These sounds capture recorded messages which are generally only heard on payphones. Most people probably would never hear these sounds.
The first sound sample is the rejection message heard when a payphone user tries to call a certain toll-free number.
I mentioned in an earlier story that payphone users are blocked from using TellME, the advertising-supported news and information service from Microsoft. TellME is not unusual in this respect. It’s become common for owners of toll-free numbers to block calls from payphones. This is presumably on account of the FCC-mandated dial-around compensation which entitles payphone owners to about 50¢ for every toll-free call made from their phones. That 50¢ compensation is paid by the owner of the toll-free number. For most businesses this expense is simply needless. More significantly it represents a financial vulnerability to shady payphone owners, as illustrated recently in the case of Nicolaos Kantartzis, a former payphone owner now in jail for skimming millions of dollars from government agencies and private companies by programming his payphones to robo-dial their toll-free numbers.
Not all toll-free numbers block payphone calls, but it seems that most do. Still, I was a little surprised to find that Microsoft blocked payphone users from TellME, an advertising-supported product which I would think is of especial interest to payphone users. TellME must have done the math and concluded that payphone users were not worth a 50¢ acquisition fee.
Payphone users attempting to access TellME instead get this recorded message:
“The toll-free number you have dialed is not accessible from a payphone. To reach this toll-free number you must dial it from a non-payphone. 2 1 2 7 L.”
Attempting to access other toll-free numbers gets a different recording of the same message:
“We’re sorry. Your call cannot be completed from a payphone at this time. Message M 7. 2 O P.”
There are probably other versions of this message to be heard, and I will add them to my collection if/when I find them.
Another sound heard only on payphones is “please deposit 25¢ for the next three minutes.”
“Please deposit 25¢ for the next three minutes. Thank you.”
A few other payphone sounds I picked up recently include:
- The call you have made requires a coin deposit.
- Thank you for using a Verizon payphone
- Insert error. Please try again.
These sounds and more, including some messages not necessarily unique to payphones but which I recorded from payphones, can be found at my new Payphone Sounds collection. I plan to sort through and share other payphone sounds I made a few months ago, including the exotic sounds of coins being deposited, coins being returned, and the guttural sound of a spinning rotary dial. Stay tuned.