Cordless phone can be picked up by scanners. Of course it does depend on model and make. For instance, V-Tech phone are usually the simplest to pick up since so many people have them and they use the same bands defaultly. The only part that can be tough about scanning cordless phones is when they make jumps to other channels (a lot of 800mhz + phones do this). You just have to keep on with it and find the new jumped channel which can usually be found with research on the phone type. Of course, things might be a bit diffrent in the UK. Cheers, Ash > > I was thinking today about phone switches, many of them are > > connected to > > the internal LAN. Many of them record all the keystrokes made by the > > individual phones (this is the important bit). If one could > > compromise a > > phone switch (or where ever it stores it's logs) then making > > free calls > > would be a minor issue. The prize in this situation could be > > who phoned > > what bank and if you can get the key presses then if that person has > > used the automated telephone banking service, you will have ( at a > > minimum): > > > > the account number > > sort code > > any verification number > > > > > > has any one done any work in this area ? > > > > I know many banks ( at least in the UK) will say not to use their > > service through cordless phones, maybe they should increase to include > > corporate phone switches. > > > > > > > > Q > > > > -- > > ##################### > > Quentyn Taylor > > Sysadmin - Fotango > > ##################### > > RFC 882 put the dot in .com.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Sat Jun 08 2002 - 17:05:40 PDT