Archive for December, 2007

R-15 - VOIPSA was launched

Monday, December 31st, 2007

The R-15 was a submarine launched ballistic missile (SLBM) design from the Soviet Union during the Cold War. It was not deployed.

The R-15 was a project to develop a SLBM complex D-3 with the capability to be launched directly from the submarine while submerged. The development was authorized for OKB-586 in Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine, on 20 March 1958 and cancelled before testing in December 1958.


See also

  • List of missiles

Links

Margaret E. Knight - patented

Monday, December 31st, 2007

Margaret Ethridge Knight (February 14, 1838 – October 12, 1914) was an American inventor. She was born in York, Maine to James Knight and Hannah Teal. A cotton mill worker from the age of nine through her 56. In 1868, while living in Springfield MA., Knight invented a machine that folded and glued paper to form the brown paper bags familiar to shoppers today.

Knight built a wooden model of the device, but needed a working iron model to apply for a patent. Charles Annan, who was in the machine shop where Knight’s iron model was being built, stole her design and patented the device. Knight filed a successful patent interference lawsuit and was awarded the patent in 1873. With a Massachusetts business man, Knight established the Eastern Paper Bag Co. and received royalties.

Other inventions included a numbering machine, window frame and sash- patented in 1894 and several devices relating to rotary engines, patented between 1902 and 1915 according to Encyclopedia Britannica, 2005. Knight’s original box-making machine is in the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C. Margaret never married and died on October 12, 1914 at the age of 76. A plaque is on the Curry Cottage at 287 Hollis St in Framingham recognizing her as the “first woman awarded a U.S. patent” and holder of 87 U.S. patents. However, Knight was not actually the first: the first female patent-holder was Mary Kies, who patented a weaving process in 1809.


References

  • “Knight, Margaret E.” Encyclopaedia Britannica 2005 Encyclopedia Britannica Premium Svs - article 9125831
  • Improvement in Paper-Bag Machines, July 11, 1871.

Links

  • Iphone Nano?: Apple Applies for Patent for Simplified Cellphone You might be looking at plans for the iPhone nano Here's a patent application by Apple dated today that shows a simplified input pad with numbers on it.
  • What Can Be Patented The patent law specifies the general field of subject matter that can be patented and the conditions under which a patent may be obtained.
  • Slashdot | Linked List Patented in 2006 Linked List Patented in 2006 — article related to Developers and Patents.
  • Patents of Lewis Latimer (If you would like to read a short essay on the American patent system in the time of Latimer and Edison, click here.)
  • Research Use of Patented Knowledge - File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLThis Working Paper reviews issues related to research access to patented .. allow for the use of patented inventions either generally for research
  • Starting June 29, 2005 (I also helped him find out how to get the information for the chart there that shows Microsoft had only a single issued patent by 1987 with company revenue

HMS Achates - launched in early 2005

Monday, December 31st, 2007

Five vessels of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Achates after the character from Roman mythology:

  • The first Achates was a 13-gun ship launched in 1573 and sold in 1605.
  • The second Achates was a 10-gun sloop launched in 1808 and wrecked in 1810 off Guadeloupe.
  • The third Achates was a 16-gun sloop, originally the French Le Milan, captured in 1809 and sold in 1818.
  • The fourth Achates, launched in 1912, was an Acasta-class destroyer. She served in World War I and was sold in 1921.
  • The fifth Achates was an A-class destroyer launched in 1929 and sunk in 1942 by the German cruiser Admiral Hipper.
  • Achates, an Amphion-class submarine launched in 1945, was never completed. She never entered service, and was sunk as a target in 1950.


References

Links

Audio filter - IP audio

Monday, December 31st, 2007

An audio filter is a type of filter used for processing sound signals. Many types of filters exist for applications including graphic equalizers, synthesizers, sound effects, CD players and virtual reality systems.

In its simplest form, an audio filter is typically designed to pass some frequency regions through unattenuated while significantly attenuating others. In some applications, such as in the design of graphic equalizers or CD players, the filters are designed according to a set of objective criteria such as pass band, pass band attenuation, stop band, and stop band attenuation, where the pass bands are the frequency ranges for which audio is attenuated less than a specified maximum, and the stop bands are the frequency ranges for which the audio must be attenuated by a specified minimum.

In more complex cases, an audio filter can provide a feedback loop, which introduces resonance (ringing) alongside attenuation. Audio filters can also be designed to provide gain (boost) as well as attenuation.

In other applications, such as with synthesizers or sound effects, the aesthetic of the filter must be evaluated subjectively.

Audio filters can be implemented in analog circuitry as analog filters or in DSP code or computer software as digital filters.

Non-linear filters are also used in audio applications: for example, compressors, fuzz boxes, ring modulators.

Generically, the term ‘audio filter’ can be applied to mean anything which changes the timbre, harmonic content, pitch or waveform of an audio signal.


See also

  • Audio crossover
  • Electronic filter
  • Equalization filter

Links

List of asteroids/104001–105000 - edit External

Monday, December 31st, 2007

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”001″| 104001–104100 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”101″| 104101–104200 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”201″| 104201–104300 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”301″| 104301–104400 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”401″| 104401–104500 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”501″| 104501–104600 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”601″| 104601–104700 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”701″| 104701–104800 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”801″| 104801–104900 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”901″| 104901–105000 [ edit]

Links

  • UK VoIP Provider VoIP UK Provider. Get a FREE VoIPtalk account and start making free calls with your VoIP Phone now! Free VoIP Service. Pay monthly Packages
  • VOIP with Vonage Canada Use your high-speed Internet connection to make all of your phone calls with Vonage digital phone service. Plans start at $19.99 per month.
  • VoIP & Gadgets Blog voip gadget blog with the latest gadget news, voip products, must have cool gadgets mobile wireless phones, product reviews.
  • VoIP - ZDNet Asia toolkit Voice over IP (VoIP) technology is gaining traction in the corporate arena, as more organizations look for ways to keep communications costs down.
  • Access >> VoIP | CNET News.com The VoIP company offers a mea culpa for its disrupted service last week, In split decision, judges OK extension of taxes to VoIP but agree with some
  • Blueface | VoIP | Ireland's Internet Phone Service Blueface is a Dublin based VoIP, internet phone, company providing residential and business users with a phone service over an existing broadband Internet

PGPfone - research VoIP security

Monday, December 31st, 2007

PGPfone is a secure voice telephony system developed by Philip Zimmermann in 1995. The PGPfone protocol had little in common with Zimmermann’s popular PGP email encryption package, except for the use of the name. It used ephemeral Diffie-Hellman protocol to establish a session key, which was then used to encrypt the stream of voice packets. The two parties compared a short authentication string to detect a Man-in-the-middle attack, which is the most common method of wiretapping secure phones of this type. PGPfone could be used point-to-point (with two modems) over the public switched telephone network, or over the Internet as an early Voice over IP system.

The Internet was not yet ready for PGPfone ­in 1996. Few people had broadband at home, and there were no protocol standards for Voice over IP. A decade later, Zimmermann released the successor to PGPfone, Zfone and ZRTP, a new and better secure VoIP protocol based on modern VoIP standards. Zfone builds on the ideas of PGPfone.

According to the MIT PGPfone web page [1] “MIT is no longer distributing PGPfone. Given that the software has not been maintained since 1997, we doubt it would run on most modern systems.”

Nevertheless, the software, source code and documentation can be found at http://www.pgpi.org/products/pgpfone/ and, despite the above prediction, still runs fine on Windows2000 and WinXP, including its derivatives such as Windows XP Media Center Edition.


See also

  • Zfone
  • ZRTP
  • Nautilus (secure telephone)
  • PGP word list
  • Secure telephone


External links

  • PGPfone homepage on PGPi
  • Old PGPfone homepage on MIT

Links

IPdrum - to VoIP. The stated

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

IPdrum is a supplier of hardware and software to the vast growing market for mobile internet telephony also called VoIP to Mobile. The company’s flagship product is the IP VoiceLink which is a Mobile Skype Solution. IP Drums first “proof of concept” product was a cable named Mobile Skype Solution and gained significant media attention when it was launched in September 2005.

The IP VoiceLink solution works as a gateway between an IP program on your computer, like Skype and the user’s mobile phone, enabling any mobile phone on the GSM network to become an Internet Mobile Telephone or a Skype Mobile. With a cheap or free calling plan between the IP VoiceLink and user’s mobile phone one can make international calls at local rates with SkypeOut from all mobile phone. Today, the IP VoiceLink works with Skype, integration with programs like Windows Live Messenger and Gtalk are coming as software upgrades soon.

The headquarters of IPdrum is located in Oslo, with a branch office in Pune, India.


External links

  • Official site
  • Article in Webuser - UK’s best selling internet magazine
  • Review in Guardian Unlimited
  • Norwegian news article digi.no
  • Norwegian news article DinSide
  • Norwegian news article Computerworld
  • Norwegian news article Studenttorget.no

Links

Open world assumption - statement is:

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

The open world assumption and its opposite, the Closed World Assumption apply within the field of Knowledge representation to express the extent to which knowledge within a system is viewed to be complete. Completeness allows inferences to be drawn from what is not recorded in the system, while incompleteness prevents this. The open world assumption or OWA asserts that a system’s knowledge is incomplete, so that if a statement cannot be inferred from what is expressed in the system, then it still cannot be inferred to be false. Heuristically, the open world assumption applies when we represent knowledge with a system as we discover it and the reality described by the system can never be known to have been fully described. In the OWA, statements about knowledge that are not included in or inferred from the knowledge explicitly recorded in the system may be considered unknown, rather than wrong or false.

Semantic Web languages such as RDF(S) and OWL make the open world assumption. The absence of a particular statement within the web means, in principle, that the statement has not been made explicitly yet, irrespectively of whether it would be true or not, and irrespectively of whether we believe (or would believe) that it is (or would be) true or not. In essence, from the absence of a statement alone, a deductive reasoner cannot (and must not) infer that the statement is false.

Example

 Statement: "Mary" "is a citizen of" "France"
 Question: Is Mary a citizen of Canada?
 "Closed world" (for example SQL or XML) answer: No.
 "Open world" answer: unknown (Mary could have dual citizenship).

Under OWA, failure to derive a fact does not imply the
opposite. For example, assume we only know that Mary is a citizen of France. From this information we can neither conclude that Mary is not a citizen of Canada, nor that she is. Therefore, we admit the fact that our knowledge of the world is incomplete. The open world assumption is closely related to the monotonic nature of first-order
logic: adding new information never falsifies a previous conclusion. Namely, if we subsequently learn that Mary is also a citizen of Canada, this does not change any earlier positive or negative conclusions.

The language of logic programs with strong negation allows us to postulate the closed world assumption for some predicates and leave the other predicates in the realm of the open world assumption.


See also

  • Closed World Assumption

Links

BT Versatility - VoIP

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

The BT Versatility is a telephone PBX switchboard sold by BT and targeted at small businesses.

It has modular construction allowing a basic setup to be expanded as needed by clipping extra modules onto a backplane

The basic model starts off as a 2-line 8 extension unit, using either analog POTS lines or ISDN. There is a serial connection that can be used for call logging and configuration. It can either use standard telephones or proprietary feature phones.

Various modules expand features such as

  • Voicemail
  • VoIP
  • On Hold music


External links

  • BT’s Product info page

Links

Beerware - License.

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

Beerware is a somewhat tongue-in-cheek term for software released under a very relaxed license. It provides the end user with the right to use a particular program (or obtain and modify its source code) if they buy the author a beer, or, in some variations, drink a beer in the author’s honor. The term was invented by John Bristor in Pensacola, Florida on April 25 1987, and the first software distributed using the Beerware licensing model was uploaded to a number of BBSs in 1987 and 1988. Many variations on the beerware model have been created since that time.

Poul-Henning Kamp’s beerware license is simple and short, in contrast to the GPL which he has described as “a joke”<ref name=”kamp”>
</ref>. The full text of Kamp’s license is:

“THE BEER-WARE LICENSE” (Revision 42):
<phk@FreeBSD.org> wrote this file. As long as you retain this notice you can do whatever you want with this stuff. If we meet some day, and you think this stuff is worth it, you can buy me a beer in return. Poul-Henning Kamp<ref name=”kamp” />


Notes

<references/>


See also

  • Otherware

Links

White route - VoIP

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

A white route is, in the telecommunications business, a legal termination route.
This is opposed to a black route, which is a route that uses illegal termination. Also common in telecom (especially VoIP) is the term grey route, which defines a route that is legal for one country or the party on one end, but illegal for the party on the other.

An example of the white/grey/black trichotomy is often seen in telecom routes from the USA to India. In India, a telecom monopoly is granted to a few large corporations. Hence, all legal (”white”) telecom traffic to the country is subject to the rates imposed by these corporations. To overcome this restriction for the purpose of achieving lower costs for consumers, and to make a profit in the process, many small parties set up VoIP routers in homes and offices around India. Telecom traffic from the USA is sent to these VoIP routers via TCP/IP and terminated to the local Indian PSTN. This process is illegal in India (”black”), but completely lawful in the USA (”white”). A route like this that is white on one end and black on the other is said to be “grey”.

Links

FOX 23 - and is licensed under

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

FOX 23 can refer to four FOX affiliates broadcasting on UHF channel 23:

  • WXXA-TV, licensed to Albany, New York
  • KOKI-TV, licensed to Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • KBSI-TV, licensed to Cape Girardeau, Missouri
  • WPFO-TV, licensed to Waterville, Maine

Links

White hat - VOIPSA

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

A white hat hacker, also rendered as ethical hacker, is, in the realm of information technology, a person who is ethically opposed to the abuse of computer systems. Realization that the Internet now represents human voices from around the world has made the defense of its integrity an important pastime for many.
A white hat generally focuses on securing IT systems, whereas a black hat (the opposite) would like to break into them.


Terminology

The term white hat hacker is also often used to describe those who attempt to break into systems or networks in order to help the owners of the system by making them aware of security flaws, or to perform some other altruistic activity. Many such people are employed by computer security companies; these professionals are sometimes called sneakers. Groups of these people are often called tiger teams

The primary difference between white and black hat hackers is that a white hat hacker claims to observe ethical principles. Like black hats, white hats are often intimately familiar with the internal details of security systems, and can delve into obscure machine code when needed to find a solution to a tricky problem. Some use the term grey hat and fewer use brown hat to describe someone’s activities that cross between black and white.

In recent years the terms white hat and black hat have been applied to the Search Engine Optimization (SEO) industry. Black hat SEO tactics, also called spamdexing, attempt unfairly to redirect search results to particular target pages, whereas white hat methods are generally approved by the search engines.


Notable security experts

  • Janizary-Utku Şen - First Turkish Certied Ethical Hacker.He hacked out microsoft.co.kr and became CEH because he doesn’t want to go to jail
  • Dave Aitel - Author of SPIKE, a fuzzer completely unusable by others than himself
  • Mark Russinovich - Expert on Windows architecture and programming; noted for identifying the limited differences between Windows NT Server and Workstation, and discovering the 2005 Sony Rootkit software.
  • Jayakrishnan.S — Author of the book “You will never walk alone”. Known for his works on security systems and ethical hacking.
  • Fyodor — Author of the open source Nmap Security Scanner, web site Insecure.Org, co-author of hacking novel How to Own A Continent, and founding member of the Honeynet Project.
  • Johan “Julf” Helsingius — Operated the world’s most popular anonymous remailer, the Penet remailer (called penet.fi), until he closed up shop in September 1996.
  • Kevin Mitnick — A former blackhat computer criminal who now (since his release from prison in 2000) speaks, consults, and authors books about social engineering and network security.
  • Shawn Merdinger — Independent security researcher, former Cisco Systems’ STAT and TippingPoint’s DV research teams. Technical Advisor with VOIPSA, the Voice Over IP Security Association. VOIPSA Blog
  • H. D. Moore — Author of the Metasploit penetration testing tool
  • Nightmarepolice — Security researcher.
  • Bruce Schneier — Author of many books on security and leading cryptographer and developer of new cryptographic algorithms (including the Pontifex or Solitaire algorithm made famous in Neal Stephenson’s novel Cryptonomicon). He also runs a popular security website and blog.
  • Tsutomu Shimomura — Shimomura helped catch Kevin Mitnick, the United States’ most infamous computer intruder, in early 1994. He is the co-author of a book about the Mitnick case, Takedown: The Pursuit and Capture of Kevin Mitnick, America’s Most Wanted Computer Outlaw-By the Man Who Did It (ISBN 0-7868-8913-6).
  • Solar Designer — Founder of the Openwall Project.
  • Joanna Rutkowska (website) — Security researcher, lecturer, author of ‘The Blue Pill’ and several other proof of concept Windows compromises.
  • Stuart Thomas — Author of the V for Victory Pro bono public information security blog
Security researcher and expert.
  • KeY — Creator of the XdeleteX program series , these programs that he made delete programs that cannot be uninstalled example: smiley central,Kazaa,and other spy ware/ad ware/viruses. He is also the creator of www.whitehatsociety.tk . KeY was uses his knowledge to help others. Also KeY’s website you can become a staff of his volunteer computer tech.


Related books

Network Security:


See also

  • Black hat
  • Grey hat
  • Hacker ethic
  • Hacker
  • Penetration test
  • CREST


External links

  • Hiring Hackers As Security Consultants
  • The Ethical Hacker Network - Free Online Magazine for Security Professionals

Links

Zfone - VoIP

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

Zfone is software for secure voice communication over the Internet (VoIP), using the ZRTP protocol. It is created by Phil Zimmermann, the creator of the PGP encryption software. Zfone works on top of existing SIP- and RTP-programs, like Gizmo, but should work with any SIP- and RTP-compliant VoIP-program.

Zfone turns many existing VoIP clients into secure phones. It runs in the Internet Protocol stack on any Windows XP, Mac OS X, or Linux PC, and intercepts and filters all the VoIP packets as they go in and out of the machine, and secures the call on the fly. A variety of different software VoIP clients can be used to make a VoIP call. The Zfone software detects when the call starts, and initiates a cryptographic key agreement between the two parties, and then proceeds to encrypt and decrypt the voice packets on the fly. It has its own separate GUI, telling the user if the call is secure. Zfone acts as if it were a “bump on the wire”, sitting between the VoIP client and the Internet, but implemented in software in the protocol stack.

Zfone’s libZRTP SDK libraries are released under a GPL or a commercial license. Note that only the libZRTP SDK libraries are provided under the GPL. The parts of Zfone that are not part of the libZRTP SDK libraries are not licensed under the GPL or any other open source license. Even if the source code of those components is published for peer review, the intellectual property status of those components remains proprietary.


Platforms and specification

  • Availability - Mac OS X, Linux, and Windows as compiled programs as well as an SDK.
  • Encryption standards - Based on ZRTP, which uses 128- or 256-bit AES together with a 3,000-bit key exchange system and voice based verification to prevent man in the middle attacks.
  • ZRTP Protocol - Published as an IETF draft: “ZRTP: Media Path Key Agreement for Secure RTP” [1]


See also

  • Comparison of VoIP software
  • Secure telephone

Other encrypted voice-over-IP programs:

  • PGPfone
  • Gizmo Project based upon Jabber
  • Skype


External links

  • Zfone home page
  • Phil Zimmermann official website
  • CNET News: E-mail security hero takes on VoIP
  • ‘Wired.com’ article April 03 2006

Links

  • VOIP Please note: ADSL broadband and VOIP still requires you to have a regular landline in your home. Our regular home phone service,
  • VoIP - ZDNet Asia toolkit Voice over IP (VoIP) technology is gaining traction in the corporate arena, as more organizations look for ways to keep communications costs down.
  • Government Computer News (GCN) VOIP home — federal, state and Industry Insights. Product/Services Finder · Custom Supplements · CA Microsite · Juniper Networks · Dell Library · GCN Home > VOIP

Dual-mode phone - VoIP

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

A dual-mode phone is a phone which uses more than one technique for sending and receiving voice and data. This could be for wireless mobile phones or for wired phones.

There are three types of dual mode phones:

  1. Mobile phones containing two types of cellular radios for voice and data. These phones include combination of GSM and CDMA technology. They can be used as a GSM or CDMA phone according to your preference. These handsets are also called global phones. A good example of this kind of phone is the Samsung SCH-a790.
  2. Mobile phones containing both cellular and non-cellular radios used for voice and data communication. There are also 2 types of dual mode phones which use cellular radio which will contain GSM/CDMA/W-CDMA as well as other technology like IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) radio or DECT (Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications) radio. These phones can be used as cellular phones when connected to a wide area cellular network. When within range of a suitable WiFi or DECT network, the phone can be used as a WiFi/DECT phone for all communications purposes. This method of operation can reduce cost (for both the network operator and the subscriber), improve indoor coverage and increase data access speeds.
  3. Wired phones with VoIP and POTS technology. These phones can be used for making VoIP calls and also used for phones on the circuit switchnetwork. These phones require compatible routers and modem to make VoIP calls.

Links

  • VoIP Singapore - The VoIP, Digium Hardware, IP PA System, Systems Incorporated in Singapore, Lantone Communications specializes in VoIP, Digium Hardware, IP PA System, SIP Servers, Systems Integration, Call Accounting
  • Cheap Calls using VoIP with Vonage UK - Broadband Phone Provider Vonage is a leading VoIP provider for consumers and business in the UK. We offer Broadband Phones services for making cheap local and international calls.
  • Voip Choice - Home Free Australian VoIP guide with service provider price comparisons, explanations of VoIP technology for new users, VoIP store, news and more., Logging on to
  • VoIP VoIP, VoIP application developer AudioCodes produce VoIP phone, voice over DSL, and voice over ATM packet processors. IP telephony leaders, Audiocodes

Assyrian Voice - Voice

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

Assyrian Voice is a world wide community for Assyrians online, offering different services including chat, forums, music, news, and more. The community was created in 1999.

The site started as a mere personal page for the webmaster, but in October 1999, it exploded in growth, when it replaced Nineveh.com as the sole provider of text chat service for Assyrians online. In early 2000, Assyrian Voice experienced more explosive growth, when it became the first Assyrian website ever to add a voice chat. The growth has continued to skyrocket ever since.

Today, Assyrian Voice has some 1300 standard users, with some 200,000 repeat visitors a month, making it one of the biggest and busiest Assyrian website online.

Although Assyrian Voice might have significantly increased the text chat traffic among members of the Assyrian community worldwide, it is now one of many Assyrian chat based community websites.


External links

  • Assyrian Cafe Voice Chat

Links

  • IBM developerWorks : WebSphere Voice The WebSphere Voice area on developerWorks provides the latest technical resources for developers who are interested in developing voice applications that
  • Fact Sheet: About Your Voice What is the definition of voice? How do you know if you have a voice problem? Read this fact sheet to find the answers to these and other basic questions
  • WritingFix: Resources and Lessons that focus on Voice, one the 6 "What is voice?" discussion tool — This is a one-page handout for groups of teachers discussing how thoroughly voice is being addressed in classrooms.
  • Voice Advocacy for children and young people in care. Campaigns, projects and services.

Mission 3:16 (EP) - mission statement is: VOIPSA’s

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

Mission 3:16 (EP) is an EP released by Carman.


Track listing

  1. Mission – 3:16 (Album Version)
  2. The Message
  3. Mission – 3:16 (Club Mix)
  4. Leave A Message
  5. R.I.O.T. (Street Flava Mix)
    • Features GRITS
  6. What’s The Message?
  7. Who’s In The House? (All Housed Up Mix)
    • Features Sigmund Johns
  8. Mission – 3:16 (Instrumental Spy Mix)

This disc is an Enhanced CD.

Links

  • MyVoIPnews: December 2006 Vistula CEO/chairman Rupert Galliers-Pratt commented in a statement "We would threats outlined in VOIPSA's VoIP Security Threat Taxonomy project.
  • MyVoIPnews: VoIP News Vyke, whose mission statement is “based upon empowering the user to make his or threats outlined in VOIPSA's VoIP Security Threat Taxonomy project.
  • VOIP IP Telephony: February 2007 VOIPSA's "How to avoid Skype 3.0 reading the BIOS of your system" .. key to many specialized mission critical applications, and this platform delivers.

Distributed Universal Number Discovery - VoIP

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

Distributed Universal Number Discovery (DUNDi) is a P2P protocol for providing services equivalent to those provided by ENUM.
In simple terms, it is like asking your neighbouring peer whether he knows how to reach a certain phone-extension or VoIP client. Some sort of P2P phonebook.

The protocol was invented by Mark Spencer who also made the PBX-system called Asterisk. Therefore the syntax of the output of a DUNDi-lookup can be directly used in the dial commands in an Asterisk Dial Plan.


Peers

For DUNDi to work, each DUNDi client has to know at least one other DUNDi client. Since these DUNDi clients belong to the same network, they are called peers.
Also at least one of the reachable peers must know how to reach the wanted extension.

In the DUNDi configuration one can limit the number of consecutive lookups between peers by setting the TTL.

  • A TTL of 1 means you only can ask the peers you know and they cannot ask further.
  • A TTL of n means that the peer you ask for a lookup can redirect your lookup to the peers it knows, only with a TTL of n-1.


Advertising extensions

Each DUNDi peer can advertise its own extensions and their context. E.g. if you can connect some local E.164 number(s), you can advertise these.

Each advertised extension (this can also be a range of extensions) has its own priority.
Low values represent a high priority and must be chosen first when more than one answer is received from a lookup.

The Digium General Peering Agreement gives some examples (in exhibit A, at the end of the document) of preferred priorities when operating in the E.164 trust group.


Example

In the Asterisk CLI one can do a lookup by hand to test if a DUNDi configuration works.

asterisk1*CLI> dundi lookup 301@priv bypass
  1.     0 IAX2/priv:ByWFbOGKgGmZbM43BJHSZw@192.168.1.2/301 (EXISTS)
     from 00:0c:29:d2:d8:ec, expires in 3600 s
DUNDi lookup completed in 113 ms

The above DUNDi lookup tells the PBX to ask the known peers if they know how to reach extension 301 in the “priv” network.
The answer consists of 6 parts:

  • The used protocol to communicate is IAX2.
  • The context-name is “priv”.
  • The secret key of the PBX, which can redirect you to extension 301 is ByW[…]HSZw (this changes periodically)
  • The address of this PBX is 192.168.1.2 (or some domainname, should be reachable by the calling party)
  • The extension to call is 301 (this can be different from what you asked for, e.g. when calls from the outside are not allowed directly to an internal extension)
  • “EXISTS” tells us the PBX is advertising this number. It is possible the PBX advertises a lot more extensions than really are connected, so it is no guarantee the extension can be reached.

In order to prevent the network from overloading and at the same time keep the responses as quick as possible, the involved peers will cache the lookups they see. Because the used key’s may become invalid after some period, each lookup has some expiry date. This defaults to one hour.

When no context is given with a lookup, DUNDi defaults to the E.164 context. This means you are looking for normal (international) phone-numbers, like 0031201234567 (some bogus number in Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
In order to do so, you have to peer with at least one other peer in the E164 trust group. The peers in this group are bound to the Digium GPA (Digium General Peering Agreement)


External links

  • DUNDi Home Page
  • Internet-Draft that expired in 2005
  • VoIP and ENUM
  • DUNDi Enterprise SIP configuration article on Voip-Info.org

Links

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Shamir - Israeli

Friday, December 28th, 2007

Shamir may refer to:

  • Solomon’s Shamir, a worm described in Judaism’s Midrash as capable of breaking the hardest stones, reputedly used in the construction of the first Temple of Jerusalem
  • Yitzhak Shamir, a former Israeli Prime Minister
  • Adi Shamir, an Israeli cryptographer
  • Israel Shamir, a Russian-Israeli-Swedish writer and journalist
  • Shamir, an Israeli kibbutz
  • Gabriel and Maxim Shamir, Israeli graphic designers

Links

International Roaming Access Protocols - Protocol

Friday, December 28th, 2007

International Roaming Access Protocols (IRAP) is an emerging protocol that enables operation across different types of wireless and wired networks. It also provide the seamless connectivity across the heterogeneous network.

Links