nancy_gohring
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Zfone encrypts VOIP for Windows users

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May 22, 20063 mins

Free software circumvents government eavesdropping laws on VOIP calls

Zfone, a free piece of software that encrypts voice over IP calls in a way that may circumvent government eavesdropping laws in some countries, is now available to Windows users, its developer said on Sunday.

The software works in a peer-to-peer manner, exchanging encryption keys directly between the two people making a voice call. Other approaches, like the commonly used PKI (public key infrastructure), typically rely on a centralized database, usually hosted by a third party, to manage keys.

The distinction is important in some places, where the debate about the rights of governments to eavesdrop on its citizens’ phone calls is growing increasingly heated. Zfone presents a challenge in the U.S., for example, where the government has ruled that VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) providers will soon have to turn over call detail records, just like regular phone companies. But the law in the U.S. applies to service providers, not end-users. That means that callers can use Zfone to encrypt calls and the government currently can’t demand that the users share the encryption keys in order to understand the contents of the call.

Zfone could be less effective for privacy advocates in some other countries. Last week, the U.K. government signaled that it is working toward enacting regulations that would require companies and individual people to hand over encryption keys or face jail time. With the encryption key in hand, authorities could listen to conversations made over VOIP calls.

The software uses extensions to RTP (Real-time Transport Protocol) for the key exchange. Zfone’s developers have submitted the extensions, under the name ZRTP, to the IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) for consideration as a standard.

Both participants of a VOIP call must be running Zfone for its encryption to work. For now, Zfone can only be used with software VOIP clients, like those used on computers, but developers can license it to integrate it into their hardware. Customers of service providers like Vonage Holdings, for example, who use adapters that allow the use of existing analog telephones, won’t be able to use Zfone because the software isn’t yet built into the adapter hardware.

Zfone also can’t be used with Skype because Skype uses a proprietary protocol.

Customers can download the software from https://www.philzimmermann.com/EN/zfone. Versions for Mac OS X and Linux are already available.,

Philip Zimmermann, the creator of the e-mail encryption tool PGP (Pretty Good Privacy), developed Zfone. The U.S. government launched and later dropped a criminal investigation into Zimmermann as a result of PGP.

nancy_gohring

Nancy Gohring is a freelance journalist who started writing about mobile phones just in time to cover the transition to digital. She's written about PCs from Hanover, cellular networks from Singapore, wireless standards from Cyprus, cloud computing from Seattle and just about any technology subject you can think of from Las Vegas. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Computerworld, Wired, the Seattle Times and other well-respected publications.

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