I Rang A Secret Government Numbers Station!

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  • Опубликовано: 18 май 2023
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    The Lincolnshire Poacher Numbers Station - Everything You Need To Know
    • The Lincolnshire Poach...
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Комментарии • 505

  • @johnn8223
    @johnn8223 Год назад +1323

    Next video: "How I used shortwave radio to make RUclips videos from prison after being arrested for espionage"

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. Год назад +151

      A shortwave radio crudely made from prison canteen forks and instant noodle flavour sachets, commonly referred to by inmates as a "gonk".

    • @giovafra61
      @giovafra61 Год назад +16

      AH AH AH AH AH

    • @4TheRecord
      @4TheRecord Год назад +30

      The AM bandit ;)

    • @RingwayManchester
      @RingwayManchester  Год назад +125

      Pinned as the best comment 😂👍🏻

    • @hopper131
      @hopper131 Год назад +33

      With a few pieces of electronics Ringway will have simple crystal radios up and running in his cell using the metal toilet bowl as a magnetic loop antenna.

  • @Equiluxe1
    @Equiluxe1 Год назад +260

    From 1979 to 2000 I lived right at the back of RAF Marham in Norfolk. One day a telephone engineer turned up ten minuets after I reported that the phone was not working from the nearest phone box, this was in 1983, The telephone engineer asked me where the telephone exchange was, something I thought was a bit odd so I asked him, he told me he was from London and that he was in the area to fix the RAF's phones so was called out for my phone as well. I did not think to much about this other than thinking it was great getting the phone fixed so quickly. Thing was after the phone got "Fixed" I started to get crossed lines mostly from Northern Ireland along with weird delays and echoes and on one scansion I got crossed with a phone line where numbers were being read out. This crossed line thing went on into the 80's when I told a phone engineer that I thought my phone was tapped and I reckoned that the MOD could not work out why I would want to live so close to the RAF base, the reason was it was cheap with a large barn I could use as an engineering workshop where the neighbours would not complain about the noise.

    • @wyrdscynce
      @wyrdscynce Год назад +39

      you know too much now, you have to come with us

    • @thepotatoincident3593
      @thepotatoincident3593 Год назад +13

      i'm not sure it was a tapped phone, you shouldn't be getting feedback like that or else people getting tapped would know.

    • @Equiluxe1
      @Equiluxe1 Год назад +33

      @@thepotatoincident3593 Something very strange was going on, the sudden fault with the engineer arriving before I had got back from the village phone box half a mile away. Always a Northern irish line I got crossed with when I live in Norfolk which is about as far fro Northern Ireland you can get in the UK and the fact that the BT engineer was from London and from the department that they refered to as the top floor by his own admission.

    • @NaoPb
      @NaoPb Год назад +10

      I would imagine that they'd use different lines for long distance and maybe they got some sort crosstalk by installing wires incorrectly?
      I don't know but it sounds strange how you would get numbers read out and echos.

    • @kersal2
      @kersal2 Год назад +6

      ​@@Equiluxe1 great story, thanks for sharing

  • @relwalretep
    @relwalretep Год назад +462

    One thing to note, dialling the phone number would enable a local carrier within the target country to identify a spy. As secure methods of communications go, this is about the worst one can use.

    • @zzzztj
      @zzzztj Год назад +49

      exactly... Everything on the Telecoms network is registered, it's called the billing system.

    • @bryngerard4334
      @bryngerard4334 Год назад +55

      @@zzzztj Yes, it has been used successfuly by Russia in the current conflict. They have loitering drones that are a GSM cell. These trick GSM devices into connecting to them. Once this is achieved all of the billing and routing data is provided. Then they poll the device to ask for a list of known cells and signal strengths. This is then used to geolocate the device. Many of the mercenaries engaged in the conflict keep their phone on to upload to TikTok etc. This has cost them many lives.
      I worked on a version of that 20 years back for a German mobile carrier. It was used for location based services.
      If you are tracing a voip call, then it is simple IP routing analysis that will reveal your location.

    • @MartusTube
      @MartusTube Год назад +31

      Unless you're using a payphone, a stolen cell phone, a landline at a bar, etc. etc...

    • @alec4672
      @alec4672 Год назад +25

      You wouldn't call in on your cell phone 😂😂💀 use a landline at a gas station, use a WiFi VoIP phone on a public WiFi network, among hundreds of other ways to access the phone system.

    • @bryngerard4334
      @bryngerard4334 Год назад +10

      @@alec4672 You still need an account with a carrier to use a VOIP phone. You need access to a Trunk to call a number on the PSTN.

  • @gorflunk
    @gorflunk Год назад +4

    That string of numbers matches the combination for the lock on my luggage!

  • @pdrg
    @pdrg Год назад +153

    Dialing a number for this would be the opposite of clandestine, and easily expose an entire network in a heartbeat. The whole point of number stations is that they are broadcast, and that it seriously doesn't matter if a million people hear it.

    • @hanktorrance6855
      @hanktorrance6855 Год назад +5

      As is proven by all the people that listen for them to this day, even with no hope of ever knowing the what and why of it all! you cant even go by the language or the accent, as those are equally likely to be a feint. it would be a poor secret agent indeed who was not fluent in at least a few languages, particularly those of both allied and rival nations alike. and for corporate espionage and drug cartels who can likewise leverage this sort of information transfer, the language tells you little if anything about the sender....

    • @ptrekboxbreaks5198
      @ptrekboxbreaks5198 Год назад +1

      Correct because the only ppl supposed to know the codes to crack the numbers are the ones sending and receiving...but I'm sure ppl figure it out sometimes

  • @danielayers
    @danielayers Год назад +166

    I used to live near an SAS base (in Auckland, NZ). One night there was a loud bang, which was worrying. So I phoned them and asked "Was that you?" and the person on the other end of the phone responded "Wasn't me, and I'm the only one here.". True! :)

    • @H.EL-Othemany
      @H.EL-Othemany Год назад +5

      Yes. So true

    • @enja001
      @enja001 Год назад +16

      ​@@H.EL-Othemanythe sas base isn't secret, and it does indeed have an office number listed online

    • @ptrekboxbreaks5198
      @ptrekboxbreaks5198 Год назад

      Yea you just phoned the air force base? Lol

    • @enja001
      @enja001 Год назад +8

      @@ptrekboxbreaks5198 you literally can just ring up the local base, they'll give the info you need

    • @bombaymolotov
      @bombaymolotov 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah, while working at a small airfield in Norfolk we heard a big explosion up the road from an airbase. Called the reception desk to see if the RAF were missing something, only to be told they were about to call us and ask the same thing.
      We literally got their phone number from Google. It isn't like you'd be talking to MI5's top brass, it'll be just some bloke at the reception desk

  • @bryngerard4334
    @bryngerard4334 Год назад +136

    As a military radio operator I used various forms of encryption. To be kept simple they were a series of cards that had a grid with a letter, word or number in each position. You were issued a key that would be written onto (using a china graph pencil) two plastic bars that gave you the Eastings/Northings. Then you would encode/decode messages using that. So it would go EY GL AP etc. and that would correspond to the grid reference for the character or word. Each card also had a number and they would be changed regularly and you would know which card to use based upon an agreed rotation. The ones used in training were never the ones used for real operations. New cards (never before seen) would be issued prior to deployment and then not used again after. Cards could be lost or compromised by capture and so they had a use by date or an order not to use the card set would be given.
    Perhaps these number stations were issuing the latest key to be used. Doesn't sound so secure but it was how battlefield encryption was dealt with back then. There could also have been an agreed offset that you would apply so if they said A they meant Z, who knows.

    • @KayleeVRC
      @KayleeVRC Год назад +12

      Damn that's super fascinating. I love how complicated military grade encryption is, respect to the people who invented the method

    • @SportyMabamba
      @SportyMabamba Год назад +18

      Sounds like a variation of the one-time pad technique. Very cool!

    • @PaxTemplar
      @PaxTemplar Год назад +3

      @Bryn Gerard.. BATCO?

    • @bryngerard4334
      @bryngerard4334 Год назад +8

      @@PaxTemplar That was introduced in the 80's. The version I used was called SLIDEX if I recall correctly. We also had a even more simplified version that was used in N. Ireland which I think was called CODEX which may have been the forerunner of BATCO but I have never used BATCO so I am unsure.
      It is so long ago that I may not be entirely accurate ;)

    • @bryngerard4334
      @bryngerard4334 Год назад +5

      @@PaxTemplar I see that it was introduced along the Clansman range of equipment. I used the old (very heavy) Larkspur range. You had to be fit to run miles carrying a A41 with a spare battery :)

  • @TheSlinq
    @TheSlinq Год назад +242

    Many years ago I used to do "war dialling". This is where you scan a whole range of 0800 numbers looking for "interesting" things.
    I'm fairly sure some of the things I found were used for covert communications of one form or another.
    Since most interactive phone systems work by responding to DTMF tones (and I would always try DTMF tones with any interesting things I found).
    I suspect all a secret service would have to do is change the actual frequencies of DTMF they use, and their system could easily be hidden behind something apparently innocuous like the customer support line for a tech product.
    I won't go into any further detail for reasons that may or may not be obvious, but yeah, there definitely used to be some interesting things around on the phone network.

    • @themagus5906
      @themagus5906 Год назад +48

      Phone Phreaks of the world unite!!

    • @iana6713
      @iana6713 Год назад +8

      Now isn't that something!

    • @davidbalfour3390
      @davidbalfour3390 Год назад +44

      I remember getting through to a 0800 number with a pattern on it. A very polite woman answered but point blank refused to say who I had connected to. Seemed odd. I forget the number.

    • @xXRedTheDragonXx
      @xXRedTheDragonXx Год назад +33

      There are often a lot of secret back doors in company 800 numbers, but they're usually all innocuous. I used to work for a company where you could call into any conference room by just calling the regular customer service line and then entering a specific code on the keypad. The same thing was also popular for multi-person calls in the late 2000s, and a lot of companies had a dedicated conference number that you could call, enter a specific code, and then be placed into a room in which multiple people could call in and join the room. These types of systems are usually for business travelers so that they don't miss important board meetings, and putting it behind an 800 number allows them to call in for free.

    • @TheSlinq
      @TheSlinq Год назад +29

      @@xXRedTheDragonXx Yep these were common - standard practice when wardialling is always to try DTMF tones at the beginning of the call during any hold music etc.
      Often you can skip a company's automated system by repeatedly hitting #, or 0 - this was standard on some old Meridian systems - enough incorrect inputs detected would forward you directly to a real person.
      Conf systems were used very regularly by us back in the day. The holy grail being a conf system with 0800 dialin for the UK as well as 1800 dialin for the US. Very useful when you have a lot of friends in the US who you would like to talk to for hours.
      I imagine a true covert operations would not use standard DTMF tones to activate their hidden system.
      There were a couple of numbers I found back in the day that had bursts of what sounded like white noise right at the beginning of the call when someone answered.
      (Being a phreaker, we'd always be looking out for tones on pickup, as these were often characteristic of the older exchanges which were hackable with a "blue box").
      These ones with white noise on pickup though.. I was convinced that white noise was some form of encrypted databurst - I even digitized it and looked for various tell-tale signs, like checksum bits and suchlike. Couldn't find anything - but then a well encrypted message would be indistinguishable from white noise, to someone not knowing the key (or decoding algorithm)

  • @bobroberts2371
    @bobroberts2371 Год назад +27

    "Hello?"
    "This is the United States calling. Are we reaching..."
    *Phone clicks*
    "See, he keeps hanging up, and it's a man answering."

    • @lordtherapeutics
      @lordtherapeutics Год назад +2

      Wanna take a baaath?

    • @oddbl00d
      @oddbl00d Год назад

      That's immediately what I thought of when I heard the double rings!

    • @jhonsiders6077
      @jhonsiders6077 Год назад +3

      Is their anyone out there ?

    • @crazytowerz3113
      @crazytowerz3113 Год назад

      brooooo are you my twin or something

    • @crazytowerz3113
      @crazytowerz3113 Год назад

      WE HAVE THE SAME PFP AND SIMILAR USERNAME XD

  • @212MPH
    @212MPH Год назад +34

    I installed some of these lines back in the mid 80s for a government agency, you are quite correct, the non director area code of Aldershot or any other area code does not end up where you think they will.

  • @elesjuan
    @elesjuan Год назад +18

    Dang you..... Ever since your first video featuring Lincolnshire Poacher, that little song has been randomly appearing in my head almost weekly. Found myself walking down the hall in the basement of my office building today whistling the song.

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan Год назад +5

      ‘A finger of fudge is just enough to give the kids a treat’

    • @unlokia
      @unlokia Год назад +2

      Walk past the wrong chap whistling that, and forever you’ll hear two sets of footsteps 😂

  • @bobroberts2371
    @bobroberts2371 Год назад +46

    In the USA, elevators are required to have a emergency phone that can make / receive calls. Poking around on the keys will net a message " Elevator call " then the elevator number followed by a couple of choices to listen in / talk to occupants. In this particular instance, it was a car dealer and judging by the background noise / time of day, it was an elevator in the service department

    • @crazytowerz3113
      @crazytowerz3113 Год назад +2

      :O

    • @1993MAZDAMIATA
      @1993MAZDAMIATA Год назад +1

      @@crazytowerz3113 what

    • @crazytowerz3113
      @crazytowerz3113 Год назад +1

      @@1993MAZDAMIATA he has a similar pfp and username as me XD

    • @1993MAZDAMIATA
      @1993MAZDAMIATA Год назад

      @@crazytowerz3113 I know

    • @mrrandomperson3106
      @mrrandomperson3106 11 месяцев назад +2

      They exist in the UK as well. I remember being in one lift where someone rang the emergency phone. They said they were running a survey of emergency phones. Very bizarre!

  • @basshead2003
    @basshead2003 Год назад +23

    Interesting video. Kind of reminds me of the 1-800-GOLF-TIPS mystery. Before it was solved, a few people had thought that it might have been a modern iteration of a numbers station. That’s what actually got me interested in numbers stations to begin with and how I discovered this channel.

  • @Technaudio
    @Technaudio Год назад +13

    I've been using the sound of dial up internet as my voicemail greeting for years - because I don't want people to leave a message, it works. Nobody has ever left a message. I might change it to this, just for fun.

  • @OxfordShortwaveLog
    @OxfordShortwaveLog Год назад +9

    Really enjoyed this one Lewis - compelling narrative and again, very professionally done! 73

  • @sparkidee
    @sparkidee Год назад

    From time to time your videos pop up and they are always something I learn from! Again this is something I wasn't aware of and was interesting to watch. Nice one :) loved the vid

  • @nick_yeah
    @nick_yeah Год назад +153

    Its almost certainly a hoax; there are many other, safer, two-way communication facilities available than a phone line these days. It makes sense as a one-way radio broadcast but not as a telephone number; the intro melody would have taken up valuable time and would serve no purpose on a phone call given it was used to alert to the beginning of the broadcast which was unnecessary on a VoIP call. And calling a number would leave a trace.

    • @Joe-og6br
      @Joe-og6br Год назад +23

      I was a hoax. People linked it to a guy who was known to be into this type of thing.

    • @jessec4677
      @jessec4677 Год назад +4

      @@Joe-og6br It took me a second to realize the typo... I thought you weren't the real Joe for a sec..🤣

    • @mkvenner2
      @mkvenner2 Год назад +5

      It’s now a hoax or it’s a distraction for open source intelligence hobbyists at the very least. But it was definitely used during the Cold War.

  • @daveys
    @daveys Год назад +9

    The whole point of a shortwave numbers station is to send encoded information anonymously. No-one listening in can tell who is trying to receive it. Calling a phone number doesn’t achieve that.

  • @hanktorrance6855
    @hanktorrance6855 Год назад +6

    Phone numbers would work nearly as well, the big flaw being that any one tracing calls of as suspected agent would show repeated dialings. whereas a shortwave radio remains a readily available means of transferring information in an unbreakable format

    • @radioweebdx7680
      @radioweebdx7680 Год назад +3

      That may be true, but they could have easily used a single use SIM card in a mobile phone and then threw away the SIM after one use.

  • @igotes
    @igotes Год назад +53

    It totally sounded like a recording from the radio to me. A novelty. If the spooks had to access it via a telephone network it would surely "blow their cover", and limits their options to receive it off-grid.

    • @Hansen710
      @Hansen710 Год назад +2

      its the local bingo club.
      or a game of battleships before the age of the internet

    • @erichjackson6994
      @erichjackson6994 Год назад +1

      Yes the original broadcast always had an accented number on the last digit of the 5 figure group.

    • @johnwetzel6200
      @johnwetzel6200 Год назад

      Maybe they have a sense of humor

  • @gavinnorthants
    @gavinnorthants Год назад +20

    Personally, I think the phone line was a hoax. As you said, having a phone number would mean foreign intelligence could easily look through phone records searching for potential spies in their country. While a radio signal would be a lot harder to police and monitor, as there could be no logging of who had listened to it.
    As well I used to cycle past these transmitters on a public footpath. Between Buckingham and Gawcott, as had some friends from school that lived in Gawcott. They started to be taken down in about 1995.

  • @DavidHarberRadio
    @DavidHarberRadio Год назад

    Superb work once again. Thank you.

  • @lostjackets4006
    @lostjackets4006 Год назад +5

    Your reference to voice inflections always reminds me that the guy who used to read the English football scores for the BBC World Service also used an inflection if the away team s cored more goals than the home team.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 11 месяцев назад +3

      I don’t know if it was the same guy but I always noticed the inflections too on my dad’s car radio. “Worcester nil Norwich (raised) three, Manchester City one Bolton Wanderers (lowered) nil.”

  • @stuartvaughan8599
    @stuartvaughan8599 Год назад +2

    Very interesting Lewis. Your videos get better and better 👏👏

  • @ukar69
    @ukar69 Год назад +5

    I was in the local shop the other day and there was Lincolnshire Poacher cheese on sale. I found myself humming the tune when I walked out!

  • @gamlemann53
    @gamlemann53 Год назад +4

    Thank's for this video Lewis! Very good as usual! 🙂

  • @steveng5503
    @steveng5503 Год назад +1

    Fascinating. You’ve done a great job of sorting through a can of worms here. Well done. ✌🏻👍🏻🇬🇧

  • @PenryMMJ
    @PenryMMJ Год назад +5

    I grew up in Lincolnshire. Some people don't go poaching (but not many).

  • @michaeltaylor8835
    @michaeltaylor8835 Год назад

    I love your exposure of these snoopers

  • @paulwilliams2663
    @paulwilliams2663 Год назад +2

    Brilliant content, cheers Lewis and very professionally done.

  • @thisandthat871
    @thisandthat871 Год назад

    WOW that's amazing fantastic research Lewis 👍

  • @stepheneyles2198
    @stepheneyles2198 Год назад +8

    This was much better than any Agatha Christie novel!!
    Thanks for sharing this story; we'll probably never know the truth, but it's fun to think about while lying in the bath or waiting for paint to dry!

  • @dickbrocke
    @dickbrocke Год назад +10

    This appears to be well up on the list of one of the most notable "listen out, I'm a spy" pranks played over the last decade or two. Thanks for presenting it, Lewis.
    If the Pinewood Studios equivalent "GCHQ" counterparts of Johnny English were to have gotten their hands on this, they'd have, without a doubt, exploited and fully embraced both the facility and the facilitation.
    I tip my hat to whomever devised this one 😁

  • @halfbakedproductions7887
    @halfbakedproductions7887 Год назад +6

    It's likely a prank. The Aldershot number is probably VOIP deliebrately chosen to look authentic because of Aldershot's military links.

  • @Rob2
    @Rob2 Год назад +4

    Most likely a practical joke from someone working at that VoIP company. Those VoIP exchanges have elaborate programming environments to setup such numbers, and combined with a recording of the intro music and the chime this can be made in a couple of minutes.
    As you correctly noted, it does not sound at all like the real Lincolnshire Poacher.

  • @COASTALWAVESWIRES
    @COASTALWAVESWIRES Год назад

    That was awesome!

  • @tomfenn7149
    @tomfenn7149 Год назад +5

    Best video yet. FWIW, I own an original copy of The Conet Project which I purchased from new when it was released. I also happen to know a chap who is an explosives expert, has a patent on a bomb defusing application (which was used by the military in Syria and Iraq), and is obsessed with codes and puzzles. But most interestingly he once went under the pseudonym as 'The Colonel' (not 'Kernel'). Same pronunciation, different spelling. He would do something like this as a bit of fun.

  • @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE
    @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE Год назад +45

    I'm smiling at the thought of a hoaxer effectively writing off a phone number, I hope it wasn't important to them. 🤣 A great video as always!

  • @sr3d-microphones
    @sr3d-microphones Год назад

    Someone hacked my computer and uploaded the Lincolnshire poacher radio broadcast (called number stations or something) to it in a webcam folder I used to use - I have no idea how they did it but it was a really enjoyable listen!!!

  • @anthonyfranz8317
    @anthonyfranz8317 Год назад

    Outstanding video!

  • @scottthomas3792
    @scottthomas3792 11 месяцев назад

    In high school, we lived in a house wired with aluminum. It was fairly common in the '70s. You had to use outlets and switches meant for aluminum wire, buff the stripped wire ro a shine, and use an antioxidant compound. Hardware Store Guy gave 14 year old me detailed instructions on dealing with aluminum wire when I went to get a couple new switches...
    If you used outlets meant for copper with aluminum wire, and plugged something in with a high current draw, fire is a real possibility....

  • @bnsfwoodvalleysubdivision9157
    @bnsfwoodvalleysubdivision9157 Год назад

    I'm American and when just hear that chime it gives me the chills

  • @lisabowenhospital
    @lisabowenhospital Год назад +1

    Unlike a radio broadcast recorded ph numbers can be rung back. The music before hand could be so an agent can make sure they have pen and paper. Also to tune one's ears into the broadcast.

  • @stuartcastle2814
    @stuartcastle2814 Год назад +6

    I would have thought if they have a phone number for spies to get messages from, it would appear to be a perfectly normal phone number until the caller performed some predetermined action, like dialling a specific code. Even that’s not great though. The action could be recorded or logged and replayed later.

  • @drcyb3r
    @drcyb3r Год назад +19

    Would be interesting to see what number that text message was actually sent from. Employees of phone companies can theoretically see the log of any customer. Often also the numbers that are hidden for the user are listed there. I think it would be the same for numbers that are fake, as the phone companies would need to have the correct caller number to calculate the due payments.

    • @Roads_of_Europe
      @Roads_of_Europe Год назад +3

      Payment control happens true line id and not by phone numbers. I installed more then a few phone systems myself, the number you see when someone calls you, can be changed to anything, including text as needed. Or nothing at all. Even with text messages. And that possibility was there already as far back as in the late 80's when digital phone lines became available. In Europe it became widely used early 90's. However business wise late 90's with bulk number blocks.

    • @streaky81
      @streaky81 Год назад

      SS7 is grossly insecure to even total amateurs. To say that governments, particularly well-equipped western governments, have absolute carte blanche over it is a gross understatement. There will be no data, there will be no log. It is broken, if it were any other system it would have been abandoned decades ago - but governments like that sort of access and telcos don't have the balls to challenge them, so it is going nowhere.

  • @CaptainCalculus
    @CaptainCalculus Год назад

    You are correct--this is a wag using an answer service. The voice inflection is for English native speakers--it's very hard for east europeans to mimic the friendly last consonant

  • @MrRW1980
    @MrRW1980 Год назад +6

    well telephone cards for public teleffons where anonymus .. these prepaid cards for public telefons where available everyone.... i also knew a undercover agent in germany that the " rote armee fraktion " traavelled 100 of km by night.. made then a 3 sec call at the public railway station and the moved on with another train .... thema telefon still many things to exploore ... excellent video

  • @jmr
    @jmr Год назад +47

    Makes me wonder about strange things I've heard when "accidentally" dialing wrong numbers as a kid. I've heard things that didn't sound like a fax or a modem. None quite like that though. Maybe that one was someone having a bit of fun.

    • @DGTelevsionNetwork
      @DGTelevsionNetwork Год назад +7

      Probably was an rtty service or some kind of switchboard diagnostic number..

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Год назад +6

      I've gotten robo telemarketer/scam calls and often I just mute my phone and listen to waste their time. Sometimes in the background you can hear weird machinery/computer noises. I've often wondered what that was.

    • @brucekives2194
      @brucekives2194 Год назад +8

      @@RCAvhstape VOIP calls have some weird background noises that are caused by low digitization rates. They sound really unrecognizable if you increase the volume.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Год назад

      @@brucekives2194 So it's like the digital version of crosstalk?

  • @PaperworkNinja
    @PaperworkNinja Год назад +12

    Are we sure this isn't the guys from Boards of Canada having a laugh as part of an album release?

  • @citizenphaid1880
    @citizenphaid1880 Год назад

    I remember as a boy in the 90s dialling a number and getting these numbers so it’s been going a lot longer on the telephony system.

  • @four_makers
    @four_makers Год назад +3

    Pretty certain this will have been setup as part of an interactive puzzle, such as a Geocache.

    • @m1geo
      @m1geo Год назад

      Yeah. Or like a real world escape room puzzle kind of thing.

  • @GlasgowGallus
    @GlasgowGallus Год назад +6

    Ah Jesus Lewis mate, perfect Friday night fare this... Sitting in me shed out back, cuppa tea in my manky paw, got the Baofeng and the Yaesu airband on scan, and managing to pull in all sorts... Not sat my Ham yet, so not transmitting, but the bits I pick up, and the aircraft chatter on a lovely night like this reminds me why I do this... See what you've started lad? Eh? 🤣🤣 Thanks again for all your work Lewis, got me hooked mate 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿✊

  • @DJ-Drakken
    @DJ-Drakken 4 месяца назад

    5:29 Changes like this happen when a SECRET numbers stations gets discovered, which is why they gave the message for a backup contact location.

  • @rjy8960
    @rjy8960 Год назад +10

    How about a follow-up "I Rang a Doctors Surgery And Got An Appointment" - Just as fanciful :)
    Great video, Lewis! Thanks!

  • @davidsradioroom9678
    @davidsradioroom9678 Год назад +2

    I didn't do it. I swear! Exciting video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @shaungagg8690
    @shaungagg8690 Год назад +1

    Just called it, no ringtone, call ended.

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Год назад

    Great video...👍

  • @banjax66
    @banjax66 Год назад +1

    That tune reminds me of the TV advert for Cadbury's Fudge..
    "A finger of Fudge is just enough to give the kids a treat" Remember it?

    • @paulkeith9680
      @paulkeith9680 Год назад +1

      A finger of fudge is just enough to hide a message in.....

  • @michaeltaylor8835
    @michaeltaylor8835 Год назад

    Great stories Lewis

  • @ThomasHaneyy
    @ThomasHaneyy Месяц назад +1

    *plays liconlin tune on phone*
    my brain: *Spinning heavy*

  • @Cam.Klingon
    @Cam.Klingon Год назад +2

    Have you considered war dialing to try to find other numbers? I would think it would be pretty easy to write a program to find the numbers

  • @btarg1
    @btarg1 Год назад

    That first phone call reminded me of that one CSGO ARG easter egg - very unsettling!

  • @morestupidforms
    @morestupidforms Год назад

    I tuned into what I thought was some secret listening post, turned out it was a test broadcast for classic FM.

  • @radscot
    @radscot Год назад +7

    Likely a great hoax, but if not (and if I was the person in charge of setting it up) then I'd definitely have used a recording of the tune - and one that was recorded at the end a fading HF radio path to make it sound like the original would have sounded, out 'in the field' - just to put a brief smile on the faces of the field officers who needed to access it! 🙂

  • @Povilaz
    @Povilaz Год назад

    Very interesting!

  • @LiamHicken
    @LiamHicken 10 месяцев назад

    Somewhere, in a base or control room.
    Is a phone plugged in to the wall that keeps ringing.
    With people asking ‘what’s that phone ringing for again?’
    ‘No idea, it’s always been doing that’

  • @Mishima505
    @Mishima505 Год назад +1

    Some agents must have run up a huge phone bill calling that number.

  • @al3k
    @al3k Год назад

    Fun stuff! :)

  • @DonzLockz
    @DonzLockz Год назад

    Very interesting info again. I think you're gonna need some private security.😮

  • @themossad
    @themossad Год назад +1

    When I was a kid in Northern Israel I used to listen to short wave radio, trying to catch some music and sometimes I would get this and other number stations. I had no idea what they were and they scared the life out of me.

    • @KGBSpyGeorgeCostanza
      @KGBSpyGeorgeCostanza 11 месяцев назад

      I'm guessing you still out in the field Mossad?

    • @themossad
      @themossad 11 месяцев назад

      @@KGBSpyGeorgeCostanza It never stops

    • @KGBSpyGeorgeCostanza
      @KGBSpyGeorgeCostanza 11 месяцев назад

      @@themossad .....I thought you retired after the cold war ended, what's your base of operations? Military or something with surveillance and counterintelligence?

    • @themossad
      @themossad 11 месяцев назад

      @@KGBSpyGeorgeCostanza Lots of work in Iran these days.

    • @KGBSpyGeorgeCostanza
      @KGBSpyGeorgeCostanza 11 месяцев назад

      @@themossad ....I'll try to be friendly and not call the Iranian Intelligence

  • @stratojet94
    @stratojet94 Год назад

    I did not know this was still around, I used to call this number in the past

  • @me-cq7wv
    @me-cq7wv Год назад

    You know your radio stuff sir

  • @hakology
    @hakology Год назад

    definitely on a list.

  • @t4om154
    @t4om154 Год назад

    When I leave work at 1AM (I work a strange shift I know lol). I'm able to pick up a Spanish station on AM in my car, I can't remember the frequency but still, it's interesting that I'm able to receive it from Spain

  • @mgsp5871
    @mgsp5871 Год назад +1

    this would be a nice ringtone for SW-fans

  • @PaxTemplar
    @PaxTemplar Год назад

    Aldershot is a GARRISON town not just home to "a barracks". It has multiple Lines , each of which contain multiple barracks

  • @gir489returns2
    @gir489returns2 Год назад +1

    I remember hearing about the Lincolnshire Poacher number, wasn't it run by Simon Mason?

  • @AragonDubs
    @AragonDubs 8 месяцев назад

    Bravo 👏👏👏👏👏

  • @IndependentNewsMedia
    @IndependentNewsMedia Год назад

    Interesting video 👍

  • @vk3hau
    @vk3hau Год назад

    Thats the first thing I noticed, the phone call had radio static on the music.

  • @alexander_adnan
    @alexander_adnan Год назад

    You crazy 😂😂😂😂 .. no seriously dude… even I would be scared doing it.

  • @michaelmacleod
    @michaelmacleod Год назад

    I bet the Poacher makes the calls! reversing the charges ofcourse! right before the drone strikes the receiver of Poachers call :-D

  • @erikmutthersbough6508
    @erikmutthersbough6508 Год назад +3

    I would be curious to know if the number strings keep changing or stay the same on the phone recording. It would also be interesting to see if the number strings were copied off a known recording of the Lincolnshire Poacher. Cheers Lewis

    • @RWBHere
      @RWBHere 8 месяцев назад

      Heh! Lewis made it clear that the strings were not in the same format as the broadcast ones.

  • @simonmason8582
    @simonmason8582 Год назад +2

    I now eat the LP cheese here in Lincolnshire.

  • @VicodinElmo
    @VicodinElmo Год назад

    Still convinced my washing machine plays this song at the end of a cycle

  • @PsRohrbaugh
    @PsRohrbaugh Год назад +12

    As an American, I've always found the UK ring tone to be exotic and interesting. Do you have a similar feeling the other way, or is ours boring and simple?

    • @1993MAZDAMIATA
      @1993MAZDAMIATA Год назад

      no

    • @daddy65
      @daddy65 Год назад +5

      There is something about the US ringtone I've always liked, the British one is boring to a Brit. It was more fun years ago when you could work out what type of exchange you were calling into by the pitch and intervals of the ringtone

    • @ohenekojo2561
      @ohenekojo2561 Год назад

      No

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 11 месяцев назад

      The specific tone heard on the line, no, the US’s is a more boring beep.
      However the one long tone rather than two short tones sounds nicer on mechanical bells imo. But on electrical/electronic phone buzzers I prefer our double beep.
      What’s kind of funny is nowadays a lot of in-office VOIP systems default to the American tone on the line, so UK peeps are getting more and more accustomed to hearing it - though to us it means “I’m being transferred… again 😠”!

    • @Jazzjasey
      @Jazzjasey 5 месяцев назад

      Fayyy

  • @DGTelevsionNetwork
    @DGTelevsionNetwork Год назад +1

    This sounds like so many other "number station" phone hoaxes. The biggest one I can remember was OTP22 from recent memory.

  • @imark7777777
    @imark7777777 Год назад

    Having an access code with DTMF would fail plausible deniability of dialing a wrong number by accident and enjoying the pretty music.

  • @jaredkelly930
    @jaredkelly930 9 месяцев назад

    You got Rick Rolled by a numbers station.

  • @Bluelagoonstudios
    @Bluelagoonstudios 8 месяцев назад

    Hi Lewis, do you have a recording from the poacher with a full string, those 45 minutes? I want to try to get a recording cleaned up from noise. I have some plugins in my DAW that could do the trick?

  • @jonathankleinow2073
    @jonathankleinow2073 Год назад +1

    Anyone recognize that doorbell-like tone they added to the recording? I'm guessing the hoaxer had to pull it from something else. Maybe for more authenticity as a numbers station, they should have used the Windows XP shut down sound at the end, like the Cubans.

  • @jameswalker199
    @jameswalker199 Год назад +2

    Nowadays, if a phone line is used at all, the number of who's calling could be used as some sort of authentication. Fred Bloggs' call just goes through to a generic voicemail or message that the number is not in use, but James Bond's call initiates playback of the encrypted message. This, of course means that only certain phones can call the number, so spies are stuffed if that phone is lost, destroyed, or captured, but it means you aren't sending an authentication code down the line that could be eavesdroped upon - even if you use a time based one time code (think 2FA authenticator apps) dialing DTMF codes is easier to pick up automatically as unusual, but voice traffic is what a phone is used for. Even an automatic voice isn't easy to detect automatically as robocalls are a thing, so anyone wanting to find a spy phoning home would need to listen to all phone calls and actually parse what is being said to have any hope of finding something. Pair that all with encryption methods that encrypt your English language message as more English language words (or any other language for that matter) and you need to have a system capable of answering "does this text make grammatical sense" to find a spy.

    • @jameswalker199
      @jameswalker199 Год назад

      Profanity-PGP is the encryption method I'm talking about, just replace the wordlist of swears with some more mundane words from your chosen language

    • @jameswalker199
      @jameswalker199 Год назад

      Oh, and it goes without saying that this is all in my crypto-nerd fantasy. Calling a number outside the country a spy is in would raise alarm bells, calling a number inside the county probably wouldn't, but its still tracked for billing.
      And if you want to try it at home, don't make your encryption stronger than your kneecaps, because they'll pick one to break.

  • @Republic4ever714
    @Republic4ever714 Год назад

    The Lincolnshire poacher aah yes I knew I heard that ditty before.

  • @JohnSmith-xd8do
    @JohnSmith-xd8do 11 месяцев назад

    When you call a secret number in the military they answer the phone with the last four digits, example, "3422" I had a TS-SCI clearance, the only juicy secrets are Nuke stuff

  • @_____7704
    @_____7704 Год назад

    Time to do a heap of videos on Phreaking!

  • @Unknown_Ooh
    @Unknown_Ooh 11 месяцев назад

    I deciphered the codes with my one time pad and here's what I got: "Hello we have been trying to reach you about your cars extended warranty. Please give us a ring back with the codeword: Warranty. Thank you."

  • @leetucker9938
    @leetucker9938 Год назад +1

    I'm having nightmares about these weird number stations

  • @mtty1988
    @mtty1988 Год назад

    A number station could be used as a telephone number. maybe having the uplift at end is so know it’s end of the group and not needed on phone. They maybe lots a random location obscure building that are used by the government and the fact it’s not publicised or any major security may make it safer for its self and if London is ever out. I can still see why they have numbers but a phone number as if you found it rather than ringing you could hack it. Witch is a topical thing this week showing how easy it is to hack is the tabloids can do it then anyone can.
    The text could be send from a number and when reply not there.
    What I don’t get is if it was real would it not keep broadcasting but using the numbers to say contact this number instead. Then again if spies heard it and realised it was the same numbers they may get suspiciouS but then again remember the imitation game if they got part or all the code and found the new number they maybe be able to decipher it all.
    I think espionage and that now is more on a normal life scale not the big secret spy stuff like bond so who knows really

  • @StoneXJK
    @StoneXJK 11 месяцев назад

    Queen Elizabeth’s channel
    “Random guy rings secret numbers station”

  • @merseyviking
    @merseyviking Год назад +4

    Of course, MI6 would *want* us to think it was a hoax... :) But my money is on it being an actual hoax that got too much attention for the level of effort that was put into it.