Black box (phreaking)

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This article is about the phreaking tool. For other uses, see black box.

The black box (as distinguished from blue boxes and red boxes), sometimes called an Agnew (see Spiro (device) for the origin of the nickname), was a device built by phone phreaks during the 1960s and 1970s in order to defeat long distance phone call toll charges, and specifically to block the supervision signal sent by the receiving telephone handset when the call was answered at the receiving end of the call.

The act of picking up the handset of a telephone causes a load to be put on the telephone line, so that the DC voltage on the line drops below from the approximately 45 volts present when the phone is disconnected. The black box consisted of a large capacitor which was inserted in series with the telephone, thereby blocking DC current but allowing AC current (i.e., ringing signal and also audio signal) to pass. When the black box was switched into the telephone line, the handset could be picked up without the telephone system knowing and starting the billing process.

In other words, the box fooled the phone company into thinking no one had answered at the receiving end, and therefore billing was never started on the call. Participating in a "black box" call meant talking between rings, since the phone company would continue to send rings (AC current) through the line which was heard as a loud buzzing noise. Few people build or use "Black Boxes" anymore, given that the method once used by telephone companies to detect an answered call became obsolete long ago with the advent of digital switching systems.

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