Quick item re cellular encryption
This was parsed off Edupage - anyone know what type of encryption they are using? -NetSurfer BEWARE CELLULAR CONFIDENCES Lawyers who use cellular phones to discuss private matters with clients are increasingly turning toward encryption technology to protect confidential information. Boston-based SafeCall, a company that guarantees secure cellular conversations by routing the calls through its scrambler, says its largest and fastest growing contingent of customers is lawyers. Meanwhile, a six-step set of how-to instructions for turning a Motorola flip-phone into a cellular call receiver was posted on the Internet. (Wall Street Journal 9/1/94 B1)
a six-step set of how-to instructions for turning a Motorola flip-phone into a cellular call receiver was posted on the Internet. (Wall Street
Anyone know where this was posted? -- Ed Carp, N7EKG Ed.Carp@linux.org, ecarp@netcom.com Finger ecarp@netcom.com for PGP 2.5 public key an88744@anon.penet.fi If you want magic, let go of your armor. Magic is so much stronger than steel! -- Richard Bach, "The Bridge Across Forever"
SafeCall 617 330 8890 Cellular Privacy Unit attaches to the mothpeice & earpeice of your phone, uses variable split band inversion. The cost, depending on the phone, is about $599 one coming out for Motorola flip phones, might be more ($699). 2 modes of operation: call 1 800 number checks customer, gives dial tone $25 activation $ 5/month .75/minute anywwhere in the US + airtime from your celular carrier. In this mode, you connect to their system, get decrypted, sent out on their phone lines to the other end. Incoming voice gets 'encryted' and sent to you. or buy two units, bypass their system. They also make a fax unit. Seems that $600 only buys you a little bit of on-air security. When I asked about the possibility of using real encryption, she said that they might, but couldn't give me any firm commitments. I've asked for their literature, and will pass on if it has anything more interesting. Adam Netsurfer wrote: | This was parsed off Edupage - anyone know what type of encryption they are | using? | | -NetSurfer | | BEWARE CELLULAR CONFIDENCES | Lawyers who use cellular phones to discuss private matters with clients are | increasingly turning toward encryption technology to protect confidential | information. Boston-based SafeCall, a company that guarantees secure | cellular conversations by routing the calls through its scrambler, says its | largest and fastest growing contingent of customers is lawyers. Meanwhile, | a six-step set of how-to instructions for turning a Motorola flip-phone | into a cellular call receiver was posted on the Internet. (Wall Street | Journal 9/1/94 B1) |
participants (3)
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Adam Shostack -
khijol!erc@apple.com -
NetSurfer