| ==Phrack Magazine== | |
| Volume Five, Issue Forty-Six, File 10 of 28 | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| /**************************/ | |
| /* A Guide to Porno Boxes */ | |
| /* by Carl Corey */ | |
| /**************************/ | |
| Keeping with tradition, and seeing that this is the first article in | |
| Phrack on cable TV descrambling, any illegal box for use in descrambling | |
| cable television signals is now known as a PORNO BOX. | |
| There are many methods that cable companies use to insure that you get | |
| what you pay for - and _only_ what you pay for. Of course, there are | |
| always methods to get 'more than you pay for'. This file will discuss | |
| the most important aspects of these methods, with pointers to more | |
| detailed information, including schematics and resellers of equipment. | |
| Part I. How the cable company keeps you from getting signals | |
| A brief history | |
| ---Older Systems--- | |
| Most scrambling methods are, in theory, simple. The original method | |
| used to block out signals was the trap method. All traps remove signals | |
| that are sent from the CATV head end (the CATV company's station). The | |
| first method, which is rarely used anymore was the negative trap. | |
| Basically, every point where the line was dropped had these traps, which | |
| removed the pay stations from your signal. If you decided to add a pay | |
| station, the company would come out and remove the trap. This method was | |
| pretty secure - you would provide physical evidence of tampering if you | |
| climbed the pole to remove them or alter them (sticking a pin through | |
| them seemed to work randomly, but could affect other channels, as it | |
| shifts the frequency the trap removes.) This was a very secure system, | |
| but did not allow for PPV or other services, and required a lot of | |
| physical labor (pole-climbers aren't cheap). The only places this is | |
| used anymore is in an old apartment building, as one trip can service | |
| several programming changes. Look for a big gray box in the basement | |
| with a lot of coax going out. If you are going to give yourself free | |
| service, give some random others free service to hide the trail. | |
| The next method used was termed a positive trap. With this method, the | |
| cable company sends a _very_ strong signal above the real signal. A | |
| tuner sees the strong signal, and locks onto the 'garbage' signal. A | |
| loud beeping and static lines would show up on the set. For the CATV | |
| company to enable a station, they put a 'positive' trap on the line, | |
| which (despite the name) removes the garbage signal. Many text files | |
| have been around on how to descramble this method (overlooking the | |
| obvious, buying a (cheap) notch filter), ranging from making a crude | |
| variable trap, to adding wires to the cable signal randomly to remove the | |
| signal. This system is hardly used anymore, as you could just put a trap | |
| inside your house, which wouldn't be noticed outside the house. | |
| ---Current Systems--- | |
| The next advent in technology was the box. The discussion of different | |
| boxes follows, but there is one rather new technology which should be | |
| discussed with the traps. The addressable trap is the CATV's dream. It | |
| combines the best features of the negative trap (very difficult to tamper | |
| with without leaving evidence) with features of addressable boxes (no | |
| lineman needs to go out to add a service, computers can process Pay Per | |
| View or other services). Basically, a 'smart trap' sits on the pole and | |
| removes signals at will. Many systems require a small amp inside the | |
| house, which the cable company uses to make sure that you don't hook up | |
| more than one TV. I believe that the new CATV act makes this illegal, | |
| and that a customer does not have to pay for any extra sets (which do not | |
| need equipment) in the house. Of course, we all know that the cable TV | |
| company will do whatever it wants until it is threatened with lawsuits. | |
| Cable boxes use many different methods of descrambling. Most are not in | |
| use anymore, with a few still around, and a few around the corner in the | |
| future. The big thing to remember is sync suppression. This method is | |
| how the cable companies make the picture look like a really fucked up, | |
| waving Dali painting. Presently the most popular method is the Tri-mode | |
| In-band Sync suppression. The sync signal is suppressed by 0, 6, or 10 | |
| dB. The sync can be changed randomly once per field, and the information | |
| necessary for the box to rebuild a sync signal. This very common system | |
| is discussed in Radio-Electronics magazine in the 2/87 issue. There are | |
| schematics and much more detailed theory than is provided here. | |
| The other common method currently used is SSAVI, which is most common on | |
| Zenith boxes. It stands for Sync Suppression And Video Inversion. In | |
| addition to sync suppression, it uses video inversion to also 'scramble' | |
| the video. There is no sync signal transmitted separately (or reference | |
| signal to tell the box how to de-scramble) as the first 26 lines (blank, | |
| above the picture) are not de-synched, and can be re-synched with a | |
| phased lock loop - giving sync to the whole field. The data on inversion | |
| is sent somewhere in the 20 or 21st line, which is outside of the | |
| screen. Audio can be scrambled too, but it is actually just moved to a | |
| different frequency. Radio Electronics August 92 on has circuits and | |
| other info in the Drawing Board column. | |
| ---Future Systems- | |
| For Pioneer, the future is now. The system the new Pioneers use is | |
| patented and Pioneer doesn't want you to know how it works. From the | |
| patent, it appears to use combinations of in-band, out-band, and keys | |
| (also sending false keys) to scramble and relay info necessary to | |
| descramble. These boxes are damn slick. The relevant patents are US | |
| #5,113,411 and US #4,149,158 if you care to look. There is not much | |
| information to be gained from them. Look for future updates to this | |
| article with info on the system if I can find any :) | |
| Other systems are the VideoCipher + (used on satellites now - this is | |
| scary shit.) It uses DES-encrypted audio. DigiCable and DigiCipher are | |
| similar, with Digi encrypting the video with DES also (yikes)... And | |
| they all use changing keys and other methods. Oak Sigma converters use | |
| similar methods which are available now on cable. (digital encryption of | |
| audio, etc...) | |
| Part II. How the cable company catches you getting those signals | |
| There are many methods the CATV company can use to catch you, or at | |
| least keep you from using certain methods. | |
| Market Code: Almost _all_ addressable decoders now use a market code. | |
| This is part of the serial number (which is used for pay | |
| per view addressing) which decodes to a general geographic | |
| region. Most boxes contain code which tell it to shut | |
| down if it receives a code (which can be going to any box | |
| on the cable system) which is from a different market area. | |
| So if you buy a converter that is say, market-coded for | |
| Los Angeles, you won't be able to use it in New York. | |
| Bullets: The bullet is a shut down code like above - it will make | |
| your box say 'bAh' and die. The method used most is for | |
| the head end to send messages to every box they know of | |
| saying 'ignore the next shutdown message' ... and once | |
| every (legit) box has this info, it sends the bullet. | |
| The only boxes that actually process the bullet are ones | |
| which the CATV system doesn't know about. P.S. Don't | |
| call the cable company and complain about cable if you | |
| are using an illegal converter - and be sure to warn | |
| anyone you live with about calling the CATV co. also. | |
| Leak Detection: The FCC forces all cable companies to drive around and | |
| look for leaks - any poor splice jobs (wiring your house | |
| from a neighbors without sealing it up nice) and some | |
| descramblers will emit RF. So while the CATV is looking | |
| for the leaks, they may catch you. | |
| Free T-Shirts: The cable company can, with most boxes, tell the box to | |
| display a different signal. So they can tell every box | |
| they know of (the legit box pool) to display a commercial | |
| on another channel, while the pirate boxes get this real | |
| cool ad with an 1800 number for free t-shirts... you call, | |
| you get busted. This is mostly done during PPV boxing or | |
| other events which are paid for - as the company knows | |
| exactly who should get that signal, and can catch even | |
| legit boxes which are modified to receive the fight. | |
| Your Pals: Programs like "Turn in a cable pirate and get $100" let | |
| you know who your friends _really_ are. | |
| Part III: How to get away with it. | |
| I get a lot of questions about opening a box that you own. This is not | |
| a good idea. Most, if not ALL boxes today have a tamper sensor. If you | |
| open the box, you break a tab, flip a switch, etc... This disables the | |
| box and leaves a nice piece of evidence for the CATV co. to show that you | |
| played with it. | |
| I also have had questions about the old "unplug the box when it is | |
| enabled, then plug it back in later"... The CATV company periodically | |
| sends a signal to update all the boxes to where they should be. If you | |
| want to do this, you'll need to find out where the CATV sends the address | |
| information, and then you need to trap it out of the signal. So as soon | |
| as the fraudulent customer (let's call him Chris) sees his box get the | |
| signal to receive the PPV porn channel, he installs the trap and now his | |
| box will never get any pay per view signals again... but he'll always | |
| have whatever he was viewing at the time he put the trap in. Big problem | |
| here is that most _newer_ systems also tell the box how long it can | |
| descramble that channel - i.e. "Watch SPICE until I tell you not to, or 3 | |
| hours have passed"... | |
| Where to make/buy/get porno boxes: | |
| You can order a box which has been modified not to accept bullets. This | |
| method is pretty expensive. You can also get a 'pan' descrambler - it is | |
| a separate piece that takes whatever goes in on channel 3 (or 2 or 4) and | |
| descrambles it. These boxes can't be killed by the bullets, and work | |
| pretty well. There are some pans which are made by the same company as | |
| your cable box and are sensitive to bullets, so beware. | |
| There are two basic ideas for modifying a box (provided you get detailed | |
| instructions on how to get it open, or how to fix it once you open it). | |
| You can change the S/N to something which is known as 'universal' or | |
| disassemble the code and remove the jump to the shutdown code. | |
| The universal codes are rare, and may be extinct. Besides, if the cable | |
| company finds out your code, they can nuke it. This happens when someone | |
| who makes (err made) 'universal' chips gets busted. The modification of | |
| the actual code is the best way to do it, just forcing a positive | |
| response to permission checks is the easiest way. | |
| A 'cube' is not a NeXT, it's a device which removes the data signal from | |
| the cable line, and inserts a 'nice' data signal which tells your box to | |
| turn everything on. A 'destructive' cube actually re-programs all the | |
| boxes below it to a new serial number and gives that number full | |
| privileges, while a 'non-destructive' cube needs to know your boxes | |
| serial number, so it can tell your box (without modifications) that it | |
| can view everything. You have to get a new IC if you change boxes, but | |
| the plus is that you can remove the cube and the box functions as | |
| normal. Then again, you have to trust the place you are ordering the | |
| cube from to not be working for the cable company, as you have to give | |
| them your box serial number - which the CATV cable has in their records. | |
| Cubes have been seen for sale in the back of Electronics Now (formerly | |
| Radio Electronics). | |
| Of course, you could check in the above mentioned articles and build | |
| circuitry, it would be a lot cheaper. The only problem is that you have | |
| to be good enough not to fuck it up - TV signals are very easy to fuck up. | |
| Then there is the HOLY GRAIL. Most scrambling systems mess with the sync | |
| pulse. This pulse is followed by the colorburst signal on NTSC video. | |
| Basically, the grail finds the colorburst and uses it as a reference | |
| signal. In theory, it works wonderfully (but does not fix the video | |
| inversion problems found on SSAVI systems). However, with the sync pulse | |
| whacked, the colorburst method may give weak color or color shifts. The | |
| schematics are in the May 1990 Radio-Electronics. I have also received | |
| email from aa570@cleveland.Freenet.Edu about his colorburst kit, which is | |
| a modified (supposedly higher quality) version of the R-E schematics. | |
| The schematic and parts list is 5 bucks, 16 bucks for a pre-drilled and | |
| etched board. A little steep, but not too bad. E-mail the above for | |
| more information. | |
| Anyway, that's all for now. Remember, information (including XXX movies) | |
| wants to be free! | |
| Carl Corey / dEs | |