Uhm. Good point. But I think that the Luxemborg wrinkle was interesting... The more interesting idea is peer-to-peer VoIP. That plus crypto and I don't think prying ears could do a whole hell of a lot. In fact, the game may be over on some levels...certainly, CALEA seems to have at best a slippery legal hold on VoIP at all, and that's when the VoIP calls are hubbed or "switched" somehow (you packet heads can remove the quote-marks from 'switched'). Peered VoIP seems to push any eavesdropping all the way out to the edges of the network. In fact, I'm wondering if there may be a popular 'giving up' underway on the greater crypto issue, with greater starting to encompass voice traffic. Actually, while we're fighting Satan's Minions(TM) (ie, the evil dark-skinned ragheads), nobody seems to care as much about some hydroponic pot growers and whatnot, and Al Qaeda seems to think that word of mouth works just fine for disseminating mission-critical information. -TD
From: "Dave Howe" <DaveHowe@gmx.co.uk> To: <cypherpunks@minder.net> Subject: Re: More on VoIP Date: Tue, 24 Feb 2004 09:49:13 -0000
Tyler Durden wrote:
Encryption ain't the half of it. Really good liottle article. And I didin't know Skype was based in Luxemborg.... http://slate.msn.com/id/2095777/ Not playing with Skype - why risk a closed source propriatory solution when there is open source, RFC documented SIP?
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