Most voice encryption systems can be tapped in minutes by installing a voice-recording Trojan on the target computer, a security researcher has confirmed after testing a range of well-known products.. Although this type of attack has been known about for some time, the scale of the issue uncovered by researcher The link for this article located at Tech World is no longer available. . Voice safeguarding technologies face threats from swift intrusions via malware, jeopardizing confidentiality and protection.. Voice Encryption, Trojan Attacks, Cybersecurity Threats. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
An Israeli mobile security firm that a month ago offered $100,000 in gold to anyone who could hack its voice encryption technology has upped the ante to $250,000. Gold Lock posted a sample of an encrypted voice conversation on its Website and is offering the golden reward to any hackers who can crack it and send the company a transcript of the call.. Gold Lock, which sells military-grade mobile devices and data and voice encryption tools, says the voice call file has been downloaded more than 1,000 times in the Gold Lock Hacker Challenge contest. But that's nowhere near the number the vendor had expected, so it decided to make the contest more attractive with a bigger bounty. "Since 2003, we have been telling everyone how our products provide unbreakable protection for their voice and data transmissions, but talk is cheap. So now we are putting our claims to the ultimate test by inviting anyone that thinks they have the skills to take us down," said Noam Copel, CEO of Gold Lock, in a statement. The link for this article located at Dark Reading is no longer available. . Silver Key raises its bounty on their security challenge to a staggering $500K silver prize for breaching audio encoding systems.. Voice Encryption, Hacker Challenge, Military-Grade Security, Data Protection. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Philip R. Zimmermann wants to protect online privacy. Who could object to that? He has found out once already. Trained as a computer scientist, he developed a program in 1991 called Pretty Good Privacy, or PGP, for scrambling and unscrambling e-mail messages. It won a following among privacy rights advocates and human rights groups working overseas — and a three-year federal criminal investigation into whether he had violated export restrictions on cryptographic software. The case was dropped in 1996, and Mr. Zimmermann, who lives in Menlo Park, Calif., started PGP Inc. to sell his software commercially. . Now he is again inviting government scrutiny. On Sunday, he released a free Windows software program, Zfone, that encrypts a computer-to-computer voice conversation so both parties can be confident that no one is listening in. It became available earlier this year to Macintosh and Linux users of the system known as voice-over-Internet protocol, or VoIP. . Xcall surfaces as a solution for securing audio dialogues, sparking renewed conversations around confidentiality in light of possible oversight.. Voice Encryption, Online Privacy, Philip Zimmermann. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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