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VoIP Security Threats:It’s Not If, It’s When
Christopher Rouland
10/19/2006
However, efforts around VoIP to date have focused primarily on improving reliability and quality, largely at the expense of security. Security simply has not been built into VoIP, and now that the technology is achieving mass adoption, it will become an increasingly attractive target for the cyber-crime organizations currently targeting the data networking world. Of course, VoIP is simply data transmitted in digital packet form. This means it can be attacked, hacked, intercepted, manipulated, re-routed and degraded just like packets on the data network. All of the maladies of the data network — viruses, worms, Trojan horses, DoS attacks and hijacking — likewise are risks to VoIP networks. Because VoIP is a nascent technology, its equally immature underlying operating systems and applications are as vulnerable as data networkbased operating systems were in the early stages of their development. Specifically, there are three key weak points in today’s VoIP ecosystem that represent prime targets for attacks:
Endpoints/Customer Premises Equipment
Central Administration/Call Processing and Management Applications
The Voice Mail System/Server
As we can see, VoIP has inherent weaknesses and is vulnerable at multiple points. VoIP must be secured to ensure the integrity and performance of the VoIP communications network, and, equally important, to maintain the marketplace’s confidence in VoIP-based communications. Today, however, VoIP is susceptible to a number of easily anticipated and defined attacks, including:
Denial of Service
Toll Fraud/Service Theft
Eavesdropping
Phishing
Other types of attacks will include call redirection, where calls are sent to an incorrect destination where identity thieves lay in wait; information theft, where names and phone extensions are obtained through unauthorized access to voice mail servers or call processors; and call integrity compromise, where call content is corrupted so quality degrades. VoIP remains in its “age of security innocence” today simply because there has not yet been a tempting enough payoff for cyber-criminals to focus their attention on VoIP. Growing adoption will change that calculus as VoIP becomes a highly attractive target for attacks, because VoIP largely is undefended and end users are not conditioned to distrust the phone in the same way that they do e-mail and the Web. When this happens, security will displace quality and reliability as the most critical focus of VoIP carriers and equipment vendors, just as it has in the data network. Christopher Rouland is CTO at Internet Security Systems Inc., which IBM announced its intention to purchase in last August. Rouland can be reached at crouland@iss.net.
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