THE HIGH TECH HOODS & A-CORP PRESENTS... *%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%* *% THE ULTIMATE %* *% CELLULAR PHONE PHREAKS %* *% MANUAL PART 2 %* *% %* *% WRITTEN BY THE RAVEN %* *% AND INTROSPECT %* *%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%* THE RAVEN +=======+ THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING: PEBBLES, BIT STREAM & THOMAS ICOM /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\//\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ INDEX: I. WHAT'S IN A NAM II. NAM/ESN REPROGRAMMING III. ADVANCED REPROGRAMMING IV. OBTAINING SYS. REGISTRATION DATA V. REPROGRAMMING YOUR PHONE VI. ------------------------ \/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ I. What's In A NAM First thing were going to start with is the NAM. The NAM is a PROM, A blank NAM costs about $5. Sometimes its more expensive depending on the operating temperature and packaging specifications. Two flavors of NAM's are most commonly used for cellular phones. NEC Corp. uses the open collector (SIGNETICS p/n 82S23 or equivalent). All others use the tri-state (SIGNETICS 82S123 or equivalent). Blank NAMs are manufactured by Signetics, National Semiconductor, Monolithic Memorys, Fujitsu, Texas Instrum ents, and Advanced Microdevices. Blank NAMs can be purchased at your local electronic distributor's, thru the various parts sources advertised in electronic magazines, and some radios come with a blank included. The NAM contains the subscriber number and lock code, the home system ID and other system-required data. You may wonder how this info is arranged. The NAM is organized into 32 rows and 8 colums. It is 32 words of 8 bits each. (256 bits total). Starting from top of the NAM (address 00), you will find the abreviation SIDH. This means "System Identifaction Number Home", a number starting at 0001 assigned by the FCC. Each market allows two systems. These two digits are even for the wire-line and odd for the non-wireline. At address 03, we find LU (Local Use) on the left and MIN on the right, and they are usually set to 1. Locations with zeros are reserved. Going down the map, there's MIN1 and MIN2-the subscriber number and the area code respectively Dont try to read them from a raw printout of the NAM data, as they are scrambled beyond recognition. The reason? THe way they are arranged is the way they must be transmitted to the cellular systems receivers. The programmer does this to make the radio's job easier. Next is the station class mark, which identifies the class and power capability of the phone. The system will treat a handheld (low power) differently than a standard 3-watt mobile. IPCH is the Inital Paging Channel. The radio listens for a page on this channel. Wirelines use 334 and non-wirelines use 333. ACCOLC (ACCess Overload Class) is designed for throwing off customers in the event of an overload. Thru neglect, this standard has been largly unused. (A Class 15 stationis supposed to be police, fire or military). Usually, It's a set to 0 plus the last digit of the phone number to provide random loading. PS (Preferred System). This is always 1 in a non-wireline and 0 in wireline. The Lock Code is about the only thing you can read directly by studying NAM data. The "spare" bit must be a 0 if the radio contains a 3-digit code. Because the number of clicks when you dial 0 on a (dial) phone equals 10, zeros in the lock code are represented by an "A"(the hexadecimal equiv of 10). EE, REP, HA and HF correspond to end-to-end signaling (DTMF tones, possibly as you talk), and REPeratory dialing (provision for 10 or more numbers in memory). Horn Alert and Hands Free. Like all options, they are 1 if turned on and 0 if turned off (all these numbers are in hex). They are supposed to be used by radio makers to store option switches. Usually 13 is used, 14 sometimes and the rest less often. Last, you will find Cheksum Adjustment and Checksum. These numbers are calculated automatically after the data has been edited for the NAM. The sum of all words in the NAM plus these last two must equal a number with 0's in the last two digits. The radio checks this sum and if it isn't correct the radio assumes the NAM is bad or tampered with. In the case radio refuses to operate until a legal NAM is installed. THE ANATOMY OF A NAM -------------------- MARK Defin. most <-- BIT Significance --> least Hex ------------------------------------------------------ 0 SIDH (14-8) 00 SIDH (7-0) 01 LU=Local use LU 000000 MIN 02 00 MIN2 (33-28) 03 MIN2 (27-24) 0000 04 0000 MIN1 (23-20) 05 MIN1 (19-12) 06 MIN1 (11-4) 07 MIN1 (3-0) 0000 08 0000 SCM (3-0) 09 00000 IPCH (10-8) 0A IPCH (7-0) 0B 0000 ACCOLC (3-0) 0C PS=Perf Syst 0000000 PS 0D 0000 GIM (3-0) 0E LOCK DIGIT 1 LOCK DIGIT 2 0F LOCK DIGIT 3 LOCK SPARE BITS 10 EE=End/End EE 000000 REP 11 REP=Reprity HA 000000 HF 12 HF=Handsfree Spare Locations (13-1D) 13 HA=Horn Alt contain all 0's 1D NAM CHECKSUM ADJUST. 1E NAM CHECKSUM 1F II. NAM/ESN REPROGRAMMING The first step to using cellular phones is to obtain one. They can be purchased new or used. Ham fests are one good source. Many people dump their cellular phones once they see just how expensive they are to operate. And of course the perception of being jerked promotes phreaking. First generation E.F. Johnson units are good choice as they are easy to modify, use uniquely effective diveristy (dual antenna) receivers, and use the AMPS control bus, which means that several maker's control heads will work with it. Another good choice is Novatel's Aurora/150. It uses a proprietary parallel bus and control head, but costs less, is rugged, and is also easy to work on. Also, all Novatel CMTs have built-in diagnostics. This allows you to manually scan all 666 repeater output freqs-great for scanning! All cellular phones have a unique ESN. This is a 4-byte hex or 11 digit octal number stored in the ROM soldered on the logic board. Ideally, it's supposed to be never changed. Some newer cellulars embed the ESN in a VLSI IC (Very Large Scale Integration Integrated Circuit) along with the units program code. This makes ESN mods very difficult at best. The ESN is also imprinted on the reciever boiler plate, usually mounted on the outside of the housing. When converted to octal (11 digits), the first 3 digits represents the maker while the other 8 identify the unit. The other important ROM is the NAM. It contains the MIN (i.e. phone #, including area code), the lock code, and various model ID and carrier ID codes. The lock code keeps unauthorized parties from using the phone. Some newer cellulars have no built in NAM and instead use an EEPROM, which allows a technician who knows the maintenance code to quickly change the NAM data thru the control head keypad. WHen one attempts to make a cellular call, the transceiver first automatically transmits the ESN and NAM data to the nearest cellsite reapeter by means of the Overhead Data Stream (ODS). The ODS is a 10 kilobaud data channel that links the cellular's computer to the MTSO, which then controls the phone's entire operation down to the selected channel and output power. If the MTSO doesn't recognize the received ESN/MIN pair as valid (sometimes due to RF noise), it issues a repeat order and will not process the call unit until a valid pair is received. In most cities, there are two CPCs or "carries". One is the wireline CPC and the other is the non-wireline CPC. Both maintain their own MTSO and network (i.e: cell-site repeaters), and occupy separate halves of the cellular radio band. Non-wirelines use System A, and wirelines use System B. (the amenities that are avaible with most landline phone service - call waiting, caller ID, call-forwarding, 3-way calling,etc., are standard fair for most CPCs. However, they are usually applied for differently.) For the cellular phreaker, the most diffuclt task is obtaining usable ESN/MIN pairs. Over the years,standard phreaker techniques have been employed for all types of phreaking to obtain the required info. These includes trashing, using inside help,joining the staff,hacking them from known good ESNs and MINs (i.e: spoofing), con strategis, strong-arming, Bribing, blackmail, etc. (This is how The High Tech Hoods get them!). The hacker knows that most CPCs do not turn off or keep track of unused MIN numbers. In fact, their general pattern is to start at the low numbers and work their way up. WHen a number is cancelled, it is reassigned instead of using a larger number. The first places to look is the authorized cellular installers and service centers in your area (see your Yellow Pages). They have on file a record of every cellular phone installed or serviced by them, including the ESN/MIN pairs. Another place to focus on is the cellular CPC's customer service or billing department. These offices contain the ESN/MIN pairs often for thousands of cellular phones, and hire low-paid people. Some cellular CPCs, installers and service centers will provide NAM system parameters upon request, and some will sell you NAM and ESN memory maps and schematics of a specific cellular phone model. And some will sell you service manuals (i.e: Motorola) that will describe the often easy method to program their cellular phones. The good phreak/hacker could interface the cellular phone's ADC circuit to his PC and hack out all of the valid ESN/MIN pairs he could possibly need. Since the ESN/MIN pair are transmitted from cellular phones (usually in an unencrypted form), these pairs can be obtained simply by scanning the cellular phone channels. Even if they are encrypted, the phreaker only will need to reproduce the encrypted pair. In some areas, you can buy the ROMs right off the street - often by the same dealers who sell drugs and stolen property, etc. All it takes is a few discreet inquires. However, many get caught doing this because of police stings. Once a valid ESN/MIN is obtained, it must be programed into the cellular phone's ROM. Some cellular makers use different devices and memory maps, but the standard is the AMPS 16-pin 32x8 bit format and some ROMs have proprietary markings. If the part number are different than those given and you can't find them in your data book, look for the IC maker's logo and call or write them for data sheets. If the IC's have proprietary markings, by looking at the external parts that are directly wired to them, one can often determine not only whether the IC is open-collector or tri-state, but also what the pin assingn- ments are, and sometimes the type of replacement IC to use. The ESN ROM is then carefully desoldered from the logic board (first ground the soldering tip thru a 1 Meg-ohm resistor). Once, removed the IC can then be placed on a ROM reader/programmer or NAM programmer (bit editing mode). Any ROM reader/programmer that will burn a compatible ROM is usable, but a dedicated NAM programmer has built-in software that takes out much of the aggravation. Using a non-NAM ROM reader/programmer, one searches for the memory locations that has the same number as ESN printed on the boiler plate. This number will be immediatly followed by an 8-bit checksum determined by the 8 least significant bits of the hex sum of the ESNs four bytes. The old ESN data (now copied into the NAM programmer's RAM) is replaced by the new ESN and the updated checksum. A new blank and compatible ROM is inserted into the ROM burner and burned with the new ESN data. Most cellular phreakers at this point install a Zero Insertion Force (ZIF) DIP socket into the logic board for this and any future ROM changes. The NAM IC is usually already installed in a ZIF socket on the logic board. Similarly, its MIN is read by the ROM reader/programmer and a new ROM is burned with the new MIN and updated MIN checksum. Altho one may wish to also update the CPC's system parameters, they can left the same if the same CPC is desired. To change the CPC'c designation, the last four MIN digits, the checksum and the exchange (if they use more than one exchange) are changed. The more astute cellular phreaker of course can design and build his own NAM programmer/reader, ideally one interfaced to a PC. A more primitive approach is to interface two banks of hex thumbwheel switches to the sockets, altho a computer program would be very helpful to determine the proper switch settings. Thumbwheel switches allow you to make changes on the fly and they can be plugged in as needed, so if one is caught red-handed, it is difficult to prove intent and origin of phone call. III. ADVANCED REPROGRAMMING Your cellular phone contains a special memory which retains data about the phone's individual characteristics, such as its assigned phone number, system identification number, (ID#) and other data that is necessary for cellular operation. This special memory is known as the NAM. You can program the phone yourself, if the phone has not already been programmed where you got it. You can also reprogram the phone yourself should you wish to change some of the features already selected for the NAM. The reprogramming of the NAM is performed after you have contacted your cellular system operator for the nessary data as described below. Enter the data received from your cellular system operator in the NAM Reprogramming Data Table before reprogramming the NAM of your cellular phone. Incorrect NAM entries can cause your cellular phone to operate improperaly or not at all. Your cellular phone can be reprogrammed up to three times. After that, it must be reset at a Motorola-authorized service facility. Be sure you read this complete text before attempting to reprogram your phone! 1. RE-PROGRAMMING FEATURES You must get seven pieces of data from the cellular system operator to allow you to reprogram the cellular phone. You provide the remaining data. Write all of this programming data on the NAM Reprogramming Data Table provided in this text before implementing this procedure. Incorrect NAM entries can cause your cellular phone to operate improperly or not at all. The required data is: * System Identification (SID) Code (S-digits): Indicates youe home system Enter 0's into the left-most unsued positions. Provided by the system operator. * Cellular Phone Number (10 digits): Used in the same manner as a standard land-line phone. The mobile phone number and the Electric Serial Number are checked against each other by the cellular system each time a call is placed or recieved. Provided to you by the system operator. * Station Class Code (2 digits): This number is 06 or 14 for most personal or portable phones. Even though your phone has extended bandwith capabi Overload Class 5c * 06 Ready for step 6 6a * Curr. Group ID Factory set at 00 6b New Group ID XX New Group ID 6c * 07 Ready for step 7 7a * Current Sec. Code Factory set at 000000 7b New Security Code XXXXXX 7c * 08 Ready for step 8 8a * Current Unlock Code setting at 123 8b New Unlock Code XXX New Unlock Code 8c * 09 Ready for step 9 9a * Current Initial Factory Setting 123 0334 PAGING CHANNEL 9b New Initial XXXXXX New Initial Paging Channel Paging Channel 9c * 10 Ready for step 10 10a * Cur. Options Factory Setting 010100 10b New Options XXXXXX New Options 10c * 11 Ready for step 11 11a * Cur. Options Factory Set. 000 11b New Option XXX New Options 11c * 01 or 01 2 Ready for Review to program. or Second Phone Number ============================================================================ Now That conclude Part 2, Part 3 will the instructions for NAM reprogramming for all the phones I listed in part 1. If you have any questions or comments you can leave me mail on one of the following bbs's that I have listed below. THE RAVEN +=======+ Downloaded From P-80 International Information Systems 304-744-2253 d walk away. Remember after every trick to put the phone back together for another day. 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Check to make sure that the information programmed matches what you wrote in the NAM Programming Table. Make any required changes. 4.5 Storing the Information If you are programming a single phone number, press SND to store the programming information when you are satisfied that it is all correct. A two-digit step number (01-11) must appear in the display in order for you to store the data. Press * until one appears and then press SND. Your personal or portable cellular telephone is now ready for normal use, if you are programming a single phone number. 4.6 Programming the Second Telephone Number If 01 2 appears in the display after you have pressed SND to store the programming information for the first phone number, you are ready to repeat some or all of the ten steps, this time for a second phone number. The 01 indicates that you are ready to enter the System ID information (step l) and the 2 indicates that you are programming information for the second telephone number. The phone assigns the same security and lock codes (steps 7 and 8) for the second phone number and as so skips from step 6 to step 9. There is no step 11 when programming a second phone number. If 01 2 did not appear after programming the first phone number, and you wish to program a second number, either the second telephone option has not been selected (step 10) or your phone is not equipped for dual system operation. Once you have completed the programming steps, review the information by