In the 1970s, a phreaker whose moniker was “Cap’n
Crunch” discovered that a whistle found in Cap’n Crunch cereal boxes could
produce a tone with the frequency of 2600
Hz. This frequency was the one used by the American Telephone and Telegraph
company and other long-distance companies at the time to indicate that long-distance
lines were open. With this discovery, John Draper was able to engage in
party-line telephone calls with his friends—without paying for the service. He
would tell his friends about his special trick so that they, too, could place
long-distance calls without paying for them. Legend has it that one of JohnÂ’s
popular antics was to connect back to himself around the globe through seven
countries—just to hear his voice with a 20-second delay.
In 1971, after a journalist wrote an article about John DraperÂ’s
phreaking, he was imprisoned. While incarcerated, Draper was approached by
Mafia members wanting to utilize his phreaking skills to perform certain
prescribed duties for them, but Draper refused to assist the Mafia. For this
reason, he was severely beaten.
Upon his release from prison, Steve Wozniak, the developer of the Apple II computer, asked
John to stop phreaking in favor of computer programming. After engaging in a
few “modem-related’ incidents on the Apple II (the modems were much like
computerized blue boxes used in
phreaking), Draper wrote “Easy Writer,” the hugely successful word processing
program sold by IBM with its PCs.
Draper has attended hacker conferences, such as the H2K, and
he is still keenly interested in what goes on in the computer underground.
See Also:
Phreaker; Wozniak, Steve.
Baard. M. John Draper (a.k.a. CapÂ’n Crunch) Reinvents Himself. [Online, March
19, 2003.] CXO Media, Inc. Website. http://www.darwinmag.com/read/buzz/column
.html?ArticleID=712; Schell, B.H., Dodge, J.L., with S.S. Moutsatsos. The Hacking of America: WhoÂ’s Doing It, Why,
and How. Westport, CT: Quorum Books, 2002.