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Phreaking out over long-distance charges

Phreaking out over long-distance charges

By:  Rosie Lombardi  On: 24 Apr 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

Phreakers are still at it. Plummeting long-distance phone rates and free calls via VoIP still haven't removed the economic incentives for voicemail hacking, also referred to as "phreaking" by industry insiders, to make free long-distance calls.

Phreakers are still at it.

Plummeting long-distance phone rates and free calls via VoIP still haven't removed the economic incentives for voicemail hacking, also referred to as "phreaking" by industry insiders, to make free long-distance calls.

SMB companies with PBX/switchboard systems are typically the targets for this type of fraud, although residential customers are also victimized with some frequency, says Jim Johannsson, spokesman for Vancouver-based carrier Telus. "Average losses per event are about $7,000," says Johannsson, adding that losses can be higher depending on how quickly the fraud is detected.

Telus' Corporate Security Fraud Management Centre uses telco-specific pattern analysis software to detect and investigate abnormal calling patterns, and contacts customers when fraud is suspected. According to Telus estimates, the centre saved its customers a total of $1.5 million in 2005.

Noting a recent increase in incidents, the center issued a number of tips to help customers protect themselves.

As in other IT spheres, fraudsters exploit people's tendency to use simple passwords such as 1111 or default manufacturers' passwords to hack into voicemail systems. They also exploit system features like call-through dialing, which is designed to allow a mailbox owner to dial in from an off-site location to make calls from a work line. Fraudsters typically call after hours and use a company's automated answering system to troll for vulnerable mailboxes.

Sometimes they use social engineering, masquerading as a phone company's technician, says Johannsson. Fraudsters will call switchboard operators, claiming they're conducting tests on the line, and ask them to dial 9 and the pound key.

"When you transfer a call like this, fraudsters can seize the phone trunk and connect all kinds of calls to it," says Johannsson, adding that legitimate technicians never require this kind of "test" done. This type of trunk access fraud can be particularly costly to a business, he says.

Overseas destinations for fraudulent calls are areas well-known for other types of cybercrime – Africa, Eastern Europe and the Middle East – but Austria is also a hotbed of phreaking activity, for unknown reasons, says Johannsson.

Telus and other telcos have been working together for years to clamp down on toll fraud, and the net losses have declined over time. "But the number of fraud attempts is increasing, although fewer are successful," says Johannsson.

Industry experts speculate the recent surge in voice mail fraud may be due to the downsizing of many IT departments at the customer end, leaving inexperienced IT staff stranded to deal with telecom management. "There's no question the experienced telecom manager of yore is becoming a rare breed," says Stefan Dubowski, an analyst at Decima Reports, an Ottawa-based technology research firm. "If you look at Telus' tips, they are all fundamental security measures."


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Rosie Lombardi Rosie Lombardi is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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