How hackers tricked the US phone system using simple musical tones

Captain Crunch wistle
By some stroke of luck this toy enabled hackers to surf the US phone network

The October 1971 issue of Esquire magazine carried an article by Ron Rosenbaum that detailed his meetings and phone conversations with a secretive, loosely knit group of people. One was John T Draper – and he's still angry about what happened.

"Ron should not have published that article," Draper said. The reason behind his anger is that he and the others were 'phreakers' – curious individuals who had worked out how to trick the US telephone network into supplying them with free calls.

The paper, impenetrable to most people, explained how the phone system used the same lines that people spoke over to carry commands in the form of audible tones between long-distance AT&T exchanges. The commands were intended for internal company use only.