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Wojciech Ziniewicz | wojciech....@gmail.com
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(Vo)IP spoofing has arrived? uuh....
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BOFH excuse #56:
Electricians made popcorn in the power supply
Every line has to have a valid callback number to display on caller id.
This is so telemarketers can't hide behind bogus numbers. U just got lucky
to be called by one of these people and have the call go over equipment that
could forward that number all the way to ur country.
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REMEMBER THE WORLD TRADE CENTER ---=< WTC 911 >=--
"...ne cede malis"
00000100
This sounds like a scam I think I heard about where they do that to get
you to call them back, racking up nice charges on your phone bill and
profits for them. Although that would be a toll number, not a toll-free
number...
Just a thought.
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Paul "TBBle" Hampson, MCSE
8th year CompSci/Asian Studies student, ANU
The Boss, Bubblesworth Pty Ltd (ABN: 51 095 284 361)
Paul.H...@Anu.edu.au
"No survivors? Then where do the stories come from I wonder?"
-- Capt. Jack Sparrow, "Pirates of the Caribbean"
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.1/au/
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Youp ,every line _should_ present a valid callback number but i have a
small voip network and tested such things just for fun. For example,
my cisco IP phone was "666" and when called my cellular it was "666"
presented too.
It all depends on configuration of PBX, whether it passes through the
"invalid" number or it does not.
note that the valid number is 0+Subscriber'sCountryNumber* , in the
other case, the PBX will present your number as "restricted" or
"private"
sorry for OT
*just translating it from Polish ;)