Phone Phreak Confidential: The Backstory of the History of Phone Phreaking

Presented at HOPE Number Nine (2012), July 14, 2012, noon (60 minutes)

Five years in the making, Phil has finally finished Phone Phreaks, his book on the history of phone phreaking from the 1950s to the 1980s. In this talk, he will weave together the evolution of phone phreaking with the backstory of the writing of his book. From giving John “Cap’n Crunch” Draper a piggyback ride around his apartment in order to secure an interview to cleaning out Joybubbles’s apartment after his untimely demise, Phil’s research took him through the maze of twisty little passages that wind through the history of this underground hobby. Some of the characters you’ll meet include the phone phreak CEO of an electronic warfare company, a cell of Stony Brook students busted for blue boxing, and the mysterious and cantankerous head of the International Society of Telephone Enthusiasts. You’ll also get a behind the scenes tour of the NSA and FBI’s phone phreak files and the 400 Freedom of Information Act requests necessary to get them into the light of day.


Presenters:

  • Phil Lapsley
    Phil Lapsley has spent the last several years documenting the history of phone phreaking, through hundreds of interviews and Freedom of Information Act requests. When not researching phreaking, Phil has tried to act like an upstanding member of society. He co-founded two high technology companies in the San Francisco Bay Area and worked for McKinsey and Company, a management consulting firm that advises Fortune 100 companies on business strategy. He co-developed Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP, RFC 977) used in the USENET news system. He is also the author of one textbook, 17 patents, and numerous technical articles. He lives in Bangalore, India.

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