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Written by James Duncan
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Saturday, 11 February 2006 |
VoIP is fundamentally interesting for both the business and geek community for two reasons: cost and security. The cost issue is easy - no POTS teleco can afford to sell on bandwidth at anything approaching wholesale cost, but large users can purchase at similar prices. Secondly, and perhaps more interestingly, control of where and how the signal is sent allows us to secure our communications in a way that is impossible on the standard network due to carrier level wiretapping and plain text transmission. Full article here. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 13 February 2006 )
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Written by Administrator
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Saturday, 11 February 2006 |
The 2006 workshop will extend the scope of VoIP security to IMS services and present the latest advances in denial of service and SPIT detection and protection mechanisms. The format of the workshop is based on two-day single-track sessions, with presentations of invited and regular papers from academia and industry. Full info here. |
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Written by Administrator
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Thursday, 02 February 2006 |
The new Snom 300 purports to guard against data theft, eavesdroppers and spam.
"Due to its rapid growth, Internet Telephony is becoming increasingly
enticing for illegal eavesdroppers, data thieves and advertising calls;
so with the snom 300 we have placed particular emphasis on security
features like SRTP and SIPS," stresses sales and marketing director Dr.
Michael Knieling. "It is precisely in the price segment around 100
Euros that most VoIP telephones are lacking effective protection
mechanisms like these."
Full spec list here.
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