |
| this article, except where explicitly noted. Disclaimer: this file is for | |
| outright illegal use. I sincerely hope publication of this file contributes to | |
| the delinquency of both minors and adults alike. -- "Codec" | |
| Getting Started | |
| In setting up your own 900 number, you earn a big percentage of the net revenue | |
| generated by calls made to that number. You can advertise and promote your | |
| number in various and sundry ways in an extremely competitive environment, | |
| or--if you so happen to be a hacker--you can simply dial up some PBXes and call | |
| the number yourself. Since you'll be earning several dollars per minute, you | |
| won't be in any hurry to hang up. In fact, you may find yourself letting the | |
| phone stay off the hook while you chat on IRC or read the latest Phrack. | |
| Though not a scheme to get rich, this can provide a considerable income or | |
| simply an occasional bonus, depending on your h/p resourcefulness and effort | |
| exerted. | |
| Before you can start calling your own 900 number and making yourself money, you | |
| need to buy into the 900 business. On your next outing for the latest copy of | |
| Hustler, grab a USA Today. In the classifieds, (as well as many other business | |
| classifieds), under the heading "business opportunities," you'll notice any | |
| number of 900 ads. You want to find a "service bureau" and not a simple | |
| "reseller," so shop around and call a number of the companies, asking about | |
| percentages and whether or not your setup costs (usually ranging from $300 to | |
| $1500) are comprehensive for the year or whether you'll have to pay a monthly | |
| fee. Avoid these pesky monthly maintenance fees. All sorts of 900 packages | |
| exist, but you want an automated service--such as a dateline--that is ready to | |
| all as soon as you've paid. This means you'll have no equipment to set up, or | |
| 900 trunks terminating at your house, or hookers to hire, etc. The service | |
| bureau provides you with the number and the service, so all you have to do is | |
| market the number (should you be legit). You can bargain a little on the setup | |
| fee. An example of a worthwhile deal would be as follows: an automated | |
| dateline number (similar to a voice ail system, only you listen to personal ads | |
| and have the option of leaving a response) for $750/year, a per minute rate of | |
| $3.99, and a 75% net return (i.e., you make about $3.00/min). AT&T and MCI | |
| provide 900 services to the service bureaus. AT&T is preferable, as you | |
| receive payment two months after the end of the calling month, as opposed to | |
| three months with MCI--so ask about this too. Your continued efforts will reap | |
| a monthly check thereafter. | |
| The service bureau actually sends you the check. You'll want it in a personal | |
| name to make it easier to cash with your bogus ID. Some bureaus will "factor" | |
| your account, meaning that if you've accumulated a lot of credits, they will | |
| pay you in advance of their getting paid by the carrier--for a percentage fee. | |
| Don't try to scam them on this; your account is scrutinized closely before a | |
| premature check is approved. If everything is done properly, both you and the | |
| service bureau will be happy. [That's what's so great about this project: | |
| everyone wins--you, the service bureau, even AT&T--only the PBX owner loses!] | |
| You will be able to check your credits, or "minutes" as called in the 900 | |
| industry, by calling a special number provided by the service bureau. After | |
| entering your account codes, an automated response will give you statistics | |
| such as daily call reports and total minutes accumulated for the billing month. | |
| Be sure to find out about the virtual end-of-month date. The end of each | |
| billing period is not necessarily the last day of the month. Accordingly, you | |
| will need to plan your attacks with this in mind, as we will discuss next. | |
| Getting A Date | |
| Now that you've set up your dateline, you'll be anxious to start earning the | |
| three bucks a minute. The dateline makes it kind of fun, since you get to hear | |
| all kinds of ridiculous messages and the typical horny soliloquy. Get a | |
| speakerphone if you lack one now. | |
| You don't necessarily need PBXes--any outdials you find that complete a 900 call | |
| will suffice. However, the lines targeted must be those of a business, one | |
| that is large enough to own a PBX. Calling on residential lines, cell phones, | |
| or from small businesses will not work--the owners will get their bill, and | |
| simply call the phone company and complain that they didn't make the call. | |
| This will attract undesired attention to your line by the LEC and your | |
| service bureau, and it will also cost you in that the carrier connect fees, | |
| about .25 and .30 per minute, will be deducted from your account. The LD | |
| carriers get theirs, whether the party pays or not. This is why the calling | |
| method encouraged here is the PBX. If you can manipulate central office | |
| switches, do so by these same principles. | |
| PBX owners tend to pay their phone bills--including 900 calls that aren't | |
| outrageous. They'll assume that one of their own employees made the call, if | |
| they even notice. Instead of attempting to exploit a PBX to some astronomical | |
| degree, you're better off running up a mere fifty to sixty dollar charge. Do | |
| this every month as part of a schedule. Not only may it go unnoticed, but you | |
| are assured that it will go uncontested even if detected. Running up an | |
| excessive number of minutes risks unneeded attention and assures either a total | |
| "killing" of the PBX, or at minimum, 900 restrictions added by the PBX | |
| administrator. Even with a remote admin access, your luck will run out. | |
| Remember: YOU WILL ONLY GET PAID IF THE PBX OWNER PAYS THE PHONE BILL! | |
| With this in mind, the most limiting factor is the number of PBXes you can | |
| accumulate. The widespread raping of AT&T's System 75/85/Definity in 1992 (as | |
| a result of discoveries in 1991) made that year extremely ripe for this 900 | |
| scheme. Many of us managed to accumulate large collections of System 75s, | |
| including the elusive Super Nigger, who allegedly compiled over 300. (Where | |
| the hell were you hiding?) AT&T security memorandums have since killed | |
| hundreds of these, but the defaults still work well in some cities. | |
| Regardless, PBXes abound, and the more you find, the more minutes you can | |
| generate. | |
| Let's look at a sample attack schedule: | |
| PBX # M T W Th F S Su | |
| 01 15m | |
| 02 10m | |
| 03 8m | |
| 04 14m | |
| 05 16m | |
| 06 24m | |
| 07 12m | |
| 08 13m | |
| 09 16m | |
| 10 2m,10m | |
| 11 13m | |
| 12 4m,4m | |
| Twelve PBXes are to be attacked in the sample week, so there are probably fifty | |
| PBXes totally to be attacked for the month. Each PBX is to be used only once per | |
| billing period. You will get many months of use out of each PBX with this | |
| conservative approach, so long as every hacker west of Poland doesn't have | |
| access as well. Notice how the number of connection minutes varies, and the | |
| calling pattern is quite random looking. The schedule is maintained not only | |
| to keep track of PBXes in your harem you've fucked for the month, but to assist | |
| you in generating minutes in a pseudo-random pattern. It is acceptable to have | |
| your minutes generated in a pattern, albeit a loose one. For instance, if all | |
| minutes are generated only on the weekend, a discerning eye will not attribute | |
| this to the type of marketing you are using. The sample schedule is only the | |
| ideal model. Having to rigid a pattern, however, such as having an exact | |
| number of calls each day, is potentially suspicious to your service bureau. | |
| Simultaneous calls to your 900 number through different outgoing trunks on the | |
| same PBX is also strongly discouraged. | |
| Listening Software | |
| Calling your 900 dateline number is fun, but when you've got over a hundred | |
| PBXes to hit each month for an average of fifteen minutes a pop, the novelty | |
| tends to wear off. Of course you can have a speakerphone and a time and go | |
| about other tasks between calls, but why not write a program that will enable | |
| your modem to do all this for you? All the program must do is have the modem | |
| call a PBX from a list, pause, and call your 900 (or another PBX and then your | |
| 900, for LD PBX attacks). Once connected to your 900, it must stay "listening" | |
| until a random timer (10-20 minutes) hangs it up. Depending upon your dateline | |
| service, the modem may have to emit a DTMF every once in a while to keep the | |
| service convinced you're still there. This is a very worthwhile program to | |
| write--it can drastically reduce your total time spent with this operation, | |
| leaving you with only the PBX list to maintain (additions and deletions), and | |
| the spending of your hard-earned cash (the novelty of this WON'T wear off). | |
| Large Charge-Rate Option | |
| A 900 number can be set up to charge as much as $50 per call. Whether the call | |
| lasts less then a minute, or for over ten, the cost for the caller is the same | |
| $50. In order to set up such an account, you must qualify as an "Information | |
| Provider," or IP. Regulations on 900 numbers state that you must be a provider | |
| of information, not tangible goods. With a dateline, the information is | |
| included in your deal with the service bureau, so you are considered an IP. | |
| The bureau can provide you with your own number that terminates in a voice | |
| processing or audio-text system, but now you must provide the actual | |
| information. Your idea must be approved by the LD carrier, and they tend to | |
| scrutinize your plans the higher your desired rate. Your bureau may even | |
| subject your service to a test to make sure it's not a fake. | |
| One idea is to ask for a $25 per-call rate. Make like a writer of shareware | |
| programs, and have your 900's announcement ask the caller to leave name and | |
| address to be legally registered to use the software, and to receive updated | |
| versions. A confirmation notice will be sent to acknowledge the registration. | |
| Many bureaus will accept this as qualification for IP status, if properly | |
| presented. A sample arrangement like this should not cost more than a grand to | |
| set up. Stats on minutes are checked just as with the dateline, only you'll | |
| receive any messages left by callers, and you'll receive any messages left by | |
| callers, and you'll be able to change the announcements--just like voice mail. | |
| [IT's always a thrill to call a 900 number and hear yourself thanking the | |
| caller, heh heh.] On a $25 line, you should net about $19 per call. | |
| All the same rules apply using this large charge-rate setup. You can't abuse a | |
| PBX any more with this option then with a dateline. It does give you the added | |
| flexibility for methods used other than PBXes, such as outdials that will only | |
| connect briefly. For instance, message notification on voicemail will not | |
| connect to a number for prolonged durations, but long enough to activate a $25 | |
| charge. And a typical modem outdial on a mainframe will soon hang up with the | |
| absence of an answering carrier, but the linger is long enough for a $25 call. | |
| And with CO switching, the arrangements you make are ideally temporary--turned | |
| quickly on and off--making a fast $25 hit optimal. Lastly, if you are skilled | |
| in accessing corporate phone closets (see "Physical Access and Theft," Phrack | |
| 43) or the corresponding outside plant, you can use your test set to call your | |
| 900. Obviously a large charge-rate would be better here too, rather than | |
| standing for endless periods of time in compromising positions connected to a | |
| squawking dateline. | |
| No matter how you access business lines, be sure they belong to a large | |
| company. Definitely experiment, but do so in moderation--make any necessary | |
| notes (like time and date of call) and wait for your 900 billing statement to | |
| see if the call was paid for. [Your billing statement, essentially a call | |
| accounting summary, is created for each billing month by the LD carrier and | |
| sent to you via the service bureau with your check. It includes the calling | |
| phone numbers, time, date, duration, etc. of all calls made to your number.] | |
| A Final Word | |
| It would be hard to get "busted" doing anything mentioned in this article. | |
| Even if you're nabbed for misdemeanor PBX abuse, no one will ever imagine--let | |
| alone try to prove--that the 900 number you were calling is your own. [Hey, | |
| you're just a desperately lonely guy!] However, be wary of pen registers | |
| (DNRs) if you've been up to other dark deeds, and set up your calling | |
| operations at a safer place. Don't check your minutes using any of the same | |
| means that you use to generate them (a record of your calling into your 900 | |
| backdoor is probably the most incriminating track you can make). Keep your 900 | |
| account anonymous, as with your address, voice mail, and ID/SSN. | |
| Welcome to the dark side--and best of luck. | |
| Sincerely, | |
| CO/der DEC/oder | |
| DSR | |
| [ The Author can be reached, when the system is up, at: | |
| codec@crimelab.com ] | |