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 in early mid 1960s we teens in suburban Philadelphia, PA, USA, used the "beep line". We called our own phone number, got a busy signal (beep tone at regular intervals, every 3-4 seconds or so) and voila! It was an open chat line just as you describe. To converse, we spoke a single word in the silence between the beeps. Introductory phrase was "who [beep] is [beep] on [beep] the [beep] line?" Fun fun fun til Ma Bell shut it down! Lasted abt 6 months.
@patrascan @mike805 @leymoo this reminds me of the system my group of friends had (UK, circa 1990) - we used coded messages based on the number of rings. So for instance, you'll ring a friend, let the phone ring 3 times and hang up. They'd look at the code sheet and see that meant e.g. "do you want to come to my house?" Free communication! Of course there were other more sophisticated phone hacks around in those days too.
@richardnosworthy @mike805 @leymoo the beep line was different. Only teens used it. It was open chat for dozens of kids at a time. Mostly for flirting and chatting with strangers. The fun part was speaking in rhythm, one word at a time, in between the beep tones.
@patrascan @mike805 @leymoo that sounds way more fun!
@richardnosworthy @mike805 @leymoo beep line was total fun. Especially the flirting