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Forums » VoIP Vulnerabilities Being Exposed Today » Excellent!!
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« illusion of privacy  
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pandora
Premium
join:2001-06-01
Outland
·ooma
·Future Nine Corpor..
·Comcast

 reply to nitzan
Re: Excellent!!

Thanks for the information. I have another question about security. My thought was my cable Internet service is shared with about 60-100 of my neighbors. Wouldn't any of my neighbors on our shared Comcast cable node be able to listen into my VOIP calls?
--
"People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use."


anony101

@comcast.net

Thanks for the information. I have another question about security. My thought was my cable Internet service is shared with about 60-100 of my neighbors. Wouldn't any of my neighbors on our shared Comcast cable node be able to listen into my VOIP calls?
It depends whether your VOIP provider uses SRTP to encrypt RTP packets from you to their proxy. Some do and some don't. You should call them and ask.

Keep in mind that encrypted VOIP calls lose the encryption once they reach the PSTN.

pandora
Premium
join:2001-06-01
Outland
·ooma
·Future Nine Corpor..
·Comcast

 
said by anony101 :

Thanks for the information. I have another question about security. My thought was my cable Internet service is shared with about 60-100 of my neighbors. Wouldn't any of my neighbors on our shared Comcast cable node be able to listen into my VOIP calls?
It depends whether your VOIP provider uses SRTP to encrypt RTP packets from you to their proxy. Some do and some don't. You should call them and ask.

Keep in mind that encrypted VOIP calls lose the encryption once they reach the PSTN.
If you read this thread, you'll see my provider has posted and indicated there is no security for my VOIP content.

»Re: Excellent!!
--
"People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use."


quetwo
That VoIP Guy
Premium
join:2004-09-04
East Lansing, MI

reply to anony101
said by anony101 :

Keep in mind that encrypted VOIP calls lose the encryption once they reach the PSTN.
True, but again, the PSTN is regulated, and in the pre-Bush world, it was very hard to get access to the data going across it. Sadly this is not the case as much anymore.
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Forums » VoIP Vulnerabilities Being Exposed Today« illusion of privacy  


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