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Blue boxes? To some degree, yes. There's a lot of switches in rural areas that rely on MF signaling (usually the ones that don't offer caller ID or anything), but they don't use 2600 hz supervision like the old carrier systems do. They use bit-robbed signaling. So to be able to send your own MFs into a trunk, you need to be able to fool the switch into thinking the trunk just hung up and went back offhook. Internationally, it's a different story. E1 carrier and it's derivatives don't support bit-robbed signaling, so you'll still find a lot of C5 trunks. 866-284-3437, for example, takes a very strange route (MCI to New York, and from there, we believe Paetec/Windstream abroad) before sending you to a conference system in Malaysia. There's even some really strange stuff in rural Russia that actually relies on their own flavor of backwards MF. So if you send a 2600 hz tone and a single MF, it'll spit MF back out at you. In Soviet Russia... As for red boxing? Yes, sort of. Most payphones these days run off of a microcontroller inside the phone, so there is a way to fool the phone, but it doesn't involve any kind of inband signaling. Some of the older ones are 6502 based if you can believe it. The Nortel/Quortech Millenniums, one of the more common phones, run on Z180s. Anyway though, if you can find a phone that hasn't been retrofitted with a processor, you can place a call to some in-state long distance areas, and a TOPS switch (in short, DMS-100 family software) will listen for redbox tones to bill for the call. As for black boxing? The short answer is no; this relied on a quirk in electromechanical stuff where you'd actually be connected to the called party while their phone was ringing. The long answer is, less and less no actually. One of the things I learned recently is if you're calling somewhere on an AT&T trunk that terminates over a 4ESS to a 5ESS before hitting your destination (in short, most large areas), you can pass audio before the calling party answers, and it'll let the call go on forever if nobody answers. So if you can find something that bridges two calls together without making the call answer, yes, you can effectively do the same thing as black boxing. As for devices, these days it's about being as resourceful as possible. So the greatest things you'll find tend to be using just a regular phone and your wits. |