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

This is, by far, the coolest thing I've heard all day. Thanks for sharing! I hope you find and share any info you find about this.

@401matthall There are so many parallels to my teen years on irc… I have been 🤯

My mother was doing this from about age 13-14 - she met my father at 17 or so (nowhere near the first person she met), they liked each other, had a few dates, became boyfriend/girlfriend, few years later I appeared. Turns out teens causing trouble is not just for modern social media. 😁

Apparently the max sizes of the groups tended to be 20-30 people at one go - so pretty niche, and I have no idea if the radio staff have any idea now this was going on.

@leymoo @401matthall the station probably had 20-30 incoming lines so that was the maximum number that could be on at once! People doing this kind of thing in the US were called phone phreaks, if that gives you a lead - I don't know if we had a different UK colloquialism?
@kitten_tech @401matthall I don’t know if us Brits had a different term but I do know as a student my next door neighbour’s son was a police investigator who worked on phone crimes (phreaking and scams) in the 80s - the new premium numbers in the late 80s meant lots of people worked out loopholes to make money - he talked about a bunch of scams which my now significantly older brain has lost to time, sadly.
@leymoo @401matthall I remember hearing that the US version of the lines where the recipient gets paid by the minute let the line owner set the rate, so somebody set it to the maximum the form allowed ($9999.99 a minute or similar), went to random offices with a package for Mr Madeupname, then when they said there wasn't anyone by that name here, asked if they could ring their office - and rang their premium rate number. Apparently it was hard to prosecute aa they'd asked permission...
@kitten_tech @leymoo @401matthall
A guy in England set up a premium rate number for himself, and used a payphone phreaking trick to call it for a few hours every night. The premium rate number was never advertised, and the only calls it ever got were from the same payphone. The payphone was very close to the guy's house. So of course he got caught.