I have a weird VHS deck that pulls in other universes. Man, I love this CD though.
Xuebing Du
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Sweet Seals For You, Always
d e v o n
Not today Justin
Stranger Things
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@changa-husky
I have a weird VHS deck that pulls in other universes. Man, I love this CD though.
Going for a dip
Scheming huskion.
Trust in me...
Just enjoying posing around a waterfall.
I will bark at nothing now!
Script by ChatBotGPT.
I REGRET NOTHING!
Phreakers Part 4: VMB Drop Box, Rick Hunter
Back in the late 80s and early 90s people were using stolen voice mail boxes at various companies as drops for various hacking/phreaking info. I remember looking for access to the old X25 network and trading in network access on said X25 network was very much on peoples desires back then. This was before widespread email so people communicated as they could. Since most phone calls cost money outside of a few miles people would take over voice mail boxes at companies with toll free numbers to trade in accounts, long distance calling cards various interesting phone system oddities like bridge lines and other voice mail boxes you would hop to. That is how you stayed in the scene by calling these numbers a lot to keep in this underground voice phone network.
Here is an example of some of these voice mail drops from around early 1990.
The screen visuals are a video recording from a sysop side of a C64 BBS running a VERY modified version of CNet
Phreakers Part 3: VMB Drop Box, Various short drops (Plus some sid music)
Back in the late 80s and early 90s people were using stolen voice mail boxes at various companies as drops for various hacking/phreaking info. I remember looking for access to the old X25 network and trading in network access on said X25 network was very much on peoples desires back then. This was before widespread email so people communicated as they could. Since most phone calls cost money outside of a few miles people would take over voice mail boxes at companies with toll free numbers to trade in accounts, long distance calling cards various interesting phone system oddities like bridge lines and other voice mail boxes you would hop to. That is how you stayed in the scene by calling these numbers a lot to keep in this underground voice phone network.
Here is an example of some of these voice mail drops from around early 1990.
The screen visuals are a video recording from a sysop side of a C64 BBS running a VERY modified version of CNet.
The one time I got to talk to Douglas Adams back in 93.
Ok, I might need to rewind here. Man, This is just hard.
Pirate Boards: 1989
Phreakers Part 2: VMB Drop Box, Luke Skywalker
Back in the late 80s and early 90s people were using stolen voice mail boxes at various companies as drops for various hacking/phreaking info. I remember looking for access to the old X25 network and trading in network access on said X25 network was very much on peoples desires back then. This was before widespread email so people communicated as they could. Since most phone calls cost money outside of a few miles people would take over voice mail boxes at companies with toll free numbers to trade in accounts, long distance calling cards various interesting phone system oddities like bridge lines and other voice mail boxes you would hop to. That is how you stayed in the scene by calling these numbers a lot to keep in this underground voice phone network.
Here is an example of some of these voice mail drops from around early 1990.
The screen capture is from a sysop side of of a BBS that at the time was running the display though a VCR to capture chats.
Those were the days, When you could mail a letter to MIT and get free access to their Unix boxes at Project GNU.
Back in the late 80s and early 90s people were using stolen voice mail boxes at various companies as drops for various hacking/phreaking info. I remember looking for access to the old X25 network and trading in network access on said X25 network was very much on peoples desires back then. This was before widespread email so people communicated as they could. Since most phone calls cost money outside of a few miles people would take over voice mail boxes at companies with toll free numbers to trade in accounts, long distance calling cards various interesting phone system oddities like bridge lines and other voice mail boxes you would hop to. That is how you stayed in the scene by calling these numbers a lot to keep in this underground voice phone network.
Here is an example of some of these voice mail drops from around early 1990.