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I once changed my mobile phone number so the last 8 digits were 69696969. I thought this was hilarious. Then I found out that people have randomly scrawled that number on every toilet cubicle "For a good time call XYZ69696969" and I would get calls all the way through the night, every night.



Steve Wozniak had 888-8888 for a while. Which is a très cool number to have, but he was getting hundreds of calls with nothing but random sounds in the background. Eventually he figured out that babies were pushing the buttons on their parent's phones, and all-eights were apparently easy for them to press.

https://www.wired.com/1998/09/woz/


Helluva good read! The early days of personal computing were wild, super interesting time :)


I own a few 867-5309 numbers for different areas. I have them do nothing these days but for a while I let them hit a pbx and we’d get up to 2500 calls a day on each line. Lots of drunk dudes trying to call Jenny.


There's a prank call podcast called The Snow Plow Show, and the guy set up a bot at a phone number that will automatically reply to callers with voice clips from a lady who yelled at him in a prank call one time. So fans of the show will put the number on windshields or craigslist ads so people will call the number and get yelled at, and the calls are all recorded so he can listen back to them later and pull out the better ones.

I think you should utilize a similar technology for your phone numbers.


Hahaha! Never thought I'd see BeverlyBot and Sorry I Dinged Your Car mentioned on HN.

Been listening to RBCP (The guy who does Snow Plow Show and Phone Losers of America) for a long time now. Great to throw on in the background for some laughs at the end of the day while reading.


Cactus cactus!


You need to go to stores in those areas and collect all the rewards points people have gifted to you by putting your number in at checkout!


I once did this by accident when fueling up my car; it just so happened that the gas station's rewards program was linked with the Safeway rewards program, and I happened to be filling up my tank just as the 867-5309 account for my area code hit some critical threshold. Hey presto, 20% off (or something like that; it was a long time ago).


I knew the guy who had 1-800-FUCK-YOU, and he used it to sell those classic bumper stickers: "How's my driving? Call 1-800-FUCK-YOU!"


If I was less scrupulous, I can think of a few ways to easily monetize that. The first and simplest is to have a toll line that charges on call and have a recording on the 867-5309 numbers that refers them to call it.

Whether you go the sultry "really meet Jenny" angle or just try to find something that piques the interest of the average drunk male that would call, just to see what they're being referred to, you'd probably get enough takers to turn a tidy profit regardless of how crappy the ultimate toll line was. I doubt it takes all that much to convince callers that are already drunk and trying to do something they think is mildly funny already.


There's got to be an automated chatbot (or perhaps "voice bot") opportunity in there somewhere. ;)


This was my friend's grandfather's number in my area when I was growing up. His name was not Jenny...


Wild that people actually call those numbers.


It's a reminder that there are a lot of people out there.


Might be students, I vaguely remember freshers being challenged to call these numbers pretending to be from our rival university.


Probably just curious whats up.


Franz Beckenbauer (famous German soccer star) did a promotion for a mobile phone provider and requested 66666666, he got similar calls at night. https://www.spiegel.de/panorama/falsche-nummer-beckenbauers-...


Jenny? Don’t change your number.


It's been 41 years since the song came out.

Assuming that Jenny was 21 when the song was written, (since there is a chance the number was written on a bar's bathroom wall) she would be at least 62 years old now.

Statistically, there's at least a 1 in 4 chance that Jenny is dead now, and there is no chance that she didn't change her number after receiving 800 million horny crank calls.


It was about 5 years ago when I realized that 8675309 is hitting all of the numbers on the keypad diagonally in stripes from the upper left to the lower right, skipping 1 for some reason.

Probably so he could rhyme 'mine' with 'nine'


When the song came out, almost all phones would have been rotary dial, so this is probably just coincidental.


On the one hand I'm enjoying wondering what the song would be paced like if instead of touch tone speed each number was separated by how long it would take to return to 0.

8 dit-dit-dit-dit-dit-dit-dit-dit 6 dit-dit-dit-dit-dit-dit 7 dit-dit-dit-dit-dit....

ON the other hand, touch tones were invented in the 60's, so it's possible that they had access to the tech to touch dial at that time.




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