Oh my goodness. I think this is the only place on the internet nerdy enough to help me locate this info.

My parents met on a what was effectively an unofficial chat room hosted by capital radio (London). In the 1980s, Capital Radio used to leave their switchboard open at night (unintentionally, they didn’t realise it was happening) and people would call the regular radio phone and just end up in what was effectively a giant group call for Londoners late at night. (I say Londoners due to the reach of the radio rather than the phone line itself, people wouldn’t know the number unless they listened in).

I understand they changed how the phone system worked later in the 80s and closed this loophole off.

So what I’m after is…
- the nature of the switchboard that allowed this to happen - edit now answered
- what change would have blocked this later on - edit now answered
- any historic info on the period it was left open, or personal accounts - still pending, trying other social media too for this

#radio #capitalradio #phreaking #VintagePhoning #1980s #retrochatroom

@leymoo There were similar things in the USA where a recorded message line would be left up without a recording and people could call that number and chat.

People were desperate for any kind of multiparty chat for decades before it was commonplace. Not sure why someone did not just provide one. It would not have cost that much.

@mike805 @leymoo this was that weird time between "we've got nothing" and "commercialize EVERYTHING"

This obviously was ripe for one of those 1-900 services in USA, but (thankfully) never happened

Someone could have easily provided local versions of these. Sure, "they" would have to be close to the telco, but at worst it'd be a flat rate. (Bear with me; I'm being kind to the same entity that implemented evil intra-LATA charges ;o)

@yakkoj @[email protected] The “1-900” as a chat room equivalent did actually happen in the uk later in the 80s. They’d be advertised on tv late at night!
@leymoo You've unlocked a memory of The Mary Whitehouse Experience rado show prank calling some sort of phone chat service, there were a couple of bored sounding people on it talking about their favourite kind of tea! Must have been early nineties.