Abstract :
The use of an electronic device called the blue box to exploit a loophole in the nation´s long-distance telephone network is recounted. To avoid long-distance charges, blue box users first dialed long-distance directory assistance, 800 numbers, or numbers that carried only a small toll charge. After the user dialed his number and was connected to a long-distance trunk, the blue box emitted a 2600 Hz tone, clearing the equipment at the tandem trunk´s receiving end and signaling the switching equipment that the call had been completed and the trunk was waiting for a new call. The local central office, however, had not received its call termination signal, so the local central office did not disconnect the caller from the long-distance network. The permanent solution to the blue box problem proved to be common channel interoffice signaling (CCIS), a method rejected in the 1950s as too costly and difficult to implement.<>
Keywords :
telephone networks; telephone station equipment; 2600 Hz; CCIS; blue box; call termination signal; common channel interoffice signaling; local central office; long-distance directory assistance; long-distance telephone network; long-distance trunk; phone frauds; switching equipment; Bandwidth; Central office; Costs; Frequency; History; Law; Legal factors; Routing; Speech; Telephony;