this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2024
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I actually have a toll free number. I was going to potentially use just for a goofy project, however once robodialers find out you have a working number you might get a flood of spam calls. This sucks because you(as the toll free owner) are billed for any minutes for calls that connect to you.
Someone would have to foot those bills and that’s really how you’d only get a 1-800 number “for free”.
I thought that was what's being implied.
And yes, 100% free in this magical scenario, no paying for the number, minutes etc.
I can't believe it took me two days to ask the obvious - as someone toying with some goofy project ideas themselves, what was yours?
I shouldn’t have even said or eluded to any kind of real project - just more of a loose idea. I wanted to set up something similar to Lenny but not necessarily for the same application against telemarketers. Just wanted to tinker around but never got off the ground - mostly because of some painful stupidity on my part trying to set up FreePBX and deleting my whole HDD accidentally.
What was yours?
One of the following ideas, in order of how likely I could get it running (given I wouldn't have the foggiest what I'm doing):
Forward the 1-800 calls to a free VoIP voicemail service, inviting callers to leave to leave the date, their location, and a message. Print stickers with the number, slap them on however many payphones I can find, and see what happens. I could do this tomorrow if I wanted.
Same idea, but routing to a FreePBX set up with whitelisting. While slapping up stickers, dial an echo number (don't think that's the right term - one that just reads back the number you're calling from, not one that echos what you're saying to test latency), add number to whitelist. That payphone is now activated. Activated payphones get to leave a message, anyone else gets 'Good bye' and disconnected. Some reading suggests this is possible, but with many, many things to learn between now and then (especially whitelisting). I'd be starting from 0 knowledge.
The above, but when you hit # to end your message, you get access to some automated menus with some fun/weird stuff (qotd, show times for upcoming bands I find interesting, a party line would be cool, etc.). See all comments demonstrating ignorance.
Why? It's pretty dumb, but seems like it'd kill some time and could garner some interesting/weird audio. I do like the idea of whitelisting payphones only, both to cut down on bot call vectors and to push the like 3 interested people to use the disappearing comms anachronisms around town.
Lol really fascinating and fun sounding honestly. But why do you keep referring to calling party numbers as payphones? Am I missing something or what do payphones have to do with this.
Probably just poor writing.
I had an interaction a while back that made me start thinking about payphones, and since you can call toll-free numbers from payphones here without depositing any coins (checked to make sure this is still a thing last week), this seemed like an interesting idea.
I have some artsy-fartsy thoughts about it, too: creative uses of dying infrastructure; 'true' anonymity - the info I'm getting from people is basically the number they're calling from, as a product of that their location during the call, and whatever audio they want to shove down the pipe - that's it; ideas about locality and physicality in an age where mass communication has erased borders in many senses, but people feel disconnected from their local communities more than ever, etc.
If you have some time to kill, I wrote a long-winded comment about it earlier and put it on a pastebin clone here (due to length limitations for comments here): https://pastes.io/paoqsezsjn
Basically, I like the idea of this weird number you can only reach from payphones someone slapped a sticker on in 2024, that doesn't ask for money (even the .50 to connect), doesn't try to sell you anything, and primarily just offers a box to leave some audio in. Could yield nothing, could yield something neat.
Hah I like it! Saving your link to read later! Thanks for sharing
That sucks - though depending on the provider (I've been digging around on this), there are some that offer unlimited minutes as part of their monthly/annual package. Not all, though, and those seem to be on the pricier end (though in the grand scheme of things, not crazy expensive).