User Controls
Can you spoof your cell phone #
-
2017-10-09 at 3:07 PM UTCIs it possible to call someone from your phone like a voip . a cell phone so you can do it mobily?
I get weird numbers on Caller ID but it sounds like the person is outside.. different areas. yet the phone number comes in with weird fucking phone numbers.. sometimes 111111111 or some gay shit. I don't answer but they leave interesting messages
if so.. How is it done. I may want to try it as a trick on someone. not nefarious mind you -
2017-10-09 at 3:19 PM UTCAFAIK, no such thing is possible from your phone directly. It's really easy from your PC. Maybe you can use remote desktop to call from your PC, through your phone.
-
2017-10-09 at 3:35 PM UTC
-
2017-10-09 at 3:37 PM UTCGet a burner phone and Google Voice https://voice.google.com/u/0/about i think you should be able to spoof a number that way although i am not familiar with the particulairs. Google Voice just takes the call on their infrastructure and forwards it to your phone and vice versa. There are some other online resources that will let you spoof any phone number in order to send text messages and such. Some vendors offer subscription services as well and you can have a couple of spoofed numbers.
-
2017-10-09 at 3:41 PM UTC
Originally posted by Sophie Get a burner phone and Google Voice https://voice.google.com/u/0/about i think you should be able to spoof a number that way although i am not familiar with the particulairs. Google Voice just takes the call on their infrastructure and forwards it to your phone and vice versa. There are some other online resources that will let you spoof any phone number in order to send text messages and such. Some vendors offer subscription services as well and you can have a couple of spoofed numbers.
So it's like a "VPN" type thing, but for phone numbers? -
2017-10-09 at 3:42 PM UTCwith a phone, typically your phone number is bound to an ICCID, ie. the SIM card - you can't just pick a random phone number and register it on the network; you'll get rejected unless the carrier has records of the phone number being attached to the SIM you're calling from.
in regards to what CF mentioned I'm not sure of the specifics, but some service providers seem to be allowed to use a range of phone numbers without having to authenticate normally - I've never seen anyone offer voice services like that, but as an example you've seen those 'email to SMS gateways' haven't you? usually you pay like $20 for 100 messages or something, and when you want to send a text message you email the gateway with the person's phone number in the subject line and the message in the email body, and the gateway sends it out to their phone via SMS originating from a random number. the implication is that there's some agreement between the company running the gateway and the phone company allowing them to use whatever number to send out messages without authenticating, but I have no idea what the protocol is there or if there's potentially any way to exploit it. -
2017-10-09 at 3:57 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra with a phone, typically your phone number is bound to an ICCID, ie. the SIM card - you can't just pick a random phone number and register it on the network; you'll get rejected unless the carrier has records of the phone number being attached to the SIM you're calling from.
in regards to what CF mentioned I'm not sure of the specifics, but some service providers seem to be allowed to use a range of phone numbers without having to authenticate normally - I've never seen anyone offer voice services like that, but as an example you've seen those 'email to SMS gateways' haven't you? usually you pay like $20 for 100 messages or something, and when you want to send a text message you email the gateway with the person's phone number in the subject line and the message in the email body, and the gateway sends it out to their phone via SMS originating from a random number. the implication is that there's some agreement between the company running the gateway and the phone company allowing them to use whatever number to send out messages without authenticating, but I have no idea what the protocol is there or if there's potentially any way to exploit it.
20 bucks for 100 messages? clearly designed for a front.
Someone told me that the oder VoiP service allowed you to change your phone number. those the number will show up as one phone numbers, the downside is if you call a message machine and leave a message (which has happen to me) and you check envelope, it will give out a different number. The original number. only the incoming call on the display in time of call will show the fake number. but if they're stupid enough to leave a message, and you hit envelope to get your digital text to voice reader, it will tell you the actual number including area code.
I've used it on callerok and it shows the address of where they're calling (not the address but the pinpoint of the neighborhood you can find on maps.google -
2017-10-09 at 4:04 PM UTCEven after you spoof it through the service provider's network, the transaction itself will still be assigned a tracking number, and that tracking number appears just above the spoofed number in the caller ID field. In short, you are not actually anonymous, and the route had been traced and logged.
-
2017-10-09 at 4:10 PM UTCwhat are you trying to achieve actually ????
are you just trying to call someone whithout them knowing your real phone number or are you trying to evade call charges ???? -
2017-10-09 at 4:54 PM UTC
Originally posted by benny vader what are you trying to achieve actually ????
are you just trying to call someone whithout them knowing your real phone number or are you trying to evade call charges ????
sort of.. Calling back someone at the number displayed in the envelope
and pull the same shit since it seems they aren't getting in trouble for threatening to "blow up" my "Honda civic (year)"
and maybe playfully fuck with an old friend or whatever -
2017-10-09 at 4:57 PM UTCSomeone threatened to blow up your car?
-
2017-10-09 at 5:10 PM UTC
Originally posted by mashlehash Someone threatened to blow up your car?
They used a text2speech but yeah. LOL I uploaded it to youtube.
I have to edit it because it says my name and number and my pin number i typed in. but I saved it for feds who I see now the FBI doesn't give a shit.
They don't seem to view Ted Gunderson as a Hero, but rather a Crazy old man with alzeimer and paranoia it seems.
plus Ted was a threat to the MIC and New World Order. it seems more and more FBI and other Agency agents are hand picked for the Illuminati. Which I'm sure exist at some level. if not the "Alex Jones Crazy version of them" they still exist and control things.
They murdered Ted Gunderson. Teds Doctor even said he showed signs of rat poisoning. it causes bladder cancer in a short time. if it's strong enough, and sprinkled on your car seat, you would touch it getting in and it would absorb through your fingers and into the blood causing cancer to your liver, kidneys, bladder and pancreas.
No one to talk to. no one cares for a reason. -
2017-10-09 at 5:14 PM UTCThe fack is ted gunnerson?
-
2017-10-09 at 5:20 PM UTCPoor Ted. Exterminated, just like you would any rat or rodent.
-
2017-10-09 at 5:23 PM UTCthis place is awfully quiet and calm eversince rattexx was deratized.
-
2017-10-09 at 5:41 PM UTC
-
2017-10-09 at 10:56 PM UTC
-
2017-10-09 at 10:58 PM UTC
-
2017-10-10 at 2:14 AM UTCThis here has worked for me in the past. I think the call is routed through their phone network. Worked perfectly.
spooftel.com
If your just looking for a second number to use on your phone, there are Android apps for that. -
2017-10-10 at 2:16 AM UTC