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by jacquesm
5252 days ago
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Yes, those are 'POTS' phones, the old style variety as mentioned in the great grand parent. Newer phones, basically anything with a bunch of electronics are not susceptible to this kind of trick. When it was first revealed by the dutch hacker group 'hack-tic' (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hack-Tic) the phone company denied it could be done until there was a public demonstration. |
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The distinction is in the type of phone attached to the POTS line. It looks like it requires a combination of a carbon mic and an old, non-integrated-circuit switchhook. Something like you'd find in an old Western Electric 2500 [1].
A carbon mic has some pretty unique properties. Base output is very high, such that output is easily detected at a distance without amplification, and they're very low impedance. Even slightly newer telephone designs would use an electret style microphone. The most basic electret circuits require a capacitor, which is noted to defeat the frequency flooding attack.
1 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_500_telephone#Model_2500