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December 29, 2006

Net Neutrality Safe For Two Years

Note:  Nice Read Rich.  Well I am glad the consumers got some pretty nice concessions from the AT&T merger with Bell South.  No one know what affects it will have us going forward?  I guess Ma Bell is back on duty.

"Yesterday I wrote about ensuring net neutrality and just to show you how fluid the telecom market is, today AT&T may have ensured net neutrality for all of us last night. Well at least for 24 months. The company made a number of concessions to the FCC in order to complete their merger with BellSouth. Some of the concessions have to do with freezing prices on enterprise broadband services and giving up wireless spectrum. Other concessions are more important – selling high-speed internet service without the need to buy phone service. This is often called naked DSL." 

Click Here to the Full Article 

Linux based Motorola A910 Wireless Handset Given "Green Light"

Note:  Sweet little linux based device.

Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has given Motorola’s Moto A910, the green signal. The phone features a Linux-Java operating system and boasts WiFi connectivity over UMA. According to the company, the A910 is loaded with a 1.3 megapixel camera and Lumi-LED Flash technology.

Motorola claims that the phone offers calendars, contacts and e-mail applications for the business consumers. The A910 supports streaming video, and offers a TransFlash memory card slot as well. The phone also features Bluetooth, a mini-USB headset jack and MotoSync software.
 
Source:  SDA Asia

Son of WiMax: the IEEE tries to clean up its committees

As the WiMax hype machine moves into high gear ahead of next month's 802.20 working group meeting in London, UK, workers on the various wireless standards are anxious to calm down negative reports about the problems they might have on making this family of wireless work in true mobile fashion.

One of the problems facing WiMax is that Intel - a major sponsor - wants to see it used on the move, at high speed in moving vehicles, not just in coffee shop hotspots. Unfortunately, the WiMax standard, 802.16d doesn't cover moving nodes, and the mobile version, 802.16e, has issues with rapid hand-off from cell to cell.

One possible solution to the hand-off problem is the 802.20 standard proposal. The credibility of that proposal has bene under something of a cloud, partly for technical reasons (many engineers remain sceptical about it) but mainly for political reasons.

The politics got so bad that at one point, the IEEE actually suspended the committee that was working on the standard.

Exactly what happened, is in dispute. The official IEEE magazine went on the record with a full analysis which makes ugly reading. However, the committee is now back in action, and due to meet in London - and is hoping to redeem its reputation.

Little of what has been written by outside commentators has pleased the members. For example, the IEEE magazine, The Institute, wrote:

The working group, IEEE 802.20, was formed in 2003 as an offshoot of the IEEE 802.16 standard activity, often referred to as WiMax, the technology enabling fixed wireless broadband access as an alternative to cable and DSL. The proposed IEEE 802.20 standard would do that but with a twist: it would support broadband wireless for laptop computers and other devices used in fast-moving vehicles such as cars and trains.

It turns out that this is one possible interpretation of events. Committee members find it misleading. They also feel aggrieved at the number of reports of the suspension of the committee and the excessive excitement over the sorry details of how, and why, the committee was suspended.

The sorry details are, indeed, simply summarised. To quote The Institute again:

Intel, Kyocera, Motorola, Qualcomm, and other giants with stakes in the market all had representatives on the new working group, which numbered roughly 175 people. Members of working groups are expected to vote as individuals and not represent their companies’ interests.

But charges flew from the very beginning that members’ votes were driven by company loyalties. A disputed 2003 election of officers for the group led to allegations that consultants who had failed to disclose their affiliations with major industry players had participated.

In the third quarter of 2005, individuals affiliated with Intel and others feared that the group’s decision to cut the technology submission phase from six months to one month would not allow them sufficient time to prepare their proposals. What’s more, when they tried to get the group to consider their proposals they were repeatedly voted down.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

December 28, 2006

Asterisk Becomes An Appliance

Note:  I am going to download and see if it delivers. 
 
While Asterisk has been available for several years, getting a working system configured was somewhat challenging for folks with limited technical abilities or those not comfortable in the Linux environment. While Asterisk seemed interesting, for many, the learning curve seemed too challenging. As a result, Asterisk has not had much of an impact on mainstream IP Telephony. AsteriskNOW may change that fact in a significant way.
As described on the AsteriskNOW website:

AsteriskNOW is a Software Appliance; a customized Linux distribution that includes Asterisk, the Asterisk GUI, and all other software needed for an Asterisk system. The most popular open source IP PBX software, Asterisk, can now be easily configured with a graphical interface. AsteriskNOW includes all the Linux components necessary to run, debug and build Asterisk, and only those components, so installation is easy. You no longer have to worry about kernel versions and package dependencies. Unlike other Linux distributions used to deploy Asterisk, no unnecessary components that might compromise security or performance are included.”
 

Om Malik: Bankruptcies Come To VoIP

Note:  Om has a nice little comment piece about VoIP Bankruptcies.  He is right on about the basics of making an actual profit comes into play.  If you do not grow at a rate that you actually covers your overhead and make a profit then you are doomed to failure unless you are a non-profit.  Even then you still need to cover your costs.  I think we will see quite a few more burnouts in 2007.

December 27, 2006

A Closer Look at VoIP in the Enterprise

Note:  They make a nice case study for VoIP in general.  A good read for anyone at the enterprise level that would like to learn more and read about some other large scale deployments using VoIP.

Is VoIP reliable? Scalable? Ready for prime time? For the answer, you only need to look at the raft of ambitious enterprise VoIP projects -- with multiple-thousands of phones -- announced in recent months, or the latest telephony market research, which shows VoIP outselling digital PBX lines for the first time.

"IP telephony has gone mainstream," says VoIP analyst Brian Riggs, of Current Analysis. "There's no doubt about it."

Planned and ongoing VoIP rollouts at Bank of America, The New York Times Co., Amazon.com, Chicago public schools, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and dozens of other enterprises all point to the acceptance of VoIP as the new standard for business telephone and messaging systems, analysts and users say.

Not that telecom professionals are entirely abandoning more than 50 years of digital PBX technology. Many are mixing IP and time division multiplexing TDM technologies for now as they wean employees off of the old phone equipment.

Call VoIP King

The shift in market dominance from TDM to IP really became apparent in the first quarter of 2006, according to research firm Synergy Research Group. Two years ago, only a third of business phone system lines were IP, but by this year's third quarter, more than 60% were. (Enterprises have spent $7.7 billion on telephony in the first three quarters of 2006, according to Synergy).

So what has prompted the shift?

"What changed over the past few years is that nothing changed," Riggs says. Products from companies such as 3com, Avaya, Cisco and Nortel have matured, not undergoing the disruptive changes seen in the early 2000s. Many of the questions regarding feature sets, stability and quality have been addressed, he adds.

IP telephony products and standards are at the point where some organizations are even comfortable with open source technology.

Amazon.com announced earlier this year that it is deploying the Pingtel SIPxchange Enterprise Communications System, an open source IP PBX, based on Linux servers and SIP phones, to support thousands of users at its Seattle headquarters. Separately, Sam Houston State University in Texas and the Southern Co. are going live with the open source Asterisk VoIP platform, in enterprisewide rollouts and in small-pocket deployments.

"We have a lot more peace of mind with the open source system," says Aaron Daniel, senior voice analyst, Sam Houston State University.

Following the Leader

Many companies now embarking on IP telephony projects are following the lead of early adopters, such as Bank of America, which in 2004 announced plans to deploy 180,000 IP phones to all of its U.S. retail branches and offices.
 
 

FCC Sides with Verizon & AT&T and Votes to Strip Local Communities of Control Over Cable Franchising

Note:  This is not a good decision at all.  People should be aware that there are some interests in the Communications industry that are really trying to rewrite how "public interest" is handled.  If you agree or disagree please call your local representative and tell them how you feel.  If you don't express your opinion now there will be alot of "closed door" decisions that are being made that you will not have a chance to weigh in on.

"The Federal Communications Commission has agreed to change cable franchising laws so that local communities have less control over incoming pay-television providers.

The vote was pushed for by the telecom giants Verizon and AT&T. The measure was passed by a three to two vote -- with Democratic commissioners, Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein dissenting.  Critics of the FCC's decision are already planning a court challenge."

Click Here to Read Amy Goodman's Interview Transcript 

 

Jefferson Parish, LA is looking for wireless Internet provider

Note:  I really like what they have done with this paper (Times Picayune). After Katrina they really got hit hard and had limited resoures.  They have now pulled it all together and have really been the ear to the street on the happenings in New Orleans and greater Louisiana.

Jefferson Parish started casting around this week for a company to build a wireless Internet network around the parish by using public buildings in exchange for providing government with free or reduced-rate service.

The wireless operator would rig up the equipment at its own cost and recoup the money by finding subscribers for its service, according to Ridley Boudreaux, Jefferson's director of electronic information systems.

 

The company would have access to the rooftops of government buildings, light poles and other public resources, and in return it would pay a monthly fee or provide wireless service to local governments free or at a reduced rate.

The connection would be a relatively slow 140 kilobits per second -- about twice as fast as a typical dial-up connection -- but Boudreaux said consumers might be able to pay a fee for a faster speed, as they do in the New Orleans municipal wireless system.

Jefferson political leaders hailed the service as a way to promote business growth at a time when the region is still rebounding from Hurricane Katrina. They said it also could help Jefferson emergency workers stay in touch during a major storm after other forms of communication have failed.

"This is an incremental step we can take that modernizes our parish," Parish President Aaron Broussard said. "It is a positive step towards improved technology in Jefferson Parish that will be heralded by the business community and the general populace."

Click Here to Continue Reading 

Baltimore Sues Vonage For Phone Tax

The city is suing Internet phone service provide Vonage to collect a telephone excise tax, although Vonage claims it does not have to pay the levy.  In 2004, Baltimore, as part of a deficit reduction plan, imposed a $3.50 monthly tax on phone lines. The city says in the lawsuit that the tax also applies to Internet-base phone service offered by Vonage and others.
"The service that Vonage is providing clearly fits the definition of a telecommunications line," said Joshua N. Auerbach, an assistant solicitor.

A telecommunications line is defined as a wired or wireless connection, identifiable by a unique telephone number, to an exchange, wireless or other telecommunications service, according to Baltimore's city code. New Jersey-based Vonage has argued that it offers an information service, not a telecommunications service, according to the suit.

 

 

But Vonage, which is based in New Jersey, says it offers not a telecommunications service, but an information service.

 

 

Brooke Schulz, a spokeswoman for Vonage, said the company will fight the lawsuit, which seeks back taxes, interest and a 10 percent penalty payment.

 

 

Auerbach said it is not known how many customers Vonage has in Baltimore.

 

 

In July, Maryland's Tax Court ruled that Baltimore and Montgomery County did not overstep their authority by imposing telecommunication taxes.
 
Source: WTOP 

Integrics releases Enswitch 2.4 PBX Solution

 

Integrics are pleased to announce the release of Enswitch 2.4, a  complete integrated solution for commercial telephony services such as:

* Full featured hosted PBX.
* Onsite PBX to install at customers' sites.
* ITSP (Internet Telephony Service Provider) services.
* Calling cards.
* Call shops.
* Toll-free and number translation services.
* Much more.

Enswitch is in production today on systems from tens of users on single machines to tens of thousands of users on redundant/failover clusters. More details, including links to the full list of features and a working demo of the web interface, are at:

http://integrics.com/products/enswitch/


2.4 is the largest update ever, reflecting the growing number of systems in production. New features include:

- Queues and ACD. Unlike vanilla Asterisk, calls can be queued across multiple Asterisk machines, with the machines voting on which call gets forwarded to an agent next. Should one machine crash, calls on other machines are moved up the queue. Agents can be on SIP or IAX phones, SIP URIs, or external numbers.

- Optional IAX client support.

- Support for telephones in different area codes. Telephones can dial local numbers in their area code without having to dial the long distance prefix.

- Call volume statistics to help system owners manage system growth.

- Extension mobility, where one telephone can be logged in on top of another telephone.

- Support for European style DDI extensions, where calls can come in from the PSTN with an extension appended.

- New user type for voicemail only users.

- The ability to search customers and numbers.

- Bulk change the peer used for routes.

- Charges attached to customer accounts can now be quarterly or annual as well as monthly.

- Many smaller changes based on customer feedback.

Asterisk 1.4.0 Released

Note:  Hope everyone had a wonderful holidays. 
 
The Asterisk Development Team is pleased to announce the first release in the Asterisk 1.4 series, Asterisk 1.4.0!

As previously announced, this release contains a large number of new features over the 1.2 series; see the CHANGES file in the distribution for the complete list. Before installing this release, be sure to read the UPGRADE.txt file as well, to be aware of changes that were made that will require you to change configuration files or dialplan entries.

Along with Asterisk, Asterisk-Addons, Zaptel and libpri were also released as 1.4.0 versions.

As usual, the release files are available on the ftp.digium.com servers via FTP and HTTP, and have been signed with GPG keys to ensure their authenticity.

The team thanks you for your support of Asterisk; more than half of the new functionality in this release was developed by community members!

December 22, 2006

Don’t fall for these methods of VoIP abuse

Note: Interesting little article I found about VoIP abuse and spamming.

Voice over IP (VoIP) technology provides many advantages to companies and individuals over both traditional telephone services and traditional IP communications. But, like other technologies, it also brings with it the potential for abuse. And as more people implement VoIP, we can also expect more frequent exploitation of this potential.

One growing concern is the possibility that unwanted VoIP advertising messages — often referred to as spam over Internet telephony, or SPIT — will overwhelm IP voice systems, much as email spam has overwhelmed email messaging systems. Over the years, spam has reduced much of the functionality of email — dozens, hundreds, and even thousands of unwanted email messages clogging up servers and users’ inboxes to the point of driving many users away from email entirely.

While SPIT hasn’t yet become a major problem, experts anticipate that it could do so in the future, as the increasing popularity of VoIP makes it a more attractive target. Let’s look at the potential misuses of VoIP and discuss how you can fight back.

How SPIT works
We’ve long had to deal with annoying telemarketers on our landlines, so how is SPIT different? The problem is that a VoIP line isn’t just a telephone number — it’s also an IP address.

Auto-diallers used by traditional telephone advertisers must dial each phone number separately. But VoIP spammers can do their dirty work much more efficiently: They can harvest a large number of IP addresses, record an advertising message, and then send the message to hundreds or thousands of VoIP voice mail boxes all at once in bulk — just like email spammers.

In addition, it’s more difficult to track the origin of VoIP calls vs. public switched telephone network (PSTN) calls, so spammers who are also scammers are harder to catch. And using a VoIP line, the spammer can call from anywhere in the world at a much lower cost than using traditional phone lines.

Why PSTN users aren’t safe either
Of course, spammers using VoIP can also make calls to PSTN numbers, so the SPIT phenomenon poses a risk not just to VoIP users themselves, but to all telephone customers. In fact, VoIP users may actually be able to protect themselves more easily than PSTN users since VoIP services usually include free voice mail, caller ID, and other features that you may have to pay extra for with a PSTN line.

One danger of SPIT, for both VoIP and PSTN call recipients, is the possibility of flooding voice mailboxes with spam messages. Full voice mail boxes prevent legitimate callers from leaving messages, resulting in voice mail denial of service (DoS). With the potential to create much larger file sizes than email text spam, audio messages can take up a lot more storage space and overwhelm systems more quickly.

But SPIT isn’t just about leaving messages — it’s also about making live calls. Because of the difficulty of tracing these callers and the low cost to make the calls, it’s a good possibility that phishers will latch onto VoIP to perpetuate their scams. Many people are more likely to trust a phone call claiming to be from a bank or credit card company than an email message, so this is another potential misuse of VoIP.

Of course, you can use features already included with most VoIP accounts to help control spam and phone phishing. For example, you can reject all messages that don’t provide caller ID information.

The bad news is that it’s possible to spoof caller ID to make a call look as if it’s coming from a different source. In fact, caller ID spoofing is another misuse of VoIP that will benefit not just spammers but other malicious callers as well.

How caller ID spoofing works
Spoofing caller ID information has been possible for years, but it’s much easier and less expensive to do it with VoIP. In fact, you don’t even have to have a voice line yourself to take advantage of it.

Numerous websites offer fake caller ID services. At least one company offers a £5 “calling card” that you can use to dial a toll-free number, enter the number you want to call, and enter the caller ID info you want to display. In addition, instructions for spoofing caller ID information using a Linux computer running Asterisk PBX software are readily available on the Web.

Caller ID spoofing is particularly troubling because some credit card companies and banks rely on caller ID information to verify customers’ identities. Spammers and scammers can also use it to disguise their identities. And since some systems will automatically allow voice mail access if you call from the phone number associated with the voice mail box, unauthorised persons can also use spoofed caller ID information to listen to someone else’s voice mail.

What you can do about it
The good news is that VoIP spam, like email spam, will likely conform to certain patterns that systems can recognise, analyse, and filter. The technology also makes it possible to block calls from specific numbers or IP addresses.

It’s likely that if — or really, when — SPIT becomes a problem, software companies will rush to offer solutions just as they have for email spam. In fact, a number of companies are already working on it.

Qovia, which makes enterprise-level VoIP management utilities, filed patent applications in 2004 for technology that would identify and block VoIP spam. And companies such as BorderWare offer SIP-aware proxies and firewalls designed to protect VoIP sessions against SPIT, caller ID spoofing, and other VoIP abuse.

Summary
VoIP can save organisations money and make calling more convenient, but like any other technology, it’s bound to attract abuse and misuse. The bad news is that you don’t even have to be a VoIP user to be a victim of VoIP misuse. The good news is that there are ways to thwart VoIP spam, caller ID spoofing, and other misuses of VoIP technology.

Source: VoIP Abuse 

Nanoradio and LG Innotek Partner to Build Low Power WiFi Technology

LG Innotek and Nanoradio announce that they have joined forces to bring low power WiFi technology to the global consumer multimedia and mobile phone market. The first application to result from the partnership is a wireless WiFi Network Camera for use in security monitoring and surveillance system. The two companies will also introduce an integrated low power WiFi System in Package solution for mobile phones during Q2 2007.

This will enable LGIT to compete and sell a unique WiFi SiP on the global market. The development of wireless network cameras is opening up new opportunities such as monitoring homes and small offices via the Internet, and the partnership between LGIT and Nanoradio is aimed at helping to meet the anticipated increase in demand for WiFi-based surveillance.

The network camera is already being used by a customer in a WiFi monitoring system that has been designed for resident and enterprise users in Europe. Fixed-mobile convergence (FMC) using dual mode cellular/WiFi handsets is set to be a rapidly developing market during 2007, and low power WiFi modules are a critical enabling technology for this application.

The partnership takes advantage of combining LGIT's expertise in providing module products to the wireless market and Nanoradio's background as a fabless semiconductor company specialised in producing chipset solutions for WiFi applications. The LGIT WiFi SiP based on Nanoradio NRX700 WiFi chipset will be targeted at Tier 1 mobile phone manufacturers. The Nanoradio NRX700 WiFi chipset offer fully tested 802.11b,g functionality, featuring ultra-low power consumption (0.3mW in WLAN standby mode) and on-chip power management, Bluetooth co-existence, FMCA/UMA compliance and support for both hosted and embedded solutions.

The power amplifier (PA) and cellular RF filter are both built in, and no external components are required. Another major advantage is an optimised algorithm for data, voice and Hi-Fi stereo audio. "Our R&D and Marketing teams have selected the Nanoradio WiFi solution after an extensive benchmarking programme that compared a number of similar products," said Mr JS Park, CTO of LGIT.

"The Nanoradio subsystem is the best in its class, and provides all the key features we were looking for, both for our immediate requirement and for moving forward with our roadmap." Pär Bergsten, CEO of Nanoradio, commented, "We are proud that a major component supplier such as LG Innotek has selected us as their WiFi chipset provider. LGIT is a well established global manufacturer of wireless components and complements perfectly our RF system-in-package expertise."

Availability LGIT Wireless WiFi Network Camera

The WiFi Network camera sub system will be available in the market in Q1 2007.

For more information please contact:

Daniel HG Kim (hgkim@lginnotek.com), General Manager of Sales & Marketing at LGIT.

Big WiMAX IPOs Are On the Way

Let the WiMAX gold rush begin. On Dec. 18 and 19, two wireless upstarts -- NextWave and Clearwire -- filed to go public with the Securities & Exchange Commission. Based on their S-1 forms, both companies hope to make their fortunes on WiMAX, a broadband Relevant Products/Services-wireless technology expected to start making significant inroads in the telecom market next year.
Market researcher Gartner Dataquest expects the North American WiMAX services market to swell from 30,000 connections in 2006 to 21.2 million by 2011.

What's the appeal of WiMAX? The wireless technology could provide consumers with a new source of high-speed broadband services, threatening to displace digital subscriber lines (DSL), cable modems, and today's slower cellular and Wi-Fi services. For WiMAX operators, product suppliers, and software vendors, the technology represents a huge opportunity to shake up the telecom market -- one that Clearwire and NextWave are hoping investors will be quick to appreciate.

Strong Investor Appetite

But will investors snap up Clearwire and NextWave's offerings? The answer could differ by company, even though, at first glance, the two outfits appear to be very similar: Both are swimming in operating losses. (Appropriately, NextWave plans to trade under the symbol WAVE) And both hope eventually to make their money, at least in part, from building out WiMAX networks.

The two companies also expect to go public in early 2007, capitalizing on a revival of the tech initial public offering market, the strongest it's been since year 2000, says IPO expert Tom Taulli. On Sept. 21, wireless broadband gear maker Riverbed Technology priced above its expected range, and the company's shares have rallied 210% since, to $30.19, indicating strong investor appetite for wireless broadband-related stocks.

Yet Clearwire's shares, expected to be listed under symbol CLWR, might receive a different reception, and attract very different investors, than NextWave. One reason: Clearwire has A-list investors: chipmaker Intel and cell phone manufacturer Motorola. It also has legendary telecom executive Craig McCaw at the helm. "There's a natural comfort that comes with the fact that Intel and Motorola are interested, and McCaw runs it," says Michael Mahoney, managing director at EGM Capital hedge funds in San Francisco. Years ago, McCaw cobbled together the U.S.'s first nationwide cellular empire, which he sold to old AT&T for $11.5 billion in 1994.

Spectrum Speculators?

How much Clearwire could raise in an IPO is yet unclear. Some estimates suggest the figure could be around $400 million. Clearwire, which originally planned to go public earlier this year but withdrew its application due to adverse IPO market conditions, already has 188,000 subscribers, up from 1,000 users in 2004. Its network is deployed in 34 markets in the U.S. and in certain locales abroad. And it has $1.25 billion in cash, equivalents, and short-term investments, according to documents filed with the SEC. Clearwire officials did not respond to requests for an interview.
 

New astGUIclient VICIDIAL Release: 2.0.2

Note: Matt Florell posted about the new release of the astGUI Client 
 
astGUI 2.0.2 client suite runs on most modern web browsers on almost any GUI-capable operating system, and it includes the astGUIclient client-side web app which extends your phone's functionality and the VICIDIAL call center suite. This package is free and GPL. (the suite is not an asterisk configuration tool) This package is geared towards Asterisk installations with SIP,IAX or Zap phones and Zaptel, IAX or SIP trunks.

For this release, we have made many changes on the server side, including changing logging from AGI to FastAGI which can cut system load in half on busy VICIDIAL systems. We have also tested the suite on Asterisk versions through 1.2.14 (cannot use 1.2.11 or 1.2.12 because of Asterisk bugs).

All client web-apps and administration pages are available in English, Spanish, Greek and German, with translations of French, Polish, Italian, Portuguese and Brazillian Portuguese for the client web-apps only.

Check out the project blog for more information:

http://astguiclient.blogspot.com

Click Here for Download: 
http://astguiclient.sf.net/

December 21, 2006

Kinmirai Tsuushin IP Telephony Company declared bust

Note:  This is the follow up for the VoIP fraud story from Japan we reported on in November.  It looks like the Japanese courts have declared the IP Telephony Co. bankrupt.  About 3,000 investors had over 40 Billion Yen ($337 million dollars) taken away in this scheme.  Here is the updated Article:

"The Tokyo District Court on Wednesday declared both Kinmirai Tsuushin Inc. and its president, Masaru Ishii, bankrupt after the firm, which claimed to provide Internet telephony services, came under investigation on suspicion of defrauding investors.

The court appointed lawyer Ginjiro Suzuki as administrator to supervise the bankruptcy procedures. The amount of debts left behind by Kinmirai Tsuushin is unknown. The administrator will hold a meeting on May 30 at the courthouse to brief creditors on the current state of the company's remaining assets.

Kinmirai Tsuushin is suspected of defrauding some 3,000 individual and corporate investors out of 40 billion yen by promising to pay lucrative dividends on the basis of its nonexistent Internet telephony operations." 

The Metropolitan Police Department began questioning Kinmirai Tsuushin executives earlier this week over the alleged fraud, investigative sources said.

Ishii is now abroad, they said.

On Dec. 7, a real estate company, one of the 3,000 investors, asked the court to declare Kinmirai Tsuushin bankrupt. The real estate company had invested 55 million yen in response to Kinmirai Tsuushin's solicitation of investments.

Lawyer Masaki Kito, chief of a group of lawyers representing Kinmirai Tsuushin investors mainly from the Tokyo area, told reporters the group has received letters from some 500 investors in which they asked the lawyers to represent them against the company.

Kito said other groups of lawyers are also being organized to represent victims of the firm's alleged fraud in areas other than Tokyo.

"The court decision is appropriate and, for the investors victimized by the firm's systematic fraudulent activities, it is only the starting point for them to recover their losses," he said.

"We will provide utmost cooperation to the administrator and make efforts to speedily recover the assets that are threatening to be dissipated and lost, so we can make sure that dividends be returned to victimized people," Kito said.

Internal Affairs and Communications Ministry investigators on Nov. 27 raided the head office and determined the firm effectively had not provided any telecommunications services.

Source: Japan Times 

In-Stat Reports 7.9 % of U.S. Households Use VoIP

 

Editor's Note: In-Stat reports that 7.9% percent of there geeks in denial are using some form of VoIP communication.  Other than the fact that major telcos have been using VoIP for call transportation on long distance for some time.  This is good news, sooner we can all get to VoIP then maybe we will see a big push of Quality of Service (QoS) hardware deployed at the Telecos with some sort of interface we can use.  In the end what I would like to see is some sort of major support of a QoS protocol so that maybe people in the US to start could have toll quality VoIP calls.  Here is the In-Stat's VoIP usage report:

"Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) continues to gain users in the residential telephone service market, according to In-Stat (http://www.in-stat.com). According to data from the high-tech market research firm’s newly launched Residential VoIP Tracker Service, more than 9 million US households now have at least one active VoIP user, with many households reporting the use of more than one VoIP service." 

The firm’s new service utilizes a combination of end-user research and market analysis to estimate usage and market share among all of the major service providers, both facilities-based providers like Vonage and client-based providers like Skype, on an ongoing basis. Recent research from the service also revealed that:

  • Vonage and Time Warner Cable continue neck-and-neck among facilities-based VoIP subscribers with an estimated 1.7 million and 1.6 million active households respectively.
  • Skype continues to dominate among client-based VoIP services with 2.1 million active households, while Microsoft gained more than 1.1 million active households as of the end of Q3.
  • In a recent survey, 49 % of current residential VoIP users reported that they had discontinued a traditional (non-VoIP) phone service when they got their VoIP services, including nearly 12 percent of respondents who report that their only VoIP service is client-based. This suggests that the rapid growth of users for client-based services like Skype and Yahoo! Messenger with Voice is also having an impact on incumbent service providers.
  • Half of users report using their residential VoIP service either in part or in whole for business purposes, including more than 40 % of client-based VoIP users.

About In-Stat’s US Residential Voice-Over IP Market Dynamics and Market Tracker service:

This service relies on a combination of quarterly end-user surveys and ongoing analysis of activities by major VoIP service providers and provides the following benefits:

  • Tracks residential usage of both facilities-based (e.g., Vonage, AT&T CallVantage) and client-based (e.g., Skype, Windows Live Messenger) VoIP services, including subscribers, users, households, and market share (approximately top 20 VoIP service providers overall)
  • Provides quarterly snapshot of usage patterns and trends including number of calls, length of calls, international calling, business versus personal calling, monthly spend, user satisfaction, intent to churn
  • Examines trends in current and planned use of VoIP peripherals (e.g., USB phones, wireless headsets, Web cams)
  • Includes updates on recent strategic moves by key market participants (e.g., launch of AOL Phoneline and comparison of its open API and developer program with Skype strategy)

For additional information, please visit: http://www.instat.com/abstracts/voip_tracker.asp

Litepoint Releases Updated Tri-Band WiMax Frequency Tester

LitePoint Corporation, a provider of advanced wireless test solutions, announces the release of the tri-band version of the IQmax one-box test system. In addition to the 3.3 to 3.8GHz band already supported by the single-band version of the instrument (introduced last May), the IQmax Test System now supports testing fixed and mobile WiMAX products in the 2.15 to 2.7 GHz and 4.9 to 6.0 GHz bands as well as optional test support for WiFi and Bluetooth products.

Based on an integrated Vector Signal Analyzer (VSA) and Vector Signal Generator (VSG) architecture, the single-box IQmax Test System can test critical WiMAX physical layer parameters for developers, volume manufacturing and quality assurance (QA) at the lowest possible cost. This one-box instrument meets all international WiMAX development, production, and QA test needs for both fixed (16d) and mobile (16e) as well as optional WiFi and Bluetooth and it’s software upgradeable to easily address any future needs.

“With this latest product upgrade, our customers can now apply the powerful capabilities of the IQmax Test System to test any WiMAX, WiFi, Bluetooth or combination products where multiple wireless standards are used. This once again demonstrates the flexibility of the one-box test solutions from LitePoint and shows our continued commitment to our customers to provide the lowest cost-of-test development and manufacturing test solutions in the market,” said Greg Ravenscroft, President / Advanced Development at LitePoint Corporation. Mr. Ravenscroft continued, “After pioneering advanced WiFi, MIMO, and Bluetooth test solutions, LitePoint now also offers similar testing capabilities for all fixed and mobile WiMAX products.”

The IQmax Test System supports the IEEE 802.16e-2005 / WirelessMAN OFDMA (mobile WiMAX) and 802.16-2004 / WirelessMAN OFDM (fixed WiMAX) physical layer standards including all bandwidth and data rate options. The WiFi option adds support for IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n and Bluetooth 1.1/1.2/2.0 + EDR.

Included with the IQmax Test System is the intuitive and richly featured IQsignal Analysis Suite. This GUI-driven software presents the user with all IQmax instrument set-up, control and analysis functions needed to measure the performance of a Device-Under-Test (DUT). With this tool, many analysis functions are available including time domain RF and I&Q graphs, frequency spectrogram, power spectral density, constellation diagrams, EVM per symbol or subcarriers and peak, average power levels and many other functions.

The software is capable to do automatic detection of most critical signal parameters – including bandwidth, rate ID, cyclic prefix, 16e burst map, etc. – simplifying capture and analysis of complex WiMAX waveforms.

To support automated laboratory and manufacturing floor testing, a C++ compatible API is included with the IQmax Test System which enables fast testing with limited user-interaction.

IQmax supports WiMAX IQfact production test programs. IQfact test programs feature chip specific production tests, test limits, chipset test driver and test executive enabling very fast time to production reducing engineering development by as much as 6 months. Check with LitePoint for a complete list of supported chipsets.

The IQmax Test System is software upgradeable for easy transition to future enhancements of the WiMAX standard or software feature enhancements and product upgrades.

The IQmax Test System is available now. Two product configurations are available, optimized for either R&D (IQmax-500) or Manufacturing (IQmax-100) test applications. Contact LitePoint for a demonstration of the IQmax Test Solution at +1 408 456 5000 / email: sales@litepoint.com or your local LitePoint Distributor at: www.litepoint.com/company/contact.php

LitePoint is a member of the WiMAX Forum.

December 20, 2006

Save The Internet - Net Neutrality Video

Note:  Spread the Word. 

Click Here to See the "Save the Internet" Video 

 

Multi-Tech Announces Cellular Bridge to PBXs

With cellular phones being a necessity in most businesses, it is common for employees to use them to call each other at no charge depending on the cell plan used. It is just as common for headquarters personnel to make and receive calls to those same cell phones using the PSTN at considerable charges both ways.

A new Multi-Tech CallFinder CDMA cellular gateway connected to a company's PBX and CDMA network can turn those expensive headquarter calls into no-charge calls.

The newly announced CallFinder CDMA cellular gateway from Multi-Tech Systems, Inc., a leading data communications and telecommunications technology company based in suburban Minneapolis, enables businesses to take advantage of lower cost wireless networks by allowing calls between cellular phones and headquarters to use wireless networks instead of land lines. By connecting to a PBX trunk line or PBX extension and routing incoming and outgoing calls through a CDMA wireless network, the CallFinder CDMA Model CF100FX2-C will not only save on telecommunications cost but can also add functionality and efficiency.

"Besides providing toll-free calling between headquarters and cell phones in the field, the CallFinder CDMA can also provide back-up communications including emergency 911 service in the event of central office PSTN failure," states Chip Harleman, Vice President of Sales and Marketing for Multi-Tech Systems, Inc. "The CallFinder CDMA can also connect to an analog phone to serve as the primary voice network for small remote offices or other locations that do not have a land line infrastructure or where having lines installed is too costly for temporary use. And, in any of these examples, if more than one line is needed, multiple CallFinders can be utilized. The CallFinder CDMA can bring both cost savings and communications security to businesses of any size."

The CallFinder CDMA cellular gateway (model CF100FX2-C) connects to a PBX trunk line, PBX extension line, or a single PSTN line and routes incoming and outgoing calls through a CDMA wireless network. Equipped with programmable FXS/FXO interface , the gateway includes dual-band GSM 800/1900 MHz CDMA technology, voice features with EZVRC, 13KQCELP and AMPS capabilities, SMA antenna connector, LED operational indicators, AT command set compatibility, CDG 1 and 2 network certified, and a two-year warranty.

Clearwire Files for IPO, Again

GigaOm has reported on a reported another try at the public markets by Craig McCaw backed Clearwire.  A Wimax based wireless broadband provider.  Well they are correct in the article about building a national wireless broaband network being expensive to rollout.  To date they have had $191 million dollar loss.  I do believe if anyone can do it Craig can.  To quote "Field of Dreams" : "If you build it, they will come".  Let's hope so.

December 19, 2006

Zaptel 1.2.12 released for Asterisk

 

The Asterisk Development Team is pleased to announce the release of Zaptel 1.2.12.

This release contains a number of updates:

- compatibility with Linux kernel 2.6.19
- bug fixes to the Xorcom Astribank driver (XPP)
- various other bug fixes

Thanks for supporting Asterisk and Zaptel!

Click Here to Download 

December 18, 2006

Linksys Unveils WAP4400N Wireless-N Access Point

 
 
The new Linksys Wireless-N Access Point (802.11n) (WAP4400N) with Power Over Ethernet capability is designed and developed specifically for the small business environment, which provide high-speed wireless access for existing networks.
The Wireless-N Access Point is built based on the 802.11n draft specification. By overlaying the signals of multiple radios, the MIMO (multi-in, multi-out) technology multiplies the effective data rate. Unlike ordinary wireless networking technologies that are confused by signal reflections, MIMO actually uses these reflections to increase the range and reduce 'dead spots' in the wireless coverage area.

The WAP4400N connects Wireless-N (802.11n), Wireless-G (802.11g) or Wireless-B (802.11b) devices to a wired network so as to allow addition of PCs to the network with no cabling hassle. Power Over Ethernet support makes it easy to install, allowing it to be mounted anywhere, even without ready access to a power plug. In addition, the integrated QoS features provide consistent voice and video quality on both the wired and wireless networks, enabling the deployment of business quality VoIP and video applications.

To protect data and privacy, the Linksys Wireless-N Access Point supports both Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) and the industrial-strength wireless security of Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA), encoding all wireless transmissions with powerful encryption.

The WAP4400N is available immediately through Linksys' channel partner network in India for an estimated street price of Rs 9,900 ($225.00 usd).
 
Source: Channel Times 

Skype founders' peer-to-peer video service ready for public beta

Note:  IP TV
 
In a posting on the Project Code Named: Joost on 12 December, CEO Fredrik de Wahl, said: "We're finally there. This morning we've completed the last version of the software prior to sending out the 'big beta' - which marks the start of getting thousands and thousands of people on the platform in an invitation style manner.
While we're still in the beta phase, we feel like we now have a strong proof of concept as we continue to build and enhance the platform....So next step will be to extend beta test invitations to a much larger group, by providing our current beta testers with tokens to invite others to participate."
 

Cisco Invests $50 Million in China Firm

Note: Everyone seems to be investing in China lately. 
 
Cisco Systems Inc. announced a $50 million investment in the newly public China Communications Services Corporation Ltd., making the U.S. network-equipment maker the largest foreign investor in CCS.
CCS, formerly a subsidiary of the state-controlled China Telecom Group, went public earlier this month on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. CTG, as well as state-controlled China Mobile and China Unicom, are the other big investors in CCS.
 
CCS helps large Chinese service providers such as China Netcom design and build Internet and other telecommunications networks. With the investment announced Wednesday, Cisco has committed more than $700 million in venture funding to nearly 30 Chinese companies.
 
Other recent investments include e-learning company Ambow and gaming company Shanda. But doing business in China remains risky _ even for Cisco, the most highly valued company in Silicon Valley, with a market capitalization of nearly $165.5 billion.
 

December 17, 2006

Signate, an Asterisk provider, bites the dust?

Note:  Found this article at Tom Keating's blog about the rumor of Signate's demise.  Tom does bring up a good point in his article asking if the Asterisk Eco-system is growing too fast?  He mentions the pressure out there with Asterisk being a free and open source product.  What I feel any company involved with Asterisk has to make sure they are providing real value to there customers.  When you provide value through your knowledge and service you will always have a market to find customers. 

December 16, 2006

IAX 128 bit encryption in Asterisk

Note:  FYI 
 
As of asterisk version 1.2.4 (maybe before) there is a rather undocumented channel encryption feature included in chan_iax2. After successful authentication the whole channel including control data and voice data is encrypted with AES128.
 

Huge Victory for Net Neutrality and Real People as Telco Bill Dies

Note:  Just so everyone knows, I will continue to provide coverage on all stories (even both sides) on this subject of "Net Neutrality".  I believe it is very important that all data packets are treated the same.  Not to say there are not other issues involved with this subject that also have merit like excessive amounts of certain kinds of traffic.  But I believe the first important step is to make sure we treat the packets the same then we can approach those other issues with the proper arguement.

"

The gavel has fallen on the 109th Congress marking the demise of entrenched corporate efforts to legislate away our Internet freedoms — and a stunning victory for real people who want to retain control of the Internet.

The fate of Net Neutrality has now been passed to what appears to be a more Web-friendly Congress.

Our Coalition pledges to work with new Members to craft policies that ensure all Americans can access the Internet and enjoy the unlimited choices it has to offer.

The end of this Congress — and death of Sen. Ted Stevens’ bad bill — gives us the chance to have a long overdue public conversation about what the future of the Internet should look like. This will not only include ensuring Net Neutrality, but making the Internet faster, more affordable and accessible." 

Click Here for the Full Article 

Clearwire Pushes WiMAX to the Big Time (Go Craig Go)

 
 
Note: Great Read, gives a very informative break down of the Clearwire service and the Pros and Cons.  Also I love that is by another technology loving Seattle native. 
 
After three years of operation in a number of secondary markets, wireless Internet service provider Clearwire finally has launched its WiMAX service in one of the top 20 U.S. urban areas. As a keenly interested observer of the wireless landscape, I find it convenient that Clearwire chose my home town – Seattle – for its big-city debut.
 
The local newspapers are full of Clearwire ads, and my recycle bin gets a steady diet of its direct mail flyers. Clearwire's aggressive promotion is not really surprising; with strategic capital investment from big guns Intel and Motorola, the company obviously wants to demonstrate that the moderate success it has achieved in smaller cities will translate to much larger markets.

To do that, it will not only have to win a substantial number of subscribers but also make a limited amount of spectrum deliver promised data rates to the masses.

TRANSLATING SUCCESS

Clearwire is the latest wireless project of Craig McCaw, whose visionary idea of cellular as a nationwide service (as opposed to a bunch of essentially independent local operations) was a major factor in the explosive growth of the wireless industry. It is easy to anticipate that the same magic inevitably will touch WiMAX in general and Clearwire in particular, but one should be cautioned that McCaw also has authored – or at least participated in – a number of costly telecommunications ventures that went nowhere.

With 162,000 claimed subscribers in its current markets, at least Clearwire is a growing concern. It has licensed 2.5 GHz spectrum, which does not suffer quite the killer line-of-sight limitations of higher frequency bands, in most major market areas. With Intel and Motorola involved, the company appears to have the deep pockets that will be needed to fund growth and expansion if the service proves highly popular. But whatever the pedigree and however secure the funding, Clearwire still needs to demonstrate that wireless broadband service can compete with wire-borne technologies in the long run.

Reportedly, Clearwire's initial service offering in Seattle, as in its previous networks, uses a proprietary "pre-WiMAX" technology rather than the IEEE 802.16 standard generally associated with the term WiMAX. That in itself probably isn't a huge problem, as it should be fairly easy for Clearwire to get subscribers to upgrade when the time comes. If Clearwire and other WiMAX operators are to enjoy success, periodic upgrades will be necessary in order to wrest ever greater capacity from limited spectrum resources. As an example of this process, CDMA technology has undergone incremental enhancements over the years to the point that spectrum capacity of the latest version is well over double that of the original IS-95 standard.

Click Here to Continue Reading "Clearwire Pushes WiMAX to the Big Time" 

Asterisk 1.4.0-beta4 Released

The Asterisk Development Team is pleased to announce the release of Asterisk 1.4.0-beta4.

This release contains a number of updates:

- a bug fix for the ExternalIVR application and addition of 'silence' sound files to support it
- various SIP interoperability improvements
- memory and dialog leaks in the SIP channel driver
- a fix to music-on-hold random mode that was not really random
- an improvement to app_voicemail to ensure that the message duration is properly included in email notifications when voicemail messages are forwarded
- corrected a segfault issue during reload of the PostgreSQL CDR driver
- a change to no longer include a header file that does not exist on
Linux kernel 2.6.18 (and caused a problem on Fedora Core 6)
- logging of dynamic queue member addition and removal in queue_log
- a minor redesign of many CLI commands to be more similar to previous Asterisk releases
- significant improvements to IMAP storage support for voicemail
- a change to the SIP channel to avoid offering formats (codecs) that cannot be transcoded due to lack of available transcoders (along with dynamic activation/deactivation of transcoders)
- support for G.722 16KHz (wideband) audio passthrough, recording and playback
- support for standard prompts in G.722 format
- many other bug fixes

Some of the changes in this release are behavior modifications from the last release; please review the UPGRADE.txt file.

This will very likely be the last beta release of Asterisk 1.4 before the final release, which is targeted for next Friday.

Click Here for FTP Download of Asterisk 1.4.0-beta4

Thanks for supporting Asterisk and Zaptel!

Asterisk 1.2.14 Released

The Asterisk Development Team is pleased to announce the release of Asterisk 1.2.14.

This release contains a number of updates:


- a bug fix for the ExternalIVR application and addition of 'silence' sound files to support it
- various SIP interoperability improvements
- memory and dialog leaks in the SIP channel driver
- a fix to music-on-hold random mode that was not really random
- an improvement to app_voicemail to ensure that the message duration is properly included in email notifications when voicemail messages are forwarded
- corrected a segfault issue during reload of the PostgreSQL CDR driver
- a change to no longer include a header file that does not exist on Linux kernel 2.6.18 (and caused a problem on Fedora Core 6)
- many other bug fixes
 
Click Here For Asterisk Downloads

Thanks for supporting Asterisk and Zaptel!

December 15, 2006

Niklas Back At the Helm for Skype

Note:  Om Malik posted this juicy little tidbit about some changes happening at everyones favorite free VoIP company.  Here is an excerp from his writings:

"We reported about yet-another-tremor at Skype, as Henry Gomez replaced Alex Kazim (Official press release) I had pointed out that there was more to the story than meets the eye. Despite all the happy shiny talk, there has been a lot of tension between eBay and Skype-people. Many from Skype have left, or have been nudged out. The business strategy shifted from working with partners (business development) to a more marketing-oriented strategy. The conflict has been on a slow simmer for a while. The recent purge3, however, brought out the hostilities into the open. Many of these moves were systematically eroding the spirits of the remaining Skypers."
 

 

Cisco approaches WiMAX with caution

Note:  Well I guess Craig McCaw will have to more time to make his case for Wimax 
 
Cisco Systems Inc. is taking a wait and see approach to WiMAX technology while continuing to market to what it sees as a largely untapped small to mid-sized business market. Charlie Giancarlo, Cisco's chief development officer, said his company is not planning on entering the radio market any time soon. “We've been sitting on the sideline for a number of reasons,” he said during a press conference Wednesday at CScape, Cisco's annual analyst conference.
Although WiMAX has been “moving a lot over the past three years,” one of the major applications is last-mile access in regions without adequate wired infrastructure.

“We don't believe in fixed wireless as a viable technology in the developing world,” Giancarlo said of WiMAX (Wireless Interoperability for Microwave Access), which was ratified as the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers's 802.16 set of standards.

Giancarlo said because WiMAX operates in licensed spectrum, wireless operators need to agree it is a viable technology. Another concern is the plethora of wide-area wireless technologies already available. “There's a chicken and egg (problem) there,” he said. “It's just another wireless technology. That's not enough to allow Cisco to enter and be successful in that market.”

A Canadian analyst who attended the conference said Cisco officials are smart for taking a cautious approach to the WiMAX market.

“I agree with their point that there's going to be more network diversity on the wireless side rather than less in the next few years,” said Tony Olvet, vice president of IDC Canada's communications practice. “To make a big bet on any single one might be a bit risky, so it behooves them to stay neutral in terms of the various technologies -- WiMAX and what have you.” Although Cisco is not making WiMAX equipment, it is partnering with other vendors in developing technologies using WiMAX as a backhaul, rather than as an access technology, Giancarlo said.

For example, he said, the company is working on interfaces to wireless radios so users can run Internet Protocol-based applications over WiMAX networks. Cisco has also joined forces with IBM Corp. to provide a wide-area wireless network to the county of San Mateo in California, which will initially be based on Wi-Fi but will use WiMAX as a backhaul technology.

Many businesses in the Silicon Valley region do not have access to inexpensive high-speed Internet services, said Brian Moura, assistant city manager of San Carlos CA, who spoke on a panel on IP Mobility at CScape.

Click Here to Continus Reading 

Netroots Net Neutrality "Lobbying" Update

Note: Found this on this List this morning.  I like to cover the "Net Neutrality" politics because I believe as we move closer to VoIP termination this could really affect the landscape.

The House and Senate telecom committee chairs are now all Democrats (tiny possibility that some political fluke will threaten a Democratic Senate majority), after the Democratic takeover in last month's elections. So the current telecom bill is dead in committee. The cableco and telco bribes/lobbying sunk into that bill are all now on Plan B. So there is now a chance to reboot the telecom bill to protect Net Neutrality (equal accessibility by competitors to quality carriage regardless of content). Write a short, polite *paper* letter to your House/Senate reps, especially if they're on/chairing a telecom committee mentioning "Net Neutrality" and whatever other familiar (to them) buzzwords with which you agree.
 

The next Congress probably won't pass any but a really temporary stopgap telecom bill, instead concentrating on "cleaning up" from the last (Republican) Congress, and "setting up" for the next (they hope Democratic) presidential election in late 2008. So there's 2 years to convince our reps that freedom and commerce, not monopoly, depend on equitable access to networks. After that, it'll be too late. For a decade, maybe a lifetime, probably a career.

More Info:
 

December 14, 2006

State forces Vonage to provide 911 service

Note: Well this is good to hear, I think all voip providers should have 911 support just like the carriers.

People who get their phone service through the internet using Vonage will now get better 911 service. Vonage is the nation’s largest Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) phone service. The State of Florida announced a deal on Thursday that forced the company to make sure customers can directly dial emergency services.

Vonage must now automatically sign up customers for 911 services when they give a physical address. It also has to provide all needed information that will better help local emergency agencies locate customers in need. Plus, the company has to better describe the differences between it and standard phone companies.
 
Florida and five other states began investigating Vonage in May 2005 after they received consumer complaints about the company’s emergency dialing procedures. Those were different than traditional 911 procedures because VoIP service uses the internet, rather than standard telephone lines, to send and receive calls.
 
Thursday’s agreement addresses the company’s alleged failure to properly inform customers about the steps that had to be taken to activate the 911 feature. Prior to that, consumers who had not activated the service but attempted to dial 911 during an emergency would receive a recorded message informing them that their 911 service had not been activated.
 
 

Sprint Announces Wireless Integration of the Cell Phone and Desk Phone

  
 
Sprint today announced the launch of Sprint Wireless Integration, a product that extends customers’ premises-based PBX features and functionality to their mobile phones. The solution offers business customers additional value and new capabilities by integrating Avaya “Extension to Cellular” capabilities and new Sprint network advancements.

Sprint Wireless Integration features include providing users with one phone number that simultaneously rings both the desk phone and mobile phone, along with one converged enterprise voicemail inbox. It also extends PBX features like conferencing and call forwarding to the mobile phone so users can get all the functionality of their desk phone even while away from the office. For example, mobile users can make intra-company calls by simply dialing the four-digit extension of the person they want to reach, just as they would from the office desk phone – with no access numbers to dial or codes to enter first.

Built within Sprint's IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) architecture, Sprint Wireless Integration is the industry's first "hosted mobility" solution. “By converging wireline and wireless functionality, Sprint Wireless Integration provides a better overall service – one that is more functional and also makes communication more simple and effective,” said Tony Krueck, vice president of product management and development, Sprint. “This solution is a great example of the promise of Fixed/Mobile Convergence.”

Lowers telecom costs while extending accessibility, simplifying management

Providing PBX functionality to users’ mobile phones can provide businesses the power to simplify management of voice services. By effectively making wireless phones an extension of the enterprise voice system, network administrators reduce the number of disparate networks they manage while providing a consistent service to both desk and mobile phone users. In some cases, wireless phones can now serve as full-featured “desk phone replacements”, allowing businesses to reduce costs by beginning to replace their desk phones with more flexible mobile phones.

Wireless Integration provides additional telecom cost savings since outbound mobile calls routed through the customer’s premise-based PBX are considered “on-net” and don’t incur mobile usage charges. Mobile-to-international calls also can be routed through the customer’s PBX or international VPN, reducing rates significantly.

Sprint Wireless Integration is currently available to businesses with Avaya Communication Manager enterprise telephony PBX. Sprint will be announcing support for similar solutions with other major PBX providers in early 2007.

More details on Sprint Wireless Integration are available at: Sprint.com/voip

ComputerWorld Covers Skype-Blocking Story

Editor's Note: It has been really good to watch more and more stories we cover here getting picked up on other great news sites and blogs (Waves at Tom).  I found this on today on ComputerWorld about a story we found about a company that developed some voip filtering technology.
 
Here Are a Couple Articles Lately We Found:
 
- Tech Dirt On More Skype Blocking [Article]
 
- FreePress.net on Nokia's VoIP Blocker [Article]
 
 

WiFi radio stations to join battle for air supremacy

Note: With all these municipal wi-fi project in the work these seem to have come to the point where it is a real option.   Well I am going call it "Radio 2.0" just to be safe. :D 
 
For many people, satellite radio is the latest thing in audio. Instead of listening to regular old FM, you can buy a player from Sirius or its main competitor, XM, and listen to crystal-clear radio at home or in your car, after paying about $400 or so for the player and accessories, and about $15 a month for the service itself.

Over the past year or so, however, there has been talk about a new take on another technology -- Internet radio -- that has the potential to disrupt both the world of satellite radio and good old terrestrial radio. It's called WiFi radio, or wireless Internet radio, and some say its time could be coming soon, thanks to cheaper radio chips and the increasing penetration of public wireless networks.

Internet radio has been around since the Web first started becoming popular in the late 1990s, thanks in large part to the development of the MP3 music-compression standard. When high-speed connections started to become commonplace, people began to share the songs they had downloaded, setting up what amounted to private radio networks with software such as Winamp.

Traditional radio stations also started streaming their music over the Web, and still do, although in many cases their ability to do so has been hampered by copyright regulations, which restrict what they can play over the Internet. (Unfortunately, the licensing agreements that allow radio stations to play songs on the radio don't always allow them to "broadcast" the same music over the Internet.)

As high-speed Internet access has spread, so have the number of sources for online radio, including hundreds of informal "channels" devoted to different styles of music, all available for free. And as wireless networking has become more popular over the past couple years, people have started looking for an easy way to stream their digital music throughout their homes.

That has led to products such as the Roku SoundBridge and Sonos sound systems, both of which connect to your home network and PC, and can stream music to speakers in other rooms or to other computers and stereo equipment. A British company called Acoustic Energy came out with an Internet radio device last year that is just like a high-end stereo component, except that it pulls Internet radio stations in via any open WiFi connection.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

 

Cisco's top technologist wants to rally latent start-up spirit

 
 
Because the Cisco of today was built on a hundred acquired start-ups, the company's top technologist wants to know: "What happened to all those entrepreneurs?"

Cisco's Chief Development Officer Charles Giancarlo raised this question in a talk at the company's C-Scape analyst conference Tuesday. He said Cisco is realigning itself to squeeze new ideas out of its internal talent pool — built through 108 acquisitions since 1993, with almost half of the 10,000 employees it has acquired still on board.

To spur more internal inventiveness, Giancarlo said Cisco has reorganized how it manages and supports its Emerging Technology groups — product areas outside of Cisco's core routing and switching, and its six Advanced Technologies: enterprise IP communications, home networking, optical networking, security, storage-area networking and wireless technology.

"There was criticism in the press for some time that said Cisco couldn't innovate, and that Cisco had to buy [companies] to come up with new things," Giancarlo said.

He said he wonders what happened to all the inventive technologists Cisco acquired "who were considered very innovative, and then as soon as they became part of Cisco, couldn't invent their way out of a paper bag," according to some industry perceptions.

Cisco defines Advanced Technologies as product areas where the company expects to see $1 billion in annual sales. Emerging Technologies are defined as areas that have the potential to become $1 billion businesses.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

Skype Now Supports Over 120 Windows Mobile Smartphones and Pocket PCs

On 12th December we have launched Skype 2.2 Beta for Windows Mobile devices. It support now Smartphone’s and has enhanced support for Pocket PC devices. Now available for Smartphone’s powered by Windows Mobile software, as well as Pocket PCs, including those using lower-power processors, the latest incarnation of Skype software further extends Skype use beyond desktop or notebook computers.

Key features and benefits in Skype 2.2 for Windows Mobile beta include:

* NEW: Support for Windows Mobile smartphones and more Pocket PC devices;

* NEW: Enhanced today/home screen: presence status, event notification (missed calls, new chat messages and voicemails);

* NEW: Proxy support: Supports regular HTTP or HTTPS proxies, and authenticating HTTPS/SSL and SOCKS5 proxies

* Skype calling features: Free Skype-to-Skype calls, support for SkypeOut, SkypeIn', voicemail and call forwarding;

* User-friendly look and feel: As easy and familiar as using Skype on a computer;

* One-click Skype access: A Skype icon on the home screen lets users view and call contacts easily;

* Multi-person chat: Users can have multichat sessions using animated emoticons. When mobile users are offline, chat messages will automatically update the next time user logs in;

* Enhanced contact list: Users can see their contacts avatars and mood messages;

* Profile personalization: Users can take a picture with the camera on their mobile device and immediately update their profile.

You can download it here, browse release notes and give us feedback on Developer Zone or browse our Windows Mobile 2.2 Beta forum.

December 13, 2006

Aspect Deploys Asterisk PBX At Its New Corporate HQ

Digium announced that Aspect Software, a company solely focused on the contact center, has selected Digium’s Asterisk Business Edition as the telephone infrastructure for its new corporate headquarters, to be located in Chelmsford, Mass.
Asterisk Business Edition will be used to support 500 Aspect Software business and technical services subscribers in an environment which requires high availability. In the technical services contact center, Aspect Software will be integrating its leading unified contact center solution, Aspect EnsemblePro, with the Asterisk Business Edition.

As a reseller of Asterisk Business Edition, Aspect Software recognized the value contact center customers have experienced with Asterisk and the company took advantage of its new headquarters move as an opportunity to install this new infrastructure and capitalize on the benefits it will provide.

“SIP-based Voice over Internet Protocol and the adoption of open source applications is clearly the direction where the communications industry is headed. Aspect has extensive experience interoperating our contact center solutions with various PBXs and has come to appreciate a PBX that offers true openness,” said Jamie Ryan, chief information officer of Aspect Software. “In addition, we heard great feedback from Asterisk customers regarding the functionality of the solution and reliability of the product.”

Added Ryan, “Because Asterisk offers the same robust features as closed-source IP PBXs, it helps support our long-term goal of creating a unified communications platform, providing the ability to add more sophisticated functionality as our business grows.”

“The fact that a recognized company like Aspect selected Asterisk Business Edition for its own infrastructure shows the power of Asterisk in a corporate environment,” said Mark Spencer, founder and president at Digium. “This is an example of how Asterisk is reinventing the way businesses communicate.”
 
 

Bharti Teletech inks deal with Polycom

Bharti Teletech has inked a distribution alliance with Polycom, Inc, the unified collaborative communications solutions provider, to distribute its voice and video conferencing solutions in India.  "This is our third such distribution alliance after our tie-ups with Thompson to manufacture and markets GE phones and Motorola for sale of US major's GSM mobile phones and accessories.
We are targeting revenues of up to $50 million in the next two years through this Polycom deal, Bharti Teletech MD and vice chairman Rakesh Mittal told reporters today.

According to him, the partnership will help Bharti Teletech enhance its position in the voice and video conferencing market by combining its domain expertise and extensive distribution network with Polycom's market-leading voice and video offerings. Mr Mittal also added that the two companies would jointly develop products that were India-centric to cater to the requirements of small businesses and individuals. "These products will be rolled out in 2007," Mr Mittal added.

The partnership marks Polycom's entry into India's retail segment to cater to the increasing demand for voice and video conferencing products. Polycom will be able to offer a select range of products through Bharti Teletech's network of 40,000 retailers across cities and towns. Bharti Teletech will distribute other product offerings from Polycom through its network of over 100 institutional distributors spread across the country. With this alliance, Polycom aims to reach out to a major proportion of the small and medium enterprise (SME) and small office, home office (SOHO) market.

Additionally, Bharti Teletech will provide instant service support through its countrywide network of 146 authorised service franchisees. The company also shares close associations with over 6 active OEMs dealing in IP- based systems and will leverage on its large base of over 1000 corporate customers for promoting Polycom's IP solutions.

"We are certain that with Bharti's retail expertise and strong domain knowledge, we are in an excellent position to address the communications needs of India's customers and make them accessible to a wider range of entrepreneurial businesses than ever before," said Sunil Bhalla, senior vice president and general manager, Polycom Voice Communications.
 
Source: Economic Times 

December 12, 2006

Talkster VoIP Network Unleashed

Canadian-based Talkster Inc. has launched a VoIP network that will allow users to make calls from regular mobile phones to traditional and next generation voice services - no special software or circuitous dialing needed to use it.

Individual user beta service is being offered to further illustrate this network capability. It’s intention is to cut the cost of international calls and roaming charges, and they’re certainly on the right track.

Scheduled to be available in March 2007, as Rebecca Swensen, Research Analyst for VoIP Services at IDC said, “it’s a good example of the marriage of web services and telecom. Talkster’s beta service differentiates itself from other mobile VoIP companies by using web services to increase functionality, usability in more countries, and extending service capability to a large number of mobile devices.”

Source: VoIP News 

One World Releases Asterisk Based Inbound Call Center Solution

One World has deployed an Inbound Call Center solution based on Asterisk PBX platform with Digium PRI boards for its Inbound call center using Indosoft contact center technology. With most ACD technology in the market being closed legacy black box with limited flexibility and adaptability. 

One World chose to implement the Indosoft Contact Center solution to obtain a truly open technology platform. Asterisk is changing the landscape of the call center Industry by its incredible ability to meet complex demands. Its seamless integration of TDM and VoIP is far ahead of its peers in technology.

The Indosoft Contact Center solution for Inbound has three important components, namely the Q-Pump (session manager), the multi-connector (CTI interface to the Asterisk Manager Interface) and the GUI tool-set. The Indosoft Inbound GUI tool-set is an advanced tool to setup an Enterprise grade Inbound call center with priority based skills routing on an Asterisk PBX.

It takes the mystery out of setting up the most complex campaigns, call routing, dial-plan, queues and agents. With access to detailed reporting, the Indosoft Inbound solution based on Asterisk PBX is an ideal solution for small and medium call centers. Selection of Asterisk PBX as a backbone of the contact center will have a positive long term impact in many ways like, the future growth, reduced effort in expansion, lesser deployment and service cost. The rapid advancement of VoIP makes this choice of technology more critical.

Source: One World and Indosoft 

Jacket Micro Devices Announces First Mobile WiMAX

Jacket Micro Devices (JMD), supplier of the smallest, highest performing RF modules available, today announced it will begin sampling of the market’s first complete mobile WiMAX RF front end module in January 2007.
The new product, M30001, is a highly integrated and performance optimized WiMAX front end containing all active and passive components required to interface WiMAX transceivers directly to an antenna.
 
The single 7x7x1.2 mm QFN package is ideal for mobile phone, laptop and consumer electronics applications. The small size of the M30001 allows WiMAX interfaces to be integrated along with other wireless and computing functions into small form factor products such as PCI Express, USB and handsets. M30001 is targeted for production release in Q2 2007.
 
”We are convinced that WiMAX will offer consumers a new and exciting option for mobile broadband connectivity,” said Jim Stratigos, JMD’s CEO, “Our modules will greatly simplify the design of WiMAX products and turn what could be a challenging RF circuit design with many disparate active and passive components into a single tested and ready to use component.”
 
The M30001 provides exceptional attenuation in the UMTS transmit and receive bands making it ideal for cellular environments. Meeting the need for extended range and increased data rates of WiMAX devices, the module delivers 24 dBm output power at 4 percent error vector magnitude (EVM).
 
It is compatible with MIMO and antenna diversity configurations using a1x2 architecture. Jacket Micro Devices (JMD) a supplier of integrated RF modules for high performance wireless products, was founded in 2002 by researchers from Georgia Tech who developed a groundbreaking new method to package RF components.
 
Unlike modules made with ceramic and other technologies, JMD’s products can be rapidly customized and have higher levels of integration, resulting in fewer external components and faster time to market. JMD's patented Multi-Layer organic (MLO) technology defines a revolutionary, system-on-package (SOP) approach to RF modules for wireless products and is ideal for wireless systems engineers who need to design compact wireless products.
 
Source: Jacket Micro 
 
 

Cisco and Citrix expand click-to-call functionality

Citrix Systems Inc. and Cisco Systems Inc. today announced enhanced click-to-call technology that allows users to click on a phone number embedded in any application on a Citrix Presentation Server to have the call automatically dialed on a Cisco Unified IP phone.

The time-saving update expands upon the previous version of the technology, which allows users to click to call on phone numbers in Microsoft Outlook or Web-based page views, a Citrix spokeswoman said.

Barry Phillips, senior director of product marketing at Citrix, said thousands of applications are already deployed by large companies on Citrix Presentation Server, and all of those applications support the new expanded click-to-call capability. Those applications include products from Siebel Systems Inc., SAP AG and Oracle Corp.

Parsram Rajaram, senior systems analyst for the city of Winter Park, Fla., said there are potentially several applications used by more than 200 city workers where a click-to-call function would save users time and increase productivity. One public safety reporting and writing application contains many fields filled with phone numbers, which a public safety officer could click to be connected to investigators around the world, he said.

For the past six months, Winter Park has been using Cisco IP phones and the Citrix click-to-call function to improve productivity for purchasing department workers. Users browse hundreds of Internet sites to find information on products being reviewed for purchase, and can click on a phone number to have it automatically dialed, saving valuable seconds, he explained.

"It's a brilliant technology," Rajaram said. "The purchasing department has a lot of places to call, and they make hundreds of calls a day. This speeds up the process, and they're very happy. They don't complain about sore fingers anymore."

Winter Park added the functionality and related functions for easier calling from Citrix two months after installing Cisco IP phones and Cisco's CallManager IP voice switch, he said.

Phillips said the Citrix and Cisco technology requires Cisco IP phones and Cisco's CallManager, as well as a Citrix Application Gateway and the Voice Office software suite of applications. All are available now, with the gateway priced at $5,115 and the software starting at $50 per user. In addition to click-to-call functionality, other functions in the suite include a phone directory, zone paging, broadcast alerts and visual voice mail. Both Citrix products will be sold through the Cisco Solutions Plus program and Cisco resellers.

Phillips said Citrix is planning future enhancements that include click-to-IM and click-to-conference.

Elizabeth Herrell, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc., said click to call is one of a variety of emerging technologies that support unified communications where voice and data are combined to improve user productivity. Other large vendors that also have click-to-call technology or plan to offer it soon include Microsoft Corp., IBM, Alcatel and Avaya Inc., she said.

The Citrix approach, featuring access to any application, requires just one interface, said Brian DalBello, Cisco's director of product marketing for IP communications.

Source: ComputerWorld

 

Polycom Announces IMS Strategy

Polycom announced support for the IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) architecture and standards. In the first half of 2007, Polycom plans to deliver a series of IMS architected products that will enable service providers to deliver next generation conferencing and collaboration services to enterprises, small businesses and consumers. These carrier-class solutions will provide a pragmatic, cost-effective migration path for service providers by supporting pure IMS deployments, other than hybrid deployments.
“IMS is a complex architecture requiring a high level of implementation expertise,” said Tom Valovic, Program Director of VoIP infrastructure at IDC. “Although many of the more advanced applications of IMS are still evolving, early deployments will involve proven capabilities that intersect with many of the real-time multimedia collaboration tools associated with the emerging area of unified communications. Polycom recognises the importance of this trend and the need to respond to the growing momentum of both IMS and SIP in service provider networks.”

Polycom will deliver a comprehensive offering which focuses purely on the collaboration and conferencing markets. Based on its experience as the industry leader in voice, video and unified collaboration solutions, Polycom has designed its IMS architected products for the unique technological demands of high scale, high quality, multi-party voice, video conferencing and collaboration. The Polycom IMS architected products will include: a conferencing and collaboration optimised application server, an application development environment, an optimised conferencing media server, and multiple voice, video, and unified collaboration applications also based on SIP.

“With the proliferation of desktop video and multimedia enabled 3G devices, Polycom believes that the next generation of conferencing and collaboration services will be vastly different from yesterday’s pre-scheduled and attended audio and video conferencing,” said Joe Sigrist, Senior Vice-President and General Manager of Network Systems at Polycom. “Our IMS strategy is designed to assist our current service provider customers and an entirely new generation of service providers to rapidly design and deploy new applications that bring value to large enterprises, small businesses and consumers. Our approach ensures that service providers can migrate to next-generation applications and infrastructures affordably and intelligently, without extensive modification or forklift upgrades.”

Polycom’s IMS solutions will enable rapid feature development, scalability, fault tolerance, zero downtime upgrades, and design flexibility — all of which will allow service providers to create differentiated services that are completely transparent to the network, regardless of device and location. The Polycom solutions will enable on-demand environments where end-users can move easily and seamlessly between collaboration services and other services whenever and wherever they want. Service providers should be able to capitalise on new market opportunities when using Polycom’s IMS strategy.

Pricing and Availability

Polycom IMS-based infrastructure solutions are scheduled to be available in the first half of 2007. Pricing will be announced at that time.
 

December 11, 2006

The Asterisk Weather Station: Forecasts from Any Phone for 42,740 U.S. Zip Codes

Note:  Good old Mundy knows when to give us the right application at the right time of year.  Kudos 
 
Excerpt: After we published our article providing Asterisk weather forecasts for 1,000 U.S. cities using airport codes, we heard from a number of folks asking if we could do something similar using zip codes to retrieve forecasts from the National Weather Service. Well, Santa is two weeks early, and today you get your wish: an enhanced weather application for Asterisk that supports every last zip code in the United States, all 42,740 of them.
As with our original weather application based upon airport codes, this one requires the Flite voice synthesizer which now is an integral part of all TrixBox builds. You'll note that there are no thermometers and barometers to install with this application.
 
So, to be perfectly candid, this is really a virtual weather station. The National Weather Service does the forecasting, the U.S. Postal Service does the locating, and the Asterisk Weather Station simply provides the glue to put the two together and retrieve and play the results using your touchtone telephone.
 
The good news is that you actually control and manage this application rather than worrying about dialing into someone else's system and finding that they've gone out of business or quit providing the service.
 

Siemens Announces OpenStage - Collection of SIP Phones

 
 
Siemens Communications, Inc., today announced OpenStage, a new line of stylish IP telephones that bring an open communications hardware platform to the desktop for the first time. With four different models ranging from basic to advanced, OpenStage phones feature a revolutionary new design that combines ease-of-use with PC functionality – the biggest change in the telephone interface since the pushbutton phone replaced the rotary dialer.
In addition, OpenStage phones utilize Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) to integrate wired, wireless and IP communications to invoke new conferencing and call features such as “push to conference,” desktop call management, “presence” based calling, and more. The phones also support compatible third-party applications through standards-based technology such as Java, HTML, WML and XML so that they can become a key interface for everyday enterprise business applications.

OpenStage introduces a touch sensitive wheel, called TouchGuide that allows easy access to the menu-driven user interface. The TouchSlider controls the volume of the handset, ringer and speaker phone, and there are touch sensitive pre-set and programmable keys that provide easy access to frequently used applications and features, such as address books, voicemail, conferencing, and speed dial. OpenStage also lets you dial using hands-free voice commands or a conventional keypad. It also features a high-quality speaker phone that has been specially designed for conference calls, and can operate multiple connections from the same desktop.

“End-users in business environments are faced with an ever-increasing variety of communications capabilities, devices, interfaces and modes. Efforts to streamline and integrate these capabilities, and to make the most of the latest in navigation techniques, are welcome and will get the attention of buyers,” said Jerry Caron, Vice President, Current Analysis. “Innovative systems, such as the Siemens Enterprise Communications Open Stage portfolio, make access to sophisticated capabilities easier and more intuitive, thus inherently raising the relevance of the capabilities themselves.”

Built-in Bluetooth support also lets you use a Bluetooth headset with the OpenStage deskphone for hands-free operation. A V.Card exchange even allows you to transfer contacts between compatible mobile phones and the desk phone. A USB port is available to backup data, such as personal contacts, as well as to connect to a wireless LAN using a WLAN dongle. With network support, you can readily access a corporate phone directory using an LDAP client, or gain public phone directory access using XML to look up new contacts.

“OpenStage is the missing link that integrates cellular, the Internet and the wired desktop,” said Thomas Zimmermann, Chief Operating Officer of Siemens Enterprise Communications. “We designed OpenStage to deliver mobile convenience in a fixed device, providing instant access that is always available and easy to drive. And this line of IP telephones offer a new, rich communications experience that combines style elements with the convenience of a mobile phone.”

OpenStage is designed to help organizations improve productivity and streamline workflow by integrating system-wide communications into the most-used office device, the telephone handset. Since it is an open application platform, OpenStage gives IS departments and third party developers more flexibility to write and deploy a wide range of value-added applications that can make the phone a key interface for enterprise applications and that can speed communications and workflow.

For example, Java applications that run on a PC, mobile phone, or PDA can now be readily ported to run on the OpenStage phone. Using HTML, the phones can be used as an interface for hosted applications, such as timesheets, calendars, or public phone books. WML support makes it compatible with applications developed for mobile phones, such as access to traffic news. Support for XML also makes it easy to customize OpenStage for any number of users, such as interfaces for building control systems, responses to incoming calls or to create "tell me when" applications that monitor for specific conditions. OpenStage is part of LifeWorks, Siemens’ vision for open communications and seamless collaboration across multiple protocols, networks, and devices.

OpenStage phones will retail starting at $295. They will be offered through Siemens Alliance partners.

Encrypted Internet Telephony is Only Safe Option

Note:  Good article. I think Dirk brings up some valid points.  With the mass adoption of VoIP we must still understand its just another technology that has its strengths and weaknesses.  If you using an IP telephony phone system your general network security policy should cover it also.  .02
 
We can safely say that it's unsafe: the Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) that enables telephony over the internet. Hackers can choose between a variety of widely available programs to pluck conversations out of the data stream and then manipulate them.  IT experts also expect a rapid increase in spam over Internet Telephony (SPIT) in coming years - spam mails being read aloud by a text-to-speech computer calling on the telephone. While there are a variety of effective security concepts, they are rarely put to use.
One fundamental error is presuming that old-fashioned telephones were particularly secure devices themselves.

"The traditional telephone net is unsafe too," warns Hartmut Pohl, professor of Data Security at the Polytechnic Institute of Bonn- Rhein-Sieg in Sankt Augustin. The telephone junction box of any apartment building is more or less freely accessible.

"It's just that it takes less effort with VoIP because the conversation is already digitized." One must therefore presume that any internet phone conversation is public.

As with email, few private users actually employ encryption for their internet telephony. "There's simply not much awareness," Pohl says. He is also spokesman for the Working Group for Data and IT Security at the Society for Computer Sciences in Bonn. There are in fact several encryption methods for VoIP.

Secure Real-Time Transport Protocol (SRTP) is perhaps the most common. Yet even SRTP is not 100 per cent secure in and of itself, the German Federal Agency for Security in Information Technology (BSI) in Bonn determined in its study VoiPSEC.

One problem arises, if the key exchanged between sender and recipient is sent without encryption at the start of the conversation. SRTP is only supported by a few VoIP providers for the internet portion of the conversation. And not every VoIP telephone offers the encryption.

If the two parties converse solely over the internet, using programs known as softphones to telephone from computer to computer or via VoIP telephony, then they can encrypt their conversation regardless of their VoIP provider. This presumes that softphones and VoIP telephones support the same protocols.

If the conversation to be encrypted is running between a softphone or VoIP telephone and the landline network, then the VoIP providers network must also support the encryption.

That's why Sipgate, a Dusseldorf-based provider, intends offering secure encryption soon, combining the SRTP and Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocols.
 

December 08, 2006

Intel to Introduce WiFi/WiMAX Multi-Mode Chip

Tech2 has reported that Intel in a major step forward is set to bring WiMAX to the mainstream market, by unveiling a new single–chip multi-band WiMAX /WiFi/HSDPA radio.
This new chipset to be called Intel WiMAX 2300 will combine virtually all known high-speed wireless access with its support for WiMAX (IEEE 802.16e-2005), WiFi (802.11a/b/g/n) and HSDPA (GSM based 3.5 G)

"Intel continues to drive innovation in mobile broadband access by eliminating the seams that prevent ubiquitous wireless connectivity," said Intel's Sean Maloney. "The Intel WiMAX Connection 2300 will help speed the deployment of mobile WiMAX, and accelerate the availability of a new wave of 'personal broadband' laptops and mobile devices that deliver the real Internet."

Intel hopes to bring this chipset out by 2007 end with full commercial deployment in 2008.

 

Asterisk Consultant SIPBox Recognised By Frost & Sullivan

SIPBox has been named Entrepreneurial Company of the Year by Frost & Sullivan. The award recognises a small company that demonstrated superior entrepreneurial ability during the year.  SIPBox, based in Tinley Park, Illinois, helps medium to large enterprises build Digium Asterisk-based solutions.
he award specifically recognises SIPBox's ability to "build around its inherent strengths and identify a unique target market with significant market potential.

"As the demand for open-source solutions increases, SIPBox will experience significant growth," said Krithi Rao, Frost & Sullivan Industry Analyst.

"The value proposition that SIPBox offers will help the company differentiate in a market entrenched with legacy equipment vendors and penetrate a large number of diverse enterprise segments."

Chad Agate, CEO SIPBox said: "Leveraging our history in IT systems integration and our experience with IP PBXs, such as Asterisk, SIPBox is helping to grow the IP telephony market and provides enterprise and carriers customers with the ability to easily make the switch to VoIP."
 
Source: VoIPNews.au 

WiMax threatens Department of Defense radars, officials say

Note: I am surprised that the WiMax operators got spectrum in the middle of DOD space. Well I am glad they agree that both gov and commmercial needs to work together to share the space.
 
The wireless industry views WiMax as the next big thing, a technology with great promise to deliver broadband to homes and offices less expensively than wired connections. But proliferation of the new commercial long-range wireless systems could cause problems for Defense Department radar systems, which operate in the same frequency bands, top DOD officials said at the ACEA DOD Spectrum Summit Dec. 6.
White House and National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) officials said commercial wireless systems present opportunities and challenges for DOD, adding that the United States needs to find ways to share frequencies.

Ron Jost, deputy assistant secretary of Defense for command, control, communications, space and spectrum in the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Networks and Information Integration, agreed that DOD needs to find ways for its systems to coexist and share spectrum with commercial products but added that such an approach is much more difficult internationally.

Badri Younes, DOD’s director of spectrum management, said the de facto international WiMax frequencies are at 3.5 GHz, in the middle of a swath of spectrum used by DOD land-based, shipboard and aircraft radar systems. At home, the Federal Communications Commission has allocated spectrum between 3.65 and 3.70 GHz on an unlicensed basis to wireless Internet service providers for broadband services.
 

December 07, 2006

Genius Launches New VoIP Mouse

Note:  Now this is a nice combination of two technologies with a nice after effect of saving space on my already cluttered desk.

Taiwan-based Genius has announced the Genius Navigator 380, its latest VoIP Mouse. The Navigator 380 is a chic mouse exhibiting a commendable integration of mouse and Internet phone functions. This VoIP mouse software can support up to six Instant Messengers (Skype, MSN, Yahoo!, GoogleTalk, QQ, and AIM) and combine these IMs into one window.

Besides, there are seven buttons in Navigator 380 especially for the phone functions - Phone on/off, List up/down, Volume up/down, and OK for IM window. 

According to company sources, Genius Navigator 380 can be carried along with your notebook anytime, anywhere. If you are in a coffee shop, and you are using the Navigator 380 featuring a 1200 dpi optical engine, you can handle your paper work or browse the Internet, and the LED on the Navigator 380 blinks to tell you that your friend just gave you a call through Instant Messenger. And if the PC speaker is on, the ringing will also alert you for the incoming phone call. So one just needs to pick up the mouse, and open it up like a clamshell mobile phone to talk to a friend via Navigator 380.

Sandeep Ramani, Country Manager of KYE Systems, said, "With the unveiling of this futuristic product, Genius Navigator 380, I hope Genius, will go a long way to mark an era of innovative products, and will accentuate particularly on next-gen products in future as well. In a nut shell, this revolutionary device is an absolute necessity for a frequent traveler to reduce his/her burden and increase work efficiency."

The key features of the product are its use as an optical mouse or Internet phone (flips open like a clamshell mobile phone), LED lights, and ringing (setup with IM software) for incoming calls, Seven phone button On/Off , Volume up/down, List up/down, OK (for IM window), Mini and portable design which is a good alternative to NB touchpad, LED light for incoming calls, Left button Right button Middle button with wheel List, up/down, Phone off/Phone on, Volume up/down, and OK for IM window.

Navigator 380 is priced at a MRP of Rs 1,850. Genius products are available with Transtek Infoways, and Tirupati Enterprises, the authorized distributors for Genius in India. 

Source: Tech Tree 

VoIP Now's 7 Fave VoIP/ WoIP Blogs Bloggers of 2006

Note:  VoIP Now has posted there 7 favorites bloggers of 2006.  Personally I am glad to see Ward Mundy at Nerd Vittles make the list.  Ward has consistently brought very informative articles focused on Asterisk for some time now.  I am glad he is getting his due.  Kudos Ward!

"Why so few? That's not to say I don't enjoy other blogs and bloggers. My freelancing means it's a necessity that I subscribe to 1,000 web feeds, and regularly scan 60-100+ websites and weblogs relating to voice, VoIP, IPTV, and IP communications on a near-daily basis - except when I fall horribly behind posting like I have the last two weeks. I can't actually more than scan everything, but there are a few bloggers that I'm eager to read as much as possible." 

Click Here to See the List for 2006 

 

Research: IP Telephony iPBX 5 Year Forcast

It its IP Telephony 5-Year Forecast Report, the Redwood Shores, Calif.-based market research firm predicts by 2010, revenues from IP lines will be US$4.6 billion per year, while the total PBX market will be US$7.1 billion annually.
Most IP PBXs sold today are actually hybrid appliances, capable of connecting both IP and time-division multiplexing (TDM) phones, said Steve Raab, Dell'Oro's director of IP telephony research.
 
Pure IP PBXs account for only 20 per cent of total PBX revenues, he said. But Dell'Oro predicts a slowdown in hybrid PBX sales, as more companies opt for pure IP hardware. “At this point, we're getting to where IP telephony is more of a mature technology,” Raab said. “In 2002 and 2003, this technology was still not fully featured and there were still some quality issues, whether it was in the products themselves or in the underlying network.”
 
In the past, corporate networks were often unsuited for real-time applications such as voice, but companies have been upgrading their local-area networks while IP PBX vendors have been adding more features to their products, Raab said. Corporate telecom managers were initially attracted to IP telephony because it reduced the cost of making long-distance calls between branch offices, but now, more companies are looking for “extra value” from IP communications, such as the ability to run applications such as instant messaging, multi-party collaboration, video conferencing and sales force automation, Raab said.
 
“We are seeing acceleration to putting much more IP on the desktop, and we're seeing businesses caring about applications.” He added businesses managers want to be able to connect home workers to their office systems, and are looking for products that will connect all offices in the corporation, eliminating the need to install small switches in all branch offices.
 
Raab also predicts Microsoft Corp. can “disrupt” the market with products like Live Communications Server and Communications Server 2007. Even though Microsoft is not a traditional telephony vendor, it is now more active in the enterprise voice and unified communications markets.
 

December 06, 2006

Intelliverse Improves VoIP Fax Transmissions

Intelliverse said Tuesday its hosted VoIP service, Talking Planet Business, now supports the ITU T.38 standard for sending faxes across IP networks. The T.38 technology sends faxes in real time with correction techniques that allow sensitive fax machines to hold a connection even during times of packet loss.

"Despite what many people may believe, faxing is still an integral part of how people do business -- especially among small and medium businesses," said Kevin M. Moran, president and CEO of Intelliverse. "The enhanced quality we offer combined with support for faxing will enable SMBs to experience a newly integrated, more efficient level of business."

With VoIP, voice communications are turned into packets and sent across a data network. Dropped packets can be detrimental to fax communications, because they may cause sessions to have errors, or even to fail, the company said.

Click Here to Continue Reading 

Asterisk Summary - TLS support for HTTP, AMI and more

Note: Luigi Rizzo posted this on the Asterisk Dev list.  Some of our readers should get some value out of this.

A few days ago i asked about certificate negotiation in asterisk.

On a related topic, i have been thinking for a while on how to provide TLS support for HTTP, AMI and more services within asterisk, keeping in mind the current state of affairs, the feedback i received on the above request, and with the goal of minimizing changes to the current code base.  I think I am at a stage where i have no more ideas, so attached you find:

- a description of the current situation with respect to the implementation of TLS support for HTTP and AMI;
- a workplan on how to add TLS support to AMI,
- general considerations on how to provide TLS TCP sockets.

Please let me know if you have better ideas on the above, but be careful that "the devil is in the details" (e.g. we still needs a poll()-able fd for the TLS sockets), and that we are a bit constrained by backward compatibility issues so e.g. changing internal interfaces such as the one for CLI commands is not really feasible without widespread changes to the code.

Note that the relevant code (currently in main/http.c, possibly to be relocated elsewhere) is designed to be as independent as possible from the specific service. So its functionalities can be reused
(hopefully without modifications) wherever we need TLS TCP sockets.

Feedback welcome.

        cheers
        luigi

--- CURRENT STATE - AMI ---

As it is now, the AMI code does I/O on the level-2 file descriptor returned by accept() (or created in generic_http_callback() in the case of AMI-over-HTTP).  On the input side, the code loops around the function get_input() interpreting a returns of 1 as "full line available" and 0 as "possibly an interrupt arrived".

On the output side, with only one exception, all I/O is performed in the function send_string(), called by either astman_append(), or by (internally) by process_events(). The routine tries to write
a buffer to the file descriptor with a bounded timeout.  (in fact, the way it is written, ast_carefulwrite() does not give any guarantee). In order for the above to work, the socket must be in non-blocking
mode (block-sockets=false in manager.conf).

The exception, on the output side, is the function action_command(), which runs a CLI command over AMI. In this case the file descriptor is passed directly to ast_cli_command() so there is no control on the way I/O is performed.
  
The input part loops around get_input() to read one line at a time from the socketinput() to read one line at a time from the socket. get_input() is also expected to return 0 (and an empty buffer) when a signal is sent to the thread, typically because there is a new event to be processed.

--- CURRENT STATE - HTTP ---

The code in main/http.c has full https support. This is relatively straightforward because all I/O is done using a FILE * descriptor. The latter is obtained by just using fdopen() on the socket returned by accept() in case of plain http requests, or by using funopen() or fopencookie() (depending on
which one is available) to install handlers to encrypt/decrypt the data.

The routines to set up the tls session are generalized in a way that they can be made globally visible and used by other modules.

--- ADDING TLS SUPPORT TO AMI ---
In my opinion the way to go for adding TLS support to the manager interface is the same used for http, i.e.

  1. change the code to use a FILE * instead of a level-2 file descriptor

  2. on setup, call the function ssl_setup() (from main/http.c) to establish the encrypted connection.

#2 is trivial - it basically requires to change from static to globally visible the TLS/SSL support functions/variables currently in http.c

#1 is mostly trivial too, and requires the following steps.

a) after the accept, make sure that make_file_from_fd() (from http.c) is called on the socket to create a proper FILE * for plain or encrypted sessions;

b) change the function get_input() to use fread() instead of read() to collect the data. One can still do the ast_wait_for_input() on the original descriptor returned by accept().

c) change the function send_string() to work on the FILE *.
   This is also relatively straightforward, especially given that a rewrite is necessary anyways because ast_carefulwrite() does not give the guarantees we want.

d) modify the function action_command() so that it creates a temporary file descriptor to be passed to ast_cli_command(), and then read back the data from the temp file and write it to the output with send_string(). The code is similar to what is done in generic_http_callback() to support AMI-over-HTTP.

--- GENERIC TLS TCP SOCKETS ---

Other applications needing (server) TLS sockets should likely be able to reuse most of the functions in main/http.c, namely server_start() and server_root(), which take charge of killing any old instance of the service on the same port, creating a new thread in charge of doing the accept(), and then
creating new threads in charge of the certificate negotiation and I/O for the new session.

For client TLS sockets, there is not much support, but all should be needed after the conventional socket()/[bind()/]connect() is just a call to make_file_from_fd() to set up a proper FILE *.

We can provide a wrapper for the above if there is a need (i don't know if any other modules currently use client TLS sockets).

--- SERVER CERTIFICATE ---

At the moment, the code that reads the server's certificate is within function ssl_setup(), and the code above is written assuming only one certificate for the whole server, accessible from the
variable ssl_ctx. It is not difficult to let each service use a different certificate. As pointed out by Klaus Darilion, let the server pick the certificate depending on the request (useful for the equivalent of 'virtual domains') requires some additional features ("server name" TLS extension) which i
don't know how to implement.

--- THE END ---

ChanSkype 1.2.6 Released

Hi folks, just to let you know that a new ChanSkype release is available at:

www.chanskype.com

This release has better startup handling and fully supports DTMF - either inbound or outbound your Asterisk box.

Best regards,

Paulo Mannheimer
The ChanSkype team

December 05, 2006

VoIP Blogger Mark Collier Releases New Book on VoIP Hacking

 

Note:  We are ordering this book today.  I am very interested in some of the Asterisk specific vulnerabilities.  Glad to see this type of books coming out.

Mark Collier is excited, and he has every reason to be.  His new book, Hacking Exposed VoIP, is hitting the shelves, and it even has its very own companion website. Besides maintaining his own blog, Mark is CTO for SecureLogix Corporation, responsible for all product and services R&D.   The book, published by McGraw-Hill, is available for pre-order.

From the book’s description:

Block debilitating VoIP attacks by learning how to look at your network and devices through the eyes of the malicious intruder. Hacking Exposed VoIP shows you, step-by-step, how online criminals perform reconnaissance, gain access, steal data, and penetrate vulnerable systems. All hardware-specific and network-centered security issues are covered alongside detailed countermeasures, in-depth examples, and hands-on implementation techniques. Inside, you’ll learn how to defend against the latest DoS, man-in-the-middle, call flooding, eavesdropping, VoIP fuzzing, signaling and audio manipulation, Voice SPAM/SPIT, and voice phishing attacks.

  • Find out how hackers footprint, scan, enumerate, and pilfer VoIP networks and hardware
  • Fortify Cisco, Avaya, and Asterisk systems
  • Prevent DNS poisoning, DHCP exhaustion, and ARP table manipulation
  • Thwart number harvesting, call pattern tracking, and conversation eavesdropping
  • Measure and maintain VoIP network quality of service and VoIP conversation quality
  • Stop DoS and packet flood-based attacks from disrupting SIP proxies and phones
  • Counter REGISTER hijacking, INVITE flooding, and BYE call teardown attacks
  • Avoid insertion/mixing of malicious audio
  • Learn about voice SPAM/SPIT and how to prevent it
  • Defend against voice phishing and identity theft scams
Source: VoIP-News

December 04, 2006

Adding an iTunes Telephone Controller to Your Asterisk PBX

Excerpt: If you're as lazy as the rest of us, then getting up to change what's playing on iTunes or to adjust the volume is just too much like work especially if you've installed one of our PBX-in-a-Flash Asterisk systems on either a dedicated Linux machine or your Windows Desktop.
For long-time readers of Nerd Vittles, you may recall that we covered how to build a streaming audio server using iTunes last year. So today we add the missing piece which will let you change songs, adjust the volume, and pause and restart iTunes using any touchtone phone connected to your Asterisk or TrixBox system.
 

Sterling National Bank Chooses Ingate for SIP Trunking Solution

Ingate Systems, which develops firewall technology and products that enable SIP-based live communication for the enterprise while maintaining control and security at the network edge, announces that Sterling National Bank, the principal banking subsidiary of financial holding company Sterling Bancorp, has chosen the award-winning Ingate SIParator to enable SIP trunking.

Sterling, which pioneers the use of new technologies to improve business processes and efficiency, is using SIParators at its Wall Street operations center and Woodbury, NY office to protect its IP-PBXs and to connect to a SIP Trunking service provider, resulting in a two-thirds reduction of its telecommunications expenses.

SIP trunking rapidly reduces telephony costs by using the Internet instead of the PSTN to carry communications traffic (voice, etc.) as far as possible, in effect eliminating long-distance telephony charges. SIP trunking also enables an enterprise to use just one connection for both voice and data, eliminating the cost of redundant network connections.

The SIP trunking solution bridges between VoIP and the PSTN. Sterling, like other enterprises, can now use VoIP to call people who still use traditional telephony service. With SIP trunking long-distance calls are routed over the Internet and terminated at the service provider's PSTN gateway which is located closest to the person being called. The result is a savings for Sterling of approximately $1,000 per month, or 2/3 of their previous telephony costs.

In addition, using SIP trunks eliminated the need for Sterling to purchase local PSTN gateways and costly ISDN BRIs (Basic Rate Interfaces). The company still uses PRI (Primary Rate Interface)-rate ISDN for incoming calls, 911 and toll-free calling but the expense is modest since all outgoing calls that are billable are sent to the SIP trunking service provider.

With such a rapid reduction in communications expenses, Sterling expects that the SIP trunking installation, including the IP-PBX, the Ingate SIParator and the trunking service will pay for itself in less than six months.

"As a company committed to a high-tech, high-touch experience for our customers, SIP trunking helps us maximize the opportunities available with IP communications," said Eliot S. Robinson, Executive Vice President, Sterling National Bank. "Ingate's SIParators were the ideal solution to allow us to deploy SIP trunks. They were fully interoperable with our IP-PBX, the SIP trunking service provider and our existing security infrastructure and perhaps most importantly they just worked."

Ingate SIParators work in parallel with a company's existing firewall to enable businesses to utilize SIP-based VoIP. They solve the Network Address Translation (NAT) traversal issues that are faced by businesses using SIP. They also provide the advanced routing capabilities necessary for enterprises to easily connect to carriers' SIP trunks. And for remote users, small branches and mobile workers, Ingate's Remote SIP Connectivity capabilities allow these workers to use the centralized IP-PBX and the SIP Trunking service to make and receive calls.

"Sterling Bank's experience highlights the benefits of proven SIP applications that streamline business processes and improve the bottom line," said Steven Johnson, President, Ingate Systems. "We are proud that Sterling chose Ingate to enable their SIP trunking deployment."

Sterling plans to expand its use of the Ingate SIParators and SIP trunking to other offices throughout the Sterling Bancorp network. They also plan to extend their use of IP communications beyond voice traffic, to include IM, presence and other productivity-enhancing applications.

Source: InGate 

 

FINTEL to Cover Fiji Islands with WiMAX

Note: I wonder if FiNTEL needs someone to come out and test the system in person? :)

 

Alvarion, provider of wireless broadband solutions and specialized mobile networks, today announced that Fiji International Communications Limited (FINTEL), the country’s international telecommunications provider, has selected BreezeMAX to offer WiMAX data services to the businesses and residents of the Fiji islands. Working with Paclink, a leading South Pacific systems integrator, FINTEL will start by offering services in the capital city of Suva, later expanding to more of the 330 islands in the south Pacific archipelago.

“We are pleased to be able to bring the ‘4G’ services of WiMAX to the Fiji Islands,” said Mr. Jone Wesele, Commercial & Business Development Manager of FINTEL. “As a complement to our existing fiber and satellite networks, BreezeMAX has proven to be ideal for our island terrain. It's a robust, ruggedized system with exceptionally high performance for our non-line-of-sight environment and meets the demanding bandwidth and service requirements of our busy tourist industry."

BreezeMAX is Alvarion's award-winning, WiMAX Certified platform designed from the ground up according to the IEEE 802.16 standards and uses OFDM technology for advanced non-line-of-sight (NLOS) functionality.

“Bringing WiMAX to the Fiji Islands is very exciting, and we are thrilled to plan and deploy such a significant addition to FINTEL’s network capabilities," said Philip Martyn of Paclink. “We look forward to growing our relationship with Alvarion to offer more network solutions to FINTEL and other carriers in our region.”

BreezeMAX carrier-class design supports broadband speeds and quality of service (QoS) to enable carriers to offer triple play broadband services to thousands of subscribers in a single base station. Since its launch in mid-2004, BreezeMAX has been successfully deployed in over 200 installations in more than 80 countries around the world.

“We applaud FINTEL’s decision to strategically integrate the excellent business case of BreezeMAX to add broadband data services to its already existing network capabilities,” said Tzvika Friedman, president and CEO of Alvarion. “As our deployments in Asia Pacific increase, we are pleased to see more and more carriers leverage our market-leading BreezeMAX in their island environments. In addition, WiMAX services will give the Fiji tourist industry a substantial boost with the corresponding economic benefits."

Source: Alvarion 

Nokia introduces Flexi EDGE GSM Base Station

Nokia introduces the Nokia Flexi EDGE Base Station, a new product for building out GSM/EDGE networks more cost effectively and quickly than ever before.  In developing the Flexi EDGE Base Station, the smallest on the market, Nokia has taken full advantage of its latest innovations in electronics and system design to provide operators with a compact and powerful platform to deploy high quality networks with minimized operating and capital expenditures.
Based on a modular compact design, the Nokia Flexi EDGE Base Station makes a significant impact on GSM/EDGE network coverage and capacity, as well as making base station siting easier and faster. Operators gain cost savings in site deployment, operations and in reduced number of sites - all resulting in lower network total cost of ownership.
 
Nokia’s Flexi EDGE Base Station delivers market leading radio performance ensuring excellent coverage for wide and hot spot areas. As a result it reduces remarkably the number of sites needed. Also, the compact design of the new Flexi Base Station requires much less space and therefore can make more efficient use of existing or new base station sites.
 
The high capacity Nokia Flexi EDGE Base Station enables easy capacity upgrades as traffic increases. Nokia Flexi EDGE Base Station also delivers significant improvements in power consumption. Nokia Flexi EDGE Base Station deliveries are expected to start from mid 2007 onwards. “The new Nokia Flexi EDGE Base Station is designed to further enhance operator revenue and to deliver superb operational efficiencies and capabilities.
 
In mature markets the new Nokia Flexi EDGE Base Station enables operators to strengthen their radio capacity and to ensure the service continuity for WCDMA networks. In new growth markets, Nokia Flexi EDGE Base Station supports fast and cost-effective GSM network rollout and deployment, both critical success factors for operators building businesses on mass market low ARPU customer bases,” says Ari Lehtoranta, Senior Vice President, Radio Networks, Nokia.
 
The Flexi EDGE Base Station’s weather-proof modules can be installed indoors or outdoors stacked on a floor or shelf, mounted on wall or pole, or fitted in cabinet or any standard 19” rack. As the modules are so small and lightweight, one person can carry the modules and install a base station, thus leading to a faster network deployment.
 
The new Nokia Flexi EDGE Base Station is the latest variant in the family of Nokia Flexi Base Station products. The Nokia Flexi Base Station platform, unique in the industry, brings the benefits of modularity to GSM/EDGE, WCDMA/HSPA and WiMAX operators.
 
The three Nokia Flexi Base Station variants, all based on modular architecture provided by the Open Base Station Architecture Initiative (OBSAI), create great synergies in radio network deployment, operation and maintenance. In addition to its newly launched Flexi EDGE Base Station, Nokia has previously launched Nokia Flexi WCDMA and Nokia Flexi WiMAX base stations.
 
Source: Nokia 

Security expert taps VoIP as new malware target

Voice over IP technology could become the new malware battle zone, according to Enrique González-Ochoa, a researcher with Panda Software’s surveillance department in Spain. The security expert thinks VoIP threats will become more prominent in the near future.

González-Ochoa will be speaking at the AVAR (Association of Antivirus Asia Researchers) conference, which is being held today and Tuesday in Auckland. There will also be speakers from Symantec, McAfee, Microsoft, IBM, Trend Micro and F-Secure.

VoIP is a relatively new field, which makes it difficult to keep up with attackers and fight malware, says González-Ochoa. A VoIP-related attack could involve fake emails made to look like emails from a bank and sent out to the bank’s customers, asking them to call a local number to confirm personal information.

This recently happened to an American bank, says González-Ochoa. “[The phone number was] a false automatic system asking for details about the customers’ accounts. That way the attacker got access to [the accounts],” he says. The ninth annual AVAR conference is expected to draw about 300 delegates from AVAR member organisations in the Asia Pacific region, according to joint conference sponsors Eset and its New Zealand distributor Chillisoft.

AVAR is a not-for-profit organisation that aims to prevent the spread and damage caused by malicious software. Its members include security experts, government agencies and corporations in the Asia-Pacific region, the US and Europe.

Source: ComputerWorld 

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