GEORGIA TECH RESEARCHERS DESIGN SYSTEM TO TRACE CALL PATHS ACROSS 
MULTIPLE NETWORKS

Posted October 5, 2010 Atlanta, GA

ATLANTA - October 5, 2010 - Phishing scams are making the leap from 
email to the world's voice systems, and a team of researchers in the 
Georgia Tech College of Computing has found a way to tag fraudulent 
calls with a digital "fingerprint" that will help separate legitimate 
calls from phone scams.

Voice phishing (or "vishing") has become much more prevalent with the 
advent of cellular and voice IP (VoIP) networks, which enable 
criminals both to route calls through multiple networks to avoid 
detection and to fake caller ID information. However each network 
through which a call is routed leaves its own telltale imprint on the 
call itself, and individual phones have their own unique signatures, 
as well.

Funded in part by the National Science Foundation, the Georgia Tech 
team created a system called "PinDr0p" that can analyze and assemble 
those call artifacts to create a fingerprint-the first step in 
determining "call provenance," a term the researchers coined. The 
work, described in the paper, "PinDr0p: Using Single-Ended Audio 
Features to Determine Call Provenance," was presented at the 
Association for Computing Machinery's Conference on Computers and 
Communications Security, Oct. 5 in Chicago.

...

http://www.gatech.edu/newsroom/release.html?nid=61428

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