A possible solution to this would be to use Zfone over TOR. See www.zfone.org

The RTP clients would need to support TCP to use TOR - See 
http://research.edm.luc.ac.be/jori/thesis/onlinethesis/chapter5.html#5.2.2
 
However TOR is really not ideal for low latency traffic like real time voice.
 
Just using Zphone seems like the best future option. Once support is built into 
new VOIP hardware and the transition to VOIP becomes global this will hopefully 
completely prevent the current routine monitoring of the worlds telephone calls 
by countries with little regard for human rights such as the USA, and by 
econonic intelligence gathering systems currently used for large-scale 
commercial theft and invasion of privacy like Echelon.
 
 
 
________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Taka Khumbartha
Sent: Thu 08/03/2007 04:10
To: or-talk@freehaven.net
Subject: Re: blog about tor and skype



-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256

well,

1.) Skype Call Traced
http://archives.seul.org/or/talk/Aug-2006/msg00232.html
and
http://archives.seul.org/or/talk/Aug-2006/msg00252.html also directly relevant 
to my point

2.) need i mention skype is closed-source?

and
3.) when starting Tor, "This is experimental software. Do not rely on it for 
strong anonymity."

conclusion: don't mix a weak link with a weaker link and expect a reliable 
chain :)
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----

iD8DBQFF74yZXhfCJNu98qARCGFmAKCODG3fE8GGYFrSxmZ8l3MHicpbmgCgvBms
4BFNKWNyB7Pl7TaKk6GarXo=
=0hXP
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----


<<winmail.dat>>

Reply via email to